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    LUSAKA, June 19 (Xinhua) — Zambia’s light-welterweight Hastings Bwalya pounded Cape Verde’s Varela Danielson at the on-going African Boxing Championships in Mauritius to continue with his impressive performance in the run up to the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, according to Times of Zambia.

    Bwalya recorded a unanimous 22-3 points decision despite carrying an injury sustained during the Amateur Boxing Association Cup in Taiwan where he settled for a silver medal early this month.

    Acting Zambia Amateur Boxing Federation Stephen Simpemba said Zambia’s other boxer flyweight Cassius Chiyanika who lost in his first encounter put up an impressive performance.

    Chiyanika Hammered Bok Kgomotso of Botswana 19-5 to maintain Zammbia’s winning spirit at the championships.

    Simpemba said Bwalya and Chiyanika are among six athletes that would represent Zambia at the Beijing Olympic Games.

    The African boxing championship have attracted 58 boxers that have qualified for the Beijing Olympics.

 
Editor: An Lu

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LUSAKA (Reuters) – Zambian has selected a unit of Rabo Bank of the Netherlands to fund its long term oil imports after financing negotiations collapsed with a South African bank, a senior official said.

Peter Mumba, the permanent secretary for the ministry of energy and water development, said the Zambia National Commercial Bank (ZNCB) had been selected to pay upfront for Zambia oil imports.

Mumba said the ZNBC, in which Rabo Bank owns a 49 percent stake with management control, was selected after talks with Stanbic Bank Zambia Ltd., a subsidiary of South Africa’s Standard Bank, collapsed in March when the two parties failed to agree conditions for a $1.2 billion oil financing deal.

“We have picked Zanaco Plc and immediately we are going into negotiations with them to complete the nitty-gritty issues,” Mumba told Reuters late on Wednesday, but he gave no further details.

The pan African government-owned PTA Bank, which has paid for Zambia’s two previous oil imports of 90,000 tonnes per shipment, will finance a third import of 90,000 tonnes in July before the ZNCB takes over future payments, the state ZNBC radio separately quoted Mumba saying.

Zambia was forced to float a fresh tender after the collapse of talks with Stanbic Bank.

Zambia has had no financier for its oil procurement since French oil major Total, which owns the country’s Indeni Oil Refinery on a 50-50 basis with the government, stopped paying for oil imports in July 2007, after differences with the government over pricing of petroleum products.

The government chose Kuwait’s International Petroleum Group (IPG) last November to supply nearly 1.5 million tonnes of crude oil for two years.

The first 90,000 tonnes shipment of crude oil worth $75 million was financed by the pan African government-owned PTA Bank, due to delays in concluding negotiations with Stanbic.

Zambia uses huge amounts of diesel to run its copper mines, the country’s economic lifeblood.

Reported By ZNBC-50 Chinese companies coming
Commerce Minister, Felix Mutati says over 50 Chinese companies are expected to be attracted to the Zambia- China Economic and Trade Zone in Chambeshi.

Mr. Mutati said the company will set firms in different sectors of the economy which will include pharmaceuticals and mineral processing.

He was speaking shortly after touring the Zambia-China Economic and Trade Zones in Chambeshi.

NFC African Mining Chief Executive Officer, Luo Xingeng appealed to the government to expedite the issuance of work permits for expatriate workers.

He said efforts by the company to have permits issued to expatriates to work in expert jobs has not been receiving the desired attention from government.

Reported by ZNBC

The United Kingdom has given the National Assembly about K8.9 billion to implement parliamentary reforms.

Finance Minister, Ng’andu Magande said he was happy that the funds will enhance the effectiveness of the national assembly.

Mr. Magande also commended the United Kingdom for its assistance to develop the governance system through grants and aid.

The minister was speaking in Lusaka, after he signed the one point four million pounds grant with the United Kingdom, for the implementation of parliamentary reforms.

Visiting UK Minister of Development, Gillian Merrow said her government will continue assisting Zambia in its democratic dispensation process.

Ms. Merrow said the grant is aimed at improving relations between members of parliament and their constituents.

According to ZNBC,

Foreign Affairs Misnister, kabinga Pande said,Zambia plans to open more missions in strategic regions abroad, the move aimed at enhancing Zambia’s economic and political relations in the world.

According to the report, Mr Pande was speaking in Lusaka, during the opening of Zambia’s Heads of missions conference.

