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Published 30th August 2019

Vol 60 No 17


Zimbabwe

Power play in Harare

Emmerson Mnangagwa, Heroes Day, August 2019. Pic: Shaun Jusa/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images
Emmerson Mnangagwa, Heroes Day, August 2019. Pic: Shaun Jusa/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images

The main opposition party wants an interim power-sharing deal. The government accuses it of using mass protests as a bargaining chip

Through the last 17 years of his rule, former President Robert Mugabe consistently dismissed claims of human rights violations as part of a Western plot to bring about 'regime change'. Now, however, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change under Nelson Chamisa is making no bones about its desire for just that. It wants to remove the Emmerson Mnangagwa administration through mass protests on the streets rather than a general election or other constitutional means.

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Activists take on the crisis

Police officers arrest protesters in Harare. Pic: Shaun Jusa/Xinhua/PA Images
Police officers arrest protesters in Harare. Pic: Shaun Jusa/Xinhua/PA Images

As the economic meltdown boosts national resistance to the government, the main opposition party senses opportunity and regroups

Observing the success of mass protests in Algiers and Khartoum against highly militarised regimes, Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) is planning a change in tactics, stepping...


Executive exerts its privilege

Despite the fuss over the delayed ministerial appointments, real power will stay in the presidency

Just days after President Muhammadu Buhari allocated the portfolios and swore in his 43 ministers on 21 August, regional leaders of the ruling All Progressives Congress started staking...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

This week's Tokyo International Conference on African Development, held confusingly in Yokohama, shows the growing competition between foreign powers on the continent. Although Japan's commercial ties with Africa – some $10 billion of trade a year – are minuscule compared with the $200bn annual China-Africa commerce, the two Asian powers are in a fight for diplomatic and strategic influence.

Initially, Japan's strategy was to partner with international agencies in the UN s...

This week's Tokyo International Conference on African Development, held confusingly in Yokohama, shows the growing competition between foreign powers on the continent. Although Japan's commercial ties with Africa – some $10 billion of trade a year – are minuscule compared with the $200bn annual China-Africa commerce, the two Asian powers are in a fight for diplomatic and strategic influence.

Initially, Japan's strategy was to partner with international agencies in the UN system or the World Bank and the IMF, to part-fund projects and programmes in Africa, burnishing its credentials as a good international citizen and, perhaps, its case for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council.

However, it wasn't until the exponential growth in China's business in Africa that Tokyo really started paying attention.

Japan is also upping its game in Africa on trade, registering a near 9% increase last year. But investment is lagging badly. This week's meeting, attended by a dozen African leaders, has established a permanent council to coordinate corporate efforts to get a bigger share of the African market with the Japanese government. Beyond the yen and dollars, Tokyo is playing another game, teaming up with India and willing African partners to create the 'Free and Open Indo-Pacific' region. Stripped of the warm words, it is a cut-price competitor to Beijing's Belt and Road initiative. With New Delhi's support, it carries some demographic heft.

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Upstarts and old guards

Jealous of presidential candidate Nabil Karoui's popularity, the political class manoeuvred to have him arrested

Tunisians go to the polls on 15 September to choose a new president and, three weeks later, a new parliament. The contests lacked strong drama until 23 August,...


No let-up in post-election war

The opposition leaders' campaign to annul the May elections depends on getting more angry people on the streets

Three months after the highly contested and narrowly won elections, politicians, civil society and even religious leaders are divided between pro-opposition and pro-government factions. The issue is unlikely...


Waiting on the general

No longer posing as an avuncular placeman, Gaïd Salah has emerged as Algeria's key power-broker

It seems a very long time since Algeria-watchers questioned whether a political beast with ambitions to control the military/security establishment and its 'deep state' structures – known in...


Juba's payday loan habit

The government’s fondness for pre-selling oil greases the wheels but hurts the exchequer. It’s an addiction that will be hard to break

Developing countries have long been advised against forward-selling their natural resources – often their only source of foreign exchange – in return for upfront cash. The credit is...


ANC tries to stop the rot

A caretaker leadership in the Western Cape is supposed to arrest the ruling party's electoral decline

Ace Magashule, the African National Congress Secretary-General, has read the riot act to the newly constituted Western Cape Provincial Task Team to start working in communities and end...


Peter da Costa

It is with great sadness that we report the loss of Peter da Costa, journalist, economist and activist, on 18 August, a year to the day after the...

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Pointers

Hamdok's appeal

Starting work on 22 August, a day after he was sworn in, new Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok quickly amassed support, ranging from activists in the sit-in outside the...


Ruing the day

The British government's Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has launched an investigation into suspected corruption by UK currency printer De La Rue Group and associates in South Sudan. The...