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Wednesday, 14 August 2013

South Africa Commemorates National Women's Day on August 9

Posted on 00:18 by Unknown
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, at New Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit on March 27, 2010. The event was a rally to demand justice in the assassination of Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah by the FBI on Oct. 28, 2009. by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, at New Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit on March 27, 2010. The event was a rally to demand justice in the assassination of Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah by the FBI on Oct. 28, 2009., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.

South Africa Commemorates National Women’s Day on August 9

57 years ago women took to the streets challenging national and gender oppression

By Abayomi Azikiwe
Editor, Pan-African News Wire

August 9 represented the 57th anniversary of the Women’s March on Pretoria in 1956. The event attracted 20,000 women to protest the pass laws which were a hallmark of the racist apartheid system.

The period between 1952-1956 has been characterized as the “Defiance Campaign Against Unjust Laws.” Mass mobilizations were organized against the racist system of Bantu education, the dreaded pass laws, the demand for labor rights and the end to legalized segregation and exploitation in the-then Union of South Africa.

This manifestation on August 9 was spearheaded by the Federation of South African Women (FSAW or FEDSAW) which was formed on April 17, 1954 in Johannesburg by leading activists in the national liberation, communist and democratic movements. FEDSAW grew out of the mass upsurge of the African independence struggles that swept the continent in the aftermath of World War II.

Ray Simons, a leading member of the South African Communist Party (SACP), then underground, brought together Helen Joseph, an organizer with the Garment Workers Union and the Congress of Democrats (COD), Lilian Ngoyi of the African National Congress Women’s League (ANCWL) and Amina Cachalia of the Transvaal Indian Congress (TIC), the founder of the Women’s Progressive Union (WPU) and later the ANC. The idea was to create a multi-racial women’s organization to protest against apartheid.

A similar march had been held the year before in Pretoria where 2,000 women demonstrated against the application of the pass laws to them. The success of this gathering encouraged the women to launch a national campaign to bring thousands from around the country to Pretoria.

Pass laws were designed to regulate African, Colored (mixed race) and Indian labor. The pass would designate which ethnic group one belonged to and whether the person had the “right,” under the racist laws, to reside in a particular geographic area.

In essence the pass laws were a tool to facilitate the exploitation of labor and prevent Africans, Coloreds and Indians from interacting and organizing against their oppression. The coming together of African, Colored and Indian progressives was a direct threat to the existence of the racist system.

By mid-1956, the FEDSAW had decided to write a letter to the-then racist Prime Minister J.G. Strijdom requesting a meeting on the pass laws and other issues. Strijdom refused and the women became determined to bring as many as possible to protest outside the Union Buildings, the symbol of the apartheid state.

The organizing efforts by FEDSAW held off the implementation of pass law requirements for African women until the early 1960s. The efforts of FEDSAW and allied organizations brought many people into the national liberation struggle in South Africa.

At the end of 1956, over 100 leading officials and cadres of the democratic movement had been charged with treason. Legal proceeding surrounding these charges went on until 1961 when all charges were eventually dropped.

Nonetheless, the anti-pass campaign of 1960 drew a deadly response from the apartheid state. On March 21 of that year, 69 people were gunned down in Sharpeville outside a police station and both the ANC and the splinter group, the Pan-Africanist Congress, formed in 1959, were banned.

The following year after additional repressive measures, the ANC in conjunction with the SACP, formed a military unit called Um Khonto WeSizwe (Spear of the Nation). The armed wing of the ANC embarked upon a campaign of sabotage where symbols of state and corporate power were targeted.

Continuing a Legacy of Struggle

South African women had challenged the racist system of settler-colonialism on numerous occasions prior to 1956. As early as 1913 there had been demonstrations against the attempts to force women to carry passes.

In the Orange Free State in 1913 women carried out petition drives and mass demonstrations against the pass laws. These protests continued for years and resulted in the racist system withdrawing the pass requirement for women. Many women were arrested and sent to prison during these years in the early 20th century.

By 1953, these laws had been established in the Western Cape designating it as a “Colored Preference Area” which sparked protest demonstrations. Soon the law’s application would spread to other provinces of South Africa.

On January 4, 1953, hundreds of women rallied in Langa Township outside of Cape Town to protest the Native Laws Amendment Act which mandated the carrying of passes for both men and women. The apartheid law determined whether women had the right to be in a particular area depending upon them holding a job. If they could not produce a pass that was “in order” both women and men could be arrested, imprisoned and summarily sent to another city or region of the country.

