Category: Politics

  • Uganda:No turning back, Besigye declares

    {Hours into his temporary freedom Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye remained defiant urging his supporters not to give up the fight for a better Uganda.}

    Hours into his temporary freedom Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye remained defiant and urged his supporters, who turned up at his Kasangati home, not to give up the fight for a better Uganda.

    “We are fighting to put our country in our own hands. Until we achieve that, there is no turning back. If they think that putting us in prison will demoralise us, then they are wrong,” Dr Besigye told a crowd of about 200 people who managed to beat the police siege outside his farm and accessed his home.

    Dr Besigye who had been on remand since May on treason charges assured his supporters that they were not breaking any law in defying a “dictatorship”. He instead blamed a section of “criminals” within the Police Force for slapping trumped up charges against him.

    “It hurts that police has been infiltrated by criminals but these are just a few individuals. Most of those in police are not criminals but there is a group of kifeesi who have tarnished the image of the Force. They are led by Mr Kale Kayihura (IGP) and his colleagues,” he said.

    Urges police to be strong
    Dr Besigye urged police officers and members of other state security organs “who want our country to go forward and who overwhelmingly voted for us” to be strong.

    Musician Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobi Wine equated Dr Besigye to South African anti-apartheid revolutionary and former president Nelson Mandela.
    “We the youth are very lucky. We used to just read about freedom fighters such as Nelson Mandela but we have had an opportunity not to just see you but also learn from you,” Bobi Wine said.

    This singer also unveiled another artiste Ronald Mayinja who he said had joined the “struggle”. Mr Mayinja was one of the artistes in President Museveni’s 2016 election theme song Tubonga Naawe. However, both artistes are known for releasing songs laden with political overtones.

    He said he had been overwhelmed by Dr Besigye’s resoluteness. “In school, I studied about Nelson Mandela but very few times did I read about him having food in a hotel, most of the times I heard about him, he was incarcerated in prison but in the end he won,” Mr Mayinja said.

    The journey
    Immediately after leaving the court premises, Dr Besigye defied the heavy police and military presence and stood through the open-roof compartment of his car waving to his supporters that had been blocked along roads such as Kampala Road, Lumumba Avenue and Nakasero Road.

    He then proceeded to Ternan Avenue past the entrance to State House Nakasero connected to Yusuf Lule and then Gayaza Road.
    Police was compelled to fight off his supporters’ procession which kept growing by the minute.

    Police commanded by Geoffrey Kaheebwa, the deputy RPC Kampala South, would occasionally block the road to stop Dr Besigye’s supporters who were mainly running along or riding on boda-boda motorcycles.

    Stick wielding uniformed police officers and operatives would occasionally beat them in an attempt to disperse them. Journalists, too, were not spared.
    At the dusty road heading to Dr Besigye’s home, Police again blocked people and mounted a road block on the main entrance to his farm.

    This, however, did not deter some of the determined supporters. They used short cuts to access the home where they sang, danced and chanted slogans in praise of Dr Besigye. One group even played football in his compound, saying they feel free “when we are in State House with our president”.

    {{Police say}}

    “We don’t want to make a big elephant out of his opinion.That is his opinion, and he is entitled to it. We don’t find insult in what he says because we are doing our job. We hope he will abide by the regulations of his bail, that will make our work very easy,” Polly Namaye, Police Deputy Spokesperson.’

  • African leaders to prioritise South Sudan in Kigali talks

    {African leaders will be under pressure to find a quick solution to the escalating tensions in South Sudan during the ongoing African Union Summit in Kigali.}

    The AU Summit opened in Kigali on Sunday with the meeting of the Permanent Representatives Committee (PRC), which continued on Monday.

    Rwanda’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Louise Mushikiwabo said on Monday that South Sudan is “weighing heavily” on the minds of African leaders following the flaring up of fighting between forces loyal to President Salva Kiir and former rebels backing Vice President Riek Machar.

    Minister Mushikiwabo told CNBC Africa on Monday that President Paul Kagame over the weekend talked to his counterparts in the East African region to discuss on how the tensions in the blocs youngest member can be quelled.

