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Chimp habitat expose to danger in Guinea railway tunnel blast

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Western chimpanzees are pictured in Guinea in an undated photo. Courtesy Maegan Fitzgerald

EXCLUSIVE Guinea rail builders blast in chimp habitat, no plan to protect apes

A Chinese-backed consortium building infrastructure for a massive iron ore mine in Guinea started blasting a railway tunnel in a habitat for a critically endangered chimpanzee species with no plan in place to manage the impact on the animals, company and government statements and satellite imagery show.

The consortium is developing the mine in the West African country’s Simandou mountains. Anglo-Australian mining company Rio Tinto PLC (RIO.L), (RIO.AX) has permission to mine an adjacent part of the deposit, the world’s biggest, and has said it plans to export the ore using the railway and port being built by the consortium, Winning Consortium Simandou (WCS).

The construction company hired by WCS to build the railway, China Railway 18th Bureau Group Co Ltd, said in a June 7 statement on its website that a shaft was blasted into the hillside “with a roar of cannons” on May 29, weeks before Guinean officials met to consider an environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA).

According to minutes of that meeting, Guinean officials did not order the company to stop blasting, but did call for revisions to the assessment – including a management plan for chimpanzees. For any projects that could impact the environment, Guinea requires environmental assessments to be finished and approved ahead of time, Article 28 of its environmental code states.

The Western chimpanzee is “critically endangered,” according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which maintains a benchmark inventory of endangered species. That’s the most vulnerable of its five classifications, one step away from extinction in the wild.

The entire area of Guinea is home to nearly two-thirds of the remaining estimated 52,800 Western chimpanzees in the wild, according to the authority.

Extensive work on the tunnel has been taking place for several months, according to a Reuters review of satellite imagery provided by Planet Labs. A June 28 image shows two main construction areas at either end of the tunnel, connected by a new access road through the mountains. This was not visible in January.

China Railway 18th Bureau Group did not respond to questions about the construction work sent by Reuters on July 28. After the questions were sent, its statement mentioning the hillside blast was removed from its website.

WCS said no blasting took place before it received the required permits or before the environmental assessment had been approved, but neither WCS nor Guinea’s government provided the basis for that assertion or made a copy of the approved environmental assessment available.

“The WCS team is assessing environmental and social impacts through the … ESIA process and will put in place appropriate mitigation measures prior to construction,” it said in response to Reuters questions.

Guinea’s mines ministry didn’t respond to requests for comment about the tunnel construction, environmental assessments and chimpanzee protection.

Rio Tinto is not involved in building the railway, but has said it will use it. It declined to comment on the construction work, or say whether the risk to chimps meant it might change its transportation plans in future, saying it was studying its options.

The IUCN said in 2016 the Western chimpanzee population had declined by 80% from 1990 to 2014. The main threats are habitat loss, poaching and disease. It said last year the animals “are on a trajectory towards extinction unless drastic measures are taken immediately.”

The Simandou railway “will permanently change the Guinean landscape,” said Genevieve Campbell, who leads an IUCN task force that advises companies on how to minimise their impact on apes. The project needs to ensure the “appropriate mitigation is already in place before construction begins.”

Chimpanzees could engage in lethal fights if the railway forces one community into an adjacent community’s territory, Campbell said.

Simandou has an estimated 8 billion tonnes of high-grade ore reserves. It is key to Chinese companies looking to wean themselves off Australian iron ore amid a worsening trade war between the two countries.

$15 BILLION PROJECT

The risk to chimpanzees – through collisions with trains and increased pressure on their habitat – was highlighted in an earlier assessment, carried out by Rio Tinto in 2012, when it was considering building a railway from Simandou to the coast. Rio has held rights to the deposit since 1997 but never developed it.

Among the hitches were the cost of the infrastructure, including the railway, that the government has said must be built if the mine is to go ahead. Now Rio has two of the deposit’s four licence blocks, and WCS the other half.

Rio Tinto’s global head of external relations, Lawrence Dechambenoit, said at a June ceremony to open a new office in Guinea’s capital that Rio would collaborate with those building the infrastructure. Simandou is the company’s most important project, he said.

The $15 billion cost of developing WCS’s half of Simandou and building the railway and port will largely be financed through the group’s own funds, “given the extensive financial capacity of its members,” the consortium has said.

The tunnel will be part of a 670-km (416-mile) “Transguinean” railway and port project. In a speech on March 19, mines minister Abdoulaye Magassouba said work on it would start on June 1 and continue until January 2024.

China Railway 18th Bureau Group said in its June 7 statement it had “officially entered the tunnel” on May 29.

Rio Tinto’s earlier impact assessment, seen by Reuters, said 600-700 chimps were present in the area where WCS is building the tunnel. The whole line would cut through important chimp habitats, it said; blasting tunnels was likely to disturb the noise-sensitive primates.

To mitigate this, Rio said it could minimise the width of the railway corridor, rehabilitate the habitat cleared for construction, and prepare the site by “physically removing or scaring away animals.”

The Simandou mountains’ dramatic landscape, rich biodiversity and cultural sites make them a sensitive place to launch mining. Rio’s previous environmental assessment said whole peaks would be erased by mining in its half of Simandou. The Pic de Fon, the mountain range’s highest peak, would be removed by the 20th year of production.

32 RECOMMENDATIONS

Reuters couldn’t determine if the rail route planned by the WCS consortium differs substantially from the one Rio had in mind: No environmental plan for the project has been made public. A draft environmental and social impact assessment submitted to the Guinean government for three tunnels, including the one announced by China Railway 18th Bureau Group, was dated June 25.

An environment ministry committee made 32 recommendations to strengthen the plan, including mitigating impacts on chimpanzees, before work progressed, according to a summary of a July 5 meeting on the website of its Bureau Guinéen d’Etudes et d’Evaluations Environnementales (BGEEE).

The BGEEE, which is in charge of publishing information about environmental assessments, didn’t publish the draft or respond to requests for a copy.

WCS told Reuters the recommendations were included in a final version of the plan, but declined to share a copy. It said it had launched surveys to prepare measures that will mitigate environmental impacts.

The WCS consortium’s members include Shandong Weiqiao, a subsidiary of the world’s largest aluminium producer China Hongqiao Group Limited, Singapore’s Winning Shipping, and Guinean mining logistics firm United Mining Supply Group (UMS).

WCS told Reuters in March that it aimed to finish its impact assessments for the Simandou project as a whole by December this year.

Nigerians glue to’Influence’ – an award-winning South African film

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The production was part of the film premiered at the 2020 Sundance film festival.

The fall of London-based PR firm Bell Pottinger, has given way for the film to be accessed by film lovers in Nigeria on its website.

‘Influence’ was produced by Neil Brandt of Storyscope (South Africa) and Bob Moore of EyeSteelFilm (Canada).

The film serves as a terrifying reminder of the dangers that lurk within the post-truth era, in which masters of disinformation use new digital tools to wage ancient propaganda wars — undermining the very fabric of democratic societies.

Nigerians have firsthand experience of this info war, with President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration recently facing off with activists and free-press advocates over the banning of Twitter.

Speaking on the inspiration behind the film, South African journalist and co-director Diana Neille shared:

“After following the story deep into the roots of modern geopolitical spin-doctoring, we discovered the fingerprints of Bell Pottinger’s founder, Lord Tim Bell, on many of the world’s most formative political campaigns.

“We felt that if our viewers comprehensively travelled Bell’s journey since the 1970s, we would end up telling the story of influence and how it helped establish what we now call the post-truth era. It’s the context in which so many democracies around the world are now floundering.”

Co-producer Neil Brandt added: “As storytellers from the Global South who have always tried to speak truth to power. INFLUENCE puts a uniquely African narrative at the centre of a global debate around the nature of truth in a world in which fact and fiction appear interchangeable. As Leonard Cohen put it, ‘there are cracks in everything — that’s how the light gets in’.”

