Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Zone 2- Africa: Micro Analysis- 'Botswana: Challenging the African Stereotype?W # 89 Dated 11th-17th Oct. 09’

General elections were held in Botswana on 16th October 2009.These were the 10th general elections held since Botswana's independence in 1966, a nation accredited with a history of smooth, periodic elections. The ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) led by President Seretse Khama Ian Khama was re-elected for the next five years with 45 out of a total of 57 parliamentary seats and representing a 53.26 percent of the popular vote, according the Independent Electoral Commission. The BDP has not lost an election since independence in 1966.
The nation is a parliamentary republic and follows a system of Single member plurality, first-past-the-post system multiparty elections. President is elected by each newly elected National Assembly. The phenomenon of limited presidential terms is a new one to Botswana, having been promulgated in the mid 1990s, through which Opposition MP Dumelang Saleshando opined Festus Mogae, the president before Ian Khama, did set a good precedent for the nation.
A group of observers from Southern African Development Community (SADC) Election Observer Mission (SEOM) said the elections were conducted in compliance with the SADC Principles and Guidelines. They further noted that a massive voter registration exercise was conducted in the run up to the election. A record 725 000 people registered to vote and the turnout was largely attributed to voter education by the Independent Electoral Commission IEC and other civic groups including the media. First time voters constituted nearly 30% of the registration indicating an unprecedented interest in elections by the youth of Botswana.
Mr. Khama, The son of Botswana's first president joined politics after a military career and was directly nominated by his predecessor. He is credited with being decisive, but also criticized for being dogmatic. Despite Splits within the president's party, a victory was still forecast since the opposition was believed to be equally fractured.
While there were complaints that the state media, particularly the Botswana Television, was biased towards the ruling party, observers reported that there were attempts to ensure that the station covered all events of the contesting parties without bias.
Botswana, one of Africa's most stable countries, is the continent's longest continuous multi-party democracy. It is relatively free of corruption and has a relatively good human rights record. An economy heavily dependent on diamond trade the recent elections were held amid a deep recession. Botswana's over-dependence on diamonds for its export earnings and tax revenues, as well as jobs and human rights were all major issues that the political parties rallied on.
Critics maintain that Botswana’s immaculate achievement at a macro-economic level has for a long time been accompanied by high levels of unemployment, unacceptable levels of poverty and gross inequalities. A key problem area is over-reliance on the mineral sector, in particular diamonds.
The opposition MP Saleshando believes that despite Botswana’s thriving liberal democracy, the political institutions necessary for providing effective checks and balances are weak in Botswana. Moreover the presidency controls all levers of power while the legislative agenda is set by the executive and parliamentary staff is recruited and deployed as desired by the presidency. Hence despite being widely lauded for its democratic tradition critics still maintain that Botswana is in a highly precarious economic situation with under-developed political institutions that need to be modernized. The nation’s tangible pride in its functional system of governance in a continent rift with stereotypes is however quite apparent.

Discussion Questions:

· Is the Botswana model despite its skewed economic stability through excessive dependence on the diamond industry, still a feasible fit for Africa at large?

· Despite international praise for its success at the polls does the opposition’s claim regarding underdeveloped institutions portray a pseudo democracy in Botswana?

Sources/Related Links
http://allafrica.com/stories/200910231087.html
http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk/2009102225867/african-perspectives/botswana-general-election-report-2009.html
http://www.mmegi.bw/index.php?sid=2&aid=175&dir=2009/October/Friday9
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8309573.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/country_profiles/1068674.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7297013.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7297374.stm https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bc.html
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Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.

Zone 2- Summary of Africa for week # 89, Dated 11th-17th Oct. 09’

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa
: Guinean opposition political parties have rejected the unity government offer by the ruling military junta in the wake of last month’s violence and government crackdown on demonstrators.
South Africa: Zimbabwe was thrown into constitutional crisis last week after Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's party pulled out of the unity government, citing President Robert Mugabe's reluctance to fully implement their power sharing agreement. Formed eight months ago, the unity government has lurched from one crisis to another amid accusations that Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF is unwilling to reform. Also the decision by a Zimbabwe court to send a close aide to Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai to jail has been condemned as politically motivated abuse by the Swedish EU presidency.
Botswana, the world's biggest diamond producer, held national polls last week where the incumbent President, Lt. General Ian Khama's Botswana Democratic Party retained power while Khama has been nominated as the President of the republic of Botswana until 2014.
East Africa/Horn of Africa: Tension is mounting along the Kenya-Sudan border between Kenyan security forces and armed Toposa pastoralists from southern Sudan.
While at least 7 people were killed last week in the Somali capital Mogadishu after insurgents attacked African Union peacekeepers (AMISOM). The 5,000-strong peacekeeping force consists of soldiers from Uganda and Burundi. Sheik Mohamed Mo'allin Ali, Information Secretary of the Islamist organization Hizbul Islam confirmed last week that some of their forces had joined the transitional government in Somalia.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa
: The International Criminal Court has launched a preliminary investigation into last month's violence at a Guinea sports stadium, where presidential guard troops opened fire on tens of thousands of demonstrators. The Community of West African States (ECOWAS) last week also imposed limited sanctions against the governments and people of Guinea and Niger Republic.
East Africa/Horn of Africa
: More than 600 delegates, including 19 heads of state and government, are expected to attend a special African Union Summit on refugees, returnees and internally displaced persons this week in Uganda. The meeting will culminate in a declaration that will tackle the root causes and problems of the continent's 17 million IDPs and refugees.
Also a Ugandan government institution last week indicted the national army for continuing to torture civilians despite their intensified sensitization and awareness about human rights observance.
Central Africa: Human Rights Watch stated last week that the Government of Burundi should immediately evaluate the claims of up to 400 Rwandan asylum seekers and stop all efforts to coerce them to leave the country. Human Rights Watch also called on Rwandan authorities to stop pressuring Burundi to force the asylum seekers to return to Rwanda.
A former Rwandan intelligence chief who was caught recently after being on the run for nine years entered a plea of not guilty last week as he made his first appearance in front of the United Nations tribunal which indicted him for his role in the country's 1994 genocide.
More over the tit-for-tat expulsion of thousands of Angolan refugees living in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and the repatriation of thousands of undocumented Congolese migrants working in Angola, is raising fears of a "humanitarian catastrophe" in the making.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa:
52 persons have died as a result of the cholera epidemic in Borno, Nigeria; while the state of Lagos was rocked by flashfloods last week which paralyzed business activities in different parts of the metropolis.
According to news reports the developed economies, under the aegis of Group 77 nations and China, are ‘uncomfortable’ with the campaign by African countries to extract an annual $67billion financial aid commitment from the industrialized economies, being demanded as a form of compensation to assuage the incidence of environmental pollution and degradation in the continent.
South Africa: The Minister of Health, Lesego Motsumi has announced that the spread of HIV/AIDS has stabilized in Botswana.
Also according to reports SADC (South African Development Community) Member States are slowly warming up to wider adoption of cleaner energy sources that result in less carbon emissions in line with new trends in the global energy sector.
East Africa/Horn of Africa: Some 16,000 volunteers are expected to take to the streets of Juba, the capital of southern Sudan, next month in a United Nations programme to tackle health hazards caused by public dumping of waste in a rapidly growing metropolitan area that has endured repeated fatal outbreaks of cholera, water-borne diseases and malaria.
Central Africa: Cholera has killed at least 51 people in the past few weeks in northern Cameroon, where health experts say safe water and proper sanitation are sorely lacking. Also the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) warned last week that Lake Chad, once one of the world's largest water bodies, could disappear in 20 years due to climate change and population pressures, resulting in a humanitarian disaster in central Africa.
A meeting of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) brought together experts from 20 countries to accelerate a massive effort to develop and deploy higher-yield, disease and drought resistant crop varieties of Africa's most important food crops.

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: Reports of a large infrastructure and minerals agreement between Guinea and Chinese investors this week have turned a harsh spotlight on the human rights and geopolitical stakes of the scramble for Africa's natural wealth. Trade between China and Africa has been growing by around 30 percent annually since 2000. Deals such as those with DRC and Sudan have drawn criticism and frustration from governments like the U.S.'s that, analysts say, prefer to use investment as carrots in the African continent.
The Federal Government of Nigeria shifted last week from the Western countries and requested China to raise a $500 million bond to finance its budget deficit. Also a battle between China and western oil multinational essentially about access to Nigeria's prolific deepwater oil fields continues.
In the meanwhile the African Development Bank (AfDB) Group Chief Economist, Louis Kasekende, has said that the continent's economic outlook is improving in the wake of the financial crisis.
Central Africa: Micro Finance Institutions (MFIs) have voiced their concerns over high interest rates being charged by banks in Rwanda.

NORTH AFRICA:

An internet service linking African parliaments is expected to be created to enable MPs around the continent to share oversight experiences and views on matters of governance, according to the speaker of the Egyptian parliament, Dr Ahmed Fathi Sorour.
At the launch of the Nigeria Movement in Solidarity with the Western Sahara People by the Nigeria Labour Congress First Lady, Hajiya Turai Yar'Adua joined the call for the independence of Western Sahara from occupation by Morocco, stressing on absolute abolition of colonialism from the African continent. Also the Nigerian Federal Government has condemned human rights violations unleashed on workers of Western Sahara, stating that it would co-opt the Nigerian Labour Congress leadership to tackle some of the problems in the region.
The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights in Banjul, Gambia, has ordered the government of Libya to suspend the execution of Nigerians on death row in that country. The Commission is the body charged with overseeing states parties’ compliance with their legal obligations under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
A new study documents serious human rights and humanitarian crisis resulting from more than three decades of warehousing of Sahrawi refugees confined to desert camps near Tindouf, in southwestern Algeria.
Oil exporters in the Middle East and North Africa have been directly hit by the global financial crisis through a sharp drop in oil prices and a drying up of capital inflows, but the blow has been softened by countercyclical government spending, according to the IMF’s new regional forecast.

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Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Condensed Zonal Summary on Africa for week # 88, Dated 4th-10th Oct 09'

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: In Nigeria an NGO the Tawheed Initiative for Good Governance and Accountability (TIGA) has accused the federal government of sponsoring mass killing of the civilian population on the pretext of uprooting the troublesome Boko Harem sect. In the mean while Some 232 members of the Niger Delta People's Salvation Front (NDPSF) and the Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force (NDPVF), under the leadership of Mujahideen Dokubo-Asari, have rejected the amnesty offered by President Umaru Yar'Adua which expired last week. Even as militant groups in the Niger Delta respond to disarmament supervised by the Federal Government, a recent seizure of ammunition has raised fears of unidentified groups raising rebel squads.

East Africa/Horn of Africa: The agreement on a multi-party transitional government for Madagascar has got off to a difficult start, with the deposed head of state, Marc Ravalomanana, refusing to recognize the leader who deposed him, Andry Rajoelina, as head of the interim administration. In the Democratic Republic of Congo An estimated 3,000 Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels have crossed back from the Central African Republic. While in Kenya controversy is growing over media reports that the government is recruiting ethnic Somalis in Kenya to join the African Union peacekeeping mission (AMISOM) serving in Somalia. All the while a spokesman for Somalia's national police force has warned about planned suicide bombings targeting African Union peacekeepers (AMISOM) serving in Mogadishu.
The peace and security conference for the East African Community (EAC) last week focused on promoting the region's peace and security framework and on identifying potential security challenges facing the integration process.

Central Africa: Inter-ethnic violence continues to impede the return of the displaced in southern Sudan. In the meanwhile a United Nations assessment team has succeeded in restarting the disarmament and integration of some ethnic fighters into the national army in strife-torn eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Also Fresh reports indicate that the rag-tag rebel outfit, Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) continues to illegally exploit minerals in Eastern DR Congo

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: A foremost human rights activist, Malam Shehu Sani, has cautioned Nigerian government to beware of its bilateral ties with the Chinese government as regards corrupt practices, violation of due process and neglect of the rule of law. The Libyan authorities have accepted to stop the execution of Nigerians on death row, pending the final determination of the case brought by Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) before the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights. A recent study conducted by the Islamic Family Law project unit of the Women Rights Advancement and Protection Alternative (WARPA) has shown that the rate of divorce among Muslims in the seven states in North-Western Nigeria has remained on a steady rise
Nigerian lawmakers disclosed last week that Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) have not accounted for about N3 trillion budgeted in the past five years. Also the country’s journalists are calling for a freedom of information (FOI) bill in Nigeria.

South Africa: In South African the government plans to revive a controversial Expropriation bill making it easier to seize land from white farmers who refused to sell their properties for redistribution to blacks.

East Africa/Horn of Africa: The Islamic administration officials in Gedo region, Somalia have ordered the women in the region to take a veil or face legal prosecution. Watchdog Groups have reported that abuse of civilians in Darfur and southern Sudan still continues. Also the country’s ambassador to Uganda opined that the International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant against the Sudanese leader, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, is a big obstacle to the realization of peace in Sudan. In the meanwhile the Ugandan Police has arrested one of the four most wanted suspects from Rwanda's 1994 genocide, Idelphonse Nizeyimana.
At least 5,000 conflict- and drought-displaced Somalis are facing an uncertain future in Bulo Hawo, a town controlled by Al-Shabab on the border with Kenya

Central Africa: Thousands of Congolese citizens are being deported from Angola to theDemocratic Republic of Congo (DRC) under alarming circumstances, say humanitarian workers. Also the United Nations peacekeeping operation in the (DRC) has launched a child protection campaign in a war-ravaged eastern province of the African nation.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: The Nigerian Senate has raised an alarm over the imminent collapse of the Lake Nyos natural dam, fearing devastating consequences. Also Nigeria's gas utilization project at the Ovade-Ogharafe oil field in Delta State has been successfully registered under the United Nations Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of the Kyoto Protocol, boosting Federal Government's efforts to reduce gas flaring and improve utilization.

South Africa: Southern Africa is the continent's best-governed and Central Africa its worst-governed region, according to a new ranking of Africa's quality of governance report.
Plans to tackle Africa’s diseases with home-grown drugs and diagnostics were reinforced with a second meeting of the African Network for Drugs and Diagnosis Innovation (ANDI) last week. While according to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) South Africa must cut carbon emissions in order to avoid steeper and more disruptive reductions later. Also a large scale "Solar Park" that will encourage an extensive use of solar energy is on the cards for South Africa.

East Africa/Horn of Africa: At least 29 people have died of cholera and hundreds more are being treated for cholera-related symptoms such as acute watery diarrhoea (AWD) in Kenya. Also the A H1N1 influenza virus is spreading in Ugandan schools. Also the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) has raised objections to the drilling of 10 more wells in Murchison Falls National Park.

Central Africa: To effectively fight malaria, Rivers State government is to collaborate with a Cuban company to build the first malaria control factory on the continent in Nigeria. Also funds for HIV/Aids Pandemic were reportedly scarce in central Africa amid the Financial Crisis.

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: According to authorities Nigeria's spacecraft, Nigeria Sat -2 will be launched in the first quarter of 2010. While in Ghana Members of the Local Textile Printers Association (LTPA) have expressed grave concern about Smuggled Textiles Killing local Industry.

South Africa: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has forecasted a positive recovery in Sub-Saharan Africa despite the negative effects of the global economic crisis

East Africa/Horn of Africa: Uganda has continued to deliver major oil and gas exploration success where further 'world-class" discoveries are attracting about $506m in foreign direct investments. While Kenya is seeking a private sector solution to its burgeoning water supply shortages in a deal that has sparked cost inflation fears. Also Labour ministers of African Union (AU) member states met in Ethiopia to discuss the effects of the global financial crises on the African continent.

Central Africa: Countries of the River Nile basin have appealed to Egypt and Sudan to co-operate in the formulation of an agreement which would allow equitable utilization of water resources.

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Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Zone 2- Africa- Micro Analysis-Violence in Guinea- Military Dictatorship, a vicious cycle?- Week # 85-87, Dated 13th Sept- 3rd Oct. 09'

Human rights groups reported at least 157 opposition supporters dead and around 1200 injured after Guinea's troops opened fire on a mass protest in Guinea last week. On September 28th Opposition parties organized the demonstration amid speculation that Moussa Dadis Camara, the country's military leader, would stand in the forthcoming elections. Camara, who has not yet formally announced his intention to contest the January 31 poll, said that the killings were beyond his control.

The protests against Camara's candidature were brutally crushed by the military forces and have invited international condemnation and human rights uproar. The loss of discipline by the military that even the premier claims out of his control, perpetuated a violent assault on human rights in Guinea. The violence was censured by France, Guinea’s former colonizers, at the United Nations as well as by the African Union, where sanctions were already in effect by the latter organization.

Camara, who came to power in a coup on 23 December last year, initially promised to organize elections but has since signaled he has not ruled out running. The military leader had pledged not to stand for the presidency when he seized power after the death of Lasana Conte, the president, essentially considered a military dictator in civilian guise. Camara has reportedly changed his tune proclaiming it his ‘right’ to contest.

Guinea has had a history of authoritarian rule since gaining its independence from France in 1958. Declining economic conditions and popular dissatisfaction with corruption and bad governance prompted two massive strikes in 2006, and a third nationwide strike in early 2007. This latest crackdown has been termed by the Human Rights Watch as "shocking even by the abusive standards of Guinea's coup government".

The destabilizing turn of events in the region follows a history of military dictatorships where even the latest coup, according to analysts, enjoyed popular support initially. However the rising dissatisfaction amongst the nationals has arisen in what is deemed to be a breach of a tacit agreement between the military and civil forces, which had hence far kept Camara in power.

The language of military dictatorships seems to share commonalities world wide as to their conflict of legitimacy. Where international pressures seem to be heeded in similar scenarios in Latin America (the recent Honduran case) or the Asian region (Pakistan being a case in point), the extent of efficacy of these measures in Africa seems puny. The crisis in Guinea continues, and despite efforts at resolution many fear the vicious cycle of dictatorship will continue.

Discussion Questions:

· Would you agree that the military dictatorships in Africa continue to function in relative isolation from international pressures? Why or why not?

· To what extent do strategic interests, for example the possibility of oil development in the region figure in determining the course of Guinea’s political future?

· Under notions of a continent that is defying its stereotypes- does the continued existence of such stunted political systems deem Africa's progress as marginal?

Related Links/Bibliography

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8280603.stm
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2009/09/200992981337765437.html
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/gv.html

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Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Zone 2- Africa Summary, Week # 85, 86 & 87; Dated 13th Sept-3rd Oct, 09'.

Politics of Security and Conflict Issues

West Africa: Prospects for Cote d'Ivoire's belated presidential elections being held on November 29 looked brighter with the completion of the contested provisional voter registration list.
In the meanwhile in Nigeria one of the key militants, leader of the Niger-Delta Vigilante and Patriotic Force (NDVPF), Mr Ateke Tom, has surrendered availing the Presidential Amnesty granted by the Federal Government; while the 49th Independence Anniversary in the nation was celebrated amidst threats from suspected religious groups causing disruptions.

East Africa/Horn of Africa: On the domestic front a major battle looms between the Kenyan Government and broadcasters over new regulations seeking to take back licenses and vet programmes. Also Kenya has reiterated that the most-wanted genocide fugitive Felician Kabuga was not on their territory.
Southern Sudan has called upon East African governments to intervene and save the peace agreement between itself and Khartoum to avoid relapses into civil war.
After weeks of political wrangling Somalia's most powerful rebel groups, Al Shabaab and Hizbul Islam, have declared war on each other. The Islamist fighters of Harakat Al-shabab Mujahideen executed two men, last week accused of spying for CIA and the AMISOM troops. Also Al Shabaab insurgents in Somalia have warned the Republic of Djibouti not to send peacekeepers to the area. Following intensified fighting in the war-torn region, Kenyan government has sealed off its borders with Somalia. The European Union has also suspended its financial support to African Union peacekeepers in Somalia over the delay to account for the past funds. Moreover the east and Horn of Africa regional bloc Igad has appealed for sanctions on Eritrea, claiming that the country and al-Qaeda are financing militant groups in Somalia.

Central Africa:
Chad has deplored the delay in deployment of the United Nations peacekeeping mission to its eastern border with Sudan. While in DR Conge the UN is helping in the reintegration of former rebels into the National Army under a recent amnesty programme. Also a British web-hosting firm recently shut down internet and computer servers dedicated to a Hutu rebel force partially responsible for the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

Human Rights and Social Issues in Domestic Politics

West Africa
: Nigerian House of Representatives Committee on Diaspora has protested the detention of 723 citizens in China. There are about 57 Nigerians facing the death penalty in Indonesia and China for whom the government’s efforts so far have been in vain. In the meanwhile in the second South America-Africa summit, attended by 8 South American and 20 African presidents, along with a number of vice presidents, prime ministers, foreign ministers and other senior officials from a total of 61 countries, a renewed commitment towards cooperation was made.
Scores of people in the Guinean capital Conakry were killed and injured on 28 September when security forces cracked down on demonstrators protesting the presidential candidature of junta leader Moussa Dadis Camara. Many have been also detained without charge. At the session of the United Nations Human Rights Council the United States called on the leaders of the "unconstitutional governments" of Madagascar and Guinea to step down and hold elections.
In Gambia the Committee on Traditional Practices (GAMCOTRAP) held a sensitization workshop for parliamentarians, members of the judiciary and security personnel on harmful traditional practices.

