Friday, June 25, 2010

Zone 2- Africa Summary, week # 123

Week # 123, Dated 6-8th June, 2010

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

Central Africa: In Burundi the chairman of Independent Electoral Commission (CENI) said preparations are far advanced ahead of the presidential election scheduled for 28 June despite the opposition’s decision to boycott the vote. Several opposition groups have accused the electoral body of failing to prevent fraud in last month’s district elections won by the ruling CNDD-FDD party with over 60 % of the votes, and are demanding a re-run. These allegations have cast a shadow over the country's democratic transition, prompting international calls for compromise rather than confrontation.

Roger Meece a US diplomat has been appointed to head the UN mission to the Democratic Republic of the Congo for his "in-depth knowledge of African issues."

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

Southern Africa: World Cup kicked off in South Africa earlier this month. According to President Jacob Zuma the soccer World Cup is uniting South Africa, much like the 1995 world rugby victory helped break down racial barriers, and it will leave a legacy for decades to come. Meanwhile South Africa has launched Africa's first high-speed train in time for the football World Cup. The railway links the city's international airport to its financial district.

A Zimbabwe farmers' union says at least 16 farmers have been attacked across the country by people trying to seize their land.

African Union members have adopted plans to implement the Kampala convention on the protection of internally displaced people, including increasing their contributions to refugee and IDP funding and accelerating the convention’s ratification, signature and domestication.

Meanwhile the United Nations refugee agency has expressed sadness after learning of the deaths of nine Somali asylum-seekers who drowned while attempting to reach Mozambique, an increasingly popular route for Somalis trying to flee the violence and suffering in their homeland.

Central Africa: United Nations aid workers have reported that the notorious rebel group known as the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) is carrying out ever more deadly attacks in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and also continues to abduct children to use as soldiers in its ranks.

Meanwhile an official with the U.N. Peacekeeping Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC) said the group will be launching an investigation into the deaths of at least 28 people allegedly killed by the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo, or FARDC. Also a court in the DRC has sentenced two former Norwegian soldiers to death over murder and espionage charges. The military tribunal condemned Joshua French, 28, and Tjostolv Moland, 29, to death after finding them guilty of killing their driver and spying for Norway.

A group of United Nations experts have welcomed the suspension of the chief of the national police of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the arrest of several officers in the investigation into last week's murder of a prominent human rights defender. They joined Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and other senior UN officials in calling for a prompt and rigorous probe into the killing of Floribert Chebeya Bahizire, whose body was found on the outskirts of the capital, Kinshasa, last week, one day after he was summoned to a police station.

In Rwanda the Committee to Protect Journalists called on authorities to provide information as to why the Web site of a leading private newspaper Umuvugizi, known for it’s critical coverage of the government, is unreachable on the networks of the country’s only Internet service providers. Editor John Bosco Gasasira, launched Umuvugizi online in May after Rwanda’s Media High Council suspended the newspaper in April for six months.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

Southern Africa: A failure to implement power sharing agreements has led the European Union to continue its suspension of development aid to Madagascar that continues suffering from both political and weather-related problems leading to water shortage and food insecurity. Similar action has come from the AU and the Southern African Development Community or SADC.

Central Africa:

POLITICAL ECONOMY

Central Africa: According to the Rwandan Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, John Rwangombwa the nation’s economy is expected to grow by seven percent this financial year, up from the six percent registered last year. §

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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.

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Zone 2- Africa Summary, week # 122

Week # 122, Dated 29th May- 4th June 2010

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: Ghana’s ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) last week intensified strategies to retain power in Elections 2012 with the inauguration of the Greater Accra Regional Women's wing of the Zongo Caucus in Accra.

Liberia’s Upper House of the 52nd National Legislature has again failed to passage the Population Threshold Bill into law due to another Writ of Prohibition filed before the Full Branch of the Supreme Court of Liberia.

Meanwhile the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Board of Directors, chaired by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, has approved an approximately $15 million grant for Liberia to support the country's ongoing efforts to improve governance.