    Regional leaders discussed on how the ongoing power struggle in South Sudan can be resolved and how the two factions can be reined in to end the hostilities which have reportedly claimed over 270 people.

    READ: Thousands flee heavy fighting in South Sudan

    “It is not a small matter, it is about trying to put aside the entrenched political differences but especially to also to try and put their eyes on the people of South Sudan. They have been waiting for a free and prosperous country for decades,”

    “A lot of blood has been spilt. The leaders in this region are extremely concerned. It is actually timely that all of them will be coming here to Kigali later in the week. I have no doubt that they will have serious discussions about South Sudan,” Minister Mushikiwabo said.

    Skip the AU Summit

    It is not clear if President Kiir and Machar will come to Kigali as earlier expected but sources told The East African that the duo might skip the AU Summit and stay home to avert a possible power grab.

    However, South Sudan officials in Kigali say situation was exaggerated by the media and it is currently under control.

    The South Sudan Ambassador to the AU James Pitia Morgan said on Monday that the fighting was a result of a misunderstanding especially on the side of pro-Machar forces who thought that he was going to be arrested.

    Ambassador Smail Chergui, AU Commissioner for Peace and Security said that a meeting of IGAD foreign ministers and the Peace and Security Council was scheduled to take place on Monday evening.

    “We are calling upon everybody, especially the leaders of South Sudan to act with restraint so that we go back to the starting point and allow the transition government to deal with this issue quietly, bearing in mind the lives of the people,” Mr Chergui said.

    Heavy fighting erupted over the weekend, between the two factions, threatening the peace deal which saw Machar return to Juba in April to form a unity government and end the bloodshed.

    Journalists sat inside a conference room as artillery fire broke out near the presidential palace in Juba on July 8, 2016. The fighting further strained a shaky ceasefire a day after five soldiers were killed.
  • Who is fighting in South Sudan and who can stop it?

    {Days of fighting in South Sudan’s capital Juba is some of the worst seen since civil war broke out in the world’s newest nation in December 2013.}

    Pitting soldiers loyal to President Salva Kiir against troops backing his longtime rival Vice-President Riek Machar — who technically ended rebellion in April to forge a unity government — the fighting has also drawn in other forces.

    Here are some of the key players in the violence: some driving it and others trying to stop it.

    – Kiir and Machar -Kiir and Machar are former rebel leaders who rose to power during Sudan’s 1983-2005 civil war between north and south — a conflict in which the two men fought each other — before South Sudan won independence in 2011.

    They come from the south’s two main ethnic groups — Kiir from the Dinka people and Machar from the Nuer — tribes that are themselves split into multiple and sometimes rival clans.

    UN experts say Kiir and Machar are both responsible for most of the violence committed during the war, which has seen tens of thousands killed.

    Civil war began in late 2013 when Kiir accused Machar of plotting a coup.

    Following an August 2015 peace deal Machar returned to Juba in April, along with 1,500 troops who are based in basic camps on the outskirts of the city and were only permitted to carry light weaponry.

    Kiir’s army — equipped with tanks, artillery and attack helicopters — were supposed to withdraw from the city leaving only a similar-sized force behind.

    – Hardliners -The fighting has fragmented and multiple militia forces now pay no heed to either Kiir or Machar.

    There are also reported divisions within both camps. Both Kiir and Machar were at the presidential palace to issue a joint appeal for calm on Friday when heavy fighting erupted outside.

    Analysts say hardliners on both sides never supported the August 2015 peace deal and instead want to end the conflict through military means.

    Key figures include army chief Paul Malong, a top general and powerful politician who commands an ethnic Dinka militia. He is a long-time ally of Kiir and opposes power-sharing with Machar.

    Machar’s authority over generals and troops is also in question, in particular his command over ethnic militia such as the so-called ‘White Army’, a fearsome force of cattle-raiding youth who pay little heed to anyone but their direct leaders.

