Category: Politics

  • Brazil: Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment thrown into chaos

    {President Dilma Rousseff’s political fate at stake as senate head overrules lower house speaker’s bid to annul process.}

    Brazil’s Senate is pressing ahead with the impeachment process against President Dilma Rousseff despite a surprise decision by the lower house’s interim speaker to annul it.

    Renan Calheiros, the head of the Senate or upper house, said on Monday he had rejected the interim speaker’s decision and that a vote in the Senate on whether to put Rousseff on trial would continue as scheduled.

    “No monocrotic decision can super impose a collective decision, specially when the decision was taken with the highest form of collectiveness in the house,” he said.

    Earlier, Waldir Maranhao, who took over as acting speaker of the lower house last week, said there were procedural flaws in the April 17 vote in the chamber when it accepted the impeachment charges against Rousseff.

    “I am aware that this is a delicate moment. A time at which we have the obligation to save democracy through debate. We are not, nor will we ever be playing with democracy,” Maranhao said.

    The previous speaker of the lower house, Eduardo Cunha, who orchestrated the impeachment process against Rousseff, was forced out by the Supreme Court last Thursday on charges of money laundering and corruption.

    After that vote in the lower house, the impeachment process was passed to the Senate, where a committee recommended on Friday that Rousseff be put on trial by the full chamber for breaking budget laws.

    Al Jazeera’s Latin America Editor Lucia Newman, reporting from Brasilia, said protesters were out in front of Brazil’s Congress once again, as the impeachment process took another extraordinary twist.

    “It’s a roller-coaster that Brazilians are hanging on for dear life,” she said. “Nobody knows what’s going to happen.

    “Now not only the president is pitted against the legislator, but leaders of the upper and lower houses are in a war, neither one recognising the decision of the other.

    “In the meantime, Brazilians are asking themselves just how long this political paralysis, driven by a political crisis that no one could have imagined, will last,” Newman said.

    Mark Weisbrot, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, told Al Jazeera that the Rousseff case exposed the flaws in Brazil’s judiciary system.

    “60 percent of the Congress is under some kind of scrutiny or investigation and when I think of all the major parties, the Worker Party, Dilma Rousseff’s party is probably the least corrupt, although they had several corruption scandals within the Worker Party too,” he said. “The whole system needs reform.

    “It’s kind of ironic because this is the government that finally gave the judiciary the power to investigate and then they abused it too and used it against this government.”

    The full Senate had been expected to vote to put Rousseff on trial on Wednesday, which would immediately suspend her from the president’s job for the duration of a trial that could last six months.

    During that period, Vice President Michel Temer was expected to replace Rousseff as acting president.

    Raimundo Lira, head of the Senate’s impeachment committee, has said the vote will go ahead as planned, regardless of Maranhao’s intervention.

    Before Calheiros overruled Maranhao’s order, Rousseff interrupted a speech on Monday to supporters to say that she had just got unconfirmed news of the annulment order.

    Brazilian markets fell sharply after the initial annulment of the impeachment process.

  • South African Judge Mabel Jansen in race rape row

    {A white South African judge has been strongly condemned for purportedly saying on social media that rape was part of the culture of black men.}

    Judge Mabel Jansen said the gang-rape of babies, girls and women was seen as a “pleasurable” pastime.

    A petition has been launched to demand her removal as a judge. She said her comments had been taken out of context.

    South Africa has been hit by a spate of racism rows in recent months, triggered by comments on social media.

    The government has responded by saying that it intends to toughen anti-racism laws.
    White minority rule and legalised racism ended in South Africa in 1994.

    The latest row came after comments that Judge Jansen purportedly made on Facebook in a conversation with South African activist Gillian Schutte last year went viral at the weekend.

    “In their culture a woman is there to pleasure them. Period. It is seen as an absolute right and a woman’s consent is not required,” the judge is quoted as saying.

    In another post attributed to her, she said that “murder is also not a biggy” for black men and “gang rapes of baby, daughter, and mother [were] a pleasurable pass [sic] time”.

    Judge Jansen added, according to the post, that the “true facts are most definitely not that espoused by the liberals”.

    Leading South African advocate Vuyani Ngalwana said Judge Jansen’s “outburst, effectively tarring all black men with the ‘rapist’ broad brush,” was “shocking beyond belief”, the local Business Day newspaper reports.

    The Judicial Service Commission, which has the power to discipline judges, should ask her to explain her comments, before a decision was taken on her future, Mr Ngalwana is quoted as saying.

    A spokesman for the governing African National Congress (ANC) said he suspected there were other judges who engaged in “racist stereotypes”, while the party’s influential women’s wing said her comments were “purely racist” and misrepresented the “facts about black culture”.

