Category: Politics

  • Embattled DR Congo opposition leader Katumbi in London: lawyer

    Moise Katumbi, the embattled DR Congo opposition leader who quit the country last week ostensibly for medical treatment, has now flown from South Africa to London, one of his lawyers said Sunday.

    Katumbi, a football magnate seen as the leading challenger to President Joseph Kabila for the top job in the mineral-rich country, needs “rest” and it is not clear when he will be heading home, Georges Kapiamba told AFP.

    With political tensions soaring over expectations that Kabila wants to extend his rule despite being barred from a third term, Katumbi has been all but forced into exile as he faces charges of undermining state security.

    The 51-year-old owner of the Tout-Puissant Mazembe football club had this month announced plans to stand in the election due later this year, but was swiftly hit with an investigation into claims he hired foreign mercenaries.

    Katumbi flew to South Africa on May 20 and was admitted to hospital in Johannesburg, with followers saying he was injured during clashes between police and his supporters a week earlier.

    “Moise Katumbi left Johannesburg on Friday and landed in London on Saturday,” said lawyer Kapiamba.

    Another member of Katumbi’s team, speaking from Johannesburg, added: “He is out of hospital. He is well, but because of the disorder in Congo, he prefers to rest for the moment.

    “He will go back to Congo but we still don’t know when,” the source said, insisting: “He is a candidate for the presidency.”

    – Moved hospitals for security –

    Doctors have recommended he rest, the source added, saying Katumbi had travelled to London because his usual doctor was there.

    The businessman left Johannesburg on a commercial jet while his wife Carine, who had accompanied him to South Africa, has gone back to Lubumbashi, the Congolese mining hub that serves as Katumbi’s power base.

    Katumbi’s entourage in South Africa said the politician had needed treatment after he inhaled tear gas during clashes between police and his supporters in Lubumbashi.

    But he left the country just a day after he was charged over the allegations that he hired foreign mercenaries, raising questions over the real reasons for the trip.

    Katumbi, who calls the charges against him “grotesque lies”, was transferred between hospitals in Johannesburg for security reasons, according to supporters.

    “Strangers came to the reception to ask where he was,” said a source close to Katumbi. “The hospital’s security staff judged this to be suspicious.”

    Congolese authorities have allowed Katumbi to seek treatment abroad on the condition that he “is not vocal on the case before the courts”, according to government spokesman Lambert Mende.

    Katumbi, a former ally of Kabila’s, joined the opposition in September when he quit as governor of Katanga province.

    Kabila has been in power since his father’s assassination in 2001. Like much of the opposition, Katumbi accuses him of seeking to stay in office beyond the two terms allowed under the constitution.

    At least one person was reported killed Thursday as rallies across DR Congo against Kabila turned violent.

    Opposition figure Moise Katumbi (R) arrives at the courthouse in Lubumbashi, DR Congo on May 13, 2016

  • Uganda to cut defence ties with Korea

    Uganda will cut defence and security ties with North Korea in compliance with a broad array of the UN sanctions imposed on Pyongyang in March for its nuclear test and ballistic missile launch.

    Former Foreign Affairs minister Sam Kutesa told journalists yesterday at State House Entebbe after President Museveni and North Korea’s archrival – the visiting South Korean leader Ms Park Geun-Hye held bilateral talks on defence and trade.
    The two nations later signed a Memorandum of Understanding which spells out areas of cooperation.

    Former Defense state minister Jeje Odongo signed on behalf of Uganda while South Korea deputy minister of defense, Hwang In Muo signed for his country.

    Signed MoUs

    They signed under the watchful eye of the two presidents.

    “Following the UN sanctions, we are disengaging our relations with North Korea. We do not support proliferation of nuclear weapons,” Mr Kutesa said.

    Mr Kutesa was responding to a question on whether the government would continue working with North Korea which has been offering military and police training to Uganda.

    He said Uganda supports use of nuclear for energy but instead urged those with nuclear weapons to destroy them.

    In March, the UN Security Council imposed sanctions on North Korea after it launched ballistic missiles.

    The sanctions prohibit all UN member states from engaging in activities such as trade or transfer of technology that could enable the nation’s missile and nuclear programmes.

