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Posts Tagged ‘election’

Congo leader wins disputed poll

Republic of Congo President Denis Sassou-Nguesso in Brazzaville (10 July 2009)

The Congolese President Denis Sassou-Nguesso has won another seven years in office, according to preliminary results from Sunday’s election.

The electoral commission said Mr Sassou-Nguesso took 78.6% of the vote. His nearest rival gained just 7.5%.

About 2,000 opposition supporters came on to the streets of Brazzaville to protest. They were dispersed by riot police firing tear gas.

Mr Sassou-Nguesso has been in power for most of the past 30 years.

The BBC’s Thomas Fessy in Brazzaville described what happened at the demonstration.

"It was a peaceful protest. But the police stormed the demonstrators and scattered them with tear gas.

"They ran after the demonstrators. One man was beaten up in front of us. His face was bleeding."

Our correspondent says that the police also confiscated and destroyed his recording equipment and that of a French television crew.

Opposition leaders had urged voters to stay away from Sunday’s election, saying the government had inflated the electoral figures.

A polling station in the Republic of Congo (12 July 2009)

On the day, election observers said turnout was low. But figures published on Wednesday by Congo’s territorial administration ministry, and reported by Agence France Presse, showed the official turnout at 66.42%.

The candidate who had been expected to be Mr Sassou-Nguesso’s nearest rival, the former finance minister Mathias Dzon, won only 2.3% of the vote.

An independent candidate, Joseph Kignoumbi Kia Mboungou came second to the president with 7.46%.

Before the polls closed on Sunday, the head of the African Union observers Dieudonne Kumbo Yaya told the BBC his team was not aware of any fraud having taken place.

But our correspondent witnessed money being handed out at a polling station in the south of the capital, to people who later said they had been asked to vote for Mr Sassou-Nguesso.

Another man said he had not voted because he had not been given a polling card. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Chaos deepens in Japan’s ruling party before poll

Chaos deepened in Japan’s ruling party ahead of an expected August election, as MPs fearing a crushing defeat continued efforts to ditch unpopular PM Taro Aso. Opinion polls show the main opposition Democratic Party ahead of Aso’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), raising the prospect of an end to more than half a century of almost unbroken rule by the business-friendly conservatives.

Euro newcomers

By Jonty Bloom
The World Tonight, BBC Radio 4

Jerzy Buzek

The first session of the new European Parliament in Strasbourg has been dominated by two issues: the election of Jerzy Buzek as its president and the arrival of the first far right MEPs from the UK.

Jerzy Buzek is the living embodiment of what many people think the European Union is all about.

He was born in Poland, in a border region which changed hands between Czechoslovakia, Poland and Germany in the chaos of World War II.

He ended the war living and working in communist Poland – a regime that he eventually helped to bring down as a member of the anti-bureaucratic trade union Solidarity.

Eventually, he became prime minister of Poland and now, aged 69, has been sworn in as the first president of the European Parliament from the former communist East.

It has been a remarkable journey for him and for Europe, the significance of which can perhaps best be judged by a line from Mr Buzek’s speech of thanks.

"Nick Griffin seemed to think he might get quite a respectful reception on the floor of the European Parliament"

Jonty Bloom, BBC Radio 4

Euro parliament elects new leader

"Once upon a time I hoped to be a member of the Polish Parliament, in a free Poland," he said.

"Today I have become the president of the European Parliament, something I could never have dreamed of."

But amid all the symbolism that surrounds these events it is also worth remembering that the role of president is largely symbolic and, in this case, is the result of political trade off.

It has already been arranged that conservative Mr Buzek will serve two-and-half years before standing down in favour of a socialist candidate.

Anti-BNP petition

If that kind of wheeler-dealing highlights one problem for Europe, many MEPs fear that the election of Nick Griffin and Andrew Brons presents another.

They are the first members of the far right British National Party to win seats in the European Parliament, although to be fair that has caused more consternation in the UK than in Strasbourg where far right politicians are not so uncommon.

Their election has led to a petition by 90,000 British voters declaring that the BNP does not speak for them.

Nick Griffin

But technically now, at least, they do and no petition is going to stop them being MEPs or speaking when and how they want.

In fact, Nick Griffin seemed to think he might get quite a respectful reception on the floor of the European Parliament.

