[Prec. per data] [Succ. per data] [Prec. per argomento] [Succ. per argomento] [Indice per data] [Indice per argomento]
weekly anb04069.txt
- Subject: weekly anb04069.txt
- From: anb-bia <anb-bia at village.uunet.be>
- Date: Thu, 06 Apr 2000 17:08:40 +0200
_____________________________________________________________ WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 06-04-2000 PART #9/9 * Zambia. Last copper mines sold - 31 March: The last major sale of Zambia's copper mines will take place at a special ceremony in Lusaka, today. Copper is the major source of wealth in Zambia, but the state-run industry has been brought to the brink of bankruptcy by mismanagement and corruption. It is hope that the privatisation of the mines -- which has proved controversial in Zambia -- will help rejuvenate the country's ailing economy. "We've sold the family silver for nothing", said one independent Member of Parliament. The buyer is mining giant Anglo American which is paying $90 million for the three mines in one of the world's richest copper belts. (BBC News, 31 March 2000) * Zambia. Without Kenneth Kaunda - In Zambia, it appears that many opposition politicians believe that without Kenneth Kaunda as the opposition political figure head, they are a ship without a captain. Most of them are against the reported resignation of their "captain" from active politics. His recent retirement from active politics has not only brought confusion to his United National Independence Party (UNIP), the former ruling party, but among other Zambian opposition politicians who are threatening to sue him. The Zambia Alliance of Progress (ZAP)'s spokesperson, Alfred Ndlovu, says that Dr Kaunda was Zambia's leading political figurehead whose absence from the political scene will affect the performance of the opposition in the presidential and parliamentary elections which will be held in 2001. The United Party for National Development (UPND)'s legal and constitutional affairs chairman, Sakwiba Sikota, says that Dr Kaunda's retirement has left the opposition parties in an awkward situation because he was part of their planning for winning the 2001 elections. (Gideon Thole, ANB-BIA, Zambia, 1 April 2000) * Zambia. Democracy Institute - The Fredrick Chiluba Centre for Democracy and Industrial Relations Studies that President Fredrick Chiluba wants to establish in Lusaka, could be a major contribution to democracy in Southern Africa where democracy is still young. Chiluba's declaration to step down as President when his term of office ends, places him alongside other African leaders who are firm advocates of democracy such as Olusegan Obasanjo, Nigeria's President, Nelson Mandela, the former President of South Africa, and the late Julius Nyerere formerly President of Tanzania. Chiluba's term of office has not been without its critics and shortcomings. At the time he was laying the foundation stone for his Institute, doctors in Zambia were on strike resulting in a number of patients dying in Zambian Hospitals. The establishment of the Institute has also attracted some criticism within Zambia. It has been described by some prominent Zambians as an "ambitious venture". A former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Zambia, John Mwanakatwe, (a close friend of former President Kenneth Kaunda) want the President to explain how the Institute will be used. He fears the centre will be run along partisan lines and will not be open to opposition parties. People remember that Kaunda's Citizenship College was used to teach United National Independent Party members how to be loyal to Kaunda and his party. President Bakili Muluzi of Malawi recently described the Fredrick Chiluba Institute as very important for the Southern African Region, as will help many people towards a better understanding of democracy. (Binson Musongole, ANB-BIA, Zambia, 4 April 2000) * Zimbabwe. Affrontements - Le 1er avril a Harare, la police a utilise des bombes lacrymogenes pour mettre fin a des affrontements opposant des manifestants anti-gouvernementaux a des partisans du president Mugabe. Deux personnes ont ete serieusement blessees lors de ces emeutes qui impliquaient des veterans de la guerre d'independance venus perturber une manifestation de quelque 10.000 personnes, a laquelle participaient de nombreux Blancs. La police a declare cette manifestation illegale et cinq personnes ont ete arretees. Il s'agit des plus graves incidents depuis l'occupation de plusieurs centaines de fermes appartenant a des Blancs par d'anciens combattants reclamant la redistribution des terres aux Noirs. Le 2 avril, au lendemain de ces incidents, des organisations civiques ont averti que le Zimbabwe pourrait basculer dans une guerre civile si le gouvernement refuse de faire respecter la loi. Mardi 4 avril, un policier zimbabween a ete tue par balle dans une ferme appartenant a un Blanc qui avait lui-meme subi des violences lundi de la part de squatters diriges par d'anciens combattants. Selon un temoin, le policier aurait ete en civil quand il a ete tue par un squatter qui l'avait pris pour un membre du Mouvement pour le changement democratique (MDC-opposition). La Haute cour du Zimbabwe a donne ordre a la police d'expulser les squatters; mais celle-ci a refuse de faire appliquer cette decision de justice. De son cote, le president Mugabe considere ces occupations comme des manifestations pacifiques et a annonce que la police n'interviendrait pas sauf en cas de violence. L'opposition a accuse le chef de l'Etat de refuser d'appliquer la loi. L'augmentation croissante de la violence raciale contre les Blancs au Zimbabwe est consideree par beaucoup comme l'aboutissement d'une tactique dangereuse du regime du president Robert Mugabe, qui cherche a s'accrocher au pouvoir. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 5 avril 2000) * Zimbabwe. Harare's morgues stacked high with bodies of AIDS victims - Room is running out for the dead at Zimbabwe's largest mortuary -- a cool, walk-in room filled beyond capacity with the victims of Africa's most deadly disease. Zimbabwe has been harder hit by AIDS in the past two decades than any other country in sub- Saharan Africa -- and nowhere is the evidence more starkly visible than in this dimly-lit chamber of Harare's central hospital. The disease now kills an average of 2,500 people each week in this country, and, according to the United Nations, one-quarter of its six million adults are infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. This mortuary was built to hold 176 bodies but, on one recent summer day, there were 314. In the developing world, hospital budgets are too tight to cover the ugliness of death underneath starched sheets or body bags. The corpses here are stored in open shelves, row upon row, uncovered and undignified. Babies lie in one spot, askew, like a pile of dolls -- still wrapped in soft frilly blankets or white hospital sheets. The adults lie in the clothes they wore on the day of their death - bloody trousers, cotton skirts, hospital gowns. "Three-quarters of them have died of AIDS," says the mortuary attendant. (Corinna Schuler, National Post, Canada, 5 April 2000) * Zimbabwe. A nation in crisis - 30 March: The mainly white Commercial Farmers Union (CFU) urges outside parties not to intervene in the land dispute. In a statement, the CFU's president, Tim Henwood, said land reform was a Zimbabwean issue and should be solved by the country's people. "I call on everybody internally and externally to refrain from emotional reaction and interference. Zimbabweans will solve this problem in a cool and level-headed manner". More white-owned farms have come under occupation. In Harare, city workers remain on strike for a fourth successive day, leaving water supplies either cut off or undrinkable. Lorries and commuter buses have to wait six hours for diesel. 1 April: The British government has a three-point contingency plan in place should relations in Zimbabwe deteriorate to the point that British nationals are threatened. The final stage would be an emergency airlift of all those holding British passports. The National Constituent Assembly (NCA) says their demonstration in Harare, today, against the government, was attacked by a "motley crew of alleged war veterans". Especially targeted were the white protestors who made up about 15% of the marchers. The Opposition says more demonstrations are planned. 2 April: British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook strongly condemns President Mugabe. He criticises Zimbabwe's police for failing to protect the demonstrators and calls on Mr Mugabe to honour a promise to set a date for general elections. Brian Kagoro, spokesman for the NCA accuses the government of "gross violations of human rights and an obscene use of violence". 3 April: Robin Cook meets with President Mugabe in Cairo and secures an assurance that the Zimbabwean general election will be held in May, though no date is set. He challenges Mugabe to allow EU observers to monitor the polling. 4 April: The Commonwealth secretary-general, Don Mckinnon says he hopes elections promised in Zimbabwe will be "free and fair" but the Commonwealth will not send monitors uninvited. A policeman is shot dead on the property of a white landowner during a struggle with black squatters. The death, on a farm near Marondera, is the first of its kind since the squatters began their action. 5 April: Opposition leaders and white farmers report a wave of arson attacks and assaults by supporters of President Mugabe. the prospect of a state of emergency looms closer. Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democracy has criticised President Mugabe for trying to divide Zimbabwe along racial lines. "Mugabe wants to use the race card and to win support by attacking whites. But race relations are good. The blacks and whites of this country have never been united as we are now in standing against ZANU-PF. In the past 100 years we have never achieved such harmony". Reports from Zimbabwe indicate that even members of the country's police force are living in a state of government-imposed fear. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 6 April 2000) ========= STOP PRESS ========== * Tunisia. Bourguiba is dead 6 April: Tunisian president, Habib Bourguiba, who led his country's struggle for independence from France and ruled the North African state for more than thirty years, has died. He was in his late- nineties. Bourguiba was removed from power -- on the grounds of senility -- in a coup in 1987 and was replaced by President Ben Ali. Correspondents say Bourguiba was regarded as one of the most influential African leaders of his generation. He strove to modernise and secularise his country and women were guaranteed more rights than in any other Arab state. The French President, Jacques Chirac, said Bourguiba was a great figure and a personal friend, who had contributed a lot to the whole of the Mediterranean. Bourguiba spent his last years under virtual house arrest in his hometown of Monastir, one-hundred-and-sixty kilometres south of Tunis. (BBC News, 6 April 2000) weekly anb0406 - end of part 8/9 - THE END
********************************************************************** * Si tu vas puiser a la fontaine veritable, * * plus tu puises, plus elle est genereuse * * If you draw from a real source, * * the more you draw, the more the source is bountiful * * (Antoine de St Exupery) * ********************************************************************** ********************************************************************** AFRICAN NEWS BULLETIN - BULLETIN D'INFORMATION AFRICAINE A fornigtly publication of African news and information Bi-mensuel d'information et actualite africaine ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ We hope you find our WEEKLY NEWS informative and helpful. But maybe you don't know our printed AFRICAN NEWS BULLETIN/BULLETIN D'INFORMATION AFRICAIN? For further information and informed comment about Africa, YOU NEED TO READ IT - Why not send for a FREE COPY and Subscription Details from our address on: <anb-bia at village.uunet.be> ? Trouvez-vous nos "WEEKLY NEWS" interessantes et utiles? Mais peut-etre vous ne connaissez pas notre publication BULLETIN D'INFORMATION AFRICAINE / AFRICAN NEWS BULLETIN? Il s'agit d'UN INSTRUMENT INDISPENSABLE pour mieux comprendre et mieux connaitre l'actualite africaine. Pour recevoir une copie gratuite et plus de renseignements pour un abonnement envoyez-nous un simple E-mail avec votre requete et votre adresse postale. ********************************************************************** Greetings from: ANB-BIA, Av. Charles Woeste 184,B-1090, Brussel, Belgium Ph.: 32-2 420.34.36-Fax: 32-2 420.05.49 - <anb-bia at village.uunet.be> WWW: http://www.peacelink.it/anb-bia/anb-bia.html -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Prev by Date: weekly anb04068.txt
- Next by Date: 08/04 Roma: iniziativa per il Congo
- Previous by thread: weekly anb04068.txt
- Next by thread: 08/04 Roma: iniziativa per il Congo
- Indice: