NEPAL: Militarising or Demilitarising?

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, November 05, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Rita Manchanda

KATHMANDU, Nov 5 (IPS) – Fighting a decade long ‘People’s War’ for the revolutionary transformation of a feudal monarchy meant that the Maoists had to militarise Nepali society, including women and youth.

However, even after the Communist Party of Nepal -Maoist (CPN-M) was popularly elected to power, following the April elections to the constituent assembly, it seems reluctant to disband the paramilitary Youth Communist League (YCL).

Indeed Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, who has been under pressure to dismantle the YCL, has instead applauded its contributions. In his first statement elaborating his government’s policies, he said: ‘’Had there been no organisation like the YCL, the peace process and the new political process would have been impossible.”

The CPN-M’s communist partner in the coalition government, the Nepal Communist Party-UML (United Marxist Leninist ) or NCP-UML, needed little prodding to launch its own clone, the Youth Force (YF).

Not to be left behind, all the leading political parties, that till recently had been berating the YCL for ”taking the law into their own hands”, are now scrambling to form their own groups.

The leaders of the centrist Nepali Congress, which has long dominated Nepal’s democratic politics, may decry the YCL, but have been encouraging the formation of the Tarun Dasta out of its youth wing in the districts.

The result has been violent clashes among the various youth forces, but most especially between the YCL and the YF. In September traffic was disrupted on the major Dharan- Danuta highway for nearly a week and a curfew had to be imposed on Dankuta Bazzar to contain violence between the two forces over road tax collection.

Even the current agitation around efforts to regulate Nepal’s famous Casinos, has a turf war angle, with leaders of the YF saying they are competing for space with the dominant TCL cadres.

With tensions growing, on Nov 2, the two communist ruling partners constituted a high level coordination committee to iron out differences. A major item on the agenda is to look into the reasons for the clashes between the YCL and YF and how to prevent them.

But it is unlikely that there will be any roll back to establishing the youth orgnaisations, going by the sporadic and contradictory statements made by political authorities about disbanding these forces that seem to be above the law.

”You’d expect that post conflict peace building would see demilitarisation,” said Prof. Sridhar Khatri of South Asia Policy Studies, a respected think tank. ”Instead, what we’re seeing is a new militarisation. We should focus on strengthening the rule of law, not undermining it.”

YCL emerged as an ubiquitous force during the political uncertainty of the 2006-8 transition that brought the Maoists into the democratic mainstream and made Nepal a republic. It was created in November 2006 after the signing of the historic Comprehensive Peace Agreement which entailed confinement in cantonments of the Maoists’ Peoples Liberation Army (PLA).

But several PLA commanders and commissars were transferred to the YCL, including its head Ganesh Man Pun. According to Pun, the YCL has a strength of 500,000 members and 6,000 ‘whole timers’.

YCL has been spearheading social service activities. These cover traffic management, garbage clearance, tree planting, delivering social justice, carrying out anti-corruption drives, collecting taxes and ‘donations’, apprehending criminal offenders and seizing ‘royal’ properties.

While Maoist minister Hsila Yami, praised the YCL cadres for assisting her in implementing change against a status quo bureaucracy, the Kathmandu-centric media was full of YCL’s abuses such as kidnapping, intimidation and physical assault of opponents. The U.N. Office of the Commissioner for Human Rights (OCHR) in Nepal has lent its voice against YCL excesses.

During the elections political parties had accused the YCL of using muscle power to disrupt meetings and intimidate voters. The Kathmandu elite was convinced that the Maoists’ landslide victory in the elections was a ‘stolen victory’.

This persisting belief may explain why political parties are creating their own youth squads. Defending the YF, UML’s Raghuji Pant said: ‘’It’s to make sure that they (YCL) won’t rig and win the next elections”.

Mahesh Basnet, the head of YF asserted: ‘’We are not like YCL. We will operate within the law. We will act as a deterrent to the terror and intimidation of the YCL”.

Nepal’s Human Rights Commission has appealed to the major political parties to ”immediately stop violating of human rights by taking the law into their own hands”.
However, far from curtailing their activities, Home Minister Bamdev Gautam has asked youth organisations to help nab criminals and restore law and order.

