Saturday 19 September 2020

A crackdown on political dissent warns of an unfree and unfair election in Tanzania

 



A crackdown on political dissent warns of an unfree and unfair election in Tanzania

By Tatenda Mazarura• 18 September 2020




Voters queue to cast their vote in the Tanazania's presidential election at a polling station in the capital Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 25 October 2015.(Photo: EPA/ANTHONY SIAME)  




Tanzania goes to the polls on 28 October 2020 to elect a president, members of parliament and councillors. This will be the fifth general election since the reintroduction of the multiparty system in the country in 1992.

While President John Magufuli, who took office in 2015, has pledged a peaceful and credible process, the election comes amid concerns of narrowing freedoms and increasing authoritarianism. 

Magufuli has been accused of cracking down on political dissent and freedom of speech in a desperate bid to tighten his grip on political power, a situation that has worsened as the election draws closer. 

Reports indicate shrinking civic and democratic space, information manipulation and restriction of freedom of expression, association and assembly. Newspapers have been shut down, journalists are being harassed and arrested, the opposition is being persecuted and arrested and the work of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) has been severely restricted. 

Protests, anonymous blogging and criticism of parliament have all been outlawed. This has heightened fears that the looming vote’s credibility will be compromised.  

In a joint statement submitted by CIVICUS and DefendDefenders at the 43rd session of the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council in June, the organisations noted the rapidly deteriorating situation in Tanzania, urging the UN to act swiftly and prevent further escalation. Part of the statement read:

“We continue to document the use of draconian legislation and of legal and extra-judicial methods to restrict freedom of expression and opinion, peaceful assembly and association, and the overall closure of the civic and democratic space.”  

Equal access to the media, and a conducive operating space for all stakeholders, is an important part of a vibrant and inclusive democracy. However, the current environment will make it difficult for citizens to make informed choices come election day. 

In the absence of a conducive operating environment for political parties, candidates, civil society and the media, the people of Tanzania risk having their right to freely participate in the elections compromised.  

Manipulation of the legal framework

The legal framework for elections remains problematic.

Freedom House’s annual report documents how, in January 2019, parliament passed draconian amendments to the Political Parties Act that, among other provisions, allow for bans on political parties that engage in common forms of activism. A campaign of repression against opposition parties ensued, with harassment, arrests, and detentions of prominent political figures.

According to a report released by Human Rights Watch (HRW) on 2 September 2020, at least 17 opposition party members and critics of the government have been arrested since mid-June. The human rights watchdog argued it was no coincidence that the Tanzanian government had increased its repression so close to next month’s elections.   

On 23 June, police arrested opposition politician Zitto Kabwe and seven other opposition members during an internal meeting of their opposition party, Alliance for Change and Transparency (ACT)-Wazalendo, in Kilwa, in the southern region of Lindi. They were charged with “endangering the peace”.

On 6 July, eight members of Chadema, Tanzania’s main opposition party, including its youth wing chairperson, Nusrat Hanje, were arrested in the Singida region, west of Dodoma. 

The police accused them of insulting the national flag by singing the Tanzanian national anthem while raising a Chadema flag during a party meeting on 4 July. Prosecutors also accused the group of unlawful assembly and “attempting to communicate classified information”. The group remains in jail in Dodoma after a magistrate denied them bail. On 26 August, the high court ordered that their bail be processed, but they remain in jail.

On 11 July, the police arrested Sheikh Issa Ponda, secretary of the Council of Imams in Tanzania at his office in Bungoni, Dar es Salaam, allegedly for circulating a document containing elements of incitement and breach of peace.

Recently, the National Electoral Commission (NEC) reportedly reviewed and amended election regulations. The new regulations indicate that inviting international observers is discretionary. In addition, party agents will not be guaranteed to receive result slips after the count has been concluded. It will be left to the discretion of the relevant election supervisor whether to allow a party agent to look at the result slips.

As a result, critics believe the October elections will neither be free nor fair unless urgent reforms are introduced. Fatma Karume, a former president of the Tanganyika Law Society, said:

“The conditions definitely do not exist for a credible election. The premise of free and fair elections is that there must be a level playing field for all political parties, which is currently not the case in Tanzania.”

Access to media severely curtailed

An independent, impartial media that affords equal access to all political parties and candidates is necessary for a free and fair election.

A month before the election, the state media continues to show bias towards the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party.  

Maalim Seif Sharif Hamad, the national chairperson of the opposition ACT in Tanzania, has bemoaned failure by public media outlets to provide equitable coverage of all political parties:

Currently, the TBC, ZBC, Daily News, Habari Leo (News Today and Zanzibar Leo (Zanzibar Today) have become mouthpieces of the CCM, driving government propaganda. The media plays a vital role in ensuring free and fair elections. They should draw up regulations and guidelines to ensure equitable and fair coverage,” he said. 

The government has reportedly imposed new restrictions on the media and on freedom of expression online. It adopted regulations that ban Tanzanian broadcasters from working with foreign broadcasters without staff from the Tanzania Communications and Regulatory Authority (TCRA) or other government agency present. It also adopted regulations that criminalise a broad range of social media and online posts, including those that support organising demonstrations. 

The authorities have also fined or suspended media outlets for covering politically sensitive topics, including the coronavirus. On 28 August, the TCRA suspended the private media house, Clouds TV, for a week for violating the broadcast code by announcing election statistics that had not been approved by the NEC. 

On 6 July, the Communications Authority banned Kwanza TV, an online television station, for eleven months following an Instagram post reporting on a Covid-19 health alert by the United States embassy about Tanzania. The authorities accused Kwanza TV of being “unpatriotic”.

In addition, the NEC has excluded human rights organisations, including the Tanzania Human Rights Defenders Coalition, the Legal and Human Rights Centre and the Tanzania Constitution Forum (Jukwaa la Katiba Tanzania), from conducting voter education. 

This may result in disenfranchisement of citizens who rely on these sources of information. In line with regional and international best practice, voter education must be open and accessible to all. It should not be criminalised unless it involves dissemination of inaccurate information with malicious intent. 

Election observers 

Owing to the Covid-19 pandemic, the elections will be held in the absence of international observers – including the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU) – as in the case of Guinea and Malawi, among others. 

Another major concern will be reduced local election observation.

The authorities have also taken action against key NGOs to limit their ability to monitor the elections. 

In July, the NEC issued lists of organisations approved to observe the elections, excluding major organisations that have historically coordinated election monitoring in the country, including the Tanzania Human Rights Defenders Coalition, the Legal and Human Rights Centre, and the Tanzania Constitution Forum (Jukwaa la Katiba Tanzania). 

According to Human Rights Watch, the organisations believe they were excluded because they have a high capacity to objectively monitor the elections processes. 

Elections and Covid-19

The Covid-19 pandemic poses an additional challenge to electoral processes in Africa and raises concerns for the holding of free, fair, transparent and peaceful elections, while also ensuring the safety of citizens. Tanzania will go into the elections amid the Covid-19 pandemic, although in June, President Magufuli declared that the country was Covid-19 free. 

Tanzania has been criticised for its management of the pandemic, including for not restricting large gatherings and not sharing information on coronavirus figures.

Decisions on elections in times of crisis can therefore pose a dilemma between civic responsibility and health protection, when people want or are encouraged to vote but are also concerned about their health, and when no appropriate measures are put in place in a timely manner. 

Going ahead with the elections in the absence of Covid-19 protection measures may increase the spread of the pandemic and put the health of the population at risk. 

Furthermore, the electorate may be reluctant to vote for fear of the virus, which could lead to a low voter turnout, and in the end may further challenge the credibility of the poll.

It remains to be seen whether authorities will be capable of ensuring a Covid-19 compliant election, which promotes physical distancing and respects international public health regulations. However, without building consensus with the political opposition on this issue, a disputed process and outcome is inevitable.

Conclusion

The SADC Principles and Guidelines Governing Democratic Elections emphasise the need for full citizen participation in the political process; freedom of association; equal opportunity to exercise the right to vote and be voted for; and voter education as some of the key principles for conducting democratic elections. 

Article 25 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights also refers to the right of every citizen to take part in the conduct of public affairs and to the right to vote in elections: “guaranteeing the free expression of the will of the electors.” 

Based on this, it is clear that genuine democratic elections require an environment conducive to the respect of human rights and fundamental freedoms, including freedom of peaceful assembly and association, freedom of opinion and expression and personal security and safety – all of which are essential conditions for the effective exercise of the right to vote. 

The playing field in Tanzania is far from being level, and this is in violation of SADC guidelines and the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance. 

For these reasons, the African Union, SADC and the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights should all be expressing concern and appealing to President Magufuli to abide by international and regional law.

Elections should not be held just to tick the box of fulfilling a constitutional necessity, but should be conducted in a manner that allows for full expression, freedom from intimidation and fear, and equal access to sources of information. 

Authorities in Tanzania are encouraged to put urgent measures in place that will guarantee a peaceful, free, fair and credible process. 

https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2020-09-18-a-crackdown-on-political-dissent-warns-of-an-unfree-and-unfair-election-in-tanzania/



… And I think to myself, what a wonderful world

 



… And I think to myself, what a wonderful world




 Pepe 
was an illiterate person who, after the death of his wife in 2001, based his days and nights on trying to read and learn to write. He needed to express himself, to feel somehow close to her, to tell her that nothing had changed, that there are still corners in the house where her smell will remain eternal. To this day, he has written more than 500 poems that he is still reading through tears. Pepe is 87 years old and lives alone, although for health reasons, there are many days when his daughter comes to be with him and attend to their needs. Copyright: © Joaquin Luna, Spain, Open, Portraiture, 2021 Sony World Photography Awards 

 

South Africa: Yes we are ‘gatvol’ of #theafricanway (aided and abetted by liberals) and this is why

("gatvol": Afrikaans slang for "extremely fed up")

Opinion by Political Correspondent

0
Yes we are 'gatvol' of #theafricanway (aided and abetted by liberals) and this is why
Yes we are 'gatvol' of #theafricanway (aided and abetted by liberals) and this is why

What has the black majority done with South Africa? #TheAfricanWay, here is some idea. Are you not gatvol of the following being done to you on a daily basis? Who commits these crimes on a daily basis?

ATM bombings, CIT heists, stock theft, street /shop and business robberies, truck/bus bombings, burning/ destruction of schools, mutilation of animals (cattle&sheep) during cattle raids on farms, violent protests, armed robberies, smash and grab, steal and swap bank cards, illegal mining, farm and Smallholdings attacks, posing as police/ metro cops, urinating in public and dumping rubbish all over, raping of the elderly, babies and teenagers, house robbing, cable theft, land grabs, stealing from overturned trucks, hijacking, taxi violence, Illegal electrical connections, burning buses and trains, vandalizing property, vehicle theft, looting shops, posing as police ” blue light gangs, inciting violence and intimidation ……..

And the ANC socialist/Marxist government does little but nothing to stop this.

In fact the ANC goes for the big time, they are specializing in much more serious crimes like state capture, industrial scale looting, institutionalizing double standards and racial discriminatory laws against minorities, designing and instigating racial hatred and economic warfare against minorities, stealing in each and every way possible, living the high life with taxpayer money, decimating and rotting up each and every piece of infrastructure and national asset – like railways, schools, hospitals, universities and state owned enterprises – treason and selling the country to foreigners etc, all whilst laughing incessantly at each other, turning national politics and institutions like Parliament into a circus.

At the end of the day all they are good at is racial supremacy and dominance but with creating , building, sustaining and nurturing they do not have the foggiest clue. And definitely also not with taking responsibility and accountability, however with denying and lying ” our people” running the country are experts in.

We need to say we had enough and we need to say we want out. The current way things are done with the Liberal/Globalist Alliance with their liberal mainstream media friends turning the whole world into a one sided racial hegemony with only black lives which matter is not working for us.

South Africa Today – South Africa News

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/yes-we-are-gatvol-of-theafricanway-aided-and-abetted-by-liberals-and-this-is-why/


Donald trumps scientists to win his Nobel prize

 

Donald trumps scientists to win his Nobel prize

Washington - Donald Trump has won his Nobel prize.

However, the US president is unlikely to boast about the Ig Nobel prize he, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Russian President Vladimir Putin were awarded on Thursday night for Medical Education.

 They shared the prize with Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil, Narendra Modi of India, Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico, Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow of Turkmenistan, for “using the Covid-19 viral pandemic to teach the world that politicians can have a more immediate effect on life and death than scientists and doctors can”.

“These are all individuals who realised that their judgement is

better than the judgement of people who have been studying this their entire lives, and were more insistent about it,” said Marc Abrahams, master of ceremonies.

Abrahams tried to reach out to the world leaders to accept their awards, with no luck.

Because of the coronavirus pandemic, Thursday’s 30th annual Ig Nobel ceremony was a 75-minute pre-recorded virtual affair instead of the usual live event at Harvard University.

“It was a nightmare, and it took us months, but we got it done,” said Abrahams.

