05/05/2012

Leaving Tunis


My (short) Tunisian trip is over.
These three days have been really interesting and unexpected. And I know I'll be back here.
I’m now going back to Paris to vote and to cover the second round of our presidential election on Sunday night from Nicolas Sarkozy and the UMP's headquartier in La Mutualite. 
Then I’ll leave again on Monday for Ethiopia.
 Africa is so wide and there’s so much to do.
After Ethiopia, I'll be in Kenya mid-May. Then it's still open. Only new appointment: Florence, Italy, mid-June for the Journalism Summer School. Looking forward.
 

No Light No Light

The sound of this night...

Wonderful song. The lyrics I would have written tonight if I had the gift of music making...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGH-4jQZRcc



"No Light No Light"

You are the hole in my head
You are the space in my bed
You are the silence in between
What I thought and what I said
You are the nighttime fear
You are the morning when it's clear
When it's over, you're the start
You're my head and you're my heart

 No light, no light
In your bright blue eyes
I never knew daylight could be so violent
A revelation in the light of day
You can't choose what stays and what fades away
And I'd do anything to make you stay
No light, no light
Tell me what you want me to say

To the crowd I was crying out and
In your place there were a thousand other faces
I was disappearing in plain sight
Heaven help me, I need to make it right

You want a revelation
You want to get "right"
But it's a conversation
I just can't have tonight
You want a revelation
Some kind of resolution
You want a revelation

No light, no light
In your bright blue eyes
I never knew daylight could be so violent
A revelation in the light of day
You can't choose what stays and what fades away
And I'd do anything to make you stay
No light, no light
Tell me what you want me to say

Would you leave me
If I told you what I'd done?
And would you leave me
If I told you what I'd become? '
Cause it's so easy
To say it to a crowd
But it's so hard, my love
To say it to you out loud

No light, no light
In your bright blue eyes
I never knew daylight could be so violent
A revelation in the light of day
You can't choose what stays and what fades away
And I'd do anything to make you stay
No light, no light
Tell me what you want me to say

You want a revelation
You want to get "right"
But it's a conversation
I just can't have tonight
You want a revelation
Some kind of resolution
You want a revelation You want a revelation
You want to get "right"
But it's a conversation
I just can't have tonight
You want a revelation
Some kind of resolution
Tell me what you want me to say


FLORENCE AND THE MACHINE - NO LIGHT NO LIGHT

03/05/2012

Somalia: World Press Freedom Day - Matt Baugh

Somalia: World Press Freedom Day - Matt Baugh

On World Press Freedom Day, my thoughts are with the families of the brave Somali journalists who were killed on the course of duty and those who still brave the dangers of operating in one of the most difficult places in the world to be a be a journalist.

The shocking fact is that so far in 2012 one Somali journalist has been murdered each month. The latest victim Farhan Jiime Abdulle of Radio Daljir was killed in Galkayo yesterday.

Other victims in 2012 have been Mahad Salad Adan, a reporter for Radio Shabelle, Ali Ahmed Abdi, a Radio Galkayo reporter, Abukah Hassan Mohamoud who was the Ex-Director of Somaliweyn, and Hassan Omar Abdi who was the director of Radio Shabelle.

On behalf of the UK Government, I condemn the killing of Farhan and reiterate the statement of the UK Minister for Africa Henry Bellingham which condemned the killing of Abukah Hassan Mohamoud.

The UK stands for universal human rights, the rule of law, democracy and freedom of expression. As always we wish to express solidarity with Somali journalists in resisting intimidation and maintaining the freedom of the press.

Our commitment is clearly reflected in the Communique of the London Conference on Somalia where all participants emphasised that journalists must be able to operate freely and without fear.

This commitment is further highlighted in the 2011 Foreign and Commonwealth Office Human Rights and Democracy Report.  The report lists Somalia as one of the countries of concern.

The report notes that international and local media reporting remained limited and journalists continued to operate in extremely difficult circumstances, with media freedoms often suppressed and intimidation of Somali journalists and civil society by armed groups commonplace.

The next few months will be crucial as Somalia enters an important phase to end the transition in August, and more than ever there is a need to have a vibrant media sector in Somalia that will be able to inform the Somali public about all that is happening in their country.

It is important that the freedom of the press is enshrined in the new Constitution as this will guarantee the media the space to operate freely. It is in this regard that we look forward to the consultations regarding freedom of expression in Mogadishu next week.