    A report by the Royal United Service Institute for Defence and Security Studies, a global security think- tank released last month, listed Uganda among the top five countries that seem not ready to cut military ties with North Korea despite the UN restrictions.

    After the bilateral talks between presidents Museveni and Geun-Hye, 10 MoUs were signed between the two countries.

    These MoUs were on defence, social welfare, rural development, health, agriculture, cooperatives, information and communications technology, science and technology, diplomacy and consultations and energy.

    President Museveni said during a luncheon that “African patriots” support the peaceful unification of North and South Korea.

    “The Korean people are an ancient people whose specific identity can be traced as far back as 1392. Unfortunately, your nation was divided at the end of the second World War,” he said.

    President Geun-Hye arrived in Uganda last Saturday for a three-day visit pledging to support Uganda’s Vision 2040, a package of strategies that plan to transform Uganda from peasantry into a modern country.

    The two presidents will today to travel to Mpigi in Kampiringisa to tour South Korean agricultural projects.

    Relations

    Training: Previously Uganda has hosted 45 North Koreans security personnel to provide police training, according to a February report by a United Nations panel of experts. Handling guns: Another report by the panel last year said North Koreans trained Ugandan police on the use of AK-47s and pistols.

    Abstained on voting: Uganda abstained from voting on all nine UN General Assembly resolutions on North Korean human rights for which votes were counted since 2005, a record mirrored by countries including India, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Mali and Qatar.

    South Korean president, Park Geun-Hye, the receives a banquet of flowers from Megan Makanga at State House Entebbe yesterday.

  • Former Chadian despot Habre ruling Monday

    Tens of thousands of citizens were reportedly killed by Habre’s forces.

    A special court will hand down the verdict in the landmark war crimes trial of former Chadian dictator Hissene Habre on Monday, with prosecutors hoping for a life sentence.

    Habre, 73, was president of the Chad from 1982-1990, during which time he is reported to have committed crimes against humanity and torture, with tens of thousands of victims.

    He went on trial last July in the Extraordinary African Chambers (CAE), established in Dakar by the African Union under a deal with Senegal.

    Special prosecutor Mbacke Fall said the apparatus of repression began to operate under the direction of Hissene Habre, in closing arguments in February, during which he called for a maximum life sentence.

    Led by a judge from Burkina Faso, the historic case is the first time that an African leader accused of serious abuse of power has been tried by another country on the continent.

    Often dressed in combat fatigues complementing his “desert fighter” nickname, Habre fled to Senegal after he was ousted in 1990 by the current President Idriss Deby.

    Habre has declined to address the court and refuses to recognise its authority.

    Neither he nor his legal team will be in court for Monday’s hearing, they confirmed to journalists on Friday.

    His court-appointed lawyers will attend the hearing and are hoping for an acquittal.

    “We have developed our arguments sufficiently well to prove that Hissene Habre is innocent,” said Senegalese lawyer Mbeye Sene.

    “If the law is correctly applied, we will go straight to an acquittal for Mr Habre.”

    Investigators found that at least 40,000 people were killed during Habre’s rule, which was marked by fierce repression of opponents and the targeting of members of rival ethnic communities.

    Years of campaigns

    Witnesses also recounted the horror of life in Chad’s prisons, describing in graphic detail the abusive and often deadly punishments inflicted by the Documentation and Security Directorate (DDS), Habre’s feared secret police.

    Prisoners and political rivals were subject to electric shocks and waterboarding while some had gas sprayed into their eyes or spice rubbed into their genitals, the court heard.

    Massa Moire, who was detained by the DDS for three years, was released in 1990.

    “I still don’t know the reason for my arrest. My wish would be to see Habre sentenced to death. He brought so much pain to so many families,” he said at the headquarters of a victims’ association in Chad’s capital, N’Djamena.

    The former president’s defence team has sought to cast doubt on the prosecution argument that their client was an all-knowing, all-powerful head of the DDS, suggesting that he may have been unaware of abuses on the ground.

    The former dictator lived freely for more than 20 years in an upmarket Dakar suburb with his wife and children, swapping his military garb for billowing white robes and a cap.

    The AU asked Senegal to try Habre in July 2006, but the country delayed the process for years under former president Abdoulaye Wade, despite an agreement to create the special court.

