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weekly anb04194.txt #7
- Subject: weekly anb04194.txt #7
- From: anb-bia <anb-bia at village.uunet.be>
- Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 16:43:03 +0200
_____________________________________________________________ WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 19-04-2000 PART #4/7 * Ethiopia. War continues...and so does the famine - 13 April: UN special envoy Catherine Bertini, is to meet with Prime Minister Zenawi today, to coordinate their response to the drought situation. She will discuss the humanitarian situation and the logistical problems of supplying over 800,000 tons of food aid this year. In the meeting, Prime Minister Zenawi says that Ethiopia will not bow to international pressure to end the war to help the relief effort. he says the war is not hampering the aid effort. Later, the prime minister says the spectre of mass starvation in Ethiopia is receding now that foreign governments have promised enough grain to feed the estimated 8 million people at risk. Canada's ambassador to Ethiopia says the looming famine in the Horn of Africa can be prevented if donor nations pledge more food aid in the next two weeks. The Red Cross has begun flying emergency food supplies to the south-east. 14 April: NGOs working in Ethiopia have issued the following statement: "We wish to state that the present food crisis is not yet a repeat of 1984/85. We affirm that there is a critical situation in the south and east that could have been averted -- and a widespread crisis can still be averted, with prompt and appropriate action". 15 April: The UN will spend millions of dollars developing djibouti's port and roads this year, in an urgent effort to bring in enough food to avert the famine in Ethiopia. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 17 April 2000) * Ethiopia. Where lies the answer? - There are no easy answers to a problem as complex as Ethiopia's. Global warming undoubtedly has its part to play in a shift in weather patterns which has cheated Ethiopia of its rain and dumped it cruelly upon Mozambique. Yet drought in other countries does not turn to disaster, unless they too scrape such a marginal existence, even in the good years, that they live constantly on the edge of disaster and can be pushed over the edge by the smallest crisis. Long-term development is the answer to that, which means better soil and water management scheme, improved farming techniques and building roads to get goods to market. That is needed for years after the television cameras have gone. It may also mean changes in government policy. Since Mengistu's fall, farmers in fertile areas have been free to sell their surpluses on the open market. But radical land reform may also be needed to avoid the ever-growing population breaking down farms into smaller and less viable plots. (...) Change is needed in the hostility between Addis Ababa and its northerly neighbour, Eritrea, which invaded Ethiopia two years ago (...). (Paul Vallely, The Independent, UK, 14 April 2000) * Kenya. UK envoy summoned over remarks - On 6 April, the Kenyan Foreign Affairs Minister Dr. Bonaya Godana, summoned the British High Commissioner to explain his remarks on the constitutional review process. The remarks alleged to have been made by Mr. Jeffrey James, were published in the East African Standard on 4 April. The envoy was quoted as expressing his disappointment that the Parliamentary Select Committee on Constitutional Reform and the parallel Ufungamano Initiative led by religious leaders, opposition MPs and civil groups, had failed to work together. The press article quoted Mr. James as saying that "time was running out for Kenya". Mr. James later said the contents of the article distorted what he really said. The article stated that Mr. James was alleged to have suggested that the two groups should come together even if it means adopting the necessary legislation, and appealed to both the Parliamentary Select Committee and the Ufungamano group "to swallow their pride and put the interests of Kenyans first." Dr. Bonaya particularly took issue with part of the article which equated the Ufungamano Initiative with Parliament. He added that Britain should be the last country to advise Kenya to disregard its Constitution, because it was bequeathed to Kenya by Britain at independence. The minister also took issue with other parts of the article which characterised the current Constitution as not based on law and not respecting human rights. (James Pod, ANB-BIA, Kenya, 13 April 2000) * Kenya. CITES meeting - 13 April: Four southern African countries have maintained their pressure at the on-going Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) meeting in Nairobi to have the ban on ivory trade lifted. Botswana, Zimbabwe, South Africa and Namibia have also denied having any "secret agenda" to their proposals, as some delegates have alleged. Botswana's wildlife deputy permanent secretary, Gayland Kombani, Namibia's permanent secretary for environment, Tangeni Erkana, Narend Singh from South Africa and Charles Chipato of Zimbabwe tells journalists in Nairobi that their proposals are based on rational arguments aimed at development. "We are for the preservation of elephants. Our intention is to sell ivory from elephants that have died from natural mortality and stockpiles that have accumulated over the years," said Chipato. They observe that their collective position on trade in ivory and the elephant in general was made public long before the CITES conference. Kombani said the decision was based on a sustainable regional protocol on conservation signed by the four countries much earlier. The countries deny that they are negotiating for any trade-off with Japan and Norway which are canvassing for support to be allowed to resume trade in some species of whales. Kombani explains that the Nairobi conference was similar to other UN conferences where people are free to lobby for support to their national positions. Singh said that his country backs the need for a more efficient monitoring system for the trade on ivory. The SADC representatives say they are still negotiating with Kenya and India, which are calling for the total ban on ivory sales to curb a resurgence of poaching. Meanwhile, Zimbabwe has maintained that it will continue trading in ivory, arguing that the country only culls elephant for ecological reasons and not to produce ivory for trade. 17 April: Delegates debate a proposal which would allow limited trade in ivory. During the course of the day, Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe reach a compromise deal on the ivory trade. They have agreed to delay any ivory sales until an effective system is in place to prevent the widespread poaching of elephants. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 17 April 2000) * Libya. Unity gathering - In a packed conference hall in Tripoli, delegates from nearly 70 African and Arab countries have been gathering to discuss their future. The three-day conference of Non-Governmental Organisations, opened on 14 April in Tripoli, with the aim of uniting Arab and African society. This was an occasion for Africans to talk about Africa without having to listen to European leaders. nearly 700 delegates listened while speakers talked of the need for Africa to unity to confront its problems -- some of them also criticising Western policies towards the region. (BBC News, 14 April 2000) * Madagascar. Jublee release of prisoners - The President of Madagascar, Didier Tarsiraka, has ordered the release of 3,000 prisoners, thanks to a plea made by the local Church that the Jubilee should also be apllied to penitentiaries. This is a response to Pope John Paul II's call, that Christians should give special attention to the situation of prison inmates. (Fides, Vatican City, 18 April 2000) * Malawi. Planning for debt relief - Malawi is one of the African countries fighting to have her debt relieved. However, the international donor community led by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are setting tough conditions. The IMF has just warned Malawi to cut down her expenditure if debt relief is to be considered. The IMF has warned the government against over-expenditure and waste of resources. The IMFs Resident Representative in Malawi, Thomas Gibson, said in a statement that the warning comes in the wake of results obtained from an IMF mission which visited the country between March 23 and April 8 this year, assessing Malawi's economic prospects and discussing programmes of economic reforms, poverty reductions and debt relief. While in Malawi, the IMF team met senior government officials in President Bakili Muluzi's government including the President himself as well as the newly appointed Finance and Economic Planning Minister, Professor Dr. Mathews Chikaonda. According to Gibson, Malawi has a problem in controlling public expenditure, preventing waste of scarce resources and of fraud. However, on a happier note, the IMF hailed the recently introduced ten-point financial plan by the new finance minister Chikaonda, saying if implemented, it may help in improving spending control procedures and consolidate the country's fiscal programme. (Aubrey Sumbuleta, ANB-BIA, Malawi, 12 April 2000) * Maroc. Clandestins et contrebandiers s'affrontent - De violents affrontements entre candidats a l'emigration clandestine et des contrebandiers ont fait un mort et 13 blesses dans la nuit du 10 au 11 avril aux environs de la ville de Fnideq (260 km au nord de Rabat), a-t-on appris le 13 avril de sources policieres. Ces affrontements se sont produits dans une zone montagneuse, lieu de transit des candidats a l'emigration clandestine qui trouvent refuge dans des grottes avant de tenter de passer le detroit de Gibraltar a destination de l'Espagne sur des embarcations de fortune. Cette zone est egalement frequentee par des contrebandiers qui vivent du trafic de marchandises en provenance de l'enclave espagnole de Ceuta. Selon les sources policieres, la grande majorite du groupe de migrants clandestins impliques dans ces affrontements est d'origine senegalaise. (AP, 13 avril 2000) * Maroc. Droits de l'homme - Le gouvernement marocain a debloque une enveloppe de 40 millions de dirhams (4 millions de dollars) pour indemniser les victimes de detentions arbitraires entre 1960 et 1990, a indique le 15 avril Driss Dahak, le president du Conseil consultatif des droits de l'homme cree par le roi Hassan II en 1990. M. Dahak a evoque ces indemnisations en presence de Mme Robinson, haut commissaire de l'Onu aux droits de l'homme, lors de la cloture des travaux d'une rencontre internationale sur les droits de l'homme a Rabat. Mme Robinson y a souligne "l'evolution positive et remarquable des droits de l'homme au Maroc" qui "touche egalement la situation des femmes et des enfants". (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 17 avril 2000) Weekly anb0419 - end of part 4/7
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