Monday, April 16, 2012

VOA News: Africa: Ghana Police Arrest Legislator for ‘Law Breaking’ Rhetoric

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Ghana Police Arrest Legislator for 'Law Breaking' Rhetoric
Apr 17th 2012, 01:31

Ghana's deputy information minister has sharply denied the arrest of an opposition lawmaker is politically motivated.

James Agyenim Boateng said the Criminal Investigation Division (CID) of the police arrested Kennedy Ohene Agyepong Monday after the legislator declared war during a radio show on Friday. He reportedly called for war against those who allegedly attacked party supporters registering to vote.

Others say he allegedly called on opposition supporters to attack two ethnic groups who seem to support the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC).

Agyepong is the main opposition New Patriotic Party's (NPP) Member of Parliament for the Assin North constituency in the Central region. Agyepong, a businessman who also owns a radio and a television station in the Ghanaian capital, Accra, is an avowed critic of the administration.

"The arrest of [the lawmaker] has nothing political about it… He had gone on his own radio station to, in his own words, declare a war from today… he has called for the lynching of all Gas [people from Accra] and Ewes [people from the Volta region] in the Ashanti region."

"The laws of Ghana frown on that, and what we have done as a government is to activate the laws against any such pronouncements and declaration of war."

Boateng said the legislator had recently made similar remarks. He said the police invited Mr. Agyepong to question him about his behavior. They are also trying to ascertain the exact words he used during his interview.

"It is a very fluid situation. The police are looking at it, and that is why he has been called in."

Some supporters of the ruling party say the arrest of the outspoken lawmaker is a move by the government to silence critics. The deputy information minister disagrees.

"All of us as politicians ought to be accountable [within the parameters of the law] to our people and be responsible for our pronouncements," said Boateng.

"He is only being investigated at this point. I do believe that at the appropriate time, charges may be leveled against him, and he will have his day in court."

Those charges, says his attorney Atta Akyea, could include treason.

He said the arrest of his client is unwarranted, and that his remarks were misconstrued.

"He was trying to prompt the conscience of the nation that if we don't rise up to the occasion and deal with such instances of lawlessness the nation will be on the verge of chaos. And that he is declaring war [and] that we should rise up to the occasion and stem the tide of lawlessness and thuggery," said Akyea.

"I have a sense of fairness. If the police are fair, and there is nothing political about what they are doing my client should be administered bail because so far as I am concerned… he was talking metaphorically."

Akyea said his client just engages in "hard talk", which he said, is normal among Ghanaian politicians.

"For somebody's freedom of expression and also the way he does it to be convert into criminality, I'm afraid democracy is being [turned] upside down…I think this is a political jamboree that is not necessary."

He said the arrest of the lawmaker will incense supporters of the main opposition party and likely lead to demonstrations against Agyepong's detention.

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VOA News: USA: NASA: 'Good Chance' for Historic SpaceX Launch April 30

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
NASA: 'Good Chance' for Historic SpaceX Launch April 30
Apr 17th 2012, 01:27

The only spacecraft to travel to the International Space Station have been produced by nations, not commercial enterprises.  But that could change if a previously postponed launch takes place at the end of this month, as planned.  The Dragon would be the first commercial craft to ever fly to - and dock with - the ISS.  

Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA's associate administrator for Human Exploration and Operations, said there is a "good chance" that the Dragon capsule, built by SpaceX, will be launched at the end of this month.

"There's still some more work we need to do, some more software testing that needs to get done, some other activities," said Gerstenmaier. "Everything looks good as we head toward the April 30 launch date, but I would caution us all that there is still quite a bit of work that needs to be done."  

Gerstenmaier made the announcement during a news briefing at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, Monday afternoon, a few hours after NASA managers, SpaceX officials and space station partners completed a flight readiness review.  

The California-based company Space Exploration Technologies, commonly known as SpaceX, developed the reusable Dragon spacecraft and the Falcon 9 rocket. NASA is essentially the lead investor in this technology.

Gerstenmaier praised the partnership.

"I was very impressed with the discussion between the NASA teams and the SpaceX teams," he said. "When I hear the discussion back and forth, it's really one team. They're really focused on 'how do we deliver cargo to [the] space station? How do we get ready for this next phase?' And these teams have worked just phenomenally well together."

The main objectives for this flight include a fly-under of the station at a distance of 2.5 kilometers to show that the Dragon's sensors and flight systems are working properly. If everything appears to be in order, the space station crew will use the station's robotic arm to maneuver the spacecraft for a rendezvous.