Dhirendra Raj Pandey, a key civil society player in the 2006 people’s democratic upsurge, finds this trend totally unacceptable. ”I didn’t expect this irrationality from the political parties. When they should be institutionalising democratic structures they are setting up these armed youth forces.”

OBAMA:DANGERS OF INDO-PAK RE-HYPHENATION

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Copyright © B. Raman – South Asia Analysis Group
www.southasiaanalysis.org

B.RAMAN

The Presidential campaign is over. The transition drill has begun. Senator Barrack Obama will take over as the President only on January 20 next, but his immense work as the President-elect would have already begun from the moment he left the dais after making the victory speech to his followers and supporters.

2.The Americans call it the period of transition. It is during this period that the President-elect chooses his team of Cabinet members and senior officials, decides on his policy priorities and works out his goals during the first 100 days of his administration and thereafter. Those, who would constitute the hard core of his transition team, would start co-ordinating with the outgoing Bush administration.

3. Senior officials of the US Secret Service, which protects the President and the Vice-President, would have already called on him and set in place the arrangements for his security. Other officials of the Bush Administration would be calling on him and his close advisers to keep them briefed on the actions of the outgoing administration.
[Read more...]

RIGHTS-COLOMBIA: Army Chief Steps Down

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Constanza Vieira

BOGOTA, Nov 4 (IPS) – General Mario Montoya stepped down as Colombia’s army chief, putting an end to his career Tuesday. The general is under investigation by the attorney general’s office, although he has not yet been charged.

”I have been in the service of my country for 39 years and today I can say that the journey has come to an end,” Montoya said in a brief statement to reporters.

The annual announcement of armed forces officers who are retiring is due Wednesday, and local analysts believe Montoya wanted to quit before he was forced into retirement, to preserve his image.

Montoya was widely regarded as a hero for the successful Jul. 2 operation in which the army managed to rescue former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, three U.S. military contractors and 11 members of the police and military who were held hostage for years by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas.
[Read more...]

LEBANON: Another Rupture Sealed, For Now

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Mona Alami

BEIRUT, Nov 3 (IPS) – Over the past few months, Tripoli, a large harbour city sitting on Lebanon’s northern shores, known for its mazy souks, century-old mansions and oriental sweets, has made front page headlines, falling prey to a series of deadly security threats. Following the recent political reconciliation between warring politicians, however, the army made headway towards establishing stability by infiltrating a terrorist cell accused of orchestrating attacks against the Lebanese army.

In the presence of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, leaders of Tripoli’s various factions last month agreed a reconciliation agreement at the residence of Sheikh Malek Chaar, Mufti of Tripoli and North Lebanon. The document’s ratification put an end to four months of spiralling violence between the Alawite minority living in the Baal Mohsen area, also known as Jabal Mohsen, and Sunni communities from the adjacent impoverished neighbourhood of Bab el-Tebbaneh. The Alawites are a Shia sect.

The agreement was signed by Sunni and Future movement leader Saad Hariri, son of slain premier Rafik Hariri who was killed in a bomb blast in 2005 that is largely attributed to Syria. It was endorsed by pro-Syrian Alawite leader Rifaat Al-Assad and his son, Ali Eid. Siniora declared while signing the document that “Tripoli should be a demilitarised city, free of gunmen and any military presence.”

He went on to underline that the army and security forces have been ordered to enforce law and order. Hariri also attempted to reassure the public by pledging that the state will meet the needs of victims of the violence.

An army source interviewed by IPS, who chose to remain anonymous because of the sensitivity of the issue, admitted that “power struggles among the different factions in the north have temporarily ebbed since the reconciliation.” But he said that while money flowing into Tripoli will help relieve pressure in the shanty towns sprawling around the city, the issue of weapons, which abound in the northern capital, remains unresolved. The source said the Alawites are still in possession of large stockpiles of weapons received from Syria, while weapons are also found in many Sunni households.

