Coalition leaders turn out to vote at respective polling stations

In these Presidential, Legislative and Municipal elections, the Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE) is going before the electorate with the support of no less than 14 opposition parties, which have joined forces with the PDGE, and to support our candidate Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.

These parties are Popular Union (UP); Liberal Democratic Convention (CLD); Social Democrat Party of Equatorial Guinea (PSDGE); Social Democratic Union (UDS); Progressive Democratic Alliance (ADP); Popular and Social Convergence (CSDP); Equatorial Guinea Popular Action (APGE) ; Equatorial Guinea Socialist Party (PSGE); National Democratic Union (UDENA); Liberal Party (PL); Centre Right Union (UCD); Equatorial Guinea National Congress (CNGE); National Union for Democracy (PUNDGE); and Equatorial Guinea National Democratic Party. We have worked on the Election Campaign, and its leaders have accompanied candidate Obiang Nguema Mbasogo in all his rallies throughout the country.

As expected, Election Day also saw Coalition leaders exercising their right to vote in their various neighbourhoods and areas. Thus, for example, we saw Francisco Mba Olo Bahamonde, head of the Progressive Democratic Alliance and Tomas Mba Monabang, from the National Union for Democracy (PUNDGE). All of them, alongside all other Equatoguineans, voted on a day marked, once again, by a lack of incidents and complete normality.

Source: Official Web Page of the Governmen

Massive voter turnout in Ebibeyin district

More than 25,000 voters on the electoral roll for the Presidential, Legislative and Municipal elections went to the polls today.

At the 118 polling stations covering the nine geopolitical zones in Ebibeyin district, voting took place in an atmosphere of complete transparency.

Throughout the district, voting was monitored by international observers from the African Union. Envoys from the international community travelled from polling station to polling station in order to gather full details on the voting process.

Voters exercised their right to vote in a democratic and transparent manner. Each one selected the option he or she had chosen, some in the presence of voting officers at the polling station, others in the booths set up to exercise the right to vote in private.

Source: Official Web Page of the Government

South Africa welcomes COP27 outcomes

PRETORIA, The South African government on Saturday welcomed the draft outcomes text to the 27th Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27).

The COP27 was held in Egypt during Nov 6-18. The South African government said it captures many issues which were discussed including the urgency of climate change.

“The draft correctly frames the climate crisis and its solutions in terms of the sustainable development goals and just transitions, leaving no one left behind, and the need for broader financial sector reform to achieve these,” said Peter Mbelengwa, spokesperson of the Department of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries.

Mbelengwa said South Africa expects the multilateral development banks and international financial institutions to take decisive action to scale-up climate finance in 2023 and make their institutional arrangements fit for the purpose.

South Africa believes further urgent action is required to meet developed countries’ obligations, Mbelengwa said.

Mbelengwa said the country welcomed the urgent new financing arrangements and a mechanism to address damage caused by climate change for developing countries. — NNN-XINHUA

Source: Nam News Network

Equatorial Guinea Votes with Veteran Ruler Set for Sixth Term

Equatorial Guinea went to the polls on Sunday, with President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo all-but certain of winning a record sixth term in the West African country with next to no opposition.

Obiang, aged 80, has been in power for more than 43 years — the longest tenure of any living head of state today except for monarchs.

A few dozen voters had already queued up when the doors swung open at a polling station set up in a school in Malabo’s Semu district early in the morning.

“Voting is going well. Everything is normal. All citizens have to vote,” fridge repair man Norberto Ondo told AFP.

“I expect this election to bring us prosperity,” the 53-year-old added after dropping his ballot in a box at the Nuestra Senora de Bisila school.

Obiang’s re-election seems virtually assured in one of the most authoritarian and enclosed states in the world.

Running against him is Andres Esono Ondo, 61, from the nation’s only tolerated opposition party.

The secretary-general of the Convergence for Social Democracy (CPDS) is a candidate for the first time and the sole representative of the muzzled opposition.

Ondo has said he fears “fraud” during voting to elect the president, senators and members of parliament.

The government has levelled its own accusations against the politician, in 2019 accusing him of planning “a coup in Equatorial Guinea with foreign funding.”

The third candidate is Buenaventura Monsey Asumu of the Social Democratic Coalition Party (PCSD), a historic ally of Obiang’s ruling party.

The ex-minister is running for the fourth time but has never done well in previous elections. The opposition have called him a “dummy candidate” without a chance.

‘Foiled plot’

As in every election year, security forces have stepped up arrests. State media has justified the crackdown as a bid to counter a “foiled plot” by the opposition to carry out attacks on embassies, petrol stations and the homes of ministers.

In September, after a week-long siege, security forces stormed the home of one of Obiang’s main opponents, Gabriel Nse Obiang Obono.