I therefore call on Somali authorities to help protect journalists and respect the principal of freedom of expression, so that Somali media can play an effective role in the stabilisation of Somalia.

As we mark this day, I would like to assure Somali journalists and other stakeholders in the media that the UK will continue to stand with them.

Think Africa Press Google+ hangouts on Oxford University's Africa Society 2012 Pan-Africa Conference

Your Questions for the Oxford Pan-Africa Conference Speakers

This Saturday (5 May) Oxford University's Africa Society is running its 2012 Pan-Africa Conference: Building Capacity for a New Generation. You have the chance to take part and engage with the speakers, even if you can't make it on the day.

Think Africa Press will be running Google+ hangouts throughout the conference. This is an opportunity to get involved and ask the speakers your own questions. A Google+ hangout is a real-time conversation between 10 people. Here it will be one speaker, one moderator, and eight other Google+ users.

How to join

If you are a Google+ user and are available on Saturday you can join our hangouts live, just let us know in advance which speaker you would like to hang out with and tell us a little about yourself. We will be choosing eight people for each hangout. If you don't use Google+, don't worry, send us your questions and we can put them to a speaker on your behalf. Leave questions and hangout requests in the comments below, email us on info@thinkafricapress.com, or send them to us via twitter (@thinkafricafeed) using the hashtag #OxAfr12 or via facebook. Please start your message with the name of the speaker your question / hangout request is for.
More details about the schedule for the hangouts, and how to follow them live online, will follow soon.

See speakers here:

http://thinkafricapress.com/blog/your-questions-oxford-africa-conference

Presentation on Oxford University's Africa Society's website here:

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~afrisoc/conference.html#conferenceinfo-container

 

From Tunis @ AfDB

I am currently working from Tunis in the Novotel, I must say it's the best hotel I have been working from since the Metropole in Kampala during the Ugandan elections last year.

Tunis is very welcoming, warm, sunny, full of friendly people and great staff at the African Development Bank (AfDB). It is a mere pleasure to work from here.

The AfDB is organising a workshop for African journalists in Tunis around other events for World press freedom day, this May 3rd.

Today the bank also presented the programme for its coming annual meeting to take place in Arusha in Tanzania from May the 28th. More details here:
http://www.afdb.org/en/annual-meetings/programme/

Tomorrow the UNESCO will be holding a special day to celebrate the improvement of media freedom in countries lie Tunisia. I'll be there and will tell you more.

Cheers from sunny Tunis!

From Tunis: My interview with Zied Mhirsi on BBC Afrique today


Zied Mhirsi is a journalist and Manager for Tunisia Live, first news website in English in Tunisia.
Our interview will be on air today on BBC Afrique: 
Probably during the evening news at 6.00 pm GMT. Stay tuned.
--
More on Tunsia and press freedom soon.

02/05/2012

Roundtable on World Press Freedom in Tunis

Tunisia Live is hosting a roundtable in honor of World Press Freedom Day.

Co-sponsored by the African Development Bank, the round table brings together politicians, publishers, journalists and activists around the theme of “Media and Governance: Sustaining the Pioneering Role of Tunisia in the Arab Awakening.”

The conference is taking place this evening at the Novotel Hotel on Avenue Mohammed V, until 7:00 pm, local time.

Tunis, African Development Bank and World Press Freedom Day

Hello folks.

While still writing on Somalia (and planning to be for a while) I am in Tunisia for four days where the African Development Bank (AfDB) and UNESCO are organising interesting debates this week.

I arrived in Tunis from Paris CGD this afternoon and listened to talks around climate change issues in Africa, including projects about the Rio+20 Summit and African ambitions for it.

Meanwhile, as tomorrow, May 3rd, is World Press Freedom Day the AfDB and the UNESCO partnered to organised a two-day session about the role of press and social media in social and political changes. Accurate topics for the past twelve months for sure.

If you want to know more, follow me on Twitter: .

Cheers from Tunis.


New Shabaabs attacks in Somalia

According to Reuters: A Suicide bomber killed three MPs in central Somalia...

Here is the story published on Wed May 2, 2012 at 6:47am GMT by Mohamed Ahmed:

MOGADISHU (Reuters) - A suicide bomber killed three Somali lawmakers on Tuesday at a hotel in the central town of Dusamareb, where legislators visiting from the capital were meeting, local authorities said.