The fractured Lebanese government has yet to address the issue of weapons, and restoring the peace in Tripoli has proved a complex exercise in cooperation. The Lebanese pro-Western and Arab parliamentary majority — comprised of the Future movement, the Druze Progressive Socialist party as well as the Christian Phalangists and Lebanese Forces — has been engaged in intense rivalry since the death of Rafik Hariri with the pro-Iranian and Syrian minority dominated by the Shia Hezbollah and Amal parties, which are allied to the Christian Free Patriotic movement.

In spite of both blocks forming a unity government in July, and Tripoli’s allegiance to the majority leadership, the dissention between the two factions, though condemned officially by all sides, has translated into intermittent eruptions of violence in the northern city. The area was shaken by two terrorist attacks that targeted the army on Aug. 13 and Sep. 29, resulting in 21 deaths.

“There was a definite breakdown of power in the North, with every small faction taking over a neighbourhood and imposing its own law, with individual feuds being exploited by various political factions and taking on a sectarian dimension,” said the army source.

However, political factions seem to have finally reached a consensus. “The resulting collaboration between the various intelligence services has allowed the crackdown on a terrorist cell accused of the bombings, which, according to information provided to me, was operating independently,” said Future movement MP Moustapha Allouch.

Islamist factions close to the minority added, however, that fear of possible Syrian intervention in the north under the banner of support to the Alawite community, or a possible quelling of the Salafist movements (a radical faction of Islam) as well as pressure from foreign countries allowed for the crackdown. Syria, Lebanon’s immediate neighbour to the north, ruled by an Alawite minority, has historically suppressed Islamic movements, and Tripoli is known to be home to various fundamentalist factions.

On Oct. 13, members of the terrorist group allegedly involved in the recent bombings targeting the army in northern Lebanon were arrested, according to a statement released by the Lebanese army.

“Tensions have been diffused to a certain extent since the intervention of the High Relief Commission (HCR), which is handling the compensation of victims of violence in Tripoli and has beefed up its staff working on the relief effort from four to ten committees. However, the lengthy process has frustrated some citizens,” said Allouch.

The MP pointed out that the fragile reconciliation process could still be jeopardised by the activity of foreign intelligence services — namely, Syria. But for now, the decrease in the number of men in fatigues roaming the streets is a refreshing sight.

ECONOMY-BRAZIL: Crisis Delays Threat of ‘Venezuelan Disease’

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Mario Osava

RIO DE JANEIRO, Nov 4 (IPS) – The global financial crisis has corrected the extreme overvaluation of Brazil’s local currency, caused by the policies of its Central Bank, thus temporarily chasing away fears of “Dutch disease”, which in the developing world could well be called “Venezuelan disease”.

The change of name for this particular “economic ailment” in the countries of the developing South is based on the work of the late Celso Furtado (1920-2004), who in 1957 identified the phenomenon of “underdevelopment with abundant foreign exchange” in Venezuela, a unique case in Latin America at a time when the region’s main complaint was the lack of capital for industrial development.

The study by the economist who was the top authority on Brazilian political economy, carried out for the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), was just now published by the International Celso Furtado Centre for Development Policies, as part of the first volume of a series based on his personal archives, that includes another essay on Venezuela, written in 1974, and commentaries from other experts.

Furtado’s analysis of the “peculiarities” of the Venezuelan economy identified problems that would only be labeled “Dutch disease” two decades later, said Carlos Aguiar de Medeiros, a professor at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, who commented on the two studies by the late economist.
[Read more...]

RIGHTS-COLOMBIA: UN Warns of Civilian Killings by Military

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Constanza Vieira

BOGOTA, Nov 3 (IPS) – The extrajudicial executions that are being committed by government forces in Colombia constitute crimes against humanity, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said at the end of her six-day fact-finding tour of this South American country.

“An offence becomes a crime against humanity if it is widespread and systematic against the civilian population. We are observing and keeping a record of the number of extrajudicial killings, and it does appear systematic and widespread in my view,” Pillay said in answer to a question from IPS in her only meeting with the press in Colombia, on Saturday Nov. 1.

According to the Observatory of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law of the Colombia-Europe-United States Coordination Group (CCEEU) — a coalition formed by some 200 humanitarian organisations — from January 2007 to June 2008 “one person died every day in extrajudicial executions” committed directly by government security forces.

