Category: Rubrique

  • Zuma, Mugabe  Boycott EU-African Summit

    Zuma, Mugabe Boycott EU-African Summit

    {{Presidents and prime ministers from Africa and Europe gathered in Brussels on Wednesday for an EU-Africa summit designed to promote peace and investment on the world’s poorest continent.}}

    But cracks emerged even before the conference got underway, with some African leaders, including Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe and South Africa’s Jacob Zuma, deciding not to attend following a dispute over the invitation list.

    Mugabe, now 90 and the president of Zimbabwe since 1987, stayed away because his wife, Grace, was not invited.

    Both Mugabe and his wife are subject to travel bans under EU sanctions following the government’s crackdown on political opponents, but the European Union routinely waives those restrictions to allow Mugage to attend international meetings.

    In this case, EU officials said Grace had not been invited because no spouses were attending the summit, which already counts 65 heads of state and government and around 20 secretaries-general, including United Nations head Ban Ki-moon.

    Following Mugabe’s protest, South Africa’s Zuma also decided to stay at home, sending his foreign minister instead.

    Initially that was said to have been due to political considerations, with elections coming up in a month. But Zuma was later quoted by the South African Broadcasting Service as saying he did not like the way the summit had been set up.

    “I think that time must pass wherein we are looked at as subjects, we are told who must come and who must not come,” he said. “I thought the African Union and the European Union are equal organisations representing two continents, but there is not a single one of them who must decide for others.”

    The center of Brussels, a city accustomed to summits since the EU’s 28 leaders meet every few months, was shut down almost entirely for the arrival of the African heads of state, with heavily guarded motorcades charging through the town.

    European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, who has visited several African countries to prepare for the summit, described the occasion as an opportunity to discuss how to move beyond Europe’s colonial past and tackle the challenges of peace, security, growth and jobs in Africa.

    “The theme we have chosen addresses the everyday concerns of our citizens – their safety and security, their job prospects and their future as families and individuals,” he said.

    The European Union is far and away Africa’s biggest development partner, providing more than 140 billion euros in aid between 2007 and 2013, including 18 billion in 2012 – nearly half the world’s aid to the continent.

    But the point of the summit is to try to move beyond emergency or development help and build “partnerships” in areas such as health, education, energy, agriculture, climate change and issues such as democracy and human rights.

    At the same time, the EU this week formally committed forces to a peacekeeping operation in the Central African Republic, a reminder that peace and stability are a pre-requisite for any closer trade and investment relations.

    {wirestory}

  • EALA SPeaker Survives Impeachment

    EALA SPeaker Survives Impeachment

    {{A move to impeach East African Legislative Assembly Speaker Margaret Zziwa failed Tuesday after she sent the assembly on recess shortly after the motion seeking her removal was tabled.}}

    Mr Bobi Odiko, the Eala senior spokesperson, last evening said: “It is true the motion has been tabled and the House has been adjourned indefinitely. The issue is not likely to be debated during the current session.”

    The March 27 motion is sponsored by Kenyan representative Peter Mathuki who accuses Ms Zziwa, among other things, of poor governance and leadership skills, abuse of office, disrespect and intimidation of Eala members and staff.

  • President Hollande ex-Partner Royal Joins Cabinet

    President Hollande ex-Partner Royal Joins Cabinet

    {{French President Francois Hollande’s former partner, Segolene Royal, has joined the government in a major reshuffle by the ruling Socialists.}}

    She will serve as environment minister in the cabinet of the new Prime Minister, Manuel Valls.

    Mr Valls was appointed to the job after the Socialists suffered a humiliating defeat at local elections.

    The Finance Minister, Pierre Moscovici, has left the government, with his job now split between two ministers.

    Michel Sapin takes charge of finance while Arnaud Montebourg will be in charge of industry and economy.

    Laurent Fabius and Jean-Yves Le Drian keep their positions as foreign affairs and defence ministers in the new cabinet, which replaces that led by Jean-Marc Ayrault.

    President Hollande is one of the most unpopular French leaders in decades, having failed to restore the economy.

    It is open to question how many of the key new appointments were the choice of Mr Valls alone. Mr Sapin is a long-time close friend of Mr Hollande.

    His first task will be to persuade the EU that France is on track after the country again missed its deficit target, our correspondent adds.

    While Mr Valls is on the right of his party, the new economy minister is most definitely to the left, having previously accused the EU of damaging growth with its demands for cuts, he says.

    {{‘Segolene’s revenge’}}

    It is said that Mr Hollande’s most recent official partner, Valerie Trierweiler, had opposed Ms Royal’s appointment to any position in the government.

    Mr Hollande and Ms Trierweiler officially split up in January after it emerged he had been having an affair with an actress.

    The French daily le Monde ran the headline “The revenge of Segolene Royal” on its web edition. One French blogger wrote on Twitter: “Sego [Segolene] nominated, break with Trierweiler complete.”

    The return of Ms Royal, mother of Mr Hollande’s four children, to government follows a long period when she was out of the political spotlight.

    She was the Socialist candidate in the 2007 presidential election, but lost to Nicolas Sarkozy.

    Mr Valls served in the previous cabinet as interior minister, where he became one of few government figures popular among the wider French public.

    His replacement as interior minister is Bernard Cazeneuve, who served as a junior minister responsible for the budget under Mr Ayrault.

    Two Green ministers from Mr Ayrault’s cabinet both resigned in protest at the appointment of Mr Valls as prime minister, because of his tough record on immigration and other issues.

    However, the Socialists still enjoy an overall majority in the lower house of the parliament, the National Assembly.

    BBC

  • Palestinians Sign Treaties to Press Israel

    Palestinians Sign Treaties to Press Israel

    {{A surprise decision by President Mahmoud Abbas to sign more than a dozen international conventions giving Palestinians greater leverage against Israel left the United States struggling on Wednesday to put peace talks back on track.}}

    The documents Abbas signed, officials said, included the Geneva Conventions – the key text of international law on the conduct of war and occupation.

    Palestinians hope it will give them a stronger basis to appeal to the International Criminal Court and eventually lodge formal complaints against Israel for its continued occupation of lands seized in the 1967 war that they want for their state.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who had been piecing together a complex three-way deal to push the faltering negotiations into 2015, cancelled a visit to the de facto Palestinian capital, Ramallah, planned for Wednesday after Abbas’s dramatic move late on Tuesday.

    “We urge both sides to show restraint while we work with them,” Kerry told reporters in Brussels, where he was attending a ministerial meeting of NATO.

    Palestinian officials signaled the new crisis could be short-lived if Israel made good on its pledge to release more than two dozen long-serving Palestinian prisoners. Israel has said it first wants the Palestinians to agree to extend the talks beyond an April 29 deadline.

    Kerry noted that Abbas, after signing the international agreements, had told a meeting of the Palestine Liberation Organisation leadership that he would remain in touch with the Americans.

    “The important thing is to keep the process moving and find a way to see whether the parties are prepared to move forward. In the end, this is up to the parties,” Kerry said.

    A spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined to comment on Abbas’s move.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Zeev Elkin, a hardliner in Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party, said Abbas’s latest step had turned the proposed talks-extension deal into a farce.

    {wirestory}

  • Foreigners Urged to Recognise 20th Commemoration of Genocide

    Foreigners Urged to Recognise 20th Commemoration of Genocide

    {The Executive secretary of CNLG, Mucyo Jean de Dieu (centre)}

    {{The National Commission for the Fight against Genocide CNLG calls upon organisations especially those established after the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi’s in Rwanda, to recognise the 20th commemoration period.}}

    CNLG encourages these organisations operating in Rwanda to honour the genocide victims and make commemoration part of culture within their various organisations in order to prevent the repeat of a horrendous past that Rwanda experienced.

    The Executive secretary of CNLG, Mucyo Jean de Dieu told reporters during a press conference on March 31 that some non governmental organisations and other private companies established after 1994 have not been honouring victims of the Tutsi genocide as required.

    Mr Mucyo noted that although some of the new organisations and companies do not have staff or any connection with genocide, the organisations staff could periodically meet and exchange ideas on genocide prevention.

    He said, “At the beginning, commemoration was always viewed as for survivors and government agencies. However, continued sensitisation enabled even the private organisations to establish monuments at their work premises in commemoration of genocide victims.”

    The theme for the 20th commemoration of Genocide against ethnic Tutsi’s is ‘Remember, Unite and Renew’.

    CNLG advises those organising the commemoration events from April 7, to carefully consider how to care for and treatment of the traumatised, long term support to widows and orphans resulting from the 1994 genocide against Tutsi’s that claimed over a million lives.

    Mucyo reminds citizens that GREY will be the official colour for commemoration. Grey colour is similar to the ash that was used since 2013 replacing the purple colour that has been in use for commemoration since after the 1994 genocide until 2013.

    He warned, “The commemoration colours should not be confused as has been the case since the adoption of Grey colour”.

    Meanwhile, CNLG reminds everyone that commemoration is not for Rwandan nationals alone but for all.

    According to CNLG’s Dr. Bideri Diogène, Foreigners working in Rwanda have been previously leaving for their home countries during the commemoration period in Rwanda; “However, there are new measures that will seek to have all foreigners stay in Rwanda during the commemoration period.”

    CNLG informs the general public that according to recent research conducted by the University of Rwanda, the number of victims has so far reached 1,070,000 victims and also confirmed by the Parliament.

    Thus the 1994 Genocide against ethnic Tutsi’s in Rwanda claimed over 1,070,000 victims and not 500,000 or 800,000 as claimed in other foreign reports.

  • Kabila Accused of Planning ‘Constitutional Coup’

    Kabila Accused of Planning ‘Constitutional Coup’

    {{The Congolese opposition has denounced the constitutional reform plans being proposed by the ruling party majority.}}

    According to the opposition, this modification, including a change in the voting system ,would allow president Joseph Kabila to run for a third term.

    The Congolese opposition claim President Kabila is planning to implement a ” constitutional coup ”

    On March 28th, the opposition and civil society mobilised protests against the constitutional reform. The protests are aimed at announce to President Kabila to stay away from the next presidential elections.

    According to the current constitution, the head of state is not allowed to seek another term in office and President Kabila has so far served his two terms and this technically means he is not eligible to contest in the next elections unless he abrogates the constitution.

    A fortnight ago, Congolese ruling party (constituting of majority seats in parliament) was said it was considering “seriously” a referendum to amend Article 197 of the Congolese Constitution.

    If this amendment is accepted. The president would be elected through the national assembly and not the entire voters in the country. The amendment would also increase the presidential term from 5 to seven years.

  • Zuma Rejects EU-Africa Summit

    Zuma Rejects EU-Africa Summit

    {{South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma has joined President Mugabe in shunning the European Union-Africa Summit in Brussels, Belgium, over the contentious invitation list to the meeting.}}

    The African Union’s Peace and Security Council last Wednesday resolved that the continent should seriously consider putting the Summit on ice because of the EU’s disrespect for the continent.

    SABC News yesterday quoted President Zuma saying: “I think that time must pass wherein we are looked as subjects, we are told who must come, who must not come, we have not attempted to decide when we meet Europe; who must come and who must not come. It is wrong and causes this unnecessary unpleasantness.

    “I thought the AU and EU are equal organisations representing two continents but there is not a single one of them who must decide for others.”

    The South African broadcaster quoted political analyst Steven Friedman interpreting the situation thus: “The position of the African Union is that it should be up to the African Union rather than the European Union to decide which African leaders are accepted or not.

    “It seems SA is taking a stand to say you have no right to exclude particular African leaders.”

    Zimbabwe had already signalled it would not be part of a discredited EU-Africa Summit.

    Foreign Affairs Secretary Ambassador Joey Bimha said President Mugabe’s stand was consistent with his principled position on Africa being treated as an equal in the comity of nations.

    “President Mugabe will not be travelling to the Summit and there will be no Zimbabwean delegation at the summit. This means our seat will be empty.”

    The continent has agreed that it is not the duty of the EU bloc to choose the delegation of the member states.

    The 22nd Ordinary Session of the AU General Assembly in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, this year resolved that African leaders would not attend the Summit if President Mugabe – who was elected AU Deputy Chair at that meeting – was not invited.

    The EU handpicked who could and couldn’t attend the meeting, putting the lie to the bloc’s claims that it viewed Africa as an equal partner in global affairs.

    The EU, without giving an reason, did not invite Eritrea. It also did not send an invite to the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic but extended a welcome to it’s coloniser, Morocco.

    {herald}

  • Italy PM Renzi says Will Quit if Senate Reform Blocked

    Italy PM Renzi says Will Quit if Senate Reform Blocked

    Italy’s new prime minister threatened on Monday to resign if a plan to reduce the powers of the upper house of parliament, a central part of his ambitious constitutional reform agenda, is blocked.

    In the latest step of Matteo Renzi’s reform drive, the cabinet is due to approve a draft bill on Monday to transform the Senate into a non-elected chamber stripped of the power to approve budgets or hold votes of no-confidence in a government.

    Renzi, who became Italy’s third prime minister in a year in February, has said that without a change in the system, the country risks being stuck with a rotating series of short-lived governments incapable of passing meaningful economic reforms.

    “I have put all my credibility into this reform; if it doesn’t succeed, I can only assume the consequences,” Renzi, Italy’s youngest prime minister at 39, told the Corriere della Sera newspaper.

    Renzi, head of the center-left Democratic Party, made a similar threat to quit over Senate reform on March 12 while pushing through a package of tax cuts aimed at reviving Italy’s sluggish economy, the third largest in the euro zone.

    The former mayor of Florence came to power after a party coup, taking over the unwieldy cross-party coalition formed after last year’s deadlocked election which left no side able to govern alone.

    wirestory

  • Russia Has No Intention of Sending Troops to Ukraine

    Russia Has No Intention of Sending Troops to Ukraine

    {{Russian said on Saturday it had no intention of sending its armed forces into Ukraine, signaling Moscow wants to ease tensions in the worst East-West standoff since the Cold war.}}

    Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reinforced a message from President Vladimir Putin that Russia will settle – at least for now – for annexing Crimea, although it has thousands of troops near Ukraine’s eastern border.

    “We have absolutely no intention of – or interest in – crossing Ukraine’s borders,” Lavrov told a Russian television channel.

    He added, however, that Russia was ready to protect the rights of Russian speakers, referring to what Moscow sees as threats to the lives of compatriots in eastern Ukraine since Moscow-backed Viktor Yanukovich was deposed as president.

    The West imposed sanctions on Russia, including visa bans for some of Putin’s inner circle, after Moscow annexed Crimea following a referendum on union with the Russian Federation which the West said was illegal.

    The West has threatened tougher sanctions targeting Russia’s stuttering economy if Moscow sends more troops to Ukraine.

    In a sign that Putin is ready to ease tensions in the worst East-West standoff since the Cold War, Putin called U.S. President Barack Obama on Friday to discuss a U.S. diplomatic proposal for Ukraine.

    The White House said Obama told Putin that Russia must pull back its troops and not move deeper into Ukraine.

    The Kremlin said Putin had suggested “examining possible steps the global community can take to help stabilize the situation,” and said the foreign ministers of the two countries would discuss this soon.

    The U.N. General Assembly on Thursday passed a non-binding resolution declaring invalid Crimea’s Moscow-backed referendum earlier this month on seceding from Ukraine, in a vote that Western nations said highlighted Russia’s isolation.

    Both Russia and West accused each other of using threats to affect the vote.

  • Egypt’s Military Chief Sisi Resigns to Run for Presidency

    Egypt’s Military Chief Sisi Resigns to Run for Presidency

    {{Field Marshal Abdul Fattah al-Sisi has announced that he has resigned as Egypt’s military chief in order to stand for the presidency.}}

    In a widely expected announcement, he said on state TV he was appearing “in my military uniform for the last time”.

    Field Marshal Sisi led the overthrow of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in July after mass opposition protests.

    Correspondents say he is likely to win the presidency, given his popularity and the lack of any serious rivals.

    To his supporters, the 59-year-old former army chief is a saviour who can end the political turmoil dogging Egypt since 2011 when a popular uprising ended Hosni Mubarak’s three decades of one-man rule.

    But his opponents hold him responsible for what human rights groups say are widespread abuses, and fear that he wants a return to authoritarianism.

    His announcement came hours after Egypt’s interim authorities ordered the prosecution of 919 suspected Islamists and days after 528 were sentenced to death in a separate case.

    {{‘Difficult task’}}

    In his address, Field Marshal Sisi told Egyptians he first wore his military uniform as a 15-year-old cadet and said: “I will always be proud of wearing the uniform of defending my country.”

    But he said he was answering “the demand of a wide range of Egyptians who have called on me to run for this honourable office”.

    He warned of an “extremely difficult task” ahead for Egyptians as the country faces up to its “economic, social, political and security realities”, including a threat “by the terrorists”.

    But he proposed “hard work and self-denial”. “If I am granted the honour of the leadership,” he said, “I promise that we together, leadership and people, can achieve stability, safety and hope for Egypt”.