AfricaFocus Bulletins with Material on Politics and Human Rights - 2005
Nov 17, 2005 Tunisia: Free Expression Protest
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/tun0511.php
Tunisia, which is currently hosting the World Summit on the
Information Society, is one of the most advanced African countries
in provision of information infrastructure. But it also
systematically represses internal dissent and blocks access to
websites critical of the government. As the summit opened this
week, Tunisian human rights activists were on hunger strike and
international activists were protesting the government's refusal to
allow freedom of expression.
Nov 13, 2005 Nigeria: Delta Oil & Human Rights
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/nig0511.php
Ten years after the execution of human rights campaigner Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight of his
colleagues by the Nigerian government, the issues of human rights
and environmental devastation in the oil-producing Niger Delta
remain unresolved. Despite the return to civilian rule in 1999 and
pledges by oil companies to implement voluntary corporate
responsibility standards, new reports by Environmental Rights
Action and Amnesty International document only limited action to
correct abuses and deliver benefits to the residents of the
oil-producing areas.
Oct 10, 2005 Liberia: Elections Necessary, Not Enough
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/lib0510.php
With frontrunners including soccer star George Weah and experienced
international official and banker Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberians
are set to choose among 22 candidates for president as well as new
legislators. "This country has to finish with war," a shopkeeper in
Monrovia told a New York Times reporter as the election approached.
Despite hopes for a new start, however, both Liberians and
international observers are well aware that much more is needed
beyond elections.
Jul 28, 2005 Zimbabwe: Housing Tsunami Continues
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/zim0507.php
Despite a devastatingly critical report by UN-HABITAT Director Anna
Tibaijuka, the government of Zimbabwe is continuing its drive to
destroy "illegal" housing and shops that is estimated to have made
at least 700,000 people homeless in the last two months.
Zimbabweans, rejecting the government's term Operation
Murambatsvina ("Clean Out Garbage") compare the assault on the
country's poor to a "tsunami."
Jul 13, 2005 Africa: G8 Reaction, Perspectives
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/glen0507.php
"Outside of British officialdom," writes Sanjay Suri of Inter Press
Service from the Gleneagles summit, "celebrations of increased G8
aid for Africa were confined mostly to a population of two - rock
stars Bob Geldof and Bono." Non-governmental groups in the Make
Poverty History campaign, in contrast, were generally skeptical.
Jun 18, 2005 Ethiopia: On the Edge
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/eth0506.php
Despite the announced release of 336 detainees in Ethiopia on June
17, and renewed agreement by opposition and government parties to
await the results of investigations of election fraud, tension
continues high both in the capital and in many other areas of the
country. Critics charge that the international community is
downplaying government repression because of the strategic
importance of the country.
May 30, 2005 Ethiopia: Election Reports, Commentary
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/eth0505.php
Provisional results from the national election board show a
majority for the ruling party in Ethiopia's May 15 parliamentary
election, but also significant gains for opposition groups,
particularly in the capital Addis Ababa. Initial reports from
observers had highlighted the high turnout (over 90%) and the
relative calm of election day. However, opposition parties are also
claiming victory, with many charges of fraud yet to be
investigated. Critics have charged the international community with
turning a blind eye to intimidation and fraud by the government.
Apr 30, 2005 Africa: Security Council Expansion
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/un0504.php
Debate is heating up on expansion of the United Nations Security
Council to 24 members. Under one of two options proposed by a highlevel
panel on UN reform in December and by Secretary General Kofi
Annan last month, there would be six new permanent seats, two for
Africa. The proposals are to be discussed this year, but disputes
over details mean that further delays are very likely.
Apr 18, 2005 Zimbabwe: Election Fraud Report
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/zim0504.php
A new report from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) in Zimbabwe, released on April 12, has presented detailed evidence
of bias and outright fraud in the March 31 elections. In
particular, the report details allegations of ballot-stuffing
sufficient to change election results in at least 20
constituencies. This would shift the balance of directly elected
seats from 78-41 in favor of the ruling ZANU-PF to 61-58 in favor
of the MDC.
Mar 2, 2005 Zimbabwe: Solidarity Newsletter
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/zim0503.php
"The Zimbabwean elections of 2000 and 2002 deepened the political
crisis, rather than contributing to a progressive resolution. Since
2002 democratic space has been further eroded. What Zimbabwe needs
now is not another gravely flawed election but a SADC-facilitated
negotiated transition towards democracy." - Zimbabwe Solidarity
Conference, South Africa, February 24-25, 2005
Feb 28, 2005 Togo: Peer Pressure Plus
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/togo0502.php
Less than a day after the African Union imposed sanctions demanding
a return to constitutional legality in Togo, Faure Gnassingbe
stepped down from the presidential post he had assumed after the
death of his father Gnassingbe Eyadema three weeks ago. Virtually
unanimous condemnation was followed by sanctions from Togo's West
African neighbors and from the continent-wide organization. This
sent the unmistakable message, in the words of one commentator's
headline, that there would be "no business as usual for Baby
Eyadema."
Feb 11, 2005 Kenya: Corruption Fight Stalling
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/ken0502.php
The resignation of respected anti-corruption campaigner John
Githongo from the Kenyan government has touched off new political
furor that seems certain to escalate in coming weeks. In its two
years in office, President Mwai Kibabi's government has initiated
numerous anti-corruption investigations. But there is widespread
skepticism that it has the will to deal with high-level corruption
within its own ranks.
Jan 26, 2005 Nigeria: Human Rights Report Released
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/nig0501.php
The long-awaited report of the Human Rights Violations
Investigation Commission, completed in May 2002 after two years of
public hearings, has now been made public, not by the Nigerian
government but by civil society organizations. In December 2004,
given the Supreme Court rulingt that the panel's original mandate
was unconstitutional, the government said it was not planning to
publish the wide-ranging report, which is popularly known as the
Oputa report after the name of the panel's chairman, retired Chief
Justice Chukwudifu A. Oputa.
Jan 12, 2005 Africa: Beyond the Ballot
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/gov0501.php
Whatever policies are needed to address Africa's crises, it is
increasingly clear to donors, civil society, and politicians alike
that capable states are essential for implementing those policies.
The current catch-phrase "good governance" has many possible
meanings in practice. How to achieve it is even more debatable. But
there is wide agreement that free and fair elections are just the
beginning.
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