Wednesday, 1 March 2017

DUMSOR: What The Hell Is Happening?

President Nana Akufo Addo, what is happening?

By Ekow Mensah
Something very strange is happening and nobody appears to care enough to explain.

Over the last three weeks or more many parts of the country have continued to suffer significant power outages without explanation.

In some parts of Accra, such as Ashongman, Abelenkpe, Kotobabi and Kokomlemle, power outages sometimes last for as long as 12 hours.

Some residents have said that this is reminiscent of the “Dumsor” era during the Mahama administration.

The difference is that in those days, officials of the energy sector offered some explanation for the situation whereas nobody speaks about the situation now.

It is interesting that this “Dumsor” is occurring at a time when the installed capacity for power generation has been doubled.

It would appear that the only factors which can cause such power outages could be lack of funds to purchase fuel and technical breakdowns.

Boakye Agyarko, dumsor again?
At the last count, the energy sector owned more than US$300 million in unpaid fuel cost.

Many Government institutions and giant companies are also heavily indebted to the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG).

In the campaign for the 2016 elections, NPP propagandists urged the electorate to punish the Mahama administration for its inability to solve the power problems in good time.

They threatened that if the Mahama administration was re-elected “Dum Sor”, “Dum Sor” would return.

Many consumers of power say that all that they want is an explanation of what is happening.

“They must show us a little respect by explaining what is happening. Are we in the “Dum Sor” era or what? Somebody must tell us something” said Helena Aseidu, a trader at Kokomlemle.

Mr Johnson Yaw Boafo, A barber at Kotobabi said “our businesses are being destroyed by these power outages”.

It is expected that sooner than later officials of the Energy sector would offer some explanation as to why the power outages are occurring.  

Editorial
A FRIEND INDEED
H.E Bawumia with Mohammed VI
The king of Morocco must be very pleased with the outcome of his visit to Ghana.

Indeed, nobody could have expected such an outcome after his kingdom broke relations with the rest of Africa for decades and claimed to be only an Arab nation.

The joint communique issued after the visit praises the King and his Kingdom to the high heavens and even paints a picture of him as a contributor to the national liberation efforts in Africa.

Ghana deliberately ignores the fact that Morocco is a colonial occupier of Western Sahara and a violator of the human and democratic rights of the Saharawi people.

It is indeed strange, that Ghana which declared on March 6, 1957 that its independence would be meaningless unless it is linked with the total liberation of the Africa continent is today embracing a colonial occupier.

This is clearly an indication of how far Ghana has travelled backwards since the Government of Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah was overthrown on February 24, 1966.

The Insight believes strongly that in spite of the praises heaped on Morocco and its king by the new regime in Ghana, the people of Ghana are firmly opposed to colonialism in all its forms whether in Palestine or in Western Sahara.

What a friend indeed?

LAWLESSNESS
PRESIDENTIAL LAMENTATIONS ARE NOT ENOUGH
Invicible forces in street fight at NPP HQ
Honourable Isaac Adongo, Member of Parliament for Bolgatanga Central has said that presidential lamentations over the lawlessness of party vigilante groups cannot be a cure.

“What we need is concrete action to end the needless violence” he said.

Mr. Adongo was speaking on “Good Morning Africa”, a magazine programme on Pan Africa Television.

He said president Akufo-Addo cannot be lamenting like all of us because he has the power to deal with the problem.

“We do not have the power to act and can lament but not the president who is the supreme commander of the Ghana Armed Forces”.

“If he has instructed the police to act and they have refused to act, what has he done?” he asked.

President Akufo Addo
Nana Fredua Ofori- Atta, a member of the communications team of the NPP, praised the President for condemning the lawlessness of the party vigilante groups in his state of nation address.

He said this is the first time that any president has dealt with the issue in a state of the nation’s address.

Nana Ofori-Atta said the National Democratic Congress (NDC) was not blameless when it comes to the operation of vigilante groups.

Mr Justices Akufo Heneku, a member of Socialist Forum of Ghana (SFG) said party vigilante groups should be completely dismantled.

He said the emergence of the vigilante groups suggest strongly that the state is failing in its duty of providing security for all.


Excellent State Of Relations between Cuba and South Africa Ratified
Salvador Valdes in South Africa
By Deisy Francis Mexidor 
Cuba and South Africa highlighted their strong ties of friendship and the excellent level of bilateral and multilateral cooperation, following an official visit to the African nation by Salvador Valdés Mesa, a vice president of the Cuban Council of State.

