Jump to navigation

Published 22nd June 2007

Vol 48 No 13


Sudan

At the barrel of a gun

International pressure has at last forced Khartoum to agree to a UN-backed protection force in Darfur but the struggle won't stop there

A mixture of scepticism and hope greets Khartoum's claims that it has unconditionally accepted that around 20,000 peacekeepers will be deployed in Darfur by 2008. Interested governments and United Nations' bodies have ratcheted up the pressure; United States' sanctions on 29 May and a UN Security Council visit on 17 June both helped. Yet within hours of accepting a 'hybrid' peacekeeping force for Darfur at a meeting with the African Union (AU) and UN in Addis Ababa on 11-12 June, Khartoum officials retreated into the doublespeak and delaying tactics which have allowed them to block an effective protection force in Darfur for the past three years.


Intelligent design

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

View site

Claims that Sudan gives the United States intelligence on Al Qaida in Somalia and Iraq - and Khartoum's rapid denial - have revived important questions. Does this 'intelligence...


In denial, in extremis

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

View site

The United Nations' Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Darfur of 8 June sets targets and deadlines with which it says the Sudanese regime should comply....



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

A new credo is emerging among African politicians: it is best described as infrastructure fundamentalism. The argument is that most African states cannot meet the Millennium Development Goals or other targets without massive investment in infrastructure: roads, ports, water supply and energy. Such investments should take precedence over social spending, according to Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni. At the African Development Bank conference in Shanghai, the Bank's development report argued...
A new credo is emerging among African politicians: it is best described as infrastructure fundamentalism. The argument is that most African states cannot meet the Millennium Development Goals or other targets without massive investment in infrastructure: roads, ports, water supply and energy. Such investments should take precedence over social spending, according to Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni. At the African Development Bank conference in Shanghai, the Bank's development report argued that Africa needed to invest US$20 billion a year in sanitation and drinking water projects 'to sustain its water resources'. A month later, Ghana held a conference for Africa's finance and energy ministers to address the continent's electricity deficit and lack of finance for new projects. This push for infrastructure coincides with the willingness of China and India to build roads, power and water plants for substantially less than Western companies – and to provide finance. A decade ago, the World Bank was arguing for maximum private sector participation in such projects. That is under revision. There is enough demand in Africa to accommodate all projects on offer. Now it is up to the more creative financial engineers to find ways for governments to pay for them.
Read more

Unlikely meeting of minds

President Abdullahi's government makes some progress but it still isn't trusted

Despite widespread scepticism, a Somali National Reconciliation Congress is now due in Mogadishu on 16 July. It offers to reconcile the clans without which no national political reconciliation...


The cocaine web spreads

Latin America's druglords are doing multimillion dollar business with West Africa's military and their politician pals

From their heydays in Nigeria in the 1980s, Latin America's druglords are diversifying their business in Africa. Nigerian traders still play a key role: they are regarded as...


Warriors by proxy

With Somalia looking more settled, Ethiopia has been looking towards Eritrea, which it sees as the regional spoiler. On 8 June, Addis Ababa wrote to the United Nations...


The clock turns back

He came to power in 2005 with a reputation as a nationalist bruiser with hardline views and a dubious past of Marxist policies and human rights abuses. Since...


Post-war hopes hit trouble

A trip along the West African seaboard today might persuade an averagely optimistic traveller that life is getting better

Several countries have seen political progress with freer elections and freer newspapers. Many of the conflicts along the arc of crisis, which ran westwards from Abidjan towards Senegal's...



Pointers

All aboard

The new United States Africa Command (Africom) is not yet operational but the US Navy plans to put ships into the Gulf of Guinea before the formal start-up....


Unity? Who with?

The death of First Lady Ethel Mutharika on 28 May and the immediate proroguing of parliament led to an eerie calm: political foes briefly spoke to each other...


Sarko's team

New Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner has won his battle to keep development policy in his Ministry, rather than in the new Immigration Ministry under the right-wing Brice Hortefeux,...


Kivu clashes ahead

Fears are growing of a confrontation between the forces of General Laurent Nkunda and the government's Forces Armées Congolaises in North Kivu Province next month. We hear that...