Category: Rubrique

  • Africa Under New Wave of Colonialism–M7 Warns

    Africa Under New Wave of Colonialism–M7 Warns

    {{President Yoweri Museveni has advised African governments to be strong to prevent Western countries from intervening in their national and continental affairs.}}

    Museveni said this Tuesday during celebrations to mark 10 years of the Pan African Parliament in Midrand, South Africa. Museveni said by being weak and under developed, Western powers were returning with a new wave of colonialism.

    “You were weak and got colonized. Fortunately we survived and got our freedom again. We did not use our freedom to make ourselves stronger; now they have come back to start from where they stopped,” said a statement from the Pan African Parliament.

    “After independence we did not analyse why we had been colonized so that we quickly rectify the problems. We simply relaxed and enjoyed being in power forgetting that the lion cannot live with the lamb,” he said using the Biblical references on how the lamb would lay with the lion in heaven.

    The Pan-African Parliament (PAP) was established in March 2004, as one of the nine organs of the African Union. It is intended to “provide a common platform for African peoples and their grass-roots organizations to be more involved in discussions and decision-making on the problems and challenges facing the continent.”

    The Parliament is expected to evolve into an institution with full legislative powers, whose members are elected by universal adult suffrage, which awaits a decision from the African Union Heads of State Summit.

    Museveni was unhappy that Western countries had intervened in Libya, which, he said has never recovered, ignoring possible solutions proposed by the African Union (AU). He said it was contemptuous of NATO to prevent a team of six presidents with the AU mandate to try and resolve the Libyan issue, from travelling to the country.

    He said that although he was part of the named AU team, he was not on the fateful flight to Libya.

    “African Presidents, on African soil, carrying out an African mission were ordered by NATO to go back (arguing) that they had not allowed them to land. This was contempt,” he said.

    “I want to advise African governments, we should not tempt the greedy people, to come and colonise us by being weak. When you are weak, you tempt the greedy,” he said, adding that, “It is your fault to be weak, why would you allow yourself to be weak. Avoid making yourself so vulnerable.”

    Museveni identified ten factors preventing African countries from developing including ideological disorientation by the political elite; attacking the private sector; inadequate infrastructure; underdevelopment of human resource, lack of education and health; small markets; lack of industrialization, underdeveloped services, agriculture and lack of democracy.

    The President of Saharawi Mohamed Abdelaziz, the President of Mauritania Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz and the former President of Ghana Jerry Rawlings also addressed the sitting, advocating for the granting of legislative powers to the Pan African Parliament.

    NV

  • Ouattara’s Challenge is West Africa’s Hope

    Ouattara’s Challenge is West Africa’s Hope

    {Why Cote d’Ivoire president’s job rating matters beyond his country}

    {{The near-giddy relief felt by Ivorians on seeing President Alassane Ouattara gingerly trot across the tarmac of the Felix Houphouet-Boigny international airport on March 2 showed how vital the 72-year-old is to the West African country’s fragile security.}}

    Cote d’Ivoire is still making its way back from a short-lived but deadly civil war lit by the refusal of Laurent Gbagbo to cede power following a 2010 electoral run-off defeat.

    Gbagbo is now held at the International Criminal Court after French and UN-backed troops in April 2011 prised him from within the bowels of the presidential palace where he had holed up. He is charged with crimes against humanity following the deaths of more than 3,000 Ivorians.

    His electoral victor Ouattara is recovering from surgery to alleviate pain linked to sciatica, the medical term given to the compression of the sciatic nerve—the body’s longest— which often affects the leg and lower back.

    Hospitalised in France for a month, the drip-drop nature of information from officials only served to fuel speculation that he was really in bad shape, a perception Ouattara sought to dispel immediately on arrival.

    “As you can see, I’ve returned in good shape. I’m doing well. I’m in perfect health,” he told the cheering crowd in Abidjan, the commercial capital.

    As if to prove the point, the Ivorian leader has in recent weeks taken up a flurry of official arrangements, all covered by state media, from hosting Morocco’s monarch in a high-profile visit to being projected on television attending to a number of diplomatic engagements.

    The Ivorian leader last Wednesday chaired his first Cabinet meeting since January 22, a gathering which he had himself announced following talks with visiting Benin leader Thomas Yayi Boni at his Cocody residence.

    President Boni is among the legion of regional leaders who have been trooping in to see Ouattara. According to media reports, Togo’s Faure Gnassingbé and Burkina Faso’s Blaise Compaore also dropped in.

    Mr Ouattara is the current political head of the 15-member Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) regional bloc, partly explaining the wide concern.

    Troubled Liberia-Ivorian border

    But the regional concern is also grounded on the understanding that a stable Cote d’Ivoire is in the best interests of neighbours struggling with their own security challenges: Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Mali. Its border with Liberia has been particularly porous and deadly, with mercenaries frequently making incursions into Ivorian territory.

    During the 2010 electoral crisis, Gbagbo’s colleagues came up empty in widely-watched attempts to convince an African leader to hand over power peacefully.

    With the country’s neighbours also mirroring the fragility in Cote d’Ivoire, how Ouattara shapes up in the run-up to elections in the second half of next year will matter to many outside the country.

    Liberia’s border with Cote d’Ivoire is an issue that has caused much angst between the two countries. Liberia is home to thousands of Ivorian refugees yet to go home.

    For landlocked Mali, the all-important Highway 7 is at risk wherever there is an Ivorian crisis. On any given day close to 1,000 trucks ferry goods through the Ivorian border town of Zegoua. A threat to this trade would further batter Mali’s already thin national finances. About 70 per cent of Malian goods pass through the Ivorian port of Abidjan.

    For eastern neighbour Ghana, any instability in Cote d’Ivoire has an impact on its stability, with some notable Gbagbo supporters in exile there. Several people have been killed in attacks Cote d’Ivoire says are launched from Ghana, leading to cyclic closures of the nearly 700km border – and to diplomatic tensions. The border post town of Noé is a particular hotspot.

    Already, internally fragile Guinea has no appetite for further instability in Cote d’Ivoire, with which it already shares a decades-old border dispute.

    For Ouattara, the biggest election issue remains progress on reconciling the bitterly divided country, with some divisions spanning back to the unstable years in the 1990s.

    Reconciliation impasse

    He has made tentative steps towards reconciliation, but as the International Crisis Group in its most recent report on the country noted, this must be extended to the western region, which is beset by land, security and identity problems.

    The west of the country – particularly the Cavally and Guémon regions—was the area most hit outside the capital Abidjan in the 2010- 2011 conflict.
    The region is a stronghold of former President Gbagbo and remains wary of what it has termed “victor’s justice” – Outtara’s demand that justice go hand in hand with reconciliation but which has been seen as selective.

    The country’s Dialogue, Truth and Reconciliation Commission (CDVR) mandate ended last September, and it is hard to find an outright positive review for the body that has been hamstrung by funding woes and legal and political interference.

    The CDVR handed Ouattara a report detailing abuses, but the commission has been heavily criticised for recommending little else by way of healing the rifts.

    To add to the flux, Gbagbo’s party, the Ivorian Popular Front (FPI), is also experiencing some sort of renaissance. Ouattara has made overtures towards the party by releasing its members held without trial since 2011, including its head Pascal AffiN’guessan, a gesture that seemed to thaw relations somewhat.

    However observers say the release may be a way of getting Ouattara allies off the hook.

    The two parties are in tentative talks mediated by Senegalese President Macky Sall. However, relations remain decidedly frosty. Essentially the FPI is waiting for the ICC’s decision on whether it will confirm charges against Gbagbo with many supporters hopeful he will be released.

    If this were to happen it would complicate matters enormously for Ouattara’s young government. A third column—former President Henri Konan Bédié’s Democratic Party of Ivory Coast (PDCI) – could be a dark horse in the elections.

    The deliberations are necessary to secure the participation of the FPI in upcoming elections, helping the reconciliation effort and lessening the zero-sum scenario of electoral competition, itself abetted by the country’s dated and French-inspired constitution.

    Economic recovery

    While the October 2015 election is vital for the country’s recouping its tarnished credentials, the preparations have not earned rave reviews.

    Campaigns are already in full flow, even before the country’s electoral authorities figure out how to run a credible ballot. Voter listing and setting up an electoral commission appear to be the most urgent, but the authorities are fast running out of time.

