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hiv_healthofficers Hundreds of people mostly women conducted a peaceful procession in Rumbek on Thursday to mark the launch of campaign to end fistula disease in southern Sudan. Addressing the crowd at Rumbek teaching hospital governor of lake state,Chol Tong Mayay, said that women reproductive health should be the priority of the government.

Published in Sudan
Monday, 06 September 2010 07:17

Flooding in Aweil affected Thousands

6 September 2010 – Flooding due to heavy rains has caused massive destruction and destroyed the livelihoods of thousands of people in Northern Bahr El-Ghazal, according to state officials..

"Though we are still accessing the damage caused by this flooding, relative estimates of destruction … is estimated at 90% for the Aweil (town) population … in the form of shelters, flour, sleeping gear, chicken and shoats (young pigs)," said Peter Kuot Jel, State Ministry for Physical Infrastructure official and head of the recently established Flood Risk and Disaster Management programme.

At the county level, 70% of Aweil South, 60% of Aweil East and 70% of Aweil West's crops and animals had been destroyed, affecting thousands of residents, the ministry official said.

The floods had also reportedly claimed three lives, and more people would likely die due to waterborne diseases, said Mr. Jel.

State Ministry of Health Director General Dr. Edward Ayong Abiai said that flood-related diseases had already been found in various parts of the state. "Many people have been admitted to health centers because of diarrhea and waterborne diseases associated with the flood problem."

Some hospitals lack drugs to treat flood victims, amid worries that cases of cholera could appear.

"Currently we don't have enough medicine in our stock," said Aweil Hospital Director General Dr. Garang Thomas Dhel. "At this stage we haven't seen cases of cholera but we don't know what will happen next, as the problem is continuing."

Mr. Jel noted that the government was working to ease the water problem by building drainage ditches.

"Though the ministry lacks machinery, we have liaised with construction companies to help us with excavators and hire some from traders in town," he said. "With those machines, we dug a drainage channel of about seven kilometres long to the lowland."

Last month, the Government of Southern Sudan declared Northern Bahr El-Ghazal State a disaster area following floods that swept many parts of it.

The region also suffered in 2008 from heavy flooding, which displaced about 40,000 people.

Source: United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS)

Published in Sudan
Monday, 06 September 2010 07:33

Egypt Air expands sub-Saharan services

Egypt Air is expanding its fast-growing network further with the launch of a twice weekly service between Khartoum, Sudan, and the Mediterranean city of Alexandria.

The launch follows shortly after the introduction of a twice-weekly service from its Cairo hub, via Khartoum, to Southern Sudan’s capital city of Juba.

The national flag carrier is keen to build close ties with the sub-Saharan countries that also support a bilateral aid agreement.

In Eastern African in particular, Cairo-based investment firm Citadel has recently acquired a major interest in the rail operator Rift Valley Railways. In Southern Sudan, an aid offer has been made towards infrastructural projects worth US$300 million.

In other news, Egypt Air has also struck a deal with in-flight communications provider OnAir to offer inflight passenger communications services on the first of Egyptair’s fleet of twin-aisle Airbus 330-300 aircraft.

Egyptair customers will be able to stay connected inflight using their mobile phones or smartphones and access the internet by connecting their laptops wirelessly.

OnAir provides GSM/GPRS and Wi-Fi internet. Mobile OnAir uses Inmarsat SwiftBroadband services from Inmarsat fourth generation satellites.

The aircraft operates between Cairo and London. More are scheduled to be equipped in coming months.

Egyptair customers will be able to stay connected inflight using their mobile phones or smartphones and access the internet by connecting their laptops wirelessly.

OnAir provides GSM/GPRS and Wi-Fi internet. Mobile OnAir uses Inmarsat SwiftBroadband services from Inmarsat fourth generation satellites.

The aircraft operates between Cairo and London. More are scheduled to be equipped in coming months. - Travel news

Published in Sudan

idp-camp-darfur The spokesman of the IDPs in Himeida Camp, Adil Adam, said that at least six internally displaced persons and ten others were wounded in clashes that erupted this morning between IDPs and government supporters, reinforced by government forces.

Published in Sudan

unimed-peace-keepers The United Nations/African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) has said that the suspects allegedly involved in last month's incident of the internally displaced Kalma Camp will not be handed over to the government unless certain pre-conditions are agreed upon.

Published in Sudan

By PATRICE CITERA, Associated Press Writer

 

KINSHASA, Congo – A riverboat loaded with passengers and fuel drums caught fire and capsized in southern Congo, and 200 people were feared dead, a survivor said Sunday. Another survivor confirmed the account and said local fishermen refused to help drowning passengers who jumped off the crowded boat.

The incident that happened Saturday evening would be the deadliest boat accident in the Central African nation this year, and among the worst in Africa this year.