At the demonstration in Langa on January 4, ANC Women’s League organizer Dora Tamana told the crowd that “We, women, will never carry these passes. This is something that touches my heart. I appeal to you young Africans to come forward and fight. These passes make the road even narrower for us. We have seen unemployment, lack of accommodation and families broken because of passes. We have seen it with our men. Who will look after our children when we go to jail for a small technical offense like not having a pass?”(sahistory.org.za)

Women played an essential role in the struggle against apartheid all during the period of the 1950s through the 1990s, when the ANC took power in 1994. Women enlisted in the ANC as organizers and military combatants. Within the labor movement they were leading organizers in the efforts that lead up to the formation of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) in 1985.

The Status of South African Women Today

Although the apartheid system collapsed in 1994, inequality among the races and gender oppression has not been eradicated from South Africa. Even though the overthrow of apartheid was a monumental revolutionary achievement, the country’s economy is still capitalist and subject to class and gender oppression.

In honor of National Women’s Day the ANC issued a statement on August 8 noting “South Africa is a better place for women than it was in 1994. However, despite the many successes recorded by the ANC government, women continue to bear the brunt of poverty, underdevelopment and unemployment. Legislated patriarchy has been removed from the statute books but women continue to be subjected to gender based violence; each incident an inhuman act that should leave South Africans outraged and united in our collective quest to eradicate all forms of discrimination and marginalization.”

In another statement published by COSATU in honor of Women’s Day it stresses that “we would be dishonoring the memory of those heroines of the past and present if we were to be complacent about the huge problems women still confront. Despite the advances since 1994, millions of poor, working class women still battle against unemployment, poverty, discrimination and abuse.”

This same statement goes on to say that COSATU “stands by the national democratic revolution’s strategic objective to build a non-racial, non-sexist and democratic society. Our economic liberation must therefore involve the upliftment of the poor, the majority of whom are African and women.”

In order for this to occur there must be a transformation of capitalist property relations which inherently oppress, exploit and abuse women. At the same time to ensure advances in the struggle against gender oppression more women must be brought into the revolutionary movement and party as organizers and leaders.

As the late Mozambican President Samora Machel stated many years ago: “The liberation of women is not act of charity but a fundamental precondition for the success of our revolution.” The truth of this statement continues both during the struggle for political independence and well as the efforts aimed at establishing socialism.

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Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW Editor, Featured on Press TV's US Desk: 'Police Brutality Widespread'

Posted on 00:11 by Unknown
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, speaking at an emergency demonstration after the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the murder of Trayvon Martin. by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, speaking at an emergency demonstration after the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the murder of Trayvon Martin., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
Abayomi Azikiwe: US police brutality widespread

Mon Aug 12, 2013 4:27PM

To listen to this Press TV statement delivered by Abayomi Azikiwe just
click on the website below:
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/08/12/318386/us-police-brutality-is-widespread/

Many in America believe that police brutality is widespread in the county as the family of a young graffiti artist, who died after being tased by the Miami police, is demanding a probe into the police action.

“Tasers are considered non-lethal weapons, however, there have been numerous cases throughout the United States and Canada where people have died as a result of the utilization of tasers,” Detroit-based Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of Pan-African News Wire, told Press TV on Monday.

Police officers, who fatally shocked the 18-year-old artist by a Taser during a chase in Florida, were allegedly “laughing and high-fiving” as their victim lay motionless on the ground, according to eyewitnesses.

Israel Hernandez-Llach was painting the wall of an abandoned McDonalds around 5 a.m. Tuesday when officers confronted him.

Grafitti is typically a misdemeanor in Florida if the damage to the property is less than $1,000.

People should “mobilize and organize against police brutality,” Azikiwe said.