According to a senior UN official the ongoing political impasse in Côte d'Ivoire contributes to heightened tensions and hampers efforts to normalize the situation in the West African nation, which has been trying for eight years to overcome the crisis that split the country. Meanwhile UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has expressed skepticism over the holding of Ivorian elections and warned of imminent violence. However Côte d'Ivoire President Laurent Gbagbo has pledged that long-delayed elections will take place before the end of the year.

In line with the provisions of the Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS, protocol on democracy and good governance, the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Aliyu Idi Hong, has restated that Niger and Guinea remain suspended until constitutional order was restored in both countries.

In Sierra Leone the political parties registration commission (PPRC) has appointed 18 new core members to beef up the staff strength of the commission countrywide.

Justice Jon Kamanda of Sierra Leone has been re-elected to serve as President of the United Nations-backed war crimes tribunal set up to deal with the worst acts committed during the long and brutal civil war in the West African nation.

Central Africa: Burundi's main opposition party says it is pulling out of this month's scheduled presidential election because of concerns that the vote will be rigged. Five other opposition parties pulled out because they believe the vote will be rigged. Burundi's National Electoral Commission says the election will go ahead despite the boycott.

The president of the Central African Republic will stay in power beyond the end of his electoral mandate, in June, because of delays in organizing a new vote. His political opponents want voter lists updated and rebel groups disarmed.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: A number of Muslims in Ghana’s Sekondi-Takoradi Metropolitan Assembly have demonstrated against the activities of homosexuals in the area with a call on government to enact Sharia Law in Ghana.

Defense lawyers for Charles Taylor last week asked Special Court for Sierra Leone judges to deny the request by prosecutors to issue a subpoena for Supermodel Naomi Campbell, who is alleged to have received rough diamonds from Mr. Taylor while on a visit to South Africa in 1997. A defense witness for Mr. Taylor also told judges this week that members of Mr. Taylor’s rebel group, who assisted Sierra Leonean rebels during the country’s civil conflict, did so voluntarily and were not sent by the former Liberian president.

Aid groups allege that progress on a "Zero Tolerance" national campaign in Côte d'Ivoire to eliminate female genital mutilation or cutting (FGM/C) by the end of 2010, has been slowed down by health and education infrastructure

Southern Africa: Zimbabwe's first private daily newspaper hit the streets last week to break a state monopoly established years ago after President Robert Mugabe's government banned a pro-opposition newspaper over a registration dispute.

Central Africa: : ISt has been announced that Rwanda will not short circuit legal procedures to release American lawyer, Prof. Peter Erlinder, despite a request by the United States State Department to release him on compassionate and humanitarian grounds. Erlinder is charged with denying the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi and minimizing it. Erlinder had come in the country to represent Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza in her case which also involves genocide denial.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, U.N. officials say while humanitarian conditions improve in one region, they’re getting worse in others. For example, civilians are starting to return to their homes in Gem ena in Equatuer Province, following inter-communal fighting, but insecurity persists in parts of North and South Kivu Provinces.

More than 50 human rights organizations have called for an independent investigation into the death of a well-known human rights activist Floribert Chebeya in an open letter to DRC President Joseph Kabila. Meanwhile The president of Congolese non-governmental organization, La Voix des Sans-voix or VSV (Voice for the Voiceless) was found dead on the road going out of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: In Ghana the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) in Kumasi and the Himalayan Cataract Project (HCP) of the US has signed a Memorandum of Understanding to build a $1,000,000 state-of-the-art Eye Centre at the hospital.

According to reports National programme manager of Onchocerciasis in the ministry of health and sanitation has revealed that Bombali district in Sierra Leone’s north currently has the highest number of elephantiasis cases.

Southern Africa: A Zambian editor was given four months hard labor last week for criticizing the arrest of another journalist who sent the vice president images of women in childbirth to highlight the country's dire hospitals.