He pointed out that when UK Independence Party’s leader Nigel Farage attacked the "federalist project" from the floor of Parliament he was heckled.

But he said: "When Bruno Gollnisch [from the French National Front] got up and spoke more specifically today he was heard politely, so I may be in the same category, we will see."

Mr Griffin may well be right, but it seems unlikely.

It is true to say, however, that the European Parliament is made up of a very wide range of political parties and has coped with their often controversial views for a long time.

Doubtless it will manage to do so in the next five years as well. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Progressive Ideas Network: Ideology is Missing Element of Progressive Strategy

Ideology is Missing Element of Progressive Strategy By Sean Thomas-Breitfeld, Center for Community Change In spite of the possibility that November’s election created for transformational…

Diane Tucker: Iranians Worldwide Roll Out Green Scroll Against Ahmadinejad (PHOTOS)

AUSTIN, TX — When a reporter asked Vaclav Havel to comment on the election protests in Iran, the former Czech president said, “Expressions of solidarity…

Japan’s PM Aso calls August vote

breaking news

Japan’s embattled Prime Minister, Taro Aso, will call a general election for 30 August, says public broadcaster NHK.

The move comes after Mr Aso’s ruling coalition suffered a crucial defeat in local elections in the capital, Tokyo.

The opposition Democratic Party (DJP) won 54 seats to 38 for Mr Aso’s Liberal Democratic Party, ending four decades of dominance in the assembly.

Mr Aso, who has approval ratings of around 20%, had been widely expected to dissolve parliament following the loss. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Taro’s last card

Japan’s beleaguered prime minister calls an election

SINCE becoming Japan’s prime minister last September, Taro Aso has resisted calls to hold an early election. But the clamour from both his own team, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), as well as the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), became too loud to ignore. The LDP suffered a striking defeat in municipal elections in Tokyo on Sunday July 12th and, facing an open revolt from his own party, Mr Aso finally succumbed.

On Monday Mr Aso decided to call an election on August 30th to select members of the lower house of Japan’s Diet (parliament), which he plans to dissolve next week. The decision should quell moves from within the LDP to boot him out. But the decision could result in the ousting of the LDP; the party has governed Japan for more than 50 years. …

Blow to Japan’s PM in Tokyo poll

By Roland Buerk
BBC News, Tokyo

Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso campaigning in Tokyo (3 July 2009)

People in Tokyo are preparing to vote in local polls considered a key test of popularity for Prime Minister Taro Aso.

The polls in the capital come ahead of a general election which must be held by October.

Taro Aso, whose Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has governed for almost all the past half-century, has approval hovering around 20%.

The opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) is hoping to break the LDP’s grip on power.

Voters are deciding who will sit on Tokyo’s metropolitan assembly, but the stakes could be higher than that for Mr Aso.

If his LDP does badly, moves to oust him from the leadership could intensify.

In the run up to the vote in Tokyo candidates, wearing white gloves and sashes, toured the streets in vans using loudspeakers to campaign.

But many voters appeared largely indifferent.

Some candidates resorted to making speeches in front of deserted city car parks, their words echoing off the surrounding apartment blocks.

The LDP has governed Japan for the past half century, except for a break of less than a year in the 1990s.

But Mr Aso, who is the fourth prime minister since the last election to the more powerful lower house in 2005, has dismal approval ratings.

The opposition DPJ hopes to take power in the next general election, which must be held by October.

It is promising to break the grip of the bureaucracy on policy making, and increase social welfare measures.

But the opposition’s support has been eroded by fund raising scandals.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

David Paul: Who Will Win the Next Phase in Iran, Ahmadinejad or Iraq’s Ayatollah Ali Sistani?

We have yet to see what the Iranian regime will be prepared to do in the face of real opposition. After all, the leaders of…

Tough love

Barack Obama before leaving Ghana

By Will Ross
BBC News, Ghana

He may only have been in Africa for 21 hours but it was long enough for Barack Obama to send out his inspiring message across the continent – "A New Moment Of Promise," he called it.

He urged Africans to stop laying the blame elsewhere and to take control of their own destiny.

He encouraged the younger generation to catch the "Yes We Can" fever that had assisted his own rise to the White House.

Strengthening democracy from the grassroots requires some brave foot soldiers and Mr Obama singled out the work of civil society groups such as Zimbabwe’s Election Support Network, which struggled to ensure people’s votes counted in the face of a violent state-driven clampdown.

