Category: Rubrique

  • Gen. Bashir to Form Transitional Government

    Gen. Bashir to Form Transitional Government

    {{An opposition party revealed that president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir agreed to form a transitional government to implement a national political program saying it must not last for more than two years.}}

    Sudan’s opposition Popular Congress Party’s (PCP) secretary of foreign relations, Bashir Adam Rahma said, in an interview with the Qatari Al-Watan newspaper on Sunday, that Bashir accepted this transitional government which will administrate the country during the national dialogue process.

    Rahma said the recent political roundtable meeting Bashir organised with political forces was meant to discuss formation of the Higher Commission for the National Dialogue (HCND) which will manage the process.

    However several political forces brought up the issue of the transitional government although it was not part of the meeting’s agenda, he underscored.

    “The transitional government will be discussed when presenting the paper regarding the interim period. The ruling National Congress Party (NCP) agreed to form a transitional government after it is being approved by the dialogue’s general conference”.

    The PCP official added the transitional government would last for a maximum of two years, noting it would adopt a program to stop the war, address the issue of refugee return, and reform the civil service and foreign relations.

    The interim government will hold the general elections and form a constituent assembly to draft the constitution and prepare the country for a new democratic era, the said in order to explain what was outlined in the meeting.

    Earlier this month, the Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir, held a political roundtable in Khartoum with the participation of 83 political parties. The move came within the framework of a call he made last January for a comprehensive national dialogue.

    The opposition official was keen to explain that besides the HCND, there will be different commissions to prepare draft papers but only the General Conference will approve it.

    The HCND, which is headed by president Omer Al-Bashir, is composed of 14 members 7 from the opposition and 7 representing the government parties. Its membership would be increased to 21 if the other opposition parties and rebel groups join the process.

    Rahma further said the political parties which took part in the meeting agreed to Bashir’s chairing of the higher commission, indicating that the general conference can be rotated between the political forces participation in the process.

    “It is preferable that Bashir chairs the higher commission (HCND) in order to be legally bound to implement the outcome of the dialogue because he is the person who controls power and the state,” he added.

    The PCP official said differences which may arise among political parties will be referred to an expert committee comprised of neutral and independent persons.

    He said they received information that Bashir and several senior government officials believe that dialogue is the only option for solving Sudan’s problems, pointing that “angry” factions within the NCP stand against dialogue and democratic transformation.

    Rahma didn’t rule out that rebel groups could agree to take part in the dialogue inside Sudan if the government takes several measures including creating an environment conducive for dialogue, declaring ceasefire, issuing general amnesty for convicts, and allowing humanitarian aid to affected population in the war areas.

    He added such measures must be guaranteed by the African Union (AU) and the international community, saying they received positive signals that the European Union (EU), AU, and the United States will support the comprehensive national dialogue.

    sudantribune

  • Zanzibar Seeks Treaty-Based Union

    Zanzibar Seeks Treaty-Based Union

    {{A Zanzibar minister yesterday said the Constituent Assembly (CA) will likely be a missed opportunity for the welfare of the Union between Tanganyika and Zanzibar.}}

    Justice minister Aboubakar Khamis Bakary (CUF – House of Representatives), said the Union was bogged down with shortfalls which could be effectively rectified if a treaty-based model would be adopted.

    “Much as the Constitution Review Commission has proposed a three-tier Union government structure, what we have to do is support it because all we want is development,” he said.

    The Union foundation was not adhered to, as most of the decisions were made by only one latent side, namely Tanganyika, he said.

    “There are about 30 Tanzanian embassies abroad, yet a mere three of the envoys are from Zanzibar…are we not clever enough to hold the posts?” the minister, who doubles as a member of the Constituent Assembly, queried.

    “Not a portion of fertilizer worth Sh10 billion belonging to the Union government was sent to Zanzibar,” lamented the minister, stressing that such shortfalls have to be rectified.

    “What does the Union government have to do with non-Union matters in the East African integration process when the Zanzibar government is present?” Mr Bakary queried.

    Clauses 4 and 6 of the Articles of the Union implying that Tanzania comprised three separate authorities indicated the intent to have a three-tier merger right from the inception, he added.

