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The 2022 Kenyan elections

With their upcom­ing pres­i­den­tial elec­tions lat­er this sum­mer, Kenyans con­tin­ue their col­lec­tive effort at strength­en­ing and deep­en­ing their democ­ra­cy. But the moment is also fraught. The August 9 vote is expect­ed to be the most tight­ly con­test­ed in Kenya’s recent his­to­ry, with polit­i­cal ten­sions ris­ing since Kenyan Pres­i­dent Uhu­ru Keny­at­ta shift­ed his sup­port from Deputy…

Window of opportunity closing for South Sudan, on road to lasting peace

With eight months remain­ing, the win­dow of oppor­tu­ni­ty is clos­ing for South Sudan to meet crit­i­cal bench­marks required to com­plete its tran­si­tion away from long-run­n­ing civ­il con­flict, the Spe­cial Rep­re­sen­ta­tive for the coun­try told the Secu­ri­ty Coun­cil on Mon­day, press­ing par­ties to the Novem­ber 2018 peace deal, to imple­ment their com­mit­ments in let­ter and spirit.

Philadelphia celebrates Juneteenth with block party, parade, film festival, and more — WHYY

It was a fes­tive Sun­day in Philadel­phia, as folks cel­e­brat­ed June­teenth in sev­er­al parts of the city.  In Cen­ter City, the African Amer­i­can Muse­um in Philadel­phia, or AAMP, host­ed a June­teenth block par­ty where hun­dreds of peo­ple jammed to hip hop and dance clas­sics like “The Wob­ble” and Jay‑Z’s “I Just Wan­na Love You.”  The block party…

Juneteenth Is a Federal Holiday, but in Most States It’s Still Not a Day Off

Last June, Pres­i­dent Biden made June­teenth a fed­er­al hol­i­day, pro­claim­ing it as a day for all Amer­i­cans to com­mem­o­rate the end of slav­ery. One year lat­er, only 18 states have passed leg­is­la­tion that would pro­vide fund­ing to let state employ­ees observe the day as a paid state hol­i­day, accord­ing to the Con­gres­sion­al Research Ser­vice. Oppo­nents of…

South Africa Hails COVID-19 Vaccine Patent Waiver

Johan­nes­burg, South Africa — 
South Africa on Sat­ur­day hailed a WTO agree­ment to allow devel­op­ing coun­tries to start pro­duc­ing their own COVID vac­cines fol­low­ing a near two-year battle.
“We secured an agree­ment. It was a strong­ly fought agree­ment,” said Min­is­ter of Trade Ebrahim Patel, who along with India and NGOs had been call­ing for an intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty rights waiv­er on COVID-relat­ed treatments.
The World Trade Orga­ni­za­tion (WTO) announced a relax­ation of intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty restric­tions on vac­cines Wednes­day in a move aimed at a pro­vid­ing more equi­table access to shots but which many observers crit­i­cized for being lim­it­ed in time and scope.
After months of wran­gling, and talks going down to the wire this week to win over some major play­ers in phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal man­u­fac­tur­ing to a com­pro­mise, the Unit­ed States and Chi­na final­ly clinched the deal by agree­ing on which coun­tries would ben­e­fit from the waiver.
Both South Africa and India had been vocal in their demands for such a move which they said was need­ed to stop “vac­cine apartheid.”
Accord­ing to the WTO, 60% of the world’s pop­u­la­tion has received two dos­es of the COVID vac­cine but there are glar­ing exam­ples of inequity with only 17% hav­ing been inoc­u­lat­ed in Libya, with the fig­ure at 8% in Nige­ria and less than 5% in Cameroon.
In a state­ment, the South African gov­ern­ment salut­ed a waiv­er designed to pro­vide local vac­cine man­u­fac­tur­ers with the right to pro­duce either vac­cines or ingre­di­ents or ele­ments that are under patents, with­out the author­i­ty of the patent hold­er, hail­ing this as a notable step for­ward — even if lim­it­ed to five years.
Pre­to­ria added that “to scale up the pro­duc­tion on the con­ti­nent, fur­ther part­ner­ships will be need­ed includ­ing access to know-how and technologies.”
The accord for the time being excludes, how­ev­er, tests and cost­ly ther­a­peu­tic treat­ments against COVID on which the WTO is to pro­nounce in the com­ing six months.
Com­mer­cial­iza­tion in Africa will be a chal­lenge, however.
Dur­ban-based South African phar­ma giant Aspen, which clinched a deal last Novem­ber with U.S.-based John­son & John­son to man­u­fac­ture a “made in Africa for Africa” Aspen-brand­ed COVID vac­cine Aspen­o­vax, said last month it could pull the plug owing to lack of orders.
“Our focus now is to ensure we address demand by per­suad­ing glob­al pro­cur­ers for vac­cines to source from African pro­duc­ers,” said Patel.
South Africa has three sites under the aegis of Aspen in Dur­ban, Afrigen in Cape Town and Bio­vac, also in Cape Town, which makes the Pfiz­er-BioN­Tech vaccine.
Afrigen’s biotech con­sor­tium makes the mes­sen­ger RNA shot based on the Mod­er­na for­mu­la, the first to be made based on a broad­ly used vac­cine that does not require the devel­op­er’s assis­tance and approval.

U.S. Restraint Has Created an Unstable and Dangerous World

The Biden admin­is­tra­tion failed to deter Rus­sia from its sec­ond inva­sion of Ukraine. Like his pre­de­ces­sors in the White House, U.S. Pres­i­dent Joe Biden went to great lengths to pla­cate and reas­sure Russ­ian Pres­i­dent Vladimir Putin in return for sta­ble rela­tions. Biden defied Con­gress when he refused to sanc­tion the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, unilaterally…

Julian Assange to be extradited to the U.S. on espionage charges

This sto­ry, plus Meta, Google, and Twit­ter promise to take a tougher line against dis­in­for­ma­tion, Karoli­na Waclaw­iak named new edi­­tor-in-chief of Buz­zfeed News and more, all in today’s media head­lines. The Center’s dai­ly brief­ing of media news will be on hia­tus Mon­day, June 20 in obser­vance of the hol­i­day. The brief­ing will be updat­ed again…

Biden’s Defense Chief Puts Alliances at Center Stage of U.S. Defense

Wel­come back to For­eign Pol­i­cy’s SitRep! Jack and Rob­bie here, chuck­ling at Ukrain­ian Pres­i­dent Volodymyr Zelenksy’s vis­i­ble dis­com­fort with French Pres­i­dent Emmanuel Macron’s PDA dur­ing his vis­it to Kyiv, Ukraine’s cap­i­tal, today. Alright, back to work. Here’s what’s on tap for the day: U.S. Defense Sec­re­tary Lloyd Austin tries to walk and chew gum between deterring…

Vaccination rates for the vulnerable are soaring in Africa, the W.H.O. says.

Most coun­tries in Africa have made sig­nif­i­cant gains in vac­ci­nat­ing two vul­ner­a­ble groups against Covid-19, but new infec­tions are creep­ing upward as sum­mer trav­el begins and some coun­tries ease pub­lic health mea­sures, the World Health Orga­ni­za­tion said on Thurs­day. About half of pub­lic health work­ers and peo­ple over 60 have been ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed in 31…