South Africa: A Zimbabwean journalist and human rights campaigner, Mukoko, who was arrested last year on political charges, has won a court victory against the violation of her rights by the state. Also in Swaziland, Amnesty International has denounced the use of excessive force by correctional services officers against journalists and political activists after a demonstration at one of the country's main prisons turned violent.

East Africa/Horn of Africa: Mediator Kofi Annan and the International Criminal Court chief prosecutor are set to visit Kenya to push for reforms and trial of poll chaos suspects. In the meanwhile in Uganda a total of 5,000 human rights violation cases have been reported against the Police Force. Uganda has also enabled the incremental return of around 1.5 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) after more than 20 years. While in Somalia civilians are bearing the brunt in the latest upsurge in fighting in the country's troubled south central region. Sudan has called upon the international community through the UN General Assembly for greater commitment to bring about lasting peace. Using the same forum the Tanzanian President called for global assistance to curb youth unemployment in Africa. While in Kenya the government will hand over election violence suspects, thought to include six sitting Cabinet ministers, to The Hague

Central Africa: The Chinese community in Rwanda has launched the first ever China Culture Month. While 300 genocide suspects fleeing the Gacaca courts are reported to have fled into Burundi in the past one month.

Health, Environment and Domestic Politics

West Africa: African leaders through the African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA) are at the forefront of a landmark initiative to fight malaria in the continent, a menace that claims around 1 million lives every year.

South Africa: South African scientists have engineered plants with resistance to a local cassava virus, potentially safeguarding one of the region's staple crops. While Zimbabwe has launched a landmark plan to reduce the impact of H1N1 virus.
In Lesotho a combination of factors, including infrastructure development, overgrazing, cultivation and the resulting erosion, has led to the degradation of wetlands.

East Africa/Horn of Africa: There has been an increase in the number of pandemic HIN1 influenza cases being reported in the East African region. While an Egyptian-funded initiative to remove water hyacinth, a water weed, on lakes Victoria and Kyoga is to be expanded to Rwanda and Burundi.

Central Africa: Rwandan president drummed up international support on behalf of Africa in his address at the special United Nations session debating Climate Change, for a concrete pact. While acute malnutrition has been found to be high in Eastern Chad, a nation where 50 % of deaths of under-five children are caused by it.

Political Economy

West Africa:
Five African regional organizations have agreed to jointly tackle issues that lead to high costs of doing business on the continent. Ghana continues to position itself as the investment destination of choice in the sub-region attracting new investments valued at US$111.67 million in the second quarter of 2009, a significant increase of 91.9% compared to the same period in 2008. While Ghana and China are to collaborate for massive exploration of oil that could make Ghana a leading world explorer and hub of the industry in the West African sub-region. A Chinese company is also eyeing water transport sector in Liberia, a welcome development for the government.
The top performers in this year's Index of African Governance are Mauritius, the Seychelles, Cape Verde, and Botswana, Tunisia, Ghana, Algeria, Namibia, South Africa, and São Tomé and Príncipe.

South Africa: Amidst the financial crisis, China has risen to the spot of South Africa’s top trading partner. While in Zimbabwe a debt amounting to U.S. $5.7 Billion has split the Cabinet, as the nation battles to extricate itself from a huge debt trap. Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has built a personal farming empire from at least five farms where the white owners were forced out under land seizures ordered in 2000. Prompted by media reports, Nestle, the international food company has refused to conduct business with these facilities.

East Africa/Horn of Africa: The Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC) has strongly defended Chinese entrepreneurs amidst increasing public resentment. While in Kenya telecommunication firms are scrambling to reap from the expanding data market.
Corruption and access to finance are the two biggest challenges to doing business in East Africa, the World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness report 2009-2010 indicates. In the meanwhile the International Conference on Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) has united against the illicit exploration of minerals. Ugandan Central bank is reviewing sections of the Financial Institutions Act 2004 to introduce Islamic banking. Fresh reports indicate that the rag-tag rebel outfit, Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) continues to illegally exploit minerals in Eastern DR Congo.

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Business and Politics in the Muslim World (BPM)refers to the project entitled, "Globalized Business and Politics: A View from the Muslim World.' The blog development project has been undertaken and jointly developed by the Gilani Research Foundation and BPM as a free resource and social discussion tool.