anti-government protests in Senegal ..
12/02/2012
More info here
(Source: wavesfadingwords, via brosephstalin)
anti-government protests in Senegal ..
12/02/2012
More info here
(Source: wavesfadingwords, via brosephstalin)
Gaza airport and Palestinian Airlines (see Historical Background )
Airports in Palestine, including Gaza, were important stops in the prestigious network of Imperial Airways. Palestinian Airways, founded in July 1937 by Pinhas Rutenberg, began with flights between Haifa and Lydda using 2 Shorts S.16 Scion 2 planes. Palestine Airways ceased its operations in August 1940 and its aircraft were taken-over by the Royal Air Force during the second world war.
During the fifties and sixties, there were no air services to Gaza while flights to the West Bank were operated through Jerusalem’s Kolundia Airport (JRS). Regional flights were flown to JRS by several Arab airlines, most of the traffic being carried by those registered in Jordan. The Six Days war in 1967 saw Kolundia airport taken over by the occupation.
An international airport in the Palestinian Authority’s territory was difficult for Israel to accept for both security and symbolic reasons. Israeli restricted possible sites to the Gaza strip and required close and direct Israeli supervision. Construction of the Yasser Arafat International Airport [GZA] was the best that could be accomplished before a peace agreement. Work started in January 1996. The costs were mainly covered by donations from Japan, Europe and Morocco. Located near Rafah, GZA had a single runway that could handle most airliner types including the Boeing 747 and was designed for up to 700,000 passengers yearly.Palestinian Airlines began operating from Port Said in January 1997 with two Fokker F-50s donated by the Dutch government and a Boeing 727 donated by Saudi prince Alwaleed bin Talal. The airline transferred its base to GZA and started operating scheduled flights from Gaza in November 1998, flying to Amman and Cairo. Two De Havilland Dash-8s were purchased in order to reinforce regional frequencies and two Canadair Regional Jets were ordered and there were plans for the lease or purchase of 3 Boeing 737s in order to expand the network towards Athens, Rome, Frankfurt, Paris and London. Palestinian Airlines’ highest level of operation was in the Summer of 2000. Other airlines flying to GZA at that time Russavia, Tarom, Royal Air Maroc, Royal Jordanian and Egyptair.
The airline was grounded in October 2000 following the start of the Al-Aqsa Intifada and was forced to move to El Arish International Airport in Egypt when on on December 12th 2001 GZA was bombed by the Israeli army and the control tower destroyed. On 10 January 2002, the US$60 million runway was completely destroyed by the Israeli army, shattering hopes for the resumption of flights to the airport.(x)
Nato Chief in Turkey:
“We have no interest at all in interfering in Syria, even to provide safe corridors.”
Amazing, isn’t it? When a country has a lot of oil, they get rapid Western “assistance.” When they don’t, and their people are bleeding… we don’t give a shit.
Andrew
Nigeria gas drilling accident sparks fear
A devastating oil spill by Chevron that has been burning for over 20 days is still on-going with no sign of stopping. Whilst Chevron, the world’s fourth largest oil company, have moved many of their staff members away from the area, it is dangerously close to many surrounding communities where people have already been severely affected by the inferno.
Chevron says that it is providing food to the local communities but denies that this spill is causing any damage to the environment or that it is harmful.
Dakar, Senegal - On February 1, mass protests swept Senegal in opposition to the perceived attempts of President Wade to engineer a constitutional coup that would allow him a third term in office. The Wade administration has responded by cracking down against protesters across the country. Police have allegedly fired on Senegalese citizens with live ammunition. The number of dead is unknown. In Dakar, a university student and a police officer were killed, and at least ten protesters were seriously injured. In Podor, a violent protest on Saturday left two dead - a high-schooler and a 60-year-old grandmother.
The violent crackdown has left Senegalese society reeling, calling into question their history as a fundamentally democratic and peaceful polity.
Mamadou Diop, the father of the student who was killed, has called on the country’s leaders to step down. “In the name of peace, I am begging Abdoulaye Wade to relinquish power,” he said. “I am not wishing any other parent, any other human being, to go through what I am going through right now.”
The protests are reportedly being led by the Y’en A Marre [French slang for “fed up”] group and M23. Composed of civil society, ordinary citizens and opposition parties, M23 is a social movement that arose from the Green Thursdayuprising of June 23, 2011, which protested against a constitutional makeover that would have instituted a vice-presidency (thought to have been created for Wade’s son, Karim) and secured an easy victory for Wade at the 2012 presidential election. The protesters have since taken to the streets on the 23rd of every month, in order to sustain their pressure against a potential constitutional coup.
The calls for President Wade’s departure were in part fuelled by his age, and by doubts about his ability to assume the country’s leadership. Officially 85 years old, Wade is popularly thought to be at least 90. After a third term, he would thus be around 97 years old. Many also fear that Wade’s secret ploy is to seize power in 2012, but not finish his term, and appoint his son Karim in his place, thus imposing a monarchic devolution of power that the Senegalese electorate rejected during the 2009 legislative elections and again on June 23, 2011.