Valdés Mesa, also a member of the Communist Party of Cuba Political Bureau, who arrived on his first official visit to South Africa, held high-level meetings with government officials and leaders of the African National Congress (ANC), and other political organizations of the ruling Triple Alliance.

The Cuban politician and his counterpart and host, South African Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, held official talks. In a subsequent joint statement to the press, Valdés Mesa noted his appreciation for the warm welcome received in this sister nation and highlighted aspects of the historic ties between the two peoples, as well as the progress of cooperation, which is today expanding across various sectors.

Meanwhile, Ramaphosa stressed that South Africa and Cuba enjoy a very special relationship, not only in the political sphere, due to the island’s contribution during the anti-apartheid struggle, but also in the social sphere, especially in the field of health.

Prior to the meeting, the Cuban leader was received by President Jacob Zuma, who wished him a productive stay.

Zuma also referred to Valdés Mesa’s participation in the recently held 28th African Union Summit, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to which Cuba attended as a guest country.

The visit, which concluded on Thursday, February 2, included a tour of the Bheki Mlangeni Hospital, which opened in April 2015 in the populous residential area of Soweto, where the Cuban official spoke with workers and patients.

On his arrival at the health center, accompanied by his delegation and the Cuban Ambassador in Pretoria, Carlos Fernández de Cossío, Valdés Mesa was welcomed by the Deputy Health Minister, Joe Phaahla, administrative staff, and members of the Cuban Medical Mission in South Africa.

The deputy minister explained that this district hospital has helped relieve the pressures on other health care facilities in this township, with a population of around two million.

Phaahla expressed gratitude for the presence of Cuban doctors, whose efforts he described as “excellent'” and worthy of mention, as they are ready to go wherever they are most needed, “where health services are deficient.”

Valdés Mesa extended the recognition of the Cuban government to the health collaborators, and encouraged them to continue advancing in their efforts. More than 600 Cuban professionals are currently offering their services in South Africa, he noted, of which some 400 are doctors.

He also referred to the young South Africans currently studying medicine in Cuba, 700 of whom will graduate next year and return to their homeland to implement the knowledge acquired.

On February 1, the vice president of the Council of State paid tribute to the late ANC leader Oliver Tambo, and participated in a meeting with staff of the Cuban Embassy, where a room of the building was named after this beloved African leader.

Valdés Mesa is heading a delegation that includes Gerardo Peñalver, director general of Bilateral Affairs of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba; Ángel Villa, director of the Ministry’s Sub-Saharan Africa Office; and Brigadier General Arnaldo Tamayo Méndez, Hero of the Republic of Cuba. This Thursday, February 2, the delegation will continue their tour of African nations traveling to Maputo, Mozambique.

The Broken "Unity" of The Opposition 
                                               Venezuela opposition forces remain divided. Photo: AVN

By Dilbert Reyes Rodríguez | informacion@granma.cu
It could be said that tenacity is the basis of the resistance with which Chavista forces have maintained the Bolivarian Revolution in the face of an incessant destabilizing and stigmatizing onslaught from within and outside the country.

To the outside world, the progress, or lack thereof, in the dialogue that today sees the revolutionary government and sectors of the opposition at the negotiating table, will define the coming twists and turns of the country’s tense political situation. However, between one session and another, the latest announcements and the next, daily life demonstrates that the internal confrontation and economic war remain a latent reality.

To date, what has been signed on paper goes far beyond any concrete advances. Since the start of the talks, the most remarkable aspect has been the relative tranquillity as regards mobilizations in the streets.

Meanwhile, the discourse has not changed, framed within the traditional polarization, and while on the one hand the national government, through President Nicolás Maduro, insists tirelessly on the permanence of the dialogue, several sectors of the right continue their threats to leave the table, while seeking pretexts for a boycott.

They repeat over and over that the revolutionary bloc is failing to comply with what has been agreed, without contributing even the slightest element, while demanding the mass release of corrupt and violent individuals they refer to as “political prisoners.” This despite the executive reiterating on several occasions that the majority of those named “are not and will not” be up for discussion, in clear reference to examples such as Leopoldo López, the mastermind behind the La Salida (The Exit) plan that triggered the guarimbas (violent street barricades) of 2014, causing the deaths of 43 Venezuelans.