    – Neighbouring nations -Past peace efforts have been led by regional nations, including the East African bloc IGAD. Ethiopia and Kenya have hosted multiple rounds of peace talks.

  • Congo opposition leader says government tried to kill him

    {WASHINGTON :Congo’s leading opposition candidate for president said Monday he was poisoned as part of a government plot to kill him, a dramatic claim almost certain to escalate tensions even further over upcoming elections in one of Africa’s largest countries.}

    In an interview with The Associated Press, Moise Katumbi said he was roughed up by police in May who injected him with an unknown substance outside a courthouse in the city of Lubumbashi.

    “Their plan was to kill me,” Katumbi said, “because they are scared about my popularity.”

    Katumbi said the directions came from the highest levels of Congo’s government, but he did not provide details about whom he specifically believes was responsible.

    Katumbi and other critics of President Joseph Kabila have expressed concern that the election set for November will be delayed so that Kabila will stay in power longer. Kabila is supposed to leave office in December, but he has not publicly declared his intentions.

    Congo’s communications minister, Lambert Mende, was unavailable to comment on Monday, but he had previously dismissed allegations Katumbi had been harmed by the police. He noted that Katumbi was allowed to leave Congo for medical treatment elsewhere.

    “If the objective was to kill him as he claims, why let him go and vilify us in the press?” Mende said in a recent interview with a radio station.

    Since Congo won independence from Belgium in 1960, there has never been a peaceful, democratic transition of power in the country. Kabila has been in office since 2001, taking over less than two weeks after his father, President Laurent Kabila, was shot by a bodyguard in the presidential palace. He was elected president in 2006 and again in 2011. Kabila is barred by Congo’s constitution from a third term.

    Congo, which has vast mineral deposits, is nearly one-fourth the size of the United States and has a population of more than 79 million. More than a decade after Congo’s back-to-back civil wars ended, the country’s east remains in discord. Scores of militias and armed groups are blamed for violence against civilians, and nearly 2.7 million Congolese are internally displaced as a result, according to figures compiled by the United Nations.

    Katumbi, a former governor of Congo’s southern Katanga and longtime president of the TP Mazembe soccer team, had been summoned to court on allegations he hired mercenaries to be his bodyguards. He called the allegations a “big joke.”

    Thousands of his supporters had gathered outside the venue on May 13 and police fired tear gas to disperse them and Katumbi fell ill. He was hospitalized in Lubumbashi with an unspecified ailment when authorities formally charged him.

    He was medically evacuated to South Africa and has since sought treatment in London and Germany.

    Katumbi hadn’t discussed the circumstances of his illness. He told the AP that he needed oxygen for a week to help him breathe. The substance caused a blood infection, Katumbi said, and he pledged to release laboratory results when tests are complete.

    “I’m going to show to everyone, to tell them what is going on in the Congo,” Katumbi said. “This is not anymore politics.”

  • What to expect from the Inter-Burundi Dialogue in Arusha

    {IBTimes UK speaks to opposition and peace activists about possible outcome of talks.}

    After stalling on negotiations for months, peace talks on the Burundi crisis are expected to resume on Tuesday 12 July in Arusha, Tanzania.

    In April, the UK government called on the Burundian government to protect prisoners’ human rights and stop abuses, after raising concerns about the treatment of prisoners in the African nation that has been rocked by deadly political violence for over a year.

    Hopes of any progress were quashed in May when the government of Bujumbura refused to hold talks with key members of the umbrella National Council for the Restoration of Arusha Agreement and Rule of Law (CNARED) and a major civil society movement known as Halte au 3e mandat.

    Both were opposed President Pierre Nkurunziza’s bid for a third-term in office. At the time, the regime agreed to attend peace talks in Arusha in which only government officials, two former heads of state and a selection of like-minded individuals participated in an exchange with mediators.

    As delegations have either arrived in or are on their way to Tanzania ahead of the talks held at the International Conference Centre (AICC), IBTimes UK looks at what can be expected from the negotiations, hosted by former Tanzania President Benjamin Mkapa. Mkapa was appointed as the facilitator for the Inter-Burundi Dialogue by the East African Community (EAC) on 2 March.