    The opposition Democratic Alliance said Judge Jansen’s comments were “not only hurtful and demeaning”, but undermined “the dignity of our people,” the AFP news agency reports.

    The judge told local media that the posts were from last May, when she was in a private inbox exchange with Ms Schutte in an attempt to get help for victims of rape and assault.

    “I was referring to specific cases,” the judge told News24.

    “It is very bad when you are attacked on this basis, when you know it is the opposite. I don’t know what she [Ms Schutte] is trying to do.”

    {{South Africa social media race rows in 2016:}}

    {{May:}}

    #MattTheunisen trends after 26-year-old Cape Town resident uses derogatory words to describe the government on Facebook after it bans four sports codes from hosting international tournaments over failure to meet racial quotas

    Rhodes Must Fall activist Ntokozo Qwabe boasts on Facebook that he and his friends made a Cape Town waitress shed “white tears” by telling her they would give her a tip “when you return the land”

    {{March:}}

    Standard Bank economist Chris Hart resigns after tweeting: “More than 25 years after Apartheid ended, the victims are increasing along with a sense of entitlement and hatred towards minorities”

    {{January:}}

    Opposition Democratic Alliance suspends membership of estate agent Penny Sparrow over a Facebook post in which she calls black revellers at a beach “monkeys”

    Government suspends employee Velaphi Khumalo over Facebook post in which he says black South Africans should do to white people what “Hitler did to the Jews”.
    Ms Schutte said she had made the posts of the judge public to expose the “deep racism and colonial thinking” prevalent in South Africa.

    The hashtag #‎MabelJansen is trending South Africa, and a petition, “Remove Judge Jansen for Racist Comments”, has been launched on Facebook.

    The latest row, involving a judge, has raised many uncomfortable questions – top of the list being how many other judges harbour such apparently prejudiced views, despite the fact that they are supposed to see all people as equal before the law.

    Many South Africans on social media are calling for her to be sacked, and legal experts say her comments could open the way for convicted black people to appeal against her rulings.

    Racism on social media is becoming a common feature in South Africa, and some analysts say the time for a frank conversation about how to tackle the problem has come.

    The concept of the rainbow nation, established in 1994 after the end of racial segregation, seems to be coming apart at the seams. Can it be rebuilt or will the situation get worse?

    Judge Mabel Jansen said her comments had been taken out of context
  • DR Congo: Crackdown on Presidential Aspirant

    {Arrests of Backers, Politically Motivated Probe.}

    Authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo have arrested at least 27 associates of Moise Katumbi, a presidential aspirant, and other opposition party members since late April 2016. Congo’s justice minister announced an investigation into Katumbi on May 4, the day he announced his candidacy.

    The arrests occurred between April 22 and May 7 in and around the southern city of Lubumbashi, where Katumbi is based. The investigation into Katumbi for his alleged “recruitment of mercenaries, [including] several retired American soldiers,” appears politically motivated, Human Rights Watch said. On May 7 the prosecutor’s office in Lubumbashi summoned Katumbi to appear on May 9.

    “The arrests and attacks in Lubumbashi appear to be more than just the usual police harassment, but targeted actions against a presidential aspirant and close supporters,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The government should urgently reverse course and ensure that opposition parties and all Congolese are freely able to express their views and peacefully assemble.”

    On April 24, police fired teargas at Katumbi and a large crowd of peaceful demonstrators in Lubumbashi to block an opposition rally at which Katumbi was to speak. Two opposition party headquarters in Lubumbashi were recently vandalized.

    Congo’s communications minister Lambert Mende told Radio France Internationale (RFI) on April 25 that “the police used teargas to disperse people who wanted to block traffic [on the roads in Lubumbashi]. There were some administrative arrests,” he added. “But without significant consequences, in my opinion.”

    The recent developments in Lubumbashi come in the context of a broader crackdown against activists, opposition party members and others who have urged that presidential elections be organized according to the constitutional timetable, Human Rights Watch said.

    Political parties organized public meetings in cities across Congo on April 24 to commemorate the country’s multiparty democratization process, which began 26 years ago. The opposition also sought to use the meetings to protest attempts to extend President Joseph Kabila’s stay in power beyond his constitutionally mandated two-term limit, which ends on December 19. The meetings in Kinshasa, the capital, and the eastern cities of Goma and Bukavu proceeded peacefully.

    A similar meeting in Lubumbashi had been organized by the G7, a platform of seven political parties dismissed from President Kabila’s majority coalition in September 2015 after publicly calling on the president to organize presidential elections on time and support a successor. On March 30, the G7 announced their support for Katumbi as a presidential candidate. The former governor of Katanga province, Katumbi defected from Kabila’s political party in September to join the opposition.

