Selected developments in human rights and democratisation during 2017: Sub-Saharan Africa
Selected developments in human rights and democratisation during 2017: Sub-Saharan Africa
Date
2018-10
Authors
Nyarko, Michael Gyan
Makunya, Trésor
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus
Abstract
Abstract: This article reviews selected developments in human rights and
democratisation in sub-Saharan African during 2017. It discusses the
presidential elections held in Kenya, Liberia, Angola, Rwanda and Somalia/
Somaliland, noting in particular democratic gains in Liberia, Angola and
Somalia where elections resulted in changes of government, which brought in
new leadership. It further notes the democratic crises in Zimbabwe, where
President Mugabe was removed from power through military intervention, and
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where instability continued due to
efforts by incumbent President Kabila to prolong his term of office. It reports on
incidents of protests, recurrent internet shutdowns and interference with the
freedom of expression and right of access to information in various African
countries. The authors identify the cause of the rift between the African Union
and the International Criminal Court as the Al-Bashir warrant issued pursuant
to a Security Council Resolution, and recommend that the AU should focus on
petitioning the Security Council to withdraws its referral, rather than to persist
with its current onslaught against the ICC. In this context, they discuss the
decision of ICC Pre-Trial Chamber, which clarified that there is no conflict
between article 27(2) and article 98 of the ICC Statute in relation to state
parties to the Statute or states referred to the ICC by the Security Council. As far
as women’s rights are concerned, the article traces significant normative and
jurisprudential gains, in particular the adoption of the Joint General Comment
on ending child marriage, the Guidelines on combating gender-based violence
and its consequences, and the decision of the ECOWAS Court of Justice against
Nigeria denouncing gender-based discrimination as a violation of the right to
dignity and non-discrimination.
Key words: human rights; democracy; sub-Saharan Africa; elections; mass
atrocities; accountability; women’s rights
Description
Keywords
human rights,
democracy,
sub-Saharan region,
accountability,
elections,
women,
crimes against humanity,
Africa
Citation
MG Nyarko & T Makunya ‘Selected developments in human rights and democratisation during 2017: Sub- Saharan Africa’ (2018) 2 Global Campus Human Rights Journal 147-173 http://dx.doi.org/10.25330/1451
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