Monday, August 30, 2010

Zone 2- Africa Summary, week # 132

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: Sierra Leoneans have expressed regret at the spotlight that has been trained on their bloody past by the courtroom appearances of model Naomi Campbell at a war crimes trial last week. Reportedly Mia Farrow and Carole White contradict Naomi Campbell’s testimony, and during the week Issa Sesay’s cross-examination is scheduled to begin.

In Nigeria the dynamics of the 2011 presidential race may be heading for a dramatic shuffling as the opposition puts its act together, with former chairman of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, now in the fray. In a ticket pairing Ribadu with Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole on the presidential Flag bearer of the newly branded Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

Meanwhile President Goodluck Jonathan blamed insecurity problems in the country on long years of under funding of the Nigeria Police, thereby debarring them from performing their constitutional roles effectively.

On another front Nigerian Senate President David Mark has said with the conclusion of the first amendment to the 1999 Constitution, the National Assembly has fulfilled one of the cardinal promises made to Nigerians at its inauguration in 2007.

At the elections front: In Ghana: Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Presidential Candidate of the main opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) in Election 2008 was on Saturday declared winner of the party's historic Special National Delegates Elections by the Electoral Commission (EC) to set for Election 2012 as the main Opposition Party.

Liberia: Barely two weeks following the celebration of the 163 Independence of Liberia in Nimba County, more than six administrative districts in the County have issued a strongly worded reaction to the petitioning of President Ellen Johnson that took place in the county to contest the 2011 presidential election.

In Guinea a run-off presidential election will hold on Sept. 19 aimed at restoring civilian rule to the West African bauxite producing nation. After a roughly two-month delay to the decisive second round after candidates challenged the results of the initial poll held on June 27.

Central Africa: In Congo-Kinshasa, Bosco Ntaganda is a wanted man, under indictment by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes in the northeastern Ituri region where Hague prosecutors allege he played a senior role in the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC), a militia group accused of human rights abuses.

In Rwanda President Paul Kagame has said he does not intend to change the country's constitution to extend his last presidential term beyond 2017 and has confirmed that this would be his last Term in Power.

The Rwanda National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR) has said that the rights of candidates in the recently concluded presidential elections and their supporters were properly observed. In a press statement released by the commission's president, Sylvie Zainabu Kayitesi, the candidates campaigned with mutual respect and that there was no mudslinging.

Rwandans voted last week in a presidential election that opponents of President Paul Kagame denounced as a sham. President Kagame faces three other candidates believed to have ties to his ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front.

East & the horn of Africa: In Sudan leaders from northern and southern Sudan are holding negotiations on how to run the country after next year's referendum that will determine south becoming an independent state. Unresolved issues between the two sides -- including demarcating the border, citizenship and the sharing of oil revenues and Nile water resources.

The United Nations humanitarian chief is demanding Sudanese authorities allow aid agencies into a camp in Darfur that has been closed off to aid workers for nearly two weeks. Meanwhile the United Nations says two police advisors working with the joint U.N.-African Union peacekeeping mission in Darfur have been kidnapped.

According to reports the United Nations and other international organizations will increase their national and international staff presence in Somalia within the next two months, according to a senior U.N official, as the al-Qaida-linked Somali insurgent group al-Shabab banned three Christian aid organizations from operating in areas under its control.

African Union chairman Jean Ping recently wrote to the South African government, imploring it to contribute troops for the Somalia mission. The South African cabinet is due to meet and consider deploying its forces to bolster the African Union troops in Mogadishu.

Kenya: In a referendum held during the first week of August, voters overwhelmingly approved a new constitution, replacing one that was drafted during the country's colonial era.

Southern Africa: Madagascar’s President Andry Rojoelina has signed an agreement with least 90 minor political parties’ settings dates for a constitutional referendum, and parliamentary and presidential elections. But the pact was rejected by the country's main opposition leaders.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: Ghana signed a cooperative agreement with International Organization for Migration (IOM), to create a platform for IOM to address migration challenges in the country which would efficiently and effectively prosecute its agenda of offering support to migrants to and from Ghana to ensure legal migration conforms to objectives of government to secure and protect the rights of citizens.

