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weekly anb04196.txt #7
- Subject: weekly anb04196.txt #7
- From: anb-bia <anb-bia at village.uunet.be>
- Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 16:43:06 +0200
_____________________________________________________________ WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 19-04-2000 PART #6/7 * Rwanda. Bishop Misago - 14 April: In an interview, Fides spoke with the Secretary of the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, Archbishop Zago, who said that Bishop Misago's arrest was a sad event, not only for the Church, not only for Africa, but for the world in general. He remarked on the great dignity with which Bishop Misago has accepted incarceration and lives this time, not hiding away, but on the contrary, defending the truth. At the same time, Fides also reported that Bishop Misago's defense lawyer, Alfred Pongon, has said that the accusations brought against the bishop were "a mixture of unacceptable facts which the law cannot qualify materially as criminal facts". The lawyer traced the campaign against Bishop Misago which began with accusations launched by African Rights and which spread, "distilling into hearts and minds the poison of hatred and revenge". 17 April: A report from the Bishops' Conference of Rwanda says that the conclusive phase of the trial against Bishop Misago of Gikongoro opened today. Even before the judges arrived, the court was full to overflowing. The presiding judge reminded the court that the Bishop's trial had now been on-going for six months and the time has come to conclude proceedings. He then said that he could only be present for this morning as he had other obligations in the afternoon. Also, he warned that some lawyers will not be available at the end of the week (Because of Holy Week). He then said that proceedings will continue on 24 April and will continue from then until 26 April. A different version of details concerning the day's proceedings comes from the Press Agency Hirondelle. Because the judges had other obligations on the afternoons of 17-19 April and because Bishop Misago had requested not to have to come to court on Holy Thursday (20 April) and Good Friday (21 April), the trial will resume on 24 April, and will continue 25-26 April. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 18 April 2000) * Senegal/Guinee Bissau. Nouveaux remous en Casamance - La Guinee Bissau a proteste aupres du Senegal, affirmant que des regions de sa frontiere nord, Cutima et Jumbembem, ont ete bombardees par des avions de l'armee senegalaise qui auraient poursuivi des rebelles du Mouvement des forces democratiques de la Casamance (MFDC). Le porte-parole du MFDC, Alexandre Djiba, a nie que son mouvement ait des combattants dans les zones bombardees. Il a reconnu que des combats avaient repris, le 10 avril, dans la region de Kolda, alors que l'armee senegalaise indiquait qu'un "ennemi" avait attaque ses positions a Sare Wari, dans cette region. M. Djiba dement que les combattants du MFDC fassent des raids sur la Casamance a partir de la Guinee Bissau. (D'apres IRIN, Abidjan, 13 avril 2000) * Somalia and Kenya. Bracing for drought emergency - Food stocks are being pre-positioned in Somalia in anticipation of a major emergency. Even where there is aid, children who could be saved are now dying. For the 6th year in succession, harvests are expected to fall, and the blow will fall on a population enduring a bare level of subsistence. In Kenya, the WFP says more than 75,000 tons of food is urgently needed to feed drought victims in Kenya. A UN spokesperson in Kenya says there is already an emergency appeal for around 43 million dollars to but food for drought victims in Kenya. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 17 April 2000) * South Africa. Mbeki under fire for plans to buy new jet - President Mbeki has come under fire after revealing plans to purchase a new jet costing US $50 million to replace the present presidential aircraft. Mbeki plans to buy a bigger Airbus 319 to replace the Falcon 900 which he and former presidents Nelson Mandela and F.W. de Klerk used over the past decade. The official opposition Democratic Party criticised the plans on 18 April, saying there were other pressing needs facing the country. (PANA, Dakar, 18 April 2000) * Sudan. Government oppression - Sources from Sudan have informed ANB-BIA about atrocities committed by Sudan government soldiers in a massive onslaught on civilians around the Bentiu oil area in March. People in the oil area are being forced to flee up to 200km away. In Kadugli, capital of the Nuba Mountains, eight army divisions are assembling for a new offensive on four fronts. The government is preparing for the construction of a second oil pipeline from Bentiu. This time it will run a long way due north, then sharply east to Port Sudan, avoiding the eastern border which is under pressure from the opposition alliance. The above has been confirmed by the New Sudan Council of Churches. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 13 April 2000) * Tanzania. Opposition supporters in Zanzibar beaten and arrested - On 12 April, Amnesty International, in a Press Release, stated that over 300 supporters of the Civic United Front (CUF) opposition party in Zanzibar, have been beaten by police in the last week, and over 100 arrested and charged with petty criminal offenses, such as vagrancy. Amnesty International appeals to Zanzibar President Salmin Amour and Tanzanian President Benjamin Mpaka to ensure that freedom of opinion and association are respected in Zanzibar. (Amnesty International, 12 April 2000) * Uganda. A Pandora's box for the economy - The war in Congo RDC is opening a Pandora's box for Uganda's economy. Western donors who met in Kampala in March told Museveni to move his troops out of Congo soon, to avoid economic chaos, and political problems at home. "The war in Congo is the major threat to Uganda's", says Rene Rodault, France's ambassador to Uganda while addressing the consultative donor group that agreed to give Uganda $800m for the next financial year and also make available a $1.1bn debt relief package. The Ambassador's warning war supported by Switzerland, the USA and Sweden, both of whom see the continuing war as hopeless. Donors are worried that if they don't criticise, Uganda's economic progress will be on the line. Programmes that were meant to maintain the country's economic growth-rate at 5% annually, are floundering. The stability of the Ugandan shilling is under constant threat, and the Bank of Uganda has recently warned that it is running short of funds necessary to maintain the shilling's stability. It's bad news for Uganda, which has been trying to keep up appearances despite the grinding war. Donors say huge resources have been transferred to the military ever since the war in Congo broke out in 1998. But the Bretton Woods Institutions think in spite of what's happening, Uganda still deserves this generous help. (Crespo Sebunya, ANB-BIA, Uganda, 11 April 2000) * Uganda. Plan to buy jet, delays debt aid - Plans by Uganda to acquire a new Gulfstream jet for its President have led international lenders to put off a decision on new debt relief for that country. The delay is an embarrassing new complication for a global debt-relief program that Congress is sceptical about funding. Uganda, an early participant in the program, has won praise for using the savings from cancelled debt payments to improve primary education. The International Monetary Fund and World Bank had hoped to announce approval of an expanded package for Uganda at a meeting of their governing committees this week here. But last week officials delayed implementing the plan, some of them appalled at the idea of forgiving more loans just when a luxury jet was ordered. Sources said the reported cost of the plane, about $35 million, is about what Uganda would save annually in debt-service payments under an expanded aid plan that now has been delayed. (...) An IMF director representing Uganda in the organization said he believed the delay would be short. Questions were posed about the jet, but not "in a challenging way," Cyrus Rustomjee said. "We don't recognize this as being any extraordinary expenditure." The plane's purchase had been discussed in Uganda's parliament. It would be used by President Yoweri Museveni, who has been in office since seizing power in 1986. (John Burgess, Washington Post, 16 April 2000) * Uganda. Links with Australian doomsday group - The former Ugandan cult leader Joseph Kibwetere, now wanted for murder, was linked to an Australian doomsday group, the Marian Workers of Atonement, according to documents found at his home by The Guardian. According to his wife, Teresa, she and her husband attended talks on supernatural manifestations given by the leader of the Australian group, William Kamm -- whose spiritual name is "Little Pebble" -- in Kampala. Based in Nowra, New South Wales, the followers of 49-year-old Kamm, share many beliefs with Kibwetere's cult, the Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God. (...) According to the documents, Mr Kamm held four meetings at the Kampala police mess between October 6 and 10, 1989 -- when reports of manifestations of the Virgin Mary, an aspect common to both cults, were becoming frequent throughout Uganda and neighbouring Rwanda. Mrs Kibwetere said she had been in contact with Mr Kamm before she and her husband went to hear him talk. "We were interested in visions of His Blessed Mother... Little Pebble sent us these papers and I used to write to him. Then he came to Uganda and we went to see him in Kampala." The couple's son, Rugambwa, said the visit made a strong impression on his father. "I remember them going, and when my father came back he said that Little Pebble had filled him with new hope." The manifesto of the Kanungu cult -- entitled: "A Timely Message from Heaven: The End of the Present Times", which was first published in 1991 -- also names Little Pebble among those "from various countries who got revelations and visions of the chastisements that are coming". Australian cultwatch groups have expressed a suspicion of links between Mr Kamm's group and the Ugandan cult. (The Guardian, UK, 18 April 2000) Weekly anb0419 - end of part 6/7
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