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Nigeria’s return to democracy in 1999 happened within the global context of a wave of democratization that saw many autocratic regimes end and electoral democracies begin. Critical domestic circumstances that included the sudden death of military head of state, General Sani Abacha (1993-98), and a resurgent pro-democracy movement created a crucial opening for Nigeria to begin the journey to political transformation. The current democratic dispensation is in its fourth electoral cycle and a culture of citizen engagement has begun to take root. Despite the numerous challenges confronting the institutionalization of a strong democratic ethos, particularly in relation to the conduct of credible and violence-free elections, election management and citizen participation in the electoral process have improved over the years.

Following the conduct of the March 28, 2015 national elections by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), the opposition party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), won the presidential vote, as well as 64 of 109 senate seats and 214 of 360 House of Representatives seats in the National Assembly. As a result of this outcome, the incoming APC-led federal government will enjoy a majority in the legislative arm of government.

There are some likely implications of the APC’s victory in the Presidential and National Assembly election on the upcoming Governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections scheduled for April 11, 2015. Nigeria’s electoral history has shown that voters in state-level elections are often inclined to voting for the governing political party at the national level. There is the likelihood that the APC’s success at the recent polls will trigger a chain of similar results in the upcoming elections. So far the dominance of the APC at the national level and its potential impact on voting patterns at the state level has created a crisis of confidence within the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) which could result in more fraught competition between both major political parties that may lead to possible electoral conflict.

Following the logistical and technical challenges experienced during the March 28 national elections, INEC has assured Nigerians that it has addressed the causes of these problems and is fully ready to manage the Governorship and House of Assembly elections. Furthermore, the security agencies have also assured Nigerians of their preparedness to ensure a peaceful election.

Where the Governorship and House of Assembly Elections will hold?

While governorship elections will be held in 29 states, State Houses of Assembly elections will take place in 36 states, both on April 11, 2015.

2015 Governorship and State House of Assembly Elections in Nigeria
2015 Governorship and State House of Assembly Elections in Nigeria

The staggered elections in the 7 states highlighted in white above is as a result of court rulings that upturned election victories after the 2007 general elections and changed their governorship election cycles.

Governorship Elections and Party Performance (1999-2011)

An analysis of voting patterns and outcomes of governorship elections in Nigeria over the past four electoral cycles reveals that the PDP has maintained a consistent lead. The PDP has successfully won more than 20 states in each of the elections from 1999 to 2011. Fig. 1 below shows that in 1999, PDP won governorship elections in 21 (58.3%) out of 36 states of the federation. The number of states governed by the PDP peaked at 28 (77.8%) in 2003, but began to decrease in 2007 to 24 (66.7%) and then 23 (63.4%) in the 2011 elections.

Fig 1: Party performance during Governorship Elections from 1999 to 2011
Fig 1: Party performance during Governorship Elections from 1999 to 2011

A look at geographical spread of political parties’ performance at governorship elections also reveals that between 1999 and 2011, PDP maintained the broadest spread. Fig. 2 shows that the PDP won landslide in all states of the South-South and South-East geo-political zones in 1999 and had 3 states each in North-Central and North-East as well as 4 states in the North-West.

Geographical spread of party performance during the 1999 Governorship Elections
Geographical spread of party performance during the 1999 Governorship Elections

Although, the Alliance for Democracy (AD) won elections in all the states of the South-West in 1999 as shown in Fig. 2, the PDP was able defeat the AD in five of the six states of that zone in 2003. In the same election, the PDP won all six states in the North-Central and made significant gains in the North-East; winning Bauchi but losing Kano state (North-West) to the All Nigeria Peoples’ Party (ANPP).

As the governing party recorded a remarkable performance during governorship elections between 1999 and 2011, similar successes were recorded during state houses of assembly elections.

Geographical spread of party performance in the 2003 Governorship Elections
Geographical spread of party performance in the 2003 Governorship Elections
Fig 4: Geographical spread of party performance in the 2007 Governorship Elections
Fig 4: Geographical spread of party performance in the 2007 Governorship Elections
Geographical spread of party performance in 2011 Governorship Elections (up to 2014)
Geographical spread of party performance in 2011 Governorship Elections (up to 2014)

The dominance of the PDP in state-level politics since 1999 was linked to the party’s control of political power at the national level. Following its recent defeat in the keenly contested 2015 presidential elections, there seems to be an important shift in public opinion and support away from the PDP which could mean a stronger inclination among Nigerian voters to cast their ballots for the APC during the governorship and state houses of assembly elections in April 11, 2015. The ongoing mass defection of PDP members across state chapters of the party to the APC is indicative of an internal crisis of confidence and an attempt by some politicians to benefit from the bandwagon effect of the APC’s recent national victory on voting patterns in the upcoming state elections.

