Showing posts with label PM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PM. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 October 2010

Watches Zimbabwe PM Tsvangirai lashes out at President Mugabe

Zimbabwe PM Tsvangirai lashes out at President Mugabe


Morgan Tsvangirai (R) has shared power with President Robert Mugabe since February 2009
Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has accused President Robert Mugabe of violating the constitution and unilateral decision-making.

Mr Tsvangirai said his MDC party would not recognise any key appointments made by Mr Mugabe in the past 18 months, including governors, judges and envoys.

He also urged the international community to do the same.

Mr Tsvangirai formed a power-sharing government with bitter rival Mr Mugabe in 2009 after disputed elections.

Under their coalition deal, the two politicians agreed to draw up a new constitution followed by a referendum and then fresh elections.

'Racist agenda'
"We will refuse to recognise any of the appointments which the president has made illegally and unconstitutionally over the last 18 months," Mr Tsvangirai said at a news conference in Harare on Thursday.

He said the disputed appointments included the central bank governor, the attorney general, five judges, six ambassadors and the police commission.

Mr Tsvangirai also voiced his "disgust" over Mr Mugabe's unilateral decision to re-appoint 10 provincial governors last week.

"I have defended President Robert Mugabe at my own cost politically. But neither I nor the MDC can stand back any longer and just allow President Mugabe and the Zanu-PF to defy the law, to flaunt the constitution, and to act as if they own this country," he said.

The MDC (Movement for Democratic Change) leader also accused the president of refusing to swear in white farmer Roy Bennett, the prime minister's choice for the post of deputy agriculture minister.

Mr Bennett was tried earlier this year on charges of plotting to oust Mr Mugabe and found not guilty.
coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-11498290

Thursday, 26 August 2010

party powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa Japan DPJ Ozawa to bid for PM in party vote - media

Japan DPJ Ozawa to bid for PM in party vote - media
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese ruling party powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa will run in a party leadership vote on Sept. 14 in a challenge to Prime Minister Naoto Kan, Kyodo news agency and other Japanese media said on Thursday.

His candidacy risks a bitter battle within the ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) as it tries to deal with a soaring yen and a fragile economic recovery.

Japan's ruling Democratic Party former secretary general Ichiro Ozawa delivers a speech at a political seminar in Tokyo August 25, 2010. Japanese ruling party powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa will run in a party leadership vote on Sept. 14 in a challenge to Prime Minister Naoto Kan. (REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao)
The head of the DPJ will be the prime minister by virtue of the party's majority in the parliament's powerful lower house.

Veteran lawmaker Ozawa, who stepped down last year as party leader after a political funding scandal, has been an outspoken critic of Kan's decision to float the idea of a future sales tax hike ahead of a July upper house election, which the party lost.
Coppied by http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/8/26/worldupdates/2010-08-26T051804Z_01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-510699-1&sec=Worldupdates

Sunday, 22 August 2010

Australia PM seeks coalition rule

Watch Australia PM seeks coalition rule

Caption: Tony Abbott said the conservative coalition was "back in business"
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard has made contact with independent candidates to try to form a government after an inconclusive election.

Ms Gillard said she would continue to provide "stable" government as final votes are counted.

She acknowledged that neither her Labor Party nor the opposition conservative coalition was likely to win the 76 seats needed for an outright majority.

ABC Australia is forecasting 72 seats for Labor and 73 for the conservatives.

With 78% of votes counted, Labor is already set to win 72 seats, and Tony Abbott's Liberal/National coalition is on course for 70, according to national broadcaster ABC.

"It is clear that neither party has earned the right to government in its own right," Ms Gillard said. She added that Labor had won the most votes overall nationally, if minor parties are discounted.

But opposition leader Tony Abbott said it was clear Labor had lost its parliamentary majority and its legitimacy.

"There was a savage swing against this government," he said.

The election comes two months after Ms Gillard ousted Kevin Rudd in a controversial leadership challenge.

'Good faith'

Australia has not had a hung parliament since 1940.

A handful of members of parliament now appear to hold the balance of power. They include three independents, a Green Party candidate, and an independent whose seat is not yet confirmed.

"It's my intention to negotiate in good faith an effective agreement to form government," Ms Gillard told journalists on Sunday.

She added that she would "continue to provide stable and effective government in accordance with our democratic process while the final votes are counted in this election".

The BBC's Nick Bryant, in Sydney, says the independent candidates will try to get the best deal they can for their constituencies, and there may well be some pork barrel politics over the next few days as Ms Gillard and Mr Abbott try to gather a coalition.

Two independents, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor, said they would side with the party most able to provide stable government, according to the Associated Press. A third independent, Bob Katter, said he would back the party that promised the best deal for his constituents.

All three are former members of conservative parties.

'Night of pride'

Mr Windsor said he had received two "very kind phone calls" from Ms Gillard and then Mr Abbott.

"Obviously we did mention if there was a hung parliament that there may have to be some discussion," he added.

After the vote, Mr Abbott told supporters in Sydney that it had been "a night for pride in our achievements".

He said his coalition was "back in business" and would try to form a government, and that Labor would "never be able to govern effectively in a minority".

Initial counting had given Labor a marginal lead over Mr Abbott's coalition - but other results suggested heavy swings against Labor, in particular in the key states of Queensland and New South Wales.

Voting is compulsory in Australia, with 14 million registered voters.

Correspondents say Mr Abbott has tried to exploit the Labor party's divisions after the departure of Mr Rudd, trying to portray his coalition as a stable answer to a government beset by in-fighting.

In his campaign he has pledged to tighten immigration and has hit out at government spending.

He has also toned down his well-known climate change scepticism.

Ms Gillard, a former lawyer who called a snap election shortly after coming to office, is hoping to be rewarded for the government's handling of the economy, which weathered the global recession remarkably well.

Ms Gillard won a leadership race in June but, despite her success, her support has fallen in the two months she has been in office.
Coppied by http://www.kbc.co.ke/story.asp?ID=65964