tag

Monday, March 16, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "opposition" (5 articles)

The Hungarian flag is seen as supporters of the opposition Tisza party attend a march during Hungary's National Day celebrations, which also commemorates the 1848 Hungarian Revolution against Habsburg rule, in Budapest. Reuters
International

Hungary's feuding parties stage big rallies

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban sought Sunday to mobilise voters for what he called a "historic" vote on April 12, while opposition supporters hoping to end the nationalist leader's 16-year rule turned out in droves at a rival rally.Huge crowds joined rival marches in Budapest Sunday, as both Orban and Magyar push allegations of foreign interference just four weeks before tightly fought elections.Tens of thousands of people attended both rallies, according to AFP journalists on site.Orban faces what could be his toughest bid for re-election after three years of stagnation, a surge in the cost of living and a pro-EU rival seen by many as a viable alternative.Both Orban's right-wing Fidesz and centre-right challenger Peter Magyar's Tisza used Hungary's March 15 national day for a show of force as the campaign enters a pivotal stage.Most surveys put Tisza ahead by a wide margin.Orban has cast the vote as a choice between war and peace, accusing his rivals of plotting to drag Hungary into the war raging in neighbouring Ukraine since Russia's February 2022 invasion, accusations which the opposition denies.Dismissing his rival's poll lead, Orban said Fidesz should aim to exceed its 2022 election landslide."We must win not like we did four years ago but better. We need not as many votes as four years ago but more," he said. "We must score a historic victory, because the next government will have a historic responsibility."Orban said his supporters' rally was the largest of its kind, filling a main square outside parliament.Opposition supporters thronged a majestic avenue stretching from near the Danube River to Heroes' Square in one of the largest rallies against Orban, exposing deep rifts in Hungary.A Fidesz supporter called Orban "Europe's best politician" while some attending Magyar's rally wondered if they had a future in Hungary if Orban gets re-elected."There is unrest all over the world, and here in our little country we want to preserve peace, calm and security. And Viktor Orban ensures that for us," said Sandorne Pista, 60, who came from the southern university town of Pecs.Orban has long been at loggerheads with the EU over a range of issues, including Ukraine.Defying Brussels, he has maintained cordial ties with Moscow, refuses to send weapons to Ukraine, and says Kyiv can never join the EU.While most polls have shown a Tisza lead, Fidesz points to surveys showing it on course to victory, though its opponents say these have mainly been conducted by institutes with financial or personal ties to the ruling party.Magyar has dismissed Orban's campaign as laughable "propaganda", but Tisza has trodden cautiously on Ukraine, saying that it opposes any fast-track EU accession for Kyiv and that it would put the issue to a binding referendum if it wins power.Magyar, speaking in a venue where Orban shot to fame in 1989 by calling for the withdrawal of Russian troops from the country, said Hungary's place was squarely in the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato)."Holding onto power at all costs. It is all that matters to him now," Magyar said of Orban. "Provoking with war, threatening with war, stoking war. This is his ultimate weapon against the Hungarian people."Some opposition supporters also thought the election would be a watershed moment."I think this country cannot bear four more years of Fidesz rule," Noemi Szemerszki said. 


People queue to vote in the municipal elections meant to pave the way for the east African country’s first direct national polls in more than half a century, in Hodan district of Mogadishu. – Reuters
International