His house had also served as an office for his banned Citizens for Innovation (CI) party.

The assault left five dead — four activists and a policeman, according to the government.

Dozens were injured and more than 150 people were arrested, including Obono.

Leading rights activist Joaquin Elo Ayeto told AFP the incident had “discredited” the electoral process.

“The ruling party needs an ‘opposition’ to hold sham elections,” he said.

Allegations of fraud have plagued past polls.

In 2016, Obiang was re-elected with 93.7 percent of the vote.

His PDGE won 99 of the 100 seats in the lower house and all 70 seats in the senate.

In 2009, the president scored more than 95 percent of the vote.

Campaigning this year saw pictures of Obiang and his Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE), the country’s only legal political movement until 1991, splashed all over Malabo.

Members of the opposition, most of whom are in exile, hold no hope for a breakthrough at the ballot box.

“Obiang’s elections have never been free or democratic but marked by widespread and systematic… fraud,” they said in a joint statement.

Despite all being obliged to vote, they urged “all citizens of Equatorial Guinea not to take part in any phase of the electoral process.”

The discovery of off-shore oil turned Equatorial Guinea into Africa’s third richest country, in terms of per-capita income, but the wealth is very unequally distributed.

Four-fifths of the population of 1.4 million live below the poverty threshold according to World Bank figures for 2006, the latest available.

The country has a long-established reputation internationally for graft, ranking 172 out of 180 nations on Transparency International’s 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index.

Source: Voice of America

British top diplomat applauds partnership with Bahrain, ME

MANAMA, Nov. 19 (BNA): United Kingdom Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs James Cleverly, reaffirmed his country’s long-term partnership with the Kingdom of Bahrain and other countries across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA).

In his remarks today at the Manama Dialogue’s first plenary session, “The Changing Geopolitics of energy”, he underlined the depth of the UK’s ties in the region in energy, trade, and security sectors.

Cleverly spoke about the transformation seen by Bahrain, as witnessed by British diplomats over the decades.

“When Britain opened our Embassy here in Bahrain, our diplomats could look out over the waters of the Gulf and watch dhows carrying pearl divers to the northern oyster beds,” he said.

“Yet today our Embassy is almost half a mile from the coast, not because it has moved, but because Bahrain has moved the sea by reclaiming land that once lay beneath the waves.”

He added: “All around us, the Arabian Peninsula has experienced one of the swiftest transformations in history, wrought by the power of hydrocarbons, allowing spectacular cities to rise from empty desert and entire countries to achieve prosperity within a single lifetime.”

He added: “The lesson I draw is that when our friends in the Gulf and the across the region decide to embrace a change, they can reinvent themselves with astonishing speed”.

Cleverly said that another transformation is beginning and that he believed that it will be equally momentous and filled with opportunity – as this region embarks on green energy by harnessing the power of sunlight, wind, and civil nuclear energy.

“As we embark on this journey, I want to assure the region that Britain will remain a steadfast friend and partner, committed to our relationships in the MENA for the long term, building on centuries of tradition,” he said.

Cleverly said: “We know that your security is our security, and any crisis here would inevitably have global repercussions”, adding that the staggering £44 billion annual trade between the UK and the GCC speaks volume of importance and the necessity to maintain this partnership with the region.

“We know that your prosperity is our prosperity, symbolised by the ever-greater flow of trade between us, including over.”

Cleverly said his country welcomed regional initiatives to reinforce stability, including the historic Abraham Accords, which the UK committed to support.

“Britain is convinced that we will only be able to overcome mutual threats and seize opportunities by cooperating ever more closely in all areas of common interest. That is why we are negotiating a free trade agreement (FTA) with the GCC, our fourth biggest export market after the EU, the US and China.”

He said: “That is why we are providing development finance through British International Investment – including $500 million in Egypt and $250 million in Morocco so far.”

“Also, we are deepening our security partnerships with Jordan and Oman and strengthening our cooperation with regional financial centres to clamp on the money laundering by using anti-money laundering joint initiatives.”

Cleverly expressed the UK’s interest in sharing the transition to green energy for the region to ensure that everyone benefits from renewable technologies that are not only practical and affordable, but also ensure a complete energy security.

“I commend Saudi Arabia and the UAE for their plans to invest $350 billion in green energy, and Bahrain for its ambition to double its deployment of renewables by 2035. I draw inspiration from the Green Middle East Initiative, which will help countries to achieve their nationally determined contributions to reduce carbon footprint.”

Cleverly stressed the importance of security for the success of shared ambitions.

“In January I stood in the garden of the British Ambassador’s Residence in Abu Dhabi watching explosions in the sky as incoming Houthi rockets intercepted and shot down overhead – and I can assure you that I gave thanks for the accuracy and efficiency of the UAE’s missile defences.”

