Monthly Archives: January 2012
-
Uganda: oil and succession plans combine in Kampala – By Angelo Izama
One of the peculiarities of African governments with long-serving leaders is that whereas they are led by aging men and women, their public institutions are pubescent. ... -
Kenya: ICC accused Ruto and Kenyatta may still run for President – By Ken Opalo
On 23rd January 2012 a panel of judges at the ICC (International Criminal Court) announced a majority decision that four Kenyans, part of the so-called Ocampo ... -
Kenyatta, Ruto, Sang and Muthaura to face trial at ICC for crimes against humanity – By Keith Somerville
The presiding judge in the cases of crimes against humanity committed during the post-election violence (PEV) in Kenya in 2007-8 have decided by majority verdict that ... -
Goodluck Jonathan’s perfect storm – By Richard Dowden
Nigeria could never be described as a quiet country, but terrorist group Boko Haram’s bombing campaign combined with a national strike over a fuel price increase ... -
Zimbabwe and the Politics of Impunity — by Alex Lichtenstein
This review first appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books on November 23, 2011 .Peter Godwin The Fear: Robert Mugabe and the Martyrdom of Zimbabwe ... -
Charles Taylor a CIA Informant “” Liberia’s Relationship with the US needs to be retooled – By Robtel Neajai Pailey
This op-ed was written based on a front page Boston Globe article on Jan. 17, which asserted that Charles Taylor was a CIA informant. However, the ... -
Boko Haram: answering terror with more meaningful human security – By Olly Owen
Nigeria today faces a formidable combination of security challenges, which led President Goodluck Jonathan last week to declare the situation “even worse than the civil war”. ... -
Sudan: Aerial military attacks on civilians and humanitarians “They Bombed Everything that Moved”, 1999 – 2012 – By Eric Reeves
Overview Since inaugurating hostilities in South Kordofan on June 5, 2011, Khartoum’s Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) military aircraft have been engaged in relentless, widespread, and systematic ... -
Intervening in Somalia: risky business with no end in sight – By Marco Jowell
Military intervention in Somalia, whether unilateral, multilateral or under the auspices of some supranational body, has never achieved its aims nor led to long term peace ... -
Nigeria: tensions as Jonathan accedes to fuel protestors’ demands – By Ejiro Barrett
The nationwide strike called by labour unions against fuel subsidy removal in Nigeria has been suspended pending further negotiations, but it is not clear whether the ...