Daily Nation Newspaper

Ghana declares week of mourning after KofiAnnan's death

-

NAMIBIAN President Hage Geingob, who is hosting a summit of southern African leaders, on Saturday strongly rejected criticism of Africa by the West, saying there was undue pressure on the continent.

"People have an attitude about Africa," Geingob said in an interview with the French radio network RFI.

"Things that they want Africans to do... they don't demand from other places," the president said.

"In the United States, there are only two parties there, the same philosophy: how come in America there are no communists, no socialists?"

Geingob also commented on the Comoros government crackdown that followed a controvers­ial referendum, boycotted by the opposition, which allowed President Azali Assoumani to run for another term.

"We would like to assess how he (Assoumani) wants to go about it. And those of us who have had a little bit of peaceful transition­s and peaceful elections, will say 'my brother don't you think we should do it this way. Let us not please the West, but to please our own people," said Geingob.

The Comoros is expected to formally join the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) at the two-day summit which ends on Saturday.

Geingob, who early this year denied corruption accusation­s stemming from a French anti-graft probe centred on the purchase of Canadian mining company Uramin by French nuclear giant AREVA, said he would never testify in a foreign court for the case.

French investigat­ors are believed to be pursuing allegedly illicit monthly transfers of $10 000 to Geingob made between 2008 and 2009

“If I committed a crime, it will be (heard) in my courts, nobody else’s courts,” he said.

“I’m never going to testify in a foreign institutio­n. I have my own institutio­ns here. That’s why I even oppose the ICC (Internatio­nal Criminal Court) because I say we must have our own institutio­ns.”

He admitted that a consulting firm he operated while he was not in government had helped Uramin obtain a licence and was paid for that service.

“They paid me. I declared that. It ends there,” he said.

Geingob, 77, was prime minister of Namibia between 1990-2002 and 20122015 before becoming president in 2015. News24 GHANA'S President Nana Akufo-Addo on Saturday declared a week of mourning to pay homage to former UN FKief anG 1obel laXUeate .ofi Annan.

Describing Annan as a "consummate" diplomat, Akufo-Addo said in a statement that Ghana was "deeply saddened" by news of his death in Switzerlan­d on Saturday after a short illness.

Born in Kumasi, the capital city of Ghana's Ashanti region, Annan became the first black head of the United Nations.

”I have directed that, in his honour, *hana¶s national Àag will Ày at half-mast across the country and in all of Ghana’s diplomatic missions across the world” for one week from Monday, Akufo-Addo said.

“He brought considerab­le renown to our country by this position and through his conduct and comportmen­t in the global arena,” Akufo-Addo said.

“He was an ardent believer in the capacity of the Ghanaian to chart his or her own course on to the path of progress and prosperity.”

AFP

 ??  ?? Kofi Annan, former United Nations Secretary-General.
Kofi Annan, former United Nations Secretary-General.
 ??  ?? Hage Geingob
Hage Geingob

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia