Rwanda’s Kagame cruises to crushing election victory

Rwanda’s Kagame cruises to crushing election victory
Rwanda's incumbent President and presidential candidate for the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) Paul Kagame prepares to cast his ballot. (Reuters)
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Updated 16 July 2024
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Rwanda’s Kagame cruises to crushing election victory

Rwanda’s Kagame cruises to crushing election victory
  • Incumbent Paul Kagame has won more than 93% of the vote at each of the three previous elections
  • Kagame is running against two other candidates, Frank Habineza and Philippe Mpayimana

KIGALI: Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame has scored a crushing election victory that will extend his iron-fisted rule by another five years, according to partial results issued Monday.
De facto leader since the end of the 1994 genocide and president since 2000, Kagame scored 99.15 percent of the vote, the National Election Commission announced after 79 percent of ballots had been counted.
It tops the 98.79 percent Kagame won in the last election in 2017 and puts him streets ahead of the only two candidates authorized to run against him.
Democratic Green Party candidate Frank Habineza scraped 0.53 percent of the vote and independent Philippe Mpayimana 0.32 percent.
The outcome of Monday’s poll was never in doubt, with Kagame’s regime accused of muzzling the media and political opposition, and several prominent critics barred from the race.
Soon after the partial results were announced, giving Kagame a fourth term, he thanked Rwandans in an address from the headquarters of his ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF).
“The results that have been presented indicate a very high score, these are not just figures, even if it was 100 percent, these are not just numbers,” he said.
“These figures show the trust, and that is what is most important,” he added. “I am hopeful that together we can solve all problems.”
Full provisional results are due by July 20 and definitive results by July 27.
With 65 percent of the population aged under 30, Kagame is the only leader most Rwandans have ever known.
The 66-year-old is credited with rebuilding a traumatized nation after the genocide but he is also accused of ruling in a climate of fear at home, and fomenting instability in the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo.
Over nine million Rwandans — about two million first-time voters — were registered to cast their ballot, with the presidential race being held at the same time as legislative elections for the first time.
“(Kagame) gives us everything we ask him, such as health insurance. This is why he wins by a big margin,” said 34-year-old mechanic Francois Rwabakina.
Kagame won with more than 93 percent of the vote in 2003, 2010 and in 2017, when he again easily defeated the same two challengers.
He has overseen controversial constitutional amendments that shortened presidential terms from seven to five years and reset the clock for the Rwandan leader, allowing him to potentially rule until 2034.
Rwandan courts had rejected appeals from prominent opposition figures Bernard Ntaganda and Victoire Ingabire to remove previous convictions that effectively disqualified them from Monday’s vote.
The election commission also barred high-profile Kagame critic Diane Rwigara, citing issues with her paperwork — the second time she was excluded from running.
The imbalance between the candidates was evident during the three-week campaign, as the well-oiled PR machine of the ruling RPF swung into high gear.
The party’s red, white and blue colors and its slogans “Tora Kagame Paul” (“Vote Paul Kagame“) and “PK24” “Paul Kagame 2024“) were everywhere.
His rivals struggled to make their voices heard, with barely 100 people showing up to some events.
Despite the lacklustre turnout at his rallies, Habineza hailed the “free and fair atmosphere.”
“This is a very good show of the level of growth in democracy in our country. We have been able to campaign (across) the whole country,” he told AFP.
Kagame’s RPF militia is lauded for ending the 1994 genocide when it marched on Kigali — ousting the Hutu extremists who had unleashed 100 days of bloodletting targeting the Tutsi minority.
The perpetrators killed around 800,000 people, mainly Tutsis but also Hutu moderates.
Kagame has overseen a remarkable economic recovery, with GDP growing by an average of 7.2 percent per year between 2012 and 2022, although the World Bank says almost half the population lives on less than $2.15 a day.
Ahead of the vote, Amnesty International said Rwanda’s political opposition faced “severe restrictions... as well as threats, arbitrary detention, prosecution, trumped-up charges, killings and enforced disappearances.”
Abroad, Kigali is accused of meddling in the troubled eastern DRC, where a UN report says its troops are fighting alongside M23 rebels.
Kigali was also accused of killing tens of thousands of Hutus in the DRC during its pursuit of fleeing genocide perpetrators.
Discussion of these alleged massacres remains taboo and is considered genocide “revisionism” in Rwanda.
In the parliamentary election, 589 candidates were chasing 80 seats, including 53 elected by universal suffrage. In the outgoing assembly, the RPF held 40 seats and its allies 11, while Habineza’s party had two.
Another 27 spots are reserved for women, the youth and people with disabilities.