    Early in the morning on April 24, police deployed heavily throughout Lubumbashi’s neighborhood known as the Kenya commune, where the political meeting was to take place. Police searched all vehicles and passengers entering the neighborhood and blocked a number of streets.

    After learning he would not be able to enter the neighborhood by vehicle, Katumbi entered on foot, avoiding the police barriers. A crowd of supporters accompanied him as he walked the several kilometers toward the Kenya stadium, the planned meeting site. As they neared the stadium, police began firing teargas toward Katumbi and the crowd around him, preventing the meeting from taking place.

    Police and Republican Guard soldiers also blocked a team of human rights observers and security officers from the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Congo, MONUSCO, from entering the Kenya commune that morning. They were only able to enter toward the end of the day, by going around the police barriers.

    In Lubumbashi during the days leading up to and following the scheduled public meeting, security forces arrested Katumbi’s former cabinet director; 6 of Katumbi’s employees; 2 sons of a G7 opposition leader, Pierre Lumbi, and 3 of their business employees; at least 10 opposition party members and others who had come out to participate in the scheduled public meeting; one of Katumbi’s former security guards; and 4 human rights activists who were observing as security forces searched Katumbi’s farm without a warrant. Sixteen of these have since been released, while 11 remain in detention. Human Rights Watch has received reports of additional arrests of those close to Katumbi that it is seeking to confirm.

    Opposition party headquarters in Lubumbashi were attacked before and since the planned meeting. Police vandalized the headquarters of the National Union of Federalists of Congo (Union Nationale des fédéralistes du Congo, UNAFEC), one of the G7 members, in Lubumbashi on April 19 and 20 and have kept it shut under police guard. On April 26, unidentified assailants set fire to the Lubumbashi headquarters of another G7 party member, National Union of Federalist Democrats (Union Nationale des Démocrates Féderalistes, UNADEF).

    After the justice minister’s announcement of the investigation into Katumbi on May 4, there were reports that Katumbi might be arrested or taken in for questioning. Three Congolese human rights activists went to Katumbi’s house on the morning of May 5 to monitor the situation from outside. They told Human Rights Watch that about a dozen vehicles with suspected National Intelligence Agency (Agence nationale de renseignements, ANR) and other security force officials, most in civilian clothes, were deployed along the avenue in front of Katumbi’s home. At about 3 p.m., an ANR official told the activists, “We know you very well, you work against the nation and you’re spying on our agents.” He then added, “We’re on an official mission, and we order you to leave the ‘sector’ immediately and not to come back.” The activists then left the area.

    These recent incidents highlight the importance of MONUSCO increasing its military and police presence in Lubumbashi, a political hotspot where there is currently a minimal UN presence. MONUSCO should fully implement its mandate to protect all those at risk from political violence and threats in the area, Human Rights Watch said.

    Over the past year and a half, government officials and security forces have arrested dozens of opposition leaders and activists, fired on peaceful protesters, banned demonstrations organized by the opposition, shut down media outlets close to the opposition, intimidated and threatened those who have considered joining the opposition, and prevented opposition leaders from moving freely around the country. In numerous recent cases, the justice system and other state institutions – including the ANR, police, and Republican Guard – have acted in a partisan manner on behalf of the government, Human Rights Watch said.

    Preparations for presidential elections have stalled, and many senior government officials and members of Kabila’s ruling coalition have said that elections cannot be held before the end of the year. They have called for a national dialogue to discuss the way forward. Many of the main opposition parties have refused to participate in the dialogue, citing fears it is merely a ploy for Kabila to stay in power.

    “Arresting those close to opposition leaders, vandalizing their party offices, and using teargas to disrupt peaceful demonstrations sends a frightening message about future election security,” Bekele said. “Government officials should get serious about their calls for dialogue by creating a climate of confidence and ending the campaign of harassment and violence.”

    {{For more information on the recent arrests and other political repression in Lubumbashi, please see below.}}

    {{Authorization for public meeting in Lubumbashi}}

    Ten days before the planned public meeting on April 24, UNAFEC wrote to Lubumbashi’s mayor on behalf of the G7 to inform him of the demonstration. Human Rights Watch has on file a copy of the letter, with acknowledgement of receipt from the mayor’s office. Congo’s constitution and electoral law require the organizers of political demonstrations to inform local administrative authorities in writing 24 hours in advance of a planned demonstration, but they are not required to receive prior authorization.