Elon Musk is the chief executive officer and chief designer at SpaceX. He cautions that the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft are still relatively new technologies. Plus, Musk points out, the Dragon needs to meet up with an orbiting lab that is zooming around the Earth every 90 minutes.   

"So you've got to launch up there, you've got to rendezvous and be tracking the space station to within inches really, and this is something that is going 12 times faster than a bullet from an assault rifle, so it's hard," said Musk.

It was in December 2010 that the Dragon spacecraft made history when it became the first commercially made space capsule to ever launch into orbit, circle the world, and successfully re-enter the Earth's atmosphere.

NASA plans to hold another assessment next week to determine if the Dragon is ready to make history once again.

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VOA News: Africa: Sudan ‘At War’ With Neighbor, Says Ruling Party Official

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Sudan 'At War' With Neighbor, Says Ruling Party Official
Apr 17th 2012, 01:19

A prominent member of Sudan's ruling National Congress Party (NCP) says the country is officially in a state of war with South Sudan.

Rabie Abdelati Obeid condemned as unacceptable the "illegal invasion" of its territory after forces from South Sudan seized the key disputed oil town of Heglig. Obeid's comments came after Sudan's parliament unanimously voted to declare South Sudan an "enemy."

He said the people of the Republic of Sudan assign the same status to South Sudan's ruling party, the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM).

"They are now angry," he said, "since the invasion of Heglig…," where "the Sudanese Armed Forces are now chasing the remaining rebels … from corner to corner."

He says the government should take as tough a stance toward Juba as has Sudan's national assembly.

Obeid said the country's southern neighbor continues to foment trouble by refusing to withdraw from the disputed border town it seized.

"Their language is a language of war," said Obeid.

"How can we talk to those people in the language of peace, when they are against peace and stability? And they have now intentionally invaded an area which doesn't belong to them."

Violence has escalated along Sudan and South Sudan's border despite the United Nations Security Council's concerns about increasing conflict between the two neighbors.

Obeid said South Sudan has failed to abide by the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which effectively ended decades of war between the north and south.

"They are not respecting the CPA, and they don't understand [it]. Their mind is actually oriented to war…and their culture is completely, different from a culture of peace," said Obeid.

"There is no way now for talks unless we clean them out of the [Heglig] region...They started war; they invaded our area, and they distracted our localities. There is no way for any diplomacy."

South Sudan said it will only withdraw from the oil town if the United Nations intervenes.

The African Union, which was helping mediate talks between the two neighboring countries, condemned south Sudan's occupation of the town.

Obeid denied accusations that Sudan's army uses Heglig as a base to launch attacks on unarmed civilians.

"If we want to do so, we should not have [allowed them to have] self-determination and the referendum," he said, in reference to the ballot last year in which mostly Christian and black southerners voted to separate from the predominantly Arab and Muslim Republic of Sudan.

"Now we have clear evidence that they violated the peace, they violated the CPA, they invaded our area, they have committed a lot of mistakes and atrocities [and] they have caused a state of instability and insecurity.  [Theirs is] is the behavior of rebels, not …of a government."

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VOA News: Africa: World Bank Picks New President With Development Focus

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
World Bank Picks New President With Development Focus
Apr 17th 2012, 00:41

A prominent U.S. economist says poor countries throughout the world should benefit from the World Bank's pick of Jim Yong Kim as its new president.

Mark Weisbrot, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, highlighted Kim's achievements in increasing access to affordable HIV drugs in the developing world.

"When he was at the World Health Organization he fought very hard and won successfully…he fought to extend treatment for HIV and AIDS to 3 million people. I think it's now up to 7 million in poor countries. And that was a hard battle and he was very dedicated," said Weisbrot of Kim's past work.

The bank announced Kim as their new president on Monday. Kim, a Korean-American doctor, was a former director of the World Health Organization and a co-founder of global non-profit Partners in Health.

But amid the praise of Kim, some also expressed worries that the new bank chief has no experience in the financial sector.

"I think those critiques were not really valid," said Weisbrot. "Especially if you compare him to any of the past presidents who came from banking and finance, and who spent most of their adult life trying to get rich and powerful and you look at what he's done trying to help poor people."

Weisbrot said Kim will be able to rely on the bank staff to handle the details of the bank's finances, and he said the main thrust of the job is development work.

Kim won the post after an unprecedented challenge for the position from Nigeria's finance minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, and Colombia's former finance minister and development expert, Jose Antonio Ocampo.