“There has to be a rethinking of the utilization of force inside the United States but if you look at the foreign policy of the US, these same types of values are enacted against people around the world, whether they are in Yemen through drone attacks, or Pakistan through airstrikes, or against other nations around the world where the United States is involved in all types of deadly military force against people, many of whom have absolutely no reason to be attacked by US.”
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Pan-African Journal: Special Worldwide Radio Broadcast for Sunday August 11, 2013--Hosted by Abayomi Azikiwe

Posted on 00:04 by Unknown
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, covering the demonstration outside the Community Arts Auditorium at Wayne State University in Detroit during the visit by Admiral Mullen on August 26, 2010. (Photo: Bryan Pfeifer) by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, covering the demonstration outside the Community Arts Auditorium at Wayne State University in Detroit during the visit by Admiral Mullen on August 26, 2010. (Photo: Bryan Pfeifer), a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
For Immediate Release

Media Advisory
Monday August 12, 2013

Pan-African Journal: Special Worldwide Radio Broadcast For Sunday August 11, 2013

To listen to this special broadcast of the Pan-African Journal just click on the website below:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/fight-for-truth/2013/08/11/pan-african-journal-special-worldwide-radio-broadcast

Unrest and instability is continuing in the North African state of Libya. Strikes and rebellions in the oil industry has been compounded with bombings and assassinations.

People in the West African state of Mali are voting in a run-off presidential election.

Ibrahim Boubacar Keita and Soumalia Cisse are the candidates in the race.

The British Museum has identified Egyptian artifacts which are being returned to the country. Meanwhile, the political crisis in Egypt is deepening with the failure of the various contending forces to reach agreement on lasting solutions.

Finally, a summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) will take place in Lilongwe, Malawi this coming week.

The gathering comes in the aftermath of the holding of successful elections in the regional member-nation of Zimbabwe.
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Tuesday, 13 August 2013

Pan-African Journal: Live Broadcast From Milwaukee on the War In Syria

Posted on 23:55 by Unknown
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, along with Tachae J. Davis, during the discussion at a public meeting on the U.S. war drive against Syria. The meeting was held on June 30, 2012. (Photo: Leona McElvene) by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, along with Tachae J. Davis, during the discussion at a public meeting on the U.S. war drive against Syria. The meeting was held on June 30, 2012. (Photo: Leona McElvene), a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
For Immediate Release

Media Advisory
Monday August 12, 2013

Pan-African Journal: Live Broadcast From Milwaukee, Wisconsin on the
War in Syria--Saturday August 10

To listen to this edition of the Pan-African Journal just click on the website below:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/fight-for-truth/2013/08/10/pan-african-journal

This week Pan-African Journal was broadcast live from the Milwaukee Public Library. The program was on the war in Syria and presentations were delivered by Abayomi Azikiwe and David Sole of the Michigan Emergency Committee Against War & Injustice (MECAWI).

The program was sponsored by the Wisconsin Bailout the People Movement. Other speakers address the gathering on the plight of war veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan and United States foreign policy towards Central America.

Abayomi Azikiwe addressed the international implications of imperialist war waged by the Pentagon and NATO in Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, Libya and Colombia. David Sole discussed the war in Syria and the role of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Pentagon in indirectly supplying arms to the rebels fighting the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad.

A summit between the U.S. president and the Russian president was cancelled by Barack Obama. There has been mention of another meeting between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Sergei Lavrov the foreign secretary of Russia.

The actual dialogue on the podcast begins about 20 minutes into the recording. Please excuse us for this problem.
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Egyptian Military Attacks Pro-Morsi Camps, 50 Reported Killed

Posted on 23:17 by Unknown
Photograph showing smoke coming from an encampment where pro-Morsi demonstrations have taken place. The camps were surrounded several have been killed. by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
Photograph showing smoke coming from an encampment where pro-Morsi demonstrations have taken place. The camps were surrounded several have been killed., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
To watch a video of the attacks on a Pro-Morsi camp in Egypt just click on the website below:
http://rt.com/on-air/egypt-protesters-police-disperse/

14 August 2013
Last updated at 01:52 ET
BBC World News

Pro-Morsi protest camps in Cairo being cleared

The interior ministry said security forces were taking "necessary measures" against the protesters

Egyptian security forces have begun clearing two protest camps in Cairo occupied by supporters of deposed President Mohammed Morsi.

Reports say 15 people have been killed as police cut off side streets and bursts of gunfire were heard.

Teargas is being fired and helicopters flew overhead as security forces moved on the camps in the east and west of the city.

The protesters want Mr Morsi, deposed by the military on 3 July, reinstated.

The interior ministry issued a statement saying security forces were taking "necessary measures" against the protest at the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque in the east of Cairo and the protest in Nahda Square in the east.

The statement said a safe exit would be provided for protesters and they would not be pursued, "except those who are wanted by the prosecution".

The interior ministry is keen "not to shed any Egyptian blood", the statement went on.