    {{Arrests in Lubumbashi}}

    On April 22 at about 8:30 p.m., police without a warrant searched the Lubumbashi home of Professor Huit Mulongo, who had served as cabinet director for Katumbi during his governorship. Mulongo has been a leader of the Front Citoyen 2016, a coalition of parties and groups urging President Kabila to accept existing constitutional term limits.

    The police arrested Mulongo after finding a revolver in his jeep and leaflets about the G7 and the Front Citoyen in his house. They took him to the National Intelligence Agency (Agence Nationale des Renseignements, ANR), where he spent a night before being transferred to a military tribunal. Judicial officials questioned Mulongo about his political activities and his revolver, which he said was appropriately registered. Mulongo was later transferred to Kassapa, Lubumbashi’s central prison, where he remains in detention. His lawyer told Human Rights Watch that Mulongo has not been officially charged with any crime and there has been no response to a request for provisional release.

    Early on the morning of April 24, before the scheduled opposition meeting in Lubumbashi, ANR agents, without a warrant, searched the Rift Congo Hotel, owned by the family of Pierre Lumbi, a G7 leader and president of the Social Movement for Revival (Mouvement social pour le renouveau, MSR) political party. The agents targeted four hotel rooms, finding five weapons in one of them.

    Hotel employees said that the ANR agents were joined by police and military intelligence officers. They seized the video recordings from the hotel’s surveillance cameras and arrested Lumbi’s two sons, Larry, 29, and Djela, 32, who manage the hotel as well as a receptionist, a security guard, and the technician who operates the surveillance cameras. All were taken to an ANR detention center.

    Lumbi’s younger son and the technician were released without charge at about 9 p.m. The others were released without charge at about 8 p.m. the next evening.

    The Rift Congo Hotel management has not been shown the seized surveillance video, which should provide images of the person who checked into the hotel room where the weapons were found as well as the license plate number of the vehicle the person arrived in.

    At about 5 p.m. on April 24, police and ANR agents arrested six of Katumbi’s employees who were waiting for him in two vehicles on Bukama Avenue outside the Kenya stadium, including two drivers, three security guards and a United States citizen who works as a security adviser for Katumbi. One of the drivers said police officers beat him before taking him and the others to an ANR detention center. At about 2 a.m., ANR personnel took one of the detained security guards from his cell and whipped him dozens of times. Witnesses said that he returned to the cell with marks on his back and an injured right arm.

    The two drivers were released the next day, while the others were transferred to the ANR in Kinshasa, where they are still being held. Katumbi told Human Rights Watch that he and his family had received multiple threats and that he had hired American security advisers after the government took away the security guards he had had while serving as governor.

    Of the 10 opposition party members and others also arrested on April 24 after coming out to participate in the scheduled public meeting in Lubumbashi’s Kenya commune, 5 were later released and 5 remain in detention, according to UN human rights observers. One of those arrested was a journalist for a pro-UNAFEC radio and television station, VKAT, which was shut down on March 11. He told Human Rights Watch that he had been accused of “sharing images” and was released the next day without charge after paying a sum of money.

    On May 5, the authorities arrested one of Katumbi’s former security guards. He was first held at a military tribunal before being transferred to the ANR in Lubumbashi, where he remains in detention.

    On May 7, security forces deployed to Katumbi’s Futuka farm, about 70 kilometers outside of Lubumbashi, and searched the premises without a warrant, according to Katumbi and people at the farm. Four Congolese human rights activists who were monitoring the situation were detained at around noon. They were held by the ANR at the farm until about 6 p.m. when three of them were released. The fourth, Hubert Tshiswaka, was then taken to an ANR detention center in Lubumbashi, where he was held until about 10:30 p.m. His phone was confiscated.

    Attacks on Opposition Party Headquarters

    On April 19, police in Lubumbashi tore down the G7 party flags and five large photos of Katumbi that had been posted on the gate outside the UNAFEC party headquarters soon after the UNAFEC leader, Gabriel Kyungu, announced the upcoming public meeting with Katumbi, their presidential candidate. UNAFEC members and other neighborhood youth soon gathered to protest. The police fired teargas into the crowd. Some of the youth threw rocks at the police and burned tires in the streets. Later that evening, the police returned to the UNAFEC party headquarters to take down a large photo of Kyungu.

    The next morning, large numbers of police were deployed to the Kenya commune and the clashes with the youth protesters continued. Witnesses said that the police fired teargas and each side threw rocks at the other. Many shops and businesses were closed.

    At about 4 p.m., prosecutor’s office officials arrived and sealed the UNAFEC headquarters shut. It remains closed, with police outside to prevent party members from entering.