    “Remove the coat hiding Tanganyika to vividly show the existing three governments,” he said.

    NMG

  • South Sudan on Brink of Collapse

    South Sudan on Brink of Collapse

    {{When not plotting military strategy to seize South Sudan’s crucial oil fields, sacked vice-president turned rebel chief Riek Machar spends time reading the economic and political history “Why Nations Fail”.}}

    Cynics might argue he would do better to simply look around his basic bush camp, where mutinous soldiers and an allied ethnic militia crammed with child soldiers ready themselves to attack government forces, as a brutal 4-month-long civil war in which thousands of people have already been killed intensifies.

    “I didn’t want to fight any more war again,” Machar told media in a recent interview at his rebel hideout, saying people had had enough of fighting during Sudan’s long civil war, in which he was a guerrilla commander.

    It was that war, which lasted more two decades, that paved the way for South Sudan’s independence from the north.

    But although less than three years old, the world’s youngest nation is spiralling towards collapse. With a ceasefire deal in tatters, the United Nations fear more than one million people are at risk of famine, and analysts warn the war is dragging in regional nations.

    Over one million people have fled their homes, with violence worsening amid a renewed offensive by the rebel forces, as well as revenge attacks by multiple militia forces.

    Women, children killed in attack

    Peace talks in luxury hotels in Ethiopia have made little if any progress, while analysts warn that any solution will require major changes, not simply more promises inked only on paper.

    “Propping up the government in Juba and polishing its legitimacy with a dose of political dialogue and a dash of power sharing will not end the conflict,” the International Crisis Group (ICG) wrote in a recent report.

    On Thursday hundreds of gunmen stormed a UN peacekeeping base in the flashpoint town of Bor, killing at least 48 men, women and children sheltering there from a rival ethnic group before peacekeepers fought them off.

    The UN Security Council called the attack an “outrage” that may constitute a war crime.

    “Badly outgunned peacekeepers are no match for the thousands of heavily armed forces and militias,” the ICG added.

    When fighting broke out on 15 December, it was sparked by “primarily political” arguments between Machar and President Salva Kiir, the ICG said, but the battles have since escalated, spreading to other states in the oil-rich but grossly impoverished nation.

    Ethnic violence

    “Ethnic targeting, communal mobilisation and spiralling violence quickly led to appalling levels of brutality against civilians,” according to the ICG.

    Atrocities were also carried out further north in the oil-hub of Bentiu, which the army admitted on Wednesday it had lost to rebel forces.

    The UN aid agency said it had reports of “targeted killings based on ethnicity”, with “several dozen” corpses rotting on the streets.

    The violence is rooted in decades-old grievances between former rebels turned political leaders, combined with unhealed wounds left over from the long civil war that preceded South Sudan’s independence from Khartoum in 2011.

    The fighting is between soldiers loyal to Kiir against mutinous troops who sided with Machar, but has also taken on an ethnic dimension, pitting Kiir’s Dinka tribe against militia forces from Machar’s Nuer people.

    Many of the fragile gains made by the billions of dollars of international development aid that poured in after independence have been lost.

    Regional conflict looms

    “The war risks tearing the country further apart and is pulling in regional states,” the ICG said, pointing to a plan by regional nations to send in military forces in addition to UN peacekeepers.

    Neighbouring Uganda has sent in troops and fighter jets to back the government, while Information Minister Michael Makuei has accused “forces from Sudan” of backing Machar, although he stopped short of actively accusing the government in Khartoum of interfering.

    Back at the camp Machar predicts, gloomily, that “this will be a regional conflict”.

    He says he is “looking for funding” but rejects accusations that he is seeking support from neighbouring Sudan, old friends who backed him during the 1983-2005 war.

    Rival gunmen from Sudan’s war-torn Darfur are accused of fighting on both sides in South Sudan.

    “Worse is yet to come,” Jonathan Veitch, the Unicef chief in South Sudan said last week, warning if the war is not stopped, there will be “child malnutrition on a scale never before experienced here.”

    Absurdity of war

    The United States, the key backer of South Sudan’s move to independence, has threatened targeted sanctions.

    Experts say sanctions would be symbolic, but they fear they would have little positive impact.

    “Many ordinary people seem to think that it is about time world powers spoke up against the absurdity of this war,” said Jok Madut Jok, a former top government official who is now head of the Sudd Institute think tank.

    But he also said he fears sanctions would mean little to rebels stationed in the remote bush, while the government could be pushed “into further rogue behaviour, having nothing more to lose.”

    – AFP

  • President Mugabe Hints on Succession

    President Mugabe Hints on Succession

    President Mugabe says he has assessed aspirants angling to succeed him and has no preferred candidate as the people will choose their next leader. The President, who was speaking in an interview with Ghanaian-born British film-maker Roy Agyemang for a BBC documentary, “Robert Mugabe @ 90” that was aired on Saturday evening, said people will elect their leader.

    Asked if he had any person he favoured to take over from him when he retires, President Mugabe said: “I have people in mind who would want to be. But I have looked at them.

    I have not come to any conclusion as to which one, really, should be. I leave it to the choice of people. Perhaps when we get close to the election I will have some in mind.”

    President Mugabe reiterated his long-held position that leaders should come from the people.

    “It must be leadership that derives from the people, chosen by the people, goes back to the people, listens to the people and is guided by the demands of the people,” he said.

    Vice President Joice Mujuru, and Justice Minister and Zanu-PF secretary for legal affairs Cde Emmerson Mnangagwa have been touted as front runners to succeed President Mugabe in various sections of the media.

    Earlier this month President Mugabe said neither of the two had an automatic ticket to take over leadership of the ruling party and country, as the people were the ultimate arbiters of who would assume the reins.

    Addressing the Gushungo clan at Murombedzi Growth Point, President Mugabe said Presidential aspirants would be elected through the Zanu-PF congress.

    President Mugabe said VP Mujuru and Cde Mnangagwa were not the only people who could take over from him as the pool of potential leaders was wide.

    In the BBC interview, President Mugabe said Britain – which funded the formation and launch of the MDC in 1999 through the Westminster Foundation in a bid to effect regime change in ZImbabwe – had degenerated over the years.

    “What has happened to Britain? They have grown small in mind, small in intellect, that wisdom which the likes of Churchill had, where is it?” he asked.

    “You can’t see it at all. You can’t see it in people now with gay habits – shame on them. I pity the one lady I admire, the Queen, that she is in these circumstances. I’m sure down deep she must be groaning (at) the loss of values in Britain. They’ve gone to the dogs. No respect, gone.”

    President Mugabe also castigated some indigenous farmers leasing land to white farmers. He said while the number of the culprits doing it was small, the practice still worried Government and it was being dealt with.

    The fast-track land reform programme, which triggered the row with Britain that London subsequently internationalised to bring in the wider European Union, the United States and their allies – resulted in some 300 000 black families taking over farms previously owned by 6 000 whites.

    However, some of the beneficiaries are leasing land to white former owners.

    herald

  • Renamo Rebels in Talks to Join Army

    Renamo Rebels in Talks to Join Army

    {{Mozambican rebel group Renamo said on Thursday it had reached an understanding with the government to integrate its fighters into the national army and police under the supervision of international observers.}}

    Renamo spokesperson Adriano Muchunga said international military experts would help identify eligible guerillas to join the security forces in a bid to end fighting that has flared up again two decades after the end of the country’s 16-year civil war.

    “Whoever is of the right age and has the physical ability and know-how will join the police,” Muchunga told reporters.

    He called the agreement a “big step forward” but said a final deal had not yet been signed.

    He added that the rebels had not reached an agreement to lay down their arms.

    In 2012, Renamo fighters returned to the bush in central Mozambique, often staging deadly attacks.

    The rebels’ revival raised fears the country was tilting back toward war 20 years after Renamo signed a peace deal with the government.

    “The only way to stop us using weapons is to integrate our men into institutions that use weapons. In Mozambique that is the police and army,” said Muchunga.

    The rebel group-turned-opposition party wants its men to be integrated into the army and police at “all levels” to make up half of the total security forces.

    It also wants pensions for fighters who are too old for active duty.

    International observers to work on the integration process are expected to come from the US, Britain, Italy, South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Kenya.

    Founded a year after Mozambique gained independence from Portugal in 1975, Renamo (the Mozambican National Resistance Movement) boasts a bloody history of resistance to communist rule during the Cold War era.

    It fought a bitter civil war against the government that ended in 1992. Conflict flared again in late 2013 leading to ongoing military skirmishes, largely in the central province of Sofala.

    Renamo and the government – led since independence by the formerly Marxist-Leninist Mozambique Liberation Front (Frelimo) – have been engaged in peace talks to end the violence.

    Central to Renamo’s demands is greater inclusion in the government and the overhaul of electoral laws.

    Negotiations between the government and Renamo are set to resume on Monday.

    – AFP

  • Zimbabwe Marks 34 years of Self Rule

    Zimbabwe Marks 34 years of Self Rule

    {{Queen Elizabeth II and US President Barack Obama have reportedly congratulated Zimbabwe on the occasion to mark its 34th Independence Day on Friday.}}

    According to The Herald, in a statement sent to through the British Embassy in Harare, Queen Elizabeth II wished Zimbabwe happiness and prosperity.

    On the other hand, Obama in his congratulatory message said the US remained committed to the people of Zimbabwe.

    He said the US would continue to support Zimbabweans as they strived to build a society “that responds to their needs and honours their democratic choices”.

    The report said Zimbabweans from all walks of life were expected to gather at various centres across the country to commemorate the event.

    The main independence celebrations would be in Harare at the National Sports Stadium where President Robert Mugabe will address the nation, the report said.

    This year’s celebrations will be held under the theme: “Zimbabwe @34: Defending Our Sovereignty and Providing an Enabling Environment for Sustainable Economic Empowerment and Social Transformation.”

    For many, the celebrations will be overshadowed by the country’s economic meltdown under Mugabe’s Zanu PF party.

    Economic and political analysts say the former liberation movement has failed to come up with concrete policies to rescue the country from sliding into a full blown economic crisis.

    – News24

  • President Bouteflika Votes in Wheelchair

    President Bouteflika Votes in Wheelchair

    {{Algeria’s ailing President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, running for re-election on Thursday, cast his ballot from a wheelchair at a polling station in Algiers.

    A smiling Bouteflika, who is widely expected to win a fourth term, arrived at Bachir El Ibrahimi school in the El Biar district and waved to reporters but made no statement.

    Shown live on television, he was accompanied by two of his brothers, including Said who serves as special adviser to the president, and a young nephew.}}

    NMG

  • Election Map Shows ANC Support Loss

    Election Map Shows ANC Support Loss

    {{The support for the African National Congress has fallen significantly over the last five years.}}

    This shift can be identified by the elections platform built by News24 parent company 24.com. The platform aggregates a number of voting metrics for a visual representation of voting patterns.

    “Percentage-wise, there is a clear shift away from the ruling party toward opposition parties when looking at percentages of votes over the last five years,” said Cathryn Reece.

    The 2014 election is seen as a key test of the ANC’s mandate to govern as the party battles damaging revelations from the public protector and the auditor general on the state of governance.

    Service delivery protests continue to be a factor in South African society and the perception that patronage and corruption is rife in the country has played into the hands of opposition parties.

    {{IEC collaboration}}

    The elections platform was built in-house and analyses data provided by the IEC to map voting patterns in South Africa.

    While the company had produced previous election maps, the 2014 one is unique in that the process is largely automated, but the fact that voting districts had increased and number of political parties presented challenges to the development team.

    “It wasn’t without its challenges – we knew we had to work with the IEC (something we had never done before) to up our game technologically,” said Reece.

    She added that the development of the application, which is available on the internet, mobile, Android and iOS, was done in collaboration with the electoral commission.

    “Throughout the development phase we have been continually checking and rechecking our data displays to make sure they comply with the IEC data supplied to us and freely available via our website.”

    On the day of voting, the IEC will provide team with voting results as they become available and this will be incorporated into the live results page in regular updates.

    “When it comes to our live results map, we’ll be getting the results directly from the IEC and will have a team monitoring updates 24/7 to ensure nothing goes wrong,” said Reece.

    {{Sentiment}}

    “That having been said, working with data this complex, there may yet be one or two small errors, and we urge members of the public to please report anything they may find to us so we can investigate and fix as soon as possible!” she added.

    The elections application reveals that sentiment turned away from the ANC in favour of the Democratic Alliance in the Western Cape province, but in KwaZulu-Natal, it shifted toward the ANC at the expense of the Inkatha Freedom Party.

    “For accuracy’s sake we did not factor in local government election results into our shifts map, as we felt this would introduce too many distracting variables to accurately report on the data, but it does look like Gautengand the Eastern Capewill be two other areas to watch,” said Reece.

  • China President to Replace Corrupt Officials with Loyalists

    China President to Replace Corrupt Officials with Loyalists

    {{Chinese President Xi Jinping plans to use a purge of senior officials suspected of corruption to put his own men and reform-minded bureaucrats into key positions across the Communist Party, the government and the military, sources said.}}

    Xi hopes that removing corrupt officials and those resisting change will allow him to consolidate his grip on power and implement difficult economic, judicial and military reforms that he believes are vital to perpetuate one-party rule, said the sources, who have ties to the leadership.

    In the most far-reaching example of his intentions, Xi plans to promote about 200 progressive officials from the eastern coastal province of Zhejiang, where he served as party boss from 2002 to 2007, to senior positions across the spectrum in the years ahead, two of them said.

    “The anti-corruption (drive) is a means to an end. The goal is to promote his own men and like-minded officials to key positions to push through reforms,” said one source.

    To be sure, Xi is also tackling endemic corruption to try to restore public faith in the party, other sources said.

    The seven sources interviewed for this article sought anonymity to avoid repercussions for discussing secretive elite politics.

    The biggest investigation Xi has ordered so far revolves around retired domestic security tsar Zhou Yongkang, who is under virtual house arrest.

    Reuters reported on March 30 that more than 300 of Zhou’s allies, proteges, staff and relatives had been taken into custody or questioned since late last year as part of China’s biggest graft scandal in six decades.

    The government has yet to make any statement about Zhou, who retired in late 2012 from the Politburo Standing Committee, the apex of power in China, or the case against him. It has also not been possible to contact Zhou, his family, associates or staff for comment. It is not clear if any of them have lawyers.

    Another source who met Xi in private this year quoted him as saying implementing reforms had been “very difficult” due to opposition from state-owned enterprises along with influential party elders and their children, known as “princelings”.

    State-owned firms and princelings in business enjoy many privileges and virtually monopolize certain sectors, something at odds with China’s efforts to steer its economy away from a reliance on heavy industry and investment to one driven more by consumption and innovation.

    On the judicial front, Xi has overseen reforms that limit the ability of the party to interfere in most court cases – apart from politically sensitive ones – but more still needs to be done to deal with frequent miscarriages of justice that outrage the public, legal experts said.

    While Xi appears set on driving reform on many fronts, human rights activists have said major political change was not on his agenda. For example, authorities have increased controls over the local media and prominent bloggers in the past year.

    {reuters}

  • Green Party Joins Political Parties Forum

    Green Party Joins Political Parties Forum

    {{A newly registered opposition Political Party, the Democratic Green Party of Rwanda (DGPR) has called for changes in the local election law, Ubudehe Scheme program and Itorerero ry’igihugu.}}

    The party wishes were made public after a ceremony of raising the party flag, on 14th April 2014, at the National Consultative Forum of Political Organisations in Rwanda.

    DGPR president Dr Frank Habineza said;

    “We are an opposition political party, we are constructive opposition, and we are not destructive political party. There are some things that we want to change. Election law where the local election it said that people compete individual but we have seen some people whore were compete individual when they are head of districts, they become automatically members of some political parties this thing should be change.”

    He added that the Ubudehe program should be revised for it has caused problems where students have been denied an opportunity to study in universities.

    Dr Habineza said,“Some parties are trying to own Itorero ry’Igihugu yet its a National program that belongs to all of us not for any political party”.

    Green Party was officially welcomed as member into the National Political Parties Forum on 3rd April 2014.