Muslim Brotherhood TV, which is allied to the ousted president, called for people to send cars to the sit-ins to take casualties to hospital.

Protesters have been camped outside the mosque, and at Nahda Square for the past six weeks.

More than 250 people have been killed in clashes since then.

On Tuesday, one person was killed in a confrontation between supporters and opponents of Mr Morsi in Giza after people marched from Nahda Square to a nearby complex of government buildings to protest against the appointment of several military officers as provincial governors.


Egypt police attack Muslim Brotherhood sit-ins in Cairo

Ahram Online, Wednesday 14 Aug 2013

Egyptian police start clearing out two Muslim Brotherhood camps in Cairo in the early hours of Wednesday

Egyptian police surrounded the two main Muslim Brotherhood sit-ins in Cairo’s Nahda and Rabaa El-Adaweya squares shortly after dawn on Wednesday as they moved to disperse thousands of Islamists in both venues.

Live television footage showed riot police firing tear gas at protesters at one of the entrances of Rabaa El-Adaweya mosque in northern Cairo, where tens of thousands have been camping for more than 40 days to demand the reinstatement of ousted President Mohamed Morsi.

Brotherhood spokesman Gehad El-Haddad accused police snipers of firing at Rabaa protesters from the rooftop of surrounding buildings.

At the Nahda camp, centred round a traffic circle and extending down a palm tree-lined boulevard next to the Cairo zoo in Giza, greater Cairo, police used loudspeakers to urge protesters to leave amid sounds of gunfire.

A security source told Ahram Online that tens were injured. He also confirmed that some protesters were killed but the number of victims was not immediately known.

Egypt's state television said two policemen were killed and six wounded during the attempt to clear out the two sit-ins.

More details to follow.

http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/78982.aspx


Egypt TV: Security forces clearing demonstrators

AP 1:38 a.m. EDT August 14, 2013

Egyptian television is reporting that security forces are clearing two tents of protesters.

Security officials say tear gas is being fired into two protest locations in Cairo.

CAIRO (AP) — Egyptian state TV says security forces are moving to clear two sit-in camps in support of the country's ousted President Mohammed Morsi.

Security officials say forces are firing tear gas into the larger of the two protest locations in Cairo, the encampment in the eastern Nasr City neighborhood.

At the smaller protest site outside the Cairo University campus is Giza, armored carriers were securing the area on Wednesday.

The pan-Arab Al-Arabiya TV is showing images of clouds of smoke from the tear gas, collapsed tents and tires burning at the Nasr City protest site. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

At least 250 people have died in clashes in Egypt following Morsi's July 3 ouster in a military coup.


13 August 2013 Last updated at 22:40 ET

One killed as Morsi supporters and opponents clash in Cairo

One person has been killed in clashes between supporters and opponents of Egypt's ousted President, Mohammed Morsi, in the capital, Cairo.

Birdshot was reportedly fired by both sides as people taking part in a pro-Morsi march were confronted by residents of a district of Giza.

After about 30 minutes of fighting, the Morsi supporters retreated to their nearby protest camp at Nahda Square.

Some 250 people have died since the military deposed Mr Morsi on 3 July.

The interim government has declared that international efforts to resolve the political crisis have failed, and rejects the demand of Mr Morsi's supporters that he be reinstated.

In recent days numbers have swelled at two mass sit-ins organised by the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist movement to which Mr Morsi belongs, at Nahda Square and outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque.

The authorities have held back from attempting to clear the protest camps.

'Terrorists'

On Tuesday, thousands of Morsi supporters marched from Nahda Square towards the interior ministry to protest against the appointment of 10 military officers as provincial governors, replacing those who had been appointed by the deposed president.

They were confronted by residents of an area that is home to many people who oppose Mr Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood, who taunted them by calling them "terrorists".

The demonstrators tried to get into a compound that contains several government buildings, but were forced back.

People on both sides threw stones and bottles at each other before security forces fired tear gas to disperse the Morsi supporters.

"There's no going forward with negotiations, the only way is back. Morsi must be reinstated," Karim Ahmed, a student who took part in the march, told the Reuters news agency.

There were fresh clashes later in the evening, during which the person was killed and at least 10 others were wounded.

Security officials said birdshot was fired from both sides, as residents smashed the front of a department store owned by Islamists.

Millions took to the streets to demand Mr Morsi's removal, but correspondents say his ousting appears to be deepening the divisions in Egyptian society.

The US said it had been concerned by the reports of fresh violence.