According to reports South African AIDS organizations have had limited success in getting FIFA to allow them to distribute condoms and HIV education materials during the World Cup. Meanwhile South Africa promised last week to protect foreign migrants from attacks amid fears of a rise in violence coinciding with the World Cup.

South Africa's public education system shows signs of serious decline. Reports of dismal graduation rates, bad teachers and crumbling buildings have become commonplace.

MSF (Médecins Sans Frontières) has launched a campaign called Starved for Attention to reform humanitarian food assistance and nutrition programmes for malnourished children, which will run until World Food Day on 16 October.

Central Africa: The U.N.Children's Fund and the government of the Central African Republic are distributing more than one-million insecticide treated mosquito nets in the African nation to protect children and pregnant women from malaria. The Central African Republic has one of the highest child mortality rates in the world. More than 170 out of 1,000 children die before reaching their fifth birthday.

In Rwanda over 10,000 people across the country tested for HIV/AIDS and 100,000 condoms were distributed during the "Police Medical Services" week.

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: The Ghanaian government has declared that they would not turn against the maintenance and production of high quality cocoa, despite the discovery of oil in the country.

According to a new report on Ghana’s mining, between 2007 and 2009, the nation lost approximately €36 million, in mining revenues that have been repatriated without the necessary taxes to government.

Southern Africa: South Africa's COSATU trade union federation threatened on Tuesday to pull out of an alliance with the ANC if the ruling party persists with disciplinary charges against union leader Zwelinzima Vavi who has accused President Zuma of not getting tough enough on corruption.

Madagascar is going through a financial crisis where stock prices are plummeting in the country. §

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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.

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Friday, June 11, 2010

Zone 2- Africa Summary, week # 121

Week # 121, Dated 24-30 May, 2010

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: US President Barack Obama said last week that Liberia has overcome most its difficulties due to the heroism of President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and her commitment to democracy. Obama also pledged more US cooperation and aid for the country.

Meanwhile Football star George Weah, who once accused Mr. Charles Taylor of plotting to eliminate him, has now endorsed the National Patriotic Party (NPP), the offshoot of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) that the now former rebel leader then president created.

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf expressed utmost dismay and total dissatisfaction with the action taken by NSA Director Fombah Sirleaf, in an attempt to arrest a staff of the General Auditing Commission (GAC). She reaffirmed that her Government does not and will not resort to the infringement of human rights or arrest of anyone without due process.

The Security Council met last week to discuss the United Nations peacekeeping in Côte d'Ivoire amid ongoing concerns about the stalled electoral process and the political impasse affecting the country.

Ghana while celebrating 50 years participation in UN Peacekeeping last week renewed its commitment to continue cooperating with the United Nations in peacekeeping to improve on the current level of international peace and security.

The Security Council today voted to extend for one month the United Nations Operation in Côte d’Ivoire (UNOCI), and the French forces supporting it, while the 15-member body continues to consider possible revisions to the mission’s mandate.

The President of the ECOWAS Commission, His Excellency James Victor Gbeho has commended the military government in Niger for releasing a 12-month transition timetable that will culminate in the inauguration of a civilian President on 1st March 2011.

A power struggle in Nigeria’s PDP has grabbed attention this week- Former President of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP’s) Board of Trustees (BOT) Ogbulafor has alleged that his arm of the party was sidelined by the Prince Vincent Ogbulafor-led National Working Committee (NWC) and the National Executive Committee (NEC).

Consequent upon a major reduction from the 2010 budget in Lagos State, Nigeria Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) recently sent a supplementary budget of N74.777 billion to the Lagos State House of Assembly to aid the implementation of some provisions in the 2010 Appropriation Law, which was ultimately rejected by the house.

Former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, returned to Nigeria on June 6, this year, returning from self imposed exile. He fled the country on January 3, 2009 after complaining of “serious” threats to his life. Meanwhile the EFCC, said last week that it was doing everything possible to extradite the former Governor of Delta State, Chief James Ibori, to Nigeria to face corruption charges. Also After being released for lack of evidence, the (EFCC) re-arrested five officials of the Oyo State government over alleged diversion of N8.2 billion local government funds. The officials had initially been granted bail by the anti-graft agency.

