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Published 6th August 2020

Vol 61 No 16


Zimbabwe

Mnangagwa in search of enemies

Emmerson Mnangagwa. Pic: UN Photo/Rick Bajorna
Emmerson Mnangagwa. Pic: UN Photo/Rick Bajorna

After two years of dangerous drift, military officers and state officials are covertly talking to oppositionists about the President’s exit and a transitional authority

The extraordinary morning broadcast by President Emmerson Mnangagwa on 4 August reinforced the national sense that his legitimacy is eroding as fast as the value of Zimbabwean dollar. Heading a government which has detained some of the region's best novelists and journalists, abducted and tortured opposition activists, Mnangagwa warned citizens about 'the bad apples that have attempted to divide our people. Good shall triumph over evil.'

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In virus veritas

Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma. Pic: GCIS
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma. Pic: GCIS

The Covid-19 pandemic is revealing some uncomfortable truths about the country’s politics as the pressures and dangers increase

Most accept that the ruling African National Congress and President Cyril Ramaphosa started the pandemic well. The President masked up immediately and has stayed masked, unlike man...


In Edo, all politics is national

Still from Daily Nigerian on YouTube
Still from Daily Nigerian on YouTube

State elections next month in the heart of what was once West Africa’s biggest empire is testing the coherence of the country’s two main parties

Last month, a massive new video screen appeared at the busiest intersection in Benin City, centre of a once towering kingdom and now capital of Edo state. Where the region's most f...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

The future of the International Criminal Court is in question again as it tries to choose a successor to the prosecutor Fatou Bensouda. The United States, although it has never joined the ICC, stepped up its attacks on the court this year, barring its officials from US territory and threatening 'sanctions' against them should they investigate US nationals. Distrust of the ICC may be a rare point of convergence between African governments and President Trump's administration.

Some...

The future of the International Criminal Court is in question again as it tries to choose a successor to the prosecutor Fatou Bensouda. The United States, although it has never joined the ICC, stepped up its attacks on the court this year, barring its officials from US territory and threatening 'sanctions' against them should they investigate US nationals. Distrust of the ICC may be a rare point of convergence between African governments and President Trump's administration.

Some African countries would support the court more if they could reform it. There are candidates for its top post of prosecutor from Nigeria and Uganda, as well as Ireland and Canada.

Relations between the ICC and Africa have thawed since 2016 when a handful of countries, including South Africa and Gambia, announced plans to withdraw from the Court, then abandoned them. Bad blood lingers from when leaders from across the continent accused the ICC of neo-colonialism and targeting African leaders.

Kenya's Ambassador to the Hague was the first to reject of the proposed candidates on the grounds that they lack 'managerial and diplomatic experience'. Nairobi's stance dates back the ICC's failed attempts to prosecute President Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto for involvement in the violence that followed the 2007 presidential elections. Convention suggests that the successor to Bensouda cannot come from the same region but there are hints that African leaders will play hardball. The court's members have until December to choose a successor.

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Fury greets Gertler report

The mining billionaire denies any link to online abuse aimed at an investigative consortium’s report on money-laundering and grand corruption

Early last month, a joint investigation by news media and NGOs claimed mining magnate Dan Gertler had set up a money-laundering ring which apparently allowed him to evade United St...


Pandemic prospects

Cases are increasing rapidly but lockdown policies have been easing and there is little public or political appetite to tighten them again

With Covid-19 positive cases doubling in the last two weeks, Africa is expected to notch up its millionth patient in the coming days. 'We are at a pivotal point,' said Dr Matshid...


The Presidents' club backs Keïta

An emergency summit has given full backing to the President but leaves grave doubts about his chances of forming a national unity government

The 27 July online summit of West African leaders has given full, emphatic backing to President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta (IBK) in his confrontation with the opposition and threatened...


Realpolitik, with plenty of guns

The government and many armed groups say a ground-breaking peace deal is possible within weeks. But they are yet to convince the sceptics

Suleiman al Dabailo, chairman of Sudan's Peace Commission, is talking up the progress made in power-sharing negotiations between the transitional government and the armed groups fr...


Groaning about zoning

A proposal that the President's election should be based wholly on merit – not rotation between north and south – has caused a storm

Politicians and pundits in Nigeria have shown a rare unanimity in outrage at comments by Mamman Daura, widely regarded as President Muhammadu Buhari's most influential advisor, abo...


Rivals fight for control of Sirte

A test of strength over Gadaffi’s home town and local oil assets threatens to become a regional war pitting Turkey against Egypt

The conflict in Libya started as a civil war, became a proxy war, and is mutating again as it reaches a potential new watershed. With battle lines now drawn up around Sirte, home t...


Clearing a path

Farmajo sacked his premier for not supporting his plan to postpone fair elections further and prolong his time in office

Prime Minister for over three years, Hassan Ali Khaire was unceremoniously sacked on 25 July after an overwhelming parliamentary vote of no-confidence. EU External Affairs Commissi...



Pointers

From a grateful nation

Not content with being among the world's best-paid politicians, Kenyan lawmakers have ensured that their predecessors are also amply rewarded for their service. On 5 August, after ...


Polls boss row

Two years after bitterly disputed and tight presidential elections, political leaders have divided along party lines over the appointment of the National Electoral Commission's (NE...


Plenipotentiary redundancy

Benin is planning to close 24 of its 27 embassies around the world in the second major retrenchment of the country's diplomatic corps since President Patrice Talon took office, Afr...


From debt to aid

Members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said in April that they would 'strive to protect aid budgets' in the wake of Covid-19. Many civil society acti...