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Published 5th August 2016

Vol 57 No 16


Nigeria

Juicier carrots, heavier sticks

Niger Delta Map Copyright © Africa Confidential 2016
Niger Delta Map Copyright © Africa Confidential 2016

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The deepening crisis in the Niger Delta is now the most serious threat to the government's plans for economic revival

This month's announcement that the government is to resume payments to former militants in the Niger Delta is by any measure a victory for the myriad gangs and activists who have been attacking oil production facilities this year. The arithmetic is straightforward. The government had been planning to cut in half the US$200 million a year amnesty programme for ex-militants, launched by the previous government under President Goodluck Jonathan. It was then to end the payments entirely in 2017. Yet a full-scale revival of militant attacks in the Delta could cost the government several billion dollars in lost revenue and other costs.

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The scramble for the spoils

Western policy looks confused and contradictory, while the UN stands accused of giving in to blackmail 

The political process set up by the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) has buckled under the weight of the country's multiple divisions, leaving Western governments c...


Unending flow of Cashgate

More and more prominent names are coming into prosecutors' sights but their political masters are applying the brakes

The conviction on 21 July of former Justice Minister Ralph Kasambara for conspiracy to murder is not just a victory for Malawian justice but a major morale boost for those prosecut...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

A year before next year's general elections, Angola is balanced between a 'promising' and a 'problematic state', according to Abel Chivukuvuku, leader of an opposition coalition which claims to be the country's fastest growing political movement, the Convergência Ampla de Salvação de Angola-Coligação Eleitoral. A former lieutenant of long-time rebel leader Jonas Sav...

A year before next year's general elections, Angola is balanced between a 'promising' and a 'problematic state', according to Abel Chivukuvuku, leader of an opposition coalition which claims to be the country's fastest growing political movement, the Convergência Ampla de Salvação de Angola-Coligação Eleitoral. A former lieutenant of long-time rebel leader Jonas Savimbi, who was killed in 2002, Chivukuvuku founded CASA-CE in 2012 in a bid to break Angola's political logjam.

As economic pressures mount, the governing MPLA lacks the money to win over the electors, said Chivukuvuku at London's Chatham House think-tank on 1 August. Recent clashes between supporters of the MPLA and UNITA point to a resurgence of rivalries as the political payola machine grinds to a halt. In Benguela, UNITA activists disarmed the police and used their weapons against them. Nonetheless, UNITA has been coopted into the post-war political system and is unlikely to revert to military opposition, Chivukuvuku says.

Halting the economic slide is the problem for the MPLA, adds Chivukuvuku, and its congress on 17-20 August will see fresh demands for a more equitable share-out of state resources. Some of that pressure will be directed towards President José Eduardo dos Santos and family, after he announced this year his plans to retire from politics in 2018, just after the elections. The problem with that, says Chivukuvuku, is there is no trusted successor in waiting.

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Racing to the finish

While the President cracks down on critics, defectors back his rival and try to bring their ethnic support with them

The electoral return match on 11 August between President Edgar Lungu of the governing Patriotic Front (PF) and Hakainde Hichilema of the United Party for National Development (UPN...


Riek rival boosts Salva

An internal party coup against Riek Machar complicates efforts to get the peace deal back on track

The replacement of First Vice-President (FVP) Riek Machar Teny Dhurgon by his former chief negotiator with the government, Taban Deng Gai, on 23 July has thrown regional and intern...


Fear stalks the law

The recent extrajudicial killings intimidate lawyers and seems designed to deter law suits over police brutality

The gruesome murder of human rights advocate Willie Kimani, his client Josphat Mwenda, a victim of police abuse, and their taxi driver, Joseph Muiruri, has added lawyers to the lon...



Pointers

Signing bonus

Kenya is urging its East African Community counterparts to return to the table in a bid to rescue the EAC's proposed Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the European Union. T...


Nkosazana's trial balloon

The Youth League of the African National Congress in KwaZulu-Natal has fired the first salvo in the 2017 ANC succession race. It has publicly backed the outgoing African Union Comm...


Run-off wrangle

For the first time since the country's democratic transition in 1991, the losers of an election have claimed the vote was rigged and refuse to recognise the official results. The s...


It's fine by the AU

The man who was Guinea's Acting President before the 2010 elections that brought Alpha Condé to office, General Sékouba Konaté, has kept an important African Union job despite bei...