A young girl in Ghana

"Make no mistake: history is on the side of these brave Africans, and not with those who use coups or change constitutions to stay in power. Africa doesn’t need strongmen, it needs strong institutions," Mr Obama stated.

Ghana is a case in point – one of the reasons for Ghana’s successful election late last year was its strong electoral commission.

Along the West African coast the Sierra Leone People’s Party was voted out of power in 2007 amid growing anger at government corruption.

The election worked because the National Electoral Commission, headed by Christiana Thorpe, was strong and did not buckle under pressure to fix the vote.

The strong institutions are certainly lacking in Barack Obama’s African home – Kenya.

When Mwai Kibaki was announced the winner of the 2007 election, the head of the government-appointed electoral commission, Simon Kivuiti, admitted that he did not know for sure if Mr Kibaki had won.

"He said if you want to play ball on the international level you have to play by the international rules"

Kwesi Aning
Kofi Annan Peacekeeping Institute

In quotes: Ghana speech

During his speech Barack Obama did not name and shame leaders – that is not his style.

But his denunciation of Africa’s "strong men" will have made a few leaders squirm in their presidential palaces.

Mr Obama seemed to be adding his voice to the collective despair across West Africa as Niger’s president, Mamadou Tandja, tears up the rule book in an attempt to stay in power.

Cameroon’s Paul Biya, Senegal’s octogenarian President Abdoulaye Wade, Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni and several others have also changed the rules in order to remain in office.

Mutual responsibility

The question is whether those leaders are going to play the blindest bit of attention to the words of an African-American who is far more popular than they are.

They may well have reached for the television remote control and found something less uncomfortable to watch.

Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni

Barack Obama said the partnership between Africa and America must be one of mutual responsibility.

"He threw the ball into our own court and said if you want to play ball on the international level you have to play by the international rules," said Kwesi Aning of the Kofi Annan Peacekeeping Institute.

It will not be easy to change some old, corrupt habits but if Africa plays its part Barack Obama is promising a great deal in return including assistance to boost agriculture, trade and healthcare.

But, in a difficult economic climate, the US may be hard pushed to fulfil some of its promises.

In Uganda, for example, there is mounting concern as funding constraints are forcing health centres to stop enrolling new patients for US-funded anti-retroviral treatment under the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (PEPFAR) initiative which George Bush started.

Being an African-American means Barack Obama is listened to as a brother in Africa rather than as a condescending visitor.

Whiff of hypocrisy

People agreed with him rather than dismissing him when he hit out at some of the practises holding back the continent.

"No business wants to invest in a place where the government skims 20% off the top, or the head of the Port Authority is corrupt.

"No person wants to live in a society where the rule of law gives way to the rule of brutality and bribery. That is not democracy, that is tyranny and now is the time for it to end," he said.

Inside the conference centre, Ghanaian politicians cheered, applauded and gave a standing ovation. Some smelt hypocrisy there.

"The political leaders were clapping and cheering the speech. But when we plead for an end to the same problems that Obama highlighted we are threatened, abused and sidelined," said Mr Aning.

He commended the speech for being honest, direct and lacking spin but suggests the same cannot be said for some of the politicians who were listening to it.

"You have the power to hold your leaders accountable," Mr Obama said, aiming his message at the youth.

But it can be dangerous trying to stand up and call for better governance.

In March, two Kenyan human rights activists – Kamau Kingara and John Paul Oulo – were gunned down in broad daylight shortly after helping an investigation into extrajudicial killings by the Kenyan police.

"It won’t be easy. It will take time and effort. There will be suffering and setbacks," Mr Obama stated as he called for the continent to take responsibility for its future.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Michael Rowe: The New Ice Age of the Young Republicans

The election of 38-year old Audra Shay of Louisiana to the chairmanship of the Young Republican National Federation on Saturday, in Indianapolis, might have gone…

Spinewatch: Can Link Journalism Change How the Media Covers the Presidential Election Campaign?

Jay Rosen of PressThink has started a meme called “spinewatch,” which he’s pursuing on Twitter with the #spinewatch tag and on the Publish2 Spinewatch Newsgroup that he created, where he offers this description:
Spinewatch is a newsgroup and link bank for campaign 2008 stories of a certain narrowly-defined type. Here, we keep track of reporting from [...]