    {{Is the government attending?}}

    According to a document seen by IBTimes UK, seven government officials − including Foreign Minister Alain and spokesman Willy Nyamitwe, Interior Minister Pascal Barandagiye and Minister for EAC Affairs, Leontine Nzeyimana − will be attending the talks.

    {{At least eight ruling CNDD-FDD officials will also be present in Arusha.}}

    While former presidents Pierre Buyoya and Sylvestre Ntibantunganya are expected to attend, presidency spokesman Nyamitwe on Monday confirmed former President Domitien Ndayizeye was aboard a flight heading to the talks.

    {{Will the opposition participate?}}

    A number of opposition parties (Uprona, Radebu, Frodebu and Pader) will be represented and leaders were invited by the mediators, including Agathon Rwasa, leader of opposition, National Liberation Forces (FNL) and current deputy head of parliament. However, officials from the MSD party have not been invited.

    Following the fiasco of the previous round of negotiations, however, Jeremie Minani, a spokesman for the alliance-in-exile Cnared exclusively told IBTimes UK that progress has been made. IBTimes UK understands that, while the negotiators refused to invite the Cnared as an entity − as previously required by the alliance − to avoid government officials pulling out of the talks, it had instead agreed to extend the invitation to between 15 and 20 members of the Cnared.

    {{The regime describes Cnared as is a “terrorist organisation”.}}

    “There will be a strong delegation from the Cnared in Arusha, whose goal is to tell the mediator what we already told him in Brussels − that we want to negotiate a return to peace,” Minani confirmed. “The entire world needs to understand that we are not in a spirit of sabotage of the negotiations because, despite the mediators’ refusal to take into account our prime demand to be invited as an entity, we still agreed that a Cnared delegation attended without the Cnared label. That is essential.”
    {{
    Will Burundi’s civil society be represented?}}

    For many Burundians, the participation of a number of members of the Cnared, as well as those of the civil society who were against the third presidential term, including right defender Pierre-Claver Mbonimpa, is a step forward.

    It is still unclear whether the presidents of other civil society organisations including Vital Nshimirimana (FORSC), Pacifique Nininahazwe of FOCODE and ACAT will be represented. IBTimes UK understands that Nininahazwe was invited, however.

    “We must admit that there has been a spectacular evolution but the regime of Bujumbura remains stubborn and not everyone has been invited to participate,” Minani said.

    {{Are Burundians confident?}}

    The presence of both sides seems to indicate they are willing to compromise a little.

    “I think Mkapa and other Burundi partners have done a great job in trying to deal with both the government and the opposition’s picky requirements. Despite the peace talks being postponed (until 11 July), there have been satisfying changes,” Jean Claude Nkundwa, a Burundian peace activist, told IBTimes UK.

    According to the peace worker, the fact the government has not changed its commitment to join the talks is encouraging, as it may allow Mkapa to draw up compromise proposals and keep the focus on Burundi. For instance, French ambassador to Tanzania and the EAC, Malika Berak, last week pledged her country’s willingness to provide support to the peace talks.

    “With this inclusion, we expect the mediators to have a clearer picture and deeper understating of Burundi’s current crisis… These level talks will also help international community be well-informed about the nature of the Burundi crisis and Mkapa’s report will help international actors decide how to prevent mass atrocities in Burundi and protect civilians from the ongoing killings.”

    According to Nkundwa, between 40 and 70 people die every month.

    {{What will be discussed?}}

    According to the invitation sent to members of the Cnared and Bujumbura officials, the facilitators are expected to listen to the different parties involved about a number of topics. On top of the list will be what the negotiations agenda will include, as well as what the negotiations’ priorities should be.

    The opposition is expected to outline “urgent preconditions” that it wants the negotiators to cover − the cessation of violence, the reopening of independent media and liberation of political prisoners.

    “We will reiterate our position, and hand our immediate road-map to the facilitators. The rest of our demands include freeing up the political space and having a democratic transition that will drive the organisation of free and fair elections for the restoration of constitutional order,” Minani said over the telephone.

