Mali: Algeria is interfering in internal Affairs

The Military Government of Mali accuses the Algerian leadership of “persistent interference” in its internal affairs. According to moroccoworldnews.com the Algerian Foreign Minister Ahmed Attaf had stated that Mali’s military strategy was failing in the fight against terrorism and that a political solution would be necessary. “Mali neither seeks nor accepts lessons from Algeria, which, in recent history, conducted its fight against terrorism in full sovereignty,” the statement of the Mali Foreign Ministry said.

In December last year, the Malian government had summoned its ambassador to Algeria and accused Algiers to host meetings with “terrorists”, that are hostile towards Mali’s government.


Chad: 1st Parliamentary Election in more than 10 years

Chad

Map: Everest700, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Berlin. – The citizens of the Central African nation Chad are voting on Sunday in parliamentary, regional and municipal elections for the first time in more than a decade. The military government had the elections delayed serveral times, due to «financial problems» and the Covid-19 pandemic. Opposition voices are sceptical whether the Central African country is really on a democratic path.

Officials in the capital N’djamena declared, that the election will formally end a three-year «transitional period» after the death of the former leader Idriss Deby, who died in the 2021. His son forcefully took over. Mahamat Idriss Deby was confirmed as the country’s president after an election in May.

Many opposition party members are boycotting the polls. They called them a «masquerade» and accused the Debry government and his «Patriotic Salvation Movement» (MPS) of trying to legitimise a «political dynasty».

Chad is one of Africa’s poorest countries, ruled by the Deby family since 1991. It is first of the coup-hit states in the Sahel region to hold elections. But human rights groups said without full opposition participation, the election could not be free and fair.

«It will be difficult to have a credible election without inclusivity,» Isa Sanusi, Amnesty International’s country director in Nigeria, told Al Jazeera. «That some are boycotting the election shows that there must be a review of the process and system to ensure that a level playing field is provided to accommodate all Chadians.»

The Elections

According to Al Jazeera,

  • some 8.3 million registered voters of the country’s 18-million population will vote for legislators in the country’s 188-seat parliament. Parties need 95 seats for a majority.
  • More than 100 political parties have put forward some 1,100 candidates for the parliamentary elections. Winners are elected by a first-past-the-post or a more-than-half majority method, depending on the constituency size.
  • Voters will also choose regional and local governments across 22 regions and the capital, N’Djamena.

The Transformers Party, as well as other opposition parties, are boycotting the elections. The argue that the vote will be neither free nor fair.

Malaria on the Move

Logo World Mosquito Program

With World Mosquito Day this week, one.org has a look at a disease they carry: malaria, a silent but lethal killer. Shark attacks get a lot of headlines (and even their own popular TV series). But Mosquito Week quietly happens every week in many parts of the world, reports one.org. Mosquitos kill more people in one day than sharks have killed in the last 100 years. The vast majority of those are young children in Africa: half a million children under age 5 in Africa die each year from malaria. => Read «Aftershocks — Incisive insights on Africa» on one.org …