An anthropologist who tested an urban legend by fashioning a knife out of frozen human faeces, and a man who found that spiders – oddly – give scientists who study insects the heebie-jeebies, are among the 2020 winners.

Metin Eren has been fascinated since high school by the story of an Inuit man in Canada who made a knife out of his own excrement. The story has been told and retold, but is it true? Eren and his colleagues decided to find out.

Eren, an assistant professor of anthropology at Kent State University in Ohio and co-director of the university’s Experimental Archaeology Lab, used real human faeces frozen to -50C° and filed to a sharp edge. He then tried to cut meat with it.

“The poop knives failed miserably,” he said. “There’s not a lot of basis empirically for this fantastic story.

The study is a little gross but makes an important point: “evidence and fact checking are vital”, he said.

Richard Vetter won an Ig Nobel for his paper looking at why people who spend their lives studying insects are creeped out by spiders.

His paper, “Arachnophobic Entomologists: Why Two Legs Make all the Difference”, appeared in the the journal American Entomologist in 2013.

Vetter, a retired research associate and spider specialist who worked in the entomology department at the University of California Riverside for 32 years, found during the course of his work that many insect lovers hate spiders.

He found that many bug lovers had had a negative experience with a spider. The fact that spiders are often hairy, fast, silent and have all those creepy eyes freaks out entomologists, he said.

The prize is a 10-trillion dollar bill from Zimbabwe, roughly the equivalent of 40 cents US (ZAR6.50). - AP

iol.co.za/ios/news/world/donald-trumps-scientists-to-win-his-nobel-prize-78053bf9-872e-4360-ac1b-c55024336028

Russia claims ownership of Venus, plans intergalactic mission

 




This May 2016 photo shows the planet Venus, seen from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Akatsuki probe. Picture: J. Greaves/Cardiff University/JAXA via AP

Russia claims ownership of Venus, plans intergalactic mission

By Storm Gifford/New York Daily News

New York - Everybody wants to rule the world, claims Tears for Fears, but Russia has set its sights beyond Earth.

Dmitry Rogozin, the director of Roscosmos - a Russian-run cosmonaut and aerospace research corporation - indicated earlier this week that his nation is organizing an intragalactic mission to Venus, reported TASS.

"We think that Venus is a Russian planet, so we shouldn't lag behind," asserted Rogozin. "Projects of Venus missions are included in the united government program of Russia's space exploration for 2021-2030."

The second planet from the sun, also referred to as Earth's twin, is - on a good day - a mere 25 million miles away. If the distance is a putoff, consider that the surface temperature is a balmy 900 degrees - hot enough to melt lead.

Rogozin's statement followed the revelation that the Earth gas known as phosphine had been detected in Venus' atmosphere.

The European Space Agency states Russians, and formerly the Soviets, are no strangers to Venus, having commenced significant planetary research in 1967.

"Russia has still preserved its unique expertise in designing and developing landing craft for Venus and continues to define scientific tasks for those craft," noted the agency on its website.

But Rogozin's claim of Russian ownership of Venus is off the mark.

The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 - originally drafted by the US, Soviet Union and UK - strictly forbids any country from staking claim to galactic entities.

"Outer space, including the moon and other celestial bodies, is not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means," reads Article II of the pact.

Currently, 110 nations are party to the Outer Space Treaty, according to the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs.

 https://www.iol.co.za/news/world/russia-claims-ownership-of-venus-plans-intergalactic-mission--5b142df5-9f2b-422d-bec1-66931efdbccb

McConnell: Senate will vote this session on Trump nominee to replace Ginsburg

 | September 18, 2020 

www.washingtonexaminer.com 

 

 The Washington Examiner

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the Senate will vote on President Trump’s nominee to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died on Friday.

“President Trump’s nominee will receive a vote on the floor of the United States Senate,” McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said in a lengthy statement praising Ginsburg as “thoroughly dedicated to the legal profession.”

McConnell referred back to his decision to punt on a nominee to replace Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in the final year of President Barack Obama’s second term.

“Since the 1880s, no Senate has confirmed an opposite-party president’s Supreme Court nominee in a presidential election year,” McConnell said.

Republicans control 53 votes and need 51 to confirm a nominee. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, an Alaska Republican, said earlier in the day on Friday that she’ll oppose a new nominee until the next president is sworn into office.

Trump announced a list of potential nominees on Sept. 9, but it remains unclear when he will nominate someone to the high court.

 

Friday 18 September 2020

Dems Call Trump a Mass-Murdering Racist

 

Dems Call Trump a Mass-Murdering Racist

His poll numbers rise.

  

According to a recent Hill-HarrisX poll of registered voters, President Donald Trump's approval rating just hit its highest mark since June. This may or may not hold after back-to-back alleged "bombshells" about what Trump knew about COVID-19 and about Trump allegedly disparaging fallen soldiers as "losers." 

But still, for Democrats, these new poll numbers are triggering yet another round of head-shaking. After all, the Democratic perception and characterization of Trump is that of a crass, ignorant, xenophobic, incompetent, mass-murdering racist. 

How, they ask, can someone who put the "d" in deplorable not find himself universally rejected? Or, as Peter Strzok, the fired senior FBI agent who led the Trump-Russia collusion probe, famously texted about the 2016 election, "Hillary should win 100,000,000-0."

How, Dems ask, can such an overtly racist president get a 36% approval rating by Black likely voters in a July Rasmussen poll? After all, Trump recently denied the existence of "systemic racism" in law enforcement and said that there are "some bad apples" and cops who "choke" at critical times. Similarly, Attorney General Bill Barr, at a recent House Judiciary Committee hearing on police response to the street protests, also disputed the claim of police "systemic racism." Barr said: "I think it would be an oversimplification to treat the problem as rooted in some deep-seated racism generally infecting our police departments. It seems far more likely that the problem stems from a complex mix of factors, which can be addressed with focused attention over time."

And, in Florida, an NBC News/Marist poll shows Trump and Biden neck-and-neck at 48% each among likely voters eight weeks before the election. Even more astonishing to those who despise Trump because he "hates" Hispanics is that, in Florida, likely Hispanic voters give him a 50% approval rating versus Biden's 46%. 

There are many reasons why Trump is outperforming among Hispanic and Black likely voters compared with the typical Republican presidential candidate. 

First, it's hard to beat, prepandemic shutdown, historically low Hispanic and Black unemployment numbers. Trump supports school choice, enabling urban parents in communities of color to decide whether to send their kid to an often-underperforming government school versus taking the public dollars allocated for their kids to a better school option. 

Second, a lot of Hispanics do not like illegal immigration any more than do non-Hispanics.

Third, the daily and nightly street protests and the protesters' anti-cop rhetoric help make Trump's "law and order" pitch look pretty appealing. As for the demand to "defund the police," a Gallup poll performed June 23 to July 6, 2020, found that the percentage of whites who want police staffing to remain where it is or even increased is very close to the percentage of Blacks who want the staffing to remain where it is or to have it increased, at 88% and 81%, respectively.

It has become increasingly clear the goal is not a more "diverse" police force. The chief of police of Rochester, New York, who was fired after the death of a Black man in police custody, is Black. The police chief of Minneapolis, where George Floyd died, is Black and Hispanic. The racial composition of the police departments of New York City and Los Angeles increasingly reflect the racial demographics of their cities. Or, as the left likes to put it, the departments look like their cities.

Chanting protesters in Rochester made their goals clear: "If you don't give us our s—-, we'll shut s—- down." A Chicago Black Lives Matter organizer defended looting in the city's Magnificent Mile as "reparations." 

Well, buckle up. According to Mapping Police Violence, 30 unarmed Black men were killed in 2019, a monthly average of 2.5. So, we could easily see 2.5 "police brutality" protests per month. According to Statista, 7,407 Blacks were victims of homicide in 2018 — a monthly average of 617. And it is estimated that 90% of Black homicide victims are killed by other Blacks. 

As for defunding the police, rapper Tupac Shakur said in 1994: "The same crime element that white people are scared of, Black people are scared of. The same crime element that white people fear, we fear. So, we defend ourselves from the same crime element that they're scared of. You know what I'm saying? While they waiting for legislation to pass and everything, we next door to the killer. We next door to 'em, you know, because we up in the projects, where there's 80 n——s in the building. All them killers they letting out, they right there in that building. But just cause we Black, we get along with the killers or something? We get along with the rapists cause we Black and we from the same hood? What is that? We need protection, too."

How ironic if, after the media and Democratic leaders' three-plus years of maligning Trump as a xenophobic racist, Hispanic and Black voters help keep Trump in the White House for four more years.

https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2020/09/dems-call-trump-mass-murdering-racist-larry-elder/