Tuesday 30 July 2013

Economic Freedom Fighters of South Africa release “manifesto”

The ex ANC youth leader Julius Malema’s new political party, the Economic Freedom Fighters, have released what they refer to as a “manifesto” to outline the party’s goals, and this has not gone down well with the South African government – understandably so, when most of the goals feature along the lines of “economically emancipating the people of South Africa, Africa and the world”.

The EFF’s inclusion of state seizure of assets in its manifesto has also riled farmers and the government, with Agriculture Minister Tina Joemat-Pettersson, moving to reassure farmers by saying that government would not allow “people to sow discord in our farming communities for party-political gains.” The government has said it would take action of any instances of land grabbing are witnessed, especially after the problems in the mining sector this year. Whether Malema’s party will get public support to give him enough political clout to implement the EFF’s national agenda is yet to be seen. While political analysts doubt the ability of new parties to garner significant support, growing disenchantment with the economy and corruption scandals have diminished the ANC’s historical glow, other parties are becoming a temptation to ANC constituents.


Zimbabwean government blocks SMS news services

According to activists and a phone company, Zimbabwe's government has blocked mass SMS bursts ahead of next week's election, stifling a powerful source of non-official information in the tightly controlled southern African state. With the July 31 poll date looming near, in which President Robert Mugabe is looking to add to his 33 years in power, web portal Kubatana.net said it had noticed this week that its mass text messages were mysteriously getting lost.

Its provider, Econet Wireless - Zimbabwe's largest mobile phone firm with 8 million subscribers out of a population of 13 million - declined to comment. However, a senior company source confirmed the firm had bowed to government pressure to block mass SMS services around the election "in the interest of peace, national security and stability". The source also revealed that, "We have just been told we cannot be facilitating bulk SMSs during the elections, roughly for the next two or so weeks. Our understanding is that they will take our network down or cancel our licence if there is any violation."


Mugabe threatens rival with arrest if he claims victory before official results are announced

President Robert Mugabe has warned his main rival Morgan Tsvangirai that he will be arrested if he claims victory before the official results are announced in an election this coming week. Tsvangirai told his supporters from the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) at the weekend that, despite the ZANU-PF trying to rig the elections, he still expected to win a victory and that he did not have to wait for the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC). This predictably did not go down well with Mugabe who announced to the cheers of many supporters in Harare that “if you breach the law and become a law breaker, the police will arrest you”.

Tsvangirai will address his last major rally today and is hoping to overthrow Mugabe from a 33-year hold on power in the country.


Wednesday 24 July 2013

Trade relations growing between Angola and Nambia

The governor of southern Cunene province in Abgika, Antonio Didalelwa, has hailed the “intense” trade relations between Angola and its neighbour Namibia, saying they are creating lucrative new business opportunities and partnerships.

According to Didalelwa, the establishment of partnerships will contribute to the growth of the region and consolidation of the existing relations between Angolan, Namibian and other countries' business people. "The establishment of partnerships will enable the entry into Angola of Namibian products and vice-versa, given the intense trade that is done through the border posts of Santa-Clara and Oshikango", he stated.


Zimbabwean state media continues to drown out opposition

Despite the upcoming elections being staged in a "vastly improved" media environment compared to previous years, the majority of Zimbabweans lack access to plural, independent sources of news, and legal and physical threats to journalists impede their ability to report freely. Independent and international media have questioned the country's readiness to hold an organized election, but the majority of citizens are dependent on strictly controlled state media to provide information.

When Star-FM launched in June 2012, it was the first time in 30 years that Zimbabweans, who have known no other radio besides the state-controlled Radio Zimbabwe, had the chance to call in to a radio station to express their views, indicating a “cautious and carefully controlled liberalization of the airwaves”. The most critical stations are still located beyond Zimbabwe's borders. SW Radio Africa bills itself as the "independent voice of Zimbabwe," but is located in the United Kingdom, while Studio 7 is a division of the Voice of America.


SADC encouraged by Zimbabwe polls

The SADC officially launched its election observer mission last week with around 442 observers deployed to monitor a potentially landmark process, following which the SADcC commended the government, political parties and leaders in Zimbabwe for their commitment to ensuring that the forthcoming harmonised elections on 31 July are held peacefully.

The SADC’s Troika also commended South Africa's President Jacob Zuma, the organisation’s facilitator in Zimbabwe, for his tireless efforts in ensuring that political stakeholders hold successful elections. The organisation also praised the former President of Mozambique and SADC mediator on the Madagascar crisis, Joaquim Chissano and the International Contact Group, for their efforts in ensuring the country is brought back to a normal constitutional.


Zambian media censorship revealed

The efforts to which the Zambian government have gone in recent months to stifle the media have been criticised harshly by onlookers. The offences range from new techniques like the online censorship of seemingly offending websites, to the plain old brute tactics of intimidation and unfounded detainment.

Recently, the government reportedly hired the help of Chinese and Russian IT-experts to block websites that air corruption claims or even cover current events. This has extended to two main culprits, the Zambia Watchdog, a citizen newspaper covering all the latest political news in the country and a similar website and media outlet, Zambia Report.  Three journalists in recent weeks have also been detained on tenuous grounds and at the weekend, a sizeable group calling themselves the “Zambian bloggers” took to the streets to demand their release. Clayson Hamasaka, Thomas Zymabo and Wilson Mpondamali, all linked to the Zambian Watchdog are in custody, charged with sedition.


Wednesday 17 July 2013

Zimbabwean internet mole has $300,000 price on his head

President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe has placed a $300,000 bounty on the head of the now infamous Baba Jukwa, an internet mole and alleged Zanu-PF party insider, who is divulging secret and insider party information through his Facebook page. The page has now been viewed more than a million times and he has amassed more than 239,000 followers, with hundreds of responses and shares to every update. Efforts to track down the mole have so far failed. His postings have accused government ministers of corruption and senior police chiefs of brutality, publishing their private mobile phone numbers. He has even posted photographs of the dead bodies of the party’s alleged enemies.

There are now reports that Mugabe is pulling strings at the Chinese government to help identify Jukwa and to help censor the website from the eyes of Zimbabwean internet users. It may be the case that the damage has already been done…


Zambian and Zimbabwean governments implicated in assassination plots

Zambian President Michael Sata was recently alleged to have held a meeting with a group of Lebanese assassins for hire for unknown reasons, according to revelations made in an article published in the U.K. newspaper The Guardian, which obtained a purported leaked letter dated 2 July 2013, which claims that Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe had attempted to hire the assassins to murder South African President Jacob Zuma and his advisor, Lindiwe Zulu, who had been assigned to Zimbabwe to attempt to lobby for a delay in the elections.

A spokesperson of Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party has dismissed the leaked document as false, commenting "it's all rubbish and hogwash to think a head of state like president Mugabe would set up something like that. We have a disagreement with Lindiwe Zulu but it would not go to that extent."
According to an excerpt of the document published by the Guardian, "Mugabe promised the six Lebanese an undisclosed fortune in cash if they succeed in getting rid of the two who South African senior officials who are giving him a lot of trouble. Names of the six could not be established, but they entered into the country via Zambia in the last few days, where they had previously held a close meeting with [president] Michael Sata before travelling into Zimbabwe."


Namibian illegal land occupation dispute

Namibia’s Minister of Safety and Security, Immanuel Ngatjizeko, has recently condemned the ongoing illegal occupation of land in the Tsumkwe West communal area. He said the recent behaviour of some citizens, who have been occupying others’ grazing land illegally seizing the land in Tsumkwe West unlawfully, are disrespecting the laws governing the country. The illegal farmers in Tsumkwe West claim to have been forced to drive their animals there because of the drought in their areas of origin which have been identified as the Ohangwena, Oshikoto, Omusati, Kavango and Omaheke regions, and partly the Otjozondjupa Region.


Thursday 11 July 2013

SADC looking for $64 Billion investment in infrastructure

Southern Africa is seeking investment and finance for a $64 billion programme to improve transport, energy and other infrastructure over the next five years. The plan for 106 cross-border infrastructure projects covering the priority sectors of energy, transport, tourism, water, information communication technology and meteorology was presented to an Infrastructure Investment Conference hosted by the Southern African Development Community (SADC) in the Mozambican capital Maputo in late June. Projects cover the development of transboundary infrastructure including alternative energy sources, information communication technology and civil aviation, and are expected to be implemented by 2017.

The transport sector had the largest number of projects showcased during the one-day investment conference, with 40 projects for improvement of road, railways, ports and border posts, valued at about US$16.3 billion, presented to potential investors. Priority transport infrastructure projects include those targeting the expansion, rehabilitation and modernisation of Durban and Walvis Bay ports; new rail projects and rehabilitation of existing ones; new road links connecting Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo and rehabilitation of others around the region; and introduction of one-stop border posts at Beitbridge between South Africa and Zimbabwe.


Standoff between Mozambican govt and opposition party Renamo continues

The Mozambican government on Monday announced that it has unilaterally signed the minutes of the talks it has held with the country's largest opposition party, Renamo. Speaking to journalists at the end of the tenth round of talks, the head of the government delegation, Agriculture Minister Jose Pacheco, said that Renamo had not signed the minutes - even on those points where consensus had been reached.

