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Africa has moved a step forward in the transition towards democracy compared with two decades ago, when military coups thrived, experts said in commemorating the International Day of Democracy.
“To some extent, democracy has grown in Africa from the 1990s to date, where most countries now hold periodic elections, giving people the opportunity to choose their leaders,” Dr. Sultan Kakuba, a political science professor at Kyambogo University in Uganda, told Anadolu Agency in a phone interview.
However, three decades ago, Africa was struggling to democratize, with the apartheid regime active then in South Africa and several military dictatorship regimes on the continent. But two decades later, the apartheid regime came to an end in South Africa after the country’s first democratic elections in 1994.
While many military regimes on the continent also collapsed or transformed into democratic rule, many are still struggling to embrace full democratic rule.
Kakuba said that currently, there are three systems of governance across the African continent, namely “consolidated democracy,” “hybrid regimes” and the “meltdown system.”
“Countries consolidating democracy have strong democratic institutions, thriving freedoms including press freedom and other rights and hold regular elections,” Kakuba said.
He named South Africa, Botswana and Tanzania as some of the countries building and consolidating democracy on the continent.
Kakuba said “hybrid regimes” consist of nations that advocate democratic values and hold elections, but at the same time, their leaders practice authoritarian tendencies such as limiting press freedom among other rights.
He said hybrid regime leaders often amend the constitution to remove presidential term limits which are usually pegged at two terms, giving them the opportunity to rule for as long as they want.
“Examples of such countries include Uganda and Rwanda, where the presidents have been in power for long but hold periodic elections, and the opposition is not given a fair, levelled playing ground,” he noted.
Kakuba said a meltdown democratic system involves countries in civil wars where democratic institutions and values are either declining or have collapsed.
“For Africans to celebrate the International Day of Democracy, we need to ask ourselves: Have we achieved building institutions that benefit all Africans? Have we achieved pan-Africanism? Or does each leader care only about their nation or regional blocks?”
Kakuba suggested that African leaders should build their own democratic systems, other than copying Western democratic systems, which the majority of the continent has failed to achieve.
Recent coups worrying
Dr. Mustafa Mheta, a senior researcher at the Media Review Network, a Johannesburg-based think tank, agreed with Kakuba that the continent has indeed made progress in the transition to democracy but said he is worried about new coups witnessed recently.
“Of late, we are beginning to see a rise in coups across certain regions such as West Africa, precisely in Francophone countries. This is a very worrying trend,” he told Anadolu Agency.
In less than two years, the continent has witnesses three coups -- one in Guinea and two in Mali. There was also an unconstitutional transfer of power in Chad after the assassination of President Idriss Deby where his son took over to continue his 30-year grip on power.
Mheta said there is a pattern that is beginning to emerge in countries where the coups are happening.
“The soldiers who are leading these coups are either US or Israeli trained,” he said.
Kakuba said greed for political power and corruption among some African leaders are responsible for some of these coups.
“Coups are mostly because of economic issues, when leaders are corrupt. It at times prompts the military to take over and also get access to these resources,” he said.
Mheta agreed that autocratic leaders are abusing their countries’ constitutions by extending the presidential term limits, which are usually put at two terms, leading to unhappiness among citizens.
He praised South Africa's constitutional democracy, saying it is exemplary and very much alive.
‘‘Surely where else on the continent can you have a former president being arrested for committing a felony?” he said, referring to former President Jacob Zuma, who was jailed in June for contempt of court but was released this month on medical parole.
Zuma was sent to prison by the Constitutional Court after he reportedly refused to appear before a judicial commission of inquiry probing corruption during his nearly decade in power.
“South Africa is certainly leading in that pack. It is the most democratic country on the continent without any doubt,’’ Mheta added./agencies
Palestinian prison escapee Mohammed al-Arida was subjected to torture following his recapture by “Israeli” authorities, according to a lawyer affiliated with the Palestinian Prisoner Society (PPS).
