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Rwanda, China boost military ties Kigali (AFP) Oct 23, 2010 Kigali and Beijing agreed to enhance their military cooperation during a visit to China by Rwandan Defence Minister James Kaberebe, an army statement said Saturday. Kaberebe held talks on Friday with his Chinese counterpart, Liang Guanglie, as part of his five-day visit to China, the statement said. "The ministers pledged to deepen and widen military cooperation by opening up new areas of cooperation such as research and development, intensifying military visits and exchange programmes," it said. The statement said the meeting concluded with the signing of a protocol giving the Rwanda a grant to construct a floating dock for the marine regiment. The small central African nation and the Asian giant have had diplomatic ties for decades but military cooperation only began after the 1994 genocide.
earlier related report "Pending on the payment of one million Namibia dollars (144,000 US dollars, 103,000 euros), this court grants the bail application of the accused Yang Fan according to conditions agreed on between the state and his lawyer," high court judge Alfred Sibuleka said. Once out on bail Yang may reside at the coastal town of Walvis Bay, 400 kilometres (250 miles) west of Windhoek, where Yang's lawyers are based, the judge said. He will have to report to that town's police station three times per week, and the court has confiscated his passport. Yang has spent 15 months in a prison cell, but his lawyer Richard Metcalfe said the bail could be posted within three days. The two Namibian suspects are already out on bail. The three were arrested in July 2009 as part of a probe into bribery allegations involving Nuctech, a company headed until 2008 by President Hu's son, Hu Haifeng. They were arrested after the southern African state's Anti-Corruption Commission discovered that a 12.8 million US dollar down payment on 13 security scanners had been diverted to a firm called Teko Trading. Teko's assets are now frozen. The two Namibian suspects, Teckla Lameck and Jerobeam Mokaxwa of Teko Trading, each got bail of 50,000 Namibian dollars.
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Zambia president defends China after mine shooting Lusaka (AFP) Oct 21, 2010 President Rupiah Banda on Thursday urged Zambians not to condemn Chinese managers for shooting 12 workers at Maamba Collum coal mine, saying other people also shoot their employees. "Let's be careful that we do not single out people. Every day people are shot at by Zambians, whites, Americans. This business of 'Chinese, Chinese', we should not create a phobia against people," Banda said. ... read more |
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