He added: “Those trails of light, darting across the sky above me, were visible evidence of how Iranian-supplied weapons threaten the entire region.”

Today, he said, Iran’s nuclear programme is more advanced than ever, and the regime has resorted to selling Russia the armed drones that are killing civilians in Ukraine.

“Britain is determined to collaborate with our friends to counter the Iranian threat, interdict the smuggling of conventional arms, and prevent the regime from acquiring a nuclear weapons capability.

Twice this year, he said, a Royal Navy frigate operating in international waters South of Iran intercepted speedboats laden with surface-to-air missiles and engines for cruise missiles.

“Had those engines reached their destination, they could have powered the type of cruise missile that bombarded Abu Dhabi on 17th January, killing three civilians – and the toll would have been higher without the defences that I saw in action few weeks later,” said Cleverly.

“That is why British forces are striving alongside their counterparts in this region to keep us safe and defend the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity which protect every nation.

He said: “Just as those principles remain constant, so I fervently belief that Britain’s friendships across the Middle East and North Africa will deepen and endure, as we uphold peace and security together, and this region masters its second transformation, allowing the new world of green energy to succeed the old.”

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Last-Minute Objections Threaten Historic UN Climate Deal

A last-minute fight over emissions cutting and the overall climate change goal is delaying a potentially historic deal that would create a fund for compensating poor nations that are victims of extreme weather worsened by rich countries’ carbon pollution.

“We are extremely on overtime. There were some good spirits earlier today. I think more people are more frustrated about the lack of progress,” Norwegian climate change minister Espen Barth Eide told The Associated Press. He said it came down to getting tougher on fossil fuel emissions and retaining the goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times as was agreed in last year’s climate summit in Glasgow.

“Some of us are trying to say that we actually have to keep global warming under 1.5 degrees and that requires some action. We have to reduce our use of fossil fuels, for instance,” Eide said. “But there’s a very strong fossil fuel lobby … trying to block any language that we produce. So that’s quite clear.”

Several cabinet ministers from across the globe told the AP earlier Saturday that agreement was reached on a fund for what negotiators call loss and damage. It would be a big win for poorer nations that have long called for cash — sometimes viewed as reparations — because they are often the victims of climate disasters despite having contributed little to the pollution that heats up the globe.

However, the other issues are seemingly delaying any action. A meeting to approve an overall agreement has been pushed back more than two-and-a-half hours with little sign of diplomats getting together for a formal plenary to approve something. Eide said he had no idea when that would be.

Concerns about emissions proposals

The loss and damage deal was a high point earlier in the day.

“This is how a 30-year-old journey of ours has finally, we hope, found fruition today,” said Pakistan Climate Minister Sherry Rehman, who often took the lead for the world’s poorest nations. One-third of her nation was submerged this summer by a devastating flood and she and other officials used the motto: “What went on in Pakistan will not stay in Pakistan.”

The United States, which in the past has been reluctant to even talk about the issue of loss and damage, “is working to sign on,” said an official close to negotiations.

If an agreement is accepted, it still needs to be approved unanimously late into Saturday evening. But other parts of a deal, outlined in a package of proposals put out earlier in the day by the Egyptian chairs of the talks, are still being hammered out as negotiators head into what they hope is their final session.

There was strong concern among both developed and developing countries about proposals on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, known as mitigation. Officials said the language put forward by Egypt backtracked on some of the commitments made in Glasgow aimed at keeping alive the target of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times. The world has already warmed 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit) since the mid 19th century.

Some of the Egyptian language on mitigation seemingly reverted to the 2015 Paris agreement, which was before scientists knew how crucial the 1.5-degree Celsius threshold was and heavily mentioned a weaker 2-degree Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) goal, which is why scientists and Europeans are afraid of backtracking, said climate scientist Maarten van Aalst of the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Center.

Ireland’s Minister for the Environment Eamon Ryan said: “We need to get a deal on 1.5 degrees. We need strong wording on mitigation and that’s what we’re going to push.”

‘Hope to the vulnerable’

Still, the attention centered around the compensation fund, which has also been called a justice issue.

“There is an agreement on loss and damage,” Maldives Environment Minister Aminath Shauna told the AP early Saturday afternoon after a meeting with other delegations. “That means for countries like ours we will have the mosaic of solutions that we have been advocating for.”

New Zealand Climate Minister James Shaw said both the poor countries that would get the money and the rich ones that would give it are on board with the proposed deal.

It’s a reflection of what can be done when the poorest nations remain unified, said Alex Scott, a climate diplomacy expert at the think tank E3G.

