Energy News  
AFRICA NEWS
Africa's crises means arms trade thrives

Ethiopian rebel faction to sign peace deal with government
Addis Ababa (AFP) Oct 12, 2010 - Senior leaders of a breakaway Ethiopian rebel faction gathered in Addis Ababa Tuesday to sign a peace deal with the government. Tuesday's signing follows the government's June announcement that the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) faction had agreed to lay down arms, but the spokesman of the main group dismissed it as Addis Ababa's propaganda. However, the government claims the breakaway group represents around 80 percent of the ONLF. The ONLF has been fighting for the independence of the remote southeastern Ogaden -- a region rich in oil -- claiming they have been marginalised by the ruling regime.

In a major raid in 2007, the ONLF rebels attacked a Chinese-run oil exploration operation in the region, killing 77 people including nine Chinese nationals and prompting a government crackdown. The barren Ogaden region has long been extremely poor, but the discovery of gas and oil has brought new hopes of wealth as well as new causes of conflict. Both the government and the insurgents routinely trade accusations or trumpet major military victories, but information on the region is very hard to verify because independent media access to the remote region is banned. Under the peace deal, members of the breakaway faction are to benefit from immunity from prosecution and their movement is to turn into a political party. The ONLF has said in the past that it was ready to talk with the government through the mediation of a third country, a request so far rejected by Addis Abeba.
by Staff Writers
Pretoria, South Africa (UPI) Oct 11, 2010
Viktor Bout, a Russian who allegedly sold vast amounts of weapons that fueled Africa's countless wars over the last two decades, is awaiting extradition from Thailand to the United States on terrorism-related charges.

His arrest in a U.S. sting operation in March 2008 for plotting to sell 700 anti-aircraft missiles and other weapons to Colombian rebels may have ended his long career as the most prolific merchant of death in Africa but it hasn't stopped that deadly trade.

On Sept. 30, U.S. federal prosecutors said the defense minister of the troubled West African state of Ivory Coast, Michal Amani N'Guessan, was involved in a plot to smuggle weapons from the United States in defiance of a U.N. arms embargo.

The minister was luckier than Bout. He and others implicated in the $3.8 million plot have diplomatic immunity to shield them from prosecution.

But his front man, Col. Yao N'Guessan, who brokered the deal in the United States for 4,000 9mm Glock handguns, 200,000 rounds of ammunition and 50,000 tear gas grenades, was indicated Sept. 30 in U.S. District Court in San Jose, Calif.

N'Guessan and other government officials in the Ivory Coast, a former French colony, had made little effort to hide their involvement. They claim the country's security forces, supposedly outnumbered and outgunned by the opposition, need the weapons to ensure that presidential elections scheduled for Oct. 31 are conducted peacefully.

Ivory Coast was torn by civil war from 2002 until May 2007 when U.N. peacekeepers were deployed. The United Nations imposed an arms embargo after the government broke a peace agreement in 2004.

The election is the first presidential poll in more than five years in the violence-plagued nation.

The crisis in the Ivory Coast, a major cocoa producer, is only one of a score of conflicts simmering or in progress across Africa.

The Democratic Republic of Congo, which has some of the world's richest mineral deposits, has been gripped by a 15-year war that involves half a dozen states.

Uganda has been plagued by a brutal rebellion by the Lord's Resistance Army for two decades.

Angola and Sudan were ravaged by civil wars for many years until recently but Muslim Sudan faces a secession by its Christian and animist south in the months ahead and both sides are reported to be rearming.

Violence-ridden Chad, one of the world's poorest and most corrupt states, has been torn apart by political violence and civil war since 1960.

Now it's on the brink of a humanitarian disaster after its government demanded a 3,300-strong U.N. peacekeeping force withdraws, leaving some 500,000 refugees in the east at serious risk from armed marauders and brigands.

The International Crisis Group, a Brussels conflict resolution organization, warned in September that Guinea's armed forces threaten democratic rule that could throw the country, and much of West Africa, into chaos.

Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation with 150 million people, is gripped by political turmoil as a divisive presidential election scheduled for January looms closer.

Its oil-rich southern region faces the resumption of an insurgency that has slashed oil production by one third since 2005, while Muslim and Christian militants are slaughtering each other in the central region.

There are other flash points across the continent, which means good business for arms dealers, sometimes in their own back yard.

According to arms watchdog Ceasefire Campaign, South Africa, the only state on the continent with an indigenous arms industry outside of Egypt, is one of the main providers of weapons on the continent.

In June, the lobby group said the Pretoria government had sold arms worth $1.7 billion to states blacklisted by South Africa's National Conventional Arms Control Act because of human rights abuses, because they are engaged in conflict issues or are subject to U.N. embargoes.

South Africa's arms exports are classified. But Rob Thomson, a senior Ceasefire Campaign official, said his organization had been able to piece together a comprehensive list of sales since 2002. Buyers included Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Colombia and the United Arab Emirates, he said.

All told, he declared, "there are 58 countries that we have sold arms to in the last 10 years that we shouldn't have sold arms to."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


AFRICA NEWS
In South Africa, crowded graveyards make for heated spirits
Durban, South Africa (AFP) Oct 10, 2010
Want to share a grave? It's a blasphemy for South Africa's Zulus who revere their ancestors, but overcrowding in Durban's cemeteries has forced the city to begin "recyclying" tombs. "We are forced to do so," says Pepe Dass, the city official who oversees graveyards. "It is not only a question of space, but a question of sustainability." Durban is located in KwaZulu-Natal province which s ... read more







AFRICA NEWS
New research questions hydroelectric reservoir emissions

GE Expands Its Waste-To-Energy Capabilities

Completion date for UAE renewable energy city pushed back

Prince Charles hails Indian slum as model for Western life

AFRICA NEWS
IEA wants govts. to do more on efficiency

ORNL Uses New Technologies To Take Steam Out Of Wasted Energy

Beijing softens tone over S.China Sea disputes: US official

Asia territorial disputes pose threat to stability: Gates

AFRICA NEWS
Wind could provide 20 pct of world power by 2030: study

Morocco draws on the elements for its green energy project

Spanish windmill makers tilt overseas

US Wind Energy Project Nets Billions

AFRICA NEWS
Taiwan Cement plans large solar power plant

Cox Enterprises Completes Alternative Energy Project In Portland

SolarReserve Moves Forward On Southern California Solar Thermal Project

Azuray Technologies And Suntech Collaborate To Develop Advanced Smart Panel Technology

AFRICA NEWS
SKB Ready To Apply For Permits To Build Spent Nuclear Fuel Repository

US, French nuclear power plant financing hits snag

EdF charges Constellation pulls out of US reactor project

Belgian consortium announces nuclear fuel deal with China

AFRICA NEWS
Biofuels And Biomaterials March To Scale

Brown University Chemists Simplify Biodiesel Conversion

Bioenergy Choices Could Dramatically Change Midwest Bird Diver

Growth Of Biofuel Industry Hurt By GMO Regulations

AFRICA NEWS
Lunar Probe And Space Exploration Is China's Duty To Mankind

Four Chinese Lunar Landers Mooted

China launches second lunar probe

Chang'e-2 Heads For Moon

AFRICA NEWS
Hopes dimmed for Cancun climate talks

Greatest Warming Is In The North, But Biggest Impact On Life Is In The Tropics

Study Sheds New Light On How The Sun Affects The Earth Climate

China and US blame each other in climate stand-off


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement