Thursday, February 25, 2016

Zanzibar vows to maintain national unity government

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His comments were in response to views by some people that GNU faces imminent collapse after March 20, the date set for the election re-run following threat to boycott the polls by the Civic United Front (CUF).
CUF leaders, led by its candidate Mr Seif Sharif Hamad, have all along insisted that they have decided to boycott the fresh elections because it is against the Zanzibar Constitution.
“Real elections were held on October 25, 2015 in which CUF won both the presidency and majority seats in the House,” said Mr Hamad. However, Mr Aboud, on behalf of the government and the Zanzibar Electoral Commission (ZEC), stated that preparations for the fresh elections were in top gear and that voters in the Isles should prepare for peaceful elections.
ZEC Chairman Mr Jecha Salim Jecha nullified the general elections in Zanzibar last October, saying it was tainted by fraud, prompting him to call for fresh polls next month.
Mr Jecha said that all the candidates from 14 political parties, who took part in the nullified polls, qualify for the fresh polls. Meanwhile, CUF’s Deputy Secretary General, Mr Nassor Ahmed Mazrui, has dismissed as baseless reports in the social media that Mr Hamad, currently in India for health checks, has undergone major surgery.
“The widely circulated reports are mere rumours from CUF enemies. Mr Hamad is still in India and may pass through other countries before returning home,” Mr Mazrui said, adding that the opposition leader’s medical plan requires him to travel to India for a further check-up every six months.

The 6 most important things you need to know about Facebook's Reactions

The 6 most important things you need to know about Facebook's Reactions

by RORYA......
Reactions-thum-2
Facebook just got a lot more emotional.
The social network rolled out its long awaited redesign of the like button Wednesday, which added five new sentiments you can use to respond to posts in your News Feed.
But with such a big change, you likely have at least a few questions. We've broken down a few of the most important things you need to know about Facebook Reactions right now.

1. How to find them

Using them is pretty easy: just hold down on the like button (on Facebook's iOS or Android app) or hover over the like button with your mouse (from desktop.) The new emoji reactions will appear and you can select the one you want to use.
The update will take a day or so to roll out to everyone so if you're still not seeing them, be patient. You'll get them soon.

2.Cool, how about using more than one

Unfortunately, Facebook is limiting us to one reaction per post, at least for now so you'll have some new decision to make. That cute puppy photo your coworker just posted? You'll have to decide whether you want to "wow," "love," or go with the old standard like. Your best friend's heartfelt post about a bad breakup? You'll have to figure out whether "sad" or "angry" is more appropriate.
There is good news, however.

3.You can undo or change a reaction

Just like before, when tapping something you previously liked made it go away, you can undo or change a reaction by tapping on it. No one ever needs to know about your passive aggressive "haha."
undo reaction

4. Facebook will show the top three reactions to a post

By now you may have noticed that most posts only show a few reactions where the like count used to appear. But that's not necessarily representative of all of the reactions of everyone who saw the post. That's because rather than showing counts for each of the six reactions, which would get quite messy, Facebook only highlights the three most used reactions on a given post.
reactions-count

5. But you can still see a more detailed breakdown

By tapping into the reaction count (on mobile), or hovering over the emoji (on desktop), you can get a full view of exactly who is behind each reaction.
Reactions count

6. How does all this affect my News Feed

For now, all reactions will count the same as a like in determining what posts to surface in your News Feed. That is, using “wow,” “sad,” or any other reaction will signal to Facebook that you should see more of that type of post.
But over time, this will likely change. As Facebook gathers more data about how and when people use reactions, the News Feed algorithm could get smarter to infer different meanings from different reactions. “Loving” a post could mean you’re more interested in something that you only “liked” before, for example.

The 6 most important things you need to know about Facebook's Reactions

Reactions-thum-2
Facebook just got a lot more emotional.
The social network rolled out its long awaited redesign of the like button Wednesday, which added five new sentiments you can use to respond to posts in your News Feed.
But with such a big change, you likely have at least a few questions. We've broken down a few of the most important things you need to know about Facebook Reactions right now.

1. How to find them

Using them is pretty easy: just hold down on the like button (on Facebook's iOS or Android app) or hover over the like button with your mouse (from desktop.) The new emoji reactions will appear and you can select the one you want to use.
The update will take a day or so to roll out to everyone so if you're still not seeing them, be patient. You'll get them soon.

