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The Leader of Opposition and Former Prime Minister of Lesotho Dr Pakalitha Mosisili on Lesotho Television during a pre- by-election campaign.
Democratic Congress.
Democratic Congress.
"I am Africa. This is my story..." YouTube digital story telling contest Enter at http://i-am-the-story.ning.com The National University of Lesotho P .O. Rom...
Democratic Congress.
PUTRAJAYA, 05/05/2011 - Saya berbesar hati untuk menyambut kedatangan delegasi Perdana Menteri Lesotho TYT Pakalitha Mosisili di Dataran Perdana, Bangunan Pe...
Retselisitsoe asks the Lesotho Prime Minister at the time Pakalitha Mosisili how he feels about South Africa and the dangers of Nuclear energy??
leqe leqe-leqe lleqe re je chelete ena monyane moleleki pakalitha mosisili lesotho politics dc.
The Prime Minister of Lesotho, Rt. Hon. Pakalitha Bethuel Mosisili was conferred the Honorary Doctorate in Leadership in 2011 at the Limkokwing University Cy...
Limkokwing University conferred the Honorary Doctorate in Leadership to the Prime Minister of Lesotho, the Right Honorable Pakalitha Bethuel Mosisili in 2011 in recognition of his transformational leadership aimed at lifting the Kingdom of Lesotho to new heights of economic competitiveness, his dedication to build international respect for the country and for his inspirational leadership in social engineering. To find out more, visit: http://bit.ly/1kLLwNc
Goodbye Mosisili Goodbye DC Democratic congress humour funny pictures cartoon Lesotho politics Africa Elections.
Dr. Pakalitha Mosisili, former Lesotho Prime Minister and Head of the Commonwealth Election Observer Group shares his assessment on the credibility of the po...
Deputy President Ramaphosa has arrived in Lesotho following the announcement of the results of Saturday's election. His visit is expected to consolidate plans for the inauguration of the new coalition government. Ramaphosa paid a courtesy call to King Letsie III; he also met with the two leaders of the incoming coalition government, Pakalitha Mosisili and Mothejoa Metsing. The two leaders commended SADC and South Africa in particular for ensuring that Lesotho holds successful election. @vuyo_mvoko @nthakoana @yolisanjamela #SABCNews @Sophie_Mokwena #LesothoVotes2015 For more News visit: http://www.sabc.co.za/news Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/SABCNewsOnline?lang=en Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SABCNewsOnline
Five opposition parties in Lesotho have formed a new coalition government after snap elections over the weekend failed to produce an outright winner. The poll was intended to ease tensions after an attempted coup last August. The All Basotho Convention of outgoing Prime Minister Thomas Thobane came second with 46 seats. Pakalitha Mosisili's Democratic Congress was narrowly ahead with 47 seats and formed a majority of 61 with other smaller parties. Announcing the final results, Lesotho's Independent Electoral Commission urged all parties to break away from a cycle of political intolerance. Last year's power struggle polarised Lesotho's security forces, with the police believed to have sided with Mr Thabane and the army seen as backing his deputy, Mothejoa Metsing who leads the Lesotho Congress for Democracy. Mr Metsing will remain deputy prime minister as his party has joined the new coalition with its 12 seats in the 120-member parliament. The army was confined to barracks for the election, which observers said was free and fair. The regional bloc Sadc deployed 475 police officers to provide security. Mr Mosisili, who served as prime minster from 1998 until 2012, said the mistakes of Mr Thabane would not be repeated by the new government. Lesotho is completely surrounded by South Africa, which played a key role in mediating last year's political crisis. It started when Mr Thabane suspended parliament to avoid a motion ousting him as the head of the coalition. He later fled, saying he was the target of a coup attempt, after the military attacked the police headquarters.
Chairman of the Commonwealth Observer Mission, Hon Dr Bethuel Pakalitha Mosisili, Former Prime Minister of Lesotho urges Ghanaians to keep the peace
Arrival of the Prime Minister of Lesotho - Pime Minister The Rt. Hon. Bethuel Pakalitha Mosisili.
Students giving thanks to Dr Pakalitha Mosisili for having introduced Free Education in Lesotho... More people in Lesotho now have basic education especially girls and children from disadvantaged and/or poor families.
The tiny moutain kingdom of Lesotho has been plunged into further crisis. The Basotho National Party and All Basotho Convention leaders have confirmed, that ...