    If convicted, Habre can expect a sentence of between 30 years and life with hard labour.

    It will be served in Senegal or another African Union member country.

    “It took 25 years of relentless campaigning by Hissene Habre’s victims to make this trial happen,” said Reed Brody, a lawyer for Human Rights Watch who has worked since 1999 to bring the case to court.

    “The Hissene Habre trial is a watershed in the fight for accountability for the world’s worst crimes,” he added, in a statement released late last week.

    A file picture taken on June 3, 2015 shows former Chadian dictator Hissene Habre gesturing as he leaves a Dakar courthouse after an identity hearing on June 3, 2015. A special court will hand down the verdict in the landmark war crimes trial of former Chadian dictator on May 30, 2016.

  • US troops’ use of YPG insignia in Syria ‘unauthorised’

    Images of special forces wearing YPG patches on their uniforms angered Turkey, which called US ‘two-faced’.

    US troops who were photographed in Syria wearing the emblem of a Kurdish armed group on their uniforms have been ordered to remove the patches, a military spokesman said.

    The Americans, part of a US-led coalition battling the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group, were working alongside a coalition of Kurdish and Arab troops north of ISIL’s de-facto capital Raqqa, and wore the insignia of the People’s Protection Units (YPG).

    “Wearing the YPG patches was unauthorised and it was inappropriate – and corrective action has been taken,” US Colonel Steve Warren said on Friday. “And we have communicated as much to our military partners and our military allies in the region.”

    Kurdish-led forces launch offensive on Syria’s Raqqa
    The images of the special forces soldiers – published by the AFP news agency – upset Turkey, which considers the YPG a “terrorist” group.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu denounced the US as “two-faced” and said the badges were “unacceptable”.

    “It is unacceptable that an ally country is using the YPG insignia. We reacted to it. It is impossible to accept it. This is a double standard and hypocrisy,” Cavusoglu said.

    Ankara also raised the issue with the US State Department.

    Al Jazeera’s Alan Fisher, reporting from Washington DC, said “the US army [is] taking immediate steps to try to diffuse what could have become a diplomatic incident”.

    The troops were supporting the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which is headed by the YPG, in an offensive against ISIL, also known as ISIS, in Raqqa province.

    The US says it has about 300 soldiers serving in training and support roles in Syria and has acknowledged that they work with the SDF.

    NATO member Turkey regards the YPG as an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, which has fought for autonomy in Turkey’s largely Kurdish southeast for three decades.

    Washington considers the PKK “terrorists”, but backs the YPG in the fight against ISIL.

    On Friday, US State Department spokesman Mark Toner declined to discuss the photos, saying he did not want to talk about where they were located in Syria.

    “We understand Turkey’s concerns, and let me make that clear,” Toner said. “And we continue to discuss this as well as other concerns that Turkey has regarding [ISIL].”

    Asked at a briefing on Thursday if it was appropriate to wear such insignia, Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said that when Special Forces operate in some areas, they do what they can to blend in with the community to enhance their own security.

    US forces angered Ankara by wearing YPG badges

  • Scuffles break out as Trump holds rally in San Diego

    Riot police sent in and pepper spray fired as presumptive presidential nominee speaks in city close to Mexican border.

    Scuffles broke out between pro and anti-Donald Trump groups as the Republican presumptive presidential nominee held a rally in a city near the Mexican border, along which he has pledged to build a wall if nominated.

    Dispersing a protest outside the venue where Trump was speaking, police fired pepper spray. The initially peaceful gathering was deemed illegal when the crowd’s behaviour became “unlawful”, the San Diego police department said on Twitter.

    Waving US and Mexican flags, more than 1,000 people had turned out for anti-Trump rallies in San Diego, a city on the US-Mexico border whose San Ysidro port of entry sees nearly 300,000 people a day cross legally between the countries.

    San Diego is considered a binational city by many who live and work on opposite sides of the border, and about a third of the city’s population is Latino.

    During Trump’s speech on Friday, some protesters outside the convention center scaled a barrier and lobbed water bottles at police. One man was pulled off the wall and arrested as others were surrounded by fellow protesters and backed away from the confrontation.