“He Said Zambia’s interaction with the international community must be based on maximising economic benefit. The Minister observed that the emphasis on economic diplomacy has changed the face of international relations world-wide. Heads of Foreign Missions are expected to meet President Mwanawasa – Friday.Reported by ZNBC

 

Bloomberg News

Published: June 17, 2008

Today in Europe

PARIS: As a fresh battalion of 700 French soldiers sets off this summer for the mountains of eastern Afghanistan, President Nicolas Sarkozy is seeking a more coherent course for a six-and-a-half year conflict that has no end in sight.

In Europe, where committing troops to the war has been an increasingly hard sell, continued involvement hinges on a comprehensive plan for the country’s reconstruction, which was the focus of an international conference in Paris last week.

European leaders “want a new strategy that’s more saleable at home,” says Daniel Korski, author of “Afghanistan: Europe’s Forgotten War” and a senior fellow at the London-based European Council on Foreign Relations. “It is part of an outreach to the domestic audience that there’s more to this than the military component.”

When the war was started in late 2001 in response to the attacks of Sept. 11 against New York and Washington, the fight against Al Qaeda and its Taliban allies had broad support in both the United States and Europe, in stark contrast to the more divisive, costlier and deadlier Iraq war that began two years later.

Since then, Afghanistan has increasingly been caught in a spiral of violence and corruption, fueled by a booming opium trade that has put local officials in thrall to a criminal narcotics racket.

Heroin production in Afghanistan has tripled since 2001 and now accounts for 90 percent of the world supply, according to U.S. figures. Profit from the drug trade helps fund Taliban insurgents, who have stepped up attacks. In 2003, there were three suicide bombings. In 2007, there were 130.

As allied casualties have mounted – more than 840 at last count – popular support for the war has waned in Europe, limiting the ability of government leaders to respond to urgent pleas for help from the United States and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which leads the international force in Afghanistan.

Money for humanitarian and reconstruction projects is easier to collect. More than $20 billion in aid was pledged at the Paris conference last week, as 85 countries and international organizations rallied to help. The United States was by far the largest donor, with a promise of $10.2 billion over two years on top of $23 billion spent since 2001. France pledged to deliver $165 million by 2009.

Sarkozy has won praise from President George W. Bush for increasing France’s troop commitment in Afghanistan. Last week, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of Italy followed suit, telling Bush that he was willing to let Italian troops assume a broader military role. Prime Minister Gordon Brown committed more British troops Monday.

They and other leaders have been less successful in convincing their populations of the importance of fighting in Afghanistan.

Sixty-eight percent of French people oppose Sarkozy’s decision to send more troops, according to a survey conducted by the Paris-based pollster BVA, which questioned 970 people between March 28 and 29.

In April, the country’s Socialist opposition introduced a no-confidence motion in Parliament because of Sarkozy’s plan to increase the French presence to 2,300 soldiers; the measure failed. German leaders, including Chancellor Angela Merkel, have had to face down political opposition each time they renewed their deployment of some 3,500 troops.

Hosting the Paris conference, which focused more on social and developmental issues, was one way for Sarkozy to offset criticism of the new deployment.

Aid donors have criticized the reconstruction effort in Afghanistan, which they say is plagued by corruption and a “bouillabaisse” of overlapping assistance programs. The conference last week promised a new start, with the local United Nations mission given a broader mandate to coordinate projects and the Afghan government more authority to execute them.

There are now about 70,000 international troops in Afghanistan; 32,000 are Americans, according to Pentagon and NATO figures. The U.S. commitment is due to increase again next year, perhaps by as many as 7,000, filling a shortfall left by reluctant NATO allies: just two years ago, the U.S. force was 20,000.

French officials stress that the Afghanistan conflict cannot be solved by force alone.

“There will be no military solution,” says Eric Chevallier, the French Foreign Ministry’s special adviser and the conference’s chief organizer. “There must be a military dimension, but it will be a political solution, achieved through a comprehensive approach.”

Europeans look to the next U.S. president – the Democrat Barack Obama or the Republican John McCain – to pay more attention to Afghanistan as the war in Iraq eventually winds down.

“It is clear that both McCain and Obama would invest more in Afghanistan,” Korski says. “They see Afghanistan as the ‘good war.”‘

 

CTV.ca News Staff

Air Canada is blaming rising fuel costs for a decision to slash 2,000 jobs and reduce its capacity.