"We're watching the situation on the ground very closely," state department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters in Washington. "We encourage the interim government to allow people to protest - that's a key part of moving forward with the democratic process."

Are you in Cairo? Did you witness the clashes? Send us your comments.
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Former South African President Nelson Mandela Makes Dramatic Progress

Posted on 22:50 by Unknown
Former South African President Nelson Mandela and current President Jacob Zuma enjoy a laugh at Madiba's 91st birthday celebration on July 18, 2009. by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
Former South African President Nelson Mandela and current President Jacob Zuma enjoy a laugh at Madiba's 91st birthday celebration on July 18, 2009., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.

Nelson Mandela makes dramatic progress, his daughter says

Wed Aug 14, 2013 1:0AM GMT

The daughter of former South African President Nelson Mandela says her father has made "dramatic progress."

Zindzi Mandela said in an interview on Tuesday that the South African leader may be going home "anytime soon,” the Associated Press reported.

"I visited him yesterday and he was watching television with headphones… He gave us a huge smile and raised his hand ... He responds with his eyes and his hands," said Mandela’s daughter, adding that her father was gaining "energy and strength."

On June 8, Mandela was taken to hospital in Pretoria to be treated for a recurring lung infection.

The Nobel Peace laureate became South Africa’s first Black president in the country's first multi-racial elections in 1994. He is called Africa’s elder statesman and is revered across the world for his role in ending apartheid in his homeland.

Seen as South Africa’s moral compass, Mandela announced his retirement from public life in 2004, but continued to make a few public appearances.

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Zimbabwe Literary Magazine to Be Launched

Posted on 22:40 by Unknown
Memory Chirere will be the editor of a new literary magazine launched in Zimbabwe. Write Mag will be the name and many authors are contributing. by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
Memory Chirere will be the editor of a new literary magazine launched in Zimbabwe. Write Mag will be the name and many authors are contributing., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.

Literary magazine to be launched

August 14, 2013
Stanley Mushava
Arts Correspondent
Zimbabwe Herald

A new literary magazine will be launched as a lifeline for budding writers who are struggling to break into print through established mediums. The Write Mag will be edited by acclaimed Zimbabwean author, literary critic and academic Memory Chirere and published by Write Africa, an organisation bent on promoting writing and reading in all literary genres.

The magazine will be published quarterly, with a special emphasis on reviving interest in African literature.

“Budding writers will get more opportunities as there will be publication of new works, as well as profiling of upcoming authors, among other writers,” Write Africa programmes manager Lawrence Hoba told The Herald.

“With targeted distribution around the country, there is hope that people will revive their interest in reading, as well as writing.
The maiden edition will appear in print, with an online version to be available on the Write Africa website in due course.

“The magazine will also act as an information platform where artists and arts lovers will exchange information as well as see opportunities that are available from various platforms,” Hoba said.

The Write Mag has begun soliciting contributions from writers with the deadline for submissions slated for August 21.

Submissions will cover a varied array of categories including book reviews, author profiles and interviews, publishing information, study guides and information, features, literary works and intellectual property.

Traditionally, literary magazines have provided a launch pad for upcoming writers with legendary grand patriarchs of Zimbabwean such as Musaemura Zimunya, Charles Mungoshi, Chenjerai Hove and Dambudzo Marechera having found their voices in literary journals like Two Tone and Chirimo.

The folding up of early literary journals was followed by a long austere patch for writers with occasional shortlived efforts like New Voices and Tsotso.

Literary magazines have been the mainstay of African literature with reputed publications like Transition, Okike, New Coin and West Africa along with Francophone outlets like Presence Africaine have captured the infancy dispensation of the continent’s literature.

International literary magazines like Poetry have withstood the wear of centuries, and are still going strong after spawning such immortals as T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound.

It remains to be seen whether The Write Mag will knock the billing and increase the visibility of local literature.

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    • ▼  August (174)
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      • Egypt Wasat Party to Meet With ElBaradei Without C...
      • Foreign Talks With Egyptian Brotherhood Failed, Sa...
      • Libya's Southern Border Remains Out of the Control...
      • Misrata Rebels Rankle the Rest of Occupied Libya
      • Libya Suspect In U.S. Consulate Attack Denies Charge
      • Car Bomb Attack Kills 18 in Damascus Suburb
      • Congratulatory Messages Continue Pouring Into Zimb...
    • ►  July (326)
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