The same source indicates that the number of summary executions has tripled since right-wing President Álvaro Uribe took office in August 2002. And the killings are occurring in every region of the country, as evidenced by statistics from the Colombian Commission of Jurists, a prominent human rights group that forms part of the CCEEU.

Pillay spoke of “continuing levels of extrajudicial executions,” which she described as “very alarming.”

But the implicated military officers may not have to appear before the International Criminal Court (ICC) — on which the South African-born U.N. official previously sat as a judge — given that the Colombian government has started to bring actions against the culprits, she noted.

“The goal is to have the national authorities investigate these crimes and prosecute the perpetrators,” Pillay explained. “It’s only when a country is unable and unwilling that the International Criminal Court, for instance, would have the power to intervene.”

Midway through Pillay’s visit to Colombia, on Oct. 29, the Uribe administration dismissed 20 officers, including three generals, and seven non-commissioned officers, for alleged involvement in forced disappearances and summary executions of civilians.

The bodies of the victims are later dressed up and presented to the media as leftist rebels or right-wing paramilitary fighters killed in combat, with the aim of showing results in the counterinsurgency war.

That same day, the CCEEU and other human rights groups presented a total of four reports on extrajudicial executions in this country that has been torn for more than four decades by a war between leftist guerrilla groups, government forces and far-right paramilitaries.

The military officers were fired for negligence or lack of command over their troops, and the Colombian press was quick to stress that they are innocent until proven guilty.

The U.N. high commissioner, however, said that in her meetings with Defence Ministry officials she “noted that in accordance with international standards, a superior may be criminally responsible for crimes committed by subordinates, under his or her effective authority and control, and as a result of his or her failure to exercise control properly over such subordinates.”

“So this is the basis on which this government has acted,” she continued, “and I am encouraging that the process of investigation be followed consistently through the ranks,” until those who are directly responsible are found.

Pillay urged “the Ministry of Defence to continue working to ensure that central orders are enforced at an operational level.”

She said she recognises “that this is an historic development that has not been attempted before, where the government takes accountability” seriously with respect to the responsibility of the armed forces.

The dismissals — which the government promises will not be the last — are “a hopeful indication that such atrocities will not be tolerated and that the army is moving away from ‘counting bodies’ as a criteria of success in their operations,” the high commissioner declared.

She added that she “supports the commitment expressed by the highest civilian and military authorities of the country that progress in security should be achieved with full adherence to legality and respect for human rights.”

The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has a major country office in Colombia, which has been pressuring the government since 2004, demanding that it stop emphasising “body counts” as a measure of military success, as soldiers are tempted by a policy of rewards — prizes, leave incentive, promotions and bonuses — which leads them to execute civilians to inflate the number of casualties achieved in actual combat.

In the last interview he gave before stepping down in 2006, the former head of the OHCHR Colombia field office, Swedish U.N. official Michael Frühling, had warned about extrajudicial killings, saying that “the government is aware of many of these cases because we have talked about it.”

“The government has taken certain steps because it is apparently concerned, even though it has not declared it publicly,” Frühling said back then to Un Pasquín, an anti-Uribe newspaper published by Colombian caricaturist and journalist Vladdo.

The Final Report of the International Observation Mission on Extrajudicial Executions and Impunity in Colombia, made up of 13 independent experts from Britain, France, Germany, Spain and the United States, identifies certain patterns in these extrajudicial killings.

Presented at the same time as the CCEEU report, it warns that these killings “are not isolated crimes but rather a systematic practice that is premeditated.”

“There is a system of incentives for soldiers,” said German expert Stefan Ofteringer, one of the 13 members of the observation mission who personally reviewed 135 of the 955 extrajudicial execution cases documented by the CCEUU since 2002.

“There are economic rewards,” he added, “and prizes for positive results, which we have been able to verify in many cases we’ve studied.”

But there are also “intimidations and aggressions against the relatives of victims, whenever they attempted to access the case files, court proceedings or bodies,” and the human rights defenders that help these families in their inquiries have also been threatened, he said.

The mission sees the efforts made in 2007 by the OHCHR, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and Colombian human rights groups, as well as its own work, as instrumental in the Defence Ministry’s decision to refer the homicide investigations to civilian courts on Nov. 2 of last year.