In Nigeria former military President, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida has appealed to the Federal Government to release former Chief Security Officer to the late Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha, Major Hamza Al-Mustapha who has been in detention for the past 12 years.

Meanwhile full-body scanners have been installed at Nigeria’s four international airports and are being used selectively,” according to the Director-General of Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).

Government ministers from across Africa gathered last week to address what is being called "the scandal of invisibility." Countless millions of Africans are living their lives and dying without leaving a trace.

Central Africa: As Rwanda's president Paul Kagame heads for election victory, the government is reviewing its genocide ideology law after being accused of limiting freedom of speech within the country by the Media.

According to the Human Rights Watch the Ugandan rebel Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) has abducted more than 697 adults and children in a largely unreported campaign in the Central African Republic and the neighboring Bas Uele district of northern Democratic Republic of Congo over the past 18 months.

Southern Africa: South African Media Group to Fight Proposed Regulation of Journalists; deputy chairperson of the group said her organization will do everything possible to stop a proposed media tribunal to regulate the work of journalists.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: Cameroon's environment minister accused a Dutch ship of dumping toxic waste off the Cameroonian coast. Environmentalists say western firms treat Africa as a "dustbin" for their dangerous waste.

In Ghana: President John Evans Atta Mills has noted that the 54 per cent of payments made by the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) on the cost of medicine for clients is unsustainable.
The National AIDS Commission of Liberia launched the National HIV and AIDS Strategic Framework 2010-2014 at the Monrovia City Hall. A framework for efforts aimed at preventing the spread of HIV and mitigating its impact on society.

Ivorian cocoa farmers battle disease at season end due to heavy rain despite their careful husbandry, they still got black pod spread by the rain.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan announced plans for a $3.5 billion national electricity grid to be jointly financed with the private sector and development agencies.

Nigeria and other countries bordering Northern Cameroon hit by cholera outbreak - are at the risk of the disease, the United Nations warned. The current outbreak in Cameroon, which began in May, has now recorded more than 2,000 confirmed cases, with fatality rate of over 13 per cent, which is considered extremely high.

Also in Nigeria Environmental issues, the Federal Government signed a Joint Venture Agreement with Messrs Titan Projects Nigeria Limited and the Rivers State government for the provision of Integrated Waste Management Services for the Oil and Gas Industry operations in the Niger Delta.

Indian Energy giant, ONGC Mittal Energy Ltd (OMEL) has concluded plans to build a180, 000 barrel per day capacity refinery in Nigeria.

Security agencies have impounded 400 doses of African Horse Sickness Vaccine allegedly believed to have been illegally imported into the country from South Africa by the Lagos Polo Club.

Central Africa: In Burundi HIV-Positive people are struggling for treatment of Opportunistic Infections and are failing to obtain drugs to treat opportunistic infections since a system to provide them with free medical care has come to an end.

Southern Africa: According to a report by the “national crop and food security situation” of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP), Zimbabwe's production of maize, its staple food, has improved "significantly", but the country is still food insecure and about 1.68 million people will require assistance in the first quarter of 2011.

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: In Ghana the annual inflation rate dropped marginally by 0.6 per cent to close at 9.46 per cent in July, up from 9.52 per cent in June. The drop was the 13th in the series after it peaked at 20.74 per cent in June 2009 bringing the respective monthly change between June and July 2010 to 0.82 per cent, which was lower than 1.57 per cent recorded between May and June 2010.

Meanwhile the Vice President John Dramani Mahama expressed optimism that Ghana's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) would rise above seven per cent by the end of this year.

Also Vice President John Dramani Mahama called for a partnership between the governments of Ghana and Iran to tap the rich experience of Iran in oil exploration and production.
Cameroon's crude oil production averaged about 66,000 barrels per day during the first half of 2010, marking an 11.5 percent drop from the same period a year ago, according to the state oil company SNH.

Nigeria: Fresh facts have emerged on the financial position of Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) showing that it recorded a loss of N2.723 billion as at September 30, 2009, according to information gotten from the management accounts. Also the Value of equities at the stock market has plunged by N173 billion or 2.7 per cent in the last three days as efforts by the Interim Administrator appointed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to stabilize the stock market, Mr. Emmanuel Ikhazoboh, are yet to yield the desired results.