‘Influence’ is an official South African/Canadian co-production, with backing from the Blue Ice Docs, Hot Docs Partners Fund, the Rogers Cable Network Fund, the Société de développement des entreprises culturelles, the National Film and Video Foundation of South Africa, and Canada Media Fund. Broadcast rights are currently held by Arte (France/Germany), documentary Channel (Canada) and eTV (SA). Cinetic Media is handling world sales.

Uganda scraps anti-porn ‘miniskirt’ law

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A woman wearing a miniskirt takes part in a protest against the idea that provocatively dressed women are to blame for sexual assaults, in Jakarta September 18, 2011. The protest was in response to remarks by the Indonesian capital city's governor Fauzi Bowo, who said on Friday that women must not wear revealing clothes to avoid being raped or victimised. The rally called on police and the Indonesian government to do more to protect women and help the victims of sexual assault. The words on the banner are part of the slogan "Don't tell us how to dress, tell them not to rape." REUTERS/Stringer (INDONESIA - Tags: CIVIL UNREST) - RTR2RHF1

Uganda’s constitutional court has scrapped a controversial anti-pornography law whose provisions included a ban on wearing miniskirts in public, in a decision hailed by women’s rights campaigners on Tuesday.

The judgement, seen by AFP, said that the 2014 legislation, which had been dubbed the “anti-miniskirt law,” was “inconsistent with or in contravention of the constitution of the Republic of Uganda.”

“Sections… of the Anti-Pornography Act are hereby declared null and void,” Justice Frederick Egonda-Ntende said in Monday’s ruling, which also struck down the powers of a nine-member committee tasked with enforcing the law.

The legislation criminalised any activity deemed pornographic, from wearing short skirts to writing risque songs, and led to increased public harassment of women who wore clothing considered too revealing.

In 2014, Ugandan pop star Jemimah Kansiime was arrested for performing in a music video that showed her in her underwear. Currently, on trial, she faces up to 10 years in jail, although the future of the case is unclear because of the new ruling.

Women’s rights activists welcomed the verdict, which followed street protests by campaigners calling for the legislation to be dropped.

“This has been a bitter struggle and we are grateful (that) those who believe in the rights of women have emerged victors,” Lillian Drabo, one of the nine petitioners who challenged the law, told AFP Tuesday.

The petitioners said the legislation encouraged the harassment and mistreatment of women in public and denied them control over their bodies as well as access to public spaces.

The government’s lead counsel Imelda Adong told AFP they were “studying the ruling” and would respond in due course.

Uganda’s former minister for ethics and integrity, Simon Lokodo, was a longtime champion of the law, threatening to close a prestigious private school in 2016 for stocking copies of a British children’s book which was deemed too sexual.

In the past, Lokodo ordered police to arrest men who have sex with prostitutes and described a popular local television dating show as prostitution.

Local media reported that he also confronted Proscovia Alengot Oromait, then Uganda’s youngest MP, when she walked into parliament in a short skirt.

Eco-friendly vehicles offer quieter, cleaner safaris in Kenyan reserve

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In Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve, the Toyota 4×4 Landcruiser of tour guide and driver Sylvester Mukenye glides silently past a herd of grazing elephants, then past a pride of lions lying in the grass.

The animals are completely unperturbed by the proximity of the vehicle because its diesel engine has been replaced by an electric one that eliminates the rumbling noise and, just as importantly, reduces the emission of diesel fumes.

“If you drive here silently, you will of course get much closer to animals, especially the elephants that we are next to right now, because there are no vibrations on the ground and there are no fumes that they get the smell from like in other cars,” Mukenye said.

His vehicle was converted by Opibus, a Nairobi-based Kenyan-Swedish company founded in 2017. It is, for now, the only company in Kenya that converts off-road safari vehicles from diesel and petrol to electric power.

Off-road vehicles are a common sight in Maasai Mara, world-famous for the annual wildebeest migration but these are the first in the usually carbon-heavy business of safari tours to be entirely powered by electric batteries.

Wanjiru Kamau, an electrical engineer at Opibus, said the company had so far converted 10 vehicles used in Kenyan game parks, including three in the Maasai Mara.