Electoral Conflicts and 2015 Governorship and State House of Assembly Elections

Since 1999, most states in Nigeria have witnessed varying degrees of electoral conflict. In a recent report by the Nigeria Human Rights Commission (NHRC) following the March 28, 2015 national elections, it was revealed that several cases of violence and security breaches led to the death of over 50 people. According to the report, acts of violence resulting in fatalities were reported in Akwa Ibom, Borno, Bauchi, Edo, Gombe, Lagos, Osun, Rivers, and Yobe States . This aligns with CDD’s 2015 Elections and the Geography of Electoral Conflicts, which highlighted these patterns and trends. Following the March 28 elections, the following states are further highlighted as potential flashpoints:

South West: Ekiti and Lagos States

In Lagos state, competition between the APC and PDP is at an all time high as evidenced in the unexpected close results of the presidential elections. This has brought to the fore latent ethnic tensions.

In Ekiti state, the political crisis in the State House of Assembly has degenerated into violence and this is expected to spill over into the forthcoming state House of Assembly election.

South-South: Rivers and Akwa Ibom States

The current fierce political feud between APC and PDP supporters has the likelihood of triggering conflict during the state elections.

North-Central: Nasarawa and Benue States

In Nasarawa state, party competition and ethno-religious tensions are key indicators of the likelihood of political violence during the election.

The party competition between APC and PDP and the mass defection of PDP members to APC in Benue state is indicative of the high stakes in the election. By INEC’s own account, Benue state witnessed the highest level of election-related destruction on March 28 resulting in the loss of 200 card readers, two INEC offices and the death of one of its staff.

North West: Kaduna State

Party rivalry between APC and PDP in Kaduna state is very intense. There have been several instances of clashes during the campaigns highlighting the extremely volatile nature of politics in the state. Any election-related violence may trigger already existing ethno-religious tensions


There’s no reliable evidence that health conditions can be effectively treated with homeopathic medicine, according to a statement by the National Health and Medicine Research Council (NHMRC) released today.

The statement comes a year after the NHMRC’s draft paper was put out for public consultation. It is based on a summary of research on homeopathy’s effectiveness for treating health conditions. It aimed to provide people who use homeopathic remedies with information of their risks and benefits so they could make informed health decisions.

The chair of the committee that produced the report, Paul Glasziou said the statement was not going to stop the use of homeopathic treatments overnight.

Professor Glasziou, who is director of the Centre for Research in Evidence-Based Practice at Bond University said the trend would likely follow a similar pattern observed after the release of a 2010 UK report by the House of Commons. There had been a decline in the use of homeopathy in the UK since that report, he added.

The review failed to find any evidence for homoepathy’s effectiveness for treating 68 conditions, which ranged from the common cough through to malaria. Only single studies were identified for 29 of the conditions, and all were deemed unreliable for either having too few participants for a meaningful result or being poorly designed.

“This lack of scientific research into the use of homeopathic medicine is not unusual and is mirrored across most alternative treatments” said Paul Komesaroff, professor of medicine from Monash University and medical practitioner.

Glasziou said reports like this created “a dialogue about the nature of the evidence and what constitutes evidence and people start to look at it and it makes an impact”.

Professor Komesaroff said patients should be supplied with accurate and up-to-date information on treatment options and that some treatment types in the field of complementary and alternative medicine lacked evidence.

“People who use alternative medicines such as homeopathy do so for a large suite of reasons not just for treatment. Their supposed effectiveness is only one reason,” Professor Komesaroff said. “One quick example is reducing the symptoms that people suffer from HIV medication.”

The NHMRC statement did not mention preventative health, but Professor Glasziou did not see this as a shortcoming.

“If you look at what GPs are treating people for, the vast majority of people are coming in for symptoms rather than health checks and preventative measures,” he said.


 

 

 

 

 

A tsunami of crisis is set to sweep through the Rivers State chapter of Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, over its failure to pay agents it used to allegedly rig the March 28 Presidential and National Assembly elections in Rivers State. Those engaged, who were either a remnant of the pool of the ad hoc staffers the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, had employed and trained but got converted by PDP, or the party’s band of militias and supporters enlisted to join in alleged massive thumb-printing and other electoral malfeasances committed by the party to snatch victory, have threatened a showdown if PDP officials and their field commanders continued to keep back the cash promised them. With the polls over, some of them who have brought their plight to the attention of The Neighbourhood alleged that their employer – PDP – has refused to pay them what they were promised.
Narrating their circumstances to The Neighbourhood in Port Harcourt and other parts of Rivers State, the used-but-dumped election riggers alleged that rather than pay them the money promised prior to the fraud, the involved PDP leaders have taken to singing a different song. “They promised us huge cash to be paid on the election day even though to some of us, we didn’t want to be involved in their plans, but now, they are telling us stories. We won’t take it lying low with them unless they paid us”, the PDP rigging partners threatened.

The complainants, whose spread spans across the genders, further narrated the locations of their unholy engagements. The Neighbourhood would not publish their names for security and safety concerns but their accounts collaborate allegations of massive rigging made by the All Progressives Congress, APC, in Rivers State.

One of the accusers whom The Neighbourhood simply identified as Sam narrated his plight.

“I was one of those who served as ad hoc staff for the March 28 Presidential and National Assembly elections. I was trained by INEC but a day to the elections, some PDP leaders in our area sent words to me inviting me to meet with them in the home of one of them(the cheated election rigger gave the name of the accused PDP chieftains but The Neighbourhood would not disclose their names at this point). They told me they wanted I and others who were to also serve as ad hoc staff to “co-operate” with them on the election day. When I asked them the type of “co-operation” they meant, they told me it was to join in thumb-printing on ballot papers on the election day.

“I was hesitant in agreeing with them but when I noticed they were becoming hostile, I accepted but not after they had promised to pay me N30,000.  So, on that day(election day), we were all driven to a house along Onne/Trailer Park road(in Eleme) which belongs to a PDP candidate. They brought the ballot papers and directed all of us to join in thumb-printing. We joined until they felt satisfied. There was no voting. But rather than pay me, they are now telling me stories”.

The cheated INEC ad hoc staffers disclosed that the men have engaged in lines of denial and are passing the bulk. “They now refer us from one person to another. Personally, I doubt their promise to pay after the Governorship and State House of Assembly elections. They said they would pay after the Governorship and State House of Assembly elections which they have told us would follow same style. They boasted they would win the governorship in the same manner they used in winning the March 28 one. But for me and others, we need our money now”.

Further investigations by The Neighbourhood showed that not only did the PDP chiefs turn their collaborators into milk cows but used them to achieve their plot at minimum cost. However, while they paid some whose wages for the rigging ranged from N5,000 to N8,000, they pocketed those whose wages were higher. Payments, it was further gathered, depended on size of Polling Unit and designation of an ad hoc worker.


 

Dear Mr. Next President, permit me to congratulate you in advance for this resounding success at the 2015 general elections. It is no mere feat to go through such an intense electioneering period in the “giant of Africa” and come out victorious. I pray that through your number one position, God will help you to help us all. Mr. next President Sir, even though I am just a common citizen amidst many of your esteemed cronies, I, humbly appeal to you to kindly take time out of your busy schedule to read this message. First of all sir, please be rest assured that I am not bothered about which party you belong to, which part of the country you come from, which language you speak nor which faith you choose to worship Almighty God. All I care about is that you belong to the party of equity, you are a citizen that will not tolerate injustice and you speak the language of truth and justice, while fairness and honesty are the bedrock of your faith.

Sir, since you will be my “OGA AT THE TOP” for the next 4 years, permit me to call on God a lot less and be calling you much more. After all, since you have been selected by God (through election by us) to be the father we can see and feel, I think it’s only fair to expect more from you and less from Him. Mr. next President Sir, as a citizen of our great country, I am a second class citizen everywhere else in the world despite the magnanimity of this global village. Based on this sir, my first appeal to you is to ensure my safety and freedom from harm or any kind of threat to my mere existence in the only place I can call home. I would really like to contribute my quota to nation building and support my children to become the next generation of responsible Nigerians, but as it is right now, my family and I feel insecure when we are at home, in school, at work, on the road and even in the market. Sir, by human design, these are places where we do not have a choice but to be at almost every day of our lives. Unfortunately, the current threats have paralysed our activities of daily living and limit our productivity which directly has affected our economic advancement among other things. Please make this part of your development agenda Sir.

My next Oga, I have a strong belief that even though we are all at liberty to choose our spiritual inclination, it should be a private affair and not encroach on the rights of others. On the other hand in our beloved nation, there are some obscure elements that are dividing us across religious lines and making life difficult to live by the day. I miss the times when faith was not an issue and we could be best of friends with persons of different religious beliefs so far we have common interest for good. Dear next president, I have high hopes and expectations that these times can be relived through your able leadership. Many Nigerians will hold you in high regard if you are able to steer us towards this direction. Sir, I will be glad if you can kindly look into the economic quagmire within which we find ourselves. As a common citizen, all I want is for my monthly income (be it salary or my modest business) to be enough to cater for my basic needs. I believe this should not be too much to ask from my dear next President. I hope you will understand that I ask this “favour” from you Sir, because I do not want to be forced into stealing and corruption to sustain myself and my family. My children are coming of age and I would like to assure them that hard work pays even in their ’fatherland’. Sir, please tell me this is possible and not merely one of my delusions, as I think, these are things that make up solid bedrock for any nation to advance.

Mr. next President, not all my friends and family have been opportune to have some level of formal education, but I am certain that if provided with the necessary support, they will be able to harness their potentials and cater for their basic needs. Interestingly Sir, even those that attended public schools in my village have not been appropriately equipped with the tools to succeed in our labour market. This is probably because most of these ‘mushroom’ schools lack qualified teachers and the necessary facilities to train our young ones, please kindly prioritize upgrading these schools and supporting the educationally disadvantaged in your reforms. This way, perhaps they will be less of a burden for the few that are lucky to make it in life. It will most likely reduce crime rate too!! Sir, I trust that by now you must have heard of the deplorable state of our basic amenities, those things that are part of our basic human needs to enable life easy for a common Nigerian i.e. potable water, stable power supply, safe roads etc.

Electricity supply has been very unstable, but I managed to buy a generator which has since been packed up because of the wear and tear of constant usage as a result of the erratic supply from the national grid. Water supply is another kettle of fish, for the benefit of consumption, many of us either boil tap water, buy sachet water (popularly known as pure water) or bottled water when we can afford in order to avoid the dreaded cholera and its counterparts. Sir, in many neighborhoods’ being a ‘mairuwa’ has become a lucrative business because of their role in acting as the official water board. We are not quite happy with the source of their water supply but they hold us to ransom because of our limited options. Our roads have also become like battle grounds because of the number of people that die every day as a result of road accidents. My heart is always in my throat when I receive news about friends or family embarking on road trips because I cannot but think about the possibility of not laying eyes on them again. Sometimes, those that have no business being behind wheels even become commercial drivers and the lives of multitudes depend on them. Please sir, include these rehabilitations and reorganizations in your immediate plan of action for our sake (Nigerian Masses).

Mr. next president, if wishes were horses, I would have wished that my loved ones and I will never fall ill or need medical attention but unfortunately, this remains a wish. It will really help, if during your time as my next President, you would ensure that our clinics and hospitals have the basic drugs and equipment to diagnose and manage any health condition we may be ill opportune to come down with. We also like to be treated well especially when we are ill and at the mercy of health workers, so it will of immense value if you look into making them more motivated and committed to take care of us more instead of being on perpetual strikes. I ask this of you sir because most people that live in my community cannot afford to travel out of the country to access health care. As an alternative, they turn to our trade-medical quacks that relate well with them but have no clue as to the science around our body and its health needs.

Dear Sir, since there is no place like home, we would like to be proud patriots and be able to hold our heads up high brandishing our green passports. Unfortunately, as a result of no fault of most of us, we face serious humiliation from other nationals because of the label of corruption our country has in the international community. I envy citizens that are patriotic to their country but I realised that this is a symbiotic relationship and they have an exhaustive list of the benefits of being citizens of their countries. Some initial steps you can take Sir, is to lead by example and be intolerant of corruption such that those that are thinking about it will consider the consequences before they act. This will greatly improve our position globally and even encourage investors to invest in our promising country.

Mr. next President Sir, may I bring to your attention that in many wards, LGAs and states, the primary election process of most of our political parties even in 2014/2015 has frustrated my hope for good governance. I have seen clueless individuals with little or nothing to offer emerge as ‘selected’ candidates. There is no scientific evidence, but it is common knowledge that most self-acclaimed Nigerian politicians are individuals that have amassed wealth (from God knows where) and share to electorates to obtain their votes, only to never set eyes on them again until the next electioneering period. In my opinion, it is the level of poverty that makes voting become base on the highest bidder and not attributed to provenor potential track record.

On a final note Sir, please be rest assured, that these are just a few of my pressing issues, but I know you are human and as such I do not expect you to make my life better with a wave of a magic wand. There are so many talented Nigerians in every sphere of life that have the willpower and commitment to help you take us to the promise land. I urge you to make them your best friends even if you don’t like them as individuals. A team approach, a team of individuals with integrity, is the only way, because the task is herculean and will take quite some time to accomplish. We will be patient with you Mr. Next President, if we know that you are taking appropriate steps to tackle these pressing issues. After all Rome, they say was not built in a day. Sir, I want to assure you that most of us the ‘common citizens’ will support you in your quest for nation building once we are convinced that our development is your number one priority.

May God help you as you help us.

Thank you and best wishes as you lead us during these vital years.

Yours Truly,

Dr Amina Aminu Dorayi


In their review of 13 clinical trials which was published in the British Medical Journal, they said the drug did not reduce disability or improve quality of life

  • Published:
play (Mirror)
 

A group of Australian researchers have said paracetamol is ineffective at treating back pain and osteoarthritis, BBC reports.

In their review of 13 clinical trials  involving more than 5,000 patients which was published in the British Medical Journal, they said the drug did not reduce disability or improve quality of life, instead it increased the odds of liver problems.

Furthermore, in osteoarthritis in the hip or knee, they found a small improvement with paracetamol. Yet the impact was so small it was "not clinically important".

According to Dr Christian Mallen, from Keele University in the UK, he said options other than drugs should be the "cornerstone" of managing the conditions.

Meanwhile, in the UK, the safety of over-the-counter drugs is being reviewed by the medicines safety regulator.

Throwing more light on pink killers, Jane Tadman from Arthritis Research UK said:

 "We've known for some time that paracetamol may not work for everyone with severe pain from their arthritis, but some people find it helps them and allows them to sleep and to exercise without discomfort."

Prof Roger Knaggs, from the Royal Pharmaceutical Society also said there were other medicines, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and opioids, which may provide better pain relief but they are associated with a range of other side-effects.


 

credit link:  http://pulse.ng/health/paracetamol-pain-killers-are-not-good-for-back-pain-researchers-reveal-id3622194.html

Alex Wang: Fashion Designer ‘Flirts’ With Furniture, Set For February Release

Fashion designer and creative director of Balenciaga, Alexander Wang has ventured into furniture. The creative director, having worked with, friend and interior designer Ryan Korban for his New York apartment; has partnered with Italian label, Poltrona Frau to design a furniture collection, that will be available in stores, from February.

Having worked closely with Korban on the design of his flagship boutique and his own New York apartment, Wang became interested in furniture and credits iconic designers Karl Springer and Milo Baughman as inspiration for the three piece collection. Evocative of his usual street-infused luxury style, the collection has all the partsof a Wang hit. Almost two years in the making, the offering includes a brass-footed beanbag chair in black shearling, another version in leather, and a bar cabinet wrapped in black shagreen, opening up to brass shelving.

With a growing interest in interior design along with his ongoing Objects Collection, a furniture collection was his next foray. “[A beanbag] is banal, an everyday item, but I like to re-contextualize what is banal, what is luxurious,” Wang says of his creations.

Wang, known for his flexible, but daring feminine designs, is often mistaken to share family ties with fellow designer, Vera Wang. However, both are designers who share Asian ties, and have worked together, share no family ties.


Nevada Democratic Senator Harry Reid has announced his retirement. REUTERS/Jason Reed

 

 

 

The late, great British Prime Minister Winston Churchill once advised that if you’re going through hell, “keep going.”

In many ways, this has been the guiding principle of retiring Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid’s long and oftentimes tempestuous political career.

Ever since arriving in Congress in 1982, the 75-year-old Nevada Democrat has not been afraid to engage in the bare knuckle partisanship that has characterized Washington, DC politics in recent decades.

“He’s got that curmudgeonly charm that is hard to replace,” confirmed President Barack Obama upon Reid’s surprise announcement on March 27 that he intended not to run for re-election.

Fierce opponent to Republicans on health care reform

Indeed, to Republicans who opposed Obama’s signature Affordable Care Act of 2010, Reid went out of his way to compare them to earlier obstructionists of groundbreaking civil rights legislation in the 1950s and 1960s. “Instead of joining us on the right side of history,” he thundered, “all the Republicans can come up with is, ‘slow down, stop everything, let’s start over.’ If you think you’ve heard these excuses before, you’re right.”

He had even harsher things to say about former President George W Bush, whom he once likened to “a loser.” He was a vocal and persistent critic of Bush’s Iraq War policies, which he claimed were ineffectual and leading to an inevitable American military defeat in the Middle East. “This war is lost,” he said.

Needless to say, this kind of rhetoric did not go over well with pro-war supporters like John McCain, his Republican Senate colleague from Arizona. “It seems to me Senator Reid has lost all sense of priority,” McCain said.

 

Lyndon B Johnson in 1965 Photo by Yoichi R Okamoto
Click to enlarge

 

Reid was no Lyndon Johnson

Alas, Reid will never be confused with Lyndon Johnson, the great Democratic Senate Majority Leader of the 1950s. The tall and physically imposing Texan employed what became known as “The Treatment,” an intoxicating mixture of guile, stubborn persistence, country charm and sheer physical force that psychologically bent would-be political opponents to his will. “Its velocity was breathtaking, and it was all in one direction,” noted the journalists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak. Johnson:

“moved in close, his face a scant millimeter from its target, his eyes widening and narrowing, his eyebrows rising and falling. From his pockets poured clippings, memos, statistics. Mimicry, humor and the genius of analogy made The Treatment an almost hypnotic experience and rendered the target stunned and helpless.”

Reid lacked such deft Machiavellian gifts, but he has had his moments. During his tenure as Majority Leader, he helped push through comprehensive Wall Street financial reform with the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, which placed greater accountability and federal regulatory oversight on our nation’s biggest financial institutions. He also ensured the passage of an $800 billion economic stimulus bill that Obama lobbied for in the early days of his administration to offset the worst effects of the 2008 Financial Panic. “I know how to dance, I know how to fight,” the former amateur boxer once said. He seemed to do more of the latter on Capitol Hill, however.

Through it all, he has earned the grudging respect if not qualified admiration of his worst political enemies. “The GOP could learn a lot from him,” writes Erik Erickson of FoxNews.com. “The Republicans try to get through a week without blowing themselves up. Reid tries to shape an entire year to make sure the GOP is blown up a month before election day.”

Who will succeed Reid?

With Reid’s departure, the $60,000 Washington beltway question of the day is who will succeed him. His stated preferred choice, the more restrained and politic Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, seems to have the inside track. But regardless of who eventually does replace him as leader of the Senate Democratic caucus, Reid mischievously reminded Republicans that he will not be leaving the Senate until his term is officially over in 2016: “I am going to be here for 22 months. I am going to be doing the same thing I have done since I first came to the Senate.”

If I was Mitch McConnell, Reid’s long-suffering counterpart on the GOP side of the aisle, I’d start worrying.


 

 

credit link: https://theconversation.com/the-legacy-of-senator-harry-reid-bare-knuckles-but-no-lyndon-johnson-39458

 

UNITED Nations (UN) secretary-general Ban Ki-Moon has congratulated Nigeria on the largely peaceful and orderly conduct of presidential and parliamentary elections yesterday describing it as an important milestone. 

Eager to see Nigeria's elections pass successfully, Mr Ki-Moon had repeatedly said that the country must set a good example for the African continent when it comes to the democratic process. Despite a few hiccups yesterday, including a Boko Haram attack in Gombe State, the elections were by and large peaceful. 

Mr Ki-Moon encouraged all Nigerians to continue to maintain the peace and to exercise patience throughout the ongoing voting process and the announcement of the final results. He condemned the attacks reportedly carried out by Boko Haram in some parts of the country and attempts by hoodlums to disrupt polling in some areas. 

According to Mr Ki-Moon, he was encouraged by the determination and resilience shown by Nigerians in pressing forward and exercising their civic duties. He called on all actors to channel any complaints that might arise from the elections through the established dispute resolution mechanisms. 

Among other things, the UN chief said he believed that the successful conclusion of the electoral process would mark an important step forward in further consolidating democracy and the rule of law in Nigeria. Before voting, Mr Ki-Moon had said that Nigeria should set a good example when it comes to holding elections and the UN tried to aid this process by donating $60m towards the process.


As pressure mounts for Africa to take greater responsibility for development, peace and security on the continent, the question of regional leadership becomes pressing. A recent African Futures paper explores the changing power capabilities of Algeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Nigeria and South Africa (the so-called ‘Big Five’) over the next 25 years. These countries are all leaders in their respective regions and hold some of the greatest power potential in Africa.

Collectively, they represent 60% of the African economy, 40% of Africa’s population and 58% of the continent’s military spending. This is expected to remain the same over the next 25 years. The future of these countries will provide a fairly straightforward answer to the often-evoked question of whether or not Africa is rising. Indeed if these states fall or fail, Africa will not be able to rise.

The authors of the paper, published by the Institute for Security Studies and the Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures, use the International Futures forecasting system to forecast future power trajectories. In an increasingly flat world where institutions matter, states that don’t network will have little influence on issues of regional and global governance.

The projections explored in the paper are based on a new index to measure national power, which includes diplomatic engagements in addition to traditional measures such as demographics, economics and technology.

If the world were a democracy, Africans would certainly have a bigger say

Today, the combined power of Africa’s 55 countries accounts for close to 9% of global power. This is more than that of Japan, Russia or India, but less than the United States (US) or China, which represent about 18% and 13% of global power, respectively. By 2040, Africa’s total relative power is forecast to surpass that of the declining European Union (EU) and US – although only adding up to around 11% of global power. This is at odds with the world’s demographic evolution. By 2050, one in four people will be African. If the world were a democracy, Africans would certainly have a bigger say.

In the next couple of decades, Africa is set to remain at the margins of global power. And this is an understatement, as Africa is clearly neither a country nor a union of states with any kind of supranational provisions. Even with significant advances in regional and continental integration, it is highly unlikely that Africa will speak with one voice in foreign policy matters, or be able to act in unison.

Only Nigeria has the potential to become a player with global significance. But this would require far-reaching changes in its current domestic stability, governance capacity and political leadership, which is an unlikely scenario. All other African countries are expected to remain so-called ‘minor powers,’ which affects Africa's influence in issues of global governance.

For the Big Five, the data tells a story of two emerging powers and three whose potential is waning. The capabilities of Nigeria and Ethiopia are expected to grow considerably in the next 25 years. Those of Egypt, South Africa and Algeria, on the other hand, are forecast to remain stagnant or experience a slight decline.

Nigeria’s economy, already the largest in Africa, is expected to represent almost 3% of the global economy by 2040. Its military spending is set to increase significantly over the next 25 years, ready to overtake Africa’s current military heavyweight, Algeria, in more or less 10 years. By 2040, Nigeria is forecast to account for nearly a fifth of Africa’s total power capabilities.

By 2040, Nigeria is forecast to account for nearly a fifth of Africa’s total power

Ethiopia, the other rising power, is coming from a low base and the country will remain the poorest among the Big Five. Nevertheless, by 2040 it is expected to be the sixth largest African economy due to high average economic growth rates. Algeria, Egypt and South Africa are likely to grow below the African average growth rate of 6.3% per annum. The size of their populations will also stagnate – although this is due to higher general levels of development, which are associated with lower fertility rates.

Among the Big Five, Egypt has traditionally dominated the category of global diplomatic engagement. This can be gauged according to the number of embassies abroad, the number of memberships to international organisations and the number of international treaties ratified by a country. Egypt’s strategic location, and its important role in both Arab and African nationalism, ensures that it is deeply connected internationally. Egypt is closely followed by South Africa, Nigeria and Algeria, while Ethiopia lags behind. Not surprisingly, South Africa made big strides after the end of apartheid in 1994 when the country reintegrated into the international community.

The way the Big Five project power is not necessarily in line with their capabilities. After all, power is as much about potential as it is about concrete projection. Some countries are able to influence more international actors, institutions or regimes than would be expected based on their capabilities, while others don’t live up to their potential.

It is questionable whether South Africa will continue punching above its weight

This is the case for Nigeria, which has been punching below its weight despite a strong set of capabilities. High levels of internal instability and corruption along with a political economy of violence compromise the country’s prospects. There is also a lack of strategic vision in the foreign-policy domain, which has recently been aggravated by the growing threat of Boko Haram.

Algeria’s role in Africa is also at odds with its relatively robust albeit declining capabilities. Faced with significant domestic and regional threats, Algeria remains focused on the need to maintain a large military capacity for internal purposes.

Egypt punches above its weight internationally, but below its weight in the African context. The country is struggling to cope with the aftermath of the Arab Spring as well as spill-over effects of the conflict in neighbouring Libya. Domestic challenges seem to detract from projecting power outside of the country, with external priorities evolving around the conflict in the Middle East and efforts to contain terrorism.

In contrast, both South Africa and Ethiopia have largely punched above their weight. Despite its limited capabilities, Ethiopia is Africa’s largest contributor to United Nations peacekeeping missions and plays an important role in peace and security matters in the Horn of Africa. Indeed, regional security is a domestic priority for Ethiopia.

South Africa, for its part, has capitalised on the miracle of the transition to democracy; Nelson Mandela’s legacy; the international activism of his successor, Thabo Mbeki, as well as several years of healthy economic growth and a benign global environment. Yet it is questionable whether the current context of stagnant or even declining capabilities and a lack of credible leadership will allow South Africa to continue punching above its weight in the medium-term future.

What seems certain is that the distribution of relative power in Africa will remain multipolar, with various countries fulfilling the role of regional leaders.

Julia Schünemann, Senior Researcher and Project Leader, African Futures and Innovation Section, ISS Pretoria; Jakkie Cilliers, Executive Director, ISS; Jonathan D. Moyer, Associate Director, Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures.

 

 

 

The article was first published by The Institute for Security Studies ( http://www.issafrica.org) and is republished with permission  granted to www.oasesnews.com


 

Sustained high levels of violence and crime fundamentally threaten South Africa’s development; not least because of the adverse effects on realising human potential. Both the National Development Plan (NDP) and the Integrated Urban Development Framework (IUDF), which the Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs released for comment last year, recognise that safety is fundamental to development.

However, the IUDF, much like the NDP, is so vague about what must be done to prevent violence in the medium to long term that it risks being inactionable. Both the NDP and the IUDF recognise the importance of investing in social protection, health care and education to realise human potential, which is needed for more South Africans to have access to jobs and live healthier, happier lives.

But it does not necessarily follow that improving access to job markets and services will increase safety. The experience of Latin America shows that job creation, particularly for young people, does not necessarily lead to social inclusion and social cohesion or an increase in safety. One reason for this is that for many young people who bear the burden of inter-generational deprivation and disadvantage, education followed by entry to the job market is not an obvious trajectory.

Our challenge as a country is to reduce entrenched inequality and violence, and improve safety. We can do these simultaneously, but it requires a radical shift of attention and investment into the very early years of children’s lives.

Neglected or abused children are likely to repeat the cycle of disadvantage

A significant number of children in low- and middle-income countries do not achieve their developmental potential because of the effects of poverty. Poverty can negatively affect physical growth (if coupled with inadequate nutrition), cognitive development, and social and emotional competence. Cognitive and socio-emotional development, and the ability to regulate our emotions, is critical to our ability to interact successfully with others. This, in turn, is critical to educational achievement. It is also necessary to succeed in the job market.

Nobel laureate and economist, James Heckman, has made a strong case for investing in children’s lives. He has shown that interventions which support the cognitive and socio-emotional development of disadvantaged children up to three years of age yields a significantly higher return in terms of human capital than investments at later stages, such as youth employment strategies.

The evidence shows that if we seek to increase human capital – which should not be our only goal, but which is necessary for realising the development goals of the NDP and the IUDF – our investments need to be made in infants and children, followed by skill building.

These programmes would not only prevent violence, but will also positively influence productivity

Ensuring that babies and infants get the right kind of care, nutrition and stimulation in the first 1 000 days of their lives is the best chance we have at breaking cycles of poverty and violence, increasing the number of people who complete school, reducing inequality and building a healthy future.

Between conception and two years of age, a baby’s brain grows to 80% of its adult weight. Also in this time, connections in the brain are created at a rate of a million per second; faster than at any other stage in our lives. The ability to regulate emotions is also learnt in these first few months.

If things go wrong in the first few years it can set a child back permanently. Abused or neglected children who don’t have a healthy bond with a caring adult are at risk of not coping at school and becoming the victim or perpetrator of violence. They are also likely to struggle later in life; as are babies who are exposed to ‘toxic stress’ – which includes exposure to alcohol and other drugs in the womb, violence in the home; or when a caregiver is depressed or mentally ill.

Children who are neglected, abused, or who are not cognitively stimulated in their infancy, are likely to repeat the cycle of deprivation and disadvantage. This is exacerbated by exposure to violence in the home, stressed parents, harsh corporal punishment at school and at home and bullying at school. The result is a toxic mix that massively reduces human potential and lays the basis for continuing cycles of violence.

Giving infants the right kind of care is our best chance at breaking cycles of violence

The good news is that several programmes have been developed and tested in South Africa to address exactly this. These include the Thula Sana home visiting programme, which helps mothers to form healthy, warm bonds with their infants; a book-sharing programme to increase infants’ attention, focus and vocabulary; programmes that help parents to use positive discipline; in-school programmes that reduce sexual offending; and skill-building programmes that reduce risky behaviour in teens – including substance abuse.

Rolling out these programmes would not only prevent violence in the long term, but will also likely have a positive effect on productivity. To achieve the development outcomes envisaged by the NDP and IUDF, we therefore need to focus our investments on ensuring that babies can grow up to be healthy, motivated adults. If, on the other hand, we focus only on infrastructure and situational crime prevention, without paying attention to the people who will use it, we risk swimming against the tide of violence in perpetuity.

To make this shift, we need to ensure that budgets at national and provincial level are allocated for primary prevention programmes. Second, key performance indicators have to motivate and enable referral by primary health care providers to programmes. Further, local and provincial government need to be informed about and understand the value and importance of primary prevention, and safety plans must be developed to include primary prevention.

Safety plans need to recognise the reality that, as data from the National Income Dynamics Surveys show, most children (57%) in South Africa do not live with their fathers, and only 40% of fathers contribute towards their upbringing. Thus, when we think about transport routes, the location of health and educational services, early-childhood development centres and after-school care, and the opening hours of service providers, we need to consider the needs of single, working parents. We also need to ask whether community-policing forums are the right forums for discussing primary interventions to decrease violence, as knowledge of such programmes is unlikely to be found here.

This article was commissioned by GIZ and was published in its longer, original form on the Safer Spaces website.

Chandré Gould, Senior Research Fellow, Governance, Crime and Justice Division, ISS Pretoria

 

credit link:  http://www.issafrica.org/iss-today/national-development-starts-in-the-cradle

 

 

The article was first published by The Institute for Security Studies ( http://www.issafrica.org) and is republished with permission  granted to www.oasesnews.com


 

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