    The spokesman, meanwhile, insisted the alliance “would not abandoned its principal preoccupation to be considered as an entity” and said it was wary of “being pushed towards a wall or the exit door, or starting the negotiations already weakened by the conditions of the mediators that seem to go in favour of the Bujumbura regime”.

    Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza (R) embraces his South African counterpart Jacob Zuma (L) as he leaves the previous round of the Africa Union-sponsored peace dialogue in Burundi's capital Bujumbura
  • Burundi violence talks in progress tomorrow

    {Former President, Benjamin William Mkapa brings the Second Round of the Burundi Dialogue to Arusha this week with the sessions expected to start tomorrow and will be in progress until next Friday at the Arusha International Conference Centre (AICC).}

    On the other hand, the French envoy to Tanzania and the East African Community, Ambassador Ms Malika Berak, expressed her country’s dedication to further provide support to the ongoing Burundi Dialogue.

    France has also hailed ongoing reforms to promote more prudent use of resources and efficiency at the East African Community Secretariat in Arusha which on the other hand emulates cost saving strategies shown by President John Magufuli.

    Envoy Berak reaffirmed France’s commitment to the success of the mediation which is aimed at promoting peace, reconciliation and security in the Republic of Burundi. The Burundi Dialogue is being facilitated by Mr Benjamin William Mkapa, a former President of Tanzania, with support from the EAC Secretariat.

    Ambassador Berak said that France as a member of the European Union knew that regional integration initiatives were full of challenges hence the country’s desire to work closely to promote integration in East Africa.

    She described as timely the reforms being undertaken by the EAC Secretariat to promote fiscal efficiency and accountability. The French Ambassador made the remarks when she paid a courtesy call on the EAC Secretary General, Mr Liberat Mfumukeko, at the EAC Headquarters in Arusha.

    Mr Mfumukeko said the EU and France were some of the largest contributors of financial support to the Community, adding that the Burundi Dialogue was well on course with the next round of talks due to be held in Arusha this month.

    He said the EAC was committed to improving in terms of performance and delivery on its mandate of driving the integration process forward. He added that he had dedicated his first two months in office to putting in place reforms at the Secretariat.

    Former President, Benjamin William Mkapa
  • Japan election: Parties struggle to engage voters

    {Sunday’s vote for upper house seats has the ruling Liberal Democrats eyeing major gains.}

    Tokyo, Japan – On Sunday Japanese voters go to the polls in a national election that is widely expected to result in Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his Liberal Democratic Party gaining a level of parliamentary dominance that has never before been seen in post-war Japanese politics.

    Should the ruling party and its allies emerge from these House of Councillors, or Upper House, elections with more than two-thirds of the seats in the chamber, then even revisions to the nation’s pacifist constitution will be in reach for the arch-conservative prime minister.

    Newspaper polls are predicting that the ruling Liberal Democratic Party will easily regain its own simple majority in House of Councillors for the first time in 27 years, and that coalition partner Komeito, their support base deriving from a well-organised Buddhist sect, is also likely to make advances.

    Meanwhile, the leading opposition Democratic Party is virtually guaranteed to suffer big losses in the number of seats it holds, with only the scale of its defeat being in question. The sole opposition party expected to be celebrating on election night is the Japan Communist Party, which has surged in popularity in the last few years to become Japan’s second-largest opposition party.

    While the stakes for Japan’s national charter and its political future may be high in these elections, voter interest has been low. Rob Fahey, a specialist of Japanese politics at the Waseda University Graduate School of Political Science, told Al Jazeera this election is likely to record the lowest voter turnout figures in Japanese history.

    “Neither the political parties nor the media have framed these elections in a way that make them seem either consequential or engaging – or even gives the public the sense of having a real choice,” Fahey said.

    These are, however, the first national elections that are being held since the voting age in Japan was lowered from 20 to 18, adding about 2.4 million people to the list of eligible voters.

