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Published 17th April 2009

Vol 50 No 8


South Africa

Zuma's surprise package

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures
Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

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The coming presidency will face the hard times with some unexpectedly right-wing measures and boosted security services

Jacob Zuma's inevitable ascent to the presidency has been achieved at considerable cost. The governing African National Congress has been absorbed for the last year in faction-fighting, dealing with defections, quashing Zuma's corruption charges and bullying the National Prosecution Authority to drop the case. The result was a legal mess: the NPA cited its receipt of illegal intercepts (see Pointer) as its reason for dropping the case but failed to explain why its top investigators had been working on the Zuma case for the past four years - unless they too were part of a political plot. For Zuma, it is mission accomplished. The main project now is to run the government.


The Mills grind slowly

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

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Under attack from his own party as well as the opposition, the President strives to shape his government

To mark his hundredth day in office on 17 April President John Evans Atta Mills gave his government eight out of ten for trying to fight corruption, protect...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

The pirates operating in the Gulf of Aden are maintaining a tradition of marine gangsterism that dates back to the 14th century, according to the journals of Moroccan traveller and scholar Ibn Battuta. Then as now international power relations were in flux. In 1991, the outgoing Republican administration under United States President George Bush bequeathed to Democratic President Bill Clinton a commitment to deploy troops to distribute aid and stabilise Somalia. In January 2009, another ou...
The pirates operating in the Gulf of Aden are maintaining a tradition of marine gangsterism that dates back to the 14th century, according to the journals of Moroccan traveller and scholar Ibn Battuta. Then as now international power relations were in flux. In 1991, the outgoing Republican administration under United States President George Bush bequeathed to Democratic President Bill Clinton a commitment to deploy troops to distribute aid and stabilise Somalia. In January 2009, another outgoing Republican administration under another President Bush bequeathed to another Democratic President, Barack Obama, a commitment to attack the USA’s enemies on land in Somalia and offshore. The US backed a Security Council resolution to prepare a mandate for the return of United Nations peacekeepers to Somalia by 15 April and a decision on deployment by 1 June. Wary of another repeat – the US lost 18 soldiers in Somalia in 1993 – US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice is unenthusiastic about the UN plan. This week’s spectacle of the USS Bainbridge, a destroyer with Tomahawk missiles, confronting a Somali dhow sums up the new asymmetric warfare. This issue will be to the fore at a 22-23 April conference on Somalia in Brussels to be attended by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and his Special Representative, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah. Top of the agenda is security and the need to tackle the scourge of piracy; the risk is that the land-bound causes of piracy will be again ignored.
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Une affaire de famille

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Pointers

Integrity in question

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Hamas and Hezbollah

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His father's son

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