    The police arrested 11 men and a teenage boy during the protests outside the UNAFEC headquarters on April 19 and 20. The teenager was transferred to the children’s tribunal and later released. The others were hastily tried on the night of April 21 without being given time to prepare a defense. Nine were convicted of rebellion, voluntary destruction of goods or property, and robbery and sentenced to 2, 5, or 10 years in prison. Two others were acquitted. The defendants’ lawyer and a UNAFEC official said the nine who were convicted were in the area during the incidents but were not UNAFEC members. They are in Kassapa central prison.

    Kyungu was not arrested, but a court in Lubumbashi found him guilty on April 22 of ordering the robbery of a store and ordered him to pay a fine of 10 million Congolese francs (about US$10,800) to the owner. The court also ordered the destruction of the seized photos of Katumbi.

    No police officers were arrested for the vandalism at the UNAFEC party headquarters or other abuses.

    On April 26, soon after midnight, unidentified assailants set fire to the headquarters of another G7 party in Lubumbashi, UNADEF. Furniture, rugs, and curtains were destroyed and the walls and ceilings were partially burned before neighbors were able to put the fire out. The day before, UNADEF had submitted a letter to the mayor’s office, informing him of a political meeting scheduled for May 2. UNADEF announced on May 1 that the meeting would be delayed, in respect for the national funeral service for Congo’s international music icon Papa Wemba, scheduled that day in Kinshasa.

    Moise Katumbi, opposition leader and former governor of Katanga province, attending a funeral mass in honor of legendary Congolese singer Papa Wemba in Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 4, 2016.
  • Uganda:Opposition leaders held at home ahead of swearing-in

    {More Opposition leaders were yesterday arrested as security forces increased a crackdown on political dissent ahead of Mr Museveni’s May 12 swearing-in.}

    Police raided FDC offices for the third time since the February 18 polls, arresting the party’s deputy secretary general for administration Harold Kaija.

    Mr Kaija had just finished addressing the FDC weekly media briefing when about 20 policemen commanded by Kampala Metropolitan Police south regional commander Andrew Kaggwa moved in and began searching the media briefing and other rooms.

    Several other items, including a laptop were confiscated by police ‘detectives’ Musa Walugembe and Albert Muhumuza, who manned the search.

    “As a police officer, I have the mandate to move in when an offence is about to be committed. We suspected there were seditious materials in there[FDC offices] and we picked some of them,” Mr Kaggwa said.

    The house detention of former presidential candidate Kizza Besigye and Kampala Lord Mayor Erias Lukwago at their respective homes in Kasangati and Rubaga, which started on May 5, also continued with police restricting visitors and journalists.

    Also, homes of leaders such as FDC spokesperson Ibrahim Ssemujju Nganda in Kira Municipality and Leader of the Opposition in Parliament in Kampala were surrounded by heavily armed policemen.

    At Mr Ssemujju’s home, a police patrol pick-up was packed at the gate of his house with the operatives manning it preventing any access by journalists and visitors.

    A plain-clothed stick-wielding man identified as Barnett Tusiime threatened, in the presence of senior police commanders including Mr Bosco Sserunjogi, the DPC Kira Division, to beat up journalists if they did not leave the premises immediately

    Mr Sserunjogi said his men were keeping vigil at Mr Ssemujju’s home to “allow the honourable have some rest as he prepares for his voters”.

    But in a telephone interview, Mr Ssemujju said: “The police are not saying anything.”

    More than 150 Opposition supporters and officials are either in detention or missing, according to FDC officials since the party called for countrywide protests ahead of the May 12 presidential inauguration.

    FDC asserts that their candidate Dr Besigye who they claim won the elections by 52 per cent, will be sworn in on May 12 as president.

    Kampala Metropolitan Police spokesperson Patrick Onyango declined to comment on the specifics of the crackdown referring the matter to IGP Kale Kayihura.

    Gen Kayihura confirmed the whereabouts of FDC secretary for mobilisation Ingrid Turinawe after security operatives arrested her on Sunday at Gayaza Trading Centre. She has not been seen since then.

    Police spokesperson Fred Enanga had earlier denied police holding Ms Turinawe in their custody.
    However, Gen Kayihura in a briefing yesterday, said the Force was holding Ms Turinawe because “we have evidence she is involved in a number of crimes.”

    Police officers surround the gate to the FDC party headquarters in Najjanankumbi, Kampala, yesterday after arresting the party’s deputy secretary general Harold Kaija whom they found addressing journalists. Mr Kaija said on May 12, former FDC presidential flag bearer Kizza Besigye will be sworn-in.
  • US, EU envoys hold talks with Museveni ahead of swearing-in

    {President Museveni last Thursday held back-to-back meetings with head of the European Union (EU) delegation to Uganda Kristian Schmidt and US Ambassador Deborah Malac on elections, recent political developments and government’s measured proposal to withdraw troops from Somalia.}

    According to both official accounts and sources in State House, the meetings were requested by the two envoys.

