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Published 24th July 2009

Vol 50 No 15


Kenya

Kofi Annan puts politicians on the spot over poll violence

Image courtesy of Panos Pictures
Image courtesy of Panos Pictures

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Options narrow after the International Criminal Court receives the list of suspects

The Kenyan government has until the end of September to set up an independent special tribunal on the post-election violence of December 2007. On 9 July, former United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan handed over to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague an envelope listing alleged perpetrators of the violence that followed the 2007 elections. The list was compiled by Justice Philip Waki's Commission of Inquiry into the Post-Election Violence (CIPEV) and handed to Annan last year. His July action pre-empted an earlier agreement with the government, giving it an extension until the end of August to set up a special tribunal. The Waki Commission had intended this tribunal to be independent from Kenya's judicial system, with international and local judges and investigators.



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THE INSIDE VIEW

This week’s clashes between workers and police in townships across South Africa reinforce the need for some fast rethinking on policy and practice by President Jacob Zuma’s team. The protests were fiercest in the informal settlements where some 8 million of the country’s 49 mn. people live. In a hopeful State of the Nation address in June, Zuma promised his government would create half a million jobs in his first year in office, violent crime would be cut by 7-10%, 80% of those who needed anti-r...
This week’s clashes between workers and police in townships across South Africa reinforce the need for some fast rethinking on policy and practice by President Jacob Zuma’s team. The protests were fiercest in the informal settlements where some 8 million of the country’s 49 mn. people live. In a hopeful State of the Nation address in June, Zuma promised his government would create half a million jobs in his first year in office, violent crime would be cut by 7-10%, 80% of those who needed anti-retrovirals would get them by 2011, and everyone would get a holiday on Mandela Day every 18 July. With an annual 21.6% fall in manufacturing and mining companies laying off workers, the job creation promise looks especially far-fetched. Although union leaders celebrated the comradely Zuma’s accession to power, the grassroots membership demur. Zuma now faces a more formidable wave of strikes than anything under Thabo Mbeki’s presidency: gold, plantinum and coal miners are threatening action; paper and chemical workers started strikes this week; and rail workers and workers at the state broadcaster also speak of disruption. Protesters lambasted corruption within the ANC and government mismanagement as a direct cause of poor services and the downturn. Just three months after Zuma’s victory, the ANC’s core supporters are unconvinced by his response to growing hardship. His impressive economic team have their work cut out.
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