Khaled Mahajna made a statement to official Palestinian television after meeting with Al-Arida, saying the prisoner underwent harsh torture and was badly beaten.
The lawyer said Al-Arida has severe wounds all over his body but has still not received any treatment and has barely slept.
Al-Arida denies all accusations, Mahajna said, noting the prisoner opted to remain silent during the interrogation despite the torture and pressure.
The PPS said it would talk to all four of the caught escapees on Sept. 20
Six Palestinian inmates tunneled out of the high-security Gilboa prison in northern “Israel” on Sept. 6. “Israeli” forces, however, have managed to capture four of them after a manhunt.
The remaining two are still in hiding.
There are around 4,850 Palestinian detainees in “Israeli” prisons, including 41 women, 225 children and 540 “administrative detainees,” according to observers./agencies
The World Health Organization chief said Tuesday the longer vaccine inequity persists, the more the virus will keep circulating and changing, and the longer social and economic disruption will continue, heightening chances that more variants will emerge.
WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus said the health organization's global targets are to support every country vaccinating at least 40% of its population against COVID-19 by the end of this year and 70% of the world's population by the middle of next year.
"So far, just two countries in Africa have reached the 40% target, the lowest of any region. More than 5.7 billion doses have been administered globally, but only 2% of those have been administered in Africa," Tedros said in a WHO webinar in Geneva.
"The longer vaccine inequity persists, the more the virus will keep circulating and changing, the longer the social and economic disruption will continue, and the higher the chances that more variants will emerge that render vaccines less effective."
260M does to 141 countries
Speaking on why it is so essential for the world that Africa is vaccinated against COVID-19, he said that so far, the partnership for vaccine equity COVAX has shipped more than 260 million doses to 141 countries.
Tedros noted that COVAX has also faced several challenges, with manufacturers prioritizing bilateral deals and many high-income countries tying up the global supply of vaccines.
The reason for Africa's low vaccination threshold is not because African countries lack the capacity or experience to roll out vaccines, said the WHO chief.
"It's because they have been left behind by the rest of the world," he asserted.
He said that many people in Africa are at high risk of disease and death exposed to a virus against which many other people worldwide enjoy protection.
"This doesn't only hurt the people of Africa, it hurts all of us," added Tedros.
To avoid this scenario, the WHO, the global alliance for vaccines Gavi, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), and UNICEF established COVAX last year to accelerate vaccines' development and equitable distribution.
Last year, the African Union (AU) established the African COVID-19 Vaccine Acquisition Task Team, or AVAT, to compliment COVAX to purchase vaccines for the AU Member States.
"Yesterday (Monday) and today (Tuesday), we had a very constructive meeting between partners from COVAX and AVAT to agree on a way forward. Vaccine inequity is a solvable problem," said Tedros.
"We call on manufacturers to prioritize COVAX and AVAT and to share information on supply and delivery projections so countries can be ready to roll out vaccines when they land immediately."/agencies
US tech firm Apple introduced Tuesday four new iPhone13 models at a virtual event held at its headquarters in Cupertino, California.
The new models include iPhone 13 mini, iPhone 13 with Super Retina XDR display with A15 bionic chip, which Apple dubbed as the fastest CPU in any smartphone with up to 50% faster than its nearest competitor.
Both supporting 5G, they have ceramic shield at front screen with water resistance, including dual-camera, coming with five new colors -- pink, blue, midnight, starlight, and (PRODUCT)RED.
The dual-camera gathers 47% more light for less noise and brighter results in photos and videos, said Apple. The two models have a cinematic mode to enable users to capture cinema-like moments in their videos, which are shoot in Dolby Vision HDR.
While 5.4-inch iPhone 13 mini has 1.5 hours longer battery life than its predecessor, this is up to 2.5 longer for the 6.1-inch iPhone 13. They start at $699 and $799, respectively.
The higher models, iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro Max, have three ultra-wide cameras with six times optical zoom range. Their specifications mostly speak to film makers.
