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Posts Tagged ‘former prime minister’

Koštunica: New policy needed for EU

DSS leader Vojislav KoÅ¡tunica said that the “EU has not alternative” policy should be replaced with normal policies that will keep the country together. “Life and the example of the conference in Slovenia confirms that it would have be good for Serbia to implement these thought-out state-preserving policies over the last two years instead of empty and superficial policies such as the current government’s ‘EU has no alternative’,” the former prime minister stated.

“Zoran ĐinÄ‘ić” awards presented

A formal ceremony was held late on Wednesday in Novi Sad to present the annual Dr. Zoran ĐinÄ‘ić awards. The awards were established by the provincial government six years ago, and are named after Serbia’s former prime minister, assassinated in 2003.

Former Croat PM Sanader hospitalized

Former Prime Minister of Croatia Ivo Sandader is in hospital with pneumonia, media in that country are reporting. The Croatian Ministry of Health issued a statement saying that Sanader was admitted running a high fever and that he was initially examined in an clinic that specializes in infective diseases, but that he is now treated in a pulmonary hospital.

HDZ offers Mesić extension of mandate

Zagreb daily Jutarnji List writes that influential Croatian politicians are trying to convince President Stjepan Mesić to extend his presidential mandate. Former prime minister Ivo Sanader, Assembly Speaker Luka Bebić and his deputy Vladimir Šeks, all senior officials of the ruling Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) party, proposed the extension of Mesić’s mandate for another whole year while making an official visit to Vukovar on Statehood Day on June 25.

Saudi Arabia offers asylum to beleaguered Musharraf

Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf may be heading former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s way as far as taking refuge outside the country is concerned.
Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to Pakistan Abdul Aziz Bin Ibrahim said that his country would consider giving political asylum to Musharraf if he asks for it, The Daily Times reports.
Talking to media [...]

High Court case against Musharraf adjourned to August 17

The Islamabad High Court on Monday adjourned the hearing of the petition for registering a case against former president Pervez Musharraf, former prime minister Shaukat Aziz and Aftab Sherpao till August 17.
Coordinator Defence of Human Rights Khalid Khwaja had filed a petition in the Islamabad High Court that he was kept in illegal detention [...]

Gearing up to vote

By Rayhan Demytrie
BBC News, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

Bakiyev campaign poster

"Together We Can" is Almazbek Atambayev’s presidential campaign slogan.

The former prime minister and main opposition candidate, Mr Atambayev is hoping an Obama-style message will carry him through to victory in Thursday’s elections.

He promises to end the governance of one family and fight the country’s high level of corruption.

Outspoken politician Bakyt Beshimov, Mr Atambayev’s campaign chief, sifts through the "Together We Can" printed T-shirts, flags, bandanas and stickers.

He sounds convinced the Kyrgyz public will back them. "Our concept is to show that together, united we can win," he says.

But he faces an extremely tough battle. Six candidates are competing for the presidency on 23 July, including Kurmanbek Bakiyev, the incumbent leader.

The brains behind his campaign have chosen not to feature Mr Bakiyev’s picture. Instead ordinary citizens smile from the billboards with the simple captions "Bakiyev is our president" or "Bakiyev is good".

PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES

  • Kurmanbek Bakiyev – the incumbent leader
  • Almazbek Atambayev – former prime minister and the main opposition candidate
  • Temir Sariyev – who broke off from the coalition of opposition parties to run for president
  • Zhenishbek Nazaraliyev – a celebrity doctor who, if elected, promises to legalise opium cultivation
  • Toktaim Umetalieva – a female Krygyz activist
  • Nurlan Motuyev – an entrepreneur allegedly linked to a coal-mining scandal

But even though his picture is not on display, Mr Bakiyev is still the most visible candidate – his campaign billboards significantly outnumber the rest of the contenders.

Two days prior to the poll, a concert featuring local and Russian pop stars was held in Bishkek’s largest stadium in support of Mr Bakiyev’s candidacy.

A recent report published by the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe’s election observers says that broadcast coverage of opposition campaigns has been limited, and state media has been predominantly focusing on the activities of President Bakiyev "both as candidate and president".

Grip on power

The last presidential elections in impoverished Kyrgyzstan took place four years ago.

In March 2005, the country underwent a popular uprising which became known as the Tulip Revolution. Then president Askar Akayev was forced to flee the country.

Almazbek Atambayev, July 2009

Mr Bakiyev was elected the following July with an overwhelming 89% of the popular vote.

But despite this mandate, he has still faced some tough challenges – notably when opposition politicians sought to combine their efforts to him bring down earlier this year.

The United People’s Movement (UPM), a coalition of opposition parties, attempted to stage mass protests, accusing him of squandering the opportunity given to him by the Kyrgyz people.

They demanded electoral reforms and an end to the harassment of opposition members, threatening to hold more rallies if their demands not met.

But in the event, turnout was poor and Mr Bakiyev lived to fight another day.

Base race

In his inaugural speech four years ago, Mr Bakiyev pledged to fight corruption and nepotism.

Kyrgyzstan, he said, will not become a place for the fulfilment of someone else’s geopolitical interests – particularly those of the US and Russia.

