Africa

Inflation Falls but Depression Remains

By Myriam Clerge
Impunity Watch Reporter, Eastern and Southern Africa

HARARE, Zimbabwe – According to the Central Statistical Office, Zimbabwe’s inflation rate has slowed from July’s rate of 7,634.8% to 6,592.8% in August. The drop and deceleration is a likely result from President Robert Mugabe’s price-control sanctions. Several months ago, President Mugabe ordered the freeze and price cut of several essential commodities. Those that defied the government policy were arrested and sentenced to prison for up to six months.

Many economists speculated the price freeze would plunge the country into a deeper economic crisis and cause a severe shortage. Although the declined rate is a promising sign, Zimbabwe’s inflation rate is nevertheless the highest in the world.

Besides the economy, the inflation rate indicates even less potential for the future of Zimbabwe. Thousands have fled the country and hundreds continue to do so daily. The refugees either bribe South African officials or creep through bushes where bandits await to rob and/or rape them. Refugees who make it across must then find employment to send money home; some women prostitute.

Those that remain in Zimbabwe are no better off. One out of five adults is still employed. With no transportation, electricity, and scarce resources, many walk miles to wait endlessly in lines in hope of bread that never arrives. The mortality rate for infants is 51 per 1000 live births. Those who survive are often orphaned as a result of the Aids epidemic and insufficient medical supplies.

In response to the government’s failed attempts to rescue the country, the Zimbabwe Human Rights Association (ZimRights) organized a meeting to discuss the upcoming election. Veteran politician Edgar Tekere, like many, continues to blame Mugabe for the downward spiral of the country and has attacked his record on human rights. Some 150 people, mainly students and activists of opposition groups like MDC and Zanu, attended the public discussion. However the meeting was disrupted by policemen although it was pre-approved by authorities. The police accused the organizers of using the platform to attack the president.

For more information please see:

AllAfrica- Zimbabwe Police Disrupt Tekere Meeting – 4 October 2007

BBC – Zimbabwe’s Precarious Survival – 8 September 2007

BBC- Zimbabwean Inflation under 7,000% – 18 September 2007

Journalists in Uganda Charged with Sedition

By Elizabeth Costner
Impunity Watch Senior Desk Officer, Africa

KAMPALA, Uganda – Three journalists working for the sole independent daily newspaper in Uganda were charged with sedition last week for alleging that the Ugandan government is training soldiers for the police force.  Managing Editor Bernard Tabaire, Sunday Editor Henry Ochieng, and Senior Political Writer Chris Obore were summoned following the publication of a story in last Sunday’s paper alleging that at least 40 Ugandan soldiers were being trained for senior posts in the police force.

Many see the army as loyal to President Yoweri Museveni while the police force is largely seen as political opposition.  The story that ran last week argued that the government is attempting to militarize the police in order to gain greater control.  Obore told the AP that the state was trying to make an example of him and his fellow reporters. “They want to subjugate the freedom of the press and stop us writing objectively.  Through us, they are sending the message that, if you write objectively like this, the next step is the police station.”

Police spokeswoman Judith Nabakooba denied that there was any political motivation behind the arrest, and that the story is “alarming and not factual.”

On Friday, the International Federation of Journalists called on the government to withdraw the charges.  The Director of the IFJ office in Africa said that article was a “balanced and professional piece of work.”

The issue of freedom of the press in Uganda is not a new one.  Last month, the newspaper’s political editor resigned as a result of compromised editorial freedom. Papers have been raided in search for information on political opposition.  A radio station was threatened with closure if they continued to discuss the trial of an opposition leader.  The government blocked portions of a website that was critical of the President last year.

For more information, please see:

International Herald Tribune – 3 Ugandan journalists charged with sedition – 1 October 2007

AllAfrica.com – Three Journalists Face Sedition Charges Over Article on Alleged Military Control of Police – 5 October 2007

AllAfrica.com – Observer Journalists Partially Freed – 5 October 2007

AllAfrica.com – Police Grill Three Monitor Editors – 2 October 2007

Rebel Groups in Chad Expected to Sign Peace Agreement with Government

By Meryl White
Impunity Watch Reporter, Western and Central Africa

NDJAMENA, Chad – Leaders of four rebel groups in Chad agreed to sign a peace agreement with the government. These peace talks will be mediated by the government of Libya.  The Union of Forces for Democracy and Development (UFDD), which is led by a “regional power-broker” Mahamat Nouri, is expected to sign the peace deal.

