It is a "long and winding road" to stability and peace in Lesotho. |
I am writing under correction.
Lesotho is only a few hours away. But the news I get through
media (both old and new) are confusing. Has there been a military coup or not?
I don’t know.
Al Jazeera writes about the conflict between Lesotho's
deputy prime minister and leader of the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD)
Mothetjoa Metsing and the Prime Minister, Thomas Thabane, leader of the All
Basotho Congress (ABC). Together with a third party – the Basotho National
Party (BNP) - they form a coalition.
The problem, according to Al Jazeera, is (and this I think really
happened some months ago):
Thabane himself announced a nine-month suspension of parliament, effectively escaping a no-confidence vote that would have seen him ousted.
The political crisis that came out of this culminated on
Saturday, when soldiers surrounded police headquarters and also shut down radio
stations for hours. But was this a coup d'état? Al Jazeera writes about the
events on Saturday:
… what may, or may not, have been a coup …
Nevertheless, the Prime Minister fled to South Africa. And
on Sunday and Monday the SADC called the parties to talks. BBC reports that the
SADC
… have rejected calls by Lesotho's exiled Prime Minister Thomas Thabane for the immediate deployment of troops to help restore order in his country …
This is indeed the right decision. It seems as if the
solution rather lies in reopening the parliament, as an analyst says to Al
Jazeera:
You just need to reopen parliament. Once it opens, the
normal constitutional procedures can be followed to change the government.
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