Bitter debate
But Wade has showed no signed of retreat from his resolution to run for a third presidential term. He changed the administrative partitioning of the country to downsize the districts where his party, the PDS, did not have a lead (seehere). He allegedly ransacked public coffers to fund his campaign. Most seriously, a series of political intimidations perpetrated against opposition politicians by heavy-muscled youth set the country in a tense mode of violence, escalating with the death of a PDS envoy and the imprisonment [FR] of Wade’s fiercest youth opponent, Barthelemy Diaz, head of the Socialist Party’s Youth League.
A bitter constitutional debate took hold of the country. The majority of Senegalese constitutionalists who took part in the writing of the 2001 constitution opposed Wade’s third bid as unconstitutional. However, a minority, affiliated with Wade’s camp, maintained that Wade was exempt from the immediate application of the 2001 Constitution’s provisions, having been elected one year prior to its adoption. Consequently, the final word on the constitutional validity of Wade’s third presidential bid was left to Senegal’s Constitutional Court.
However, the “Five Wise Judges” were appointed by the president - and were allegedly each provided with gifts of a limousine and CFA 5 million ($10,000) bonuses from the president. This has cast serious doubts on the impartiality of the court’s decision.
On January 27, the “Five Wise” ruled that Wade could run for president - and excluded the popular singer Youssou N’Dour from the campaign.
The Ministry of the Interior forbade protests at the decision, setting the scene for potential tensions and renewed clashes between national security forces and the mobilised youth.
From 3pm to 6pm, the protest ensued peacefully. At 6pm, however, tanks began to roll against the tight crowd assembled at the Place de l’Obelisque, driving into the crowd, as police officers targeted political opponents - such as Moustapha Niasse, Youssou N’Dour and others.
The violence that ensued has been met with a mix of national mourning and incredulity.
The nation’s religious leaders have parted from civil society by asking the people of Senegal to respect the decision of the Constitutional Court. One notable exception was the leader of the Niassene Leona Muslim Brotherhood, who has called upon the president to relinquish power in the name of peace and stability: “Power is not worth this. It is not worth the death of even one of our sons. You have given us 11 good years. You cannot do anything short of what Senghor or Abdou Diouf have achieved. For the sake of peace, Wade, we beg you to retract yourself” (Walfadjri, Jan 31 2012).
Meanwhile, President Wade, the object of all the tensions - but still the guardian in the exercise of the nation - sits in silence. He has yet to speak on the mass protests and his attempted constitutional coup.
Whether Wade comes to his senses and quells the ongoing violence by withdrawing his candidacy, or whether the electorate decides to return peacefully to their homes and vote en masse on February 26 to oust Wade through the ballot, Senegal’s hard-won peace and democracy of the past 50 years lies in peril.
The hour is grave.
Arame Tall is the Climate Centre’s technical adviser for West and Central Africa. Nimi Hoffmann works for an organisation of rural and small-scale farmers who fight for environmental justice in South Africa.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/02/201224101919348700.html
Western black rhino delcared extinct
No wild black rhinos remain in West Africa, according to the latest global assessment of threatened species.
The Red List, drawn up by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), has declared the subspecies extinct.
A subspecies of white rhino in central Africa is also listed as possibly extinct, the organisation says.
The annual update of the Red List now records more threatened species than ever before.
The IUCN reports that despite conservation efforts, 25% of the world’s mammals are at risk of extinction. As part of its latest work it has reassessed several rhinoceros groups.
Poaching vulnerabilityAs well as declaring the western black rhino (Diceros bicornis longipes) extinct, it records the northern white rhino (Ceratotherium simum cottoni), a subspecies in central Africa, as being on the brink of extinction.
The last Javan rhino (Rhinoceros sondaicus) outside Java is also believed to have disappeared.
Overall numbers of black and white rhinos have been rising, but some subspecies have been particularly vulnerable to poaching by criminal gangs who want to trade the animals’ valuable horns.
Simon Stuart, chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission, told BBC News: “They had the misfortune of occurring in places where we simply weren’t able to get the necessary security in place.
“You’ve got to imagine an animal walking around with a gold horn; that’s what you’re looking at, that’s the value and that’s why you need incredibly high security.”
That will help protect endangered species including Tarzan’s chameleon (Calumma tarzan) and the limbless skink (Paracontias fasika).
Among the success stories identified in the latest annual update is the reintroduction of the Przewalski’s horse (Equus ferus). Listed extinct in the wild in 1996, it was brought back after a captive breeding programme and the wild population is now thought to exceed 300.
Among the partner organisations involved in compiling the research for the list is the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).
ZSL’s Dr Monika Boehm said: “This Red List update very much shows us a mixed picture of what’s happening to the world’s species. There’s some good news and some bad news.
“Unfortunately, the overall trend is still a decline in biodiversity. We still haven’t achieved our conservation potential.”
Another focus for this year’s list is Madagascar and its reptiles. The report found that 40% of terrestrial reptiles are threatened. But it also says that new areas have been designated for conservation.
I need to get back to Africa.
Calabar, Cross Rivers State, Nigeria
submitted by: http://pre-eminent.tumblr.com/
Recently, West Africa has sprung to near the very top of my travel list.
A Senegalese woman crosses the street in her brightly coloured gown
Princess of streets - NIGER - by C.Stramba-Badiali on Flickr.
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