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UGANDA TALKS EXCLUSIVE: Rolling Stone newspaper to appeal High Court ruling

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Giles Muhame, the managing editor of the Rolling Stone that published an article identifying a group of Ugandans as homosexuals, is set to appeal against today’s High Court ruling against the newspaper.

The article indicated addresses and pictures of the individuals whom it described as "Uganda's top homos" under the title “Hang them”.

The High Court ruled that the newspaper violated the constitutional rights to privacy and safety of these individuals. The Civil Society Coalition on Human Rights and Constitutional Law in Uganda announced that the court had awarded the three plaintiffs in whose names the case was launched damages of shs4.5m.

However, Muhame who says Rolling Stone is “exposing the evil in our society” told The Independent that the newspaper’s lawyers were already preparing an affidavit to set foot in the court of appeal. “We are also going to get signatures from Ugandans,” he added.

Human rights groups warned that the article in October put the lives of gay people in danger, saying that at least one women named in the story had been forced to leave her home after neighbours pelted it with stones.

 Rolling Stone

 

AP reports Obama to visit Africa again in 2011, calls President Gbagbo twice

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The Associated Press has an interesting story filed earlier today suggesting President Obama will return to Africa in 2011, visiting countries which ‘reflect positive democratic models’. This fits with the increasing focus of his administration on governance issues in Africa:

The White House says Obama will travel to Africa again and the political calendar means the trip will almost certainly happen this year, before Obama has to spend more time on his re-election bid. No decision has been made on which countries Obama will visit, but deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes said stops will reflect positive democratic models.

The administration is monitoring more than 30 elections expected across Africa this year, including critical contests in Nigeria and Zimbabwe.

"The U.S. is watching and we're weighing in," Rhodes said.

There is also a snippet showing how closely Obama is engaging with the stand-off in Côte d'Ivoire:

The President tried to call incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo twice last month, from Air Force One as Obama returned from Afghanistan and then a week later. Neither call reached Gbagbo; administration officials believe the Ivorian leader sought to avoid contact. So Obama wrote Gbagbo a letter, offering him an international role if he stopped clinging to power and stepped down.

Where do you expect him to visit? What odds do you give a stop in Kampala?

 Obama in Ghana

 

UPDF 'despises' Besigye?

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The most eye-catching headline in today’s newspapers comes on page 7 of The Observer, which announces ‘UPDF despises Besigye’s political bankruptcy’ above an article by Army spokesman Lt Col Felix Kulayigye. At first glance the article seems a worrying intervention by a Government institution that should of course be neutral in a national Presidential election. However, it does appear in this case that the sub-editors at The Observer may have got a little over-excited.

Parts of the article are certainly close to the partisan line, for example accusing Besigye of ‘cheap political opportunism’ for supposedly pinning blame for the LRA on President Museveni. Overall, though, the article’s tone is more factual rebuttal than attack piece. The problem is that any Army intervention this close to the election which is specifically directed at one candidate is bound to draw scrutiny. The spokesman may decide in future to keep his counsel – although my guess is he will be picking up the phone to The Observer sub-editor who on this occasion has done him no favours at all.

Lt. Col. Felix Kulayigye

 

Happy New Year!

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Happy New Year to all our readers from The Independent team!

We will shortly be re-launching our website, including the Uganda Talks blog. We aim to provide the most comprehensive, rolling updates of the 2011 Uganda Election.

We want to hear from you too - what would you like us to do for the election?

You can leave a comment below or we are on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Uganda-Talks/104413896910

And Twitter: @UgandaTalks

Best wishes for 2011 and we look forward to interacting with you.

The Independent Team 

 

WikiLeaks fallout: US-Africa relations still strong and growing

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Johnny Carson, Assistant Secretary for African Affairs, has likened WikiLeaks to a person who eavesdrops on a conversation between a husband and wife discussing one of their in-laws which is purely a private matter but steals the information and lets it out in the public.  “We hope that those who have this information recognize that it is stolen material,” he said, cautioning the media not trade in it.

Carson said the contents in leaked US diplomatic cables do not in any way reflect the position of the US government but individual opinions of the diplomats, adding that the relation between the US and African countries is not affected by the WikiLeaks revelation of the secret US diplomacy.

The leaked cables about African leaders express unflattering comments by US ambassadors across the continent. Leaked cables about Uganda so far reveal that Museveni at one point expressed his fears to the US government that his long time friend, Libyan Leader Muammar al-Gaddafi  would shot down his plane and asked the US government to beef up his aerial security whenever he would travel. In a more recent cable written in October 2009 the US ambassador to Kampala, Jerry Lanier, allegedly wrote to his government that Museveni is “eroding the African success story”. The leaked cables described Kenya as a “flourishing swamp of corruption”. The revelations have sparked angry reactions from Kenyan government spokesman for instance.

“I am not going to confirm nor deny any information about one or two cables about any country,” said Carson, when asked  about alleged leaks that the US secretary of state asked its diplomats in the Great Lakes Region to collect information on leaders, military, opposition leaders and prominent people in the region. “No information that may emerge from WikiLeaks can weaken our relations with Africa,” Carson said. He was reacting to questions from journalists across the continent in a teleconference on Dec. 9.

The recent revelations by WikiLeaks on the US diplomatic maneuvers have brought the two faces of America, something that has angered the US government. The leaks show the visible soft public diplomacy and secret candid diplomacy assessment by American diplomats of peers from other countries.

In the same teleconference, Carson also spoke about a range of Africa-American issues including the crisis in Ivory Coast on which he announced that the US government respects the resolutions of the ECOWAS and the United Nations that recognizes Alassane Quattara as president-elect of that country.

By Mubatsi Asinja Habati

 

 
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Kebab Says:
2012-05-11 08:23:36
what time does this air on capital fm? thanks ndereya

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