As well as being more environmentally friendly than diesel engines, the electric motors cut operating costs by half, she added.

“In Kenya our fuel prices are always rising… Why not save on that?” she told Reuters at the Opibus workshop, where assembled vehicles were in various stages of electrification.

Kamau said her company uses 35% locally made materials and aims eventually to use only local materials.

Jailed former S.African president Zuma undergoes surgery

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Jailed former S.African president Zuma undergoes surgery

Jailed former South African president Jacob Zuma has undergone unspecified surgery and remains in hospital with more operations planned, prison authorities said on Sunday.

Zuma, serving a 15-month sentence in Estcourt prison for contempt of court, was sent to a hospital outside for observation on Aug. 6, days before the start of a corruption trial he has thus far avoided. 

“Mr Zuma underwent a surgical procedure on Saturday, 14 August 2021, with other procedures scheduled for the coming days,” prison spokesman Singabakho Nxumalo said in a statement.

There was no word on a potential discharge date for Zuma, who in July asked the country’s top court to reverse his incarceration, saying it was unjust and might kill him if he catches COVID-19.

Last week, a high court postponed his corruption trial to Sept. 9 after his hospitalisation. It is unclear what medical condition ails Zuma and his legal team was ordered by the judge to produce a medical report by Aug. 20.

The prosecutors may appoint a doctor of their choice to assess whether Zuma is fit to stand trial.

Zuma, whose jailing last month ignited looting and unrest, faces charges with co-accused, French defence firm Thales (TCFP.PA), over a $2 billion arms deal corruption case that led to his sacking as South Africa’s deputy president in 2005.

Zuma and Thales have denied the allegations.

Nigeria places worth of airports at N30bn, opens bid for concession

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Nigeria concessions four international airport terminals in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano.

ABUJA, Nigeria – The Federal Government of Nigeria has opened bids for the concession of four international airport terminals in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano, with net worth of N30 billion per bidding firm or consortium in respect to the request for qualification (RFQ).

The development is a followup to the Federal Executive Council’s (FEC) approval in 2016 regarding the concession of the four major airports in the country to drive profitability and proper management of the facilities.

The consideration of 20 to 30 years concession tenure for the facilities is to enable private investors own, operate and recoup investments.

Nigeria’s Minister of Aviation, Hadi Sirika while briefing stakeholders on the development said the concession exercise is open to all qualified entities with the capacity to turn around the fortunes of the facilities.

Yesterday, the Ministry of Aviation, in compliance with the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC) and National Policy on Public-Private Partnership (N4P), released a request for qualification for the concession.

Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Aviation, Hassan Musa, in the official memo made available to reporters, stated that the four major commercial airports: Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja; Murtala Muhammed Internatıonal Aırport Lagos; Malam Amınu Kano Internatıonal Aırport and Port Harcourt Internatıonal Aırport, Omagwa, and surrounding communities are intended to develop into efficient, profitable, self-sustaining, commercial hubs which will create more jobs and develop local industries through a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement.

“The Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) through the Ministry of Aviation is inviting bids from reputable Airport Developers/Operators/Financiers/Consortia for prequalification for the Concession of selected Airports Terminals under a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement.

“The airport’s terminal concession is one of the critical projects under the Aviation Sector Roadmap of the FGN and fits well within the scope of the Ministry’s strategic plan for the sector. The execution of this project is meant to achieve the Federal Government’s objective in terms of air transport value chain growth by developing and profitably managing customer-centric airport facilities for safe, secure and efficient carriage of passengers and goods at world-class standards of quality,” the memo read in part.

Eligibility requirements include the full names of firm/consortia; evidence of Company Registration; ownership structure of bidding entity; audited financial statements; sworn affidavit; power of attorney/board resolution and in the case of a consortium, evidence in the form of a letter of association agreement.