“I think this is huge to have governments coming together to actually work out at least the first step of … how to deal with the issue of loss and damage,” Scott said. But like all climate financials, it is one thing to create a fund, it’s another to get money flowing in and out, she said. The developed world still has not kept its 2009 pledge to spend $100 billion a year on other climate aid — designed to help poor nations develop green energy and adapt to future warming.

“The draft decision on loss and damage finance offers hope to the vulnerable people that they will get help to recover from climate disasters and rebuild their lives,” said Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at Climate Action Network International.

The Chinese lead negotiator would not comment on a possible deal. European negotiators said they were ready to back the deal but declined to say so publicly until the entire package was approved.

The Egyptian presidency, which had been under criticism by all sides, proposed a new loss and damage deal Saturday afternoon and within a couple hours an agreement was struck but Norway’s climate and environment minister Espen Barth Eide said it was not so much the Egyptians but countries working together.

According to the latest draft, the fund would initially draw on contributions from developed countries and other private and public sources such as international financial institutions. While major emerging economies such as China would not initially be required to contribute, that option remains on the table and will be negotiated over the coming years. This is a key demand by the European Union and the United States, who argue that China and other large polluters currently classified as developing countries have the financial clout and responsibility to pay their way.

The planned fund would be largely aimed at the most vulnerable nations, though there would be room for middle-income countries that are severely battered by climate disasters to get aid.

An overarching decision that sums up the outcomes of the climate talks doesn’t include India’s call to phase down oil and natural gas, in addition to last year’s agreement to wean the world from “unabated” coal.

Several rich and developing nations called Saturday for a last-minute push to step up emissions cuts, warning that the outcome barely builds on what was agreed in Glasgow last year.

It also doesn’t require developing countries such as China and India to submit any new targets before 2030. Experts say these are needed to achieve the more ambitious 1.5 degrees Celsius goal that would prevent some of the more extreme effects of climate change.

Youth say ‘keep fighting’

Throughout the climate summit, the American, Chinese, Indian and Saudi Arabian delegations have kept a low public profile, while European, African, Pakistan and small island nations have been more vocal.

Many of the more than 40,000 attendees have left town, and workers started packing up the vast pavilions in the sprawling conference zone.

At the youth pavilion, a gathering spot for young activists, a pile of handwritten postcards from children to negotiators was left on a table.

“Dear COP27 negotiators,” read one card. “Keep fighting for a good planet.”

Source: Voice of America

Prime Minister receives delegation of AU observers

On Friday, at the Presidency of the Government of Malabo II, the Prime Minister of the Government, Charged with Administrative Coordination, Francisco Pascual Obama Asue, received a delegation of International Observers sent by the African Union (AU) to witness first hand the process of the Presidential, Legislative and Municipal elections on November 20th.

The AU delegation is in our country on an election observation mission, led by the former president of Guinea Bissau, H. E. José Mario Vaz, who said,

“We have come to inform the Prime Minister that the African Union delegation is in Malabo to accompany them during the elections that will take place on 20th November, that is, this Sunday.

We have come to declare to Equatoguinean authorities that we are here as observers. We would also like to see an atmosphere of peace, serenity and calm during the process, both before and after the elections. We really want everything to go well and for Equatorial Guinea to continue to enjoy the peace it has come to know”.

Accompanied by the head of Foreign Affairs, Simeón Oyono Esono Angue, the Head of Administrative Coordination gave the delegation a brief account of the history of the national socio-political and economic development implemented by the President of the Republic since he came to power.

Source: Official Web Page of the Government

Speech by the PDGE General Secretary

The PDGE Deputy National Campaign Director, Jeronimo Osa Osa Ecoro, in his speech, mentioned recognition of the PDGE candidate for his work in leading the country.

In his speech he said that the PDGE was convinced that the path taken must continue without interruption.

Osa Osa Ecoro summarised the PDGE’s electoral programme as positive on balance, due to the work done and led by the President in power H. E. Obiang Nguema Mbasogo in an climate of peace and harmony.

The PDGE is the element that has been able to adopt political plans and programmes and has also promoted equality for all and ensured a prosperous future for the next generation.

Acceptance of the PDGE candidate was due to his leadership and his political and economic plans, which have placed Equatorial Guinea within the international context.

The Deputy National Director of the PDGE Campaign also recalled the sad memory of the past in which the country was held hostage by dictatorial oppression. During more than three decades at the helm of the country, H. E. Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has provided the country with infrastructure, health centres, promoted gender equality and children’s rights, and the policies designed by the PDGE have guaranteed peace throughout the country, among other actions including a development programme in the urban sector.

He concluded by appealing to the militancy that a vote for the PDGE candidate was a vote for a familiar route, a vote for peace and political and social stability in the country.

Source: Official Web Page of the Government