The boats that traverse Congo's rivers are often in poor repair and filled beyond capacity, with little regard for safety. The industry is not well-regulated and boat operators are known to fill boats to dangerous levels.

A local official confirmed the boat had tipped but said the passenger manifest apparently vanished in the fire.

Fabrice Muamba, who said he was on the boat when it caught fire Saturday night on the Kasai River, said he thought only 15 of the more than 200 people he thought were aboard were able to swim to safety. He said passengers began to jump overboard when the engine caught fire as it passed the remote village of Mbendayi, some 45 miles (70 kilometers) from the town of Tshikapa, which is north of Congo's border with Angola.

Another survivor, a woman named Romaine Mishondo, said the boat was already packed with "hundreds" of passengers when it stopped some 10 minutes before the fire to pick up more people.

She said she did not know exactly how many people were aboard, but said the boat was so crowded it reminded her of "a whole market in the village full of people."

But when the fire started and people began jumping overboard, she said nearby fishermen ignored drowning passengers' pleas for help.

"Fishermen attacked the boat and started beating passengers with paddles as they were (trying) to loot goods," she said. "The fishermen refused save passengers, instead taking goods into their pirogues. ... I survived because I hung onto a jerrycan until another vessel passed by the scene and rescued us."

Boat owner Mwamba Mwati Nguma Leonard said a survivor and an employee called to tell him the boat caught fire when workers spilled fuel and ignited the engine.

"At the moment I am crying after learning my boat caught fire," Leonard said. "I was just told on phone that it was while seamen were putting fuel into the tank that an explosion occurred after the oil touched the vessel's battery."

He said he has asked police to arrest the boat's managers as he believes they employed unskilled workers.

But he said he had no further details because he was in Congo's capital, Kinshasa, some 500 miles (800 kilometers) from the scene, and because his employees on the scene did not answer his calls Sunday.

"Since I am far away in Kinshasa, I cannot confirm at the moment the exactly what happened," he said.

Leonard also confirmed Muamba's account that the boat was carrying many drums full of fuel on its journey through Kasai Occidental Province. Leonard said the boat also was carrying sacks of maize. He said he did not know how many people were aboard.

Francois Madila, an official from the navigation department in the province, said police arrested two of the vessel's sailors and are investigating the incident. Madila said the sailors have not said how many people were aboard and that the passenger list appeared to have disappeared in the fire.

Other officials and witnesses in the remote area could not be reached for comment Sunday.

The incident is the deadliest of several boating incidents reported this year in Congo.

In July, officials said at least 80 people died when a boat ferrying about 200 passengers to Congo's capital capsized after hitting a rock.

In May, dozens of people died when an overloaded canoe capsized on a river in eastern Congo. And last November, at least 90 people were killed after a logging boat sank on a lake in Congo. The timber-carrying vessel was not supposed to be carrying passengers.

Congo is a vast country of jungles and huge rivers in Central Africa with little more than 300 miles (480 kilometers) of paved road. Many people prefer to take boats even if they do not know how to swim.

Published in Sudan
Sunday, 05 September 2010 10:55

Rainfalls boost food security in South Sudan

By IRIN

 

Juba, Sunday- Food security in many parts of Southern Sudan is set to improve after good rains, according to recent crop and precipitation assessments.

Some 2.4 million people in Southern Sudan received aid from the UN World Food Programme in June, during the lean season between harvests.

Now, harvesting of early crops of maize and groundnuts has begun in Eastern and Central Equatoria, Lakes, Warrap, Unity, Northern and Western Bahr el-Gazal regions, according to the Food and Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS Net), a project of the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

“In most parts of these areas, rainfall has been above average and better than in 2009, though dry spells of varying duration or localized flooding have occurred in some areas, with impacts ranging from minimal to moderate,” according to FEWS Net’s latest Food Security Outlook.

“Food security in these areas is expected to significantly improve at the end of September to mid-October,” it said.

The report warned that while heavier rain improved pastureland and access to water for livestock, it also increased the risk of flooding in some areas.

And for the improvement in the food situation to continue through 2011, security in Southern Sudan had to remain stable.

Areas that would still remain food-insecure are Aweil West and South Twic East, Awerial and central parts of Jonglei state, Western Equatoriaand Northern Bahr el-Ghazal, where floods have displaced almost 60,000 people.

 

Published in Sudan
Sunday, 05 September 2010 11:06

Nigeria’s Super Eagles beat Madagascar 2-0

Kickoff

Nigeria’s Super Eagles beat Madagascar 2-0 in a 2012 Africa Cup of Nations Group B match played at the UJ Esuene Stadium in Calabar on Sunday.

It was not a convincing display for the star-studded Super Eagles, who raced into a two-goal lead before halftime.

Obafemi Martins opened scoring for the home team after 20 minutes when he got to the end of a loose ball on the top of the 18-yard box before he fired home past the impressive Madagascar goalkeeper.

Martins was again involved in the second Nigerian goal when he dribbled his way into the Madagascar box from the left before he delivered a low cut-back for Esperance striker Michael Eneramo to make hay with a tap-in.

Martins was again on target late in the second half, but Tunisian referee Jedidi Slim incorrectly disallowed this effort for a foul on the Madagascar goalkeeper.

Goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama, who was mostly on holidays for the duration of the game, was called to make a finger-tip save with five minutes left on the clock. He scrambled away a goal-bound shot for a corner to the relief of the packed Calabar Stadium.

Both Eneramo and Martins had chances to give the Eagles a bigger home win.

Eneramo could have opened scoring as early as the first minute, but he stumbled when all alone with the goalkeeper, while the Madagascar shot stopper Masina made a point-blank save off Martins after the break.

Nigeria are now second in their group after Guinea ran away 4-1 winners also on Sunday in Ethiopia.

Both Guinea and Nigeria will square off in a decisive qualifier next month in Conakry.

There were full international debuts for former schoolboy international Stanley Okoro and Ahmed Musa, who finished top scorer in the Nigeria Premier League last season with 18 goals.

Published in Sudan

RADES, Tunisia (AP) -Striker Iso Kanyenda scored with a late penalty as Malawi rallied from 2-0 down to earn a 2-2 draw away to Tunisia in a 2012 African Cup of Nations qualifier.

Lens forward Issam Jemaa looked to have steered Tunisia toward a comfortable win with goals in the 11th and 26th minutes to take his international tally to 21 goals in 51 games.

But Orlando Pirates forward Chiukepo Msowoya pulled a goal back in the 45th, and Kanyenda equalized in the 82nd.

Botswana tops Group K with 10 points from four games after winning 2-1 at home to Togo on Saturday.

Tunisia is second with four points, having played one game less. Malawi has three points.

Tunisia, the 2004 African Cup winner, lost its opening qualifier 1-0 at home to Botswana before winning 3-1 at Chad.

 

Published in Sudan
Sunday, 05 September 2010 11:25

Ghana and Zambia walk to victory

Ghana and Zambia walk to victory World Cup quarterfinalists Ghana cruised to a 3-0 victory over little Swaziland on Sunday in an opening-round 2012 African Nations Cup qualifier.

Turkey-based striker Mamadou Niang snatched the first hat-trick of the competition as Senegal surprised defensively brittle Democratic Republic of Congo 4-2 in Lubumbashi with Patou Kabangu on target twice for the losers.

Nigeria hardly raised a sweat as they triumphed 2-0 against Madagascar in southern city Calabar through clinical first-half finishes from strikers Obafemi Martins and Michael Eneramo.

Cedric Amissi earned Burundi a surprise 1-1 draw in Benin by scoring five minutes from full-time and Liberia had to come from behind to produce the same score against Zimbabwe in Paynesville.

From the moment the Cup fixtures were released last February the only question being posed about the visit of Ghana to Swaziland was what the winning margin would be.

Midfielder Andre Ayew, a son of African football legend Abedi 'Pele' Ayew, put the Black Stars ahead on 13 minutes, striker Prince Tagoe struck the second midway through the second half and defender Hans Sarpei completed the rout.

Ghana are ranked second by Fifa in Africa and Swaziland 35 so the result was entirely predictable and took the winners to the top of Group I on goal difference from Sudan, who defeated Congo 2-0 in Omdurman late on Saturday.

Zambia were also in the mood for goals, scoring four without reply against international rookies Comoros Islands in Lusaka to take an early lead in Group C after Mozambique and Libya fought a goalless Maputo draw.

Comoros, a group of islands off south-east Africa and competing in the qualifiers for only the second time, admitted before a game delayed 24 hours by the late arrival of the Eritrean match officials that they had little hope.

And their defensive resistance lasted just five minutes before Rainford Kalaba gave Chipolopolo (Copper Bullets) a lead that Fwayo Tembo and James Chamanga added to before half-time.

Zambia found it more difficult to carve openings in the second half and supporters had to wait until seven minutes before full-time to see the net bulge again as Emmanuel Mayuka completed the scoring.

Mozambique will be disappointed not to have taken maximum points off Libya at Machava Stadium on the outskirts of capital Maputo with the North Africans making their competitive debut under Brazilian coach Marcos Paqueta.

Another new coach, Scotland-born Iffy Onuora, suffered a debut from hell as Ethiopia crumbled 4-1 at home to Guinea, leaving the East Africans with five fixtures to play and virtually no hope of making the finals.

Gabon and Equatorial Guinea will co-host the 2012 Nations Cup, the first time the tournament has officially been split between two countries since it was launched 53 years ago in Sudan.


© Sapa - AFP

Published in Sudan
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