Somalis vote in Mogadishu’s first local election in nearly 60 years

Somalians voted Thursday in the Mogadishu region’s first direct local election in nearly 60 years, despite security concerns and a boycott by opposition leaders. The election is seen as a test ahead of the 2026 presidential ballot, in a country struggling to emerge from decades of conflict and chaos, an Islamist insurgency and frequent natural disasters. There were long queues outside several polling stations early Thursday, but numbers had dwindled significantly by early afternoon, an AFP correspondent saw. “This is a great day,” said Guhad Ali, 37, showing the ink on his finger proving he had cast his ballot. Universal suffrage was abolished after Siad Barre took power in 1969. Since the fall of his authoritarian government in 1991, the east African country’s political system has revolved around a clan-based structure. The government said it had deployed more than 10,000 security personnel on the streets of Mogadishu, while the civil aviation authority said it was shutting the country’s main airport on voting day. Since 2006, authorities in the Horn of Africa nation have been fighting Al Shebaab fighters linked to Al Qaeda. Security has improved in the capital but just 60km away, fighting continues. According to the electoral body, there are more than 1,600 candidates contesting 390 local council seats in the southeastern region of Banadir, where Mogadishu is located.“This is my first time to vote. I am very happy and I came here early in the morning, walking with other mothers,” Addey Isak Abdi, 65, who was covered with a pink veil, told Reuters. President Mohamud has championed the reintroduction of direct elections, saying Thursday that they were “the future of the Somali people”. However, the ballot has been boycotted by the opposition Somali Future coalition, and a number of federal states have dismissed it as a bid by central government to concentrate power in Mogadishu. Former prime minister Hassan Ali Kheire, a member of Somali Future, said the coalition believed the government had orchestrated the election to extend the current president’s mandate. This he warned, “is not going to be accepted”. Although Barre abolished direct elections nearly six decades ago, they have been reintroduced in the northern region of Somaliland, which declared independence in 1991 but is not internationally recognised. The semi-autonomous northern state of Puntland also held direct local elections in 2023 but abandoned the system for local and regional polls in January 2025. The vote had been postponed three times this year before going ahead Thursday. 

Nobel peace prize laureate Maria Corina Machado laughs as she addresses a press conference at the Grand Hotel in Oslo, Norway, Thursday. (AFP)
International

Nobel winner Machado vows to bring award back to Venezuela

Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Corina Machado said she planned to take her award back to Venezuela, but declined to say Thursday when she would return after leaving in great secrecy to receive the honour.Venezuelan opposition leader Machado arrived in Oslo in the early hours of Thursday, failing to reach the Norwegian capital in time for the prize ceremony held hours earlier.The 58-year-old engineer had secretly left Venezuela for Oslo in defiance of a decade-long travel ban imposed by authorities and after spending more than a year in hiding."I came to receive the prize on behalf of the Venezuelan people and I will take it back to Venezuela at the correct moment," she told reporters at Norway's parliament, dressed in white, declining to say when this would be.When Machado won the Nobel Peace Prize in October, she dedicated it in part to US President Donald Trump, who has said he himself deserved the honour.She has aligned herself with hawks close to Trump who argue that Maduro has links to criminal gangs that pose a direct threat to US national security, despite doubts raised by the US intelligence community.Speaking at a press conference, Machado was asked if she would support a US invasion of her home country, and said her country had already been invaded by actors such as agents and drug cartels."This has turned Venezuela into the criminal hub of the Americas. And what sustained the regime is a very powerful and strongly funded repression system," she said alongside Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere."Where do those funds come from? Well, from drug trafficking, from the black market of oil, from arms trafficking, and from human trafficking. We need to cut those flows."Venezuela's Ministry of Information did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Machado's remarks.Maduro and his government have always denied any involvement in crime and have accused the US of seeking regime change out of a desire to control Venezuela's natural resources, especially its vast oil reserves.She said Maduro's rule would come to an end and there was a need to prepare a transition in her country."I'm going back to Venezuela regardless of when Maduro goes out. He's going out, but the moment will be determined by when I'm finished doing the things that I came out to do," she added, without going into further detail.Following her pre-dawn arrival, Machado greeted dozens of people from the balcony of Oslo's Grand Hotel, where Nobel laureates traditionally stay, waving and singing the Venezuelan national anthem along with the crowd.Later, Machado came down to the street and climbed over crowd barriers to hug and shake hands with people who had gathered in the cold for the chance to see her.Machado was barred from running in the presidential election last year, despite having won the opposition's primary by a landslide. She went into hiding in August that year after authorities expanded arrests of opposition figures following the disputed vote.Machado thanked the men and women who had risked their lives to help her leave Venezuela but would not be drawn on details of her departure other than to say US authorities had also provided support."One day I will be able to tell you because certainly I don't want to put them in risk right now," she said. "It was quite an experience."Late on Wednesday, Venezuelan Minister of the Interior Diosdado Cabello said on a weekly broadcast that Machado left the country "without drama" but provided no details. 