In the bank's 68-year history, an American has always headed the institution, while the top job at its sister organization, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), traditionally goes to a European. But emerging economies have recently been contesting that informal arrangement at both the IMF and the World Bank and presenting their own candidates.

Kim's ascension was applauded by Weisbrot, and international aid agency Oxfam called him "an excellent choice," but both said it is time for the nomination process to change.

"Dr. Kim is an excellent choice for World Bank president and a true development hero.  But we'll never know if he was the best candidate for the job, because there was no true and fair competition," said Oxfam spokesperson Elizabeth Stuart in a statement released shortly after the announcement. "The world deserved better than a selection process with a forgone conclusion. Poor and emerging countries are insisting the Bank be more accountable and open in how it does business. This sham process has damaged the institution, and sullied Dr. Kim's appointment."

Weisbrot agreed it's time for an emerging economy to be given a shot at the World Bank's reins. "Of course, it's ridiculous that the U.S. should ever get to choose the head of the World Bank," he said. "The only reason they get away with it is that because the developing countries are not organized as any kind of a bloc within the bank."

He added a prediction: this could be the last time the US chooses the leader so easily.

Kim will begin his five-year tenure in July.

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VOA News: Africa: Report: Congo's Security Sector Reform is Vital

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Report: Congo's Security Sector Reform is Vital
Apr 16th 2012, 22:26

A new report directed by the U.S.-based Eastern Congo Initiative is calling for more political will inside the Democratic Republic of Congo and more help from outside to effectively reform the country's security sector, after years of failure.  The report is called "Taking a Stand on Security Sector Reform."

More than a decade after the official end of Congo's war, an estimated 1.7 million people remain displaced internally because of ongoing violence, mostly in the east of the country, while about half a million Congolese remain refugees in neighboring countries.

In eastern regions, gender-based violence and rape, the recruitment of child soldiers, militia and rebel activity, illegal mining and cross-border smuggling remain rampant.  The most recent election cycle was marred by violence across the country.

Despite large quantities of highly sought minerals used to make cell phones and laptops, the Democratic Republic of Congo remains 187th out of 187 countries on the United Nations Human Development Index.

A report released this week by the Eastern Congo Initiative and other groups, including Congolese civil society forums, says the main problem is Congo's security sector, which remains much more of a scourge than a help.

A conference in Washington Monday started with the release of a video by the founder of the Eastern Congo Initiative, American actor Ben Affleck.

"Armed groups continue to prey on Congolese families and their communities. Perhaps most troubling, they are not the sole violators of human rights," said Affleck. "The police, judiciary and most importantly the military are all too often perpetrators rather than protectors.  As a result, people suffer, investors are put off, the unemployed turn to militias to secure a living, and the cycle of violence continues."

The first speaker was Cindy McCain, wife of U.S. Senator John McCain. She has made several recent trips to Congo and joined forces with Affleck in terms of Congolese advocacy.  She also underlined the urgency of security sector reform.

"An effective security sector, organized, resourced and trained, is essential to solving problems from displacement, recruitment of child soldiers, and gender-based violence," she said.

The report calls on Congolese civil society to take charge of the issue, while demanding Congo's government carry out repeated promises of security sector reform with clear benchmarks.  It calls for a more unified structure and command of Congo's military, with more recruitment of women and underrepresented social groups, while ending the integration of militias.

The report says too little money, both channeled by Congo's government and coming from outside, is directed toward these types of reforms.  It says donors, who contribute about half of Congo's budget, have had poor coordination on the matter.

One of those acknowledging the many challenges, despite continued attention to the problem, is U.S. State Department official Karl Wycoff.

"We recognize that the DRC has struggled to make meaningful progress in the implementation of security sector reforms and has had little success holding security forces accountable for their human rights violations," said Wycoff.

He also says the Congolese government has failed in its many attempts to integrate former rebel fighters into the army.

Several Congolese audience members were angry the report focuses too much on eastern Congo and not on the entire country.  They also say the real problem is a lack of democracy and failed elections, which have twice returned President Joseph Kabila to power, since he took over after the 2001 assassination of his father, former coup leader Laurent Desire Kabila.

Albert Moleka is a spokesman for Etienne Tshisekedi, the current president's main political rival.  Moleka says he believes if the Democratic Republic of Congo had properly elected leadership, the country would not need outside help to reform its military.  Moleka says he was not impressed by current security reform efforts, which already include the United States, other governments and the United Nations.

A Congolese embassy spokesman, Yves Bashonga, denied there is a lack of political will with the current government in Kinshasa, but rather problems in how fast the reform is going and whether the right strategies are being employed.