Notwithstanding, the dialogue has provoked a falling out among opposition factions, casting further light on the internal divisions within the so-called Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD).

There has been no shortage of attacks against opposition representative Carlos Ocariz, of the Primero Justicia party, who almost immediately after the agreements were announced, was forced to declare that the section in which the right wing recognizes the existence of an economic boycott promoted by them, was the result of a misinterpretation of the document, claiming “because there is a boycott, but on the part of the government.”

The truth is that following the conciliatory announcements, there have been successive divisive incidents within opposition forces, especially among the leaders of the parties making up the MUD.

The first sign was the self-exclusion from the negotiating table of the radical Voluntad Popular party, led by the incarcerated Leopoldo Lopez, whose top brass declared that conditions were not ripe to sit down and talk, while assuring they would continue with disturbances in the streets.

With this withdrawal, remaining at the table were the representatives chosen by the dominant Primero Justicia and Accion Democrática parties, together with those from the Un Nuevo Tiempo party. Despite being three parties, the conservative media have named them the “G4”, while their exclusive participation in the talks has generated a series of squabbles among the rest of the MUD members.

Just last week there were strong statements by several leaders of the coalition, including Omar Ávila from the Unidad Visión Venezuela party, who criticized the exclusion of other opposition forces in decision-making, and called for an internal negotiating table to really shake up and restructure the coalition, as reported by AVN.

Joining the denunciation of this arbitrary exclusion was María Corina Machado, of the Vente Venezuela party, who recalled that since January there has been no further plenary meeting of the 26 parties forming the coalition.

“It is not a matter of claiming that we were excluded and that they did not take us into account to consult us regarding decisions, we are not defending a small sphere of influence, but rather at the moment the country requires the consensus of opinion of the majority of the society,” she said, according to AVN.

Meanwhile, Ávila stressed the urgency of the meeting and demanded it be held before December 6, the date set for the next meeting between the government and the opposition.
Henri Falcón is also participating in the dialogue as a representative of the MUD. The controversial governor of the state of Lara is described by Chavista forces as a “turncoat” after switching political sides years ago.

This self-styled champion of reconciliation has been described by several factions as a candidate for the undecided. However, as his positions do not satisfy either one side or the other, he suffers the rejection of many of his supposed allies, who refute his role as a negotiator and have even decided to mount a campaign against him in the lead-up to the state governorship elections in 2017.

According to the Twitter account of the Bolivarian José Alejandro Natera, municipal councilor for Iribarren, it was revealed during a meeting in the city of Barquisimeto, the state capital, that the current mayor (from the Causa R party) would run for governor, and the deputy, Luis Florido (of Voluntad Popular), for mayor, in a joint strategy that would prevent the re-election of Falcón.

Alongside these rifts, there have been signs - some implied and others evident - that the MUD has had to recognize its mistakes and desperation, including the statements published by Jesús Torrealba in a recent opinion piece.

The secretary general of the MUD asserts in the article that the intended political trial that right-wing legislators in the National Assembly attempted to use as a tool for a parliamentary coup against Nicolás Maduro is not constitutional.

“The real truth is that there is no such thing as a “political trial” or impeachment in the National Constitution, such as that which removed Richard Nixon from power in the United States or Dilma Rousseff in Brazil,” he admitted.

The news broadcast the previous week, on the withdrawal of the three deputies from Amazonas state, illegally sworn in to the National Assembly in July, in defiance of the Supreme Court of Justice’s (TSJ) suspension, also demonstrates the veiled recognition of opposition errors. Further evidence is the request from Henrique Capriles to the National Electoral Council (CNE), to activate a recall referendum process against the President of the Republic for 2017, on December 6, thus conceding that their aspirations of holding the vote this year have been frustrated.

By now, and as a result of the political confrontation, the Bolivarian Government is no longer the only force fighting on several fronts, although in this case the aim is to overcome the dispute and advance the economic progress of the country.

In addition to the defense of the Revolution and all its social conquests, in the face of the internal oligarchy’s onslaught, the executive is making colossal efforts to consolidate the nation’s productive diversification, while resisting the attacks of an international conspiracy that extends from media lies, through shady diplomacy and financial strategies.

The last known ploy was the intentional delay by U.S. banks in issuing payments to PDVSA (state oil company) bondholders, despite the South American nation having made the bond coupon payments on time, a stunt the Bolivarian government denounced as premeditated in order to discredit and directly attack the state-owned company.