    Last summer there was considerable excitement over the emergence of the SEALDs (Students Emergency Action for Liberal Democracy) and the unusual degree of activism that some young people were showing in opposition to the Abe government’s passage of new security legislation.

    Although the SEALDs still exist and some of its leaders continue to garner media attention, it is also apparent it has so far failed to spark a mass political movement among the young, nor are young voters expected to have a significant impact on the results of Sunday’s elections.

    In their first test, which was a local mayoral election in southwestern Japan, eligible 18 and 19 year olds had a voter turnout of only 38.4 percent compared to an overall voter turnout of 56.1 percent.

    Still, the largest Japanese political parties have been attempting to innovate in the video, internet, and social media spheres in an effort to reach out to young voters.

    It was only three years ago that internet campaigning was first allowed by a revision of the nation’s election law. Perhaps the most successful campaign since then is Kakusanbu, a group of eight animated characters supporting the Japan Communist Party. The stated objective of this “section” of characters is “to spread correct policies and politics throughout the world”.

    In pursuit of this objective, the Kakusanbu webpage features a series of short “lectures”. For example, in the first lecture, the character Koyo no Yoko (Employee Yoko) shows the yellow card to “black companies” that force their employees to work unreasonably long hours without proper compensation.

    For this election, the Democratic Party has created the VOTE18 campaign in which a pair of stylish female high school students encourage eligible teenagers to pay attention to politics and to vote.

    The governing Liberal Democratic Party has uploaded a special manga pamphlet to its website called “A Report to the Country”, which is explicitly aimed at 18-year-old voters. Among other things, the online pamphlet explains the procedures for voting, and it also offers a short history of the ruling party, starting with prime minister Nobusuke Kishi and ending with a colour photo of Kishi’s grandson, incumbent Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

    Fahey provided a mixed evaluation of these efforts: “Online campaigning is new to Japanese politics, and parties here are still playing catch-up, with some success. But they are largely falling on deaf ears at a time when the public isn’t actually paying very much attention.”

    Many members of the general public gave the same view. A service industry worker, Mr Abe, 35, told Al Jazeera to the extent he is interested in politics, it is the July 31 special election of a new Tokyo governor that is capturing his attention. As for Sunday’s House of Councillors election, he apologised and then stated, “I haven’t really been watching the news about it.

    While the stakes for Japan's political future may be high in these elections, voter interest has been low
  • Uganda:Report coup plot to DPP, Besigye tells Museveni

    {Dr Besigye said Mr Museveni shows prejudice when he speaks about issues that are already in court}

    Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) former presidential candidate, Dr Kizza Besigye, has challenged President Museveni to report allegations that he and Gen David Sejusa were planning to kill him or destabilise Uganda, to the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP).

    Speaking to a team of 14 FDC supporters and leaders from Kabarole District who visited him at Luzira prison on Friday afternoon, Dr Besigye said Mr Museveni shows prejudice when he speaks about issues that are already in court.

    “Mr Museveni should not talk about cases that are already before court. He is breaking the law because treason case is already in court,” Dr Besigye said. “If he has a complaint, he should present it before the Director of Public Prosecutions for investigations. It’s only the Director of Public Prosecutions who can say that I have a case to answer.”

    Mr Museveni, earlier this week while meeting Inter-Party Organisation for Dialogue (IPOD) officials, allegedly said Dr Besigye and Gen Sejusa wanted to destabilise Uganda. He also reportedly claimed jailed Nakawa MP Michael Kabaziguruka was behind schemes to assassinate him.

    Dressed in yellow prison uniform and blue slippers, Dr Besigye boastfully said he is “spiritually strong, emotionally strong and physically fit.”

    An ecstatic Besigye said yellow uniform is for prisoners in Uganda whether you meet them inside or outside prison.

    The group went through a weary five hour process before meeting the four time presidential candidate at around 2pm. For instance, from Luzira prison main gate to Upper Prison where Besigye is detained, the team was checked five times at different checkpoints. At the first gate, Mr Kyensi Buruhani, an executive member of FDC Kabarole District committee, who was donning an FDC shirt, was forced to remove it.