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VOA News: Africa: Report: Al Qaida Finding Fertile Ground in Africa

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Report: Al Qaida Finding Fertile Ground in Africa
Apr 16th 2012, 21:01

<!--AV-->From eastern shores of Somalia to western borders of Mali, there has been an upsurge in Islamist violence across Africa.

A new report from Britain's Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) cites growing evidence that al-Qaida is expanding its reach via a network of affiliates and partnerships across the continent.

According to London-based security analyst Valentina Soria, author of "Global Jihad Sustained Through Africa," the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan is forcing the terror organization's central leadership to look beyond their traditional heartland.

"The aim is now for the central leadership to try to forge strategic relationships with like-minded groups in Africa ... like al-Shabab, and obviously strengthen the already existing relationship with AQIM, al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb," she says, adding that al Qaeda is also working with other terror organizations to secure stable footholds in volatile countries.

In Somalia, for example, where al-Shabab is active, Soria says al-Qaida's Islamist agenda is key to drawing in fighters who carry out increasingly sophisticated attacks on government forces and African Union peacekeepers.

"The first thing for these groups is the ability to attract recruits ... who may well be attracted by the more transnational aims that these groups [such as al Qaeda] might pursue, rather than the more localized agenda," she says.

Al-Qaida's African affiliates in turn provide expertise to localized Islamist groups. Boko Haram in Nigeria, for example, has recently staged a series of deadly attacks on Christian and government targets.

"There is the availability of experts going to provide some kind of expertise and know-how to Boko Haram fighters," she says, "and also Boko Haram fighters travelling to join training camps run by both al-Shabab and al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb."

Soria says recent conflicts in north and west Africa - such as the Tuareg rebellion in northern Mali - have provided more opportunities for militant groups to prosper.

"In Libya, for example, [we saw] the easy availability of weapons, which enabled groups like AQIM to strengthen themselves," she says, adding that the current crisis in Mali represents "fertile ground for al-Qaida to reorganize and re-energize its campaign against the West."

Richard Dowden, director of Britain's Royal African Society, says al-Qaida and its affiliates are bringing a different type of warfare to the continent.

"This phenomenon of having a religious movement, an Islamic movement, and letting off car bombs and things like that, is completely new," he says.

However, Dowden cautions against fears that all of Africa is vulnerable to Islamic insurgents such as Somalia's al-Shabab.

"I think [al-Shabab is] trying to establish this Islamic state, but I think that's completely different from what's happening in Nigeria, and different again from what's happening in Mali and across that area," says Dowden. "They're obviously influenced by Islamic fundamentalism but I don't think it's coordinated. They may be learning from each other but they're not working together."

While Islamist militant groups may pose a growing threat in places like Nigeria and Mali, analysts also warn of the potential for so-called "home-grown" terrorists to seek training and support in Africa for staging attacks in the West.

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VOA News: USA: Pentagon 'Embarrassed' by Alleged Misconduct in Colombia

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
Pentagon 'Embarrassed' by Alleged Misconduct in Colombia
Apr 16th 2012, 21:17

Pentagon officials say they are "embarrassed" about the alleged misconduct involving Secret Service members, military staff and prostitutes in Colombia.

The U.S. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, said in a press conference at the Pentagon Monday that the military arm "let the boss down" by causing a distraction to an important regional engagement for the president.  

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta added that it is a "requirement" for our forces to abide by the "highest standard."  He said that if found in violation, the people involved in the scandal will be held accountable.

Eleven Secret Service personnel who were stationed in Colombia ahead of President Barack Obama's visit were sent home and placed on administrative leave pending an investigation that involved prostitution.  At least five U.S. military staff assigned to support the Secret Service were confined to their barracks in Colombia after the allegations.

The alleged misconduct reportedly took place before Mr. Obama arrived in the resort city of Cartagena Friday for the sixth Summit of the Americas.

On Sunday, Mr. Obama cast the incident as isolated and praised the Secret Service as a whole.

He said agents who misbehave are vulnerable to blackmail and therefore could risk the security of those under their protection.

The Secret Service has said none of the personnel involved was assigned to protect Mr. Obama.

Media files:
AP_Leon_Panetta_480.jpg (image/jpeg, 0.1 MB)
AP_Leon_Panetta_230.jpg
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VOA News: Economy: American Wins Top World Bank Job - Again

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
American Wins Top World Bank Job - Again
Apr 16th 2012, 19:42

The new head of the World Bank is global health expert Dr. Jim Yong Kim, from the United States. While the president of the World Bank has always been an American, this time there was competition for the job by two highly-regarded candidates from developing nations. Kim brings a different approach than predecessors who were experts in foreign policy, business, banking or economics.

