Friday, January 31, 2025

Maduro Meets US Special Envoy Grenell, Signaling Potential Shift

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Venezuelan Foreign Ministry

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro meets US special envoy Richard Grenell, reaffirming his government's Diplomacy of Peace policy.

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro met with United States special envoy Richard Grenell on Friday. The meeting took place at the request of US President Donald Trump, signaling a potential shift in US-Venezuela relations after years of tension.

Following the meeting, Grenell reportedly flew back to the US, accompanied by six US nationals who were reportedly detained by Venezuelan authorities. Trump's special envoy also looked to discuss the deportation of Venezuelan migrants back to their home country, and crude oil licenses. 

The Venezuelan Ministry of Communication and Information confirmed that Grenell had formally requested an audience with President Maduro, a move that was strongly emphasized by Freddy Nanez, Venezuela’s Minister of Communication, through a Telegram statement.

This meeting is being viewed as a reaffirmation of Venezuela’s unwavering commitment to its Bolivarian Diplomacy of Peace, a policy launched by President Maduro, a press release by the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry explained. The Venezuelan leader, known for his stance against foreign intervention, reportedly accepted the meeting with a "zero agenda," underscoring his approach of peaceful dialogue and cooperation with all nations.

Upon his arrival in Venezuela, Grenell was greeted by Yvan Gil, Venezuela’s Minister of Foreign Relations, and Jorge Rodriguez, President of the National Assembly, at Simon Bolivar International Airport in La Guaira.

The context of this meeting lies in the long-standing estrangement between Venezuela and the United States. Diplomatic ties were severed when former US President Barack Obama declared Venezuela a threat to US national security in 2015. In 2019, the Trump administration implemented a "maximum pressure" strategy aimed at isolating the Maduro government and forcing political change.

However, Grenell's arrival in Venezuela could signal a significant shift in bilateral relations, particularly as President Trump implements pressure tactics elsewhere. It is also worth noting that this is the first visit made by a member of the Trump administration to Latin America. 

Martyred Leaders Passed Torch to New Generation of Warriors: Al-Hayya

By Al Mayadeen English

31 Jan 2025 23:24

The head of Hamas in Gaza affirmed that history will record that the heroes of the al-Qassam Brigades and the Resistance "forced the enemy to its knees" just as they pledged.

The Palestinian people and their Resistance have achieved their objectives in Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, foremost among them bringing the Israeli occupation entity to its knees, shattering its image as an invincible entity, and dismantling the myth of its army as an indomitable force, the head of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, Khalil al-Hayya, said.

In a speech delivered on Friday evening in tribute to Hamas' fallen leaders, al-Hayya emphasized that “defeating the entity is now possible, and the liberation of all of Palestine has become attainable” following Al-Aqsa Flood.

He also noted that the Resistance had decided to officially announce the martyrdom of several senior commanders only after the cessation of fighting in Gaza, stressing that they had "passed the banner, held high, to a new generation of warrior leaders who will continue the march toward al-Quds and al-Aqsa [Mosque] and pave the way for the great return."

Al-Hayya further highlighted that Hamas' leaders are "at the forefront of the martyrs, standing shoulder to shoulder with their people in the same trench."

He added that these commanders “willingly offered their lives for the sake of God alongside the fighters, fearing no death, engaging the enemy on the frontlines of resistance, all in pursuit of a free and dignified Palestine."

In the same context, the head of Hamas in Gaza affirmed that history will record that the heroes of the al-Qassam Brigades and the Resistance "forced the enemy to its knees" just as they pledged.

He pointed to the gradual liberation of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails and the withdrawal of Israeli soldiers from Gaza "humiliated and subdued," and pursued by the Resistance and its supporters worldwide.

Mohammed Deif; the man adored by millions

Al-Hayya dedicated part of his speech to the late Mohammed Deif, al-Qassam Brigades' Commander-in-Chief, describing him as "the inspirational leader of struggle and resistance, the man adored by millions who chanted his name without ever seeing his image."

He asserted that Deif’s name "struck fear into the hearts of the enemy and terrorized them, his very shadow haunting them," adding that he "spent his life as both the hunted and the hunter, outmaneuvering his pursuers for over 30 years."

Furthermore, al-Hayya noted that the martyr Deif began his journey at a time when "Hamas did not possess rifles or bullets, and neither the movement nor al-Qassam Brigades had anything but a clear vision and unshakable will."

Together with his comrades—both the living and the martyrs who preceded him, including Yasser al-Namrouti, Imad Aqel, and Salah Shehadeh—Deif "built an army (al-Qassam Brigades) capable of feats beyond what many armies around the world can achieve," al-Hayya emphasized.

This army, according to the Hamas official, "strikes the enemy without hesitation, breaches borders, wages battles of heroism, and is built upon warrior fighters with vision, insight, and a sound doctrine before weapons and equipment."

"It is an army embraced by a resistance-driven society, ready to make every sacrifice for its freedom and independence," he added.

Following the same path, martyr Marwan Issa, known as “Abu Al-Bara,” was described by Al-Hayya as “a man of sharp vision, sound intellect, and unwavering resolve—one who always worked in silence, yet whose actions spoke volumes.”

Architects of Al-Aqsa Flood

Al-Hayya also paid tribute to the martyred commanders Ayman Nawfal, Ghazi Abu Tam’a, Raed Thabet, Rafe' Salama, and Ahmad al-Ghandour, describing them as "the architects of the [al-Aqsa] Flood."

He noted that each of these martyrs "left their distinct mark and played a pivotal role in building this great structure until it became solid and unbreakable, culminating in the grand battle of the Al-Aqsa Flood."

Touching on the battle, the senior Hamas official stressed that it was "the defining moment between the possible and the impossible," proving that "nothing is impossible for a people fighting for their freedom and for a resistance that holds its own decisions, will, and arms."

Hamas had "overcome severe challenges and hardships, with its martyrs rising to their responsibilities with unwavering resolve and relentless effort to transform strategies and visions into realities on the ground, particularly the commencement of the liberation project," al-Hayya pointed out.

Martyrs left behind a generation capable of completing the journey

In this context, al-Hayya commemorated martyr Ismail Haniyeh, describing him as "a great national symbol" and a loss to the Ummah, highlighting his calm wisdom, "behind which lay the fire of a revolutionary fighter."

He also honored the martyr Yahya Sinwar, calling him "the master of the Flood, the revolutionary leader who left an indelible mark on the history of Hamas and the Palestinian people, becoming an icon for every free and honorable person around the world who rejects oppression and aggression."

Additionally, al-Hayya paid tribute to martyr Saleh al-Arouri, "a fighter in prisons and beyond, who helped establish the al-Qassam Brigades in the West Bank and revived the spirit of resistance there."

Alongside these leaders, al-Hayya named several other martyrs who played significant roles in Hamas' journey, including: Tayseer Ibrahim, Chief Justice of Hamas, Osama al-Muzaini, Chairman of Hamas' Shura Council in Gaza, Sami Ouda, Head of Hamas' General Security in Gaza, Mohammed Abu Askar, member of Hamas' administrative office in Gaza, Khaled al-Najjar and Yassin Rabih, senior Hamas officials in the occupied West Bank, and Fathallah Sharif, Hamas' leader in Lebanon.

He also honored the martyrs of Hamas' political bureau in Gaza, including Rouhi Mushtaha, Sameh al-Siraj, Zakaria Ma’amar, Jameela al-Shanti, and Jawad Abu Shamala, in addition to commanders Samir Fendi and Azzam al-Aqra’.

He concluded by affirming that all these martyrs had "left behind a generation raised on the teachings of the Quran and the battlegrounds of jihad and resistance, equipped with the awareness, understanding, and willpower to carry on the journey and complete what the founding leaders—foremost among them, the movement’s founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin—began."

Meta Announces Israeli Spyware Company Paragon Targeted Whatsapp Users

By Al Mayadeen English

31 Jan 2025 21:40

Paragon Solutions has been accused of targeting journalists and civil society members with hacking attempts, with WhatsApp issuing a cease-and-desist letter while highlighting concerns over the growing misuse of commercial spyware.

According to an official from Meta's WhatsApp communication application, Israeli spyware firm Paragon Solutions targeted a large number of its users, including journalists and civil society representatives.

Following the incident, WhatsApp issued Paragon a cease-and-desist letter, according to an official on Friday. In a statement, WhatsApp stated that it "will continue to protect people's ability to communicate privately," while the Israeli firm declined to comment. 

WhatsApp officials informed Reuters that they had discovered an attempt to hack about 90 users of the platform, ranging from civil society to media members. One official revealed WhatsApp stopped the hacking attempt and was referring targets to the Canadian online watchdog group Citizen Lab.

The official refused to reveal how it determined that Paragon was responsible for the hack, detailing that law enforcement and industry partners had been notified but declined to go into detail.

According to Citizen Lab researcher John Scott-Railton, the discovery of Paragon malware targeting WhatsApp users "is a reminder that mercenary spyware continues to proliferate, and as it does, so do we see familiar patterns of problematic use."

Israeli spyware firms like NSO group and Pegasus, have in the past claimed their services to governments are crucial to combating crime and preserving national security while in effect engaging in espionage activities against journalists, activists, and opposition lawmakers, raising worries. 

Natalia Krapiva, senior tech-legal counsel at the advocacy organization Access Now, stated that Paragon had the reputation of being a superior spyware firm, "but WhatsApp's recent revelations suggest otherwise."

"This is not just a question of some bad apples — these types of abuses (are) a feature of the commercial spyware industry."

US judge rules Israeli NSO Group liable for WhatsApp hacking

Last month, a US judge ruled in favor of WhatsApp in a lawsuit against "Israel's" NSO Group, accusing the company of exploiting a vulnerability in the app to install spy software for unauthorized surveillance.

US District Judge Phyllis Hamilton in Oakland, California, granted WhatsApp's motion and determined NSO was liable for hacking and breach of contract.

The case is now set to move to trial to address the issue of damages, according to Hamilton. However, the NSO Group did not immediately comment on the ruling.

A senior researcher at the Canadian internet watchdog Citizen Lab, John Scott-Railton — who uncovered NSO's Pegasus spyware in 2016 — described the ruling as a landmark decision with "huge implications for the spyware industry."

In an instant message he said, “The entire industry has hidden behind the claim that whatever their customers do with their hacking tools, it's not their responsibility,” adding, “Today's ruling makes it clear that NSO Group is in fact responsible for breaking numerous laws.”

NSO history of unauthorized access 

In 2019, WhatsApp took legal action against NSO, requesting an injunction and damages, accusing the company of hacking WhatsApp's servers six months earlier to deploy Pegasus spyware on victims' devices.

The lawsuit claimed the breach led to the surveillance of 1,400 individuals, including journalists, human rights defenders, and political dissidents.

To justify its actions, NSO argued that Pegasus helps law enforcement and intelligence agencies counter crime and protect national security, while its technology intends to catch terrorists, pedophiles, and hardened criminals. 

Armed Group Executes 15 in Hama, Clashes Erupt in Idlib's Countryside

By Al Mayadeen English

Masked militants execute 15 civilians near Hama, Syria, while heavy clashes erupt in Idlib’s Talada. Local residents call for intervention amid rising violence.

Local sources in the Hama governorate report that a masked armed group stormed the village of Arza, abducting several residents before executing 15 of them near the Orontes River, late on Friday.

According to eyewitnesses, the assailants knocked on doors in the village, forcibly took the residents to an unknown location, and executed them by shooting with silenced pistols. The attackers then quickly fled the area, leaving the bodies behind.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) has condemned such incidents, noting at least 105 revenge killings being recorded across the country, with 218 people reported dead, since the start of 2025. Over half of these victims were targeted because of their sectarian affiliations.

Meanwhile, in the country's north, violent clashes erupted in the village of Talada, located in the Dana district of Idlib's countryside. Two armed groups have engaged in heavy fighting, with reports of casualties among both combatants and civilians. Local residents are calling for immediate intervention by the Syrian government's security forces to halt the violence and restore order in the area.

Clashes between armed groups, summary killings, and targeted executions have become increasingly frequent in Syria. This trend of violence follows the fall of the previous regime and the rise of rebel forces to power, led by now-President Ahmad al-Sharaa.

Although authorities have promised to end such acts of violence, substantial action is yet to be taken in this regard.

Yemeni Navy Agrees to Allow Banned Ship to Cross Red Sea

By Al Mayadeen English

31 Jan 2025 23:45

Sources told Al Mayadeen that CHRYSALIS had contacted the Yemeni Armed Forces to get approval to cross the Red Sea.

Sources confirmed to Al Mayadeen Friday that the CHRYSALIS fuel tanker contacted the Yemeni Navy and approval was given for it to cross the Red Sea.

The sources explained that the Yemeni Armed Forces (YAF) agreed to allow this ship to cross the Red Sea after the ceasefire agreement in Gaza, noting that "the army reassured the ship and paved the way for its safe passage, and it arrived at its destination safely."

Private sources pointed out that CHRYSALIS is the first of the ships that had been banned by the YAF decision to now cross the Red Sea.

In a related context, the Chairman of the Suez Canal Authority, Osama Rabie, stated, "There are indications of the return of stability to the Red Sea ."

Many major international shipping companies have suspended their Red Sea voyages and rerouted their ships around South Africa during the Israeli war on Gaza.

The Yemeni Armed Forces are currently monitoring and following up on the implementation of the agreement in Gaza and the developments in Jenin and the West Bank, the leader of the Ansar Allah movement Sayyed Abdul-Malik al-Houthi said Sunday.

During the annual commemoration of martyred leader Sayyed Hussein Badr al-Din al-Houthi, in the capital Sanaa, he emphasized that the Yemeni position of continuous readiness and permanent willingness to support the Palestinians still stands no matter what.

He also asserted that if the Israeli enemy violates the agreement and engages in escalation and continuing the genocide, "we too will escalate."

The Yemeni Resistance leader emphasized that they will continue to work by the equation established by the martyr of Islam and humanity, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, regarding the Al-Aqsa Mosque as well.

In this context, Sayyed al-Houthi stressed that coordination with the freedom fighters in Palestine and the Axis of Resistance regarding any developments continues unabated.

Addressing the US' loyalists, the Yemeni leader said, "Let America do its best to confront us; let it make designations, fight, and do whatever it feels like doing," vowing, however, "We will confront it and repel any aggression it might unleash on us it, regardless of its size."

Rwanda’s Evolving Stature Ensures Muted Global Pressure as M23 Advances in Eastern DR Congo

By SAM METZ and MONIKA PRONCZUK

2:47 PM EST, January 30, 2025

When Rwanda-backed rebels seized control of eastern Congo’s strategic city of Goma this week, it prompted a flurry of declarations condemning Rwanda from the U.N. and western nations, including the United States, France and the U.K.

Yet, the international community has stopped short of putting financial pressure on Kigali to withdraw its support for the rebels as happened when they took Goma in 2012.

The contrast has to do with the country’s evolving stature both in Africa and the West, where officials have long admired fourth-term President Paul Kagame for his role in uplifting Rwanda in the aftermath of genocide, analysts and diplomats said. They point to Rwanda’s shrewd branding, efforts to make itself more indispensable militarily and economically and divided attention spans of countries preoccupied with wars in the Middle East and Ukraine.

“So far there has been significantly less international pressure than there was in 2012 for various reasons, including the new administration in the White House, other ongoing international crises and Rwanda’s role in continental peacekeeping and security operations,” said Ben Shepherd, a fellow Chatham House’s Africa Program.

Aid was once a key source of leverage

Kagame’s efforts to transform his small east African nation into a political and economic juggernaut, they say, has made the international community more reluctant to pressure Rwanda.

That’s been true when Kagame has abolished term limits and waged a campaign of repression against his opponents at home. It’s been true as he’s backed rebels fighting Congolese forces across the country’s border. And it’s remained true despite the fact that Rwanda’s economy is still heavily reliant on foreign aid, including from the United States, the World Bank and the European Union.

The United States disbursed $180 million in foreign aid to Rwanda in 2023. The World Bank’s International Development Association provided nearly $221 million the same year. And in the years ahead, the European Union has pledged to invest over $900 million in Rwanda under the Global Gateway strategy, its response to China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

In 2012, that aid was a key source of leverage as the western powers pressured Rwanda to end its role in the fighting. Donor countries withheld aid and the World Bank threatened to. Only a few nations, including the U.K. and Germany, have implied Rwanda’s involvement could jeopardize the flow of aid.

But today, the international community has fewer means to influence Rwanda as M23 advances southward from Goma. The United States suspended military aid to Rwanda in 2012 in the months before it seized Goma but can’t make the same threats after suspending it again last year. And since taking office, President Donald Trump has since frozen the vast majority of foreign aid, stripping the United States of the means to use it to leverage any country in particular.

Rwandan troops observed pouring into Congo

The Rwanda-backed M23 group is one of about 100 armed factions vying for a foothold in eastern Congo in one of Africa’s longest conflicts, displacing 4.5 million people and creating what the U.N. called “one of the most protracted, complex, serious humanitarian crises on Earth.”

A July 2024 report from a U.N. group of experts estimated at least 4,000 Rwandan troops were active across the Congolese border. More have been observed pouring into Congo this week.

Kagame has claimed that M23 rebels in eastern Congo merely want to defend Tutsis from the same Hutu extremists who carried out the genocide that killed some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus without intervention from the international community.

That failure and the resulting guilt informed a generation of politicians’ thinking about Rwanda.

“Rwanda’s justifications and references to the genocide continue to play to the West’s perception of it,” said South Africa-based risk analyst Daniel Van Dalen. “There’s always been apprehension to take any decisive action against Rwanda politically or economically.”

Kagame seen as ‘a beacon of stability and economic growth’

But today, there are other factors at play.

Set on transforming the country into the “Singapore of Africa,” Kagame has modernized Rwanda’s infrastructure, raised life expectancy rates and lured companies like Volkswagen and leagues like the NBA to open up shop in-country. Donors and foreign correspondents often profess wonder at Kigali’s clean streets, upscale restaurants and women-majority parliament.

The transformation has won Rwanda admiration from throughout the world, including in Africa, where leaders see Rwanda’s trajectory as a model to draw lessons from.

“The history of genocide still plays a role, but Kagame has very cleverly set up relationships with western capitals and established himself as a beacon of stability and economic growth in the region,” said a European diplomat, who did not want to be named because he was not allowed to speak on the matter publicly. “Some capitals still don’t want to see the truth.”

Rwanda contributes more personnel to U.N. peacekeeping operations than all but two countries. It is a key supplier of troops deployed to Central African Republic, where the United States worries about growing Russian influence. The country has also agreed deals to deploy its army to fight extremists in northern Mozambique, where France’s Total Energies is developing an offshore gas project.

“They have leveraged two things very well, which is their international diplomacy and their military prowess,” said Jason Stearns, a political scientist and Congo expert at Canada’s Simon Fraser University. “They’ve just been very good at making themselves useful.”

Key exporter of critical minerals

A decade ago, Rwanda was primarily exporting agricultural products like coffee and tea. But it has since emerged as a key partner for western nations competing with China for access to natural resources in east Africa.

In addition to gold and tin, Rwanda is a top exporter of tantalum, a mineral used to manufacture semiconductors. While it does not publish data on the volumes of minerals it mines, last year the U.S. State Department said Rwanda exported more minerals than it mined, citing a U.N. report. And just last month, Congo filed lawsuits against Apple’s subsidiaries in France and Belgium, accusing Rwanda of using minerals sourced in eastern Congo.

Yet still, the European Union has signed an agreement with Kigali, opening the door to importing critical minerals from Rwanda. The deal sparked outrage from activists who criticized the lack of safeguards regarding sourcing of the minerals, and accused Brussels of fueling the conflict in eastern Congo.

The EU pushed back, saying that the deal was in early stages and that it was “working out the practicalities” on tracing and reporting minerals from Rwanda.

But even if the West stepped up its response, it has less leverage than in 2012, analysts said. Kagame invested in relationships with non-Western partners, such as China and the United Arab Emirates, which is now the country’s top trade partner. Rwanda also deepened its ties with the African nations that took much more decisive action to defuse the crisis in 2012.

“We are waiting to see how South Africans and Angolans react,” Shepherd said. “There was diplomatic pressure in 2012, but it only changed things because it came alongside African forces deployed in the U.N. intervention brigade.”

__

Metz reported from Rabat, Morocco and Pronczuk from Dakar, Senegal.

2 Associates of Benin’s President Sentenced to 20 Years in Prison for Coup Plot

Benin President Patrice Talon listens to French President Emmanuel Macron after a signing ceremony at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2021. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

By VIRGILE AHISSOU

6:07 AM EST, January 31, 2025

COTONOU, Benin (AP) — Two associates of Benin’s president have been sentenced to 20 years in prison, following their arrest last year on suspicion of plotting a coup in the small West African country.

Olivier Boko, a businessman and longtime friend of President Patrice Talon, and Oswald Homeky, a former sports minister, were found guilty of “conspiracy against state security” and “corruption of a public official” by the court for financial crimes and terrorism in the capital, Cotonou.

The sentence was handed down on Thursday night. Both men were arrested in September after being accused of bribing the commander in charge of the president’s security to carry out a coup.

Homeky was caught while allegedly handing over six bags of money to the head of the presidential guard, according to Elonm Mario Metonou, the special prosecutor at Benin’s court for financial crimes and terrorism.

During the trial, the head of the presidential guard, Col. Djimon Dieudonne Tevoedjre, said that he was approached by Homeky in September to plot a coup against Talon.

Boko, often seen as Talon’s “right-hand man,” was accused of being the mastermind behind the coup attempt and was arrested separately. Several politicians, including Homeky, had expressed support for Boko’s potential run in the country’s 2026 presidential election.

A third man, Rock Nieri, Boko’s brother-in-law who is on the run, was sentenced in absentia on the same charges.

While Benin has been among the most stable democracies in Africa, opposition leaders and human rights organizations have accused Talon of using the justice system to attack his political opponents after taking office in 2016 and changing electoral rules to enable him to consolidate power in 2021.

Following his reelection three years ago, Talon promised not to seek a third term in office in the 2026 election. Benin’s constitution limits the number of presidential terms to two.

Lawyers for the defendants were absent during the verdict, having withdrawn earlier in protest of the court’s composition.

In addition to the 20-year sentence, the court also ordered the three men to pay 60 billion CFA francs ($95 million) in damages to the Beninese state.

They were also handed individual fines of 4.5 billion CFA francs ($6.8 million) each.

Hospital Nurse in Uganda Dies in Country’s First Ebola Outbreak in 2 Years

By RODNEY MUHUMUZA

12:36 PM EST, January 30, 2025

KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — A nurse in Uganda has died of Ebola in the first recorded fatality since the country’s last outbreak of the disease ended in early 2023, a health official said Thursday.

The 32-year-old male nurse was an employee of Mulago Hospital, the main referral facility in the capital, Kampala, Diana Atwine, permanent secretary of the health ministry, told reporters Thursday.

After developing a fever, he was treated at several locations in Uganda before multiple lab tests confirmed he had been suffering from Ebola. The man died on Wednesday and the Sudan strain of Ebola was confirmed following postmortem tests, Atwine said.

At least 44 contacts of the victim have been identified, including 30 health workers and patients at Mulago Hospital, according to Uganda’s Ministry of Health.

The health authorities are “in full control of the situation,” Atwine said, while also urging Ugandans to report any suspected cases.

Tracing contacts is key to stemming the spread of Ebola, and there are no approved vaccines for the Sudan strain of Ebola.

Uganda’s last outbreak, discovered in September 2022, killed at least 55 people before it was declared over in January 2023.

Confirmation of Ebola in Uganda is the latest in a trend of outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fevers in the east African region. Tanzania declared an outbreak of the Ebola-like Marburg disease earlier this month, and in December Rwanda announced that its own outbreak of Marburg was over. The ongoing Marburg outbreak in northern Tanzania ‘s Kagera region has killed at least two people, according to local health authorities.

The World Health Organization will send an initial allocation of $1 million from a contingency fund to support Uganda’s response, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO director-general, said in a brief statement posted on the social platform X.

“A full scale response is being initiated by the government and partners,” the statement said.

Kampala’s outbreak could prove difficult to respond to, because the city has a highly mobile population of about 4 million. The nurse who died had sought treatment at a hospital just outside Kampala and later traveled to Mbale, in the country’s east, where he was admitted in a public hospital. Health authorities said the man also sought the services of a traditional healer.

Emmanuel Batiibwe, a physician who helped lead Uganda’s efforts to stop the country’s 2022 outbreak, told The Associated Press that he expected a swift response in tracing all possible Ebola contacts in Kampala and elsewhere.

“Our reaction should be swift, decisive and well-coordinated,” he said, speaking of lessons learned from the 2022 outbreak, whose epicenter was a town in central Uganda. “We have the means of responding quickly now.”

Ebola, which is spread by contact with bodily fluids of an infected person or contaminated materials, manifests as a deadly hemorrhagic fever. Symptoms include fever, vomiting, diarrhea, muscle pain and at times internal and external bleeding.

Scientists don’t know the natural reservoir of Ebola, but they suspect the first person infected in an outbreak acquired the virus through contact with an infected animal or eating its raw meat.

Ugandan officials are still investigating the source of the current outbreak.

Uganda has had multiple Ebola outbreaks, including one in 2000 that killed hundreds. The 2014-16 Ebola outbreak in West Africa killed more than 11,000 people, the disease’s largest death toll.

Ebola was discovered in 1976 in two simultaneous outbreaks in South Sudan and Congo, where it occurred in a village near the Ebola River, after which the disease is named.

AU Commission Set to Elect Chairperson, Deputy on February 15-16

AU Commission set to elect chairperson, deputy on February 15-16 - The three candidates vying for the AUC top leadership position.

The three candidates vying for the AUC top leadership position.

By Amina Wako

 Monday, January 27, 2025

Kenya’s former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, Djibouti’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Mahamoud Ali Youssouf, and Madagascar’s former Minister of Foreign Affairs Richard Randriamandrato are the contenders for the chairperson role.

The African Union (AU) has announced that the election and appointment of the AU Commission Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson will take place on February 15-16.

The highly anticipated process will see three candidates vying for the top leadership position after the opening ceremony of the 38th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of AU Heads of State.

Kenya’s former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, Djibouti’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Mahamoud Ali Youssouf, and Madagascar’s former Minister of Foreign Affairs Richard Randriamandrato are the contenders for the chairperson role.

For the Deputy Chairperson position, six candidates are in the running, including Salah Francis and Selma Malika from Algeria, Mohamed Ahmed Fathi and Hanan Morsy from Egypt, Najat M. Elhajjaji from Libya, and Latifa Akharbach from Morocco.

There will be two phases to the elections. From February 12-13, the AU Executive Council, comprising foreign ministers from member states, will elect and appoint the commissioners who will oversee various portfolios within the AU Commission.

This will set the stage for the second phase, during which the Assembly of Heads of State and Government, the AU's supreme decision-making body, will elect the Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson during their February 15-16 session.

The voting process is governed by strict rules to ensure fairness and consensus. To win, a candidate must secure a two-thirds majority. Candidates may face elimination after three rounds of voting if they fail to secure the majority.

Should no candidate secure the necessary majority after three rounds, only the two candidates with the highest votes will be eligible for further voting. The candidate with fewer votes will be withdrawn, and voting will proceed.

In cases where only one candidate remains but still fails to achieve the required two-thirds majority, the chairperson is mandated to suspend the election.

If the vote is postponed, it could add several months to the term of incumbent Moussa Faki Mahamat, which is due to end in February this year.

Ramaphosa Flags off South Africa's First Shipment Under AfCFTA

Ramaphosa flags off South Africa's first shipment under AfCFTA - South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is received by KwaZulu-Natal Premier Nomusa Dube-Ncube at the Port of Durban, for the launch of the country's commercial preferential trade under the African Continental Free Trade Area, January 31, 2024 (Photo: X/ South African Government) 

By Ibrahim Omar

Wednesday, January 31, 2024

The move makes South Africa the latest country to start trading under AfCFTA, a deal that seeks to create a single market for the continent’s 1.3 billion people.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa on Wednesday flagged off the first shipment of goods for export under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

The move makes South Africa the latest country to start trading under AfCFTA, a deal that seeks to create a single market for the continent’s 1.3 billion people. The pact seeks to remove all cross-border trade taxes by 2030.

Ramaphosa was joined at the Port of Durban in the KwaZulu-Natal Province by leaders including South African Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition, Ebrahim Patel, Premier Nomusa Dube-Ncube and AfCFTA Secretary-General Wamkele Mene.

“The successful implementation of the AfCFTA is expected to lead to diversification of exports and increased productive capacity. It will also lead to increased investment, employment opportunities and, most importantly, broaden economic inclusion both in South Africa and the rest of the continent,” said Patel.

“It provides South African exporters with new market access opportunities to key markets in the African continent and can unlock growth.”

South Africa – which is Africa’s most industrialised country - now joins Kenya as one of the countries that have already started trading under AfCFTA, which was launched in January 2021.

Kenya was among six countries – including Cameron, Egypt, Ghana, Rwanda and Tanzania – that were selected to participate in the pilot phase of the deal.

In September 2022, Kenya sold its first goods under AfCFTA – a consignment of locally-made Exide batteries – to Ghana.

The AfCFTA pact requires members to phase out 90 per cent of tariff lines over the next five to 10 years.

With South Africa commencing trade under AfCFTA, Kenya can expect to get goods cheaper from South Africa once the trade taxes are gradually removed.

South Africa is the largest exporter of goods to Kenya on the African continent. Nairobi imports motor vehicles, machinery, foods and beverages from Pretoria. Kenya's largest exports to Pretoria are pearls, precious stones, metals and inorganic chemicals.

Envoy Nominee to Algiers Grilled on Kenya's Stance on Western Sahara Conflict

By Amina Wako

Friday, April 5, 2024

Despite the nominee's 27 years of service in the public sector, with 17 years spent at the foreign ministry, Kaluma faced scrutiny over his lack of proficiency in foreign languages during grilling.

Kenyan ambassadorial nominee to Algeria, Timothy Kaluma, was tasked during his confirmation hearing with elucidating Nairobi's stance on the contentious Western Sahara conflict to legislators.

Kaluma, a career diplomat with experience in Kenyan missions in Islamabad and the UN Geneva, faced questions from Kamukunji MP Yusuf Hassan regarding Algeria's support for Western Sahara.

"Algeria is the principal supporter of Western Sahara. We have previously opened an embassy in Rabat and it seems our policy towards North Africa is shifting. How would you ensure Kenya doesn't get entangled in the conflicts of the two rivals?" posed Yusuf Hassan.

Kaluma, who has previously worked under the Peace and Security Directorate at the Headquarters, said, "Kenya submits to the AU position on Western Sahara and the UN resolution that agreed that the people of Western Sahara should be given an opportunity to determine their cause through a referendum."

"Whatever we have as a country and whatever they have as a country will be tapped through collaborations... My role will be to strengthen our relationship with Algeria," he added.

The conflict between Morocco and the pro-independence Polisario Front began in 1975 when Spain withdrew from its former Sahara colony, later known as Western Sahara.

After Spain's departure, Morocco and Mauritania partitioned the territory.

The Polisario, with support from Algeria, wants an independent state in the Western Sahara, a vast stretch of mineral-rich desert which Morocco sees as a sovereign part of its territory.

They have waged an armed struggle before agreeing to a ceasefire in 1991 on the promise of a UN-supervised referendum on self-determination, which has never happened.

Despite the nominee's 27 years of service in the public sector, with 17 years spent at the foreign ministry, Kaluma faced scrutiny over his lack of proficiency in foreign languages during grilling.

"Looking at your CV, I noted you have been a career diplomat. You have not invested in acquiring any foreign service. You only speak Swahili, Taita and English. Do you feel you would be handicapped serving in a country that speaks French and Arabic?" posed Yusuf Hassan.

"I would like to state that I served in the Kenyan mission in Geneva, where French is a formal language. I understand French and I am continuing to hone my skills," responded Kaluma.

He was further queried by MP Joshua Kandie from Baringo Central whether he has an idea of what he is going to do in Algeria to increase trade volumes.

"Our exports to Algeria are minimal. We haven't signed any formal agreement with Algeria to govern our engagements and this explains why we have low volumes," said Kaluma.

He added, "My role will be to work with the Algerian government on how we can come up with a formal trade agreement that will guide us... On the balance, I believe there is a lot of work to improve trade."

Kenya's Wave of Deadly Violence Spurs Women to Fight Back

Kenya's wave of deadly violence spurs women to fight back - Members of the Granny Defence "Cucu Jikinge" participate in a warm-up session, as they attend a program that trains elderly women on the basic Karate skills for self-defence in the wake of the femicide crisis in the Korogocho settlement within Kasarani in Nairobi Kenya, November 12, 2024.

Friday, January 31, 2025

At least 97 women across Kenya were killed in femicides - intentional killings with a gender-related motivation - between August and October of last year, according to police figures.

From the young woman brutally murdered and dismembered in a short-term rental apartment to the Olympic runner set on fire by her estranged boyfriend, a surge in violence against women in Kenya has spurred many to prepare themselves to fight back.

At least 97 women across Kenya were killed in femicides - intentional killings with a gender-related motivation - between August and October of last year, according to police figures.

The police did not provide statistics for earlier periods, but according to figures compiled by the Africa Data Hub collective based on media reports, there were at least 75 femicides in 2023 and 46 the year before.

Activists said the recent upward trend is felt across Kenya's impoverished informal settlements, where women's efforts to protect themselves have taken on fresh urgency.

Inside a church in the Korogocho area of the capital Nairobi, Mary Wainaina, 93, thumped a punching bag. "No! No! No!" she shouted, before running away from a classmate pretending to be a male aggressor.

For the dozen members of the class, who refer to themselves as Cucu Jukinge, Swahili for "Grandma protect yourself", the lessons have never been purely theoretical.

The course was started nearly 25 years ago by an American couple working with local residents after several women were raped and killed in Korogocho, an impoverished and crime-plagued sprawl of iron shacks along the Nairobi River.

Shining Hope for Communities, a non-profit, said it had supported 307 survivors of gender-based violence in Korogocho between October and December alone.

A few years ago, Wainaina said she used her self-defence skills to fend off a man who tried to rape her.

Esther Njeri Muiruri, 82, said she found the current surge in violence against women just as worrying as the wave of attacks that prompted the class's creation.

"It's something that scares us, to see young mothers and young women being killed," she said, as a classmate nearby practised striking a would-be attacker with a cane.

'I Warned You'

Gender-based violence has long been a major problem in Kenya because of patriarchal views, socioeconomic inequalities and insufficient legal protections, researchers say. For example, Kenyan law does not criminalise spousal rape, meaning it can only be punished under laws covering non-sexual assaults.

Alberta Wambua, director of the Gender Violence Recovery Centre, said economic hardship fueled such violence as men frustrated by their financial struggles lashed out at women.

Other Topics To Read

Kenyan police routinely fail to respond to complaints of gender-based violence, often considering them private matters, Betty Kabari, an activist with End Femicide Kenya, told Reuters.

"We have a lot of cases of domestic violence where it's not that the perpetrator is not known," she said. "They are known, but the police have no interest in following up."

The professional runner Rebecca Cheptegei, whose ex-boyfriend killed her in September by dousing her in petrol and setting her alight, had gone to the police at least three times last year to report threats and physical abuse by him, her family said.

In an interview, a police spokesperson said the police were taking the issue of femicide seriously and that the Directorate of Criminal Investigations had recently established a Missing Persons Unit to concentrate on the murders of women.

But activists say they see few signs of progress. When several hundred people marched last month in Nairobi against femicide, the police fired teargas and arrested several of them.

The police spokesperson later acknowledged "mismanagement" in the handling of the demonstration.

The following week, the government created a presidential working group that it gave 90 days to deliver recommendations for addressing femicide.

For now, the Cucu Jukinge said they could only count on themselves. Beatrice Mungai, 81, recalled the time a young man tried to break into her house.

"I quickly started kicking him in his private parts three times. He started screaming asking me not to kill him," she said. "I told him: I warned you."

Prof. Ogot: My Encounter with the Great, Yet Reluctant Historian

The late Prof. Bethwel Ogot. He is a renowned historian and academic whose footprints in Kenya's journey to document the historical past will be remembered. 

The late Prof. Bethwel Ogot. He is a renowned historian and academic whose footprints in Kenya's journey to document the historical past will be remembered.

By Barack Oduor

Friday, January 31, 2025

Ogot, who began his career as a mathematician, later became an esteemed historian and researcher. He studied at Maseno High School, Makerere University, and the University of London.

While working as a news correspondent in Homa Bay County some years back, I decided to travel to Gem in Siaya County for the launch of two books authored by the late veteran author Grace Ogot. I had read Grace's works, and the fervour and fever of being part of that momentous occasion could not pass me.

I have remembered the exact date! It was March 17, 2018, at the launch of The Royal Bead and Princess Nyilak, published posthumously after the death of Grace. I sat pensively, and excited listening to her husband Allan Bethwel Ogot take us through the books.

Interacting with the Ogots was amazing. The deep knowledge and wisdom awed me. I also got the opportunity to tour the magnificent mausoleum built in honour of Grace.

When I received news of the death of Prof. Ogot on Friday, the nostalgia of that day came calling. It reminded me of the countless books of the Ogots I have interacted with and his assertion that we need to write more and more books about our cultures and societal setups.

"There is no end to writing. We should write about our culture, way of life and everything about the society we are living in," Prof Ogot said nonchalantly, as he narrated his tortuous, long love for writing, books, research and let's just say knowledge.

Last year, I interacted closely again with the Ogots, through his son Prof. Madara Ogot. On the evening of July 17, 2024, something big happened at the Alliance Française in Nairobi. While coastal kangas or lesos were embedded inside the artistic walls of the city's imposing arts and culture venue, the sound of the coastal Taarab music gripped the air as the debate on the newest book about the history of Kenya's coastal people went underway.

The event marked the launch of the book published by Anyange Press titled Mvita: History of Mombasa 12th Century – 2012 by Bethwel Ogot and his son, Prof Madara Ogot.

The late Prof. Bethwel Ogot. He is a renowned historian and academic whose footprints in Kenya's journey to document the historical past will be remembered.

Historians, archivists, scholars, and Swahili enthusiasts packed the auditorium and listened as Madara and the University of Nairobi's Prof Tom Odhiambo led a panel of discussion on the book.

"People should write their own history so that others do not write it for them. That is why we decided to write the book," said Prof. Madara Ogot.

Odhiambo, an avid scholar, book reviewer, and literary critic explained that this is not only the latest book on Mombasa but also the most authoritative.

This is how I remember Prof. Ogot. And I would wish that we remember him in terms of that last exhortation, that those of us who claim to be knowledge producers should continue to produce knowledge about our histories and stories.

It is history and stories that made Grace and Bethwell one of the true 'power couples' in Kenya. Theirs was a family that was steeped into knowledge production and dissemination with the intention to serve their people — Kenyans.

Prof Ogot's death was confirmed by Siaya Governor James Orengo, who described him as one of the greatest scholars the continent has seen.

Ogot, renowned for his pioneering contributions to African history, particularly East African history, passed away at Kisumu Hospital after a brief illness.

Other Topics To Read

Former Prime Minister Raila Odinga mourned Ogot, calling him a national treasure. "Prof. Bethwel Ogot was in the category of the now increasingly rare and outnumbered internationally known, deep, independent and professional scholars who treasured academic excellence and the value of knowledge to a community and a nation," Odinga said in a statement.

Ogot's career

Ogot, who began his career as a mathematician, later became an esteemed historian and researcher. He studied at Maseno High School, Makerere University, and the University of London.

Ogot's academic career included a role as Head of the History Department at the University of Nairobi, as well as a member of the East African Community (EAC) Legislative Assembly from 1975 to 1978. He also served as the Moi Chancellor until 2013.

He commenced his university academic and research life as a lecturer at Makerere University and eventually became Chairman of the History Department of University College, Nairobi, currently the University of Nairobi (UoN).

At the UoN he founded and directed the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) and the Institute of African Studies (IAS). He also served as the Dean of the School of Arts and Social Sciences and Deputy Vice-Chancellor of Academics therein.

He was the President of the International Scientific Committee for the preparation of UNESCO's General History of Africa. He edited Volume V of UNESCO's History of Africa, and presided over the committee that oversaw the production of the entire History. He was a member of the International Commission for UNESCO's History of Humanity.

From the University of Nairobi, Ogot was appointed by President Jomo Kenyatta to serve as member of the East African Community (EAC) Legislative Assembly, between 1975 and 1977. He was President of the PanAfrican Archaeological Association from 1977 to 1983.

Between 1978 and 1980 Ogot served at the International Louis Leakey Memorial Institute for African Prehistory (TILLMIAP), which was an integral part of the National Museums of Kenya (NMK), as its first director. He served Kenyatta University as a Professor, and the Kenya Post and Telecommunications as chairman. He was the Chancellor of Momedi University, Eldoret, up to 2013.

Ruto Preaching Pan-Africanism, Dialing the West

France President Emmanuel Macron with his Kenyan counterpart President William Ruto in Paris, France on 23 June 2023. (Photo: Xose Bouzas / Hans Lucas / Hans Lucas via AFP)

By Mwangi Maina

 Friday, January 31, 2025

Critics have lambasted Ruto's decision to seek counsel from Western powers to solve continental problems instead of engaging his African counterparts.

Kenyan President William Ruto has built a reputation as a vocal advocate of African solutions to African problems, yet his recent admission that he consulted French President Emmanuel Macron and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on the escalating crisis in eastern DRC has sparked sharp criticism across the continent.

At a time when France is being systematically pushed out of several African nations—most notably in the Sahel—Ruto openly divulged about discussing the Great Lakes conflict with Macron.

His remarks have raised questions about whether his Pan-Africanist rhetoric is a genuine commitment or merely political posturing. South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) International Affairs Editor Sophie Mokoena, in a scathing critique on Thursday, lambasted Ruto's decision to seek counsel from Western powers instead of engaging his African counterparts.

"Belgium and France were directly implicated in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide. For a head of state to call the French president—at a time when France is losing its grip on the continent, especially in the Sahel—rather than consulting his peers, what are you communicating?" Mokoena questioned.

She argued that engaging regional or at least continental leaders should have been Ruto's first instinct and "not dialling Paris and Washington when all hell broke loose."

Ironically, just days before this revelation, Ruto had hosted a retreat of African leaders in Nairobi to push for African Union (AU) reforms, lamenting the AU's inefficiencies and pledging to spearhead reforms to make it "fit for purpose."

President William Ruto when he hosted Guinea-Bissau President Umaro Mokhtar Sissoco Embaló, Ethiopia President Taye Atske Selassie, Ghana President John Dramani Mahama, Comoros President Azali Assoumani, African Union Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat during a retreat of the Extended Bureau on the Implementation of Institutional Reforms of the African Union, State House, Nairobi on January 25, 2025. (PCS)

His push for institutional change at the AU follows in the footsteps of Rwandan President Paul Kagame, who previously led AU reform efforts before stepping down in February 2023.

Kagame cited "hypocrisy and a lack of progress" as reasons for quitting the initiative—an indictment of African leaders who publicly champion reforms but fail to back them with action.

Broader trend

Ruto's latest contradiction is part of a broader trend: African leaders who speak of self-reliance but turn to Western capitals when "crises erupt".

Before the Russia-Africa Summit, he criticised global powers for treating Africa as a pawn in geopolitical struggles and accused "big countries" of mishandling African leaders at summits.

He famously declared that he would "not attend a meeting where one man speaks and the rest of us just listen."

Yet, he was among the first African leaders to fly to Rome for the Italian-Africa Summit, despite previously insisting that Africa should only engage as a bloc through the AU.

Other Topics To Read

His 2023 comments at the Mo Ibrahim Governance Forum, where he decried how African heads of state are "herded onto buses like schoolchildren" when attending global summits, has appeared ironical —given his willingness to attend similar gatherings.

Ruto's latest outreach to Paris and Washington on the DRC crisis only adds to the growing perception that his Pan-Africanist stance is more of a "performance than principle".

High-stakes test ahead

The timing of this controversy could not be worse for Ruto. The AU's annual summit is just weeks away, where high-stakes elections will determine the next AU Commission Chairperson.

Ruto has thrown his weight behind former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga's candidacy, in what is shaping up to be a fiercely contested race.

His credibility as a Pan-Africanist will be under scrutiny—not just in campaign rooms but also in the corridors of Addis Ababa, where African leaders will remember his willingness to dial Western leaders while preaching the gospel of African independence.

Thursday, January 30, 2025

SACP Input Delivered by Ben Martins, Central Committee Member and Political Bureau Secretary for International Affairs and Solidarity

ANC MUST ENSURE THAT THE ALLIANCE AGREED MANIFESTO INFORMS PRIORITISATION FOR THE 2024-2025 FINANCIAL YEAR

Saturday, 25 January 2025

Programme Director,

Leaders and members of the Alliance,

Esteemed stalwarts of the movement present.

Once again, the SACP congratulates the ANC on its successful 113th anniversary celebration held in Khayelitsha on 11 January 2025.

We appreciate the importance of the invitation to this second ANC NEC Lekgotla after the May 2024 election.

Our movement suffered a major setback from the May 2024 elections with far-reaching implications. As the Alliance, we are yet to address the core of the implications, given what happened afterwards.

In this message, our focus is on the priorities for the 2025-2026 financial year.

The SACP believes that priorities for the 2025-2026 financial year should be based on the 2024 ANC elections manifesto. We are glad that the six priorities elaborated in the ANC NEC statement on the occasion of the ANC 113th Anniversary are in line with the 2024 elections manifesto.

We stated in our message to the 113th anniversary of the ANC what is required by society, the working class and the poor of this country in particular. This includes, amongst others, the following:

Large-scale employment creation programmes to mitigate the unemployment crisis.

A high impact adequately funded industrial policy to drive broad-based industrialisation.

State-led infrastructure development, with strengthened state participation in critical infrastructure on behalf of the people as a whole as an apex priority.

A comprehensive poverty eradication programme.

A radical programme to resolve the crisis-high wealth and income inequalities.

Expediting the implementation of the Sovereign Wealth Fund to secure long-term national financial interests.

A comprehensive social security system, including a decisive advance towards a universal basic income grant.

Holistic implementation of the National Health Insurance to ensure universal access to quality healthcare.

Financial sector transformation, prioritising the establishment of a state banking sector and a public banking system.

We, therefore, present these to this ANC Lekgotla as areas of emphasis as extensively elaborated during the 2024 elections manifesto development process, as our contribution to this Lekgotla.

Our message to the ANC 113th Anniversary referred to the crisis of over 12 million unemployed active and discouraged work seekers, with further retrenchments contemplated at that time, including the termination of workers’ contracts in public employment programmes by the GNU and the over 3,500 direct and close to 100,000 indirect workers facing retrenchment if the government allows Arcelor-Mittal to close down productive factories in Newcastle, Vereeneging and eMalahleni. The priorities for the Financial Year 2025-2026 must be directed at reversing these trends, among others.

We also stated that the crises facing South Africa are likely to persist for a long time and that macro-economic policies rooted in fiscal austerity and other restrictive measures may not, and have not, provided any solution to these challenges in the last 29 years since the government adopted GEAR in 1996. This Lekgotla needs to cast its eyes beyond the post-1996 approach.

We agree that Local Government needs improving. Water and energy security must remain a priority.

We submit that answers to our challenges do not lie in budget cuts in the Medium Term Budget priorities but in the proper prioritisation, planning, adequate resourcing and meticulous execution of identified priorities for each year of the five-year terms, accompanied by appropriate monitoring and evaluation of progress. Our priorities should aim to resolve the challenges faced by society, especially the majority, being the workers and poor, while setting the country on a shared growth path and inclusive development trajectory underpinned by a massive, broad-based reindustrialisation.           

We appreciate the ANC’s firm stand on the NHI Act, the BELA Act, and the Expropriation Act.

Having listened to what the ANC had to say, our view on the GNU and the way it was formed is well recorded.

We continue our opposition to the neo-liberal policies, including, but not limited to, austerity measures that focus on budget cuts rather than on alternatives to increase production that will help support the developmental needs of the people.

We will continue our struggle against monopoly capital, also noting that the DA, a right-wing, neo-liberal party opposed to the National Democratic Revolution, will continue to lead the charge in the interest of the beneficiaries of colonial and apartheid oppression and the class they represent.

The SACP within the Alliance will continue to take a fully and uncompromised class posture against monopoly capital and the exploiter class at large.

The resolution of the SACP to contest elections aims to assert the SACP’s independence and programme to build itself and act as a vanguard party of the workers and poor.  The SACP will continue to do this as a member of the Alliance. We reiterate our readiness for the politically critical bilateral, which has not taken place as promised before this Lekgotla.

Issued by the South African Communist Party,

Founded in 1921 as the Communist Party of South Africa.

Media, Communications & Information Department | MCID

Dr Alex Mohubetswane Mashilo, Central Committee Member

National Spokesperson & Political Bureau Secretary for Policy and Research

FOR INTERVIEW ARRANGEMENTS, MEDIA LIAISON & CIRCULATION SERVICES

Hlengiwe Nkonyane

Media Liaison Officer & Digital Platforms Manager

Mobile: +27 66 473 4819

OFFICE & OTHER CONTACT DETAILS

Office: +2711 339 3621/2

Website: www.sacp.org.za

Facebook Page: South African Communist Party

Twitter: SACP1921

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SACP Statement on the Conflict in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo

Thursday, 30 January 2025: - Once again, following the initial message by our General Secretary Solly Mapaila on Sunday, 26 January 2025, the South African Communist Party (SACP) expresses its heartfeltcondolences to the families of the 13 South African National Defence Force (SANDF) soldiers who lost their lives in the conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Their sacrifice in the pursuit of peace and stability on the continent must not be in vain. The SACP stands in solidarity with their families and the entire SANDF during this difficult time.

The SACP calls for an immediate ceasefire and dialogue to achieve lasting peace and development in the DRC and across Africa. The people of the DRC deserve peace, stability and a future free from war and foreign-sponsored conflicts. All stakeholders must commit to a peaceful resolution that prioritises the needs of the people rather than external interests or internal elitist interests.

The South African government must provide the nation with a coherent and transparent account of what transpired. This is crucial following the reaction and allegations made by Rwandan President Paul Kagame in response to President Cyril Ramaphosa’s statement on X, as well as the statements made by the Minister of Defence Angie Motshekga and Deputy Minister of Defence Bantu Holomisa in their press briefing. Clarity is particularly important given the discussions at the African Union Peace and Security Council emergency ministerial-level session on Tuesday, 28 January 2025, and the Southern African Development Community (SADC) extraordinary summit in Harare, Zimbabwe, on Thursday, 30 January 2025. However, we must make it clear: The SACP denounces Kagame’s utterances, which amount to a war talk – we do not want any further war on our continent.

While the SACP firmly supports South Africa’s participation in peacekeeping efforts in our region and on our continent, these efforts must not be used to enforce or legitimise governments that come to power by means which undermine the people’s will in democratic processes. For example, Felix Tshisekedi’s first term as the President of the DRC, which started in January 2019, was not based on winning but undermining the outcome of elections, which were held in December 2018. The impact this had on peace and stability cannot be ignored. That said, Tshisekedi did win the subsequent elections held in December 2023 for his current term, which started in January 2024.

Also, legitimate peacekeeping efforts in which the SANDF is deployed must be backed by an adequately equipped and resourced participation. The capability of the SANDF has been severely compromised by austerity-driven budget cuts. This is well documented, including in parliamentary defence reports.

For example, a 2015 defence review highlighted that the SANDF is under-funded by approximately 24 per cent. Defence spending in 2022/23 was 8.4 per cent lower than in 2021 and 21 per cent lower than in 2013. A “confidential” yet publicly accessible presentation by the Department of Defence to the Parliamentary Appropriation Committee revealed that the SANDF budget was reduced by approximately R33 billion between 2008 and 2021. The presentation further shows that the SANDF faced a total shortfall requirement of approximately R7.73 billion in 2022/23 during the 2020 medium-term expenditure framework. Based on the analysis of the negative impact of austerity on defence capability, the report warned of severe consequences.

Among others, as a result of the consistent defence budget cuts, South Africa’s pledge to SADC peacekeeping efforts had to be scaled down, and the SANDF’s infantry, armour, artillery, air defence artillery and other critical capabilities could be reduced to light infantry. The presentation warned that the SANDF risks being downgraded to mere “constabulary tasks,” a situation that carries far-reaching implications for national and regional security.

The tragic loss of our soldiers in the DRC underscores the consequences of an under-funded defence force. Had the SANDF been adequately equipped, it would not have been forced to request additional capabilities amid a crisis, although this was co-ordinated after the request. This must never happen again.

The SACP calls for an urgent end to austerity-driven cuts that have weakened South Africa’s defence capabilities and compromised national security. The lives of our soldiers and the country’s commitment to peacekeeping must not be jeopardised by budget reductions. The South African government must take decisive action to ensure that the SANDF is properly funded, well-equipped and able to fulfil its mandate effectively, including international obligations.

Issued by the South African Communist Party,

Founded in 1921 as the Communist Party of South Africa.

Media, Communications & Information Department | MCID

Dr Alex Mohubetswane Mashilo, Central Committee Member

National Spokesperson & Political Bureau Secretary for Policy and Research

FOR INTERVIEW ARRANGEMENTS, MEDIA LIAISON & CIRCULATION SERVICES

Hlengiwe Nkonyane

Media Liaison Officer & Digital Platforms Manager

Mobile: +27 66 473 4819

OFFICE & OTHER CONTACT DETAILS

Office: +2711 339 3621/2

Website: www.sacp.org.za

Facebook Page: South African Communist Party

Twitter: SACP1921

Didiza Yet to Set Date for Snap Parly Debate on SA's Troop Deployment in DRC

Political parties on Thursday pushed her to urgently decide on a date, with the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) proposing she convene Parliament even before next week's State of the Nation Address (SONA).

Didiza yet to set date for snap Parly debate on SA's troop deployment in DRC

FILE: Speaker of the National Assembly, Thoko Didiza. Picture: @ParliamentofRSA/X

CAPE TOWN - National Assembly Speaker Thoko Didiza said that she's yet to determine a date for a snap debate on the deployment of South African troops in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Political parties on Thursday pushed her to urgently decide on a date, with the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) proposing she convene Parliament even before next week's State of the Nation Address (SONA).

The EFF and Democratic Alliance (DA) have both asked for a debate in the wake of the intensified fighting in the DRC that has claimed the lives of 13 South African soldiers in recent days.

During the National Assembly's first programme committee meeting of the year, Speaker Thoko Didiza conveyed her condolences to the families of the fallen soldiers. 

She acknowledged the requests from political parties to urgently debate the matter.

"We are considering that matter and also the possible date on which the debate must take place."

But the EFF's Hlengiwe Mkhaliphi was not satisfied that a date had not yet been scheduled.

"In our letter to you, we said can you use your powers in terms of the rules of Parliament to convene Parliament even before the opening of Parliament."

She was backed by the MK Party's Visvin Reddy. 

But Didiza said she would communicate her decision at an appropriate time.

The parties also complained that Wednesday's meeting of the defence committee was cancelled at short notice. 

In a statement on Thursday, committee chairperson, Dakota Legoete, apologised and said he did so to ensure that Minister Angie Motshekga would be available to attend.

She is due to appear before the committee on Tuesday.

Former South Africa President Zuma's Daughter is Arrested on Terrorism Charges

FILE -Former South African President Jacob Zuma, speaks as his daughter Duduzile Zuma-Sambudla, right, listens, during a press conference in Soweto, South Africa, Dec. 16, 202

Africa News with AP

A daughter of former South African President Jacob Zuma has been arrested and is expected to appear in court on Thursday to face terrorism charges.

Duduzile Zuma-Sambudla, who is also a member of the South African Parliament, is accused of inciting violence during riots in July 2021 which led to the deaths of more than 350 people.

Zuma-Sambudla handed herself over to police on Thursday to face charges under the Protection of Constitutional Democracy against Terrorist and Related Activities Act and incitement to commit violence, police said.

“The arrest is as a result of a meticulous investigation by the Durban Crimes Against the State unit of the Serious Organized Crime Investigation, following the unrest that brought the country to a standstill in 2021,” police spokesperson Brigadier Thandi Mbambo said.

Her political party confirmed that Zuma-Sambudla would appear in court on Thursday.

The case against Zuma-Sambudla is based on posts she made on Twitter, now called X, allegedly urging protesters to cause more damage during nationwide unrest that started after her father was sent to jail.

Former President Zuma was taken to prison for defying a court order to testify before a corruption inquiry. Following that, angry mobs engaged in widespread looting of shops, arson and destruction of property. More than 5,000 people were arrested.

The riots, which lasted more than a week, were some of the worst unrest in South Africa since the end of the apartheid system of white minority rule in 1994. Zuma-Sambudla was accused of encouraging the unrest as a sign of support for her father, although a later investigation into the riots found that they were partly spurred by frustration and poverty during South Africa's harsh lockdowns because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Jacob Zuma was president from 2009 to 2018 but was pressured to resign by the African National Congress party he then led over corruption allegations. That set in motion an ongoing political feud between Zuma and the man who replaced him, current President Cyril Ramaphosa.

Jacob Zuma was expelled from the ANC last year and now leads a new political party called the MK Party, which became the official opposition following last year's national election.

His daughter, Zuma-Sambudla, has become a high-ranking member of the MK Party and is one of its lawmakers. The party has been urging members to support Zuma-Sambudla when she appears at the Durban Magistrates Court in the eastern province of KwaZulu-Natal, where Jacob Zuma has strong support. South African media reported that police were on high alert in the city.

The charges were brought nearly four years after the riots following a long forensic investigation, although Zuma-Sambudla has long been accused of instigating some of the trouble through her social media posts.

“She has conditioned herself, because there have been many threats about her imminent arrest for the past three or four years, MK Party spokesperson Nhlamulo Ndhlela said. "She is awaiting and she will abide by the law as a law-abiding citizen.”

Rwanda Defends Support for M23 Rebels

Rwandan President Paul Kagame listens to a question while participating in a panel discussion on the campus of Tufts University, Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Africa News and AP

President Paul Kagame has said Rwanda is ready for "confrontation," rejecting growing criticism over its support for M23 rebels in eastern Congo.

On Thursday, M23 forces, with Rwandan backing, captured the major city of Goma and began pushing south towards Bukavu, the capital of South Kivu province. This marks the biggest escalation in the region's conflict since 2012.

Rwanda’s involvement in Congo has sparked strong international condemnation. Countries like Germany have canceled aid talks, and Britain has threatened to withhold $40 million in aid. Despite this backlash, Rwanda’s actions on the ground seem unaffected.

The situation continues to escalate in the wake of decades of instability in the region, fueled in part by the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide.

20 Killed When a Chinese Oil Company’s Flight Crashes in South Sudan

By DENG MACHOL

12:02 PM EST, January 29, 2025

JUBA, South Sudan (AP) — A small plane chartered by a Chinese oil company crashed Wednesday in a remote part of South Sudan, killing 20 people, authorities said. One passenger survived.

The flight chartered by Greater Pioneer Operating Co. had 21 people on board, including two pilots, when it crashed while taking off near an oil field in Unity state as it headed to the South Sudanese capital, said the state information minister, Gatwech Bipal.

Local media reports said the passengers were oil company workers. The U.N.-affiliated Radio Miraya, citing the flight manifest, said the victims were mostly South Sudanese, and included one Indian and two Chinese nationals. Authorities did not immediately confirm the identities of the victims.

“We are deeply saddened,” South Sudan’s oil minister, Puot Kang Chol, told reporters in the Kenyan capital Nairobi after confirming that 20 people were killed. He was in Nairobi for peace talks aimed at ending South Sudan’s cycle of political violence.

It wasn’t immediately clear what caused the crash.

South Sudan President Salva Kiir ordered the Transport Ministry to investigate, and said the crash had affected not only the families of the victims “but also the communities, our nation and the entire oil industry.”

South Sudan, which gained independence from Sudan in 2011, is a major oil producer in the region. The East African nation has been trying to ramp up oil production and exports amid persistent cash flow issues for the government.

Rwanda-backed Rebels in Eastern DR Congo Say They Plan to Take Their Fight to the Capital

By CHINEDU ASADU and JUSTIN KABUMBA

5:59 PM EST, January 30, 2025

GOMA, Congo (AP) — Rwanda-backed rebels who captured eastern Congo’s largest city said Thursday they want to take their fight to the far-off capital, Kinshasa, while Congo’s president called for a massive military mobilization to resist the rebellion and his defense minister rejected calls for dialogue.

In a video message on Thursday, Congo’s Defense Minister Guy Kabombo Muadiamvita said he has directed plans for any dialogue with the rebels to “be completely burned immediately.”

“We will stay here in Congo and fight. If we do not stay alive here, let’s stay dead here,” said Muadiamvita, a close ally of Congo’s president.

At a briefing where they sought to assert their control over the eastern city of Goma and surrounding territory in the neighbouring South Kivu province, the M23 rebels said they would be open to dialogue with the government, also proposed by the east African regional bloc of which Rwanda is a member.

Their motive, however, is to gain political power, Corneille Nangaa, one of the political leaders of M23, said during the briefing. “We want to go to Kinshasa, take power and lead the country,” Nangaa said. He did not indicate how the rebels planned to advance on the capital, more than 1,500 kilometers (nearly 1,000 miles) away.

Rwanda’s leader, Paul Kagame said he spoke with Angola’s President Joao Lourenco — a mediator in the conflict who also met with Congo’s leader a day earlier — and both leaders committed to working with other African countries to resolve the hostilities.

U.S. President Donald Trump described the conflict as a “very serious problem” when asked about it Thursday but declined to comment further, and a U.N. spokesman said the agency is “disturbed” by reports that neighboring Rwandan forces have crossed the border in the direction where the rebels are said to be advancing.

The M23 rebels are backed by some 4,000 troops from neighboring Rwanda, according to U.N. experts, far more than in 2012 when they first captured Goma. They are one of more than 100 armed groups vying for control in Congo’s mineral-rich east, which holds vast deposits estimated to be worth $24 trillion that are critical to much of the world’s technology.

Congolese President Félix Tshisekedi, meanwhile, called on young people to enlist massively in the military, as a crucial meeting of neighbors asked the Congolese government to talk with the rebels. Rwanda’s leader also threatened to “deal” with any confrontation with South Africa, which has complained that fighting in eastern Congo has left South African peacekeepers dead.

In his first public remarks since the M23 rebels advanced into, Goma on Monday, Tshisekedi vowed “a vigorous and coordinated response” from his forces to push back the rebels while reaffirming his commitment to a peaceful resolution.

On Thursday, he met with French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot in Kinshasa, the Congolese presidency said on X, noting that France has provided significant support to Congo in recent U.N. meetings on the issue. “(Congo) expects a little more action in the face of this crisis,” it added.

Dead bodies, looting in Goma

Goma remained largely without electricity and water on Thursday, as the bodies of several alleged government soldiers lay in the streets, horrifying residents, including children.

M23 rebels escorted some 2,000 government soldiers and police officers — who they said surrendered — to an undisclosed location, some of them singing anti-Tshisekedi songs.

The U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator in Congo said basic services are largely paralyzed in Goma, a humanitarian hub critical for more than 6 million people displaced by the conflict. “After several days of intense clashes, the city is now (faced) with massive humanitarian needs and severely impacted response capacities,” said Bruno Lemarquis, the humanitarian coordinator.

Footage from Goma showed residents carrying food items and goods looted from stores and warehouses in the city. “This is something that is going to exacerbate a dangerous cycle of violence as desperate times call for desperate measures,” the U.N. World Food Program emergency coordinator in eastern Congo, Cynthia Jones, said Thursday.

South Kivu gripped by fear

After capturing much of Goma, the rebels were advancing toward South Kivu’s provincial capital, Bukavu, causing fear and panic among residents, witnesses said Thursday.

Néné Bintou, a civil society leader, said gunshots and explosions were heard in Mukwinja, a captured town 86 miles (135 kilometers) from Bukavu.

The Congolese military has been weakened after hundreds of foreign military contractors withdrew and handed over their arms to the rebels. Residents of Goma described seeing soldiers changing into civilian clothing and dropping their guns as they crossed over the border to Rwanda or took shelter in foreign peacekeeping bases.

“The (Congolese) military bases in Bukavu have been emptied to reinforce those in Nyabibwe, Bushushu, and Nyamukubi” along the way to the capital, one youth leader said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was worried about his safety.

Neighbors urge talks with M23 as tensions grow

A summit of the regional East African bloc called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire in eastern Congo and “strongly urged” Tshisekedi’s government to hold talks with the rebels. Tshisekedi was conspicuously absent from the virtual summit attended by Rwanda, also a member.

While African countries as well as the U.N. and U.S. have called for an immediate ceasefire, the risk of a regional war has increased, analysts say, exacerbated by the rebels’ advance into South Kivu and diatribes between Rwandan and South African officials. Congo is a member of the southern Africa regional bloc and also that of east Africa, whose peacekeeping force it expelled last year after deeming it ineffective.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa blamed the “Rwanda Defense Force militia” for the fighting that has resulted in the deaths of 13 South African peacekeepers in eastern Congo. He also said his government will ensure the peacekeepers are “sufficiently supported during this critical mission.”

His comment drew an angry response from Kagame, who called the South African peacekeepers a “belligerent force” working alongside armed groups that target Rwanda. “If South Africa prefers confrontation, Rwanda will deal with the matter in that context any day,” the Rwandan leader said on the social media platform X.

Who are the M23 and what do they want?

The chaotic situation with the M23 has its roots in ethnic conflict, stretching back decades to the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, when 800,000 Tutsis and others were killed by Hutus and former militias. M23 says it is defending ethnic Tutsis in Congo. Rwanda has claimed the Tutsis are being persecuted by Hutus and others involved in the genocide. Many Hutus fled into Congo after 1994.

Unlike in 2012 when the rebels seized Congo for days, observers say their withdrawal could be more difficult now. The rebels have been emboldened by Rwanda, which feels Congo is ignoring its interests in the region and failed to meet demands of previous peace agreements, according to Murithi Mutiga, program director for Africa at the Crisis Group, a think tank.

“Ultimately, this is a failure of African mediation (because) the warning signs were always there. Kigali was adopting very bellicose rhetoric and the Congolese government was also adopting very, very aggressive rhetoric,” Mutiga said.

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Asadu reported from Abuja. AP journalists Ruth Alonga in Goma, Jean-Yves Kamale and Christina Malkia in Kinshasa, Congo, Mark Banchereau in Paris and Edith M. Lederer in New York contributed to this report.