    Other reform areas are also lagging. The Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration Authority (ADDR) says it has managed to reintegrate 27,000 of the targeted 30,000 ex-combatants, but pro-regime militia such as the Dozo remain on the loose.

    UN head of Cote d’Ivoire operations Aichatou Mindaoudou in January told the Security Council that security sector reforms are urgently needed, to go with the re-integration and justice reforms.

    UN independent expert Doudou Diène echoed this following a two-week visit last month to the country of close to 20 million.

    On a more reassuring note, Ouattara’s economic record is less convoluted, even sparking talk of a new “economic miracle” following the heady years of the 1960s-1980s. There has been talk of a return to the country by the African Development Bank (AfDB) in what would be a major fillip for the trained economist’s efforts.

    Major infrastructure projects such as motorways and French-built bridges are visible, but investment remains stymied by uncertainty.

    In 2011 the Ivorian economy shrunk by 4.7 per cent, grew to 9.8 per cent in 2012, 8.7 per cent last year and is projected to touch 8-10 per cent this year, according to available data. Much of this is new growth, but concerns remain over wealth redistribution.

    The country climbed six places on the bank’s Doing Business 2014 raking, but remains at a lowly position 167. Among the lowest ranked indicators are the payment of taxes and the protection of investors.

    The Mo Ibrahim 2013 governance index ranked Côte d’Ivoire at 44 out 52 African countries, and 15 out of 16 West African states.

    Clearly there still is a lot of work to for the incumbent, including making the country’s $24 billion National Development Plan for 2012-2015 viable. The coming year will be crucial for the country, and for West Africa.

    NMG

  • SA rejects Nigerians’ Poll Participation Calls

    SA rejects Nigerians’ Poll Participation Calls

    {{The government has dismissed demands by Nigerians to participate in future South African elections.}}

    In an interview, spokesperson for the department of international relations and cooperation, Clayson Monyela, said such demands by Nigerians were “ridiculous” and “unacceptable.”

    Arguing that the idea would never be tolerated, Monyela challenged Nigerians living in South Africa to understand bilateral agreements and trade relations.

    “It is impossible, ridiculous and unacceptable! What it means is that our country has to change the constitution to suit Nigerian demands; something that is impossible,” Monyela said.

    Monyela was reacting to calls made by Nigerians living in South Africa this past weekend.

    They (Nigerians) demanded that they should be allocated ward council and parliamentary positions arguing that their economy contributed a significant percentage to the South African economy via the number of South African multinational firms operating in Nigeria and the amount of Nigerians living in South Africa.

    “South African companies alone are the biggest investors in more than 26 African countries, does this mean we (South Africa) must have MPs (Members of Parliament) in each and every African country that we have investments?” Monyela asked.

    He added, “China is the biggest BRICS trading partner, so does it mean the Chinese must automatically have seats in our parliament? There is no such a thing in the whole world.”

    There was no immediate response from the Nigerian High Commissioner despite a request on Tuesday.

    Nigerians interviewed by CAJ News argued that South African companies were raking in billions of dollars from Nigeria into South Africa yet Nigerians living in South Africa were not allowed to make any meaningful contribution towards policy formulation as well as represent Nigerian citizens in the country.

    MTN, Multichoice, Mr Price, Checkers, Pick & Pay, Standard Bank and South Africa Airways, among others, have operations in the West African nation.

    MTN owns 52% of Nigeria’s mobile telecommunications market share, Multichoice’s DSTV boasts 90% of Nigeria’s satellite television while franchises such as Nandos, Chicken Republic and St. Elmos account for an estimated 50% fast food consumption share in Nigeria.

    Nigeria has a population of 170 million with its GDP standing at $268.8bn while South Africa’s population is estimated to be 52 million with a GDP of $375.9bn.

    – CAJ News

  • Crimea ‘theft’ Accusation Sparks Russian Threats at UN

    Crimea ‘theft’ Accusation Sparks Russian Threats at UN

    {{Russia and the US exchanged threats on Wednesday at a tense UN Security Council meeting over the Ukraine crisis, with Moscow’s envoy threatening that US “insults” will jeopardise Moscow’s willingness to cooperate on other diplomatic matters.}}

    It was the council’s eighth meeting in less than three weeks on the situation in Ukraine, a show of determination by Western powers to highlight Russia’s diplomatic isolation following its takeover of the Crimean Peninsula – even if the council is powerless to act because of Moscow’s veto power as a permanent council member.

