"GEN. LAURENT NKUNDA, rebel leader, Eastern Congo -- Nkunda holds the fate of 
hundreds of thousands of long-suffering people in Eastern Congo in his hands. 
He has been battling the Congolese army for months in the region, forcing some 
200,000 people to flee their homes. Nkunda claims he is protecting Tutsis from 
Rwandan Hutus who crossed into Congo after the 1994 genocide, but his critics 
call him a serial human rights abuser and the Congolese government has a 
warrant out for his arrest. Peace talks at the end of December may help end the 
fighting at last, but Nkunda has recaptured much of the territory he previously 
lost to the Congolese government, and he may be in no mood to negotiate. 
Congolese, who have seen no end of war in the last decade, will likely suffer 
the most."(COX NEWS SERVICE)
  
   
    Dear All,
   
      This is very interseting to read that COX NEWS SEVICE has cited General 
NKUNDA as one of the INTERNATIONAL FIGURES TO WATCH IN 2008.
   
        One thing COX NEWS SERVICE seem to ignore is that the General has 
always been OPEN to negociation for peace in the Congo.COX NEWS should have 
mentioned that the actual war in the DRC has been imposed to him.
   
  http://www.modbee.com/opinion/national/story/167060.html
   
  International figures to watch in 2008        By THE FOREIGN STAFF OF COX 
NEWS SERVICE 
  last updated: January 01, 2008 12:26:19 AM
       