A member of Uganda's military police confronts a supporter of the National Unity Platform (NUP) presidential candidate and opposition leader Robert Kyagulanyi, with a baton during a presidential campaign rally in Kampala.
International

Ugandan opposition says over 300 supporters detained in presidential campaign

Security forces in Uganda have detained more than 300 supporters and officials from the party of opposition presidential candidate Bobi Wine since campaigning for a January election kicked off last month, his party's spokesperson said Tuesday.Pop star-turned-politician Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, is challenging 81-year-old President Yoweri Museveni for the second time after coming second in the last election in 2021.Now Africa's fourth longest-ruling leader, Museveni's government has changed the constitution twice to remove age and term limits, allowing him to remain in office since 1986.The arrests included scores detained this week in the capital Kampala, where Wine began campaigning on Monday, Joel Ssenyonyi, spokesperson for Wine's party National Unity Platform (NUP), told Reuters."Over 300 have been detained since the campaigns started. The regime is in panic, they are resorting to arrests to deter and instil fear in our people," Ssenyonyi said.The majority of those detained are ordinary supporters but also include campaign co-ordinators, Wine's aides and other officials, he said.Police spokesperson Rusoke Kituuma did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment.At a rally in Kampala's Kawempe area on Monday security forces used tear gas and water cannon to disperse a crowd of Wine's supporters, video aired by local broadcaster NTV showed.A video posted on Wine's X account late on Monday also showed police using pepper spray on his supporters. A man in plain clothes who approached from the side of the security personnel was seen beating supporters using a cane.At least 100 people were arrested on Monday and dozens more detained Tuesday at another rally on the outskirts of Kampala, Ssenyonyi said.Police said in a statement late on Monday that they had detained seven people after clashes with Wine's supporters, accusing them of throwing stones and injuring seven officers."Security personnel responded by using public order measures to control rowdy crowds," the statement said.Wine says Museveni won the last election through ballot-stuffing, intimidation of voters, bribery and other rigging tactics. Ruling party officials have dismissed the accusation.If he wins a new five-year term, Museveni will extend his rule in the East African country to nearly half a century.

Kenyan activists Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo are received after being freed following 38 days in disappearance and abduction in Uganda, at the Kisumu International airport in Kenya, Saturday.
Region

Kenyan activists released after Uganda abduction

Two missing Kenyan activists have been released after they vanished in Uganda where they were attending a political opposition event, legal and rights groups said Saturday.Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo went missing in October after travelling to the neighbouring east African nation to support Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine, who intends to run against long-time incumbent Yoweri Museveni in elections next year.In a brief joint statement on X, rights groups Amnesty Kenya, Vocal Africa and the Law Society of Kenya (LSK) said they "welcome the release of Nicholas Oyoo and Bob Njagi last night in Busia after 38 days of their enforced disappearance".The statement, posted by LSK head Faith Odhiambo, did not give any further details but said they were "facilitating their transfer to Nairobi".It expressed thanks to human rights groups, as well as to the foreign ministries and to active citizens who "tirelessly campaigned for this moment".Oyoo's older brother, Nobert Ochieng, 53, said his family was "elated" at the news."It was a big relief, because it's been a very tormenting and difficult month for us," he said.Kenya's foreign minister Musalia Mudavadi confirmed that the two were released late Friday after "sustained diplomatic engagement".Arrangements were underway to "ensure the two Kenyans reunite safely with their families", he added in a post on X.The pair went missing last month, with the Ugandan police denying either activist was in custody.Rights groups and the men's families in Kenya have agitated for their return, appealing to the Uganda court and urging the government to disclose their whereabouts.The head of Kenyan rights group Vocal Africa, Hussein Khalid, said last month that eyewitnesses had reported that the two men were taken by "masked, uniformed and armed men, suggesting strong evidence of state involvement in their disappearance."It is our suspicion that the two may be detained alongside other Ugandan political detainees in military facilities," he said.Dozens of government critics and opposition figures have been abducted in recent years across east Africa, and rights groups allege authorities are failing to protect their own citizens and even working together against activists.In May, Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi and Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire say they were abducted and tortured by security forces in Tanzania, and received little support from their own governments.