9/13/08


It's Zimbabwe not WI for T20 tourney in Canada

Posted on Sep 13, 2008 at 23:47
Tags: canada, t20, west indies

Karachi: The organisers of the four-nation Twenty20 international tournament to held in Toronto next month have signed up Zimbabwe instead of West Indies after the Caribbean nation neither accepted not rejected the offer.

Noman Nabi, who is a representative of the organisers in Pakistan, confirmed that Zimbabwe would compete in the event instead of the West Indies along with Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Canada.

"The West Indies Cricket Board was delaying the signing of the MOU and we couldn't wait any longer so we approached Zimbabwe and they have agreed to play in the Twenty20 event," Nabi said.

The tournament was earlier postponed in August because the West Indians were not happy with the ground conditions at the venue in Toronto where the competition is planned now from October 10 to 14.

Nabi said expert curator was now working on improving the ground and pitch conditions in Toronto and it would be ready for the international event soon.

The organiser put up a winners purse of 100,000 Canadian dollars for the event with 60,000 for the runners up.





--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66
Canada's Harper to Give Small Businesses C$220 Million Tax Cut

By Theophilos Argitis

Sept. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper promised C$220 million ($206 million) of small business tax cuts during the next four years if he's re-elected.

Harper, wrapping up his first week of campaigning for the Oct. 14 elections in Atlantic Canada, is trying to frame his campaign for the Oct. 14 elections around the economy after growth slumped this year to the lowest since 1992.

The governing Conservatives will change the income threshold under which companies can become eligible for lower small business tax rates and the limit on capital gains exemptions will be indexed to inflation, Harper said today in Fredericton, New Brunswick.

On Sept. 9, Harper pledged to reduce a tax on diesel fuel that will cost government coffers C$600 million a year.

``The measures that I am announcing today are modest, responsible and affordable steps,'' Harper said in a speech delivered at a factory in Fredericton that makes heating panels for floors. ``But we believe they are steps in the right direction for Canadian small businesses and for the Canadian economy.''

A poll released yesterday by Harris/Decima for Canadian Press had the Conservatives with the support of 41 percent of voters, compared with 26 percent for the opposition Liberal Party. The survey of 1,406 Canadians was conducted Sept. 8 to Sept. 11 and has a margin of error of 2.6 percentage points.






--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

Princess Pats soldier died from insurgent fire: report

Scott Deveau, National Post  

Killed in action was Master Corporal Josh Roberts, an infantryman in Charlie Company, 2nd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry Battle GroupCanwest News ServiceKilled in action was Master Corporal Josh Roberts, an infantryman in Charlie Company, 2nd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry Battle Group

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- An investigation into the death of a Canadian soldier killed during a grisly firefight in early August concluded Saturday he died as a result of insurgent fire.

Master Cpl. Joshua Brian Roberts was killed in the crossfire during a firefight between the coalition forces, a private security firm, and insurgents in the Zhari district of Kandahar province on Aug. 9, 2008.

Initial reports into his death raised questions around whether he died of injuries sustained at the hands of the security firm or by the insurgents.

"Based on physical evidence, witness interviews, and analysis by the military police investigators, the investigation concluded that his death was inflicted by the insurgents," Capt. Paule Poulin, a spokeswoman for the Canadian Forces Provost Marshal, said in a statement Saturday.

While security personnel from a private security firm, Compass Integrated Security Solutions, were present in the area at the time of the incident, they were not responsible for Cpl. Roberts' death, the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service concluded.

Cpl. Roberts was an infantryman with the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry Battle Group based in Shilo, Man. He transferred to the regular forces in August 2006 after serving as a reservist with the North Saskatchewan Regiment for a decade.






--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

"Canada is quietly becoming a basket case"

September 13th, 2008 
Leave your comment Posted by Scott Tribe
Published in Canadian Politics, International Politics

Sober reading from Slate Magazine:

Since 2004, a succession of unstable minority governments has led to a constant campaign frenzy, brutalizing Canada's once-broad political consensus and producing a series of policies at odds with the country's socially liberal, fiscally conservative identity. Canada is quietly becoming a political basket case, and this latest election may make things even worse..

A not so subtle reference to the Conservatives in that last line. What exactly is making Canada a basket case? Well.. our former fiscal prudence is going by the wayside thanks to the Cons:

In June, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development warned that Canada—for years the only G8 country to post regular budget surpluses—was likely to fall into deficit this year, thanks to a reckless cut to the national sales tax.

The Conservatives attempt at being Big Brother is also being noticed, as is their subtle attempt to re-open the abortion debate with Epp's private members bill C-484:

In February, the government proposed denying funding to films and TV shows whose content it deemed "not in the public interest," sparking cries of censorship from a sector that has historically received public support. In 2007, a member of the governing Conservative Party proposed a bill that would reopen the debate over abortion, a topic that governments both liberal and conservative have avoided for decades.

And Harper's insistence on being a northern clone of George W. Bush is also noted:

The country is projecting its uncharacteristic behavior abroad as well. After decades of encouraging countries to increase their foreign-aid spending, Canada cut its own, from 0.34 percent of GDP in 2005 to just 0.2 percent last year. Long a beacon of human rights, Ottawa announced last fall that it would stop advocating on behalf of Canadians sentenced to death in other countries. And Canada is now the only Western country that still has one of its citizens held in Guantanamo, but Ottawa has refused to press for his release.

Oh yes, Canada's "back" to being noticed, Harper.. for the wrong reasons. There is an encouraging poll out today though. A lot of Canadians can't stomach the thought of Harper winning a majority:

The poll showed that more than half of Canadians — 54 per cent — reject the idea of a Conservative majority government, while 35-per-cent support it. Also, 38 per cent of Canadians reported they would be prepared to vote strategically, by switching their vote to another party, to prevent the prospect.

I'd prefer him removed from government all together, but this is a good start.






--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

Canada has become a more conservative nation, Harper says

FREDERICTON, N.B. — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says Canadians have shifted to the right and made the country more conservative since he's been in politics.

But Conservatives must govern in the interests of the broad majority of the population if they want to stay in power, Harper said Saturday.

"I don't want to say the Canadian public is overwhelmingly conservative or that it is necessarily as conservative as everybody in our party," he said in Fredericton at the start of a weekend swing through Atlantic Canada.

"And that means that our party has to make sure that it continues to govern in the interests of the broad majority of the population. That means not only that we want to pull Canadians towards conservatism, but Conservatives also have to move towards Canadians."

Harper said when he entered politics, Canada was debating whether balanced budgets and trade were a good thing.

Since then, he says there's been a "tremendous" change among Canadians who have embraced many small-c conservative values.

The military has joined the CBC and medicare as a source of national pride, he said.

In terms of the economy, the Liberals and New Democrats are out of step with Canadians, Harper said.

Their policies take a "pre-free trade, Cold War" approach to the economy that will hurt the country, he said.





--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

What to Ask Before Marriage

What to Ask Before Marriage

Work Questions

Let's acknowledge that we live in an extremely status-oriented society, with emphasis placed on marrying a person with the "right" professional identity. How often have you heard people brag (or maybe you've bragged yourself) about a partner, saying, "He's a doctor" or "She's a model," as if status alone were enough to guarantee a good relationship. Unfortunately, you don't hear people bragging, "He's a kindergarten teacher" or "She's an administrative assistant at a not-for-profit organization in the Bronx." This is part of the problem. When we focus on status, we destroy any chance to live an authentic life with a partner who shares our values. These are the questions you really want answered:
  • Are you working in your chosen profession?
  • How many hours a week do you work?
  • What is your dream job?
  • What is your retirement plan? What do you plan to do when you stop working?
  • What does your job entail? (For example: Do you often travel for business, work at home or perform dangerous tasks?)

Money Questions

Money is a loaded topic. Many couples stop talking at the point of "how much," assuming the rest will take care of itself. But questions about money will infuse themselves into every area of your life and show up on a daily basis. These are a few questions you should ask:
  • What is your annual income?
  • Should individuals within a marriage have separate bank accounts in addition to joint accounts?
  • Do you have significant debts?
  • Do you believe in establishing a family budget?
  • How important is it for you to make a lot of money?

Sex Questions

Men and women have different issues with owning their sexuality. For men, it is denying the significance of sex and not seeing the sacredness in the act. For women, it is more often ignorance and shame, not giving themselves permission to know what they need and then matching it with their behavior. In a conversation about your sexual expectations and fears, be sure to respect each other's boundaries. Your goal in asking these questions is not to pry into every detail of sexual history, but to open a conversation about the most intimate aspect of your relationship.

What sexual activities do you enjoy most? Are there specific sexual acts that make you uncomfortable? Be specific!
  • Do you feel comfortable initiating sex? If yes, why? If no, why?
  • What do you need in order to be in the mood for sex?
  • How often do you need or expect sex?
  • Is sexual fidelity an absolute necessity in a good marriage?

Parenthood Questions

Although Lies at the Altar is about marriage and intimate relationships, having children is also for grown-ups, and there are all too many "adult" couples bringing children into marriages where the foundation is shaky on a good day. Being a mature adult involves recognizing that much of what you re-create in your marriage and as parents has to do with unresolved issues with your own parents and family. If you are married and don't have children, give them and yourself the gift of building a strong foundation before subjecting them to the chaos of parents who haven't shown up and haven't grown up.
  • Do you want children? When? How many? Are you unable to have children?
  • Do you believe that children should be raised with some religious or spiritual foundation?
  • How important is it to you that your children are raised near your extended family?
  • Do you believe in spanking a child? What type of discipline do you believe in (time outs, standing in the corner, taking away privileges, etc.)?
  • Should boys be treated the same as girls? Should they have the same rules for conduct? Should you have the same expectations for their sexual behavior?

Religion Questions

Religion cannot be reduced to affiliation. That's especially true today, when religion has become complicated for people. Dr. Robin has friends who chose not to be actively involved in a formal religion. However, she was raised as a Catholic, and he was Jewish, and these strong historical and familial influences constantly showed up as surprise guests in their lives.

They thought they had rejected the religious affiliations of their parents, but when they became parents themselves, they found themselves automatically being drawn back. Naturally, this created a serious conflict about which religious influence would dominate their child's life. Because these were not dogmatic people, they eventually found a way to give their child the gift of a mixed religious heritage, but not every couple will find that possible. So when you're having a conversation about religion, open it up beyond affiliation, and find out what religion means to each of you.
  • Do you believe in God? What does that mean to you?
  • Do you have a current religious affiliation? Is it a big part of your life?
  • Does your religion impose any behavioral restrictions (dietary, social, familial, sexual) that would affect your partner?
  • How important is it to you for your partner to share your religious beliefs?
  • How important is it to you for your children to be raised in your religion?

--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

L'Etat américain au secours de Wall Street

 

Au printemps 2008, Henri Paulson, secrétaire au Trésor américain, était sûr qu'il n'aurait pas besoin de sortir son "bazooka". Certain que la seule évocation qu'il avait faite alors du soutien de l'Etat vis-à-vis de Freddie Mac et Fannie Mae suffisait à rassurer Wall Street. Certain enfin que l'Etat n'aurait pas à débourser des milliards pour éviter la déconfiture de Freddie Mac et Fannie Mae, les deux géants du refinancement hypothécaire aux Etats-Unis. "L'avantage quand vous avez un bazooka et que les gens le savent, c'est que vous n'avez pas besoin d'en faire usage", indiquait-il.

Trois mois plus tard, non seulement M. Paulson a dû dégainer ledit bazooka mais cela n'a pas suffi. Dimanche 7 septembre, l'Etat a annoncé la quasi-nationalisation de Freddie Mac et Fannie Mae. Une opération qui pourrait lui coûter jusqu'à 200 milliards de dollars (141 milliards d'euros). Cinq jours plus tard, le Trésor et la Réserve fédérale américaine (Fed) ont dû s'emparer d'un nouveau dossier : le sort de Lehman Brothers. La banque d'affaires a annoncé, mercredi, une perte trimestrielle abyssale de 3,9 milliards de dollars. En moins d'une semaine, son cours s'est effondré de 77,41 %. Depuis Lehman recherche désespérément un repreneur.

L'Etat ne sauvera peut-être pas Lehman Brothers, toutefois, un porte-parole de la Maison Blanche a indiqué vendredi 12 septembre sur la chaîne CNBC que le gouvernement "avait à l'oeil le secteur financier". Les investisseurs ont été à moitié rassurés. Assez en tout cas pour calmer le "krach rampant", expression désormais consacrée par les analystes pour décrire la baisse continue de la Bourse depuis un an.

Sur la semaine, le Dow Jones a ainsi engrangé 1,79 %. Les places européennes ont suivi la tendance. A Paris, le CAC 40 a gagné 3,24 %, le Footsie de Londres 3,36 %, tandis qu'à Francfort le DAX a terminé en hausse de 1,75 %.

La capacité des autorités à calmer les inquiétudes des investisseurs et à soutenir à bout de bras la finance américaine pourrait toutefois trouver ses limites. "Elles l'ont fait trop souvent", explique le milliardaire américain George Soros, dans son ouvrage La Vérité sur la crise financière (éd. Denoël, 18 euros).

Avant de soutenir Freddie Mac et Fannie Mae, la Fed avait déjà orchestré en mars la reprise de Bear Stearns, une autre banque d'affaires menacée de faillite.

En outre, la finance n'est pas, ou plus, le seul motif d'inquiétude. "Toute l'économie est en train d'être saccagée", souligne M. Soros. La contagion de la crise financière au reste de l'économie devient manifeste.

Aux Etats-Unis, le chômage atteint désormais 6,1 % de la population active. L'inflation reste vive et le consommateur se serre la ceinture. Vendredi, le département du commerce a indiqué que les ventes de détail aux Etats-Unis avaient reculé de 0,3 % en août après une hausse de 0,1 % en juillet. Un chiffre inattendu qui est, pour la plupart des économistes, le signe que les effets du "plan Bush" - une restitution d'impôts de 157 milliards de dollars à plus de 100 millions de foyers fiscaux américains - commencent déjà à s'estomper.

Du côté du commerce extérieur, la remontée du dollar pourrait désormais empêcher la monnaie de jouer son rôle de soutien aux exportations. Bref, les Etats-Unis ne sont peut-être pas en récession, mais l'économie souffre.

L'Europe, elle, n'a jamais émis de crédits subprimes, mais se retrouve frappée plus durement encore qu'aux Etats-Unis par cette crise. "Une récession dans la zone euro n'est pas exclue", a indiqué jeudi Nout Wellinck, gouverneur de la banque centrale néerlandaise. "Il ne faut pas dire que l'Europe est sur le seuil de la récession, ce n'est pas vrai, il faut distinguer récession et récession technique (soit deux trimestre de contraction du produit intérieur brut) ", a rectifié vendredi Jean-Claude Juncker, président de l'Eurogroupe, en marge de la réunion des ministres des finances européens à Nice.

Pour les investisseurs, la nuance n'a que peu d'importance. Ils savent que les profits des sociétés vont reculer. Depuis le mois de janvier, l'intégralité des cours des sociétés du CAC 40 est dans le rouge. Certaines actions souffrent plus que d'autres. Comme le secteur automobile, jugé plus vulnérable aux cycles économiques. Cette semaine, le constructeur Renault (- 45,38 % depuis janvier) prévoit 6 000 suppressions d'emplois dans le monde afin de réduire ses coûts et de préserver ses marges.

Le secteur de la distribution, sensible à la baisse du pouvoir d'achat des ménages, inquiète aussi. Depuis le début de l'année, le titre de Carrefour a cédé plus de 35 %.

L'âge d'or de l'immobilier et des valeurs foncières semble quant à lui révolu. Depuis le début de l'année, Gecina cédé 21 % et Nexity plus de 50 %.






--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

L'ancien électorat du Front national est en déshérence



 

Un peu plus de six ans après le coup de tonnerre du 21 avril 2002, le Front national semble en voie de marginalisation. Le parti d'extrême droite, qui réunit samedi 13 et dimanche 14 septembre son université d'été à Evian (Haute-Savoie), se trouve confronté à un triple défi : l'effritement brutal de son électorat, l'érosion de ses finances et le retrait prochain de son leader historique, Jean-Marie Le Pen, ayant annoncé son intention de quitter ses fonctions après le congrès de 2010.

A 9 heures par e-mail, recevez les titres du journal à paraître l'après-midi.

10,7 % au premier tour de la présidentielle de 2007 ; 4,7 % aux législatives ; moins de 1 % aux municipales : Pascal Perrineau, directeur du Centre de recherches politiques de Sciences Po (Cevipof), évoque un phénomène de "défidélisation profonde", qui serait accompagné d'un "reclassement majeur des électeurs du FN".

Que sont-ils devenus, ces électeurs qui avaient qualifié M. Le Pen pour le second tour de l'élection présidentielle face à Jacques Chirac ? Le Centre de recherches politiques de Sciences Po a ausculté un panel d'électeurs frontistes, de l'élection présidentielle de 2002 jusqu'aux élections municipales de 2008. L'étude révèle que, sur cent électeurs représentatifs de 2002, seulement 40 % sont restés fidèles à M. Le Pen en 2007. 25 % sont passés chez Nicolas Sarkozy, 13 % à gauche et 23 % se sont répartis entre les autres candidats ou réfugiés dans l'abstention.

Pour M. Perrineau, l'hémorragie s'explique avant tout dans la capacité qu'a eue M. Sarkozy d'incarner un projet susceptible de "parler" aux électeurs lepénistes : "Pendant l'entre-deux- tours, tous les candidats se sont polarisés sur le MoDem. Le seul à parler aux électeurs du FN, ce fut Nicolas Sarkozy." Autre explication : la banalisation de M. Le Pen. L'éternel protestataire se trouve, en 2007, concurrencé sur son propre terrain : tous les candidats occupent à leur manière le terrain de la protestation, de la rupture. "L'image de Le Pen, commente M. Perrineau, s'est étiolée, elle a perdu son parfum de soufre. Or ses électeurs se reconnaissent dans un leader qui, comme eux, est sorti du système."

ABSTENTION PROTESTATAIRE

L'étude montre que le "dépouillement électoral" du FN s'accentue aux législatives de 2007 : le parti de M. Le Pen ne conserve plus que 17 % de ses électeurs de 2002 ; 39 % ont basculé sur l'UMP, 5 % sur le MoDem, 15 % à gauche et 24 % ont choisi de ne pas voter. "On assiste à un véritable dynamitage d'un électorat", souligne M. Perrineau.

Contrairement aux espoirs de M. Le Pen, les municipales de 2008 vont encore amplifier ce phénomène de défidélisation. Mais, cette fois, il ne profite plus à M. Sarkozy : une partie des électeurs frontistes qui l'avaient rejoint ont déjà été déçus et se sont réfugiés dans l'abstention. Ni le chef de l'Etat ni l'UMP n'ont réussi à fidéliser les anciens électeurs lepénistes.

Une étude qualitative réalisée par la Sofres sur les élections municipales à Vénissieux, dans la banlieue de Lyon, confirme l'émergence de cette abstention protestataire chez une catégorie baptisée "les oubliés", dans laquelle on retrouve une forte proportion d'anciens frontistes. Pour cet électorat plutôt actif et féminin - en majorité des cadres -, animé d'un fort sentiment d'abandon, de déclassement social, et d'une très grande déception du monde politique, l'abstention constitue une "bouteille à la mer", un dernier recours pour exprimer leur détresse.

Pour l'heure, le FN a perdu ces oubliés. Son dernier noyau est désormais extrêmement populaire. Un électorat de la protestation sociale et même de la "souffrance", comme dans le Pas-de-Calais. Une cible visée, à l'autre extrême, par le porte-parole de la LCR, Olivier Besancenot.

Sophie Landrin




--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

Facebook Politics?

Kevin Van Aelst



Published: September 12, 2008

In late August, John McCain's Facebook page featured a martial semi-profile of the candidate emblazoned with the slogan, "Country First: The Official Home of John McCain on Facebook." In early September, the slogan was replaced by "The Ticket for America." A new image showed McCain and Sarah Palin companionably joined by Photoshop, apparently, given how inorganic the pose seemed.

 

For adventures in digital culture, don't miss The Medium, a blog by Virginia Heffernan.

The candidates now pose before a half-moon of convention bunting featuring a red-heavy configuration of stars and stripes. The bunting looks ragged. The "America First" picture was better. I know presidential candidates have to pose with running mates as if with brides or newborns, but they look more dignified when photographed alone.

Where my own page on Facebook, the social-networking site, lists my "friends," the pages of McCain and other politicians and celebrities show "supporters" or "fans." McCain had fully 269,709 when I last looked. He seems to have picked up about 45,000 between the Democratic National Convention and the start of the Republican one. The day that McCain named Palin as his V.P. candidate, I notice idly from McCain's Facebook résumé, was also the candidate's 72nd birthday: Aug. 29. His political views are listed right after his birthday: conservative.

Facebook appears to have supplied a job-seeking template for aspiring free-world leaders, and blanks have been informatively filled in.

Country: United States

Currently Running for Office: President

Party: Republican Party

Current Office: Senate

State: Arizona

People reveal themselves on Facebook by making unmistakable just what kind of cyberfigure they hope to cut. The software seems to compel it. While no information is mandatory on a Facebook page, McCain supplies a phone number, as well as his favorite movies, book and television shows, including "Viva Zapata!" "Letters From Iwo Jima," "Some Like It Hot," "For Whom the Bell Tolls," "24" and "Seinfeld." We also get McCain's "work info," a cutesy if serviceable heading for jobs at, say, Forever 21 or Gold's Gym. It works less well for heavily decorated positions in the U.S. Navy.

McCain's page has a message for the young. A campaign video in which McCain fields a student's question about whether he's too old to be president permits him one of the longest stretches of dialogue on a site that's curiously quiet when it comes to McCain's own voice. (By contrast, Barack Obama's Facebook page resounds with audio of the candidate.) "I've out-campaigned all of my opponents, and I'm confident that I will," McCain says in the video, adding, "Thanks for the question, you little jerk." The song "Johnny B. Goode" then comes up — Go Johnny, go, go! — and the implication is clear: the Facebook McCain is a 72-year-old whippersnapper.

Another video, in which the candidate is equally reticent, presents McCain's middle-way stance on global warming. Yet another shows his radical opposition to Congressional profligacy: a $3 million study of bear DNA and a $1 million Woodstock museum strike his campaign as especially galling. This video occasions a sincere discussion in the comments section of what qualifies as waste. At the round table are Facebook users affiliated variously with Georgetown University, International School Bangkok, the Carlton J. Kell High School, Thomas Jefferson High School and the Berkeley Carroll School. (There's not much incentive to fake your identity or bona fides on Facebook, and it's difficult, too. Still, people do it.)

Someone called Anthony points out early on that while the Woodstock museum is "a stupid way to spend a million bucks," the war in Iraq costs much more. Others on the site roundly deride him as a moron. "Matt Mongeau (Xaverian Brothers High School)," whose avatar shows a shirtless bronzed glamour boy, scolds: "cmon anthony war is expensive. it always has been it always will be. so stop bitching about it the reason the Iraqis want us gone is becasue they have a sense of pride and want to do things themselves they dont want help."

If you click on a photo showing McCain with his wife, Cindy, greeting Palin under a tree, you arrive at Palin's Facebook page, which reveals that she has (at the time of this writing) 51,847 supporters. The "Ticket for America" picture appears. Palin's page features a Facebook "mini-feed" — bullet-point notes that record her every move on the site. On Friday, Aug. 29, at 1:49 p.m., evidently: "Sarah Palin updated their profile. They changed the following: Country and Current Office." I can't find evidence of these changes on the page, as Palin's country and current office are not listed anywhere. There is, however, a Facebook "wall" on which people have written, "I would like to congratulate Ms. Palin on her upcoming new job as a Grandmother!" and "Am I the only one who thinks Palin's kinda hot?"

Back to McCain, and the most tempting part of his page: a videogame called Pork Invaders. By hitting my space bar, I'm firing vetoes at pudgy pink pigs who stand for wasteful government spending. It's a forgiving game: the pigs don't fire back often. My veto-bullets will also take slightly curved paths, if necessary, to hit their targets. I'm pleased to kill all the pork invaders. My reward is a fact sheet that says Barack Obama has requested $740 million in earmarks — tax money for his "pet projects" — where McCain has $0 in earmarks. Hunh. Within a few more levels, I've saved the American people — says the ticker — some $4 billion. Game over. You can thank me later.

McCain's wall has more than 60,000 posts. The posts, which started trickling in on Feb. 17, 2007, were mostly notes to McCain himself. That's how people generally use Facebook Walls. More than a year later, a group of canny commenters dominate the wall and talk almost entirely to one another. They use first names, favor a tone of highhanded tolerance for competing views and dismiss as jargon or illiteracy even seemingly innocuous message-board conventions like "lol." The opinions on the site are unpredictable, and conversation flips this way and that like a cat in a bag. Someone suggested that McCain should be ashamed for calling Palin away from her work as mother of five to run with him. Others stump tirelessly for Obama. Still others seem to be hunting, in vain, for white supremacists among the McCain supporters.

Abortion comes up, though the discussion is not as heated as might be expected. Poverty gets people going, as do assertions of who — if anyone — deserves handouts and tax breaks. The question of whether America is a meritocracy is especially pressing for these posters, many of whom appear to be college students.

An anti-McCain poster named Rachida Shapi, who gives her location as France and is accepted by the crowd as French, tends to get hazed for posting news that is both late and wrong ("Know you that Palin has a 17-year-old girl who has an illegitimate child?"). Nonetheless, she persists, and the (presumably) American posters take great pleasure in teaching her the ropes of speedy American political debate, even as they wonder what she's doing on this particular wall.

In fact, that question seems to haunt the whole crowd. What are we doing here? Clearly, it could go either way. What they're doing on John McCain's Facebook page — debating, joking, cooking up homemade propaganda about war, poverty, taxation, sexuality, immigration, religion — is, depending on who's talking and what day it is, either just another online waste of time or the most important thing they've ever done in their lives.






--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

War in Georgia: French LCR mimics Sarkozy's foreign policy

By Peter Schwarz
13 September 2008

 

The true class orientation of a party is often revealed in the way it reacts to important political events—by its ability to evaluate new developments and to provide a correct political orientation. Judging the reaction of the French Ligue communiste révolutionnaire (LCR) to the recent crisis in Georgia on this basis, it becomes clear that its view of foreign policy largely coincides with that of the country's ruling elite.

The LCR, which was founded in 1969, is presently engaged in transforming itself into the "New Anti-capitalist Party" (NPA). It presents the NPA as a socialist alternative to bourgeois politics, which is completely independent of the discredited Socialist Party. But the LCR's reaction to the war in Georgia differs only slightly from that of the French government, which also coincides with that of the Socialist Party.

The first thing to notice is that the LCR attaches hardly any significance to a political event that has dominated the headlines for days and which raises the dangerous possibility of an armed conflict between the two largest nuclear powers, Russia and the US. Looking at their web site, which covers social and trade union questions on a daily basis and reports extensively on the activities of LCR spokesman Olivier Besancenot, all that can be found on the war in the Caucasus is one short communiqué, scarcely two dozen lines in length. And this is so well hidden that it can only be found using the site's search function.

The content of the LCR statement echoes the attitude taken by those European governments that were alarmed by the outbreak of hostilities in the Caucasus and supported French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who negotiated a cease-fire in his capacity as president of the EU Council. The LCR adopts the same pose of non-partisanship and apparent desire for peace that Sarkozy and the European Union also display, painting their role in the rosiest colours.

Solomon-like, the LCR states, "The reasons for this war are various and the wrong-doing is shared," and then assigns an equal measure of responsibility to all sides involved.

Writing understandingly about Georgia's unprovoked attack on South Ossetia, which unleashed the war, the LCR states, "The offensive, probably a poor calculation, unleashed by the Georgians in charge, was motivated both by the desire to establish respect for the territorial integrity of a state with disputed borders and to assert themselves politically and militarily in relation to their Russian neighbour."