    After the convention center emptied, clusters of Trump supporters and anti-Trump demonstrators began to mix in the streets, many exchanging shouted epithets and some throwing water bottles at one another.

    READ MORE: California protesters surround Donald Trump rally

    At least 35 people were arrested and 18 others were left needing medical attention before calm was restored, according to police.

    “I am opposed to the hateful, bigoted, racist language of Donald Trump and his arrogance and intolerance,” one protester, Martha McPhail, told the local City News Service (CNS).

    An anti-Trump demonstrator (L) and a Trump supporter (R) argue outside a campaign event [Jonathan Alcorn/Reuters]
    “I’m for all of our people – all races, sexes, genders, military veterans – and he’s divisive,” she said.

    Riley Hansen, a 19-year-old Trump supporter who was selling T-shirts bearing his image, said it was time the US voted for a leader with a business background.

    “My dad always told me you need a businessman as president,” he told CNS. “I like his policies.”

    Trump was in the city to hold a rally ahead of a primary in California on June 7th.

    He has promised to build a wall along the US-Mexico border and deport the nearly 11 million undocumented immigrants who live in the US.

    Shortly before taking the stage, Trump issued a statement ruling out a one-on-one debate with second-place Democratic hopeful Bernie Sanders, who was also in California, killing off a potentially high-ratings television spectacle.

    The suggested debate, an idea first raised during a talk show appearance by the New York billionaire, would have sidelined likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton but given Sanders a huge platform ahead of the California Democratic primary.

    A day after saying he would welcome a Sanders debate, Trump called the idea “inappropriate,” declaring that he should only face the Democrats’ final choice.

    “I will wait to debate the first-place finisher in the Democratic Party, probably Crooked Hillary Clinton,” Trump said in a statement.

    Trump has won 1,238 delegates, one more than needed to win the Republican nomination, according to an Associated Press news agency tally on Thursday.

    Friday was not the first time Trump has been greeted by protests in California, which is home to the largest Latino population in the country. Late last month, a visit to the California Republican convention set off days of protests in the area, leading to several arrests.

  • Buhari’s first year: Five ways Nigeria has changed

    President Muhammadu Buhari came to power promising Nigerians “change”. Novelist and writer Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani gives five examples of what has changed in Nigeria since 29 May 2015 when he was sworn in.

    1.Are we safer

    Those of us who travel regularly in Nigeria’s north-east had become used to what should be a 15-minute journey turning into an hour-long ordeal.

    You had to stop dozens of times at roadblocks and disembark, while heavily armed soldiers inspected your vehicle for traces of the Islamist militant group, Boko Haram.
    Today, the number of checkpoints has fallen significantly – even on the road to Chibok – thanks to enhanced confidence in the security of the entire region.

    The army has regained swathes of territory that the Islamist militants had occupied as part of their so-called caliphate.

    Boko Haram has been considerably weakened, resigned to attacking soft targets using suicide bombers.

    Thousands of women and girls kidnapped by the group have also been rescued, including one of the 219 schoolgirls from Chibok abducted in April 2014.

    But while there is progress in the north-east, trouble in the Niger Delta, the country’s oil-producing region, is resurfacing.

    Recent attacks on oil facilities have caused a drop in production and helped push up the global price of crude oil.

    2. Where’s my money?

    In the months preceding last year’s elections, the popular chant on the streets was “Sai Buhari, Sai Buhari”, which means “Only Buhari” in Hausa – the most widely-spoken language in the north where the president originates.

    “Sai Buhari” became an almost magical greeting, capable of earning you a discount from the sweaty chap pushing a wheelbarrow of tiger nuts or sugar cane.

    It could even elicit a smile followed by permission to move along, from the miscellaneous airport officials who usually ensure that your passage through Nigerian customs and immigration is fraught with agonising delays.

    A year later, the chant has changed to “Buhariya”, which roughly translates to “Buhari’s way” or “Buhari’s time”.
    The slogan is now used to explain every unpleasant evidence of Nigeria’s troubled economy and a time of austerity.
    Q: “A basket of tomatoes has gone up from 3,000 naira ($15) to 18,000 naira?”
    A: It’s “Buhariya!”
    Q: “How come the naira is plummeting against the dollar on the black market?”
    A: It’s “Buhariya!”