    The President’s Press Secretary, Ms Linda Nabusayi, confirmed to Daily Monitor that Mr Museveni “and the two leaders met and held bilateral meetings” but added there was nothing strange about the meeting nor the timing.

    Meeting confirmed
    “The President regularly meets foreign diplomats as our development partners,” Ms Nabusayi said, adding that “the deliberations of their meetings are not for public discussion.”

    Last Thursday, Mr Museveni first met with the EU envoy, Mr Schmidt. EU press and information officer Emmanuel Gyezaho confirmed the meeting and said “the two also discussed EU-Uganda relations and regional issues of mutual interest, including the Somalia mission.”

    The envoy, according to sources, raised issues about the just concluded controversial presidential elections and also presented the final report of the European Union Election Observation Mission which was released last month.

    The 42-page report, which is a detailed account of the preliminary report of findings the Mission issued on the eve of the presidential elections results announcement on February 20, notes that the 2016 elections took place in a challenging political environment, exposing significant division between the state apparatus and large parts of the population.

    President Museveni and Mr Schmidt also discussed the UPDF involvement in the African Union Mission in Somalia, which the government said last week, was “considering to withdraw.”

    The envoy, sources said, in the meeting expressed reservation on the UPDF pulling out now when the Somali government is in the process of building capacity to stand on its own. However, Mr Museveni is said to have maintained that Uganda was not withdrawing its troops but rather conducting a review of its deployment.

    Museveni meets US envoy
    President Museveni later in the afternoon held talks with Ms Malac, who had been touring projects funded by her government in West Nile sub-region but cut short the trip to return to Kampala.

    Sources, citing her swift return to Kampala, had indicated she had been summoned but Ms Nabusayi and US embassy spokesman Christopher Brown denied the claim.

    “When we learned of the time of the meeting with President Museveni, we had to return to Kampala earlier than scheduled,” Mr Brown told this newspaper in an email. “The altered schedule meant we unfortunately had to cancel and attend the meeting we had requested with the President.”

    Uganda is America’s close military ally in the Great Lakes Region but the recent open rebuke likely signalled that Washington is not afraid anymore to re-set relations with the country’s leader who it has consistently supported.
    President Museveni, while speaking at his victory party held at Kololo ceremonial grounds on April 9, told off donor countries: “I don’t like foreigners giving me orders on Uganda. Uganda is ours.”

    Sources described Thursday’s meeting as cordial but noted there were some points of dissent between the two parties on political developments in the country.

    Mr Brown, who personally attended the meeting was, however, non-committal on what the two agreed or disagreed on, saying: “I will not discuss the details or contents of our diplomatic engagements, but Ambassador Malac and President Museveni held a frank discussion and exchange of views on multiple topics.”

    The public will be keen on whether the two envoys will attend Thursday’s swearing in ceremony.

    Already, there is no official indication the EU and US governments have congratulated President Museveni since the elections, and especially after the Supreme Court on March 31 dismissed the petition by third runner up Amama Mbabazi, seeking to annul the result.

    President Museveni (R) greets a European Union official as US Ambassador Deborah Malac (C) looks on following a meeting at State House Entebbe last Thursday.
  • Magufuli: Bear with me as I clean up mess

    {President John Magufuli has called on Tanzanians to bear with him as he applies tough and stringent measures against some unscrupulous leaders and civil servants because the situation calls for it.}

    “It is only due to poor leadership and mismanagement that the majority of Tanzanians suffer in misery and poverty while a few public servants amass all wealth. I had vowed that throughout my tenure as president, I will side with the poor,” stressed President Magufuli.

    The president made the remarks yesterday after being invited to address the congregation after the first mass at the ‘Tokeo la Bwana’ Catholic Parish in Burka, Arusha City.

    He reminded Arusha residents and other Tanzanians that it was a shame that people in the country, which is endowed with all natural resources, minerals and million hectares of fertile and arable land should continue to reel in poverty.

    “Take tanzanite, for instance; these minerals are only found in Tanzania — precisely in Arusha. That is how rare they are. But still we have failed to make use of this endowment to lift up the country’s economy and our people’s earnings.

    And all this is due to few selfish individuals,” he observed. Dr Magufuli noted further that the country is so rich in natural resources, such as wild animals, that can generate a lot of foreign money, but yet some people have been illegally smuggling the rare species out of the country.

    “And as if this is not enough, the same people entrusted to safeguard these national treasurers use their ill-gotten wealth to oppress Tanzanians. There is no way we can condone such acts,” he stated amidst much applause.