Kim obviously is a man of many talents.

Before his nomination to be president of the World Bank, he was president of Dartmouth College...

Where he played a comic role in a student musical.
<!--AV-->

More seriously, Kim also once headed United Nations' efforts to fight AIDS, founded a non-government organization that promotes healthcare around the world and taught at Harvard's schools of medicine and public health.  

In YouTube videos posted by Dartmouth College, Kim tells students a broad education can help them solve tough problems. His education includes degrees in medicine and anthropology.

"In all the problems that I've taken on, I have not come at it from a purely philosophical or political perspective, but at one level, I'm a very practically-oriented physician that's trying to solve problems so that people can live," said Kim.

In a preview of his approach at the World Bank, Kim analyzed the U.S. healthcare system, urged officials to focus on data and results, and called for a new approach.

"It is getting so bad that we think that finally there will be enough pressure so that we have to act. Unfortunately, for about the last 20 years, we have been saying that," said Kim.

Critics say the World Bank deals with far more than just health care and they question whether Kim has enough experience to boost global growth to pay for improved health care, education and infrastructure. One economist said the president of the World Bank needs to change its "feudal" culture and focus on core economic issues.

Anders Aslund of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, however, said Kim's experience running a college may be helpful.

"Because there you also have people that you can't sack [fire], institutions that you can't do away with very easily," he said.

Officials passed over Nigeria's highly-regarded finance minister to pick Kim. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said her years of work at the bank and life experience would have made her a strong leader for the world's largest development institution.

"It's not good enough to say you know about poverty. You have to live it to know what it means, and I did," said Okonjo-Iweala.

A development expert who also is Colombia's former finance minister, Jose Antonio Ocampo, also sought the top World Bank job.

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VOA News: Economy: US Consumer Spending Advanced in March

VOA News: Economy
Economy Voice of America
US Consumer Spending Advanced in March
Apr 16th 2012, 19:39

U.S. retail spending increased at a solid pace in March, an indication that consumer confidence is growing even as gasoline prices remain high.

Consumer spending drives about 70 percent of the U.S. economy, the world's largest. The government said Monday that retail sales advanced 0.8 percent last month, faster than economists had projected, but slightly less than the 1 percent gain in February.

The U.S. said its consumers spent more on home improvements, cars, electronics, furniture and clothing, as well as paying more for gasoline. Gas prices in the U.S. have risen to more than $1 a liter ($3.90 a gallon), which is less than in many other countries, but high by U.S. standards.

The increased consumer spending could signal that the American economy is growing at a faster pace than earlier predictions. It grew 3 percent in the last quarter of 2011. Some economists had projected slower growth in the January-to-March period this year. But some now think the early 2012 pace may come close to matching the end-of-year growth last year.

Some information for this report was provided by AP and Reuters.

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VOA News: USA: US Consumer Spending Advanced in March

VOA News: USA
USA Voice of America
US Consumer Spending Advanced in March
Apr 16th 2012, 19:39

U.S. retail spending increased at a solid pace in March, an indication that consumer confidence is growing even as gasoline prices remain high.

Consumer spending drives about 70 percent of the U.S. economy, the world's largest. The government said Monday that retail sales advanced 0.8 percent last month, faster than economists had projected, but slightly less than the 1 percent gain in February.

The U.S. said its consumers spent more on home improvements, cars, electronics, furniture and clothing, as well as paying more for gasoline. Gas prices in the U.S. have risen to more than $1 a liter ($3.90 a gallon), which is less than in many other countries, but high by U.S. standards.

The increased consumer spending could signal that the American economy is growing at a faster pace than earlier predictions. It grew 3 percent in the last quarter of 2011. Some economists had projected slower growth in the January-to-March period this year. But some now think the early 2012 pace may come close to matching the end-of-year growth last year.

Some information for this report was provided by AP and Reuters.

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VOA News: Africa: Some African Constitutions Give Voice to Grass Roots, Disenfranchised

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Some African Constitutions Give Voice to Grass Roots, Disenfranchised
Apr 16th 2012, 18:44

Nigeria and Ethiopia have adopted federal systems that allow citizens to elect their own representatives at the state and local levels. The states also have their own courts and can collect taxes for their own use.

<!--IMAGE-LEFT-->

Dele Olowu, a consultant on governance issues and president of the Africa-Europe Foundation based in The Hague [the Netherlands], said "The major responsibility of local governments," he said, "includes basic health services, basic education, rural roads and economic planning for the region, for their territorial space.  And of course water, sanitation...."

South Africa is divided into central, provincial and local levels, with the last two tiers enjoying a degree of autonomy from the national government. And, Kenya's 2010 constitution gives more power to new regional governments.

Olowu is optimistic about the future of federalism on the continent.

"The reason countries [have broken up] in Africa," he said, "is that...there was not enough autonomy within the federation.  So the force of federalism is inevitable in Africa because you have different groups of people, nation states in a sense with their own languages and cultures, and they need a modicum of autonomy (like Nigeria)."

Central control

Winluck Wahiu, the project manager of the Constitution-Building Process program at the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance in Stockholm, Sweden,  said new African leaders often talk about federalism, and some constitutions do experiment with greater local and regional autonomy.  But he said there's still widespread resistance to full federalism, which would entail greater legislative and judicial independence from the central government. Wahiu said even in Ethiopia, with 11 designated ethnic states, the rules still tend to protect officials in the capital who make policy and issue directives for the other tiers to carry out.

Among the areas often kept under tight central control are the economy, education, agriculture and security. Even parts of transport planning and infrastructure are often centralized.

Decentralization vs. federalism

Wahiu said it's more common for countries to try to decentralize services than give real power over decision-making or the budget. In such cases, the central government usually continues to cover the costs of the services.

Among those countries that have adopted policies to decentralize services are Botswana, Cameroon, Ghana, Tanzania and Mozambique. Tanzania allows local authorities to manage basic education, health, and water and sanitation.

"There is still a bit of shyness about [giving power to state or local government]," he said. "This is still part of the philosophy that…African state capacity is seen as weak. Holding the country together is seen as a priority for the political and military branches. And it is suspected at a political level that allowing autonomy at a local level might produce an incentive for the local level to stop listening to the center, and you [might] spur this dispersal of [centrifugal] forces."

Local participation

Federalism and decentralizing services are not the only ways of encouraging local involvement in politics.

Some constitutions support local government efforts to give citizens a direct say in prioritizing the services they need from limited funds.

Wahiu described one plan in Uganda that encourages citizens to help determine local budgets. It's an idea that he says originally came from Argentina and other Latin American countries.

"Essentially," he explained, "you sit together at the local level. You can even form a committee or a council. You say what your needs are, document them and pass on the documentation to state officials. They are obliged to take that into account when they submit their budgetary requests to the national governments. So this is a way of getting citizens to say what they need money for, according to their own priorities on the ground."

Wahiu expects African countries to continue to experiment with local level governance and make changes as needed.

Overlapping mandates

In some places, local, state and national powers seem contradictory and need to be clarified. He cited one case in South Africa, where the constitution insists on cooperation and coordination between different tiers of government, but also allows the provincial governments some freedom to decide how to implement national policy.

"In the health sector," he said, "the national government is committed to doing things to minimize HIV infection, and they've got a national policy. But the ministries cannot dictate priorities to the provincial and local government level or even direct how they use their budgets.

"So you have this reality that the local level is not implementing the national policy, or there is skewed implementation of national policy between one area and another, depending on the skills, level of education of the people who are employed at the different local levels. It creates a haphazard implementation of national policy."

New remedies

In some African countries, citizens may not have a direct say in allocation of funds and services. But efforts are underway to make it easier for them to petition the government for help with administrative problems.

For example, the constitutions of South Africa, Uganda and Kenya provide for the creation of anti-corruption and human rights commissions that will intercede on behalf of the public.

"The constitution practically removes fees,"  explained Wahiu. "You don't pay to access information from these bodies. [And], if you are poor and are not able to go to court, you can go to these commissions and file a complaint, and that body will use state money to try and investigate and give you a solution that works.

"The accessibility of these bodies is unique and different from accessibility of ordinary courts of laws. These bodies are also highly populist in the sense of their compositions. You find constitutions providing for representation of civil society in these bodies, which is unique, because you don't find representation of civil society in parliament or in the judiciary.

"To participate in a parliament," he continued, "you need to belong to a political party. But to participate in a human rights commission, you could be [a] political [activist], provided you are part of a civil society organization like a bar association, a women's group, or a farmers cooperative."

Enhancing women's participation

Increasing the numbers of women political representatives has also become a big constitutional issue.

Rwanda's constitution provides a quota for women and other groups in government. As a result, Rwanda has one of the highest numbers of women in parliament in Africa, nearly 50 % in the lower chamber.

Wahiu said Rwanda has similar rules for other organs of government.