A complications thrown up by the death of the late Nigerian president Umaru Musa Yar' Adua is the debate on the political future of his successor, Dr Goodluck Jonathan. The debate has to do with whether he should run for president in the 2011 general elections or give way to a presidential candidate from the Northern part of the country in line with the zoning arrangement of the ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP). Senate president, David Mark, allayed fears last week that President Jonathan will run in the 2011 presidential election, saying he is certain Jonathan will respect the zoning arrangement.

A former Niger Delta militant has said Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan is the best person to solve the crisis in the oil-producing region.

In the meanwhile Nigeria and the United States signed a pact to fight corruption and also see to the conduct of free and fair elections in 2011.

Even before the committee set up by the Nigerian Federal Government to review the salary of federal civil servants completes its assignment, the Senate, last week, approved a 100 % salary increase for workers of the National Assembly, to be implemented over eight years.

About three persons are feared killed in Jos city, Nigeria, following reports of the death of three Fulani headsmen in Barkin Ladi Local Government Area last week. Meanwhile a backlash led to the death of another two.

At the beginning of an official visit to the African nation last week the United Nations relief chief said that Chadian forces must ensure security in the troubled east of the country so that aid workers can continue to assist the region's vast population of refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs). Meanwhile Chadian President Idriss Déby reiterated assurances that his Government will take responsibility to protect civilians, including the humanitarian community, as the United Nations prepares to end its peacekeeping mission there by the end of the year.

Southern Africa: Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai said last week that Zimbabwe elections will go ahead next year, despite infighting that continues to hamper the government's power-sharing agreement. Meanwhile a meeting aimed at launching a process of national reconciliation was aborted after chaos erupted over delegate accreditation.

Zambia’s information minister has dismissed accusations that a former president and the electoral commission will rig next year’s general elections to keep the ruling party in power.

Negotiations between Comoros' leader and opposition parties on a date for presidential elections have stalled with President Mohamed Abdallah Sambi's rivals accusing him of illegally clinging on to power.

Madagascar's leader Andry Rajoelina named 10 new ministers, including five military officials, in a cabinet reshuffle the opposition said fell way short of creating a neutral government.

South African Special Forces troops have begun a six-month deployment along the troubled border with Zimbabwe, where rape, robbery and other crimes are commonplace, and the flow of desperate migrants continues unabated.

Central Africa: Peter Erlinder, the American lawyer who is in Rwanda to defend Victoire Ingabire, the embattled leader of the yet-to-be-registered political party, FDU-Inkingi has not yet received official approval from the relevant authorities, to practice in the country.

Through a unanimously adopted resolution the Security Council extended the current mandate of the United Nations peacekeeping force in the Democratic Republic of the Congo by one month and agreed to transform the operation making it a stabilization mission.

The International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) is expected to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the African Union (AU) aimed at harmonizing peace and security approaches.

Burundi's major opposition parties have demanded a re-vote of last week's local-level elections, which have so far given an extraordinary landslide victory to the ruling party. Meanwhile EU Observers have praised Burundi’s Election despite opposition complaints.

The Rwandan government has told off the United States over the human-rights situation in the country, saying that America's understanding of Rwanda had to be "contextualized." Earlier last week, top American diplomat Johnny Carson warned that the Rwanda government was tightening political expression in the country, and criticized the arrest of an opposition politician.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: The controversial TRC Report in Liberia recommending punishments for serious perpetrators of war crimes, and bans for those deemed as backing the war is to be scrutinized by a Geneva-based Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue.

The United Nations refugee agency is rushing aid to about 3,500 Ghanaians who have fled into neighboring Togo after their homes and belongings were destroyed in an ongoing land dispute between two villages in the northeast of the country. Meanwhile the National Disaster Management Organization (NADMO), in the Northern Region also dispatched relief items to the victims of the Bunkrugu/Yunyoo conflict.