The terms further stated that to be prequalified for consideration as a prospective PPP partner for the project, the prospective firms/consortia must have the technical, operational and financial capability including; experience in the development and operation of an international airport and cargo terminals; evidence of financial capacity in support of the company or consortium’s ability to undertake the airport concession illustrated by a minimum net worth of N30 billion and letters of support from credible financial institutions in support of the consortium’s ability to manage and operate the airport terminals.

The request emphasizes that the RFQ is the pre-qualification stage of the procurement process for the Project in which interested parties are required to meet the pre-qualification requirements specified in the RFQ package.

Only pre-qualified parties will proceed to the Request for Proposal (RFP) stage and shall execute a Non-Disclosure Agreement prior to issuance of the RFP documents.

Director, Public Affairs, Ministry of Aviation, James Odaudu, added that the interested international parties had been urged to partner with local firms in compliance with the requirements of the Federal Government’s local content development policy while submission of RFQs through electronic media will not be considered.

Fast fashion spurs bleach-like pollution of Africa’s rivers – report

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Global fast fashion brands are helping drive pollution that has dyed African rivers blue

Global fast fashion brands are helping drive pollution that has dyed African rivers blue or turned their waters as alkaline as bleach, according to a report published on Tuesday.

Water Witness International’s (WWI) report featured the polluted rivers in Lesotho in southern Africa and Tanzania to highlight the risks posed as global brands increasingly source garments from contractors in Africa, attracted by cheap labour and tax incentives.

Global brands could force better practices, but so far their presence in Africa has done little to stem rife pollution, water hoarding by contracting factories or even ensure adequate water and sanitation for factory staff, Nick Hepworth, director of WWI and author of the report, said.

“The flipside is that (fast fashion) could be a force for change,” he continued, but brands and investors needed to take the lead.

In Lesotho, researchers found a river visibly polluted with blue dye for denim jeans. Samples taken from Tanzania’s Msimbazi river in Dar es Salaam meanwhile tested a pH of 12 – the same as bleach – near a textiles factory, the report said, adding local communities use the Msimbazi for washing, irrigation and more.

It identified some 50 international brands that source or have sourced their clothes from African nations, including Inditex’s Zara, ASOS (ASOS.L) and H&M (HMb.ST), but didn’t tie the pollution to any company’s supply chain.

Zara did not provide a comment. ASOS and H&M confirmed they source from Africa but pointed to initiatives to ensure sustainability or address water risks.

Brands can and do make environmentally sustainable clothing, and consumer pressure was key to encouraging more, said Katrina Charles, an expert on water security and quality at the University of Oxford who has worked with governments in Africa and Asia.

The textiles sector offered opportunities for African nations, including growth and jobs, but these would not pay off if pollution management and adequate working conditions weren’t ensured, she said.

“Making the textile industry a force for good in Africa is a very delicate balance,” she said.

Formal statement by MultiChoice Nigeria on Kayvee’s exit from the #BBNaija show released

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Formal statement by MultiChoice Nigeria on Kayvee’s exit from the #BBNaija show released

Kayvee’s exit from the BBNaija 2021 could be due to doctors advise

Filters coming out as to Kayvee‘s untimely exit from the ‘Shine Ya Eye’ BBNaija 2021 edition, could be as a result of advised by his doctor, after medical consultation.

In a statement credited to MultiChoice: “Kayvee, one of the housemates in the Big Brother Naija Shine Ya Eye Season, has been exited from the House on medical grounds. Prior to this, he had a consultation with Big Brother and the on-site medical team, where it was decided that he had to leave the house for a more thorough medical investigation. MultiChoice and the show producers, are committed to ensuring the safety and wellbeing of all housemates in the Big Brother house at all times.”

Watch the video of Pere announcing the news to the housemates:

Followup to the development, Kayvee’s social media handler has appealed for the support of his fan, justifying why the photographer developed weird behavior:

The KayVee we know isn’t what people are painting him to be. His friends and family will never allow him to go into the house if he had a mental health issue. KayVee is big on mental health and positive vibes, and you could see that from when he entered the house.

What is happening in the house is simply a reaction to him being unwelcomed. He was full of life when he got into the house, and something has triggered this phase. This has caused him to withdraw into his shell to rebuild his energy and vibe.

