Wednesday, October 16, 2019

South Africa: A House Of Cards

SOUTH AFRICA

A House of Cards

A long-awaited corruption trial against former South African President Jacob Zuma was postponed to February after his lawyers filed an appeal against an earlier court ruling against his attempt to dismiss the charges.
Zuma faces 16 charges of fraud, corruption and racketeering related to an arms deal in the 1990s, Agence France-Presse reported.
The former president is alleged to have made about $270,000 in kickbacks from a deal with French arms manufacturer Thales during his time as deputy president in Thabo Mbeki’s administration.
Zuma has denied all charges and argues that politics is playing a significant role in his prosecution.
The ruling African National Congress (ANC) party forced Zuma to resign last year after almost a decade in office due to escalating pressure from the public over corruption allegations.
President Cyril Ramaphosa, who took over from Zuma, has made the fight against corruption one of his top priorities, but faces opposition from many ANC members still loyal to Zuma.
Meanwhile, some analysts say the trial could see Zuma dragging down many top officials of the ANC, the party of Nelson Mandela, which has governed the country since the end of apartheid in 1994.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

The Space Review: Review: The Number of the Heavens

The Space Review: Review: The Number of the Heavens

The Space Review: Modern monetary theory and lunar development

The Space Review: Modern monetary theory and lunar development

The Space Review: How to make an urgent and affordable return to the Moon

The Space Review: How to make an urgent and affordable return to the Moon

The Space Review: Getting commercial crew flying, at last

The Space Review: Getting commercial crew flying, at last

Guinea-Tim'e Up

GUINEA

Time’s Up

At least five people died and dozens more were injured after protests against President Alpha Conde’s attempt to extend his rule turned violent Monday, Al Jazeera reported.
Police opened fire on demonstrators as they ransacked military posts and blocked roads with burning tires in the capital, Conakry, and in the northern opposition stronghold of Mamou, Reuters reported.
Conde’s second term expires in 2020 and he is constitutionally barred from a third. To get around this, he has had his government look into options to create a new constitution, sparking calls for protests from opposition leaders.
Conde’s first election win in 2010 ended two years of military rule that followed a quarter century of dictatorship, and raised hopes for democracy to take root in the country.
However, Conde has responded to protests by placing opposition leaders under house arrest and effectively banning street protests, according to Human Rights Watch.

Mocambique: Ruling Over Nothing

MOZAMBIQUE

Ruling Over Nothing

Police officers allegedly killed an election observer in Mozambique a week before the presidential vote on Oct. 15. Reported by Human Rights Watch, the incident was just one flare-up of recent violence in the southeastern African country.
The elections were supposed to be a celebration of democracy. President Filipe Nyusi, who is now running for re-election, negotiated a peace deal with the Mozambican National Resistance (Renamo), a militant opposition group, earlier this year. Nyusi also recently inked a $33 billion deal with ExxonMobil for a mammoth liquefied natural gas project that Bloomberg said could transform the former Portuguese colony’s $15 billion economy.
But, as African Arguments explained, corruption allegations against officials in Nyusi’s ruling party, the Mozambique Liberation Front (Frelimo), soured many voters’ perceptions of their head of state. The allegations centered on $2 billion of debt that public authorities had secretly amassed, leading the International Monetary Fund in 2016 to cut off aid that was crucial to the well-being of ordinary Mozambicans.
Nyusi is also battling an insurgency in the country’s north where terrorists affiliated with the Islamic State have staged attacks. Russian soldiers have reportedly been seen in the area, suggesting the president feels that he can’t squelch the violence. Russia denies its involvement, however.
Yet Nyusi might win re-election anyway. Renamo’s longtime charismatic leader, Afonso Dhlakama, died suddenly last year, leaving the main opposition group weakened. After a new resistance leader, Ossufo Momade, rose to power, a splinter group led by Mariano Nhongo emerged. Nhongo’s fighters have launched attacks that have crippled transportation networks in the center of the country.
With armed uprisings in multiple regions, the opposition in tatters and promises of prosperity yet to materialize, many voters have lost faith in their government, especially the young.
“The youth are not interested in the vote because they are tired,” Andre Cardoso, a 24-year old rapper from Maputo who goes by the name MC Chamboco, told Chinese news site, CGTN Africa, which covers the continent. “There are many problems that they are facing but they don’t see change. They are disillusioned. Even those voting for the first time don’t believe there will be change.”
Free and fair elections are impossible, warned Jasmine Opperman, an Africa specialist with TRAC, the Terrorism Research and Analysis Consortium, in a Voice of America video. In the north, people are too afraid to go to the polls, she said. Reuters also noted that in regions where cyclones struck earlier this year the government still has not given out identity documents necessary for voters to cast ballots. And some urged voters to stay at the polling stations after voting to make sure their ballots weren’t stolen, Al Jazeera reported.
Nyusi’s Frelimo party, which has held onto power since independence nearly 45 years ago, won recent municipal elections with only a slim margin of victory. Opperman felt as if Nyusi and his allies were unlikely to cede power if they lose this time around.
If developments continue in their current vein, Nyusi might cling to power but he might not have a country to run.

Friday, October 11, 2019

Rwanda: Made In Africa

RWANDA

Made In Africa!

Rwanda released the first smartphones entirely made in Africa this week, an important milestone for the African country – and the continent – which has been struggling to overcome its economic dependence on commodities and instead develop more lucrative sectors such as tech, CNN reported.
While smartphones are already assembled in other African nations like Algeria, Egypt and South Africa, the components are always imported. Rwanda’s Mara Group, however, is making all parts of its smartphones at their Kigali factory, opened by Rwandan President Paul Kagame earlier this week.
“(It’s) another milestone on our journey to a high tech ‘Made in Rwanda’ industry,” he said, according to CNN.
The Mara X ($130) and Mara Z ($190), which both run on the Android operating system, are slightly more expensive than Chinese alternatives, but the company hopes customers will be lured by African pride to eventually displace the Chinese-owned Transsion, which has more than a 50 percent share of the continent’s cell-phone market.
The development is part of an accelerating trend: African tech is booming with more than 618 active tech hubs across the continent, an increase of almost one-third over 2018, said Quartz Africa.
The achievement is all the more impressive considering that consistent and reliable access to electricity much less fast internet is not a given across the continent.

Thursday, October 10, 2019

The Run-Up To The Mocambique Election

MOZAMBIQUE

No Quarter

The murder of a local election observer – possible by police officers – has escalated concerns over an upcoming election that is expected to help Mozambique move past its violent history toward peace.
Election observer Anastácio Matavel was shot to death Monday after leaving a training session for observers in southern Gaza province, the Associated Press reported. Police officers are among the suspects.
The incident was the latest violence to mar the runup to the elections, said Human Rights Watch. More than 30 people have died since the start of the election campaign, and dozens more arrested, Agence France-Presse reported.
Meanwhile, the European Union election observer mission criticized party leaders for allowing the violence to occur silently, “without strong, clear and persistent condemnation.”
Mozambique will hold presidential elections Oct. 15 with President Filipe Nyusi running against the opposition Renamo party’s Ossufo Momade for a second term. The vote comes just two months after Nyusi and Renamo signed a permanent cease-fire to stop the violence that has flared in the 27 years since the end of the civil war.
That war killed an estimated 1 million people over 15 years.
Meanwhile, Mozambique continues to struggle to recover from two cyclones that struck earlier this year and killed more than 600, as well as attacks claimed by Islamic State and other extremist groups.

Social Unrest In Egypt

EGYPT

Of Pharaohs and Tin Ears

Egyptians are furious about corruption.
Their rage stems from viral videos posted by Egyptian businessman Mohamed Ali, who alleged that President Abdel-Fattah El-Sissi forced him to build luxury hotels and palaces for Sissi and his cronies in the military while failing to pay bills for other construction projects.
“You say the Egyptian people are very poor and that we should tighten our belts, but you are throwing away billions and your men are wasting millions,” Ali said in one video cited by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project.
Sissi denied the accusations, Agence France-Presse reported, adding that Ali’s accusations were tantamount to slander.
The president’s explanations flopped. The videos unleashed years of pent-up frustrations over graft and economic stagnation. Protests, rare in Egypt under Sissi, have broken out, reported Al Jazeera. As activists called for Sisi’s resignation, the military closed down Tahrir Square, site of the demonstrations that brought down former dictator Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
The civil unrest is the “most intense political pressure” that Sissi has faced since 2013, when he seized power from Mohamed Morsi in a military coup, VICE wrote. Morsi was Egypt’s first democratically elected head of state and an Islamist whose leadership also sparked widespread disturbances.
Egypt’s state-controlled media have long told stressed how Sissi is universally popular. But, writing in Middle East Eye, media scholar Mohamad Elmasry argued that Sissi failed to provide Egyptians with more than “warmed-over Mubarakism,” a mix of dictatorship, corruption, a powerful state security apparatus and cooperation with the West in foreign policy that didn’t include solutions to the grievances that led to Mubarak’s downfall.
New York Times columnist Bret Stephens agreed, concluding that Sissi could have left office after delivering stability in the wake of the Arab Spring. Instead, he now must bear the responsibility for his people’s complaints.
Sure, he’s spending billions on a new capital and other cities to stoke economic growth. But the financing for those projects is in doubt, their benefits as yet unrealized. His austerity program – cutting spending on fuel subsidies, for example, as part of an International Monetary Fund aid package – remains unpopular today.
Meanwhile, one in three Egyptians live in poverty, an increase of 16.7 percent in the past two decades, the Washington Times reported.
Meanwhile, Egyptian security forces have arrested almost 2,000 protesters. Ali lives in Spain, out of Sissi’s reach. He loves to taunt and mock Sisi – from afar, of course.
“El Sisi is now nervous because of the demonstrations, and I am sure he is now appealing to US President Donald Trump to protect him from the next revolution,” Ali quipped.
And Trump did praise and defend the leader, the Washington Times noted.
As the protests continue, military leaders will likely consider whether they must replace Sissi to satisfy the street, wrote Lancaster University fellow Lucia Ardovini in the Conversation.
That would be something, observers say. It would show tired, cowed and frustrated Egyptians that their revolution eight years ago wasn’t a failure. Because it taught the new pharaohs of Egypt that there is danger in not listening.