    3. Where’s our money?

    This time last year, friendship with Sambo Dasuki, the former national security adviser, could have altered your economic circumstances forever.

    He would have been besieged with invitation cards to be the chief guest at various events.

    When he entered a room, almost everyone would stand in respect.

    Today, he sits in an Abuja jail, awaiting trial for the alleged mismanagement of billions of dollars meant for the war against Boko Haram – charges he denies.

    Several other big men, previous untouchables, such as former service chiefs, top politicians and government officials, are also sitting in jail awaiting corruption trials, or out on bail.

    And, if you’re looking for a second-hand luxury car to buy, now may be the time.
    A number of people formerly linked to the government are desperate for cash and selling off their fleets.

    It would seem as though the leaking taps that gushed dollars to be spent carelessly have stopped flowing since President Buhari came to power.

    Buhari’s battle to clean up the oil industry

    4. Where are the women?

    Ensuring women’s participation at all levels in political, economic and public life is one of the targets of the UN’s sustainable development goals (SDGs).

    But oly six out of Mr Buhari’s cabinet of 37 are women, a meagre 16% and way down on the previous administration’s 31%.

    The president’s wife, Aisha, is also the most silent first lady Nigeria has had in decades, barely seen or heard – except maybe when she is visiting unkempt children in a refugee camp or donating food items to victims of Boko Haram. She appears as the stereotypical good African wife.

    Her invisibility is suspicious when you consider that President Buhari, during his election campaign, said he would abolish the office of the first lady – but then retracted the suggestion when challenged by feminist voters.

    5. What are we wearing?

    In Abuja the government in power influences the style of dress throughout the administration.

    Staff of the government, friends of the government and aspiring friends of the government all aim to dress like the person at the top.

    Northerners ruled Nigeria for most of the country’s first three decades after independence from the UK in 1960.

    Over time, their traditional outfits, babarigas (flowing gowns) and kaftans, became firmly entrenched – even when a non-northerner was elected in 1999.

    Olusegun Obasanjo is an ethnic Yoruba from the south but throughout his eight-year presidential tenure, he mostly wore babarigas.

    Cartoons depicting a typical Nigerian “big man” will usually feature him dressed in the flowing robes, his potbelly distorting the layers of cloth.

    All this changed in 2011, with the election of Goodluck Jonathan.

    He was Nigeria’s first president from one of the country’s smaller ethnic groups, and also the first from the oil-producing Niger Delta, in the south.

    Mr Jonathan preferred the long shirt and trouser outfit that is traditional among his Ijaw community.
    Suddenly, the babariga was nowhere to be seen.

    Government offices and hotel lobbies began to feature an inordinate number of men dressed in the presidential style of the time.

    Some even went as far as the fedora hats and walking sticks that go with the outfit.
    Eventually, the style gained its own special nickname – “resource control” – in reference to the fact that most people who wore it seemed to be the ones controlling Nigeria’s oil resources.

    Indeed, it seemed to be the preferred outfit of many of Nigeria’s newest millionaires.
    Not any more. Within a year of Mr Buhari, “resource control” outfits have almost completely vanished from view. The babariga is back.

    Beyond these five areas, there are many more profound changes that Nigerians are expecting from our government, but those will take time.

    The structure of corruption and mismanagement which previous governments left behind must first be dismantled before a new foundation of progress can be laid.
    And President Buhari is no modern-day Hercules.

    Cleaning Nigeria’s equivalent of the fantastically filthy Augean stables of Greek myth is certainly not a one-year job.

    Muhammadu Buhari is the first Nigerian opposition candidate to be elected president

  • UN chief welcomes region-led meetings of political dialogue for Burundi

    27 May 2016 – United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today welcomed the meetings of the political dialogue for Burundi, held in Arusha, from 21 to 24 May under the auspices of the Facilitator of the East African Community (EAC), Benjamin William Mkapa, former President of Tanzania.

    Commending Mr. Mkapa’s decision to convene further meetings including those stakeholders who were not present in Arusha, the Secretary-General, in a statement issued by his spokesperson, stressed that a solution to the year-long political crisis in Burundi can only be found through an inclusive dialogue process that upholds the Constitution of Burundi, as well as the principles of the Arusha Peace and Reconciliation Agreement for Burundi, of which the UN and the region are guarantors.