The party of Lesotho's prime minister is leading in initial results from an election in the mountain kingdom, which held an early vote in an attempt to overcome tension among political factions. Lesotho's election commission said Sunday that Prime Minister Thomas Thabane's All Basotho Convention party was ahead with wins in 35 out of 80 voting districts. The Democratic Congress of Pakalitha Mosisili, a former prime minister, was second with 10 district victories on Saturday's election. http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/5KOEabcO5Ws/ http://www.wochit.com
The opening ceremony of Maliba lodge, featuring Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili as speaker. Check us out at http://maliba-lodge.com.
Thousands of Basotho marched to deliver a petition to the Prime Minister of Lesotho Pakalitha Mosisili on Monday August 22, 2011, in the capital city: on wag...
Les électeurs se rendaient aux urnes samedi 26 mai au Lesotho pour renouveler leur Parlement lors d'un scrutin qui s'annonce disputé, le Premier ministre Pak...
The southern African nation of Lesotho held an early election aimed at overcoming tension among political factions that has led to violence among security forces since last year. Voting proceeded smoothly on Saturday in the mountain kingdom, one of the few countries on the continent to have experienced coalition rule. There were more that 2,000 polling stations opened across the landlocked mountain kingdom, which is surrounded by South Africa. Delays were reported in some polling stations. The parliament has 120 seats. Al Jazeera's Erica Wood, reporting from the outskirts of Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, said many voters expressed frustration with the ongoing political crisis and were hoping the situation would improve after elections. "There is an optimism that with international observers and security present that this election will be peaceful and bring about change," our correspondent said. Analysts said there is a possibility that no party will win a majority, meaning the country could end up with another coalition government. The country has been politically deadlocked since Prime Minister Thomas Thabane suspended parliament in June last year to avoid a motion that would have seen him ousted after his fragile coalition government, in power since 2012, fell apart. On August 30, soldiers - reputedly loyal to the opposition - attacked police headquarters, looting weapons and killing one officer. Casting his ballot in his home district of Abia, near the capital Maseru, Thabane downplayed the risk of unrest. "We have to accept the outcome of the election. In the unlikely event that I lose, I will have to accept it," he said. Thabane, 75, has previously said this will be his last play for power. His party faces stiff competition from the Democratic Congress of Pakalitha Mosisili, a former prime minister, who ruled from 1998 to 2012. The Democratic Congress won the most National Assembly seats in the 2012 election, but it was Thabane who ended up forming a government, composed of the ABC and two smaller parties. Thabane described the violence as a coup attempt and fled to neighbouring South Africa, though the military denied this. About 1.2 million people are registered to vote in the poll, which was negotiated by mediators from the regional bloc Southern African Development Community (SADC). Initial results will be released on Sunday, said Mahapela Lehohla, chairman of Lesotho's election commission. Military aircraft will help round up the results by flying them from remote areas to the central counting station in Maseru, Lesotho's capital, according to Lehohla.
Vote counting is under way in Lesotho, the tiny African enclave surrounded by South Africa, where voters cast ballots for a new National Assembly and prime minister in snap elections. Saturday's election, two years earlier than scheduled, followed an attempted coup in August that forced Prime Minister Thomas Thabane to flee. The attempt took place after Thabane sought to replace the army’s top commander, said to be an ally of Deputy Prime Minister Mothetjoa Metsing. Thabane is now back at home in the capital, Maseru, hoping to return to office after votes are counted. But he told VOA on Saturday, while appearing in his home district of Abia, that he still feared for his life. Thabane was flanked by heavily armed security guards, and sniffer dogs swept the area before he voted. Three parties were jostling for control of the government: Thabane's All Basotho Convention, the main opposition Democratic Congress and the Lesotho Congress for Democracy. Thabane has presided over a tripartite coalition government, the first of its kind in the country's history. However, discord within the coalition built rapidly when Thabane declared a 10-month suspension of parliament in June. The declaration came after the opposition tried to pass a motion of no-confidence that would have ousted the prime minister. In an interview with VOA in Maseru, Thabane said he closed parliament because "there was definitely a conspiracy to have a regime change within parliament. ... I could have hung on and struggled on, but I thought, 'Let's go back to the people.' So I have risked my own position. I still had some time as prime minister." Metsing, also running for the prime minister position, told VOA it was a mistake for his LCD party to have entered into a coalition government with Thabane's ABC. Metsing said that "we differed with ABC on so many issues. ... Today, we are aware that we made mistakes." He said now his party "would like to ensure that we can grow the economy. We would address aggressively the issue of youth unemployment, because I