    Dr Besigye said Nakawa court Chief Magistrate James Ereemye Mawanda, who visited Luzira on Thursday, did not address his complaints.

    Mr Ereemye visited the prison accompanied by the Nakawa court state attorney Doreen Elima and the Judiciary’s communication officer Solomon Muyita.

    “The magistrate didn’t make any decision about my complaint. He promised to compile a report which he will hand over to higher authorities,” Dr Besigye revealed, adding that he will present his complaints in court again next time, specifically denying him a chance to communicate with the outside world.

    Dr Besigye has repeatedly complained to court that his life is under threat. He told Nakawa Magistrate’s Court on June 29 that his rights as prisoner were being abused, prompting the magistrate to promise that he would visit Luzira to address “those issues.”

    Dr Besigye said he is optimistic that court will grant him bail since it is not the first time he is being charged with treason.
    “I was supposed to appear in court on Wednesday for my bail application hearing but it was Idd. I will go there on Monday,” he said. “They have charged me with 50 or 80 cases and all of them were dismissed. Even this one, they will drop these charges,” he said.

    Earlier this month, the DPP withdrew a case in which Dr Besigye had been charged with disobeying lawful orders at Kasangati court.
    However, Dr Besigye said whether court grants him bail or not, he will be released because treason charges will be dropped. He said the DPP should expedite investigation process.

    “They say I declared myself president; how long does it take to investigate that case and present evidence?” he asked. “I have spent two months in prison and they haven’t presented evidence.”

    Besigye described his court battles as “persecution not prosecution.”
    Kabarole District FDC chairperson Rusoke Nyakato Abooki, who led the delegation, said the process of accessing Besigye is tiresome.

    “Clearing from the first to the last gate took us almost three hours,” she said.

  • S Africa honours black soldiers killed in World War I

    {Black South Africans, who died and were buried in France in 1916, honoured and remembered for first time.}

    More than 250 black South Africans, who perished during a bloody battle in World War I in France, have been finally commemorated for their role during the Great War, the country’s Minister of Defence has said.

    Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, Minister of Defence and Military Veterans said on Friday in Dieppe in northern France, that it was the first time the lives of black South African troops, who died and were buried in Arque-la-Bataille in 1916, would be honoured and remembered.

    The minister was speaking during a memorial service at Arque-la-Bataille in what she described as a bid to the rewrite “an objective just and authentic South African military history”.

    “It is necessary to ensure that the historical role played by black South Africans in France is accorded the importance it deserves in the same spirit as that of white South Africans.

    “The representation of Africans during the war is very minimal and it distorts the important role they played in various theatres of war,” she said.

    More than 229,000 South Africans, of which 21,000 were black, participated in the allied effort against Germany and its allies in WW I between 1914-1919.

    Black South Africans, however, were considered unfit to serve as combatants because of their skin colour. They were not allowed to carry arms and their duties were mostly restricted to working in the dockyards and the railroads.

    Around 1,120 black South Africans men died during the war in Europe, with 260 buried in Arque-la-Bataille.

    According to the Ministry, white and black South Africans were buried in different places even here in France; white troopers were buried at Dalville Wood cemetry and blacks at Arque-la-Bataille.

    “History will be re-written as until now only white soldiers buried in Delville Wood were the only ones who were recognised and celebrated,” Siphiwe Dlamini, communications head for ministry, said in a statement on Friday.

    At the museum and national memorial at Delville Wood, in Longueval, where the First South African Infantry Brigade suffered some of the biggest casualties in WW I, there is little mention of blacks and coloureds and their role in the war. At the time, the South African brigade, made up of more than 3000 troops, was attached to the 9th Scottish Division and tasked with securing the woods, when they incurred massive casualties.

    {{Contesting politics }}

    The Delville memorial, originally unveiled in 1926, commemorates South African soldiers who died in Africa, Europe and the Middle East.

    According to historian Bill Nasson, the memorial has always been a site of contestation in South African politics.