    Mr. Ban in his statement fully supported regional efforts aimed at fostering a peaceful settlement to the crisis and reiterated the readiness of the UN to provide technical and substantive backing to the Facilitation, as mandated by the UN Security Council.

    At Ndutu refugee camp in Tanzania, Abdul Yamuremye in his tent with his wife Hadija Umugure and their family fled violence in Burundi after their house had been attacked killing Abdul's two brothers, a friend who stayed with them and her three children.

  • G7: Global economic growth an ‘urgent priority’

    Summit of major industrial powers ends in Japan with vow to tackle risks to growth and warning against UK exit from EU.

    The leaders of the G7 group have said the world economy is an urgent priority and cautioned that a British vote to leave the European Union would seriously threaten global growth.

    In a statement following a two-day summit in the Japanese resort of Ise-Shima, the world’s seven leading industrial nations pledged to “collectively tackle” major risks to global growth and committed to a cooperative approach in beefing up policies to stimulate their sluggish economies.

    “Global growth remains moderate and below potential, while risks of weak growth persist,” the G7 leaders said in a declaration on Friday.

    “Taking into account country-specific circumstances, we commit to strengthening our economic policy responses in a cooperative manner and to employing a more forceful and balanced policy mix, in order to swiftly achieve a strong, sustainable and balanced growth pattern,” the G7 statement said.

    ‘Serious risk’

    Last month, the International Monetary Fund cut its global economic growth outlook for this year to 3.2 percent, compared with a forecast of 3.4 percent in January.

    For 2017, the IMF said the global economy would grow 3.5 percent, down 0.1 percentage point from its January projection.

    The G7- made up of Britain, Germany, Canada, France, Italy, Japan and the United States – also warned that a British secession from the EU in next month’s referendum could have disastrous economic consequences.

    “A UK exit from the EU would reverse the trend towards greater global trade and investment, and the jobs they create, and is a further serious risk to growth,” they said.

    The comments highlight international concern over the possibility of so-called Brexit, as UK voters prepare for a June 23 referendum to decide whether to leave the 28-country bloc.

    “This summit is sending the signal that all of us hope that Great Britain remains a member of the European Union,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

    “But of course the decision has to be made by the British voters.”

    Gap widening

    David Cameron, the UK prime minister, has been campaigning for Britain to stay in, with recent polls suggesting a widening lead for supporters of continued EU membership.

    However, the “leave” campaign is putting up stiff competition, with a number of prominent supporters, including former London mayor Boris Johnson.

    Brexit: Au revoir Europe? – Head to Head

    Al Jazeera’s Scott Heidler, reporting from Tokyo, said “Brexit” was not a primary issue in the G7 summit.

    However, leaders wanted it to be identified in the statement published after the summit and it was included in the document, he said.

    “There was obviously no back-and-forth discussion on this issue,” he said.

    Separately, the G7 called large-scale immigration and migration a major challenge.

    It pledged to increase global aid for the immediate and long-term needs of refugees and displaced people.

    “The G7 recognises the ongoing large-scale movements of migrants and refugees as a global challenge which requires a global response,” the leaders said.

    INTERACTIVES: Islands row around China

    They said they would “commit to increase global assistance to meet immediate and longer-term needs of refugees … as well as their host communities”.

    The group also expressed concern over the East and South China Seas, where China has been taking more assertive action amid territorial disputes with Japan and several Southeast Asian nations.

    Without mentioning China, which has claims to almost the entire South China Sea, the G7 reiterated its commitment to the peaceful settlement of maritime disputes and to respecting the freedom of navigation and overflight.

  • South Africa passes land expropriations bill

    Some groups critical of bill allowing compulsory purchase in public interest that ruling ANC says will tackle injustice.

    South Africa has passed a bill criticised by some opposition parties and farming groups that allows the compulsory purchase of land in the public interest.

    The bill, approved by parliament on Thursday, will enable the state to pay for land at a value determined by a government adjudicator and then expropriate it for the “public interest”, ending the willing-buyer, willing-seller approach to land reform.