In Nigeria two different women groups have protested against the quizzing of Senator Ahmad Sani Yarima over his marriage to an under-aged Egyptian girl. A spokesperson for the first group said the attack on Yarima is an attack against Islam and Hausa-Fulani culture. Meanwhile the second group led by President of the widows and less-privileged empowerment association Abuja, Mrs Rita Audu said Yarima has been the benefactor of widows in the country. She added that the moral bankruptcy in the society today makes it a good thing for girls to marry very early.

South Africa: Last week Zimbabwe licensed four private daily newspapers, including the banned Daily News, a sign the new unity government is following through on promises to open up the media to non-state run publications.

South Africa's leader Zuma, in a rare rebuke of a fellow African nation condemned Malawi's sentencing of a gay couple to 14 years in jail but said he would not press the country to change its laws. Meanwhile Malawi President Bingu wa Mutharika pardoned the couple earlier last week after he held a meeting with U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. Also a Zimbabwean court has freed two gay activists on bail after they were arrested on allegations of possessing indecent material and writings seen as insulting to President Robert Mugabe.

Two ex-officers in Zambia's air force have been awarded damages following claims they were tested and treated for HIV without their knowledge. Mandatory HIV screening is not legal in the military and is a contentious issue in Zambia. Some think forced screening is an invasion of privacy - others say it is needed to fight the virus.

On 25 May Africans celebrated Africa Day and marked the diversity and richness of African culture. However as South Africa prepares to “welcome the world” for the World Cup some are concerned about the possibility of post-event xenophobia. Meanwhile Amnesty International too has said that South Africa's government must do more to protect African migrants from persistent xenophobic violence.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: Mental Health Associations in the Upper East Region of Ghana have appealed to the Ghana Health Service, to improve the supply of Mental Health drugs to the various Psychiatric Units in the area, to enable patients get a regular supply.

Health workers fanned out across Liberia last week to vaccinate children against polio as the third round of a synchronized regional immunization campaign aimed at eradication the paralyzing disease in West Africa began, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) reported.

Meanwhile in line with its new thinking in bilateral relations with Nigeria, the United States government is embarking on a joint HIV/AIDS vaccine research effort.

The German Federal Ministry of economic, collaboration and development wants to invest from the year 2010 to 2012 a total of three milliard US dollars in rural development and food protection in Ghana. Meanwhile Mr. Kurt Cornelis, head of operations of the European Commission (EC), has said that the Commission would continue to support the development of developing countries including Ghana, to reduce poverty by half by 2015.

A new report by humanitarian aid group Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warns that backtracking by international donors in funding HIV/AIDS risks undermining years of positive achievements and will cause many more unnecessary deaths.

In Nasarawa, Nigeria one of the states which prides itself as the food basket of the nation, this year’s harvest is at risk of being poor due to fertilizer scarcity.

Two Nordic countries, Sweden and Finland, are exploring opportunities for green businesses in Nigeria, as part of efforts to step up their trade and investment promotion activities in the country.

A Nigerian politician has been arrested on suspicion of smuggling cocaine at Lagos airport, purportedly to fund his election campaign for the local House of Assembly in Edo state.

South Africa: As the World Cup prepares to kick off, fears are growing activities surrounding the event could further spread the HIV/AIDS epidemic in South Africa. A national HIV/AIDS effort is being mounted to raise awareness of the risks.

U.N. agencies report some five million children in Zimbabwe are at risk of getting measles while hundreds have died from this preventable disease.

Central Africa: Rwanda Environment Management Authority (REMA) has released new guidelines in environmental education and training in a paper titled 'Rwanda Environmental Education for Sustainable Development Strategy', that also include a five-year action plan for 2010-2015.

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: Ghana and Nigeria are to renew talks in August, this year to find lasting solution to the stand-off in trade and commerce between them.