Al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab rebels claimed responsibility for the attack, and also for a car bomb in the heart of the capital Mogadishu on Tuesday that killed one man.

While suicide bombers sent by al Shabaab militants have struck government targets and African Union troops in the capital Mogadishu often in recent years, such attacks are rare in central Galgadud region.

The delegation of lawmakers was in Dusamareb to discuss how to form local administrations in the central region of Galgadud, as part of political reforms meant to bring a string of transition governments to an end with elections in August.

Member of parliament Dahir Amin Gesow told Reuters he was in the hotel cafe when the bomber walked in blew himself up. He said several people were killed, including some lawmakers.

The spokesman for the pro-government militia which controls Dusamareb, the capital of Galgadud, said the total death toll from the blast was four.

"The bomber killed four people, including three legislators and one of our soldiers," Sheikh Abdullahi Sheikh Abu Yusuf, spokesman for the Sufi militia Ahlu Sunna Waljamaca, told Reuters.
Dusamareb, 560 km (350 miles) north of Mogadishu, has been under the control of the Ahlu Sunna militia group for years, although al Shabaab fighters have seized the town briefly on several occasions, including in March this year.

Al Shabaab's spokesman for military operations, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, told Reuters one of their bombers was behind the attack and that Ahlu Sunna officials, Ethiopian officials and legislators had been killed.

Ethiopia has long backed Ahlu Sunna in its fight against al Shabaab, providing training and weapons. Ethiopian also sent its own troops into Somalia last year to take on the Islamist rebels, mainly to areas where Ahlu Sunna has a presence.

In Mogadishu, a bomb planted inside a car killed a man near the busy Kilometre 4 junction. Al Shabaab said it had killed him because he worked for the government.
 

Somalia Report says a Car Bomb blew around KM4 in Mogadishu


According to the website Somalia Report:
At least four people were killed and ten others were injured in two separate blasts that rocked in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, on Tuesday afternoon.

In what appears to be a forced suicide car bomber, the perpetrators detonated a four door sedan in the strategic road that links Mogadishu's main airport and KM4 junction, which is regularly used by Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and African Union (AMISOM) vehicles.

Locals said the man driving the car was a well known businessman, Arafat, who sold cars to the government and was not aligned with al-Shabaab. Independent sources said he was likely forced to drive the car wired with remote controlled explosives, which was then detonated by al-Shabaab sources nearby.
"The explosion was huge and those who carried out that explosion attached the explosive to the car. They then they used a remote control the explosion from another area where they monitored their operation,"' Saleoh Omar, a TFG official confirmed to Somalia Report.

Locals said the explosion was quick and likely premature.

“The car came out of a garage near the road and exploded immediately. We do not know the target. No government vehicles or AMISIOM were in the area. Only the driver was killed and a person passing by,” Mohamed Sa’id, an eyewitness, told Somalia Report.

Colonel Khalif Ahmed Ereg, a Transitional Federal Government (TFG) security intelligence chief for Banadir region who reached the scene, confirmed a car bomb was to blame, but suspected it was an intentional suicide bomber.

“We do not know the motive behind this barbaric attack, it seems that the intention was to damage TFG and AMISOM but it prematurely detonated. We can thank God for that. We are investigating the incident," said Colonel Khalif.

Grenade Attack in Bakara Market

Meanwhile, at least two people were killed and ten were injured, mainly civilians, when a grenade was thrown into a busy intersection of Mogadishu's largest market, Bakara. 

“The attack has happened as people were busy with their jobs. I saw many wounded people and then after the blast TFG forces opened fire into four directions so we were all scared,” Ali Ahmed, a conductor of public transport, told Somalia Report.

These attacks come as al-Shabaab fighters vowed they will increase their attacks on the capital as a warning to the traditional elders who are set to approve the new constitutional draft.

This also comes as a suicide bomber blew himself up in a restaurant in Galgadud, killing several prominent Somali lawmakers today.
Although no group has yet claimed responsibility for today's attacks, officials blame the al-Shabaab militant group battling for control of Somalia which is known for conducting suicide attacks.

Somalia Report is investigating the incident and will post an update shortly.

© Somalia Report 2012. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Somalia Report content, graphics, photographs and web site image is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent from editor@somaliareport.com. The "Somalia Report" logo is a registered trademark of Somalia Report.