The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) lamented that the nation was losing over $5 million daily- that is, N750 million daily, from the non-participation of Nigerians in the lifting of crude oil in the nation’s oil industry.

The Republic of South Korea, has expressed the need to expand trade with Nigeria, which was drastically affected by the global economic meltdown, just as it plans to double her Official Development Assistance (ODA) to Africa by 2012.

Central Africa: Rwandan mining companies that comply with internationally accepted standards are to be graded and issued with a certificate of compliance by the end of this year in an effort to improve the performance of the sector. Mining is one of the top sources of government revenue.

South Africa: The South African government has increased its offer to more than one million public service workers who are threatening to strike. The government increased its monthly housing allowance offer to $95 from about $87. But the government did not change its pay raise offer of 7 percent.

East & the horn of Africa: Civil aviation authorities in Djibouti have denied the Ethiopian Airlines permits for operation flights last week, reliable sources disclosed. Ethiopia's national flag carrier has subsequently suspended its scheduled passenger flights to Djibouti indefinitely, as of August 1, 2010.

Foreign and domestic investments in Uganda reached some Ush6.5trillion ($3.5b) in 2009, a number that was higher than the investment growth that was seen in 2008, an investment survey carried out last year has indicated.

Prices of foodstuff in Zanzibar have increased sharply with the advent of the Holy month of Ramadan during which the Muslim faithful fast, a move by unscrupulous traders to take advantage of Ramadan and easily scoop big profits.

The African Union has commenced a process that would lead to the setting up of a regional space agency. The agency, to be known as the African Space Agency, would focus on the development of common space policy for the continent. §

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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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Monday, August 23, 2010

Zone 2- Africa Summary, week # 131

Week # 131, Dated 1st- 7th August, 2010

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: In Ghana Parliament on last week passed the Organized Crime bill which seeks to establish a comprehensive legal framework to monitor, investigate and facilitate the prosecution of organized crime.

Still on Liberia’s former President’s case in Hague, Supermodel Naomi Campbell testified last week before the Special Court for Sierra Leone judges about allegations that she received a gift of blood diamonds from former Liberian President Charles Taylor while they were both present in South Africa in 1997.

Also last week, Issa Hassan Sesay, the former convicted interim leader of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebel group, told Special Court for Sierra Leone judges in The Hague that RUF fighters have been framing stories against Mr. Taylor because the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) made promises to them and that some of them saw the Special Court as a place to make money for their evidence.

According to a communiqué issued at the end of a two-day international seminar on peace support operations, organized by the Ministry of Defence, Nigeria Lacks Peace-keeping Policy and has lost some 2,000 men in conflict zones.

Also in Nigeria zoning of Presidential Flag bearer continues to divide the core north and Northern minorities in the build-up to the 2011 elections, the pro and anti-zoning forces in the region have begun meeting to forge a common front.

In Liberia the standard-bearer emeritus of the opposition Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), George Weah, has accepted a petition to run for president in the 2011 presidential elections.

Ivory Coast's President Laurent Gbagbo pledged last week that his nation would hold elections this year at last, despite many years of missed electoral deadlines and political crisis. Ivory Coast should be able to hold long overdue presidential elections in October, the electoral commission said, five years after they were first meant to happen.

West Africa's mediator for Guinea called last week for the second round of presidential elections to be held soon to ensure that the attempt to return power to civilians stays on track.

In Nigeria the 2011 Elections is feasible in January if the new voters’ registration exercise is completed on time by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

East & the horn of Africa: In Kenya the controversial constitution referendum went to poll, which proposed reducing president's powers, Devolving power to regions, creating a commission to manage public land, creating a senate and recognizing Kadhi (Muslim) courts. The referendum saw a big voter turnout where Kenyan voters backed the new constitution.

Southern Sudan will in early 2011 hold a referendum to determine whether to remain part of a united Sudan or become a separate state. The referendum was a core component of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended decades of conflict between the Southern Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) and the Khartoum government.

A long-standing ally of successive U.S. governments Rwandan President last week vowed to Crush Troublemakers Ahead of Monday's Vote. The president finds himself in the middle of a controversial election campaign, marked by media repression, jailing of opposition leaders, threats of war, attempted assassinations and several killings of political opponents.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: Chinese suspects are in Nigeria for trial over N4 billion cocaine, according to the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency; Ahmadu Giade has said that all suspects arrested in connection with the unlawful importation of 450.400kg of cocaine will be prosecuted in the country.