  Cox Newspapers' foreign correspondents provided this list of people around 
the world worth watching in 2008. Here's their list of notables:
  DMITRI MEDVEDEV, prime minister of Russia -- Change in Russia? Probably not. 
Russian President Vladimir Putin has endorsed this bookish former academic from 
St. Petersburg as his successor. In return, Medvedev has said he would name 
Putin as prime minister. In the end, Medvedev may hold the key to just how much 
influence Putin continues to yield after his term ends early next year. 
Already, Medvedev has said that Russia must continue on the path set by Putin 
since he took office in 2000.
  NICOLAS SARKOZY, president of France -- Smart and outspoken, Sarkozy was 
France's youngest mayor when he took over as leader of Paris' affluent suburb 
of Neuilly at the age of 29. He went on to become interior minister before 
succeeding Jacques Chirac as president in May. Amid rioting in late 2007, he 
has pledged to revive the work ethic and fight intolerance. Known for his 
strong stance on law and order, he is expected to continue taking a hard line 
against Iran as he pursues closer ties with the United States.
  JAVIER BARDEM, Spanish actor -- A sex symbol in his home country, Bardem is 
breaking into the Hollywood movie scene in a big way. The former member of the 
Spanish rugby team just picked up a Golden Globe nomination for his portrayal 
of a serial killer in the Coen brothers film "No Country For Old Men." Soon he 
will be seen in the film adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez's "Love In The 
Time Of Cholera" as well as Woody Allen's "Vicky Cristina Barcelona." He's also 
set to star in "Nine," a new movie from Rob Marshall.
  PERVEZ MUSHARRAF, president of Pakistan -- His actions have polarized 
Pakistan. The world will be watching this tottering leader of a tottering 
nuclear state.
  ZHOU XIAOCHUAN, governor of China's central bank -- Called "China's 
Greenspan" and "Mr. Renminbi," a reference to China's currency, Zhou wields 
enormous power over the world's most rapidly growing economy. Since becoming 
head of China's central bank in 2002, he has presided over reforms including 
allowing the renminbi to strengthen against the U.S. dollar, a shift that makes 
Chinese exports more expensive and could upset China's role as manufacturer to 
the world. Top-level politics in China are murky and Zhou could be moved to a 
new job soon. But he is certain to remain deeply involved in decisions about 
how quickly China's currency should strengthen and how to keep China's red-hot 
economy from derailing.
  KEVIN RUDD, prime minister of Australia -- After Rudd was sworn in as prime 
minister in December, he immediately changed Australia's course by ratifying 
the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, leaving the United States as the only 
industrialized nation that has refused to do so. While Rudd views Australia's 
alliance with the United States as a foreign policy cornerstone, he has 
promised to withdraw Australian combat troops from Iraq, possibly next year. 
For President Bush -- a longtime friend of former Australian Prime Minister 
John Howard -- Rudd's election could shake relations with one of Washington's 
closest allies.
  RAJENDRA PACHAURI, chairman of the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate 
Change, from New Delhi, India -- Accepting the Nobel Peace Prize this month on 
behalf of the IPCC, the U.N. panel that shared this year's prize with Al Gore, 
Pachauri called the recognition a "clarion call for the protection of the 
earth." Under his watch, the panel brought together thousands of scientists and 
largely put an end to scientific debate over whether the world is warming. (A 
recent IPCC report called global warming "unequivocal.") In 2008, look for 
Pachauri to play a larger role in pushing governments to curb emissions of 
carbon dioxide and other gases blamed for rising temperatures.
  GEN. DAVID PETRAEUS, U.S. Army general -- He's not from the Middle East, but 
perhaps no other human being in 2008 will have as much influence on events 
there. Since he became commander of the Multi-National Forces in Iraq in 
February, Petraeus has redefined the U.S.-led mission and produced results. 
Peace is still a distant goal, but -- contrary to some forecasts when he took 
command -- Petraeus has not failed. Aside from bombs and bullets, he will have 
to continue to contend with election-year politics in the United States and 
continuing sectarian political discord in Iraq.
  EHUD BARAK, Israeli defense minister -- The former prime minister (1999-2001) 
is once again angling for the top job after taking over as chairman of the 
Labor Party and being appointed minister of defense in Ehud Olmert's government 
in 2007. Some Israelis fear that his determination to prove his muscle, 
however, may lead in 2008 to costly military incursions into the Gaza Strip, 
which is currently controlled by the radical Islamic movement Hamas, and a 
refusal to loosen the Israeli army's control of the West Bank, thus undermining 
the Bush administration's declared hopes for a settlement of the long-running 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict by the time Bush leaves office.
  SHEIK MOHAMMED BIN RASHID AL-MAKTOUM, ruler of Dubai -- Simmering labor 
troubles notwithstanding, there is no reason to think that the architect of the 
economic dynamo that is Dubai, one of seven sheikdoms that make up the United 
Arab Emirates, will lose his touch in 2008. In the past quarter alone, the 
investment firm owned by his Dubai government has bought a "substantial stake" 
in Sony and state-run Dubai World has purchased a 9.5 percent share in the Las 
Vegas-based casino firm MGM Mirage. He also oversees the world's most expensive 
collection of racehorses and has an interest in buildings: He is likely to be 
on hand when his brainchild, the Burj Dubai, is topped off in late 2008 at 
2,625 feet, thus becoming the tallest freestanding structure in the world.
  MOHAMMAD BAQER QALIBAF, Mayor of Tehran -- Qalibaf is considered a top 
contender to succeed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president of Iran. Elections are 
scheduled for early 2009, but his supporters see this spring's parliamentary 
race as a bellwether of his chances. Qalibaf, who lost to Ahmadinejad in 
presidential balloting two years ago, is allied with a coalition of political 
parties intent on winning back parliament from the president's hard-line bloc. 
A former commander of the elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps' Air Force 
and Iran's former top cop, Qalibaf has strong conservative credentials but also 
appeals to Iran's reform- minded younger generation. As mayor, Qalibaf oversees 
Iran's largest daily newspaper, a platform he has used to criticize 
Ahmadinejad's nuclear policies and to bolster his populist résumé.
  HUGO CHÁVEZ, president of Venezuela -- After nearly a decade of triumphs, the 
firebrand socialist Chávez suffered his first serious political defeat in late 
2007 when voters narrowly rejected his proposed laundry list of constitutional 
changes. The persistent U.S. critic had hoped to win approval for measures that 