    Writing in the English Historical Review, Nasson, notes that while some white newspapers saw the memorial as a way to celebrate Dutch-English relations, black organiations took exception to the manner in which black lives were ignored.

    “The Natal Witness saw the National Memorial as an ode ‘to the memory of the Fallen, drawn from the great white stocks that form the South African people of today’.

    “Black South African political organisations and their small press expressed little if any Delville Wood
    allegiance, embittered that observance seemed to provide no honouring recognition of the deaths of African support troops on active service,” Nasson, a professor of history at the University of Stellenbosch, wrote.

    On Friday, the South African government also reinterned the remains of Private Nyweba Beleza, the first black South African to lose his life during the war, to the Delville museum.

    “It will further greatly assist in helping to remove the negative stigma attached to the Delville Wood Memorial that has been for a very long time seen as a dedication to a very small segment of the South African population,” Dlamini said.

    The Delville memorial commemorates South African soldiers who died in Africa, Europe and the Middle East
  • Mugabe won’t step down, says his party as protests pile up pressure

    {They said they were fed up with the 92 year-old ruler’s failed policies.}

    Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe will not resign as demanded by protestors who brought the country to a standstill Wednesday, the ruling party has said.

    The country was brought to a standstill in one of the biggest protests to rock Zimbabwe in the last decade after a social media movement known as #ThisFlag and civil society groups called for a job boycott to force President Mugabe to listen to their demands.

    They said they were fed up with the 92 year-old ruler’s failed policies, corruption and a worsening economic crisis.

    However, the ruling Zanu PF accused Western embassies of coordinating the protests and vowed that State security agencies would clampdown on dissent.

    “Zanu PF is focused on what it wants to do and cannot be shaken by these activities,” Zanu PF secretary for administration Ignatius Chombo told journalists in Harare.

    “We are the ruling party and we will not accept anything short of law and order. In Harare, these demonstrations have been led by leaders of vendors’ associations, some other shadowy groups calling themselves various names. And we know that they are being sponsored by Western embassies,” he added.

    Mr Chombo claimed Western countries wanted to topple President Mugabe’s government. “The regime change agenda that is being pursued by the West will come to naught,” he said.

    The organisers of Wednesday’s stay-away dubbed #ShutDownZimbabwe 2016 said they would stage another protest next week if the government does not address their demands.

    President Mugabe, in power since 1980, has in the past few months been facing growing protests against his rule as the economic crisis that has crippled the country continues to intensify.

    In April, former Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, organised one of the biggest marches in the last decade in the capital Harare against the veteran ruler, demanding that he steps down.

    Mr Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change party has since held two more marches against President Mugabe in the cities of Bulawayo and Mutare.

    Civil society groups have also been staging daily protests against the government demanding an end to the economic crisis and human rights violations.

    FORGOING WORK

    Zanu PF has already endorsed President Mugabe to stand for yet another term in the 2018 elections.

    Under Mugabe’s authoritarian rule, protests and strikes have been rare in Zimbabwe despite about 90 per cent of the population being out of formal employment.

    The last similar protests took place in 1998 when riots erupted over the price of bread.

    “This is a sign of economic collapse which has left people with nothing more to sacrifice and nothing to lose,” Mr Dumisani Nkomo, spokesman for the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition campaign group said.

    “We are heading towards a tipping point as a country, where citizens will express their pain by any means.”

    There were few people on the streets of the usually bustling capital Harare after civil society organisations called the strike to pressure Mugabe to tackle economic woes.

    “I can’t go to work when the rest of the country is not going to work,” said Sybert Marumo, who works for an electrical shop.

    “Life is tough and we need to show the government that we have been stretched to the limit.” Children were seen streaming home from school after teachers failed to turn up.

    In some suburbs of Harare, protesters burned tyres and blocked streets to prevent cars from heading into the city centre.

    The Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) said police had arrested at least 20 people across the country.

    A protester throws rocks during a demonstration in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, on July 6, 2016. Zanu PF has already endorsed President Mugabe to stand for yet another term in the 2018 elections.