US ceremony at Manas, 15 June, 2009

Now the country is perhaps best known for precisely that – with debate centring on the only US military base in Central Asia, which Kyrgyzstan announced in February that it would shut.

Manas, as the base is known, is the main transit hub for tens of thousands of US and Nato forces on their way in and out of Afghanistan. The decision to close the base came just as US President Barack Obama signalled that the US would double its number of troops in Afghanistan.

On the same day that President Bakiyev made his decision public, Russia offered Kyrgyzstan almost $2bn (£1.2bn) in loans, and a $300m grant.

In June parliament voted in favour of a new deal allowing the Americans to stay, and just in the past week a high level Russian delegation has visited Kyrgyzstan to discuss the expansion of its military presence by opening a second base in the country.

Cracking down on dissent

Another problem facing Kyrgyzstan at the moment is that, since the beginning of this year, there have been a series of attacks on independent journalists.

Kyrgyzstan

In the latest incident, just two weeks before the election, Almaz Tashiev – who worked for the opposition Agym newspaper – died following surgery for injuries sustained after he was beaten by police officers in the town of Nookat.

The interior ministry has promised to investigate the case and "severely punish" those found guilty. In an unprecedented move, the authorities have dismissed the head of Nookat’s police and several of his deputies.

In March, a reporter from the opposition newspaper Reporter Bishkek was also brutally attacked – it has been reported that he can no longer write.

Bakyt Beshimov, back at his campaign headquarters, says the abuses are continuing.

"There was a journalist in my office just now; she came to say that the editor of her newspaper has been threatened for publishing an interview with our candidate," says Beshimov.

It remains to be seen how far journalists dare report this coming election.</p


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

Arresting Awan, Malik could lead to Bhutto’s assassins: PPP

Arresting federal ministers Babar Awan and Rehman Malik could lead to the masterminds of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination, Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leader Chaudhury Aslam has said.
Aslam said he has already written a letter to the UN Commission probing the assassination asking it to arrest the ministers.
In an interview with an Urdu daily, [...]

Pakistan court acquits former PM Sharif of hijacking

Pakistan’s supreme court Friday overturned convictions against former prime minister Nawaz Sharif for plane hijacking and terrorism, two months after reversing a ban on the opposition leader’s holding office. Sharif was convicted of “hijacking” a commercial jet carrying Pervez Musharraf

Blair in frame to become first EU president

Britain’s new Europe minister says ex-prime minister’s candidacy would have full backing of British government

Tony Blair is a contender to become the first president of the EU with the full backing of the British government, the new Europe minister said today.

Glenys Kinnock, in Strasbourg for the opening session of the new European parliament, said that although the former prime minister had not formally declared his candidacy, it was “certainly” the government position to support him.

“I am sure they would not do it without asking him,” Lady Kinnock said. “The UK government is supporting Tony Blair’s candidature for president of the council.”

The new post is to be created under the Lisbon treaty, which will streamline the way the EU is run if it is endorsed in an Irish referendum in early October.

Blair would be the first sitting president of the EU, who will be appointed by European government chiefs for a minimum of 30 months and a maximum of five years.

If the Irish back the treaty on 2 October, EU leaders are expected to decide on who will get the presidency at a summit at the end of that month.

“Blair is seen by many as someone who has the strength of character, the stature,” Kinnock said.

“People know who he is, and he would be someone who would have this role and step into it with a lot of respect and I think would be generally welcomed.”

While Blair has declined to declare himself as a candidate before the outcome of the Irish referendum, Kinnock’s remarks were the first solid confirmation that he is to run for the job.

However, British diplomats said her comments remained speculation for the moment because the Irish could yet vote down the treaty – as they did in their first referendum last year.

“The reality is Lisbon has not entered into force,” one diplomat said. “Blair has yet to say whether he will stand.”

A spokesman for the ex-PM said: “The job doesn’t exist, so there is nothing to be a candidate for.”

If he stands for the post, the founder of New Labour could yet in to stiff opposition in Europe.

Fredrik Reinfeldt, the Swedish prime minister – who took over the rotating presidency of the EU this month and will chair the October summit – is known to be strongly opposed to a Blair presidency.

Reinfeldt told the Guardian he would not get into any discussion about names for the post, while a senior European diplomat said the presidency would be “the absolute top subject” at the October summit.

Reinfeldt said he expected to oversee the launch of the Lisbon treaty, “including the elected council chairman [Europe president]“.

He added that if the treaty was ratified by all member states, he expected “very many names” to be put forward for the presidency.

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, the Spanish prime minister, who will succeed to the EU presidency after Reinfeldt in January, is also an opponent of Blair.

France’s president, Nicolas Sarkozy, an early fan of the idea of President Blair, appears now to have turned lukewarm.

William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary, said the creation of a new EU president “could be enormously damaging for Europe”.

“Any holder is likely to try to centralise power for themselves in Brussels and dominate national foreign policies,” he said.

“In the hands of an operator as ambitious as Tony Blair, that is a near certainty. He should be let nowhere near the job.

“It shows what a grip Lord Mandelson now has over Gordon Brown that he has been forced to support his bitterest rival.”

 

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