2.Cool, how about using more than one

Unfortunately, Facebook is limiting us to one reaction per post, at least for now so you'll have some new decision to make. That cute puppy photo your coworker just posted? You'll have to decide whether you want to "wow," "love," or go with the old standard like. Your best friend's heartfelt post about a bad breakup? You'll have to figure out whether "sad" or "angry" is more appropriate.
There is good news, however.

3.You can undo or change a reaction

Just like before, when tapping something you previously liked made it go away, you can undo or change a reaction by tapping on it. No one ever needs to know about your passive aggressive "haha."
undo reaction

4. Facebook will show the top three reactions to a post

By now you may have noticed that most posts only show a few reactions where the like count used to appear. But that's not necessarily representative of all of the reactions of everyone who saw the post. That's because rather than showing counts for each of the six reactions, which would get quite messy, Facebook only highlights the three most used reactions on a given post.
reactions-count

5. But you can still see a more detailed breakdown

By tapping into the reaction count (on mobile), or hovering over the emoji (on desktop), you can get a full view of exactly who is behind each reaction.
Reactions count

6. How does all this affect my News Feed

For now, all reactions will count the same as a like in determining what posts to surface in your News Feed. That is, using “wow,” “sad,” or any other reaction will signal to Facebook that you should see more of that type of post.
But over time, this will likely change. As Facebook gathers more data about how and when people use reactions, the News Feed algorithm could get smarter to infer different meanings from different reactions. “Loving” a post could mean you’re more interested in something that you only “liked” before, for example.