Have you met #KayVee? If 20 people are in a room and down spirited, he s always there to uplift them. We could see how he played this role for his fellow housemate, Angel. He is a kind person, and that’s one of the qualities that makes us super supportive of him.

KayVee is passionate about his craft, and that’s why he is on the #BBNaija show to promote himself and work. He has worked with several celebrities and individuals. He’s a focused and hardworking person whose life and work ethics inspire his friends and family. Over the years, he has tirelessly built his brand “KOKO’s VIEW”, which provides top-notch photography and cinematography to clients.

He doesn’t speak bad English. Guys, he felt unwelcomed and overthinks his point before speaking, so it sometimes comes across as incoherent. Isn’t it human nature to overthink? Let’s be humane.

When we say, “you don’t know what people are going through”, this is the kind of situation where we should be reminded to be kind to each other and remain supportive. Fewer words, more action.

Please keep supporting #KayVee as he needs us now more than ever.🙏🏾 We are the #KayVeeFC⚡️

#BBNaija2021 #BBNaijaShineYaEye

BBNaija 2021: Housemates request Biggie to intervene in Kayvee’s strange behavior, suggesting mental illness

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Kayvee exited 'Shine Ya Eye' due to poor mental health

Kayvee, one of the last housemates to join the BBNaija 2021 has exited the show barely a week after coming on board, after displaying weird behaviour.

His exit has been alluded to mental illness, which is yet to be verified.

The development was as a result of the housemate showing weird behavior that got everyone in the house worried.

The photographers coldness, strange behavior and constant lost in thought got Cross, Whitemoney, JMK concerned.

Zambia opposition leader Hichilema wins landslide in presidential election

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Hakainde Hichilema secured a stunning landslide victory over incumbent president of Zambia Edgar Lungu

Hakainde Hichilema secured a stunning landslide victory

LUSAKA – Opposition leader Hakainde Hichilema secured a stunning landslide victory over incumbent Edgar Lungu in Zambia’s presidential election, results showed on Monday.

The electoral commission said Hichilema got 2,810,777 votes against Lungu’s 1,814,201, with all but one of the 156 constituencies counted.

“I therefore declare that the said Hichilema to be president of Zambia,” electoral commission chairman, Esau Chulu, said in a packed results centre in the capital Lusaka.

That would make the third time that power has shifted peacefully from a ruling party to the opposition since the southern African country’s independence from Britain in 1964.

Across Zambia, celebrations broke out in the streets as Hichilema’s supporters wearing the red and yellow of his United Party for National Development (UPND) danced and sang, while drivers honked their horns.

Celebrations could be short-lived however: Zambia is in dire financial straights, and it became the continent’s first pandemic-era sovereign default in November after failing to keep up with its international debt payments. 

That was owing to an explosive mix of depressed commodity prices – which had pushed Zambia into recession well before the pandemic – and a brutal slowdown in economic activity caused by the pandemic itself.

Hichilema, 59, a former CEO at an accounting firm before entering politics, now faces the task of trying to revive Zambia’s fortunes. The economy has been buoyed only slightly by more favourable copper prices – now hovering around decade highs, driven partly by the boom in electric cars.

Last year, Zambia, Africa’s second biggest copper miner, produced a record output of the metal.

International Monetary Fund support is on hold until after the vote, as is a debt restructuring plan seen as an early test for a new global plan aimed at easing the burden of poor countries.

Lungu, 64, has yet to concede defeat, and has indicated that he might challenge the result, which will be difficult, given the margin.

Lungu said on Saturday that the election was “not free and fair” after incidents of violence against ruling Patriotic Front party agents in three provinces, and the party was consulting on its next course of action.

UPND officials dismissed Lungu’s statement as emanating from people “trying to throw out the entire election just to cling on to their jobs.”

If Lungu wants to settle a dispute or nullify elections, he must approach the Constitutional Court within seven days to lodge a complaint after a winner is announced.

Hichilema’s win reverses a narrow loss in the 2016 presidential election against Lungu.