think that it is a time bomb waiting to explode." Former Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili of the main opposition Democratic Congress was also running for the country's top post against Thabane and Metsing. The Southern African Development Community brokered an agreement with Lesotho's coalition parties to end the suspension of parliament in order to hold the snap election. In Abia district, people wearing bobble hats and wrapped in woolen blankets for protection against the morning chill cast their votes in canvas tents pitched in a field. Thabane was in high spirits when he voted. “My opponents will never praise me, and I am not going to praise them myself — that’s politics," he said. "You don’t praise your enemy in politics, you pull him down and you pull off his pants so women can laugh at him, so tighten your belt if you are in politics. Here in politics, we do unto others as they do unto us.” Thabane dismissed accusations from opposition parties that he had stuffed government institutions with his supporters to assert his power. Voting in Abia, Winned Magala said she voted for Mosisili, who was prime minister from 1998 to 2012. Years at the helm of government have given him an advantage, she said. “ I think the order of DC is coming to do something better than Thabane,” she said. With no opinion polls in Lesotho, it was difficult to predict the election outcome, but some said that the Democratic Congress was a strong contender. The party won a significant number of seats in the 2012 election but fell short of winning a majority, losing out to the ABC-led coalition. The top finishers most likely will have to look for allies to form a coalition government. Some voters said they felt the politicians hadn't done enough for Lesotho, where nearly 60 percent of the 2 million population lives below the poverty line. “According to me, I don’t see anything that can be different because here they are still the same people, same people," said Rethabile Bohope, 23, who is unemployed. "If this one goes down, this one comes up, there’s no difference. They will look for themselves and their own benefits.”
Africa Mosisili Unreleased Funny Political Video HD720p.
Lesotho's Prime Minister Thomas Thabane had accused his country's army of mounting a coup against him as he visited South Africa, but the military denied seeking to oust him and said its soldiers had returned to barracks. Political tensions have been high in the tiny kingdom since June when there was a power struggle after Thabane suspended parliament to dodge a vote of no confidence. At the time, South Africa warned against simmering conflict. Speaking to Al Jazeera on Saturday from an undisclosed location in South Africa, Thabane said the army had taken over government buildings and said that the current situation in Lesotho can be defined as a coup. "I am talking to you from a venue in South Africa because I left yesterday late and this morning the army commander and the cohorts following him were all over the streets looking for me, what they were going to do - I do not know," the prime minister told Al Jazeera. But Lesotho's deputy Prime Minister Mothet Joa Metsing denied that the landlocked nation, located within eastern South Africa, was undergoing an attempted coup. "This is not a coup - let us get that straight. I would not still be a deputy prime minister now; the prime minister would not still be the prime minister if a coup [had] taken place in Lesotho," said Metsing, speaking to Al Jazeera from Mafeteng. He refused to condemn the actions of the army, saying that the army had given reasons as to why it occupied government buildings. Metsing had previously vowed to form a new coalition that would oust Thabane after the political situation there escalated in June. The military had gathered intelligence that the police were going to arm factions participating in a demonstration planned for Monday by one of the coalition parties, the Lesotho Congress for Democracy, Major Ntlele Ntoi, defence forces spokesman, told the Associated Press news agency. Police disarmed The army disarmed police in the capital, Maseru, to avoid bloodshed, Ntoi said. An exchange of gunfire between the military, youths and police injured one soldier and four policemen, he said. "The arms have been removed and they are in military custody. The military has returned to the barracks," Ntoi said, denying reports of any coup attempt. "We are not in a position now or in the future to stage a coup. All we do is to carry out our mandate to secure our country and property." Diplomatic sources said the army made its move after the prime minister had fired the army commander, Lieutenant-General Kennedy Tlali Kamoli. The army spokesman said Kamoli was still in charge of the military. But South Africa's foreign ministry said they were monitoring the situation in Lesotho on Saturday, adding that an unconsitutional change of government would not be tolerated by the region. "By all accounts the actions of the Lesotho defence force bear the hallmarks of a coup d'etat," said Clayson Monyela, the spokesman for the ministry. Since its independence from Britain in 1966, Lesotho has undergone a number of military coups. In 1998 at least 58 locals and eight South African soldiers died and large parts of Maseru were damaged during a political stand-off and subsequent fighting. The landlocked country's first coalition government was formed in 2012 after competitive elections that ousted the 14-year incumbent Pakalitha Mosisili, who peacefully stepped down from power. The coalition has since been fragile. Political stability returned after constitutional reforms, and parliamentary elections were peacefully held in 2002.
