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Tuesday 21 August 2012

S. African mine carnage reveals anger over inequality

S. African mine carnage reveals anger over inequality

CAPE TOWN — South Africa's mine bloodshed which killed 34 strikers has laid bare anger with persistent poverty and put a damning spotlight on President Jacob Zuma's government, analysts say.

Police opened fire on striking workers Thursday in an escalating stand-off between rival unions that had already killed 10 people days earlier at the North West province mine owned by the world's number three platinum producer Lonmin.

"I really believe the government should have been more proactive," said analyst Susan Booysen of Wits University.

"Here they should have been pre-emptive, getting together, convening stakeholders, and getting together the ministries of labour, mining, and police. I really think this tragedy could have been prevented."

Horrific images of workers being gunned down in the worst police violence since the dawn of democracy in 1994 have left a reeling nation and the world asking how scenes evocative of apartheid brutality could recur in a free South Africa.

"Is it going to force an existential crisis among South Africans? Yes, and I hope it does. It needs to shake up South Africans, and it particular needs to shake up its political and economic elite, who have become too complacent," analyst Adam Habib told AFP.

"I don't think they actually recognised how volatile our society has become, and in sporadic moments, it can flare."

South Africa's workplaces and streets frequently erupt into protests over low wages or a lack of basic services and jobs, with millions of poor blacks still living in shantytowns.

With one of the world's most glaring gaps between rich and poor, the lives of workers have changed little since Nelson Mandela vowed a better life for all.

"The poor are saying 'bugger you'. If you plunder the resources of this country, we are entitled to a share. It's become survival of the fittest in a lot of ways," said Habib who is based at the University of Johannesburg.

"That your political elite must take responsibility for, but also executives in the private sector."

Despite inroads made by black wealth, Africa's biggest economy is still divided along racial lines, with the miners who live in shacks on the world's richest platinum reserves seeing little of the country's mineral riches.

Worryingly for the government which is already trying to quell increasingly militant protests, the economy is failing to grow fast enough to transform frequently trotted out pledges into reality.

"I think we are sitting on a ticking time bomb in South Africa," said Kwandiwe Kondlo of the University of the Free State, who said issues boiled down to poor leadership, governance and lack of coordination.

"There is no proactive governance and you can't have proactive governance if there is no leadership," he said, charging that under President Zuma "the situation actually has gotten worse".

Zuma cut short a foreign trip to travel to the carnage site and announced an inquiry into the deaths for which union leaders and Lonmin bosses have also been slammed.

But his government faces questions over why it did not step in after the first deaths -- which included two police officers -- and fears of a trigger-happy police force that has resumed taking military titles since Zuma took power in 2009.

The internationally condemned shootings join a string of damning reports of public service breakdowns, including a textbook delivery scandal that saw the state hauled to court.

The escalation at Lonmin reflects a tendency to put out fires through crisis management rather than pre-emptive action, said Booysen.

"It does shed a very poor light on government in that it creates the impression that its eye is not on the ball," she said.

"It suggests regrettably that this a government that is not in full touch with developments on the ground."

Copyright © 2012 AFP.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5h4R4qw_ouI0v_0GTwgC8TGrlF3aQ?docId=CNG.543ff5121eb5602388dd81a4b9b937fc.661


Ethiopia's Meles Zenawi dies of undisclosed illness

Ethiopia's Meles Zenawi dies of undisclosed illness

Fears for stability after PM's 21-year rule characterised by economic growth and human rights protests from international community

One of Africa's most powerful and divisive leaders, Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia, has died of an undisclosed illness, it has been announced. He was 57.

During his 21-year rule, Meles turned Ethiopia into one of Africa's fastest-growing economies and proved to be a key US ally in the war on terror. But he was also regarded as an authoritarian strongman whose critics suffered persecution, imprisonment and torture.

Meles had not been seen in public for about two months. He failed to attend a meeting of African Union heads of state in the capital, Addis Ababa, last month, raising speculation about his health.He died "abroad" at around 11.40pm on Monday after contracting an infection, state television said on Tuesday.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/aug/21/ethiopia-meles-zenawi-dies-illneses?newsfeed=true

Ethiopian PM Meles Zenawi dies after illness

Ethiopian PM Meles Zenawi dies after illness

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has died aged 57 after months of illness, the government says.

A spokesman said Mr Meles had died in a hospital abroad - but did not specify where or give details of his ailment.

