Category: Politics

  • Is another revolution brewing in Egypt?

    Is another revolution brewing in Egypt?

    Five years after the Arab Spring, analysts say the conditions are in place for another uprising in Egypt.

    In a speech marking the Prophet Muhammad’s birthday last month, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi warned critics not to hold protests on January 25, the fifth anniversary on the 2011 popular uprising, saying a new revolt could destroy the country.

    “Why am I hearing calls for another revolution? Why do you want to ruin [Egypt]? I came by your will and your choice, and not despite it,” Sisi told the hand-picked audience of politicians, media pundits and members of Egypt’s newly elected parliament.

    Sisi’s words, greeted by a roar of applause, revealed the regime’s fears that another popular uprising may be brewing.

    As Egypt nears the fifth anniversary of the uprising that ended three decades of Hosni Mubarak’s rule, analysts and activists say the regime is imposing a “reign of terror” to deter people from marking the day. Security forces have stepped up their crackdown on activists: On January 7, police arrested three administrators of Facebook pages allegedly promoting anti-government protests on January 25. Four journalists, along with members of the April 6 Youth Movement, have also been arrested.

    In addition, earlier this week, security forces conducted mass searches of flats, primarily in downtown Cairo near Tahrir Square, the heart of the 2011 protests. Hundreds of Egyptian revolutionaries and regime opponents are already behind bars, and the religious establishment has described those calling for a new round of January 25 protests as “weak believers who carry extremist ideas”.

    “The spirit of the January uprising continues to pose a threat to the regime, despite the fact that none of the known revolutionary forces actually called for protests, to my knowledge,” Khalil al-Anani, a political science professor at the Doha Institute, told Al Jazeera.

    While it is difficult to predict when uprisings will take place and in what form, the regime’s concerns do not seem entirely imaginary, analysts say.

    “There is likely just as much support today for an uprising as there was on January 25, 2011,” Wael Haddara, a former adviser to Egypt’s deposed President Mohamed Morsi, told Al Jazeera. The social and economic grievances that led to the 2011 uprising are present in ways quite similar to 2010, Haddara added.

    Other analysts concurred, citing a raft or problems in Egypt today: a worse dictatorship than before the 2011 uprising, brutal police practices, the targeting of activists and journalists by security forces, a deteriorating economic situation, and a newly elected parliament that is dominated by pro-government figures.

    “While the Egyptian state of 2010 was brutal in some ways, that of 2015 is far more so,” said Michele Dunn, the director and a senior associate with the Middle East programme at the Carnegie Endowment. The government has succeeded to some extent in rebuilding “the wall of fear between citizens and the state”, Dunn told Al Jazeera.

    But with a spate of industrial actions picking up steam in recent weeks, coupled with an increase in “the mass of unemployed” and simmering popular discontent over the widening gap between what Egyptians were promised and what has been delivered to them, analysts say the regime has reason to worry.

    “The conditions are certainly in place for another wave of popular uprising,” Haddara said. “The very fact that there is widespread speculation about the likelihood of a popular uprising tells us how unstable Egypt is.”

    Although street protests have all but dried up in Egypt since an anti-protest law was passed in November 2013, popular unrest has not completely burned out.

    Last August, thousands of public sector workers took to the streets in one of the biggest street actions since July 2013, when a military coup led by Sisi deposed Morsi. The workers were protesting against the civil service law issued last March, which they say negatively affects up to seven million civil servants by decreasing their income, increasing the managerial powers of administrators and introducing regulations that threaten basic workers’ rights.

    Gilbert Achqar, author of the book The People Want, noted that Egypt’s 2011 uprising came after five years of significant developments in the struggle of Egyptian workers. “The wave of labour strikes was instrumental in precipitating Mubarak’s downfall. Whether Sisi will face the same fate is a big question,” Achqar told Al Jazeera.

    On January 9, Democracy Meter, an NGO that monitors the Egyptian labour movement, issued its annual report on Egyptian industrial actions, citing 1,117 labour protests throughout 2015 – an average of around three each day.

    Another cause of concern for the regime is the wave of public anger that has followed a number of recent deaths in police stations. Over the past two months, thousands of citizens have taken to the streets in Luxor and Ismailia governorates to protest against the killings of Talaat Shabib and Afify Hosny, reportedly tortured to death by police. Incidents of police brutality and the ensuing lack of accountability were among the driving forces behind the 2011 uprising.

    The simmering unrest in Egypt today indicates that the public sphere has yet to be brought completely under military and police control, analysts say.

    “Securing popular support, or at least ending widespread discontent, is necessary for the construction of a military-backed regime under Sisi,” said Amr Adly, a senior researcher at the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center.

    Some observers, however, prescribe caution, suggesting that fears of a repeat of 2011 are overblown. While the anniversary of the uprising remains an open wound in the view of many Egyptians, the fissures and schisms that divide the disparate factions, whose unity once made history in Tahrir Square, appear beyond mending, as they still suffer from a lack of leadership and vision.

    “It is unlikely that the generals’ dominance will be met with the kind of unified challenge that toppled Mubarak,” one analyst told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity.

    Still, there are continuing calls for another revolution.

    Late last year, an unknown group of activists issued a call for demonstrations on the revolution’s anniversary through a Facebook event, to which at least 50,000 people registered their attendance. Another group advocating an uprising against the Sisi regime initiated the hashtag #WeAreBackToTheSquare, while others have used the hashtag #IParticipatedInTheJanuary25Revolution.

    An organiser of the Facebook event told a local news website that “reclaiming the revolution” was among the group’s goals. But other activists were sceptical, saying they did not expect this anniversary to be any different from the last one, and predicting that it would be mainly characterised by demonstrations of small numbers of people and random arrests.

    The problem with calls for another revolution is that they are abstract and not based on any political organisation, Khaled Abdel Hamid, a leftist activist who participated in January 25 uprising, told the local website Mada Masr.

    “Revolutionary groups need to organise themselves, learn lessons from previous years, and reach a consensus on the form, methods and the slogans necessary to face the counter-revolution, which is a difficult matter and needs time,” he said.

    Egypt’s shift from a full revolution to the nearly complete restitution of the pre-revolutionary regime is “Mubarakism without Mubarak”, Adly noted.

    “The old state-dominated system with the same socioeconomic biases and autocratic leaning has been reborn under the guise of a new military-supported dictatorship,” Adly said in a study of the economics of Egypt’s rising authoritarian order. “How successful that is will depend in large part on the economic policies that Sisi’s government enacts.”

    While the economic situation in Egypt today is crucial, there are other factors at play. The reconstitution of Mubarak-style rule is unlikely to be durable for many years, considering Egypt’s restive youthful population and the dim economic outlook, Dunn said.

    “If public opinion turns against Sisi after two years of his rule without economic improvements, more turmoil in the form of another popular uprising and another military coup could well be in the cards,” Dunn said.

    According to Haddara, the two barriers that fell during the 2011 uprising were fear and expectations of violent repression.

    “In 2015, those same elements [fear and violent repression] will determine whether an uprising happens,” he said. “Will a critical mass of Egyptians overcome the psychological fear of brutalisation, and if so, will the army respond with mass violence?”

    Source:Al Jazeera:Is another revolution brewing in Egypt?

  • Tunisia PM appeals for ‘patience’ after street protests

    Tunisia PM appeals for ‘patience’ after street protests

    Habib Essid’s plea comes after an emergency cabinet meeting following a wave of violent protests over unemployment.

    Tunisian Prime Minister Habib Essid has pleaded for “patience” following a wave of violent demonstrations against poverty and unemployment, the worst social unrest since the 2011 revolution.

    Essid spoke on Saturday after chairing an emergency cabinet meeting, as authorities said a night-time nation-wide curfew would be indefinite.

    Tunisia “is in danger despite the positive things which we have accomplished, particularly the transition towards democracy”, Essid said, urging people to “understand that there are difficulties”.

    “Solutions exist, but some patience and optimism are needed,” Essid added.

    Al Jazeera’s Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from Tunis, said that thousands of dissatisfied people have taken to the streets in recent days, demanding immediate action against unemployment and poor economic conditions.

    “They say we voted for this government because we had hopes that this government would tackle corruption, poverty and offer job opportunities for almost a million unemployed Tunisians,” he said.

    “The government is saying that it does not have a quick fix and that it will take some time before it can meet the people’s demands. It is quite a delicate situation for a government that just a few years ago was promising a better future.” Ahelbarra said.

    International backing

    Protests over unemployment in Tunisia, which started in the western Kasserine province, intensified and spread to other parts of the country on Thursday.

    On Friday, President Beji Caid Essebsi said in a televised address that the government would put a programme in place to try to ease the unemployment rate.

    He also warned that members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group in neighbouring Libya may use the unrest in Tunisia to sneak into the country.

    France will provide $1.1bn over five years to help Tunisia deal with its transition to democracy, French President Francois Hollande said on Friday.

    Ahelbarra said the only option for the Tunisian government at the moment is to ask for more international support to prevent a further descent towards more instability

    “This is exactly why President Essebsi yesterday was stressing the fact that groups like ISIL are seizing the opportunity to try to further destabilise Tunisia,” he said.

    “But the problem that you have here in the country is that people are waiting for immediate decisions to be taken by the government.”

    Meanwhile, the country’s interior ministry said on Saturday that 423 people have been arrested across the country for being involved in acts of violence.

    Source:Al Jazeera:Tunisia PM appeals for ‘patience’ after street protests

  • U.S. urges African leaders to sway Burundi on peacekeepers

    U.S. urges African leaders to sway Burundi on peacekeepers

    The United States on Saturday urged African leaders to “work behind the scenes” before their annual summit next weekend to convince Burundi to accept a deployment of international troops in the tiny African state amid festering political violence.

    U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, said members of the African Union Peace and Security Council expected leaders to endorse its proposed deployment of 5,000 troops to protect civilians, despite a rejection of the force by Burundi.

    “I didn’t get a sense from the African countries gathered in the room that they’re going to take that as a final answer,” Power told reporters after a meeting between the U.N. Security Council and the AU Peace and Security Council in Addis Ababa.

    “As well as the AU meeting (next weekend) to endorse it, we will need leaders to work behind the scenes to get the Burundi government to change its position,” she said.

    Burundi’s President Pierre Nkurunziza says the plan to send peacekeepers would constitute “an invading force”. Nkurunziza’s re-election for a third term last year sparked the crisis, which has raised fears of an ethnic conflict in a region where memories of neighboring Rwanda’s 1994 genocide remain fresh.

    The U.N. Security Council traveled to Burundi on Thursday for one night, it’s second visit to the country in less than 10 months. The United Nations estimates the death toll at 439 people but says it could be higher. More than 240,000 people have fled abroad and the country’s economy is in crisis.

    The African Union plans to seek U.N. Security Council backing for any deployment of troops. France will draft a resolution, Deputy U.N. Ambassador Alexis Lamek said, adding that an initial priority was to send some 100 AU human rights and military observers to Burundi.

    Russia’s Deputy U.N. Ambassador Petr Iliichev said the situation in Burundi appeared to be improving, but not to the point where “we can say we should put it on the back burner.”

    “For us it will be very difficult to oppose any resolution from the African Union because we always say that there should be African solutions to African problems,” he said of any request for U.N. authorization to deploy troops. Russia is a council veto power.

    “There are no signs of genocide, but there is potential for genocide … but there is no imminent threat,” he said. Iliichev said on Friday that Burundi did not need peacekeepers and instead needed help increasing its police capacity.

    During a meeting with the U.N. Security Council on Friday, Nkurunziza accused neighboring Rwanda of supporting rebels by training and arming Burundian refugees recruited on Rwandan soil. Rwanda has previously dismissed the allegations.

    “It is in the interests of the Burundian government to consent to having an enhanced African presence in Burundi to monitor the border, to disarm those elements outside the traditional security forces and to help stabilize the situation,” Power said.

    Burundi and Rwanda have the same ethnic mix – about 85 percent Hutus and 15 percent Tutsis. A 12-year civil war in Burundi, which ended in 2005, pitted a Tutsi-led army against Hutu rebel groups.

    Source:Reuters:U.S. urges African leaders to sway Burundi on peacekeepers

  • Tunisia protests: President vows to end ‘ordeal’ of unemployed

    Tunisia protests: President vows to end ‘ordeal’ of unemployed

    Tunisia’s president says he understands frustration that has led to protests over unemployment, but instability could be exploited by extremists.

    A curfew began on Friday evening after “attacks against public and private property”, the interior ministry said.

    Protests over youth unemployment have spread from the northern region of Kasserine to towns and cities.

    In a televised speech, President Beji Caid Essebsi said the country would “get out of this ordeal”.

    How Tunisia is keeping Arab Spring ideals alive

    “Arab Spring” pioneer under threat

    In his first address since protests began almost a week ago, Mr Essebsi said on Friday night: “There is no dignity without work. You can’t tell someone who has nothing to eat to stay patient.”

    He said there was a risk that the Islamic State group in neighbouring Libya “finds that the moment is opportune to infiltrate into Tunisia”.

    Mr Essebsi said on Wednesday that more than 6,000 jobs would be given to people from the town of Kasserine.

    The government also promised an investigation into allegations of corruption.

    Unemployment has worsened since the 2011 revolution, when President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali was ousted. More than a third of young people in Tunisia are without work.

    Tunisia’s uprising was the first of the Arab Spring, and often hailed as the most successful.

    But correspondents say the authorities have failed to resolve the problems of social exclusion and poverty, and face a growing jihadist threat.

    The curfew, which runs from 20:00 to 05:00 local time (19:00 to 04:00 GMT), was put in place because of the “danger to the security of the state and it citizens”, the interior ministry said in a statement.

    Only night-shift workers and people needing urgent medical care are exempt.
    The authorities called for calm after protests descended into vandalism, looting and violence in several areas.

    The demonstrations started on Sunday in the central-western town of Kasserine, after a man was electrocuted while protesting over his rejection for a government job.
    In the nearby town of Feriana, a policeman died after his car was overturned on Thursday.

    Ridha Yahyaoui died on Sunday after climbing a utility pole in protest over a public sector job prospect that he was rejected for.

    His brother, Mehrez, told the BBC’s Rana Jawad in Kasserine that the 28-year-old had been fighting for a job for two years.

    “His dream was to work, he didn’t like taking money from people,” he said.
    “I’m his brother and when I would try to give him five dinars (£1.70; €2.50), he would not take it.

    “This government has forgotten us… [Ridha] climbed a pole to tell them, ‘give me my rights’. He was electrocuted and he died.”

    Prime Minister Habib Essid, who cut short a visit to Europe to deal with the protests, has said his government has no “magic wand” with which to tackle unemployment.
    After meeting French President Francois Hollande in Paris, Mr Essid was due to return to Tunisia and visit Kasserine on Saturday.

    Meanwhile the French presidency announced that the country would provide €1bn (£767m) $1.1bn) to Tunisia over the next five years as part of an economic support package.

    Source:BBC:Tunisia protests: President vows to end ‘ordeal’ of unemployed

  • U.S. envoy says little achieved in U.N. meeting with Burundi president

    U.S. envoy says little achieved in U.N. meeting with Burundi president

    The United Nations Security Council met with Burundi’s president on Friday to push for peace talks and an international force to quell worsening political violence, but U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power said little was achieved.

    The meeting came a day after rebels in the tiny African state raised the stakes in the crisis by declaring a general who led a failed coup in May as their leader, deepening concerns that Burundi is sliding back into conflict after its ethnically charged civil war ended in 2005.

    The 15-member council, which arrived in Burundi’s lakeside capital Bujumbura on Thursday, met with President Pierre Nkurunziza in Gitega for more than two hours. It is the council’s second visit to Burundi in less than a year.

    “I’m here to guarantee that there will not ever be another genocide in Burundi,” the president told the council.

    Power made clear that the council wants to see more dialogue and an enhanced U.N. presence in Burundi.

    “None of us want the situation in Burundi to deteriorate, we’re here because we want to support efforts at dialogue, because we believe as a council that a more substantial international presence here can help, we conveyed those points to the president,” Power told reporters after the meeting.

    “In this meeting we did not achieve as much, frankly, as I think we would have liked. But we never give up, the cause of peace in Burundi is too important to give up,” she said.

    Nkurunziza’s re-election for a third term sparked the crisis, which has raised fears of an ethnic conflict in a region where memories of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide remain fresh.

    The government insists there is no ethnic bias, but opponents say districts of Bujumbura where many Tutsis live – and which were also hotbeds of protest against Nkurunziza last year – have been targeted with some Tutsis singled out.

    The United Nations estimates the death toll at 439 people but says it could be higher. More than 240,000 people have fled abroad.

    The rebel group, FOREBU, announced on Thursday that it was now commanded by the former intelligence chief, General Godefroid Niyombare. The group said it welcomed international mediation but also called for Burundians to support their fight against Nkurunziza.

    “This development shows why the U.N. Security Council is concerned about the risk of a downward cycle of violence,” British U.N. Ambassador Matthew Rycroft told Reuters.

    Burundi’s government has accused neighboring Rwanda of supporting a rebel group by training and arming Burundian refugees recruited on Rwandan soil. Nkurunziza raised those accusations again on Friday with the Security Council.

    “The threat is not from within Burundi, it comes from outside,” he told the council. “The Rwandan government must be told to stop.”

    Rwanda has previously dismissed the allegations.

    “We’ve expressed concern about the allegations of external interference … and it’s very important that nobody support armed opposition groups no matter what they assess the history,” Power said.

    The president has rejected the deployment of an African peacekeeping force, saying the troops would constitute “an invading force”. The issue is expected to be a focus for an African Union summit at the end of January.

    “It’s not peacekeepers that the Burundians need. What they need is to increase their own capacity, especially their police capacity,” Russia’s Deputy U.N. Ambassador Petr Iliichev told Reuters.

    “Maybe what we need is some kind of policing mission, either advisors, either trainers or maybe formed police units that will be deployed in Bujumbura … from the African Union or the U.N.,” he said.

    Months of talks between the government and the opposition last year failed to make progress. New negotiations begun at the end of December in Uganda have already stalled.

    Nkurunziza backed Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni’s mediation efforts.

    “We told (the Security Council) that he is somebody who knows very well the problems of Burundi,” Nkurunziza told reporters after the meeting.

    Regional Western diplomats say the government has set too many conditions about who can attend talks to make them meaningful. They also say rebels may believe they can make more gains through force of arms than at the negotiating table.

    Source:Reuters:U.S. envoy says little achieved in U.N. meeting with Burundi president

  • China’s Xi calls for creation of Palestinian state

    China’s Xi calls for creation of Palestinian state

    President says Palestinian problem “should not be marginalised” as he outlines series of economic deals for Middle East.

    Chinese President Xi Jinping has called for the establishment of a Palestinian state, with East Jerusalem as its capital, as he announced a series of multibillion-dollar investment plans for the wider Middle East.

    Speaking from Egypt during the second leg of a Middle East tour, Xi said on Thursday that the Palestinian problem “should not be marginalised”.

    “China supports the peaceful process in the Middle East [and] the establishment of a Palestinian state with its capital being eastern Jerusalem,” Xi told the Cairo-based Arab League through an interpreter.

    Xi also announced aid of 50 million yuan ($7.6m) for a solar power station project in the Palestinian territories.

    For the Palestinian-Israeli conflict to end, negotiations should be pushed forward to reach a peace agreement, Xi said.

    Tensions between the two sides have been growing in recent months after a wave of Palestinian stabbing attacks on Israelis and clashes between Palestinians and Israeli soldiers.

    “Maintaining the legitimate interests of the Palestinian people is the responsibility of the Arab League as well as the international community,” Xi said.

    Separately, Xi also also announced that China will be donating $35m in humanitarian aid to Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya and Yemen.

    “The situation in Syria could not continue as there is no winner in this conflict and it is only the Syrian people who are suffering,” he said.

    “The immediate priority to end this conflict is a ceasefire and to engage in a political dialogue and, at the same time, there must be an urgent need for humanitarian aid operations in Syria.”

    Regional tour

    Xi arrived in Egypt on Wednesday, the first visit by a Chinese head of state to the country in 12 years.

    Heralding a new era of closer political and economic ties, officials from the two countries signed 21 deals at a ceremony in Cairo.

    The agreements span several development and infrastructure investments, including the first phase of a new Egyptian administrative capital announced last year, a $1bn financing agreement for Egypt’s central bank and a $700m loan to the state-owned National Bank of Egypt.

    Xi’s visit to Egypt comes as part of a regional tour, which has already taken him to Saudi Arabia, amid efforts by Beijing to assert its economic and political clout in the Middle East.

    Xi said China would dedicate $15bn in special loans to boost industrial production in the region, $10bn in trade credit for joint energy projects and another $10bn in soft loans.

    China would also set up funds with the United Arab Emirates and Qatar worth a total of $20bn to invest in conventional energy.

    On Tuesday, China and Saudi Arabia signed a memorandum of understanding to build a nuclear reactor in the oil-rich kingdom.

    Iran will be the final stop in Xi’s three-nation trip, a visit that comes days after the implementation of a landmark nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers, leading to the lifting of international sanctions on Iran.

    Source:Al Jazeera:China’s Xi calls for creation of Palestinian state

  • Museveni spends Shs27b on campaigns in 2 months

    Museveni spends Shs27b on campaigns in 2 months

    The NRM presidential candidate, Yoweri Museveni has spent Shs27 billion on his 2016 campaigns in two months, 12 times more than his two closest challengers combined, according to results of a preliminary study about campaign financing released yesterday.

    In the 16 districts reviewed, Mr Museveni spent Shs4.8b in November and Shs22.2b in December, 2015 representing 91.6 per cent of the 29.6b spent by all the candidates in total.

    Independent presidential candidate Amama Mbabazi, who followed, in terms of spending, spent a total of Shs1.3b or 4.6 per cent in the same period. Dr Kizza Besigye, the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) candidate spent a total of Shs976m or 3.3 per cent. The other candidates, Dr Abed Bwanika, Prof Venansius Baryamureeba, Ms Maureen Kyalya, Maj Gen Benon Biraro and Mr Joseph Mabirizi spent less than 1 per cent of the Shs29.6b combined. Prof Baryamureeba spent Shs95,732,000 while Abed Bwanika used Shs34,311,000 and Joseph Mabirizi Shs26,486,000. Maureen Kyalya used Shs5,692,500.

    The expenditure of Gen Benon Biraro was not reviewed in the study.
    The study was funded by Democratic Governance Facility (DGF) and conducted by Alliance for Campaign Finance Monitoring (ACFIM), a loose coalition of CSO activists advocating increased transparency in the practice of financing political parties and election campaigns in Uganda, including Transparency International and Anti-corruption Coalition.

    Out of the Shs137.6b spent, NRM accounted for 87.9 per cent or Shs121b in November and December. FDC followed at 2.1 per cent, Go-Forward at 1.1 per cent, Democratic Party at 0.5 per cent and Uganda Peoples Congress at 0.3 per cent. The rest accounted for 0.3 per cent of the total expenditure. “…As European Union Observer Mission, we shall try to get all financial reports from the Electoral Commission and issue our findings after the elections,” said Dr Jurij Toplak, the EUOM, Campaign Finance Analyst while reacting to the report.

    Mr Ofwono Opondo, the deputy NRM spokesperson, says their huge expenditure is justified. “No other party or organisation has held activities such as NRM has done. Tasked to explain the source of the money, Mr Opondo said “the party received money from the electoral commission. We also fund raise and get support from volunteers.”

    The report faults political parties and candidates participating in the 2016 campaigns of being “poor at keeping records of expenditure.” It also noted that candidates were engaging in voter bribery and misuse of government resources. The report cites materials such as hoes, sugar, sauce pans, seeds and salt distributed by campaign agents to potential voters. “On 9th November, 2015, a number of government vehicles were used on candidate Museveni’s rally held at Kasana Playground. Some of the vehicle registration plates observed in action at the rally included UG 2183C, UG 0178H, and UG 0187D,” an excerpt from the report reads.

    Section 27 of the presidential elections act (as amended) 2005 makes it illegal to use government resources for campaigning for election.

    Mr Opondo said only the president, the vice president and the Speaker are allowed to use government property in campaigns. “If there are ministers and government officials taking advantage of their positions, we would be glad if someone gives us evidence,” Mr Opondo, who doubles as the Government Media Center Executive Director, said.

    FDC party spokesperson Ibrahim Ssemujju Nganda says the president is exorbitantly sponsored by the State against his opponents. Jothan Taremwa, the Electoral Commission spokesman, said: “It is extremely difficult to track campaign expenditure because in the first place we don’t know how much someone has budgeted to spend.”
    The report makes three recommendations including relevant government institutions such as the Inspectorate of government, Police and the Electoral Commission investigating further the breaches of the electoral laws.

    It also appeals to government through the Justice Ministry to amend legal provisions on voter bribery in both the Presidential and Parliamentary Acts of 2005. Further, the report appeals to all Ugandans to fight the commercialisation of politics and embrace the practice of ordinary citizens making donations to candidates of their choice.

    ACFIM monitors used scientific tools to collect data on campaign expenses, voter bribery and misuse of government resources for campaigns at constituency level. Filled campaign expenses tools were then submitted to district supervisors who moved between constituencies for data quality assurance. A team of experts at ACFIM secretariat frequently carried out data quality control checks across the 16 districts. Collected data was then entered into a web based database. Also, monitors submitted data on campaign events observed directly and indirectly. Critical incidents were transmitted to supervisors in real time by the use of phone calls or SMS.

    The law
    Section 22(7) of the Presidential Elections Act provides that: “Each [presidential] candidate shall, within thirty days after the election, …(b) Submit a return to the Commission disclosing all assistance obtained by the candidate from any source.”

    Source:Daily Monitor:Museveni spends Shs27b on campaigns in 2 months

  • South Africa: Students would rather take to the streets than vote – analyst

    South Africa: Students would rather take to the streets than vote – analyst

    This year’s local government elections could see many students turning their back on the ANC, or the whole system of voting, opting instead for the ”direct democracy” of protests, a political analyst has said.

    ”They don’t channel their discontent into voting for an opposition party – they rather take it to the streets and on the campuses,” said Susan Booysen, a Wits professor and author of Dominance and Decline; the ANC in the time of Zuma.

    Her comments come after some protesters in the #FeesMustFall movement threatened to boycott the elections, which are due to be held on a date still to be set between May and August this year.

    According to the Electoral Commission, current voter registration is 24.98 million out of around 34.1m people of voting age (18 years and older).

    As many as 9.1m eligible voters are not currently registered, with over 80% of these under the age of 35.

    Booysen said the ANC is already struggling to get the youth interested in elections, and to vote for them.

    She said students have been mostly non-aligned during their protests, rejecting overtures from political parties who tried to get in on the revolt.

    The EFF appear to be the only party gathering support according to opinion polls, which spells potential trouble for the ANC.

    ‘No confidence in the ANC’

    The test is whether the threat to boycott translates to mass action.

    ”Young people are the emerging intellectuals, the future leaders, and if there is a distant motion of no confidence in the ANC, it is a big problem for the ANC.

    ”The ANC has been getting away with a massive amount of unfulfilled promises, and young students are saying ‘so far, no further’.”

    She said it would be a small step for the unemployed and homeless people to join the revolt.

    However, opposition parties should not think they will be able to gather up disillusioned ANC voters, she warns.

    ”They [students] will rather take it to the streets and on to the campuses,” she observed.

    ”The deinstitutionalisation and deligitimisation of constitutional politics is probably the biggest winner, and that isn’t any good for democracy. I don’t think any opposition party will be a great winner.”

    Institute for Security Studies researcher Lauren Tracey said the level of participation at local government elections is usually much lower than national elections.

    Researchers think it could be because people do not understand what municipal government does, or that their interactions with councillors and municipalities has not been effective.

    ”They don’t see them as the go-to people to sort things out,” said Tracey.

    However, it would make more sense for people to vote because it is a better way to get their voices heard.

    ”By abstaining from participating in these processes, it’s not benefiting your cause to try and change things in your local communities.”

    But research is also showing that the youth don’t know who to vote for.

    ”There is a sense of ‘I am not going to vote because my voice is not heard. If I do think of going out and voting, who do I vote for anymore?’”

    She said the youth have become disillusioned by people who forget their grassroots – the people who put them in power – when they go into politics.

    Tracey said young people don’t have the same loyalties as their parents and believe they have a completely different struggle, such as the fight for economic freedom.

    If political parties wanted to catch the attention of the youth, they should develop a younger look, stay more connected, engage with young people – and not only during election time.

  • Burkina Faso issues arrest warrant for Ivory Coast speaker

    Burkina Faso issues arrest warrant for Ivory Coast speaker

    Burkina Faso has issued an international arrest warrant for Guillaume Soro, Ivory Coast’s speaker of parliament.

    The warrant concerns his alleged role in a coup attempt in Burkina Faso in September, which sparked deadly street protests.

    Authorities listened to phone recordings linking Mr Soro to the coup, Reuters news agency says.

    Mr Soro has always denied that his was the voice on the tape.

    The speaker is an ally of Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara.

    Mr Soro and the armed rebel group he led – the New Forces – played a key role in Ivory Coast’s 2011 civil war.

    “I confirm that the warrant was issued at the beginning of the week,” a military source told Reuters.

    Former Burkina Faso Prime Minister Isaac Zida previously confirmed that Mr Soro’s voice was heard in a recording advising former Burkinabe foreign affairs minister Djibril Bassole on how to be successful in a coup.

    In September, presidential guard officers seized power in a coup, overthrowing Burkina Faso’s interim government.

    Members of the presidential guard – set up by ex-President Blaise Compaore – said they were unhappy with the new electoral law banning candidates linked to a bid to extend the president’s time in office. The attempt triggered his overthrow in October 2014.

    But the coup ended just over a week later, and the reinstated interim government disbanded the presidential guard.

  • Burundi reaffirms dialogue commitment

    Burundi reaffirms dialogue commitment

    BURUNDI has said it is ready to continue with dialogue involving all its citizens living inside and outside the country to ensure a lasting solution to the political impasse in the East African country.

    Speaking to journalists in Dar es Salaam yesterday, the Burundi Foreign Minister Alain Aimee Nyamitwe said that he will continue to consult President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda who is the chief mediator on the dialogue modalities to find a peaceful settlement. “Our government is ready to negotiate and we have shown the readiness in the formation of commission for dialogue,” he stressed.

    He also said that his country was doing all this efforts for the interest of Burundi“We are doing things not to be trusted by the world,” he remarked.

    “We want to ensure stability and peace for Burundians,” he emphasised. Meanwhile, the Minister for Foreign Affairs, East Africa, Regional and International Cooperation, Dr Augustine Mahiga, said Tanzania continues to consult with Burundi on the peace negotiations.

    He said that the minister’ visit was a clear indication that Burundi was committed to the dialogue. He said that the talks held between the two countries touched on the issue of deploying peace keeping force.

    “I had fruitful discussion on the issue of deployment with AU and we agreed in principle on the need to deploy peacekeepers,” he said. However, the AU have agreed to first consult Burundi government before making such a move, he said.

    “Therefore, I have conveyed the message which the minister will deliver to his president,” he said. When Mr Nyamitwe was asked about the petition going on at the East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) by various stakeholders over the human rights violation. He said it was a democratic process and people were free to give their views.