would've enabled him to continue running for re-election for life. Despite the 
stinging defeat, Chávez remains immensely popular among Venezuela's poor 
majority, and the opposition has yet to unite behind a single leader. Look for 
him to continue blasting U.S. "imperialism" in 2008, cementing his role as heir 
to Fidel Castro as the hemisphere's chief U.S. critic. He'll also continue 
doling out Venezuela's oil billions to foreign leftists and his own poor 
supporters, aiming to build an anti-U.S. bloc among emerging nations.
  EVO MORALES, president of Bolivia -- Bolivia's president hasn't grabbed as 
many headlines as Chávez in neighboring Venezuela. Yet he's been pushing his 
own socialist reforms that have created no less of a stir within this Andean 
nation of 9 million. Morales, a former coca farmer elected in 2005 as the 
nation's first indigenous president, surprised many by bringing stability 
during his first year in office. But he has been creating controversy in recent 
months with his push to create a new "Magna Carta" in Bolivia. A constitutional 
assembly recently approved his reforms, which now must be approved by voters in 
a referendum. The proposed changes, which would affect large landholdings and 
indigenous rights, have been sparking protests and deepening divides in the 
country.
  CRISTINA FERNÁNDEZ DE KIRCHNER, president of Argentina -- Endlessly compared 
to Hillary Clinton, Fernández de Kirchner will be closely watched as 
Argentina's first elected female president. The former first lady and senator 
was sworn in this month while her husband, outgoing President Nestor Kirchner, 
looked on. Observers have expected her to raise Argentina's international 
profile and warm frosty relations with the United States. But earlier this 
month, after U.S. prosecutors accused the Venezuelan government of trying to 
smuggle money into Argentina to contribute secretly to her campaign, she 
derided the U.S. claims as "garbage in international politics."
  FIDEL AND RAUL CASTRO, leaders of Cuba -- Cuba's lingering state of limbo may 
continue or instead might finally give way to a new era in 2008. It all depends 
on the health of the communist island's longtime strongman, Fidel Castro, who 
has not been seen in public since July 2006, when he underwent emergency 
surgery for a life- threatening stomach bleeding ailment. Castro's brother, 
Raul, has ruled in his absence, but the question of whether he has complete 
power is still unclear. 
  MARCELO EBRARD, mayor of Mexico City -- Ebrard, the bespectacled, bookish, 
and let's face it, nerdish mayor of sprawling Mexico City, seemed like an 
unlikely candidate to make a splash in his first year in office. Instead, 
Ebrard made headlines for nearly 12 months: he brought the world's biggest ice 
rink to the city's Zocalo plaza, built urban beaches in rough neighborhoods, 
kicked out some 15,000 street vendors from Mexico City's historic downtown, 
supported the city's groundbreaking legalization of abortion and ordered 
government bureaucrats to bike to work one day a month. Detractors say Ebrard 
prefers hype to substance and should concentrate more on the city's vast 
infrastructure challenges and widespread poverty. But the left-leaning mayor 
looks to be taking the long view, perhaps preparing a run for the presidency in 
2012.
  JACOB ZUMA, leader of the African National Congress -- A former 
anti-apartheid guerrilla fighter who has tried to shatter the staid, secretive 
image of the African National Congress, Jacob Zuma is considered a favorite to 
become South Africa's third post- apartheid president in 2009. His rise seemed 
doomed after he was accused but later acquitted of rape and was fired as deputy 
ANC president over corruption charges. Now the ANC has appointed him its 
leader, and he will bring a more bombastic, populist image than those 
cultivated by his predecessors, Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki. The only hitch: 
new graft charges could come soon, and a conviction would rule out a 
presidential run.
  BINYAVANGA WAINAINA, magazine editor, Kenya -- Wainaina, editor of the Kenyan 
literary magazine Kwani? (So What?), is the most famous of a batch of young 
Kenyan writers who are unafraid to challenge both foreign and home-grown 
perceptions of their country. A writer-in residence at Union College in 
Schenectady, N.Y., he gained renown with an essay in Granta magazine, "How To 
Write About Africa," which ridiculed white foreigners' treatment of African 
themes. "In your text, treat Africa as if it were one country," he wrote. 
"Africa is to be pitied, worshiped or dominated. Whichever angle you take, be 
sure to leave the strong impression that without your intervention and your 
important book, Africa is doomed."
  NGOZI OKONJO-IWEALA, World Bank managing director, living in Lagos, Nigeria 
-- The first woman to hold the post of finance and foreign minister in Nigeria, 
Okonjo-Iweala was recently appointed a managing director at the World Bank. 
Educated at Harvard and MIT, she gained the nickname "Trouble Woman" for her 
drive to fight corruption in her homeland, one of the most corrupt nations on 
the planet. Okonjo-Iweala is a fellow at the Brookings Institution and a 
co-founder of the Makeda Fund, which invests in African women entrepreneurs. 
"When it comes to doing my job, I keep my ego in my handbag," she once told 
Britain's Guardian newspaper. Among the inflated egos of the World Bank, that 
attitude could prove useful.
  GEN. LAURENT NKUNDA, rebel leader, Eastern Congo -- Nkunda holds the fate of 
hundreds of thousands of long-suffering people in Eastern Congo in his hands. 
He has been battling the Congolese army for months in the region, forcing some 
200,000 people to flee their homes. Nkunda claims he is protecting Tutsis from 
Rwandan Hutus who crossed into Congo after the 1994 genocide, but his critics 
call him a serial human rights abuser and the Congolese government has a 
warrant out for his arrest. Peace talks at the end of December may help end the 
fighting at last, but Nkunda has recaptured much of the territory he previously 
lost to the Congolese government, and he may be in no mood to negotiate. 
Congolese, who have seen no end of war in the last decade, will likely suffer 
the most.
  Compiled from reports by Shelley Emling in London, Craig Simons in Beijing, 
Margaret Coker and Craig Nelson in Jerusalem, Jeremy Schwartz in Mexico City, 
Mike Williams in Miami and special correspondents Andrew Marra in Buenos Aires 
and Nick Wadhams in Nairobi.

          
        
 


                   
   

     
  

   
  
 
RWANDA RAVE REVIEWS

                  Sharangabo Rufagari
   
  Montreal
   

















       
---------------------------------
Now with a new friend-happy design! Try the new Yahoo! Canada Messenger
_______________________________________________
Ugandanet mailing list
Ugandanet@kym.net
http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/ugandanet
% UGANDANET is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/


The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including 
attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way.
---------------------------------------

Reply via email to