Speculation about his health mounted when he missed an African Union summit in Addis Ababa last month.

Mr Meles took power as the leader of rebels that ousted communist leader Mengistu Haile Mariam in 1991 and led the country's economic transformation.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-19328356

Sunday 19 August 2012

Pereza Ahabwe, former MP and now a PHD in Economics student at Makerere University – monitor.co.ug, August 19, 2012


"Recently, I was watching a documentary on the history channel of DSTV on the world leaders during and after the Second World War. At the end of it run a statement like this, "Roosevelt died in office, Churchill was defeated in the election following the war, Hitler blew himself up and Stalin stayed and completed his mission of capturing Poland and declaring it a communist state".

I have also read missives of David Mafabi, and Margaret Wokuri as well as Bishop Zac Niringiye's retirement mission on restoration of term limits for the President of the Republic of Uganda. The debate between Mr Tamale Mirundi and the leadership of the Catholic Church's Easter message as well as that of the Pentecostal Churches cannot go unnoticed.

I also recall an article I wrote in 2008 in the Daily Monitor titled, "Term Limits have failed the test in Africa" citing examples of countries which had also amended their constitutions to lift presidential term limits and today I have not changed my position on this.

Lest I forget, I am even reluctant to mention that in the first constitutional 7-year term of President Paul Kagame, he stated in no uncertain terms that he would never run for a third term. Recently in an interview while in Uganda and was asked if he will run for another term, he stated that the people of Rwanda will decide.

Thank you Paul for at least stating the truth. This is Africa! I recall during the debate on whether or not to lift term limits in 2005, Hon. Nyombi Thembo stated, "In Africa, and Uganda in particular, we are not endowed with many people who are presidential material. They are a scarce commodity and Uganda should not be seen to lose on the God given chance in the person of Mr Yoweri Museveni" and I could not agree with him more then and even now.

I have monitored for quite some time now and analysed the attributes of those who have openly manifested themselves as successors of Mr Museveni and those who are quiet but have been talked of being potentials in the widely termed succession queue. I am aware that human beings can never be the same but leaders with presidential attributes enshrined in Article 98(1) of the Uganda Constitution are indeed a scarce commodity.

To those with such wishful dreams its one thing to wish to be a President, it's another thing to manage to be a President. I can assure you, Dr Obote, Prof. Lule, QC Binaisa were all Presidents but were they really according to Article 98(1) of the Constitution? Let me also take this opportunity to wish you well in your endeavours. To Mr Museveni, stay calm, the Constitution still protects you under Article 1, 98, 102, and 103. I am made to understand that you will be only 72 years in 2016? May be I am wrong but in case, I am right, Article 98 has vindicated you, Article 104 qualified you and Articles 1 and 103 will guarantee your presidency till 2021. I wish you good health as well.

It is for the above reasons that I do not hesitate to tell the Besigyes, Wokuris, and some religious leaders of this part and the rest of the world to stop making noise and making life difficult for other people to live that Yoweri Museveni's constitutional term ends on May 11, 2021 (Aticle 61 (2) and when he will be 77 years young but old according to Article 102 (b) of the Ugandan Constitution respectively.

May God Bless Uganda. "

http://www.monitor.co.ug/Magazines/ThoughtIdeas/Save+your+breath++Museveni+reign+ends+2021/-/689844/1482060/-/1uou6u/-/index.html

Rape of young girls in Congo still unpunished

Rape of young girls in Congo still unpunished

Fri, 17 Aug 2012 15:37 GMT

Source: Content partner // Inter Press Service/Emmanuel Chaco

A woman with a traditional Congolese hair style poses for a portrait in the village of Bangadi in northeastern Congo, February 18, 2009. REUTERS/Finbarr O'Reilly

Inter Press Service

By Emmanuel Chaco

KINSHASA, Aug 16 2012 (IPS) - A rash of recent rape cases has sparked local criticism of the weakness of the justice system in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where inadequate resources and simple incompetence mean survivors of sexual violence hold little hope of obtaining justice.

“In the final week of July, we recorded more than 12 cases of rape committed against very young girls – some of the victims were just six years old,” said Father Jean Okutu, the parish priest at Sacré Cœur Church in Mushie Territory. “The perpetrators were adults, all civilians.”