But, at the same time, the cases brought before ordinary courts advance very slowly, there aren’t enough prosecutors assigned to them, and no efforts are being made to determine who is really behind the crimes, beyond the actual perpetrators.

“We asked that military aid be conditioned to (the elimination) of extrajudicial executions and, in general, to the human rights record of the security forces,” Ofteringer told IPS.

The expert said that the countries should assess whether Colombia is complying with the annual recommendations made by the high commissioner for human rights, in preparation for the Universal Periodic Review that Colombia will voluntarily submit to next Dec. 10 in Geneva. Ofteringer noted that because of the forthcoming review, “the outcome of our mission goes far beyond individual cases.”

POLITICS-US – Racism Won’t Keep Arab Americans From Polls

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Habib Battah

NEW YORK, Nov 3 (IPS) – Arab Americans are expected to vote in large numbers Tuesday, despite concerns over voter intimidation and weak outreach from the presidential candidates, representatives of major community organisations say.
The Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) has set up a voter protection unit staffed by lawyers to help dispel rumours that may have prevented some from going to the polls in the past.

“As always, there will be voter intimidation,” predicted Abed Ayoub, one of five attorneys attached to the unit. Enthusiasm for the election is higher than it was in 2004, he contended, pointing to a recent ADC-sponsored event in Michigan that saw at least 500 Arab Americans register in just two days.

At the same time, the ADC has received hundreds of calls over recent months from Arab Americans who mistakenly believed they may have been ineligible to vote.

“One rumour was that if you are in foreclosure, you can’t vote,” Ayoub said. Another is the misconception that those who couldn’t read or write in English — often a problem for elderly Arab Americans — would not be allowed to use translators.

But the greatest fear is of an incident like the one at the 1999 municipal election in Hamtramck, Michigan, where dozens of dark-skinned Arab Americans were asked to take a citizenship oath before voting. The move caused many to avoid the polls for fear of embarrassment.

Even in more recent elections, a number of complaints were made to ADC, though never made public, the lawyer said. “This year we want to attack the problem before it happens,” Ayoub said.

Votes of the estimated 3.5 million Arab Americans could be pivotal, especially in swing states. And though a September poll by the Arab American Institute showed that Sen. Barack Obama was far more popular — with a 54 percent to 33 percent lead over Sen. John McCain — it also found that 20 percent of Arab Americans are not enrolled in any political party. And Arab organisations say both presidential campaigns have largely failed to recognise Arab Americans as an important voting bloc.

“Neither party has done a lot of outreach to the community,” said Lelia Al-Qatami, ADC’s communications and cultural affairs director. “Ethnic outreach is very common, but we haven’t seen any with regards to the Arab community.”

The Obama campaign briefly had a liaison to the Arab American community, she acknowledged. But the liaison, Mazen Asbahi, resigned 10 days after his appointment in early August, after the Wall Street Journal ran a story alleging that he may have had ties to a fundamentalist imam. The Arab American Institute called the Journal’s claim “vague and specious.” But the incident was just one of many that upset Arab Americans.

Many Arab Americans also felt let down by the Obama campaign this summer when two Muslim women wearing headscarves were barred from appearing seated behind the senator in a television shot at Detroit rally. And there’s been disappointment over McCain’s recent response to supporters who called Obama “an Arab”. By defending Obama as “a decent family man”, McCain drew fire from Arab American Institute director James Zogby, who issued a statement noting that Arab Americans were “also decent men and women”.

“We would have liked to have better contact from both sides [of the presidential race],” said Christina Zola, AAI communications director. “The racism on behalf of staff or supporters should have been dealt with better.”

A feeling of alienation from the two campaigns was also voiced by the Arab American Political Action Committee, which decided not to endorse either presidential candidate. And neither campaign requested an endorsement, the AAPAC said.

“Those candidates who are not willing to make the effort to request our support and pursue it respectfully are not worthy of our vote, regardless of who they are,” the AAPAC said in its Oct. 11 statement.

Both Obama and McCain have also been criticised by Ralph Nader, an Arab American of Lebanese descent and the Green Party presidential candidate. Nader challenged both McCain and Obama to visit a Muslim place of worship before Election Day, “like they [visited] churches and synagogues,” according to a statement on Nader’s campaign website.