Transit reforms initiated by Government of Ghana to streamline activities in the import and transit sector have attracted applause from the World Bank Group while WB has also recommended for replication by other ECOWAS members.
Ghana’s mining sub-sector grew at a remarkable rate of 8 % in 2009 compared to 5.5 % recorded in the previous year. According to Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) and the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning the country has also maintained its position as the ninth highest gold producer in the world, closing the year (2009) at an increased yearly output of 9 %.

Meanwhile Cocoa purchases in Ghana, the world's second-biggest producer of the beans, fell 10 % in the first 30 weeks of the season, according to an industry official.

Nigerian mobile investor Globacom is threatening to withdraw from Ghana amid claims that its infrastructure is being sabotaged. Meanwhile rLG Communications, Ghana's first mobile phone assembling company, has started operations in the country with a promise to give jobs to 30,000 youth from the National Youth Employment Programme by the close of the year.

Meanwhile Ghana has being losing a larger chunk of its import revenue through numerous leakage points, mostly systemic failure and administrative lapses, along the import processing chain, Financial Intelligence (FI) investigations have revealed.
London-listed oil and gas exploration company Afren has said that it’s Ghana offshore oil development costs rose by 7-8 % due to regulatory changes following BP's oil spill off the Gulf of Mexico.
Liberia’s Finance Ministry officials have intensified their search for missing financial documents to justify over US$134m allotments issued during the 2006/07 fiscal period after the General Auditing Commission (GAC) threatened a Supreme Court action against Finance Minister Augustine Ngafuan for failing to submit those allotment documents for audit.

Meanwhile the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Board of Directors, chaired by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, last week approved an approximately $15 million threshold program grant for Liberia to support the country’s ongoing efforts at reform.
a joint Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and African Development Bank study has urged that African states should consider renegotiating unfavorable contracts with multinationals to ensure they get a fair return on their natural resources.

South Africa: South Africa’s UNIOR miner Wesizwe Platinum has said that it has secured an $877m (R6,6bn) financing package from Chinese investors, in a deal that will see the investors gaining a majority stake in the company.

South Africa's state-owned logistics group Transnet signed a wage deal with a transport union last week, ending a three-week rail and ports strike. South Africa faces more protests ahead of the World Cup. A fresh stoppage looms after a miner's union said 3,000 workers would down tools at diamond producer De Beers.

The IMF has urged Zimbabwe to take corrective measures to repair its economy, warning that without them economic growth could slow significantly this year and undermine progress made so far.

Central Africa: Rwanda is East Africa's best destination for investment, says a new report released by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the World Bank. Meanwhile intensive marketing of Rwanda's tourism products and a steady recovery in the global economy have helped the country register a 5 % rise in tourism revenues to $44.4m in the first quarter of 2010. §

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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.
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Friday, June 4, 2010

Zone 2- Africa Summary, week # 120

Week # 120, Dated 17th-23rd May, 2010

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: The challenges and opportunities for Africa's peace and development were the focus of discussions between General Assembly President Ali Treki and Cameroonian President Paul Biya last week.

In Nigeria former governor of Lagos State, Bola Tinubu, has called on president, Goodluck Jonathan to abolish the current voters’ register, describing it as a “fraud.”

According to Donald Oji, a Nigerian brigadier general and the leader of the task force Troops of the Special Task Force (STF) on the Jos Crisis, have averted renewed violence in Bukuru, Jos.

Chad has become the 100th nation to agree to give the United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) more information about its nuclear activities, which the agency hailed as a milestone in efforts to bolster global nuclear verification efforts.

South Africa: Madagascar's government is accusing former President Marc Ravalomanana of being behind an attempted mutiny last week when security forces battled with a dissident group of military police. Military officials say at least two soldiers were killed and several civilians wounded in the violence in the capital, Antananarivo. The mutineers were said to be angry at alleged abuses by their superiors.