A total of 16 rapes of young girls have been reported in recent weeks in this remote administrative district of western DRC, and the mothers of the survivors have joined forces to complain about the failure of the local and provincial judicial system to prosecute their assailants.

Maria T.*, whose eight-year-old daughter was one of the victims, told IPS that despite being treated at the Sacré Cœur parish dispensary, her little girl still complains of pain in her genitals and abdomen. “We have to go to a bigger medical centre to be sure that we won’t face more consequences later on. But we don’t have money,” she said.

Elodie K.’s ten-year-old daughter was also raped. “We need strong measures to protect young girls in Mushie. We also need the identities of all the victims to be carefully protected to ensure that they can grow up normally and have a chance to get married one day,” she said.

“The government should even consider relocating these children, or letting them study overseas at the state’s cost, to ensure they are protected from taunts and isolation by other children their age.”

According to Bandundu’s attorney general, André Mvunzu, the province has already put in place a programme to fight impunity for sexual violence.

“Twelve perpetrators of the rapes recently recorded in Mushie have been arrested and are currently in detention there. They will face trial and the court’s rulings will send a clear message to all,” he told IPS.

Mushie resident Jean Pierre N.* is sceptical. “When we hear the attorney general on the radio, we get the impression that he doesn’t have a clue about how his own judicial administration is working. Of the 12 accused that he stated are in detention, eight have escaped – including the two men who raped my daughter.”

Nzundu told IPS that security at Mushie’s prison needed to be improved, as it was not the first time detainees had escaped.

Jacques Katchelewa is head of a non-governmental organisation working to promote gender equality and food security in Mushie. He fears that if the judicial system fails them, the families will turn to informal arrangements for compensation for the crimes committed against their daughters.

“This runs counter to the law in terms of ending sexual violence,” he said. “The only way victims and families can get justice is if the local court is strengthened. In Mushie, the court has just one magistrate who cannot, all by himself, sit and rule on cases of sexual violence. We need to reinforce the team of judges.”

Congolese law requires a panel of three judges to hear such cases.

Father Okutu shares Katchelewa’s concerns about the effectiveness of the justice system in Bandundu. “I’ve appealed for justice to be served in these rape cases. The provincial attorney general has responded by sending a second magistrate to support the one who is here.”

Mushie’s local prosecutor’s office is subordinate to the provincial attorney general’s office in the provincial capital, the city of Bandundu, 500 kilometres away. It is intended to bring justice a bit closer to the people, but it lacks resources – as do local residents.

“The victims’ families are too poor to pay court costs. I’ve already had to take on the cost of medical care for most of the girls,” Okutu told IPS.

“Litigants who experience problems should write to the Minister for Justice and Human Rights and to the High Council of the Judiciary to explain their difficulties in order to obtain justice and so that magistrates will be deployed to Mushie,” said Jean Paul Nyumba, an advisor to the justice minister’s office.

But Nyumba, himself a lawyer, lamented the fact that there is a shortage of magistrates in many parts of the country while there are many idle magistrates in the capital, Kinshasa.

Joseph Ntayondezandi Mushagalusa, a lawyer and former national attorney general, said a dose of realism is required. “The problems with the justice system are the same across the country,” he told IPS.

For example, Mushagalusa told IPS, “Even with the recruitment of 2,000 new magistrates in March 2012, the DRC’s judiciary has only 4,000 members. With the population standing at nearly 80 million, we have just one judge for every 20,000 residents of DRC.

“And that’s without accounting for the many magistrates who are not working, such as those who are assigned new posts, but for unresolved logistical and practical reasons, never report to their new assignments or abandon them.”

The provincial governor, Jean Kamisendu Kutaka, has appealed for help from the broader population. “Everyone needs to help the government fight against the different forms of criminality that are raging in the province. It calls for more vigilance. Every citizen has the obligation to expose crimes. It’s the only way to make criminals afraid,” he said.

Read the original story here

http://www.trust.org/trustlaw/news/rape-of-young-girls-in-congo-still-unpunished

-“The root cause of the Rwandan tragedy of 1994 is the long and past historical ethnic dominance of one minority ethnic group to the other majority ethnic group. Ignoring this reality is giving a black cheque for the Rwandan people’s future and deepening resentment, hostility and hatred between the two groups.”

-« Ce dont j’ai le plus peur, c’est des gens qui croient que, du jour au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre ».

-“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

-“I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.

-“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”

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