    At the council, Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin (pictured left) was once again alone in defending his country’s actions in Crimea.

    He began his speech by celebrating the treaty signed a day earlier by Russian President Vladimir Putin declaring Crimea part of Russia, saying it honoured the will of the Crimean people and complied with international law.

    “Yesterday, something truly historic happened,” Churkin said. “A historic injustice has been righted.”

    US Ambassador Samantha Power (pictured right) said the US rejected “Russia’s military intervention and land grab in Crimea”.

    She warned that the US and its allies, who imposed sanctions on Russia two days ago, “are prepared to take additional steps if Russian aggression or Russian provocations continue”.

    {{‘Theft’ of Crimea}}

    Power also compared Russia’s takeover of Crimea with theft. “A thief can steal property, but that does not confer the right of ownership on the thief,” she said.

    The Russian ambassador shot back: “It is simply unacceptable to listen to these insults addressed to our country.

    “If the delegation of the United States of America expects our cooperation in the Security Council on other issues, then Mrs Power must understand this quite clearly.” By then, Power had left the meeting to her deputy.

    Churkin did not elaborate. The US and Russia are the key players in efforts to establish peace talks in Syria, and also are involved in talks over Iran’s nuclear programme.

    The spat came as UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon left for Russia and Ukraine in a bid to seek a diplomatic solution to the crisis. Ban will meet with Putin, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and other senior officials in Moscow on Thursday.

    He will then travel to Kiev on Friday for talks with Ukraine’s acting president, Oleksandr Turchynov, and acting prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

    “[Ban] has made clear we’re at a crossroads and […] the focus must be to engage direct dialogue between Moscow and Kiev aimed at agreeing on specific measures that will pave the way towards a diplomatic solution,” UN deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said.

    {{Tatar concerns}}

    The council also heard a briefing from Ivan Simonovic, assistant UN secretary-general for human rights, who expressed particular concern over the security of Tatars and other ethnic minorities in Crimea.

    He highlighted the disappearance of a Crimean Tatar activist after participating in a March 3 protest. Simonovic said the activist was found dead on March 16 and his body bore marks of “mistreatment”.

    Simonovic announced that the UN is deploying a 34-member human rights monitoring mission to Ukraine, scheduled to be in place by Friday.

    He said he was not able visit Crimea because the authorities there refused to receive his mission or ensure its security until it was too late.

    But he said he had spoken to representatives of displaced Tatars and victims of arbitrary arrests, torture and other human rights violations.

    Churkin dismissed Simonovic’s assessment as “one-sided”. He also blamed snipers – not Russian soldiers – for the killing of a Ukrainian soldier and an unarmed member of a local self-defence brigade in Crimea on Tuesday, saying the two were deliberately targeted to provoke confrontation.

    Obama rules out war

    Meanwhile on Wednesday, US President Barack Obama ruled out US military involvement in Ukraine, emphasising diplomacy in the standoff.

    “We are not going to be getting into a military excursion in Ukraine,” Obama told San Diego TV station KNSD, in an interview.

    He then told St Louis station KSDK in a separate interview: “We do not need to trigger an actual war with Russia.”

    Obama, who imposed sanctions on 11 Russian and Ukrainian officials on Monday, said the US will push diplomatic efforts to bring pressure on Russia to loosen its grip on the Crimea region of southern Ukraine.

    “There is a better path, but I think even the Ukrainians would acknowledge that for us to engage Russia militarily would not be appropriate and would not be good for Ukraine either,” Obama said.

    {wirestory}

  • Protais Mitali to Head PL Party for Another 5 Years

    Protais Mitali to Head PL Party for Another 5 Years

    {{The fifth congress of the Liberal Party (PL) {‘Parti Liberal’ } has re-elected, Protais Mitali ({pictured above})as its president and party flag bearer for the next five-year-term of office.}}

    Mitali is also Rwanda’s Minister of Sport and Culture and has been at the realm of the party since the 2010 presidential elections, when he replaced former party president Prosper Higiro

    In his acceptance speech, Mitali said that he is fully energized to step party objectives and steering the party’s contribution to the country’s development.

