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Published 26th April 2013

Vol 54 No 9


Nigeria

Opposition on all fronts

WARRI: A militant fighter. George Osodi / Panos
WARRI: A militant fighter. George Osodi / Panos

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

A new political alliance to confront President Jonathan is gathering pace as security conditions – north and south – deteriorate

The newly united opposition parties – the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) – have joined forces to condemn soldiers for what human rights groups are calling a massacre of 180 civilians at Baga, Borno State, this week. Several days of fierce fighting between troops and Boko Haram militants followed efforts by President Goodluck Jonathan’s government to negotiate an amnesty deal with the Islamist militia. Although Brigadier General Austin Edokpaye reported six civilians and 30 Boko Haram fighters killed in a firefight at Baga, in the north-east, Senator Maina Ma’aji Lawan of Borno North said 180-200 civilians had been killed. Opposition politicians blame government and army commanders for the death and destruction.


A tough one hundred days

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President Mahama says his government has been denied the six-month honeymoon his predecessors enjoyed

The economic and political prospects may be bright in the medium term but on 17 April John Dramani Mahama reached his first 100 days in office without much to celebrate. Benefits f...


On live TV, a swarm of lawyers

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On 16 April, the Supreme Court began hearings on the petition from the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) to annul John Mahama’s victory in December’s presidential election. This...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

The alacrity with which the United Nations Security Council approved the financing of a 12,600-strong peacekeeping force for Mali on 26 April shows France’s residual diplomatic clout. In mid-December, the UNSC turned down a similar request for money from the African Union. A month later, France sent some 4,000 troops to drive out jihadists from northern Mali in response to a request from Bamako. The AU rais...

The alacrity with which the United Nations Security Council approved the financing of a 12,600-strong peacekeeping force for Mali on 26 April shows France’s residual diplomatic clout. In mid-December, the UNSC turned down a similar request for money from the African Union. A month later, France sent some 4,000 troops to drive out jihadists from northern Mali in response to a request from Bamako. The AU raised nearly US$500 million for some 8,000 African soldiers to fight alongside the French.

Now Paris wants an exit strategy and the UN has provided one, with no serious opposition from the Permanent Five or the three African members, Morocco, Rwanda and Togo. Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin cautioned the UN about taking more combative stances and foregoing attempts at neutrality.

The Mission intégrée des Nations unies pour la stabilisation au Mali is to start operations on 1 July: with a budget of $800 million it will be the UN’s third biggest peacekeeping force after Congo-Kinshasa and Sudan’s Darfur. However, in deference to Russia and China, the UNSC stipulated that the force should have a peacekeeping not peace enforcement or counter-terrorism role. In much of Mali’s north, there is no peace to keep. Although the jihadists have been chased out of the main towns, they have launched an insurgency against French and the African troops. That will not change soon, certainly not by July, when President Dioncounda Traoré’s government is due to hold elections.

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Rise of the professionals

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Tactics but no strategy

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Clean sweep slows down

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Debt deal scandal revives

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The Abalone list

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The fight for Mount Simandou

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Patience snaps over IMF

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Pointers

Kivu talks impasse

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Progress but...

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Law suits unravel

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