Meanwhile, the leadership of the Venezuelan political opposition, apparently created with the sole intent of overthrowing anything resembling a Revolution, and not proposing any coherent or credible alternative, has been forced to face, as a new battle front, its own followers, already tired of useless marches and maneuvers, and of their own loud-mouthed and failed leaders. Almost a year after the parliamentary elections, opposition forces have not advanced at all in terms of the coup they promised for this year, and have been thwarted in their attempts time and again by the resistance of the Bolivarian government and its popular support.

US Feigns Human Rights Concerns in Philippines
Rodrigo Duterte
By Tony Cartalucci
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is heading a controversial campaign against crime, embodied in his “war on drugs” which has led to violence spanning the nation’s troubled urban centers. President Duterte’s comments have ranged from reasonable, to utterly indifferent regarding fears of extrajudicial executions, vigilantism, and very real human rights abuses – opening a door of opportunity for his political opponents both at home and abroad.

President Duterte’s inability to clearly condemn extrajudicial executions and vigilante violence, along with his inflammatory, provocative, even dangerously demagogic statements both invites further abuses, as well as both legitimate and opportunistic criticism of him, his administration, and his policies.

While legitimate criticism is both necessary and justified, it is undermined by disingenuous political opportunism, wielded by hypocrites who only stand to compound the Philippines’ current crisis, not solve it.

America the Humane? 

Among President Duterte’s more opportunistic political opponents is the United States.

While the United States would otherwise be justified and morally grounded in its criticism of President Duterte’s administration, there are some current and past complications that reveal such criticism as stark hypocrisy, crass opportunism, and even the cynical political exploitation of abuse, rather than any genuine attempt to constructively address or stop it.

The most recent manifestation of America’s feigned concern regarding the Philippines’ ongoing campaign against accused illicit narcotic dealers was the blocking of a shipment of US-made rifles destined for Philippine police units. Some 26,000 rifles were on order before being blocked by the US Senate based on “concerns about human rights violations.”

These concerns, however, have not prevented the US from selling billions of dollars worth of weapons, including warplanes, munitions, tanks, and helicopters to Saudi Arabia, who is using this vast US-made arsenal to oppress its own people and execute a war of aggression against neighboring Yemen. Saudi Arabia is also admittedly involved in arming and funding terrorist organizations in Syria and Iraq, including with US-made weapons – particularly anti-tank TOW missiles. This hypocrisy exposes US “concerns” as merely politically motivated, designed to put pressure on Manila in an effort to reassert US influence over the Southeast Asian state. Not only has the US previously enjoyed greater influence over the Philippines since the end of World War II, but before the war, and for half a century, the United States literally controlled the Philippines as a US territory.

It seized the Philippines in a bloody 1899-1902 war that claimed the lives of over a quarter of a million people (some sources estimate over half a million), and initiated an occupation marked by brutality, oppression, and torture, including the introduction of water boarding (then called “water curing”) conducted by the US as a means of attitude adjustment for local Philippine leaders.

It is ironic and telling that both water boarding and attempts by the US to maintain influence over the Philippines both persist to this day. Attempts by the US to predicate its desire to control Manila on “concerns about human rights violations” not only is bitterly ironic, it undermines those genuinely attempting to expose and stop real abuses taking place amid the Philippines’ current crisis. President Duterte has been able to insulate himself from criticism precisely because of US hypocrisy and meddling. Had independent, local activists and media platforms – networked with regional and international organizations – attempted to expose and rein in President Duterte’s anti-crime campaign, it would have been immeasurably more difficult to dismiss the facts and continue with impunity. The US has in essence discredited genuine human rights concerns by hijacking them for self-serving political objectives.

Extrajudicial executions, vigilante violence, and President Duterte’s indifference, even defense of both, needs to be opposed – but by the people of the Philippines – not disingenuous, exploitative, and self-serving foreign interests who are not only notorious human rights abusers today – worldwide – but who have carried out campaigns of extermination, torture, and human rights abuses in the Philippines itself, as a foreign conqueror and occupier.

For President Duterte, it is more than possible for him to lead a more dignified and just campaign against criminals operating across the Philippines. Nations like Singapore have used stern, popular, but legitimate judicial measures to rein in the drug trade and organized crime, so can the Philippines. Doing so would close this door of opportunity President Duterte himself opened to the Americans, and leaves open with his current policies.
Tony Cartalucci, Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer, especially for the online magazine New Eastern Outlook.









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