This month marks the sixteenth anniversary of the military takeover in The Gambia, in which President Yahya Jammeh ascended to power via coup d'état. A former wrestler and soldier, Jammeh has proven himself a tough man to deal with, as the Gambian media has discovered.

Turmoil in poverty-stricken Guinea-Bissau has forced the EU to end its mission to reform the country's security forces - a move that may further embolden powerful generals and drug traffickers.

Central Africa: Rwandan political fugitives in South Africa are complicating bilateral relations between the two countries. Meanwhile South African High Commissioner to Rwanda Gladstone Dumisani Gwadiso was summoned back to Pretoria amid growing concerns about Kigali's repressive policies as the country prepares for presidential elections.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: A ministerial committee in Ghana has been established to probe the spillage of toxic substances in the country’s oil fields by oil drilling giant, Kosmos Energy, has slapped a punitive fine of ¢400bn on the company. Within five months, Kosmos spilled a total of 699 barrels of Versaclean, a type of drilling fluid or oil based mud, which contains poisonous heavy metals, on three occasions.

According to reports parts of sparsely populated and arid eastern Niger, north of the city of Diffa, are strewn with putrid dead cows: amid a drought pastoralists traveled great distances to find food and water for their animals. The region is in dire need of aid.

Africa is cooking up a climate deal with another round of negotiations towards a global treaty on climate change concluded in Bonn on Aug. 6, with activists calling on parties to rediscover a spirit of compromise and make offers rather than demands

East & the horn of Africa: In Rwanda the Minister of Gender and Family Promotion, Jean d'Arc ujawamariya, has commended Project Ubuzima for the clinical research its carrying out in microbicides, as an alternative HIV prevention tool especially for women, terming it as "a new initiative that could help protect millions of women against contracting HIV/AIDS."

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: Ghana Company AngloGold Ashanti, Obuasi, increase production from 383,000 ounces to 500,000 within the next three years, Mr. Kwesi Enyan, the Managing Director, has announced.

In Nigeria stock market loses amounted to N51 billion transactions on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) that opened the week on a negative note as most blue chip companies suffered considerable loses while the All-Share index shed 209.79 or 0.8 to close at 25,634.39 as against 25,844 .18 as its opening index.

Meanwhile the Nigerian Federal Government met with some members of the National Executive Council (NEC) of the National Union of Petroleum & Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) in a bid to avert a strike targeted at stopping the lifting and supply of fuel to the nation’s capital city, Abuja.

Ten African countries ranked in order from most to least progressive are vying to be among the most progressive nations on the continent in accordance with the 2010 State of the Union Continental Report, these countries are Nigeria, Rwanda, Mozambique, Ghana Algeria, Egypt, Cameroon, Kenya, Senegal and South Africa.

Framework for ECOWAS Single Currency Regime out Soon to speed up the process of actualizing a single currency regime in West African states

African countries should invest in broadband infrastructure to improve the welfare of their people and not Roads to Transform Africa, according to Ajai Chowdhry, co-founder and CEO of HCL Info systems, the global IT services provider.

The recent seizure of more than two tones of cocaine, worth an estimated $1bn (about £675m) in The Gambia has once again shone a light on West Africa as a major transit point for narcotics making their way from Latin America to Europe.

Central Africa: According to reports Ugandan President Museveni's government is paying $14.2 million (about Shs31.3 billion) to the Burundi government as compensation for material and financial support offered to the National Resistance Army (NRA) before the rebel group seized power in 1986. §

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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 # 130

Week # 130, Dated 25th – 30th July, 2010

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: As the Cameroonian government enjoys the ceding of Bakassi Peninsula to it, it has extended its claims of ownership to the Obudu Ranch Resort in Obanliku local government area of Cross River State in Nigeria.

Response from the Cross River state government in Nigeria through the Director-General of the Cross River Border Development Commission (BORDERCOM), Mr. Leo Aggrey says such a claim is only an empty threat that is yet to be substantiated and considered as rumor.