Indonesian president holds first Cabinet meeting in new capital

Indonesian president holds first Cabinet meeting in new capital
Updated 7 sec ago
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Indonesian president holds first Cabinet meeting in new capital

Indonesian president holds first Cabinet meeting in new capital
  • President-Elect Prabowo Subianto vows to continue working on future capital project 
  • Investors have so far committed $3.53bn investment to Nusantara, president says

JAKARTA: Indonesian President Joko Widodo held on Monday his first Cabinet meeting in the country’s new capital of Nusantara, showing the latest progress in the ambitious $33 billion megaproject just a few months before the end of his presidency. 

Widodo formally launched the capital relocation project in 2019, in what has been widely viewed as an attempt to seal his legacy before the end of his second and final term in October. 

The outgoing leader has been working since late July from the city, located in the East Kalimantan province on Borneo island, which will hold its first Indonesian Independence Day celebration in less than a week. 

“The Nusantara capital is a canvas that carves the future. Not all countries have the opportunity and the ability to build their capital city starting from zero,” Widodo told his ministers during a livestreamed meeting held in the massive, eagle-shaped new state palace.  

“Nusantara is developed with a forest city concept, a city filled with greenery. It is not a concrete city or city of glass. It is also a smart city, supported by technology across all the city’s activities, and a livable city.” 

Located more than 1,200 km away from the current capital Jakarta, the move to Nusantara was intended to ease the burden on the old center of government, which faces chronic traffic congestion, overpopulation, and heavy pollution and is one of the world’s fastest-sinking cities. 

It is also aimed at redistributing wealth across Indonesia, as Java, the island on which Jakarta is located, is home to around 56 percent of the country’s population and nearly 60 percent of economic activity. The relocation process is scheduled for completion by 2045. 

Widodo said investors have so far committed about IDR 56.2 trillion ($3.53 billion) in investments across various projects, including in transportation, housing and education. Last month, Widodo secured a deal to involve Dubai’s financial hub in developing Nusantara’s financial center. 

The government expects to cover only 20 percent of the planned $33 billion budget, relying heavily on private sector investment to build key infrastructure and public facilities. The government launched new capital incentives earlier this month in a bid to lure investment, including granting land rights of up to 190 years. 

As construction of Nusantara only began in mid-2022, buildings in the new city are still unfinished, with the new state palace about 88 percent complete while several ministry buildings are usable only on their lower levels. 

The project, which is using land carved out of Borneo’s jungle, has also faced criticisms from environmentalists and indigenous communities, who have previously warned that the new capital was rushed without consultation. 

Speaking to the press alongside Widodo, Indonesia’s President-Elect and Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto vowed to continue work on the new capital after he takes office on Oct. 20. 

“Construction is ongoing and it should continue, and we should even speed it up, if possible,” Subianto said. 

“We will definitely finish it, although the outline plan is dozens of years long, like other capital cities also took a very long time. We should not force it, but I am optimistic that in five years, I think, it will function very well.” 


Woman and 11-year-old girl stabbed at London landmark

Woman and 11-year-old girl stabbed at London landmark
Updated 12 min 7 sec ago
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Woman and 11-year-old girl stabbed at London landmark

Woman and 11-year-old girl stabbed at London landmark

LONDON: A woman and an 11-year-old girl were hospitalized on Monday after being stabbed in central London’s Leicester Square, police said, adding that a man had been arrested.
“Officers are at the scene of a stabbing in Leicester Square. A man has been arrested and is in custody,” said a police statement.
“Two victims, an 11-year-old girl and a 34-year-old woman, have been taken to hospital and we await an update on their condition,” it added.
Police did not give any further details about the suspect.


France bids reluctant farewell to dazzling Paris Olympics

France bids reluctant farewell to dazzling Paris Olympics
Updated 12 August 2024
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France bids reluctant farewell to dazzling Paris Olympics

France bids reluctant farewell to dazzling Paris Olympics
  • Hollywood star Tom Cruise delivered stardust at the closing ceremony on Sunday evening — and a link with the next Games in Los Angeles — by abseiling into the national stadium
  • The ceremony followed 17 days of sporting action lit up by Biles, American sprinter Noah Lyles, Pakistan’s javelin king Arshad Nadeem and casual Turkish shooter Yusuf Dikec

PARIS: France bid a reluctant farewell on Monday to an “enchanted” fortnight of Olympic sport as athletes headed home from Paris praising a dazzling edition of the Games that has breathed new life into the biggest show on earth.
Hollywood star Tom Cruise delivered stardust at the closing ceremony on Sunday evening — and a link with the next Games in Los Angeles — by abseiling into the national stadium.
The “Mission Impossible” star descended on a wire in front of 71,500 spectators, grabbed the Olympic flag and jumped onto a motorbike, to the delight of thousands of dancing athletes and awe-struck fans.
The final act of the Paris Olympics brought relief that an event foreshadowed by worries about terror attacks, strikes or protests had passed off with barely a hitch.
But there was also sadness that two weeks of high-spirited celebration had come to an end.
“Keep the flame alive,” urged the front-page headline of France’s biggest sports newspaper, L’Equipe, which featured new national swimming hero Leon Marchand and urged French people to maintain the spirit “of this enchanted fortnight.”
At the Athletes’ Village in northern Paris, bleary-eyed athletes were packing their bags after a late night, with the French capital’s two main airports braced for a huge influx of travelers and sports equipment.
Magda Skarbonkiewicz, a Team USA fencer, said she would return home filled with memories of competing inside the Grand Palais, one of the historic venues used around the French capital.
“It’s such an iconic venue and just nothing like I’ve ever seen before,” she told AFP. “It’s amazing to see so many people care about fencing the way the French people do.”
During Sunday night’s closing ceremony, which stressed the Olympics’ core message of peace and cooperation, International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach had praised the Paris Games for being “sport at its best.”
“These were sensational Olympic Games from start to finish,” Bach said. “Or dare I say: Seine-sational Games,” the IOC chief quipped in a pun about the river flowing through Paris which was a sometimes fickle star of the event.
Observers had seen Paris 2024 as essential for the Olympics brand as a whole, coming after a Covid-affected edition in Tokyo and a corruption-tainted version in Rio de Janeiro in 2016.
Around 9,000 athletes flooded into the Stade de France on Sunday night for a show that featured music from French electro act Air, guitar band Phoenix, Belgian singer Angele and the Cambodian rapper VannDa.
“We knew you would be brilliant, but you were magic,” Paris 2024 organizing chief Tony Estanguet told the crowd during a triumphalist speech.
He said the Games had transformed “a nation of implacable complainers” into “unbridled supporters who don’t want to stop singing.”
Much of the media commentary has focused on the uplifting impact of the Games on the generally morose national mood.
Just weeks before the Olympics, snap elections called by President Emmanuel Macron delivered a hung parliament and a historic number of seats for the far-right National Rally party.
“The Paris Games offered the capital and the entire country more than two weeks of fervor and happiness that were so unexpected and appreciated given that they came after a political period dominated by the sad passions of decline and xenophobia,” said an editorial in Le Monde newspaper.
“For 17 days the stereotype of the indifferent, grumpy Frenchman went missing,” wrote sports writer Owen Slot in The Times newspaper, adding that Paris had “made the Olympic Games look more beautiful than ever before.”
The closing spectacle marked the beginning of the four-year countdown to the LA Games, and American gymnastics icon Simone Biles joined Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass as the Olympic flag was formally handed over.
The ceremony followed 17 days of drama-filled sporting action lit up by Biles, American sprinter Noah Lyles, Pakistan’s javelin king Arshad Nadeem and casual Turkish shooter Yusuf Dikec, who has become an Internet sensation.
They also featured a damaging gender row about two female boxers, Imane Khelif of Algeria and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting, who both went on to win gold.
The last day of sporting action saw the United States pip China for top spot in the battle for medals after the US women’s basketball team squeezed past France 67-66 to clinch the last gold of the Games.
The win — the eighth consecutive Olympic women’s basketball title won by the USA — ensured the Americans finished level with China on 40 golds each.
The USA however finished on top of the overall medal table with a total of 126 medals, with China in second place on 91.


Police back on Bangladesh capital’s streets as strike ends

Police back on Bangladesh capital’s streets as strike ends
Updated 12 August 2024
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Police back on Bangladesh capital’s streets as strike ends

Police back on Bangladesh capital’s streets as strike ends
  • Police loathed for spearheading a lethal crackdown on the weeks of protests
  • Police had vowed not to resume work until their safety on duty was guaranteed

DHAKA: Bangladeshi police resumed patrols of the capital Dhaka on Monday, ending a weeklong strike that left a law and order vacuum following the abrupt ouster of autocratic ex-premier Sheikh Hasina.

Officers vanished from the streets of the sprawling megacity of 20 million people last week after Hasina’s resignation and flight abroad ended her 15-year rule.

Police were loathed for spearheading a lethal crackdown on the weeks of protests that forced her departure, with 42 officers among the more than 450 people killed.

Police had vowed not to resume work until their safety on duty was guaranteed, but they agreed to return after late-night talks with the new interim government, helmed by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus.

“It’s good to be back,” assistant commissioner Snehasish Das said while standing at a busy intersection directing traffic.

“As we feel secure now, we are back on duty.”

Student-led protests against Hasina’s government had been largely peaceful until police attempted to violently disperse them.

Around 450 of the country’s 600 police stations were targeted in arson and vandalism attacks over the past month, according to the national police union.

Some began reopening late last week under guard by the army, an institution held in higher esteem for largely refusing to participate in the crackdown.

In the police’s absence, the students who led the protests that toppled Hasina volunteered to restore law and order after looting and reprisal attacks in the hours after her departure.

They acted as traffic wardens, formed overnight neighborhood watch patrols and guarded Hindu temples and other places of worship, quickly settling the unrest.

Das said there was “no tension” between police and the students who had been performing their duties.

“Students have done a tremendous job in the past few days,” he added. “Our thanks to them.”

The volunteers, for their part, said they were relieved to yield back their responsibilities.

“It’s too difficult for us to manage the vehicles,” Chanu Abdullah, 27, said. “I’m really thankful the police came back.”

Yunus’s de facto cabinet now administering the country said it had noted with “grave concern” some attacks on Hindus and other minorities.

In its first official statement on Sunday night, the cabinet said it would work to “find ways to resolve such heinous attacks.”

Bangladeshi Hindus account for around eight percent of the country’s 170 million people and have regularly been the targets of violence during periods of upheaval.

Hundreds have arrived on India’s border since last week, asking to cross.

The leadership of Jamaat, Bangladesh’s largest Islamist party, said it would meet with representatives of the Hindu community and other minority leaders later Monday in a bid to ease tensions.

Hasina, 76, fled by helicopter to neighboring India a week ago as protesters flooded Dhaka’s streets in a dramatic end to her iron-fisted tenure.

Her government was accused of widespread human rights abuses, including the extrajudicial killing of thousands of her political opponents.

But new home minister Sakhawat Hossain said the government had no intention of banning Hasina’s Awami League party, which played a pivotal role in the country’s independence movement.

“The party has made many contributions to Bangladesh — we don’t deny this,” he told reporters.

“When the election comes, (they should) contest the elections.”

Interim leader Yunus returned from Europe on Thursday to head a temporary administration facing the monumental challenge of steering democratic reforms.

The 84-year-old won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for his pioneering work in microfinance, credited with helping millions of Bangladeshis out of grinding poverty.

He took office as “chief adviser” to a caretaker administration — all fellow civilians bar Hossain, a retired brigadier-general — and has said he wants to hold elections “within a few months.”


Daesh group claims deadly Kabul bomb blast

Daesh group claims deadly Kabul bomb blast
Updated 12 August 2024
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Daesh group claims deadly Kabul bomb blast

Daesh group claims deadly Kabul bomb blast
  • The blast occurred in a western Kabul neighborhood home to many Shiite Muslims

The Daesh group has claimed a bombing on a minibus that killed one person and wounded 11 in a Shiite-dominated neighborhood of the Afghan capital.
The jihadist group said on its Telegram channel late Sunday that “one Shiite was killed in a bombing by Caliphate soldiers in the Afghan capital.”
Kabul police said on Sunday the blast occurred in a western Kabul neighborhood home to many Shiite Muslims, a historically persecuted minority in Afghanistan and a frequent target of the Daesh group that considers them heretics.
Italian nongovernmental organization Emergency NGO, which operates a hospital in Kabul, said on social media platform X that it had received eight people wounded in the blast, with seven in need of surgery and one “in a serious condition.”
The number of deadly bomb blasts and suicide attacks in Afghanistan has declined markedly since the Taliban ended their insurgency after seizing power in August 2021. However, a number of armed groups, including Daesh-Khorasan, remain a threat.
Daesh-Khorasan, or Daesh-K, is the group’s Afghanistan branch, “Khorasan” referring to a historical region that included parts of Iran, Afghanistan and Central Asia.
The group also claimed an attack targeting tourists in Afghanistan in May that killed six people, including three foreigners.
It has also claimed responsibility for an attack on a Moscow concert hall in March that killed 145 people.
A UN counter-terrorism official warned this month that Daesh-K poses the greatest external terrorist threat to Europe, having “improved its financial and logistical capabilities in the past six months.”
Chief Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the concerns raised were “driven by propaganda” and that the group had been “significantly weakened” in Afghanistan.
“The Islamic Emirate (of Afghanistan) does not allow anyone to use Afghan soil against the security of any other country or to pose threats from Afghanistan,” he wrote on X.