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SADC suspends all activities in Lesotho over enquiry report into death of military commander

SADC has suspended all activities in Lesotho following failure to release a report by a commission of enquiry on the death of a former Lesotho army commander.

The suspension comes out of a SADC Troika meeting held in Gaberone, Botswana, which was also attended by  Lesotho Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili.

The activities have been suspended till August when SADC will hold a full assembly and discuss the matter.

Lesotho may get full suspension from the regional block if it does not accept the report.

South African president Jacob Zuma says SADC should still go ahead to release the report without Lesotho’s consensus.

Regional media reports have said the southern african leaders have called off efforts to mediate Lesotho’s political crisis following resistance by Lesotho’s Prime Minister Mosisili, to the publication of the report of a judicial commission which probed the assassination of a military leader who had earlier been fired by Mosisili.

Regional leaders including Mosisili and President Jacob Zuma of South Africa met in Gaborone on Monday for a meeting, hosted by President Ian Khama of Botswana, to receive a report from South African Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa on his mediation efforts in Lesotho on behalf of the regional grouping, the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

SADC leaders last year appointed Botswana’s Justice Mpaphi Phumaphi to head a commission to investigate a range of issues, including the killing by soldiers of Brigadier Maaparankoe Mahao, commander of the Lesotho Defence Force (LDF), two months after Mosisili removed him.

The commission submitted its findings to SADC in December. However, Mosisili’s government is refusing to receive the report, on the grounds that the LDF’s special forces commander is challenging the commission in a Maseru court.

A South African journalist earlier this month tweeted apparent excerpts from its draft report, recommending the removal of Defence Minister Tšeliso Mokhosi, as well as Mahao’s replacement as army commander, Lt. General Tlali Kamoli.

Lesotho’s security forces are notorious for their factionalism and political partisanship, and part of the SADC mediation process has involved pressing for wide-ranging security sector reforms.

At the end of Monday’s meeting, the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) reported that SADC has “disengaged” from the Lesotho mediation and move for the country’s suspension at the next SADC summit if its government did not accept the commission report.

In a report from Gaborone, the SABC quoted Zuma as saying that in the absence of consensus on the release of the report, SADC would release it on its own. A SADC communique is expected on Tuesday, January 19. –  Photo by Michael J. Jordan and courtesy of allafrica.com

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