    Twenty years after the end of apartheid, most of South Africa’s land is still white-owned and the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party says the legislation will tackle an injustice and put more land in black hands.

    The national assembly initially passed the bill in February before it was sent for amendments and it remains only for President Jacob Zuma to sign it into law.

    Tough times

    Many commercial and small-scale producers in South Africa are currently facing tough times because of the worst drought in at least a century.

    Experts say the bill will not signal the kind of often violent land grabs that took place in neighbouring Zimbabwe, where white-owned farms were seized by the government for redistribution to landless blacks.

    “The passing of the bill by parliament is historic and heralds a new era of intensified land distribution programme to bring long-awaited justice to the dispossessed majority of South Africans,” the ANC said in a statement.

    Some economists and farming groups have said that the measure could hit investment and production at a time when South Africa is emerging from drought – pointing to the serious economic damage arising from farm seizures in Zimbabwe.

    They have also complained about a lack of clarity on how it will work.

    The ANC says land will only be expropriated after “just and equitable” compensation has been paid.

    Around eight million hectares (20 million acres) of land have been transferred to black owners since apartheid, equal to eight to 10 percent of the land in white hands in 1994.

    The total is only a third of the 30 percent targeted by the ANC.

    Small-scale farmers are facing tough times because of the worst drought in at least a century

  • DR Congo protests against Joseph Kabila turn deadly

    Rallies called by dissidents to oppose Kabila’s plan to stay on as caretaker president after expiry of his second term.

    At least one police officer and one protester have been killed as thousands of people took to the streets in nationwide protests against incumbent President Joseph Kabila in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

    The deaths occurred in the eastern city of Goma on Thursday, according to Jose Maria Aranaz, director of the UN’s Congo-based Joint Human Rights Office. Two others were injured by gunfire, he said.

    In the capital Kinshasa, security forces fired tear gas and charged at several thousand stone-throwing protesters.

    Police said although the Kinshasa demonstration had permission from the authorities unlike other parts of the country, the crowds had deviated from an agreed route.

    “In these cases we don’t negotiate, we disperse,” national police spokesman colonel Pierre Rombaut Mwanamputu told the AFP news agency.

    Al Jazeera’s Haru Mutasa, reporting from Lubumbashi, said the situation developed in a different way in that city.

    Protests erupted after a court ruling allowing Kabila to remain president [Habibou Bangré/Al Jazeera]

    “Opposition supporters said they were waiting for their leaders to come out to say ‘start marching’ [without a permit] but the leaders did not come out so people did not start marching,” she said.

    “Some people said they were afraid to do so because in the past few weeks when the police clashed with the opposition supporters some of them were injured.”

    Opposition groups called for the protests after the country’s Constitutional Court ruled earlier this month that Kabila, in power since his father’s assassination in 2001, could remain in a caretaker capacity beyond the expiry of his second term in December.

    Feeling disillusioned

    With Kabila’s powerful rival, Moise Katumbi, 51, all but pushed into exile in South Africa, some dissidents in the central African country feel disillusioned.

    With many dissidents seeing in Katumbi a rightful potential leader for the country, the Citizen Front has defied the ban on protests in North Kivu and Lubumbashi.

    Political unrest has hit the country for months over concerns that Kabila intends to extend his rule.

    There are fears at home and abroad that Kabila will delay elections due to be held late this year.

    Kabila’s supporters want the election delayed for two to four years because of logistical and financial difficulties, but the opposition accuses Kabila of planning to amend the constitution to extend his rule.

    Despite opposition support for Katumbi, many rank-and-file dissidents are disappointed that he left the country on May 20, ostensibly to undergo treatment at a South African hospital.

    His departure came a day after he was charged with “threatening the internal and external security of the state”.

    ‘Respiratory problems’

    Katumbi’s followers say he was injured in clashes between police and thousands of his supporters in Lubumbashi on May 13, with a source saying he was suffering from “respiratory problems” after being tear-gassed.

    Katumbi draws part of his popularity from his ownership of TP Mazembe, one of Africa’s biggest football clubs.

    Less than a week into his departure to South Africa, one of his supporters criticised him for leaving them to face police “harassment” alone.