Anonymous ID: 35921c May 11, 2019, 6:40 p.m. No.6475968   🗄️.is 🔗kun

New research from think tank Eunomix Business & Economics found that South Africa endured one of the worst declines over the past 12 years for a country not at war.

The country’s performance on a range of social, economic, and governance measures deteriorated more than any other nation not involved in an international or civil conflict, it said.

 

An index of security, governance, prosperity, and welfare indicators showed South Africa slumped to 88th out of 178 nations last year from 31st in 2006.

The Johannesburg-based advisory company said the decline is likely to continue as South Africa is grappling with the consequences of nine years of worsening corruption and policy paralysis under former President Jacob Zuma.

 

The fragility of the economy may also limit the tenure of his successor, Cyril Ramaphosa, who faces his first national election May 8, Eunomix said.

 

“There is the strongest likelihood of him being a one-term president,” the head of Eunomix, Claude Baissac, was quoted as saying by Bloomberg. “He is starting with a very weak economy, the weakest of any president since Mandela. He is also starting with a fairly weak hand from a political standpoint.”

 

Only conflict-torn countries such as Mali, Ukraine, and Venezuela have had a worse time in the past decade than South Africa, said Eunomix.

 

According to the think tank, the major reason of the nation’s massive decline is the unsustainable structure of South Africa’s economy where economic power is largely held by an elite that wields little political influence.

 

“Economic policy serves narrow interests, thus generating insufficient and unfairly allocated growth. Populism, rather than developmentalism, is an easy temptation, with the economy a tug-of-war between mutually distrustful groups.”

 

Eunomix also said that while Ramaphosa spent his first 14 months in power pledging a crackdown on corruption, an end to policy uncertainty and a drive to reform loss-making state-owned companies, his political weakness will hinder progress.

 

“South Africa’s state performance peaked in 2007, that year its economy and governance were at their best. Since then the state has experienced continuous decline in all core indicators of performance.”

 

“The developmental state project has failed. South Africa is now a fragile state, expected to continue to weaken,” Eunomix said.https://www.rt.com/business/456816-south-africa-worst-decline/

 

this with embedded demon governance, we will see this here in CONUS in demon led urban centers..

Anonymous ID: 35921c May 11, 2019, 7:05 p.m. No.6476220   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6323 >>6470 >>6541

enemy paper says,

 

ASİA

Protesters lock down parliament in Afghanistan

Wolesi Jirga (lower house) candidates from Kabul are angry at prolonged delay in announcement of final poll results

 

News Service

16:33 May 11, 2019

Candidates for the Afghan parliament in capital Kabul on Saturday locked down the house in protest against prolonged delay in announcement of final results for the polls held in October last year.

 

Scores of angry Wolesi Jirga (lower house of the parliament) candidates and their charged supporters staged a demonstration in front of the parliament building on what was supposed to be the maiden session of the newly elected legislature.

 

Following the parliamentary elections marred by allegations of irregularities, rigging and technical glitches, final results for almost all constituencies have been announced except for the Kabul province that has significant 33 seats in the Wolesi Jirga of 249.

 

Last month, while inaugurating the newly-elected parliament, President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani stressed the lawmakers should robustly perform its three-tier task of monitoring the activities of the government, legislation and representation of the public.

 

In its special report titled “2018 Elections Violence”, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) noted last year the Taliban launched deliberate campaign of violence and intimidation to disrupt elections.

 

The report verified a total of 435 civilian casualties (56 deaths and 379 injured) during the process.

 

According to the country’s Independent Election Commission (IEC), at least 8.8 million people had obtained voter cards to cast votes for 2,500 candidates who were running for the lower house of the parliament.

 

IEC is set to announce results for Kabul in the coming weeks.

Anonymous ID: 35921c May 11, 2019, 7:11 p.m. No.6476283   🗄️.is 🔗kun

arrest verb

ar·​rest | \ ə-ˈrest \

arrested; arresting; arrests

Definition of arrest (Entry 1 of 2)

transitive verb

 

1 : SEIZE, CAPTURE

specifically : to take or keep in custody by authority of law

Police arrested the suspect.

2a : to bring to a stop

Sickness arrested his activities.

b : CHECK, SLOW

Its growth was arrested.

c : to make inactive

an arrested tumor

3 : to catch suddenly and engagingly

arrest attention

arrest noun

Definition of arrest (Entry 2 of 2)

1 : the taking or detaining in custody by authority of law

The investigation led to his arrest.

2a : the act of stopping

b : the condition of being stopped or inactive

— compare CARDIAC ARREST

under arrest

: in legal custody

The suspect was placed under arrest.

Other Words from arrest

Synonyms & Antonyms

More Example Sentences

Learn More about arrest

Other Words from arrest

Verb

 

arrester or less commonly arrestor \ -​ˈres-​tər \ noun

arrestment \ -​ˈres(t)-​mənt \ noun

Synonyms & Antonyms for arrest

Synonyms: Verb

 

apprehend, bust [slang], collar, nab, nail, nick [British slang], pick up, pinch, pull in, restrain, run in, seize

Synonyms: Noun

 

apprehension, arrestment, bust [slang], collar, pinch

Anonymous ID: 35921c May 11, 2019, 7:18 p.m. No.6476352   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Lawmakers this spring passed legislation to keep information secret from the public, even though open meetings and public records have been a cornerstone of Florida’s “government-in-the-sunshine” laws for decades.

 

The bills this legislative session created 11 new exemptions in open government laws and reenacted 14 exemptions already on the books. The new bills would add to more than 1,110 exemptions already in the law.

 

That’s a total of 25 bills designed to restrict the public’s “constitutional right to access,’’ says Barbara Petersen, president of the nonprofit First Amendment Foundation in the state capital.

 

And those 25 bills make up about 14 percent of the major bills passed by the Legislature this spring. “It’s never been this high,” says Petersen, whose foundation was tracking legislation throughout the session.

 

The exemptions this legislative session relate to everything from home addresses and property descriptions to certain criminal records and voter information, as well as public utility records and toll collections. Gov. Ron DeSantis must approve or veto the bills, and he’s already signed some of them, according to the governor’s office.

 

“Not one good bill passed,” said Petersen, referring to comprehensive reforms that would bolster transparency in government.

 

Instead, lawmakers have chipped away at the public’s right to know about their elected officials, public meetings and information that holds government accountable and staves off corruption.

 

Petersen says there were some bright spots during the session:

 

Lawmakers didn’t pass a bill that would exempt the names of certain foster parents. The foundation had been opposed to widespread exempting of names of foster parents who are licensed and paid by the state to take care of vulnerable foster children.

 

Lawmakers also didn’t pass legislation to exempt the names of applicants for presidents or provosts at state universities and colleges – even though Florida has long hired such top academic officials without hiding their names.

 

Opponents of the exemptions say that the names of applicants, as well as their credentials, qualifications and accomplishments, is pertinent public information in academic job searches.