Swaziland’s banned opposition PUDEMO party is demanding an independent inquiry into what they say is the “murder” of a member of the group after he was arrested and imprisoned by security agents.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: One Nigerian was shot dead while after trying to flee from a routine police inspection. 32 Street vendors were detained by police at a popular open-air market after throwing stones and metal objects at custom authorities in reaction to the killing of one of their colleagues. A similar case in Greece in 2007, had led to a massive protest by African immigrants.

Nigerian police routinely carry out summary executions of suspected criminals, use torture to extract confessions from detainees, and rape as an interrogation technique, according to a report by the Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI), a rights group, which appealed to President Goodluck Jonathan to make good on promises to urgently reform the force.

The 820 prisoners on death row in Nigerian prisons across the country have dragged the 36 state governors and the Comptroller-General of Prisons before a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos, seeking an order to stop their planned execution. The governors had recently announced that they will start signing execution warrants to kill prisoners sentenced to death, as a way of decongesting prisons in their states.

In Mali a controversial new family law intended to give greater freedoms and rights to women, has been sent back to the National Assembly for a second reading after protests from Muslim radicals.

South Africa: Human Rights Watch has warned in a letter to Zambian leaders that recent homophobic statements by religious leaders and government authorities risk undermining Zambia's fight against HIV/AIDS. Meanwhile a Malawi judge gave the maximum sentence of 14 years to a gay couple convicted of "gross indecency" and unnatural acts. The Malawian minister of information, Leckford Mwanza Thotho said his government is pleased with the conviction.

Amnesty International is accusing Zimbabwe's unity government of failing to compensate hundreds of thousands of people forcibly evicted from their homes in 2005 following a "slum clearance programme",

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: The WHO's baseline estimate for achieving the health-related MDGs is at least 23 health workers per 10,000 people - against an average of 13 in Africa. Shortages of medical staff have been identified by IRIN as one of the major impediments in Chad, Burundi, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Somalia, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Malawi, Mozambique and Niger.

Reports from northern Nigeria say a growing number of people from Niger are crossing the border into Nigeria because of the food crisis at home. Aid agencies have said that about seven million people in Niger - about half the population - are short of food.

South Africa: In Madagascar by mid-May admissions to the malnutrition rehabilitation centre had topped the combined totals for 2008 and '09, and at 117 seemed set to breach the '07 level as well. Meanwhile despite some remaining pockets of food insecurity and fears that a prolonged dry spell would set back Malawi's maize production in 2010, the country looks set to realize another surplus year.

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) had signed an MOU with Chi006Ea State Construction Engineering Corporation Ltd. to construct three oil refineries (about 250,000 bbl/day capacity each) and a petrochemical plant. The total cost would reportedly be $28.5 billion. Meanwhile the Nigerian naira weakened to 152.40 to the U.S dollar last week, from 151.75 previously, in the interbank market after heady buying of dollars by some banks.

Multinational German telecommunications firm, Siemens AG, has assured Nigerians that it will pay the price for the bribery scandal involving it and some top government officials, if fined by the federal government.

A group, Northern Elders Assembly, has accused President Goodluck Jonathan of contravening his oath of office and violating the constitution over the recent appointments made in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). Out of the 20 senior officials of the ministry of petroleum, 10 are from the South- South zone, the area where the president comes from.

According to the Mozambican National Director of Research and Innovation in the Ministry Chinese assistance could boost the productivity of rice farmers from their current average of 1.2 tonnes per hectare to 10 tonnes per hectare (733%). Meanwhile the China Development Bank is to fund construction of a cement factory in Beluluane, in Mozambique’s Maputo province costing US$100 million.

Researchers from the Centre for Chinese Studies at the University of Stellenbosch have said that despite having secured licenses to invest in Tanzania, most Chinese investors still continue to import Chinese-made goods.

Transportation costs in West Africa are among the highest in the world second only to East Africa, according to a study of one of the primary trade corridors in West Africa funded by USAID.

East Africa: China Development Bank (CDB) has extended a 50 million U. S. dollars loan to Kenya's largest Equity Bank. §

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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.
Please Preview your comments before posting.