Issa Hassan Sesay, who is taking time from his 52 years jail sentence in a Rwandan cell told Special Court for Sierra Leone judges last week that he was not made interim leader of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebel group by Mr. Taylor alone but rather by a group of West African leaders after a meeting in the Liberian capital Monrovia.

Burkina Faso and Niger Refer Border Dispute to UN International Court of Justice (ICJ) as part of a wider agreement by the two States to resolve the situation peacefully.

In Ghana the electoral commission last week announced that it would start nation-wide distribution of ballot papers for the New Patriotic Party (NPP) National Congress to elect its presidential candidate on August 03. The congress was scheduled for Saturday, August 07.

In Guinea the candidate who came out on top in the first round of Guinea's presidential election, Cellou Dallein Diallo, has won the backing of third-placed Sidya Toure for the run-off. No date has been set yet for the run-off between the top two candidates.

Nigeria’s new Electoral Law bans consensus candidature; the law provides strictly for compulsory balloting at primary elections by parties with prescription that only aspirants with highest number of votes cast at primaries will be forwarded to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as candidates for the main elections.

Central Africa: New Evidence Shows U.S. Role in Congo's Decision to Send Patrice Lumumba to His Death controversy has continued to swirl over allegations of U.S. government responsibility. After all, the U.S. had at least as much, if not more, influence in the Congolese capital as Belgium.

Local authorities in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are reporting that almost 90,000 people have been uprooted from their homes following recent military operations in the region, six civilians have died and dozens of others have been injured in the fighting between the national army and fighters associated with the Ugandan rebel group.

In Rwanda the Civil Society Election Observation Mission (CSEOM) last week officially launched its National Election Observation Mission to observe the presidential elections slated for August 9.

A top official of the Democratic Republic of Congo said that President Joseph Kabila will soon approve of a seven-member panel to form a new Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) to organize next year’s general election.

East & the horn of Africa: French and African leaders are pledging to counter al-Qaida-backed violence in East and West Africa with more military force in the aftermath of suicide bombings in Uganda and the killing of a French aid worker in Mali.

Sufi group a Somali militant backs more African Union troops in Somalia the war-torn country of an al Qaeda-linked movement to expand its peacekeeping presence in the country. Meanwhile the African Union summit ended without a resolution to change the mandate of its mission in Somalia from peacekeeping to peace enforcing, despite calls from some African leaders to do so.

Burundi goes to the polls again to holds Senate elections. Only the ruling National Council for the Defense of Democracy - Forces for the Defense of Democracy (CNDD-FDD) and the opposition Union for National Progress (Uprona) will contest the polls.

Southern Africa: South Africa is mulling sending army and navy personnel to Somalia to reinforce the troubled African Union peacekeeping mission there.

Political Outreach Leaders in Zimbabwe is in the process of drafting a new constitution that is aimed at bringing new elections and ending years of political conflict. As part of the process, specially trained leaders are consulting with citizens across the country in a process called the Constitution Outreach Program.

The chairman of the opposition Botswana Movement for Democracy (BMD) said that talks among other opposition parties are seeking to form a coalition aimed at breaking the dominance of the ruling party in the next general elections, which must be held by 2014.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: In Liberia civil society groups are gearing up for protests, insisting that the 2011 elections should be held in accordance with the constitution, With the Legislature' trashing of the census despite guaranteed constitutional provisions against their acts.

Over Sixty Messages of Congratulations from world leaders and sovereign governments, as the Liberia graciously celebrated its 163rd National Independence Anniversary.

Southern Africa: In Amid the women’s struggle for fair representation in Madagascar, where the political world is deemed to be dominated by men, Brigitte Rasamoelina Brigitte Rabemanantsoa Rasamoelina, a female politician from Madagascar plans to contest the November elections.

A South African court has ordered four white South African men to pay fines for making a video degrading black university workers three years ago. The men pleaded guilty to deliberately harming the integrity of the workers. The former students have to pay $ 2,720 in lieu of a one year jail sentence, provided they stay out of trouble.

Close to 200 prisoners died in Malawi prisons in less than one year says a report that has also revealed massive abuses of rights of people in conflict with the law in this country.

U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization said that Zimbabwe food security is improving. It has made improvement from 1.2 million tones to 1.3 million tones.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: According to reports Ghana is close to total eradication of Guinea worm disease since the inception of the Guinea worm eradication programme in 1989. It has achieved 99.99 % reduction of the disease.

President John Atta Mills of Ghana has appealed to other African leaders to commit themselves to the health of expectant mothers, infants and children and tackle their health issues in a holistic manner. President Mills said this in his contribution to a debate on the theme of the 15th African Union Heads of States summit in Kampala, Uganda. Members of the African Union (AU) reaffirmed at the end of their meeting on 27 July in Kampala, Uganda, that they would strive to spend 15 % of their national budgets on health, but at the end of the day it is about how “effectively and efficiently” you spend the money, not about how much.

Many African countries battle to bring down staggering rates of maternal and child mortality, maternal and child health made for a fitting theme at the African Union (AU) Summit in Kampala, Uganda.

Southern Africa: Madagascar's unique biodiversity could be lost - possibly forever, and at incalculable cost to ordinary Malagasy and the world - by the continued suspension of environmental funding in response to an ongoing political crisis, says a new report by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the main environmental donor. Also UNESCO has added Florida's Everglades National Park and Madagascar's tropical rainforest to a list of world heritage sites at risk.

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: In Nigeria Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Malam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, said after a critical review of the national economy that 7.63 % growth rate has been recorded and concluded that there was no cause for alarm.

Ghana’s Government has begun the process of privatizing some state-owned loss-making enterprises, with the aim of injecting millions of cedis to improve their performances.

Meanwhile Mr. Franklin Fiifi Kwetey, Deputy Minister of Finance and Economic Planning has assured that the Ghanaian government will continue to implement policies to compel local financial institutions to reduce their lending rates (interest rates). He said the reduction of interest rates would make funds available and affordable to entrepreneurs and investors to expand their businesses.

Cameroon's economy is projected to grow by 3.3 % this year, before rising to an average of 4.7 % annually until 2012, mostly due to increased in foreign demand for its commodities.

The African Union said last week that Africa must turn ever more to China for its development because conditions and checks often stalled the flow of funds from Western nations and the World Bank.

The research analyst for Chinese studies at the University of Stellenbosch, Mathew McDonald has said that Chinese moves into Africa have more to do with the promotion of solidarity with previously colonized countries rather than with a new scramble for Africa or actually attempting to colonize the continent for itself. §

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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.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Zone 2- Africa Summary, week # 129

Week # 129, Dated 18th- 24th July, 2010

POLITICS OF SECURITY AND CONFLICT ISSUES

West Africa: The Scramble for a flag bearer with the ruling party in Nigeria over the zoning issue has generated heat among several political groupings which has caused a split among the Northern governors.

At border of Mali and Mauritania six suspected al Qaeda militants were killed, while four other members escaped the operation led by the Mauritanian army.

In Gambia a judge has sentenced to death eight men, including The Gambia's former army chief, for their parts in a coup plot last year in the Country.

Doubt over January Election Date of the 2011 elections in Nigeria as the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is now in a serious dilemma over the date while seeking N55bn for Fresh Voters registration.

Meanwhile the Nigerian Senate has passed the new Electoral Act, putting the conduct of Presidential and National Assembly elections ahead of Governorship and Houses of Assembly elections.

Amid the lingering contention over the retention or jettisoning of the zoning arrangement within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), President of Niger Delta Professionals in the Diaspora, Mr. Teddy Obaseki, has admonished ethnic minorities in the country against decisions that would go against the zoning arrangement. Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Odein Ajumogobia, has joined the debate on zoning of the presidency and declared that Nigeria has outgrown the formula adopted by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for sharing offices between the North and South in 1999. Meanwhile the agitation for zoning of political offices should not arise because the North has had its share of leadership positions in the past, elder statesman Chief Solomon Lar has said. According to him, the demand for zoning heightened in the past after it became clear that the North had wronged other sections of the country in the choice of leaders.

Guinea's top court last week overruled challenges to the results of a hotly contested June 27 presidential poll, paving the way for a run-off between the West African state's top two candidates. The court added that votes from five districts, including two loyal to the third-place finisher, were thrown out due to "severe irregularities." The No. 1 bauxite-exporting nation is seeking to replace a military-led government with what would be its first freely elected regime since independence from France in 1958 amid widespread concern the results could trigger unrest.

Central Africa: The appeals chamber of ICC ruled to put the Release Mr. Lubanga Dyilo (Warlord) a former rebel leader from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), on hold pending the determination of the prosecution's appeal of the verdict remain under the custody of the ICC.

In the Central African Republic the army confirms the control over an army base after the Rebels in the country attacked the base near the country's border with Sudan.

A leading member of Burundi’s opposition Forces for National Liberation (FNL) has called on supporters of his party as well as other opposition parties to boycott the parliamentary election as was done during the Presidential election.

East & the horn of Africa: The US State Department expressed disappointment over Chad's failure to arrest the Sudanese leader Omar Bashir during his visits to the country, as it was nominally obliged to do as an ICC signatory country.

The United Nations acknowledge the steps taken by Eritrea and Djibouti to resolve their border dispute through mediation by Qatar, and ready to provide technical support if needed to facilitate a settlement.

The African Union has agreed to change the mandate of its peacekeeping mission, Amisom, in Somalia into peace enforcement in an effort to engage the Al Shabaab militia.

Nationwide tension and potential violence preceded the August 4 vote in Kenya, to Vote for or campaign against the proposed Constitution. Close to 70 % of Kenyans have voted in favor of the country's new constitution, according to preliminary results, all but ensuring it will replace the colonial-era British document that preceded it.

Southern Africa: The island of Seychelles has convicted 11 Somali pirates on attempting to hijack a Seychelles coast guard boat last December.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: Humanitarian agencies and relief organizations pushed for continued economic support from the international community on behalf of the drought-ridden African countries in the Sahel region, like Niger and Mali at the United Nations last week for their level of food insecurity.

According to reports Africa has seen a slow but marked decrease in the number of internal "refugees" during the last decade and has become more peaceful. While internal displacements continue to rise in the world at large.

African Union's current president Bingu wa Mutharika said at the opening of the AU summit on the Issue of ICC “To subject a sovereign head of state to a warrant of arrest is undermining African solidarity and African peace and security that we fought for so many years,".

As Gambia celebrated its national holiday tagged “Freedom Day” last week, about 89 national and international non-governmental organizations in 14 countries called on President Yahya Jammeh to stop “widespread human rights violations with total impunity”.

Sources have told news agency AFP that the French military stepped up action making fresh efforts to free Michel Germaneau the 78-year-old hostage, held in Mali by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (Aqim). French officials deny that an operation is taking place but Mauritania's army is said to be moving in on the group in its desert stronghold.

A judicial inquiry in Ivory Coast into corruption allegations against Interior Minister Desire Tagro cleared him on Monday of charges including stealing money meant for victims of a toxic waste dumping.

Central Africa: Representatives of the United Nations and the Sudanese opposition movement, the Justice and Equality Movement, have signed an agreement on the protection of children in the Darfur conflict area.

Meanwhile the top officials from United Nations food and refugee agency has expressed hope that security will soon improve to allow people of Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to return home and begin farming their lands.

East & the horn of Africa: The main international backers of Somalia's government have pledged additional resources for the drive to defeat al-Qaida-linked militants trying to establish a beachhead in the Horn of Africa.

HEALTH, ENVIRONMENT AND DOMESTIC POLITICS

West Africa: About half the babies exposed to HIV may not be getting the antiretroviral (ARV) drugs they need to be born HIV-free and stay that way, say the findings of a four-country study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). The study, conducted in Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire, South Africa and Zambia, found that only 51 percent of HIV-exposed infants had received a single dose of nevirapine before and after birth, the basic tool in prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT).

POLITICAL ECONOMY

West Africa: Ghana is expected to generate revenue from energy export through an estimated 75-million-dollar power transmission project that would link her to Burkina Faso and other countries in West Africa.

Meanwhile Liberia recovering from civil war has signed a one-year oil supply contract with Nigeria that will allow it to take 20,000 barrels of Nigerian crude per day and resell to bolster its Economy. Also Petroleum Engineers on all oil platforms in Nigeria last week declared that the country could double its current production, which stands around two million barrels per day, by 2030.

Ivory Coast's SIR refinery has taken a 50 billion CFA ($98.37 million) loan from Groupe Banque Atlantique to buy crude oil at 80,000 barrel-per-day. §

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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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