"They've also created a constitutional forum called an Inter-Political Party Forum," he said, "whose job it is to discipline political parties so no party espouses what they call the ideology of genocide. So [in effect] the forum legitimizes the discourse political parties can have, the issues political parties can engage in and they also check that parties have national character – that their composition is not ethnic, age or gender exclusive."

Recently, Kenya has introduced a constitutional requirement to guarantee women's membership in parliament, the judiciary and other state organs.

African constitutions also encourage the inclusion of women and minorities in another important way. They now contain a number of international treaties and conventions on human rights, including the rights of women and indigenous people.

African democrats say the combination of structural reforms and progressive legislation should ensure the voices of the poor and disenfranchised are brought into government decision-making.

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VOA News: Europe: Freed Belarus Presidential Candidate: Lukashenko Only Responds to Pressure

VOA News: Europe
Europe Voice of America
Freed Belarus Presidential Candidate: Lukashenko Only Responds to Pressure
Apr 16th 2012, 19:00

Andrei Sannikov ran for president of Belarus in December 2010 against Alexander Lukashenko, ruler of Belarus since 1994. For his pains, Sannikov and six other presidential candidates were beaten by police and  jailed. On Saturday night, the eve of Orthodox Christian Easter, Sannikov was unexpectedly released from jail.

After 16 months in jail, Andrei Sannikov said Monday that he was literally blinking in the sunshine.

He spoke of his sudden reunion in Minsk with his wife, Irina, and their four year old son, Danil.

"Fantastic; that was something I waited for  so long, and I hoped - not every day, [but] every second - I hoped that it would happen, and finally it happened,"

Sannikov, a former deputy foreign minister, honed his English while working as a diplomat in New York. He said he fears for the 15 other political prisoners in Belarus, including one other former presidential candidate.

Sannikov was released early from a five-year sentence. He described the pressure of living in a high security prison, controlled by a security agency still called in Belarus, the KGB.

"It was really unbearable psychologically, and physically also," he said. "There was a lot of pressure on me, threats, pressure and for almost four months I was in [a] solitary cell."

As a politician, Sannikov led "European Belarus." He said Belarus should look west and join the European Union. As leader of a cause popular among young people in this Central European nation, he said he felt that his life was always in danger in prison.

He said the most frightening times came when he was locked in prison railroad cars with criminals and moved from prison to prison.

"You can expect anything there because you are not controlling the situation," he said. "You are absolutely helpless. They could plant with you any criminal with whatever intentions or instructions. It was really very dangerous situation. You have to be on guard 24 hours a day."

While Sannikov was in prison, President Alexander Lukashenko moved closer to Russia, receiving loans that saved Belarus from falling into a deep recession.

In the West, European countries saw no progress on human rights. They withdrew all their ambassadors and tightened sanctions against Lukashenko regime officials.

Sannikov praised the European Union for following Washington's lead and adopting a tough sanctions policy.

He said the West should treat the Lukashenko government the way it once treated the Soviet Union.

"It was based on principle," said Sannikov. "So we have to base our policy, our activity here, in Belarus, on principle, and the West, the democratic world in general, has to base their policy on principle."

He said that the beating and jailing of almost all the opposition presidential candidates exposed to Europeans the clearly dictatorial nature of the Lukashenko government.

"Before, the regime was pretending that we are not a totalitarian state, that there is a kind of democracy here in Belarus, that the West does not understand," he said. "But on the 19th of December 2010, the regime declared itself a dictatorship and we are facing all the consequences now."

After watching Alexander Lukashenko rule Belarus for 18 years, Sannikov said the only language the dictator responds to is pressure. 


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VOA News: Middle East: Syria Cease-fire Poses New International Challenges

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
Syria Cease-fire Poses New International Challenges
Apr 16th 2012, 19:24

The Syrian government's decision to partially implement the peace plan endorsed by the Arab League and the United Nations creates new challenges for world and regional leaders.

The cease-fire in Syria largely took hold last Thursday, but only briefly.  Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have resumed some shelling of opposition strongholds, and the government's tanks and troops did not pull out of cities and towns, as the plan requires.  United Nations truce observers have begun to arrive in Syria.  But Western officials, and analysts like Nyresa Cama of the Janusian Risk Advisory Group, do not expect the relative calm to last very long.

"I don't think there's really any strong evidence that we can point to that the Assad government has been convinced to go down a different route than the one it's been going down," Cama said.

And that creates some interesting questions for the international community.

"I think the West really has to make up its mind what level of intervention it wants to stage in Syria, if any," Cama said.