The LCR accuses the Russian leadership of wanting "to show the European Union and the United States that the country is once again an imperialist power of the first order, claiming the role of regional gendarme, which regards the NATO membership of several former Warsaw Pact states and regions as a threat."

And as far as the responsibility of NATO is concerned, the LCR writes with clear understatement: "It is in this regard that the responsibility of the Western leaders comes into play, who have decided to expand NATO, which Georgia wants to join."

Finally, the LCR attributes great similarities to the ruling powers in Russia and Georgia: "Both are ultra-nationalist, authoritarian and militarist, and the majority of the population of these countries have nothing to gain from such a conflict."

The communiqué ends with a general call for the fraternisation of the peoples: "The interests of the world of work are the same across all borders. Fraternity must prevail, in that the right of all peoples to self-determination is respected.... What is necessary is the construction of a movement of international solidarity between peoples."

Such a call for "international understanding", which is essentially pacifistic, is completely compatible with the foreign policy line of Sarkozy and his foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner.

The LCR is suppressing all the essential questions: The catastrophic consequences of the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the associated enflaming of national conflicts, which are then manipulated and exploited by the great powers; the aggressive penetration of American and European imperialism into the oil and gas reserves of the Caspian Sea and Central Asia, and the associated military encirclement of Russia; the responsibility of the US and its Georgian puppet Saakashvili, who provoked the Caucasus war with a night attack on the South Ossetian capital Tskhinvali; and finally, the complicity of France, Germany and the other European powers, which are pursuing their own strategic interests in the region, and, regardless of tactical differences, have clearly sided with Washington.

Obviously, the Russian regime of Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev deserves neither support nor trust. It represents the interests of the criminal, nouveaux riche ruling class, which has destroyed and plundered the Soviet Union and which suppresses the working class. But by blurring the causes of the war in the Caucasus, attributing responsibility equally to all parties, and linking this to general appeals for "international understanding," the LCR disarms the working class in the face of grave dangers posed by the aggressive policies of US and European imperialism. It likewise lends credibility to the policies of the French government, which is hiding its imperialist aims behind generalised clichés about peace, fraternisation of the peoples and self-determination.

It is not the first time that Sarkozy's foreign policy has been supported by the LCR. When Kosovo split away from Serbia, strongly encouraged by French Foreign Minister Kouchner, the LCR supported this move without reservation.

Incidentally, Kouchner is an old acquaintance of LCR founder Alain Krivine. In the 1960s, both sat together in the leadership of the Vietnam solidarity committee CVN (Comité Vietnam national). Kouchner later joined the Socialist Party, then switching to Sarkozy's camp after his electoral success. Krivine remains one of the central leaders of the LCR.

Balkanisation of the Caucasus

The LCR communiqué is dated August 12, five days after the Georgian attack on Tskhinvali. Since then, for nearly one month, there has been no further statement on the Georgia conflict, although the crisis has escalated and the French president has played an extremely active role. This silence is also a form of complicity.

The LCR newspaper Rouge of September 4 (there was no paper published in August) contains a further short article on the Caucasus conflict, albeit one that was not written by the paper itself but comprises excerpts from the Russian group Vpered (Forwards).

Vpered denotes the war in the Caucasus as a conflict between two imperialist blocks, thereby equating Russia and the US. Obviously anxious to demarcate themselves from the Putin regime, they write: "We reject any solidarity with Russian imperialism and any support for the state of Putin and Medvedev."

At the same time, Vpered professes its "complete and unconditional solidarity with the people of South Ossetia," supporting the "right of South Ossetia to self-determination, including separation from Georgia and the creation of an independent state or to unification with North Ossetia as part of the Russian Federation."

Vpered entangles itself in an insoluble contradiction, ascribing the protection of the Ossetians to the very Russian regime from which they dissociate themselves in the same breath. "The concrete balance of forces at an international level—as well as the great weakness of the international and Georgian workers' movement—means that the population of Ossetia today has no other defenders than the Russian imperialist armies."

The September issue of International Viewpoint, the English-language magazine of the United Secretariat, to which the LCR belongs, also contains two articles on the Caucasus conflict: the previously cited Vpered article and a further article from the British magazine Socialist Resistance.

The latter also describes the Caucasus war as an "inter-imperialist struggle between Russian and US imperialism where Georgia functions as the proxy of the US," however attributing far greater responsibility to the US and NATO than Vpered.

But their conclusions are the same. Both Vpered and Socialist Resistance express their unreserved and unqualified support for the principle of national self-determination, for "the full and unrestricted right to self-determination," as Vpered puts it.

The consistent implementation of this principle would entail the complete balkanisation of the Caucasus, dividing it into countless, ethnically defined petty states, which would fight endlessly over borders, suppressing and driving out ethnic minorities and, since they would never be sustainable within the global economy, becoming the cat's paw of the great powers. It would unleash a terrible scenario similar to the one witnessed in the Balkans after the dissolution of Yugoslavia, as can already be seen in parts of the Caucasus.

For a long time, Marxists have maintained that the solution of the national question is inseparably bound up with the question of the socialist revolution. Only a socialist federation can guarantee the peaceful coexistence of the numerous nationalities in the Caucasus.

The October Revolution of 1917 found such a solution, which was soon sabotaged, however, by the Great Russian chauvinism of the ascendant Stalinist bureaucracy. Indeed, shortly before his death, Lenin conflicted with Stalin over the Georgian question. Seven decades later, with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, national conflicts boiled up unhindered and were used by the imperialist powers to penetrate into the Caucasus and Central Asia.

It should be noted that neither the LCR nor its international co-thinkers even consider a socialist solution or refer to the experiences of the Soviet Union. The working class does not exist in their considerations as an independent political force. This says much about their social orientation. The insistence on independent statehood has become the hallmark of those petty bourgeois elements that strive for social ascent and a privileged relationship with the imperialist powers.





--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

Alaska Lawmakers Vote to Subpoena Todd Palin

Article Tools Sponsored By
Published: September 12, 2008

ANCHORAGE — Alaska lawmakers voted Friday to issue a subpoena to Todd Palin, the husband of Gov. Sarah Palin, in an escalation of the inquiry into whether Ms. Palin improperly tried to have her former brother-in-law dismissed from his job as a state trooper.

Skip to next paragraph
Matt Hage/Associated Press

Stephen E. Branchflower, who is leading the inquiry into whether Gov. Sarah Palin improperly tried to have her former brother-in-law dismissed

Blog

The Caucus

The CaucusThe latest political news from around the nation. Join the discussion.

Matt Hage/Associated Press

State Senator Gene Therriault, a Republican who voted against issuing subpoenas in the case

The subpoena was one of 14 approved by the Judiciary Committee of the State Senate in a vote of 3 to 2 in a joint hearing with the House Judiciary Committee, which served in an advisory role during the proceeding. The subpoenas were requested by the legislative investigator conducting the inquiry, Stephen E. Branchflower, a former Anchorage prosecutor who now lives in South Carolina.

The vote set the stage for a possible legal clash between the Legislature and the Palin administration, which threatened this week to go to court to quash the subpoenas for state workers. Ms. Palin, the Republican nominee for vice president, has hired a lawyer, who did not return calls seeking comment about the subpoena for Mr. Palin.

"It seems that we are heading for a branch-against-branch smack-down," said Senator Gene Therriault, a Republican who voted against approving the subpoenas and instead advocated that the investigation be handled by the state Personnel Board. "This is a nuclear route that should be avoided at all costs."

But Senator Charlie Huggins, a Republican from Ms. Palin's hometown, Wasilla, took a break from moose hunting to vote with the Democrats on the subpoenas. "I want to hear the truth," Mr. Huggins said.

At the hearing, which lasted two and a half hours, Mr. Branchflower said he wanted to talk with Mr. Palin because he had been a "chief critic" of the trooper, Mike Wooten, and was "such a central figure" in the push to have him dismissed. Mr. Branchflower also told the legislators that he wanted to interview Ms. Palin but had not requested a subpoena for her.

Another subpoena, according to testimony by Mr. Branchflower, is for the owner of a company that has a contract with the state to handle workers' compensation claims. Mr. Branchflower said that based on information he had received on a tip line from an employee at the company, Harbor Adjustment Service, the owner might not have been truthful when she initially denied to him that someone from the governor's office had put pressure on her to turn down a claim submitted by Mr. Wooten.

Eleven of the subpoenas are mostly for state workers, including one for Ms. Palin's scheduler and executive secretary. The final subpoena is for cellphone records from February and March for Frank Bailey, who in February was recorded while telephoning a trooper commander to convey the displeasure of Ms. Palin and her husband that Mr. Wooten was still on the force.

The ethics case, which has been the subject of national scrutiny since Ms. Palin was named to the Republican ticket by Senator John McCain, has its roots in her decision this summer to dismiss Alaska's public safety commissioner, Walt Monegan. He has contended that he was dismissed for refusing to fire Mr. Wooten. Ms. Palin has accused Mr. Wooten of threatening her family and drank while operating his trooper car. But she has denied that Mr. Monegan's dismissal was related to the Wooten matter.

State Republicans have argued that the investigation, which is being overseen by Senator Hollis French, a Democrat, is politically biased. Lawmakers have said that a final report on the inquiry by Mr. Branchflower is due by Oct. 10, to allow both sides sufficient time to respond before the presidential election.

The McCain-Palin campaign released a written statement from Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell in which he expressed indignation over the handling of the investigation, which he called a "complete farce."

"I'm disappointed by the complete hijacking of what should be a fair and objective process," Mr. Parnell said. "It is troubling to see partisan Democrats and Obama supporters abuse their power, the legal system and trust of Alaskans to smear Governor Palin to score political points."

Mr. French, the Democrat leading the inquiry, did not return calls seeking comment.

Taylor Griffin, a spokesman for the McCain-Palin campaign, said that Ms. Palin's private lawyer was reviewing the subpoena for her husband to decide how to handle it.






--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66

S.                                   S- Africa's Zuma Is Victorious in Court

Judge Dismisses Graft Charges, Calls Them Politically Motivated

SLIDESHOW
  Previous        Next    
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, waves as he arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, waves as he arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, center, reacts as he jokes with his colleague on his arrival in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, center, reacts as he jokes with his colleague on his arrival in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, third from right, arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, third from right, arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, reacts as he arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, reacts as he arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma's supporters sing and dance as they burn traditional burning incent arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma's supporters sing and dance as they burn traditional burning incent arrives in Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma's supporters sing a and dance outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma's supporters sing a and dance outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, sing and dances outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. A South African judge ruled Friday that prosecutors were wrong to charge Zuma with corruption, effectively clearing the way for the 66-year-old former freedom fighter to become the country's next president. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, sing and dances outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. A South African judge ruled Friday that prosecutors were wrong to charge Zuma with corruption, effectively clearing the way for the 66-year-old former freedom fighter to become the country's next president. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
African National Congress President Jacob Zuma, reacts, outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. A South African judge ruled Friday that prosecutors were wrong to charge ANC President Jacob Zuma with corruption, effectively clearing the way for the 66-year-old former freedom fighter to become the country's next president. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
African National Congress President Jacob Zuma, reacts, outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. A South African judge ruled Friday that prosecutors were wrong to charge ANC President Jacob Zuma with corruption, effectively clearing the way for the 66-year-old former freedom fighter to become the country's next president. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
A supporter of African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, carries a wooden replica of an AK-47 rifle outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
A supporter of African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, carries a wooden replica of an AK-47 rifle outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
A supporter of African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, carries his portrait and a wooden replica of an AK-47 rifle outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
A supporter of African National Congress (ANC) President Jacob Zuma, carries his portrait and a wooden replica of an AK-47 rifle outside the Pietermaritzburg High Court, South Africa, Friday Sept. 12, 2008. Judge Chris Nicholson will announce Friday whether fraud, corruption and money laundering charges against Zuma relating to a massive arms scandal are unlawful and unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe) (Themba Hadebe - AP)
Zuma, 66, sings his anthem in wrapping up his remarks to supporters. The judge's ruling could open the way for the former freedom fighter to become South Africa's next president.
Zuma, 66, sings his anthem in wrapping up his remarks to supporters. The judge's ruling could open the way for the former freedom fighter to become South Africa's next president. (By Themba Hadebe -- Associated Press)

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, September 13, 2008; Page A10

PIETERMARITZBURG, South Africa, Sept. 12 -- A South African judge dismissed corruption charges against ruling party leader Jacob Zuma on Friday, likely clearing the path for the former freedom fighter to become the nation's president next year.

Zuma had faced 16 counts of fraud, racketeering, corruption and money laundering relating to a multimillion-dollar arms deal. In dismissing the case, High Court Judge Chris Nicholson said Zuma had been the target of a political scheme involving President Thabo Mbeki, his former ally turned bitter rival.

The ruling did not assess Zuma's guilt or innocence in the arms deal but upheld his claim that government prosecutors should have consulted him before charging him for a second time in December.

After the hearing, Zuma, 66, greeted thousands of jubilant supporters who had converged on the main square of this historic provincial capital for a rally and concert that posters around town promoted with the slogan "Hands Off Our President."

"It is a victory for our democracy," Zuma told the crowd in a speech, given mostly in Zulu, that explained the points of the ruling. "It is a victory for our justice system."

ad_icon

The ruling removed a barrier to Zuma's presidential ambitions and quelled threats of unrest by Zuma supporters, which had worried business leaders and investors who were already nervous about his ties to trade unions and communists in Africa's biggest economy. Although national prosecutors can refile charges, legal analysts said Friday's decision was a major blow to the case.

But political experts said the decision could deepen fissures in the ruling party, the African National Congress, if Zuma supporters increase their calls for Mbeki to step down. Zuma, beloved by South Africa's poor and working classes, took control of the ANC from Mbeki, a British-educated intellectual who is seen as remote, in a bitter party contest in December.

"Whatever standing Mbeki had in the ANC will be seriously damaged by this judgment," said Karima Brown, political editor of Business Day, a South African newspaper. "If he stays, what little political power he has left would be very denuded."

In a statement to the Reuters news service, Mbeki's office said: "The Presidency is certainly not aware of any fact that may have led to the conclusion that there was executive interference with the work of the National Prosecuting Authority in this matter."

The ANC, which has led South Africa since the end of apartheid in 1994, is expected to maintain its dominance in parliamentary elections next year, and its president typically becomes president of the country.

The judgment marked another milestone in Zuma's unlikely political comeback. Mbeki fired Zuma as the nation's deputy president in 2005 after Zuma's financial adviser was convicted of soliciting bribes from an arms dealer. Zuma also was charged that year, but the case was dismissed. In 2006, he was acquitted of rape charges in a trial in which he testified that he had had unprotected sex with an HIV-positive woman and then showered to prevent infection.

Zuma was charged again last December, days after winning the ANC presidency. The new charges sparked a rancorous national debate over judicial independence, as top ANC figures called for a "political solution" to the case and the head of the ANC Youth League vowed to "take up arms and kill" to ensure Zuma's exoneration. Critics saw such remarks as attempts to sidestep the judicial system, a widely respected institution of South Africa's young democracy.

But Nicholson, a human rights activist during the apartheid era, said he detected political machinations in the National Prosecuting Authority's decision not to prosecute Zuma along with his financial adviser, then doing so days after he won the ANC leadership. Nicholson, who called the decision "bizarre to say the least," said justice ministers had been involved in the decision to prosecute, making it "inconceivable that the president did not know."

"There is a ring of the works of Kafka in this," Nicholson said.

Given the judge's sharp words, legal experts said any renewed charges would probably be hobbled by politics.

"It's a question of, do you want to take on somebody who's going to be president?" said Michael Cowling, dean of the law faculty at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, the province where the hearing was held. "The burden of the political meddling is simply going to be carried through this entire prosecution."

Zuma's supporters, who filled the modern, wood-paneled courtroom, erupted in cheers when Nicholson concluded. Outside, throngs of people who had come from nearby townships and faraway universities danced and waved banners emblazoned with Zuma's face.

"We have been vindicated!" Buti Manamela, head of the Young Communist League, a major Zuma constituency, told the crowd.

"We need Zuma to be our president," said Khetho Myende, 34, a slight and weary-looking municipal worker in a Zuma T-shirt. He and two friends had traveled three hours from their village and spent the night in the plaza outside the courthouse. "This case is finished. Today we're going to celebrate."

Zuma, who spoke last, exhorted audience members to respect the judiciary, then wrapped up by singing his trademark political anthem, "Bring Me My Machine Gun." Young men perched high in nearby trees for a better view swayed to the music.

"Your prayers reached where they were supposed to reach," Zuma told the crowd. "The truth prevailed."






--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: +250-08470205
Home: +250-55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali-Rwanda
East Africa
Blog: http://www.cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID : Kayisa66