APPLE VS. FBI: COOK MAKES A BIG BLUNDER

APPLE VS. FBI: COOK MAKES A BIG BLUNDER

02_25_tim_cook_01
One of the gaps in CEO Tim Cook's response to a federal order that Apple help unlock a mass shooter's iPhone is that he ignores the strength of the government's Fourth Amendment case, the author writes.CARLO ALLEGRI/REUTERS
Can the United States government compel Apple to help break into the phone of Syed Rizwan Farook, who, along with his wife, Tafsheen Malik, gunned down 14 innocent people last December at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California?
That question has sparked fireworks in recent days. The dispute arises because Apple has equipped its new iPhones with encryption settings that erase the data contained on the phone whenever 10 false password entries have been made. It was agreed on all sides that only Apple has the technology that might overcome the encryption device.
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In her short order of February 16, Magistrate Judge Sheri Pym instructed Apple to offer that assistance, pursuant to the All Writs Act, which dates back to the First Congress in 1789. The heart of the matter lies in whether the government—more specifically, the FBI—can require computer companies to build in backdoors to their systems to allow the government to enter.
I participated in hearings that then-Senator John Ashcroft held in March 1998 and spoke in opposition to the measure, along with Kathleen Sullivan, then a professor of law at Stanford Law School.
The greatest risk of the built-in backdoor is that the government will not be the only party that will enter through it. Backdoors necessarily compromise the integrity of a security system. There were therefore serious constitutional as well as practical objections to these early proposals.
It would be highly dangerous to allow the government to seize confidential data sources without first obtaining a search warrant, except in conditions of genuine emergency. And the loss of confidential data through theft gives rise to serious risks to vital data, for which compensation from the government, assuming that it were available, could never repair the damage or restore the confidence that people have within the system.
It should not be supposed, however, that the proposals that were bandied about in 1998 reflect the state of play on the ground today.
The first myth to dispel is that the current case has anything to do with data privacy at all. On the day the order was issued, Apple CEO Tim Cook posted astrong message to his customers denouncing the government. Unfortunately, Cook gave away the privacy game when he noted that Apple had cooperated with the government by turning over all data pursuant to a valid search warrant.
The difficulty here is that the information that was sought from Farook’s iPhone had not been backed up, so the government could not conduct a simple search on its own to get it. Instead, it had to attack the encryption systems built into the phone itself.
In dealing with that issue, it is important to note that Farook did not own the phone; his employer did, and it gave consent to the search. This knocked outany Fourth Amendment claim that the government intended to perform some unreasonable search and seizure.
The point is true, but also inconsequential, that the legal situation would not materially change if Farook had used his personal password on his very own phone. The Fourth Amendment states that “no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
Clearly, these requirements were satisfied when the government identified the iPhone to be searched, knowing that its possessor had committed mass murder.
One of the tragic gaps in Cook’s letter is that he ignores the strength of the government’s Fourth Amendment case. He also fails to explain why granting the government’s request necessarily involves the compromise of the privacy of millions when only one iPhone is at stake.
Cook skirted the Fourth Amendment issue. Instead, the gist of his claim is contained in the following misguided sentence: “Rather than asking for legislative action through Congress, the FBI is proposing an unprecedented use of the All Writs Act of 1789 to justify an expansion of its authority.”
Every part of this sentence is misguided. First, there are thousands of government applications each year under the All Writs Act; there is no reason whatsoever why the government has to seek to pass new legislation to cover a situation that is amply covered by current laws.
Nor is Cook correct in insisting that the All Writs Act does not cover this particular case. The relevant portion of that short statute reads: “All courts established by Act of Congress may issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.”
Terms like necessaryappropriateusages and principles were chosen precisely because Congress did not want to pin judicial discretion to particular technologies known in 1789 or any subsequent date. That language is no more problematic than the text of the Fifth Amendment, which holds that the United States shall not deprive any person “of life, liberty or property, without due process of law.”
No one doubts that these terms can give rise to difficult cases at the margins. But it hardly follows that Apple’s case is one just because it hogs the headlines.
Cook attempts in his letter to stake out a per se rule that it is somehow outside the scope of the All Writs Act to require any company to work with the government in overcoming technological barriers. The case law on this question is well-settled, and the government brief has assembled an impressive list of precedents in which private parties have been required to assist the government in its legitimate enforcement efforts.
These include “ordering a phone company to assist with a trap and trace device” or having a company “assist in accessing a cell phone’s files so that a warrant may be executed as originally contemplated.” It is also the case that Apple had assisted the government without complaint in over other 70 cases.
To be sure, the order here is more complex than those imposed in other cases, but the legitimate government interest in the document is more compelling than those other cases, so that perhaps it is more accurate to say that what is truly unprecedented is that any company would seek to defy the government when the stakes are so high.
Right now, Apple is worried that assisting the government will tarnish its brand. Cook may well be wrong. The better strategy might be to insist on the narrowness of the order, thereby avoiding the current soap opera. But Cook seems intent on turning the case into a heroic struggle, by making some dubious leaps of logic:
If the government can use the All Writs Act to make it easier to unlock your iPhone, it would have the power to reach into anyone’s device to capture their data. The government could extend this breach of privacy and demand that Apple build surveillance software to intercept your messages, access your health records or financial data, track your location, or even access your phone’s microphone or camera without your knowledge.
This parade of horribles is unworthy of Apple. Judge Pym knows full well that a balancing test is implicit in any application of the All Writs Act. She therefore made it clear that Apple’s efforts are narrowly limited to the task of uncovering this requested information from this device and no other; that Apple may limit the government to the remote access needed to unlock the pass code by brute force; and that Apple could protest the order within five days if it believed compliance with its terms would be “unreasonably burdensome.”
Her order does not pave the way for the government to unilaterally insist in the next case that Apple must disclose the private information of millions of people.
Remember, the central motif of the All Writs Act is one of balance and proportion. Allowing the government to win in one case under dramatic circumstances does not give it carte blanche to do whatever it wants in other cases.
I strongly opposed the push for a mandatory built-in backdoor in 1998, and I would oppose one today. But, again, it is irresponsible hyperbole for Cook to write that “it would be wrong for the government to force us to build a backdoor into our products.” That broad request is not found in the government’s plea for a specific fix under which it need not be told anything about the technology that Apple will use in order to overcome the data protection feature on its iPhone.
Other defenses of Apple’s legal position are no better. Writing in The New Yorker, Amy Davidson also resorts to improbable scenarios to find the government’s request dangerous. She writes, “If it can tell Apple, which has been accused of no wrongdoing, to sit down and write a custom operating system for it, what else could it do?”
Once again, this reasoning is flawed. Of course, the All Writs Act applies to persons who are accused of no wrong. Persons who have been accused of no wrong still have to comply with warrants or subpoenas in cases in which their noninvolvement is wholly beyond dispute. The government can and does often compel labor in these situations.
The hard question again is whether the need for the evidence trumps any broad claim for privacy, which, given the specificity of the request of Apple, it surely does. Nor is Apple being asked to make an operating system. The government just wants to find the password without destroying the data. And as to the last question, the burden is always on the government to explain what it needs, not for any private party to parry an infinite set of government claims.
Davidson is on even weaker ground when she muses that the government might use its power to further violate the rights of individuals: “Could an imam, for example,” she writes, “be asked not only to tell what he knows but to manufacture an informant?” In posing her hypotheticals, Davidson takes no note whatsoever of the undisputed point that the only party to whom the government could turn for this assistance is Apple itself.
It is a commonplace of the law of common carriers that anyone who has a monopoly over some public utility or common carrier can be required to offer service on reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms. The existence of the monopoly is the justification for the extra burden.
The government’s case against Apple is perfectly analogous to the common carrier situation insofar as the services it demands cannot be competitively provided. But when it comes to finding informants, the government is just as able, indeed more able, to do that by itself, which is why it never makes such silly requests under the All Writs Act.
Davidson concludes her think piece with a misguided flourish. In using the All Writs Act, she argues, “the government is attempting to circumvent the constitutionally serious character about many questions about encryption and privacy.”
Nonsense. There are no constitutional issues raised by this government demand, even if some such claims might arise in other circumstances. The Wall Street Journal reports that Apple has hired two “heavyweights” at the prestigious law firm Gibson Dunn, Theodore Olson and Theodore Boutrous.
Both are great lawyers who will have their work cut out for them.
Richard A. Epstein is the Peter and Kirsten Bedford senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