Western governments say they have no intention of intervening, even if the cease-fire breaks down.  But some Arab governments, notably Saudi Arabia, want to arm the Syrian opposition.  
The Saudis have become leading opponents of President Assad, in part to appear to champion a popular rebellion, says retired British diplomat Michael Williams.  And he says the Saudis also want to put pressure on their chief rival, Iran, a key Assad ally.

"If the Assad regime was to fall, this would be an enormous blow for Iran.  And Saudi Arabia feels very strongly now that this is the time for change," Williams said.

The other key countries in the Syrian conflict are China and Russia, which have vetoed two resolutions at the United Nations Security Council.  

China generally opposes international intervention as a matter of principle.

Russia particularly needs Syria, its closest friend in the Middle East and home to its only naval facility outside the former Soviet Union.

Experts say if the Assad government abandons the peace plan and ends the ceasefire, China and especially Russia will come under pressure to change their policies.

"If it violates the ceasefire, that puts Russia in a difficult position and it leaves the U.S. and its allies on the Security Council in a much stronger position to try and push through the type of Security Council resolution we were looking at a few months ago," Cama said.

But Michael Williams believes China may come around to the Western position, because it needs to worry about its relationships throughout the Middle East.

"I think a key target of Western diplomacy, frankly, should be to try and peel away China from its agreement with Russia on Syria," Williams said.

Experts have little confidence the Arab League and United Nations peace plan, initiated by special envoy Kofi Annan, will actually result in a diplomatic solution.  

But humanitarian officials are hoping to use any break in fighting to deliver aid to hard hit civilian areas.  And experts say changes in the international equation could produce enough pressure, over some additional months, to convince President Assad to resign.

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VOA News: Middle East: Turkey's Role in Iran Nuclear Talks Could Diminish

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
Turkey's Role in Iran Nuclear Talks Could Diminish
Apr 16th 2012, 19:08

The latest talks on Iran's controversial nuclear program, held in Istanbul April 14, were viewed as productive by the participants. But analysts say Turkey's role as a facilitator has weakened due to Iran's growing unhappiness with Turkish foreign policy, especially its call for regime change in Syria.  

In the past, Turkey defended what it called Iran's peaceful nuclear energy program and even voted against U.N. sanctions on Iran two years ago. But Turkey's relationship with Iran has changed, as it began aligning itself with its Western allies on a series of issues.

Richard Howitt is a member of the European Parliament's committee on Turkey. "Turkey has come back into line on Iran. Turkey really lost some trust on the Iran issue and suffered in public relations terms by its opposition to sanctions, which frankly we worked very hard for at the U.N. and EU," he said.

A factor in Turkey's changing role is Syria, an important regional ally of Tehran.

The once-warm relations between Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Syrian President Bashar al- Assad have deteriorated steadily over the past year due to Syria's violent crackdown on the opposition. The Turkish government's strong support for Syria's opposition has angered Iran.

This was reflected last week when Iran tried to change the venue for the P5+1 talks away from Istanbul. Mr. Erdogan shot back with a terse statement saying "because of the lack of honesty, Iran is "continually losing its international prestige."

In the end, Istanbul did host the talks, but Iran and the other parties agreed to hold another round in Baghdad next month.

Soli Ozel at Turkey's Kadir Has University says that despite the chill in relations, Tehran still sees Ankara as being useful. "Iran still needs Turkey's good offices because it is the only country that really, really tries very hard for a political solution," he said.

In addition, Turkey gets about 80 percent of its natural gas and more than half of its oil from Iran and Russia, a key Iranian ally.  And that, Ozel says, should reassure Iran that Turkey isn't about to make any rash moves.

Some critics say Turkey may have lost its role as a facilitator on Iran's nuclear issue. But diplomatic correspondent Semih Idiz for the Turkish newspaper Milliyet says there still remains a potentially important future role for Ankara. "The Iran talks seem to be going sufficiently with their own steam. But when you read the small print, the sides are clinging to their positions. So if there is need for a country with clear and open channels with both sides, then possibly there is some role that  Turkey can play," he said.

Iran's next meeting with the U.N. Security Council's five permanent members plus Germany will be in Baghdad in May.  

The talks are expected to focus on the complex and difficult issues of persuading Tehran to agree to measures that will reassure the international community that Iran is not using its nuclear energy program to develop weapons.  

Tehran has already called for an easing of international sanctions in exchange for such moves. Many analysts say reconciling the opposing demands is expected to be difficult.

Media files:
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IRAN_ISTANBUL.jpg
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