    Arusha is the country’s tanzanite gemstones trade centre as well as wildlife hotspot. However, minerals smuggling and wildlife trafficking have been notorious in the area. “When I deal with people harshly it is not because I’m a cruel person.

    It is the other way round. I am removing these public servants from public offices because they had been cruel to the people who entrusted me with the country’s top leadership knowing I will rescue them from years of oppression.

    There is one thing you should be assured of; “I won’t let you down,” he stressed. Earlier, the Parish Chairman, Mr Philemon Mollel, invited the president to become a parishioner at the Burka Church, which the head of state accepted and donated 1m/- to the church choir.

  • Uganda:Kadaga dances to Speaker nod

    {After beating off competition for the position of Speaker from her deputy, Mr Jacob Oulanyah, Ms Rebecca Kadaga on Friday took to the dancing floor in a popular night club in Kampala with MPs who backed her for the top job. }

    Her campaign taskforce that has been involved in weeks of lobbying and campaigning – sometimes with bare knuckles – organised the party to celebrate their win.

    Ms Kadaga is set to be elected the Speaker of 10th Parliament after the ruling NRM endorsed her for the much sought-after position ahead of Mr Oulanyah who had appeared determined to vie for the post.

    According to Ms Kadaga, this will be her last term as the Speaker of Parliament. She had earlier served 10 years as Deputy Speaker.

    Before the declaration was made by NRM Central Executive Committee (CEC) to maintain the status quo — Ms Kadaga as the Speaker and Mr Jacob Oulanyah her deputy, the two went for each other’s neck in ugly spats.

    Despite being a popular choice for both sides of the august House, Ms Kadaga was still subjected to the rigours of her party (NRM) internal clearance, a move her supporters claimed was uncalled for.

    However, all that didn’t stop her from unwinding last night (Friday) in the best way she knows — dancing.

    Just minutes to 11pm, Ms Kadaga arrived and was in the house—Guvnor. The nightclub that is located on First Street, Industrial Area is one Kampala’s most popular nightspots. By then several MPs were already grooving waiting for her.

    Upon her arrival, she didn’t waste time and hit the dancing floor where she did several paka chini strokes, took selfies, did “high-five” and plenty of hugs with her supporters, mainly the MPs.

    Her energy was high. Dance moves commendable and composure admirable.
    Nearly 35 minutes later, her deputy, Mr Oulanyah, arrived amid ululation. He hit the dance floor where Ms Kadaga was jigging, mobbed by MPs. Smiling broadly, he slapped her palms as if to say we are one and greatest of friends.

    By 1am, the Speaker seemed to have had enough and left. Shortly thereafter, Mr Oulanyah also left, leaving legislators, some of whom were just arriving to take his place on the dance floor.

    When asked what the celebration was about, Mr Isaac Isanga Musumba, former State minister for Regional Foreign Affairs, said: “This is a unity dance.”

    He continued: “We are celebrating the nomination of Ms Kadaga for the position of Speaker. And all the MPs are here to celebrate in unity.”

    The same view was expressed by MPs Denis Hamson Obua and Chris Baryomunsi, who both said the occasion was to celebrate the nomination of the two Parliament principals—Ms Kadaga and Mr Oulanyah.

    On his way out when Sunday Monitor asked Mr Oulanyah what the occasion is, he sighed briefly, raised his eye brow, smiled and then moved on with a procession that was seeing him out.

    Ms Rebecca Kadaga (seated, Left) dances with other MPs at Club Guvnor.
  • Pope Francis: Being a migrant is not a crime

    {Pontiff urges European leaders to ‘tear down’ walls put up to keep refugees fleeing wars out of the continent.}

    Pope Francis has urged Europe to “tear down” the walls being built to keep out refugees and to create a radical new “social economy” serving the many not the few.

    Invoking the memory of the European Union’s founding fathers’ pursuit of integration in the aftermath of World War II, the pontiff on Friday said they inspired because they had “dared to change radically the models” that had led to war.

    Saying he dreamed of a Europe in which “being a migrant is not a crime”, Francis said: “Today more than ever, their vision inspires us to build bridges and tear down walls.”

    The comments came in a speech at the Vatican following the 79-year-old pontiff’s presentation with the EU’s Charlemagne Prize for his contribution to European unification.

    Having unexpectedly decided to accept the award, Francis delivered a typically hard-hitting message to an audience including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the heads of the EU’s main institutions, the Council, the Commission, the Parliament and its central bank.

    ‘What has happened to you?’

    “What has happened to you, the Europe of humanism, the champion of human rights, democracy and freedom?” he asked.