The cuts stem from a seven per cent reduction in capacity in the airline’s fall and winter schedule, which means less staff will be needed.

On its website, the company claims to have the equivalent of 23,900 full-time employees, with an average of 1,370 scheduled flights per day in 2007.

Air Canada president Montie Brewer said in a statement issued Tuesday that the job losses were “painful,” but necessary as the airline must reduce flying time to stay profitable.

“I regret having to take these actions but they are necessary to remain competitive going forward. Air Canada, like most global airlines, needs to adapt its business and reduce flying that has become unprofitable in the current fuel environment,” he said.

The airline, the first in Canada to introduce a fuel surcharge, claims that every dollar rise in the price of oil per barrel translates into a $26-million increase in its annual fuel bill.

Fuel accounts for more than 30 per cent of Air Canada’s operating costs. The company said that the rapid rise in fuel costs could mean it will face a bill that’s $1 billion higher than in 2008 than it was in 2007.

The capacity reduction, which will total seven per cent, will begin in October. The reductions will allocated as follows:

  • Domestic: Two per cent
  • U.S. transborder: 13 per cent
  • International: Seven per cent

Air Canada has previously announced the suspension of its Toronto-Rome flight. However, it will remain over the summer.

Canada’s largest airline has also previously announced the suspension of its Vancouver-Osaka, Japan flight, which will stop on Oct. 26.

An Air Canada spokesperson told CTV.ca that the details of the cuts haven’t been determined yet.

The reductions mean Air Canada has reduced its capacity growth outlook.

It had previously forecast growth of up to 2.5 per cent above 2007 levels. That has now been cut to anywhere from minus one per cent to plus one per cent.

Strategy questioned

A University of Toronto business professor and airlines industry analyst questioned Air Canada’s strategy, saying it could hurt the airline rather than help.

“I’m really concerned Air Canada is going to get itself into a vicious cycle,” Joseph D’Cruz of the Rotman School of Management told CTV Newsnet on Tuesday.

“As morale goes down, the treatment that frontline employees offer to passengers is bound to suffer. In the airline business, everything depends on how the frontline employees behave,” he said.

One beneficiary could be Westjet, which could see its market share rise, he said, adding it could force further cutbacks in staff and flights at Air Canada.

D’Cruz said the airline showed little concern about the welfare of their employees in its announcement.


Winnie the Pooh, Luke Skywalker and British football hooligans could shape the foreign policy of Barack Obama if he becomes US President, according to a key adviser.

Barack Obama with his daughter Sasha, seven, in Chicago after giving a speech about fatherhood
GETTY
Barack Obama with his daughter Sasha, seven, in Chicago after giving a speech about fatherhood

Richard Danzig, who served as Navy Secretary under President Clinton and is tipped to become National Security Adviser in an Obama White House, told a major foreign policy conference in Washington that the future of US strategy in the war on terrorism should follow a lesson from the pages of Winnie the Pooh, which can be shortened to: if it is causing you too much pain, try something else.

Mr Danzig told the Centre for New American Security: “Winnie the Pooh seems to me to be a fundamental text on national security.”

He spelt out how American troops, spies and anti-terrorist officials could learn key lessons by understanding the desire of terrorists to emulate superheroes like Luke Skywalker, and the lust for violence of violent football fans.

Mr Obama’s candidacy was given an early boost by his opposition to the Iraq war and he has repeatedly said the US needs to rethink its approach to the Middle East.

Mr Danzig spelt out the need to change by reading a paragraph from chapter one of the children’s classic, which says: “Here is Edward Bear, coming downstairs now, bump, bump, bump on the back of his head behind Christopher Robin. It is, as far as he knows, the only way of coming down stairs. But sometimes he thinks there really is another way if only he could stop bumping a minute and think about it.”

Mr Obama’s approach will be popular in Europe, where President George W. Bush has spent the week on a farewell tour, arriving in Britain yesterday for meetings with the Queen and Gordon Brown.

In a subtle break from Mr Bush’s belief that the war on terror can be won, Mr Danzig, who is a Pentagon adviser on bioterrorism, warned that while the West can defeat individual terrorist groups and plots, it can never entirely remove the threat posed by nuclear proliferation or the prospect of bioterrorism.

In a briefing which will inform Mr Obama’s understanding of terrorists, Mr Danzig said he learnt much from recent interviews with jailed Aum Shinrikyo terrorists who released sarin nerve gas on the Tokyo underground in 1995.