    “We will build on what we have already started. To continue to build our party, recruit more members and increase its capacity to create awareness of government development programs” said Mitali.

    The party also highlighted its achievement over the past five years, especially its participation in the 2010 presidential elections, 2013 parliamentary elections, training and recruitment of members and contribution of Rwf11.5million to the country’s development fund (Agaciro fund).

    Also elected were new committee members who included: Hon Donatilla Mukabalisa (first vice president) Hon François Byabarumwanzi (2nd vice president) Hon Dr. Odette Nyiramirimo (Secretary General) and Leodomir Ndagijimana as the Treasurer

    The secretary general of the forum for Rwanda political parties Anicet Kayigema, hailed the party members for their contribution to building democracy, freedom of speech and community development.

    The Liberal Party was founded on 14 July 1991 is now an important political formation. The party is one of the key players in Rwanda’s politics after The Social Democratic Party (PSD), with members in the Rwandan parliament and the East African Legislative Assembly (EALA).

    {newsofrwanda}

  • 5 New Envoys Present Credentials to President Kagame

    5 New Envoys Present Credentials to President Kagame

    {{President Paul Kagame Tuesday received credentials of five new Envoys nominated to represent their respective countries in Rwanda. }}

    The new Ambassadors included Marek Ziolkowski, representing Poland with residence in Nairobi, Maria Marcela Nicodemo, Ambassador of Brazil to Rwanda with residence in Nairobi, Anders Urban Andersson, representing Sweden to Rwanda with residence in Kampala, Ivan Zivkovic, Ambassador of Serbia to Rwanda with residence in Nairobi and William John Gelling, High Commissioner of the United Kingdom to Rwanda with residence in Kigali.

    Briefing the press at Hotel Umubano after presenting their credentials, the new envoys said they would work towards strengthen the existing cooperation between their countries and Rwanda, focusing on key areas.

    Marek Ziolkowski, the Polish Ambassador to Rwanda said:

    “ It is always an honour to meet with the Head of State, especially a President like Kagame. My country expects to do a lot of business with Rwanda, especially due to the fact that both of us produce what each of us does not produce.

    We dont produce Coffee or Tea, which Rwanda produces in abundance. We produce machineries and motor vehicles that are cheaper than elsewhere in Europe.

    Ambassador Maria Marcela Nicodemo who will be representing Brazil in Rwanda based in Nairobi said her country and Rwanda would especially cooperate in promoting the Agriculture sector. In June 2011, Rwanda and Brazil agreed to fast-track cooperation in agriculture and food security.

    The two countries signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in Rome aiming to promote technical cooperation, capacity building, knowledge exchange and competencies available in Brazilian institutions and organizations.

  • Bushishi of PSD Party Replaces Mukandasira in Parliament

    Bushishi of PSD Party Replaces Mukandasira in Parliament

    {{Bushishi Jovani is now a member of parliament under the Social Democratic Party (PSD) party. He replaces Mukandasira Caritas who was recently appointed the Governor of Western Province.}}

    The new changes have been confirmed by the National Electoral Commission.

    Accordingly, all political parties recognised in the country have a standby list of its members that would replace one another in situations like above. Such lists of various party members are elected during parliamentary elections.

    Honourable Bushishi told IGIHE that he will work closely with citizens instead of staying in office.

    {Bushishi Jovani -PSD Party}

  • Juba & Khartoum Discuss Security Issues

    Juba & Khartoum Discuss Security Issues

    {{South Sudanese defence minister, Kuol Manyang Juuk left for the Sudanese capital, Khartoum on Tuesday with what he described as a “special message” from President Salva Kiir to his Sudanese counterpart, Omer Al-Bashir.}}

    Speaking to reporters at Juba airport before his departure, Juuk said he would hold talks with Sudanese officials, including the president and defence minister, Abdel-Rehim Mohamed Hussein mainly focusing on security issues and rebel presence along the two country’s borders.

    “I am carrying with me special message from our president Salva Kiir Mayardit to his brother, president Omer Al-Bashir. My visit will focus on two issues: the border demarcation between the two countries and the presence of the rebels along the border areas,” said Juuk.

    “This is very important because rebels loyal to Riek Machar and Taban Deng Gai expect support from some neighbouring countries. We want to tell the Sudanese authorities not to help them,” he added.

    The South Sudanese defence minister, however, downplayed possibilities of Sudan supporting the rebels, asserting that stability serves the interests of both countries.

    Juuk was welcomed at Khartoum Airport by the Sudanese state minister for defence, Yahya Mohamed Khair, who told reporters that the visit comes in the framework of continued consultations towards the development of bilateral relations, hoping that South Sudan regains peace and stability.

    The visit comes in the wake of continuous reports in the Sudanese press alleging the participation of the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) rebels in the fight against South Sudan rebels.

    Sudantribune

  • Jeb Bush Considers Run for White House

    Jeb Bush Considers Run for White House

    {{Jeb Bush({right}), Brother to former US President George W Bush({center}) and also son to former US President George H.W. Bush({Left}) is expected to compete in the 2016 Presidential race.}}

    Mr. Jeb gets the question at just about every public appearance these days: Will you run for president?

    The former Florida governor gives a well-worn answer: ”I can honestly tell you that I don’t know what I’m going to do.” It’s an answer that won’t satisfy the GOP faithful for much longer.

    The scion of the Bush political dynasty will likely be asked the question many times in the coming weeks as he raises his profile with appearances in Tennessee, New Mexico, Nevada and Texas — where he’ll bump into another possible 2016 presidential candidate, Hillary Rodham Clinton.

    Bush’s ”yes” or ”no” is one of the most significant factors looming over the 2016 Republican presidential contest. A White House bid by the brother and son of presidents would shake up a wide-open GOP field, attract a legion of big-money donors and set up a showdown with the influential tea party movement. Bush has said he’ll consult with his family this summer and make a decision by the end of the year.

    With New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie facing multiple investigations in a political retribution probe, many Republicans see Bush as a potent alternative: a two-term GOP governor who thrived in the nation’s largest swing-voting state and could make the party more inclusive.

    Friends and advisers say he is seriously considering a presidential run. His busy schedule will do little to quiet speculation.

    This month, Bush is expected to visit New Mexico and Nevada to campaign for Republican governors there, even though both incumbents are widely expected to cruise to re-election. In Las Vegas, he’ll address leaders of the Republican Jewish Coalition, an influential political group backed by casino magnate and GOP mega-donor Sheldon Adelson.

    And in Dallas next week, Bush is scheduled to co-host an education conference where Clinton is also set to appear.

    With no clear frontrunner for the GOP nomination, Bush’s standing is rising in early presidential polls and among donors. His popularity with wealthy insiders was on display last month at a Republican fundraiser in the gilded ballroom of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Palm Beach estate. The night’s keynote speaker was a tea party firebrand, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, but a short video message from Bush received far more applause.

    ”Jeb is striking a chord amongst many thoughtful donors,” said Fred Malek, finance chairman of the Republican Governors Association.

    ”He’s a proven conservative,” Malek said. ”But at the same time, he is not viewed as extreme or an ideologue and therefore can appeal to the moderate element of the party as well.”

    Bush would carry both the benefits and the baggage of one of America’s most prominent political dynasties. Its patriarch, George H.W. Bush, was elected to one term in 1988; his son, George W. Bush, served two presidential terms beginning in 2001. The family’s vast fundraising network and political connections, in addition to Jeb Bush’s own constellation of donors and advisers, could fuel a formidable campaign. A senior adviser at the financial firm Barclays, Jeb Bush remains a favorite of the Wall Street set.

    But the shadow of his older brother’s controversial presidency still looms. The family’s matriarch, former first lady Barbara Bush, has repeatedly spoken of the potential for Bush fatigue, saying, ”If we can’t find more than two or three families to run for high office, that’s silly.”

    A Washington Post-ABC News poll this month signaled head winds Jeb Bush could face: nearly half of all Americans, and 50 percent of registered voters, said they ”definitely would not” vote for him for president.

    Nevertheless, friends and advisers say, he is mulling a bid and reaching out to influential donors.

    ”He is seriously considering this, but he is not following the timeline that the pundits or the press would like him to follow,” said Sally Bradshaw, Bush’s former chief of staff.

    Bush briefly considered a presidential campaign in 2012 but declined to run.