African leaders in Burundi to push for peace talks

African leaders in Burundi to push for peace talks

Five African leaders on Thursday launched a two-day visit to Burundi to push for talks on ending the fragile nation's deep political crisis.
The visit comes just two days after a trip by UN chief Ban Ki-moon as part of growing international efforts to bring an end to 10 months of deadly turmoil, which has seen more than 400 people killed and forced over 240,000 to flee the central African country.
The African Union agreed to send the delegation -- which is headed by South African President Jacob Zuma and includes the leaders of Ethiopia, Gabon, Mauritania and Senegal -- during its January summit when Burundi successfully faced down a plan to deploy 5,000 peacekeepers to the country.
They were due to meet leaders from across Burundi's political spectrum later Thursday before holding talks with civil society and religious leaders.
A Burundi analyst underlined however that most prominent opposition and religious figures opposed to President Pierre Nkurunziza's controversial re-election for a third term had fled to exile following a crackdown.
The visiting team will then hold talks with Nkurunziza on Thursday evening before addressing a press conference on Friday.
Ban, on his first visit since the crisis erupted, met Nkurunziza on Tuesday and said he had won a guarantee that "inclusive dialogue" would begin between the government and its opponents.
But the main umbrella opposition group CNARED, whose leaders are in exile, dismissed it as a "false opening", saying Nkurunziza did not want real negotiations.
The opposition was angered by the president's apparent attempt to choose who should participate when he said the dialogue would include all Burundians "except those engaged in acts of destabilisation".
Previous talks have failed, with the Burundian government refusing to sit down with some of its opponents who it accuses of involvement in a failed coup last May and months of violence including grenade and rocket attacks.
"The heads of state are coming to consult with the government and other stakeholders on the revival of an inclusive dialogue," said an African diplomat in Bujumbura who did not want to be named.
"The issue of deploying a peacekeeping force in Burundi is not on the agenda," the diplomat added.
- Slim hope of breakthrough -
CNARED chairman Leonard Nyangoma welcomed the delegation's visit but held out little hope of a breakthrough.
"Nkurunziza is a diehard and without strong pressure and real sanctions he will never agree to the meaningful negotiations that are the only way out of this crisis," he told AFP by telephone.
Burundi's upheaval was triggered by Nkurunziza's decision last April to run for a third term which he won in an election in July.
Following protests and a brutal government crackdown, violent attacks have become routine, raising fears of a return to the civil war fought between 1993-2006 in which around 300,000 people died.
On Thursday advocacy group Human Rights Watch warned that "government forces are killing, abducting, torturing and arbitrarily arresting scores of people at an alarming rate."
It called for the deployment of "a strong UN political mission with a substantial international police component".
Even Ban's visit was greeted by an uptick in grenade attacks with at least four people killed just ahead of his arrival on Tuesday and at least a dozen injured.
A Burundi government spokesman said the AU delegation's visit would "confirm that there is peace and security in Burundi" and that peacekeepers were not necessary.
However, Zuma arrived Thursday with a personal guard of more than 50 soldiers and at least six machine gun-