He said that even people who are relatively well off and successful can feel like failures and become alientated from their societies. He said one terrorist told him: “We have been raised on a theory of superheroes. We all want to be like Luke Skywalker.

“When we’re doing mundane things, we lose track of our ambition but when someone comes along, like Asahara, the head of the cult, and presents himself as a messiah and gives us a picture of progress that is ordained by heaven and that we are carrying out a saintly mission on earth that is for us extraordinarily evocative.”

Mr Danzig added: “The parallels with al Qaeda are obvious.”

He said that another lesson about terrorists can be learnt from studying violent football fans. “One of the best books I’ve read on terrorism in recent years was not about terrorism at all,” he said. “It’s Bill Buford’s book Among the Thugs, which is a description of soccer violence in Britain.

“Buford became absorbed by soccer violence. He describes the most appalling examples of soccer violence by fans against fans. But he describes with relentless honesty how he finds sickening things attractive. He says violence lets the adrenaline flow; it’s like sex, you live in the moment.”

 

By Zamchro Correspondent

I found this article on-line published by Nairobi Daily News,  Kenya. The article in Bold was written by

Tajudeen is deputy director UN Millennium Campaign, Africa.


A quote by African opinonist  Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem:

There is a carnivalesque celebration across Africa about Senator Barrack Obama becoming the Presidential candidate for the Democrats in next November’s elections in the US.

The excitement is such that one would be forgiven for thinking that Obama was about to be sworn in. The enthusiasm ignores the fact that he is yet to be formally adopted and still has an election to fight against the Republicans. Nowhere is this excitement more infectious than in Kenya, the homeland of Obama’s father.

Quote from Daily news -Nairobi Opinion:

“Kenyans are not alone. I am not sure how many of the millions of Africans now jubilating about Obama’s possible victory, would be that enthusiastic were Obama to be standing for office in their own countries. Can you imagine an Obama as a presidential candidate in Ivory Coast?”

Would he not be reminded that he is not African enough? How could he pass the ‘ivoirite’ test when even a former Prime Minister of the country, born in the country was disqualified? If Obama had stood in a Nigerian election would he have generated the same mass adulation?

This is a continent in which a former President (Kenneth Kaunda), founding father of Zambia and a man who served as President for 25 years, had his citizenship stripped by his successor Chiluba (a small-minded small man) because his parents allegedly came from a neighbouring country (not even another continent) The former President of Tanzania, Benjamin Mkapa, had the citizenship of a number of Tanzanians annulled because they (or he suspected that they) disagreed with him politically.”

Zambians did not strip the first Zambian President Dr K Kaunda’s citizenship. He ruled Zambia for 27 years. It was just time for change, unfortunately, there was only Chiluba who came forward to challenge his long leadership. Though Mr Chiluba was just another hypocrite. What ever treament he gave Dr K Kaunda, has come back to bite his own butt.

As part of his campaign of prolonging his gerontocracy, President Mugabe stripped many Zimbabweans of their citizenship. The journalist Trevor Ncube was declared a Malawian, but his siblings who were not considered sympathisers of the opposition, remained Zimbabweans.

Ethiopia and Eritrea shamelessly engaged in tit for tat denationalisation of innocent citizens because of the senseless war between the two leaders. There are so many examples of routine denial of citizenship across Africa.”

The ease with which political opponents are foreignised in Africa would never permit Obama to dream of becoming a local councillor, let alone aspiring for the Presidency in an African country. Even within the same country, claims of who is an indigene, a settler, a resident, and so on, are used to disempower fellow citizens.”

 

 

Posted: 03:00 PM ET
From CNN AP

Gore has not ruled out a future presidential run.

Gore has not ruled out a future presidential run.

(CNN) — After remaining neutral throughout the Democratic primary season, former Vice President Al Gore is officially backing Barack Obama’s presidential run, and will appear with him at a Michigan campaign event Monday night.

“A few hours from now I will step on stage in Detroit, Michigan to announce my support for Senator Barack Obama,” said the 2000 Democratic presidential nominee in a fundraising e-mail sent to supporters Monday. “From now through Election Day, I intend to do whatever I can to make sure he is elected President of the United States.”

Former presidential candidate John Edwards also announced his decision to endorse Obama at a rally in the crucial fall swing state