They come in four colors -- graphite, gold, silver and blue. Their GPU provides 50% faster graphics performance than competitors, which Apple said is the leader in the sector.
Their Super Retina XDR display comes in 6.1 inches and 6.7 inches. As for battery life, iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro Max last 1.5 and 2.5 longer, respectively, compared to their predecessors. They start at $999 and $1,099.
For fitness users, Apple Watch Series 7 has nearly 20% larger screen area and 40% thinner edges than the previous model, and over 50% more screen area than Series 3. It will support Fitness+.
Dubbed as the most durable Apple Watch ever built, Series 7 has resistance against cracks, dust and water. Powered with WatchOS 8 that senses cycling activity, it has an 18-hour battery life, while it charges 33% faster than its predecessor. It starts at $399.
As for tablets, the new iPad carries A13 bionic chip with 20% faster CPU, GPU and neural engine than the previous one, which Apple said it is 3 times faster than Google's Chromebook, and 6 times faster than the top-selling Android tablet. The new tablet supports the first-generation Apple Pencil. It is powered by iPadOS 15.
The new iPad Mini, which comes in four different colors with 5G, has a liquid retina display with a screen size raised to 8.3 inches. It has a 40% jump in CPU performance compared to its previous model. It has a 12 MP rear camera and ability to record in 4K, while it also supports Apple Pencil.
Both iPad models are built with a 100% recycled aluminum enclosure, according to Apple.
Apple's iPhone smartphones by far continue to be the largest revenue generator for the company with $39.57 billion net sales in the third fiscal quarter, up 49.8% from the same period of last year.
Net sales of iPhone climbed to $153.1 billion for the nine months ending June -- up 37.5% year-on-year, according to the company's latest financial figures released on July 27./agencies
At least 11 people, including soldiers and civilians, were killed and several others wounded when a suicide bomber blew himself up at a tea shop in Mogadishu's Wadajir neighborhood on Tuesday evening, said the police.
Dadir Hassan, a police officer in the capital Mogadishu, told Anadolu Agency over the phone that the suicide bomber targeted a busy tea shop near a major military base in Mogadishu.
"The preliminary investigations confirmed that the attack was a result of lone suicide bomber who blew himself at a teashop where security forces and civilians frequented and we can confirm that at least 11 people, including soldiers, were killed and several others wounded," Hassan said.
Several people, most of them civilians, were also wounded in the suicide bombing and they were rushed to hospitals for treatment, he said.
The police officer added that security forces from different agencies of the government rushed to the scene and investigations are currently underway.
Gen. Dhagabadan military training facility is located hundreds of steps away from where the suicide bomber detonated and there was huge security forces present at the area, according to residents who spoke to Anadolu Agency over the phone after the attack.
Somali-based al-Qaeda affiliated terrorist group al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the suicide attack in Mogadishu on Tuesday evening, saying it had killed 11 soldiers and wounded 16 others.
Somali Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble has condemned the "indiscriminate" terror attack on Tuesday evening that killed at least 11 people, including civilians and soldiers.
"This barbaric act shows how al-Shabaab terrorists are thirsty for the indiscriminate bloodshed of the Somali people, forcing us to cooperate in fighting terrorism," Roble said.
Al-Shabaab, an al-Qaeda affiliate, was behind a truck-bombing attack in October 2017 in Mogadishu that took some 600 lives, the worst attack in the nation's history./agencies
Boeing said Tuesday it forecasts $9 trillion aerospace market opportunities in commercial, defense, and services over the next decade.
American multinational firm, which manufactures airplanes, rockets, and telecommunication satellites, said commercial airplanes and services are showing signs of recovery following the coronavirus pandemic, while the global defense, space, and government services markets have remained stable.
The company's latest estimate is up from $8.5 trillion a year ago, and up from $8.7 trillion made in the pre-pandemic forecast of 2019, "reflecting the market's continued recovery progress," according to a statement.
Boeing's new commercial market outlook projects a 10-year global demand for 19,000 commercial airplanes valued at $3.2 trillion.
Its 20-year commercial forecast through 2040 projects demand more than 43,500 new airplanes valued at $7.2 trillion -- an increase of around 500 planes over last year's forecast.
"The global commercial fleet will surpass 49,000 airplanes by 2040, with China, Europe, North America and the Asia-Pacific countries each accounting for about 20% of new airplane deliveries, and the remaining 20% going to other emerging markets," the statement said.
Boeing said it forecasts a $3.2 trillion market opportunity for the services market, which includes commercial, business, and general aviation services, representing $1.7 trillion, and government services representing $1.5 trillion through 2030.
The company's outlook, in addition, projects the defense and space market opportunity will remain consistent with last year's forecast at $2.6 trillion during the next decade.
"Long-term demand for newly qualified aviation personnel remains strong, with projected demand for more than 2.1 million personnel needed to fly and maintain the global commercial fleet over the next 20 years, including 612,000 pilots, 626,000 maintenance technicians and 886,000 cabin crew members," it said./agencies
A senior Malaysian official on Tuesday invited Turkish businesspeople to invest in his country’s Selangor province.
Speaking at a virtual event, Amirudin Shari, the chief minister of Selangor province, asked Turkish investors to consider their operations in Malaysia’s most populated province.
“It will further nurture Turkish-Malaysian relations,” Shari said at the event, hosted by World Islamic Economic Forum (WIEF).
The annual trade volume between Turkey and Malaysia reached $2.3 billion in 2020.
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the chief minister said, he assures to provide a “better outlook in near future” for the investors.
Selangor is a province on the west coast of the Malaysian peninsula, encircling the capital Kuala Lumpur. It is the biggest contributor to the country’s gross domestic product with 24.3%.
Merve Safa Kavakci, Turkey’s ambassador to Malaysia, said the trade volume between Turkey and Malaysia had already “increased by 46% in the first 6 months of 2021.”
“Trade is normalizing back after the pandemic,” Kavakci said.
Free trade agreement 'must be expanded'
She said the free trade agreement (FTA) between the two countries that entered into force in 2015 boosted the trade relations.
The trade volume rose to $3.4billion after the FTA was signed and has remained around $2.5 billion since 2018, the ambassador added.
Emphasizing increasing the bilateral trade target to $5 billion, Kavakci said her country presents “EU-quality and cost-advantage material at the same time” to its customers.
She said areas of trade, services, e-commerce, investments are the main focus to increase the bilateral trade and that “FTA must be expanded” to achieve these goals.
Kavakci said Turkey and Malaysia have a “deep interest” in developing existing relations in the defense sector.
To create further opportunities, she said the two countries signed 14 business-to-business Memorandums of Understanding, mostly in the defense sector, in 2019.
“There is $1 billion cooperation in the defense sector between the two countries and we want to increase it,” the Turkish ambassador said.
'Strategic partner'
Hasan Gumus, the chairman of the Turkey-Malaysia Business Council of the Foreign Economic Relations Board of Turkey, said Malaysia is a “strategic partner and a gateway to Asia” for Turkey.
Despite the pandemic, he said, “we have continued contacts with our counterparts in Malaysia and Selangor is an attractive” destination for trade.
Gumus said Turkey is also a gateway for Malaysian products to a foreign market worth $8 trillion.
Hasan Azhari Haji Idris, the chief executive officer of the Invest Selangor Board, said the province boasts of main airport and seaport besides being home to the world’s 12th busiest container port with a growing railway network.
Selangor is the most populated province with 6.5 million people and a 75% workforce rate, said Idris.
Around 65,000 students graduate every year from universities in the province.
Idris said there is a need for academic-industry collaboration "to meet demands of the industry."
He said the province was focusing on five areas in manufacturing, including food and beverages, transport equipment, life sciences, machinery equipment, electrical and electronics equipment./aa
South Korea’s antitrust regulator has imposed a $177 million fine on global tech giant Google for its alleged abuse of the market dominance in the mobile operating system and app markets, local media reported.
“Since 2016, the Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) has been looking into Google over allegations it obstructed local smartphone makers, such as Samsung Electronics Co., from using operating systems developed by rivals,” according to Yonhap News Agency.
The regulator said that the global tech giant hampered market competition by requiring smartphone makers to clinch an "anti-fragmentation agreement (AFA)" when they sign key contracts with Google over app store licenses and early access to OS.
Under the AFA agreement, the device makers are not permitted to install modified versions of Android OS, known as "Android forks" on their products. They are also not allowed to develop their own Android forks, Yonhap said.
The regulator has also ordered Google to end its practice of forcing Android device manufacturers to sign the AFA agreement.
"We expect the latest measures will help set the stage for competition to revive in the mobile OS and app markets. This is also expected to help the launch of innovative goods and services in smart device markets," the news agency cited KFTC statement as saying.
Reacted to the decision, Google said it plans to appeal the regulator's decision.
In April this year, Turkish authorities fined Google 296 million Turkish liras ($36.6 million) for violating the country's competition law.
In 2019, the European Commission also slapped a $1.69 billion fine on Google for breaking the EU’s anti-trust rules on online advertising./agencies
The number of centenarians in Japan rose to a record 86,510 for the first time, the government data showed on Tuesday.
The number of male centenarians in Japan rose past 10,000, rising continuously for 51 years, the country’s Kyodo News Agency reported citing Health Ministry data.
Japan is battling an aging population mainly due to enhanced medical and social infrastructure developments in the country.
The data showed the number of centenarians rose by 6,060 from a year earlier.
Japan has marked Sept. 20 every year as a holiday to express “Respect for the Aged” in the country.
The ministry also revealed women made up at least 88.4% of the total 86,510, up 5,475 from a year earlier and men totaled 10,060, up 585.
Then Japanese government began a survey of centenarians in 1961 when it found only 153 people above 100.
The western province of Shimane has the highest number of centenarians, followed by Kochi and Kagoshima provinces.
Meanwhile, a statement by the Prime Minister’s Office said the number of COVID-19 cases in the country rose to 1.7 million, including 16,846 deaths.
Data released by the government also showed that more than 50% of the country’s 126 million people have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
Close to 64 million people have received two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine as of Monday./agencies
Over 100,000 people are staring hunger in the face following the suspension of food assistance by the World Food Program (WFP) in South Sudan, the UN agency warned Monday.
The WFP said that due to funding shortfall from donors it will start suspending monthly food rations starting in October until next year for 106,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) in the Wau and Bor areas as well as in the capital Juba.
“Drastic times call for drastic measures,” said Matthew Hollingworth, WFP country director in South Sudan.
“We are forced to take these painful decisions and stretch our limited resources to meet the critical needs of people who were on the brink of starvation and now risk slipping back into catastrophe if their access to food diminishes.”
He noted that despite having provided life-saving support this year to millions of people in dire need, many vulnerable people living in crisis areas continue to suffer from the highest levels of food insecurity and cannot survive without sustained food assistance.
“If funding levels continue to drop, we may have no choice but to make further cuts as the needs of vulnerable communities continue to outpace available resources,” said Hollingworth.
Hollingworth said that WFP requires an additional $154 million within the next four months to enable it to provide food assistance in sufficient quantities.
It said that the three-month suspension of food assistance is part of a broader reduction in food assistance that WFP announced in April across all camps.
Those to be affected include 700,000 refugees and internally displaced people who now receive half the caloric contents of a WFP food ration.
A full ration provides 2,100 kilocalories per person and includes cereals, pulses, vegetable oil, and salt.
It further noted that food insecurity in South Sudan has increased in the last few years and currently affects more than 60% of the country’s population./aa