European Parliament votes for EU-wide arms export embargo against Saudi Arabia

European Parliament votes for EU-wide arms export embargo against Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia has been accused of bombing civilians with European-made equipment during in its war in Yemen
    GettyImages-466707928.jpg
The European Parliament has voted in favour of an EU-wide embargo on selling arms to Saudi Arabia.
A resolution calling for a ban on all weapons sales to the country was passed by 359 votes to 212, with 31 MEPs abstaining.
The non-binding motion calls on member states to stop selling weapons to the country, which is currently conducting a widely-criticised military operation in neighbouring Yemen marked by high civilian casualties.
Saudi Arabia is intervening in Yemen to fight Houthi rebels, who control the country’s capital but are not internationally recognised as its government. 
Criticism of the country’s military operation have however included the bombing of multiple hospitals run by the charity Médecins Sans Frontières and the deaths of thousands of civilians, including 130 at a single wedding.
While international observers have recognised abuses on all sides, in late December UN human rights chief Zeid Raad al-Hussein said that a “disproportionate” number of attacks of civilians in Yemen had come from the Saudi-led invasion force.
“I have observed with extreme concern the continuation of heavy shelling from the ground and the air in areas with high a concentration of civilians as well as the perpetuation of the destruction of civilian infrastructure – in particular hospitals and schools – by all parties to the conflict, although a disproportionate amount appeared to be the result of airstrikes carried out by Coalition forces,” Mr Zeid said.
The UN has also said Saudi Arabia is contributing to a “humanitarian disaster” in Yemen.

RAIS WA JAMHURI YA MUUNGANO WA TANZANIA MHESHIMIWA DKT. JOHN POMBE MAGUFULI AKUTANA NA DKT. RICHARD SEZIBERA, KATIBU MTENDAJI WA JUMUIYA YA AFRIKA MASHARIKI IKULU JIJINI DAR ES SALAAM FEBRUARI 24,2015

RAIS WA JAMHURI YA MUUNGANO WA TANZANIA MHESHIMIWA DKT. JOHN POMBE MAGUFULI AKUTANA NA DKT. RICHARD SEZIBERA, KATIBU MTENDAJI WA JUMUIYA YA AFRIKA MASHARIKI IKULU JIJINI DAR ES SALAAM FEBRUARI 24,2015

3e021a13-681e-40d7-a56f-df33b0056a50 Rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania Mheshimiwa Dkt. John Pombe Magufuli akimpokea Dkt. Richard Sezibera, Katibu Mtendaji wa Jumuiya ya Afrika Mashariki Ikulu jijini Dar es Salaam Februari 24,2015 
3ef1fc5a-2bda-4998-8c45-00d36ff78532Rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania Mheshimiwa Dkt. John Pombe Magufuli akizungumza na Dkt. Richard Sezibera, Katibu Mtendaji wa Jumuiya ya Afrika Mashariki Ikulu jijini Dar es Salaam Februari 24,2015 
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RAIS MHE.DKT JOHN POMBE MAGUFULI AKUTANA NA RAIS MSTAAFU WA AWAMU YA TATU MHE.BENJAMIN MKAPA PAMOJA NA MJUMBE MAALUM WA RAIS WA GUINEA BISAU FEBRUARI 25,2016

RAIS MHE.DKT JOHN POMBE MAGUFULI AKUTANA NA RAIS MSTAAFU WA AWAMU YA TATU MHE.BENJAMIN MKAPA PAMOJA NA MJUMBE MAALUM WA RAIS WA GUINEA BISAU FEBRUARI 25,2016

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86ef9304-4088-4daf-91c2-36d3da94bc67 Rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania Mheshimiwa Dkt. John Pombe Magufuli akizungumza na Genarali Omar Embalo mjumbe Maalum wa Rais wa Guinea Bissau Jose Mario Vaz Ikulu jijini Dar es Salaam. Pamoja na mambo mengine Mjumbe huyo alileta salamu za pongezi kutoka kwa Rais wa Guinea Bisau.
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Rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania Mheshimiwa Dkt. John Pombe Magufuli akimshukuru Mjumbe Maalum wa Rais wa Guinea Bissau mara baada ya kupokea barua ya Salamu na pongezi.
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Rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania Mheshimiwa Dkt. John Pombe Magufuli akiagana na Genarali Omar Embalo mjumbe Maalum wa Rais wa Guinea Bissau Jose Mario Vaz Ikulu jijini Dar es Salaam