Experts believe that this peace agreement will help pave the way for the United Nations to send in peacekeeping forces in Chad’s insecure eastern border. This peace deal comes a month after another deal was struck between a smaller rebel group and the government which called for a total ceasefire and amnesty for militant fighters.

The Foreign Minister to Chad stated “We dare to hope that it will create conditions that will foster stability and reconstruction in the eastern region of our country that have been devastated by incursions of the Sudanese Janjaweed and other armed men coming from Darfur.”

A Chadian government official in N’djamena stated, “an official signing ceremony will be organised in the presence of a number of heads of state to make the document public.”

The bloodshed in Darfur, Sudan, has spilled over into Chad and the Central African Republic. Presently, there are 240,000 refugees from Sudan’s Darfur region in eastern Chad and 173,000 internally displaced people.

Rebel groups have waged rebellion against President Idriss Deby for years. Rebels were especially angry with Deby because in 2005 he modified the country’s constitution to allow himself to run for a third term in office. Moreover, rebels are also critical of the involvement of United Nation forces in the region.

There is an estimation that 30,000 French EU troops and 300 UN police will arrive shortly in Chad to oversee the displacement camps.

BBC – Chad Rebels agree move to peace – 4 October 2007

AllAfrica.com – Chad: Government, Rebels Reach Peace Deal – 4 October 2007

AllAfrica.com – Chad: Country Pledges Full Cooperation for New UN Peacekeeping Presence – 2 October 2007

The “Forgotten” Somalia

By Myriam Clerge
Impunity Watch Reporter, Eastern and Southern Africa

MOGADISHU, Somalia – On Tuesday, several people were injured and at least three people killed after an explosion in Bakara, Somalia’s main market, in the heart of the Mogadishu. Although the shop was believed to be selling arms, the government forces say the store was in fact a hideout for insurgents responsible for earlier attacks.

Many of the local traders believed the explosion began during a clash between government troops and insurgents around the former defense ministry building. Reports indicate the police were conducting search operations in the area. The subsequent fire began on Tuesday and spread rapidly to other shops. Many of the shops were reduced to ashes along with their products. Assistance was slow and ineffective due to a lack of fire equipment and insecurity.

Many of the people depend on the market for essential goods given that it is the only wholesale market in Somalia, a country ravaged by war and hunger. In a separate incident, one government soldier and one civilian were killed in three serial bomb explosions in the Gubta settlement in Mogadishu. These are just a series of unrelenting attacks against government and Ethiopian troops in which civilians are the victims.

In recognition of its dire condition, Somalia urged the world to increase aid for the thousands of people displaced due to persistent attacks by insurgents. Somali leaders have requested the deployment of more Arab and African  troops under the support of the U.N. Somalia believes their problem has been overshadowed by the conflict in Darfur and intervention hindered by the history of the “Black Hawk Down” battle.

Many countries rushed to pledge troops even though the troops pledged to Somalia earlier have not been fulfilled. Several African nations, like Congo and Kenya, have dubbed the Somali problem the “forgotten crisis” and have also urged the U.N and international community to do more.

For more information please see:

Reuters: Africa – Somalia Chides Nations at U.N. Over Slow Pace of Aid – 2 October 2007

BBC- Fire Engulfs main Somali Market – 3 October 2007

AllAfrica.com- Somalia: Explosion Leaves Three Civilians, One of them a Policeman – 4 October 2007

BRIEF: SLCMP Addresses New Government in Sierra Leone

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone – The Sierra Leone Court Monitoring Programme (SLCMP) issued a press release on Monday congratulating President Ernest Bai Koroma and the APC party in their recent election win following a fair and free election. The SLCMP also reiterated the core recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) issued in 2005 and urged the new government to see those recommendations as a “blueprint for change in Sierra Leone.”  Sierra Leone’s TRC is unique in that it creates an obligation on the government to follow its recommendations and the new President could send a strong signal that he is committed to following that law and to ensuring that the recommendations are implemented.  The topics addressed include: protection of human rights, establishment of the rule of law, security services, promoting good governance, youth, women, children, national reconciliation, and the reparation programme.