Pacheco stated that Renamo wants the two parties to produce a proposal for the revision of the electoral legislation that would be rubber stamped by the country's parliament, the Assembly of the Republic. However, the government refuses to accept this position as it considers this to be unconstitutional and in violation of the principle of separation of powers.


Illegal voter registration in Zim: offenders caught red handed

Four suspected MDC-T activists yesterday appeared before a Mutare magistrate facing charges of unlawfully conducting voter education without authority from the Zimbabwe Election Commission.

The accused were hauled before the town's magistrate, Noah Gwatidzo, for contravening an act that criminalises conducting voter education without approval from the commission. Prosecutor Sam Chabuka said that on 6 July at around 3pm, the quartet conducted unauthorised voter education at Pick and Save Superette in Mutare. They allegedly played voter education jingles through a public announcement system they were using.


Tuesday 2 July 2013

SPECIAL REPORT: A closer look at Mamphela Ramphele’s Agang – on the road to power?

Several readers have been asking me about Mamphele Ramphela’s new political party Agang. So I thought I’d put together a special report this week. Thanks for the support guys and gals.

Mamphela Ramphele’s entry into South African politics after a long and distinguished career has certainly been a source for headlines since her new political party’s inception. Prior to its formation, many speculated that the Democratic Alliance leader, Helen Zille, was prepared to step down from her role to back Ramphele as a leader of a new party called the Democrats. Ramphele's new party is named Agang, after the Sesotho phrase meaning “let us build”, and Ramphele asserted that it would be a direct challenge to the current ruling African National Congress.

Agang started out with Ramphele and a small team, including co-founder Moeletsi Mbeki; chief of staff Zohra Dawood; policy director Mills Soko; spokesperson John Allen; and the party’s Canadian chief of staff, Tim Knapp. A top banker and former BP and Chevron executive, Nkosinathi Solomon, was recently appointed as Agang’s campaign director. Research has also shown that some of these five (Tim Knapp, Moetletsi Mbeki, Mills Soko and Mamphela Ramphele) are directors at a company that is considered to be the legal entity behind Agang, a Johannesburg-registered company called Great Potential for South Africa.

Now to the murky question of the party’s political funding…

Despite Ramphele’s insistence to the media that she has not requested international assistance, former DA leader and ambassador to Argentina, Tony Leon, told City Press recently that he knew that Ramphele had staged at least two recent meetings in the US to fund-raise for the party. One of these meetings was most certainly at the residence of the South African-born former Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, Margaret Marshall and her husband, a former New York Times journalist. Ramphele is said to have stated she was there to raise money for Agang and that she will continue to request support from South Africans all over the world so that they can be part of the building process.

My research has shown that various American businessmen have made significant contributions to the party, most notably the Hungarian-US billionaire George Soros. Soros has reportedly donated several million US dollars through his Open Society Foundation. Ramphele has close links to both Soros and the Open Society Foundation, having co-founded its South African arm with him in 1993 and she remains a director at the Open Society Foundation of South Africa to this day. Soros has also been able to support in other ways, such as in secondment of employees from the Open Society to Agang.

Ramphele’s closeness to former World Bank general counsel and senior vice president Roberto Dañino could also hint at funding from abroad; Ramphele and Dañino met at their time together at the World Bank and were also together at gold miner Gold Fields. They reportedly remain in close contact and Dañino is known to stay at Ramphele’s Camps Bay home when he visits Cape Town. Given Dañino’s business connections in the USA, it seems that Soros is not Ramphele’s exclusive source of foreign funding…

It is also worth adding that Ramphele is also a trustee at The Rockefeller Foundation. Did she go knocking at David’s door too?

Original articles:



I welcome requests for other special reports.

Zanu-PF reacts angrily to Obama’s Zimbabwe comments

Zimbabwe’s ruling party, Zanu-PF, has lashed out at Barack Obama after the US president called for real reforms in Zimbabwe ahead of the elections. Zanu-PF party loyalists have accused the American leader of “meddling” in African affairs and “insulting” Africans. Obama made the remarks while on a visit to South Africa last week, which was part of his official tour of African nations. He reportedly told the press that bad governance in Zimbabwe was responsible for the country’s problems, including the poor the state of the economy.

The Herald, a Zimbabwean newspaper considered to be the mouthpiece of Zanu-PF, criticised Obama for “abusing his visit to South Africa to meddle in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs.” Zanu-PF loyalists were quoted as saying that Zimbabwe is “governed by its laws not the opinion of foreigners” and that the country “doesn’t want any interference from foreigners.” Political analyst Clifford Mashiri said Obama’s comments were welcome, and that Zanu-PF’s reaction was not surprising: “It is expected that Zanu-PF would react in a nasty and hostile way. This is how they always react when they are being told things they do not want to hear.”