    “What has happened to you, Europe, the home of poets, philosophers, artists, musicians, and men and women of letters?”

    Borrowing a phrase from writer and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, the Argentinian pontiff said Europe needed a “memory transfusion” to free itself from the temptation of “quick and easy short-term political gains.”

    And after that reference to the migrant crisis, Francis went on to say Europe had to fundamentally change its economic model.

    “If we want to rethink our society, we need to create dignified and well-paying jobs, especially for our young people.”

    Francis made the comments after receiving the EU's Charlemagne Prize for his contribution to European unification
  • Syria civil war: Aleppo ceasefire extended

    {US confirms extension of ceasefire in Syria’s northern province, with Russia saying it will be valid for 72 hours.}

    The US State Department has confirmed an extension of the ceasefire in Syria’s northern province of Aleppo.

    Russia late on Friday announced the extension of the truce in Aleppo for 72 hours starting at midnight on Saturday.

    State department spokesman John Kirby said that “the cessation of hostilities has reduced violence in Aleppo, and the United States is committed to keeping it in place as long as possible”.

    “While we welcome this recent extension, our goal is to get to a point where we no longer have to count the hours and that the cessation of hostilities is fully respected across Syria,” Kirby said.

    The renewed truce extends a 48-hour ceasefire that came into effect on Wednesday at midnight Damascus time and was due to expire at midnight on Saturday.

    Sporadic fighting

    The initial ceasefire was supposed to include not only the city of Aleppo but also surrounding districts.

    However, fighting has continued at several locations across Aleppo province.

    On Friday, Syrian rebel group al-Nusra Front captured the strategic village of Khan Touman outside of Aleppo city that could potentially open up new supply routes for rebel-held areas of the city.

    The capture also opens up an alternate supply route to rebel-held areas of the city, connecting it to areas of Idlib that are also controlled by the opposition.

    Syrian government forces have been trying to encircle rebels in the city by cutting them off from supply routes in the north.

    Sources told Al Jazeera that groups involved in the attack included Ahrar al-Sham, Ajnad al-Sham and other factions under the command of the Army of Conquest.

    British-based rights group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said more than 73 people had died in clashes in Khan Touman and surrounding villages, which included at least one al-Nusra suicide bomber.

    The group put the number of government dead at 30 and rebels killed at 43, with dozens of wounded on both sides.

    A boy rides a bicycle near damaged buildings in the rebel held area of Old Aleppo, Syria May 5, 2016.
  • Egypt arrests leading rights lawyer

    {Malek Adly is among group of lawyers who filed legal suit against Egypt’s decision to hand two islands to Saudi Arabia.}

    A prominent Egyptian rights lawyer, who had raised a legal suit against the Egyptian president’s decision to hand two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia, has been arrested and ordered held in custody for 15 days, pending investigation into a list of allegations, including attempts to overthrow the government.

    Malek Adly’s detention on Friday is part of a wave of arrests in Egypt as security forces put down protests against President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi’s decision on the islands.

    Adly, a member of the April 6 youth movement that was part of the uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak from power in 2011, has appeared on TV talk shows, speaking out against the islands’ handover.

    He was also among a group of lawyers who filed a lawsuit over the case of the islands.

    Two others from the group were also arrested. They were detained in a police raid of the Journalists’ Syndicate on Sunday, which sparked protests by hundreds of journalists who called for Interior Minister Magdy Abdel-Ghaffar’s dismissal and a presidential apology.

    Both Sisi and Abdel-Ghaffar have ignored the demands.

    The interior minister on Thursday attended the inauguration of a mega project for land reclamation hailed by Sisi as one of his “unprecedented” achievements. In his half-an-hour speech at the event, Sisi repeated several times, “I am not afraid” – a statement observers believe was meant for his critics.

    {{Crackdown on dissidents}}

    Sisi, Egypt’s army chief-turned-president, has orchestrated one of largest ever crackdowns on dissidents in the country, following the military’s ouster of President Mohammed Morsi in July 2013.

    An anti-protest law issued months later led to mass arrests of thousands of protesters, mostly Morsi’s supporters or pro-democracy advocates. The law and heavy-handed security measures have stifled street demonstrations.

    However, on April 15, nearly 2,000 protesters rallied to denounce the handover of the Tiran and Sanafir islands. The deal took many Egyptians by surprise, especially since it came during Saudi king’s visit to Egypt, during which several multi-billion dollar deals were struck.

    Sisi and the government have defended the decision by saying the islands at the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba were Saudi territory and that the kingdom asked Cairo in 1950 to protect them from Israel.

    Adly's detention came amid a crackdown on journalists who oppose government policies, as well as protests against the clampdown