Still, hundreds of Arab Americans are campaigning for Obama or McCain, the ADC said, while the AAI has recruited several hundred volunteers to help register Arab voters, as part of the Yalla Vote Campaign. (Yalla means “come on/let’s go” in Arabic.)

“We need to be involved in this election,” said Mohammad Al Filali, outreach director for the Islamic Center of Passaic County, New Jersey, home to one of the greatest concentrations of Arab Americans. “We cannot allow our voices to be muzzled.”

At least 100 Arab Americans registered to vote in the space of a few hours during an event to celebrate the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in early October, Al Filali said. He said the community was energised by the election, despite the perception that the word Arab has “all of a sudden become a curse” in campaign rhetoric.

Samir Issa, a software engineer who took part in the event, said he was still supporting Obama, the abrupt departure of the candidate’s Arab American liaison notwithstanding. “I lost some trust in him [Obama], but not all, because the other choice is even worse,” said Issa, 36. “He’s just trying to win, whatever the cost.”

Community involvement is another problem. The campaigns “pay closer attention to people with money,” Al Filali said. “We are new to the game of politics. We have to make ourselves known.”

THAILAND: Anti-Coup Movement Strikes Back

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Marwaan Macan-Markar

Supporters at an anti-coup rally cheer as Thaksin ’speaks’ from exile.

Credit:Marwaan Macan-Markar/IPS

BANGKOK, Nov 4 (IPS) – For the past five months Ataporn Kampa has endured insults hurled at him by an anti-government protest movement, that is supported by affluent, urban-based Thais who openly profess right-wing, conservative views and want the military to take over the country.

To this protest movement, the likes of Ataporn, who come from the impoverished agricultural belt of north-east Thailand, are a bane to the country’s politics. They have been sneered at as uneducated, stupid and lacking in intelligence required of voters in a democracy.

Such brazen contempt for the country’s rural poor by this right-wing movement, which calls itself the People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD), has also prompted calls for the rolling back of the voters’ power in the country. The PAD wants the military to turf out the ruling six-party coalition that was elected at last December’s poll.
[Read more...]

VIETNAM: Prosperity Tough on Trash Collectors

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Helen Clark

HANOI, Nov 3 (IPS) – As the expendable income of households in Hanoi increases, so does the amount of refuse generated. This is taking a toll on the city’s predominantly female force of garbage collectors, as well as the environment.

A green truck idles on a street beside one of Hanoi’s largest beer halls, Hoa Vien, popular with the capital’s movers and shakers. In the twilight, women in khaki overalls and blue helmets push heavy trolleys, piled high with refuse, into a line behind it.

”I don’t get days off,” Tram, 33, tells IPS. ”Any celebration, I work more because there’s more garbage to collect. It’s always busy; I don’t even get Tet off.” Tet is Lunar New Year and the most important holiday in the Vietnamese calendar.

Tram has been collecting the city’s garbage for 14 years, and says things have become harder in recent years. There is far more to pick up, whilst wages have remained the same — between 1.5 million VND — 1.9 million VND (90 – 115 US dollars) each month.
[Read more...]

POLITICS-MOZAMBIQUE: Ready To Roll

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

John Keitta

CHIMOIO, Mozambique, Nov 3 (IPS) – The posters and flyers are ready, and so is Marta Simango. Ready for Nov. 4, when the municipal elections campaign officially kicks off in Mozambique.

Simango is running for a second term at the Municipal Assembly in the eastern province of Manica, bordering Zimbabwe. Her party is the opposition coalition Mozambican National Resistance Movement-Electoral Union (Renamo-UE, in Portuguese).

Renamo holds 15 of the 39 seats at the Municipal Assembly, and four belong to women. The ruling Front for the Liberation of Mozambique party (Frelimo) holds 24 seats, with 10 women (originally 12, but two died in office).

Overall, women account for 36 percent of Manica’s Municipal Assembly, beating the National Assembly, where 30 percent are women — one of the highest proportions in sub-Saharan Africa, where the average of women in Parliament is 16 percent.
[Read more...]