The INAGUARATION OF HON MOTSOAHAE THABANE AS PRIME MINISTER OF LESOTHO REVEALED THAT WHATEVER HE SAID DURING THE CAMPAIGNS OF 2012 ELECTIONS WAS NOT REAL, AN...
An interview with the Academic Administration Unit Manager of the Limkokwing University of Creative Technology (LUCT) in Lesotho, Mr. Kaibe Mokoma. Kaibe is ...
Recorded on August 13, 2011 using a Flip Video camera.
(www.abndigital.com) African ministers of energy have gathered in Johannesburg to discuss what they call the "Road to Durban: promoting sustainable energy ac...
Thousands of protesters have stormed the Kuwaiti parliament after police and security forces beat up protesters outside the country's prime minister's home. ...
this song was written after Thomas Motsoahae Thabane aka ntate Nkemele crossed the Lesotho Parliament floor from LCD to form All Basotho Convention(ABC) in 2...
Lawatan Jacob Zuma ke Malaysia
... the swearing in of Lesotho's prime minister, Dr Pakalitha Mosisili in a coalition-led government.
All Africa 2015-03-19President Jacob Zuma congratulated Pakalitha Mosisili on being inaugurated as the new prime minister ...
Sowetan Live 2015-03-18... Pakalitha Mosisili, leader of the Democratic Congress party that won the February 28 election.
All Africa 2015-03-18... Stadium for the inauguration of newly-elected Prime Minister Dr Pakalitha Mosisili yesterday.
All Africa 2015-03-18LESOTHO ELECTION Lesotho's Pakalitha Mosisili was sworn in as prime minister on Tuesday, two weeks ...
Reuters 2015-03-18Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili was inaugurated on Tuesday in the capital Maseru. Mosisili came to ...
WPXI 2015-03-17Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili was inaugurated on Tuesday in the capital Maseru. Mosisili came to ...
Fox News 2015-03-17... Mosisili of the Kingdom of Lesotho, after receiving an invitation from the Majesty King Letsie III.
All Africa 2015-03-17President Jacob Zuma has congratulated Pakalitha Mosisili on being inaugurated as the new prime ...
News24 2015-03-17President Jacob Zuma congratulated Pakalitha Mosisili on being inaugurated as the new prime minister ...
Independent online (SA) 2015-03-17Your Excellency, Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili; ... Hon Prime Minister Mosisili, we take this ...
noodls 2015-03-17... attend the inauguration of the Prime Minister-elect Mr Pakalitha Mosisili of the Kingdom of Lesotho.
noodls 2015-03-16... attend the inauguration of the Prime Minister-elect Mr Pakalitha Mosisili of the Kingdom of Lesotho.
noodls 2015-03-16Bethuel Pakalitha Mosisili (born March 14, 1945) has been the Prime Minister of Lesotho since May 29, 1998. He led his party, the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD), to a near-total victory in the 1998 election, and under his leadership the party also won majorities in the 2002 and 2007 elections. In addition to serving as Prime Minister, Mosisili is the Minister of Defense.
In 1993, Mosisili was elected to parliament from the Qacha's Nek Constituency and became Minister of Education. On April 14, 1994, he was briefly kidnapped along with three other ministers by soldiers; a fifth minister, Deputy Prime Minister Selometsi Baholo, was killed in this incident. Mosisili was appointed Deputy Prime Minister in late January 1995, while remaining Minister of Education; on July 20, 1995, he was named Minister of Home Affairs and Local Government instead, while remaining Deputy Prime Minister. A new ruling party, the LCD, was formed in 1997 under the leadership of Prime Minister Ntsu Mokhehle as a split from the Basutoland Congress Party. On February 21, 1998, Mosisili was elected leader of the LCD after Mokhehle chose to step down due to poor health.