    ”It’s much more serious this time,” said Slater Bayliss, a lobbyist and former Bush aide. ”The question for him is whether he’s willing to make the sacrifices that he’s seen his brother and his dad make at a time in his life when he’s having an impact on policy issues he cares about.”

    Bush has spent much of his post-governorship studying education policy and advocating for the kinds of changes he pioneered in Florida, including publicly-funded private school vouchers and stricter accountability standards for teachers and students. At the same time, he has promoted overhauling the nation’s immigration system and providing a path to citizenship for millions of immigrants who are here illegally, an intensely personal effort. His wife, Columba, grew up in Mexico. The two met while Bush was an exchange student there; she is now an American citizen. Bush speaks fluent Spanish.

    His personal story and immigration advocacy could help him connect with Latinos, a group that Republicans have long struggled to court.

    ”He needs no briefing sheets when it comes to what’s important to Hispanics,” said Ana Navarro, a Bush friend and GOP strategist.

    But the former Florida governor’s education and immigration efforts would likely put him at odds with conservative activists.

    Bush has been a champion of so-called ”Common Core” academic standards, which were developed by a bipartisan group of governors and state school officials and later promoted by the Obama administration. Many conservatives see them as a federal takeover of local classrooms. Likewise, anti-immigration activists have battled Bush-backed immigration legislation in Congress that they consider ”amnesty” for lawbreakers.

    ”We’re seeing from Jeb Bush’s actions that he likes having a government that has much more say in people’s lives,” said Jenny Beth Martin, co-founder of Tea Party Patriots.

    Over the past two years, in speeches and public appearances, Bush has chafed at what he calls ”purity tests” inside the GOP, saying both his father and former President Ronald Reagan would struggle in the tea party era.

    Citing a scheduling conflict, he declined an invitation to speak this month at the Conservative Political Action Conference, the country’s largest annual gathering of conservative activists.

    ”I’m a conservative and I’m a practicing one, not a talk-about-it one,” Bush said last year.

    In Florida, Bush slashed billions of dollars in taxes, toughened crime laws and revamped the state’s education system. But he has refused to sign the anti-tax pledge that many activists now consider sacrosanct. He has told Republicans the party needs to shed the perception that it’s ”anti-everything.”

    Allies and adversaries alike question whether Bush, a policy wonk who often talks about ”big, hairy, audacious goals,” could stomach the hyper-partisanship and gridlock in Washington.

    ”He’s accustomed to moving an agenda,” said Dan Gelber, a former state senator and Democratic leader who often tussled with Bush in Tallahassee, ”and I think he’s got to be wondering how he would do that.”

    {Jeb Bush is also former Governor of Texas state}

    {telegram}

  • Two Killed in Malawi Political Violence

    Two Killed in Malawi Political Violence

    {{Two people were killed in political violence on Sunday in Malawi’s Thyolo district in the aftermath of a political rally attended by President Joyce Banda.}}

    In a statement from their headquarters at Lilongwe, Malawian police confirmed the deaths of one civilian and a police officer.

    The statement said the police shot in self defence after violence erupted between suspected supporters of the ruling People’s Party and the opposition Democratic Progressive Party.

    President Banda took her campaign to Goliati village, the home of one of her biggest rivals Peter Mutharika, the brother of former President late Bingu wa Mutharika.

    There is political bad blood between the Mutharikas and President Banda following her expulsion from the then ruling party, and subsequent attempts to prevent her ascending to power following Bingu was Mutharika’s death in 2012.

    Goliati villagers were said to have been incensed by attacks by orators at the rally who said the Mutharikas had failed to develop the area despite being in positions of influence.

    Peter Mutharika is a member of parliament.

    The crowd went on to interrupt President Banda’s speech on a number of occasions.

    President Banda, who avoided referring to the two brothers, did not however mention the earlier utterances by her supporters, instead urging tolerance in her remarks.

    After she left the area, the agitated villagers started pelting her supporters with stones, injuring scores and damaging vehicles.

    In a bid to quell the situation, a policeman shot at them, killing one. The angry villagers are then reported to have lynched the officer.

    Malawians on social media platforms have roundly condemned the incident, calling for political tolerance and clean campaigns.

    Many have called issue based politics in the forthcoming elections saying politics of insults have failed to develop the country for the past 50 years.

    The country holds closely-contested general elections on May 20.

    NMG