[Prec. per data] [Succ. per data] [Prec. per argomento] [Succ. per argomento] [Indice per data] [Indice per argomento]
Weekly anb04276.txt #6
- Subject: Weekly anb04276.txt #6
- From: anb-bia <anb-bia at village.uunet.be>
- Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2000 17:15:27 +0200
_____________________________________________________________ WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 27-04-2000 PART #6/6 * Zambia. Malnutrition on the rise - 18 April: Poverty and low agricultural productivity have increased malnutritional levels among Zambia's rural households, with many forced to survive on less than three meals a day. An official of the WFP says it is currently involved in supplementary feeding programmes for 100,000 people, most of whom are women and children, as well as tuberculosis victims. The WFP supplies high protein food, beans and maize through rural clinics. According to government statistics, 70% of Zambian households are unable to meet their basic nutritional requirements. (IRIN, Southern Africa, 18 April 2000) * Zambia. Diamond smuggling trade thrives - The ban on trade in diamonds from territory held by UNITA, has not stopped foreign visitors coming to the remote north-western corner of Zambia. They pose as botanists, butterfly collectors or even preachers, but what they are really interested in is diamonds. Some smugglers are Angolan civilians, who walk great distances to the border to sell one or two small gems. Others are UNITA officers, looking for supplies or funds to support their families. A UN report last month found that many African countries are paying only lip-service to the sanctions regime. It said Zambia was being used as a channel for diamond and fuel smuggling. It also named the country's security chief, Xavier Chungu, as having regular contacts with a senior UNITA source, and said that UNITA personnel were present in Zambia with the knowledge and protection of the authorities. (BBC News, 19 April 2000) * Zambie. Fuite des medecins - Quelque 57 medecins zambiens ont quitte le pays depuis le declenchement, il y a 4 mois, de la greve des jeunes medecins qui se poursuit encore a ce jour, a-t-on appris le 25 avril. Le president de l'association des medecins residents, M. Tembo, a indique que les medecins avaient quitte le pays malgre eux et qu'ils seraient disposes a rentrer si les autorites acceptaient d'ameliorer leur situation. M. Tembo s'est plaint aussi de l'initiative du gouvernement de recruter davantage de medecins cubains et chinois. Selon lui, plus de 150 medecins cubains et 39 medecins chinois ont ete recrutes. M. Tembo fustige les depenses enormes pour les logements des medecins etrangers, alors que huit medecins zambiens ont ete expulses de leur logement au cours du mois dernier dans la seule ville de Lusaka. "Ce pays ne pourra jamais se developper si l'on continue d'etouffer les professionnels zambiens au profit des etrangers", a ajoute M. Tembo. (PANA, 25 avril 2000) * Zimbabwe. Land -- A confused issue - President Robert Mugabe's point of view: In a land where farming is the single largest generator of foreign exchange, nearly a third of Zimbabwe's most productive farmland remains in the hands of 4,5000 white farmers, and almost half of all land is owned by the country's 70,000 whites. Veterans point of view: The leader of Zimbabwe's "veterans" movement, Chenjerai Hunzvi, says he will not allow elections until the issue of land ownership has been resolved. He has promised an end to violence in exchange for co-operation on plans to transfer white-owned land to blacks. He has declared that he is concerned only with land and that occupied farms will be evacuated only when progress has been made on a resettlement programme. White farmers point of view: They are adamant in their demands for full compensation. And for most white farmers, there is an immediate problem. Having fled their farms, their tobacco crop is still in their sheds, not yet graded for the big sales. There are other disincentives to an early sale of the tobacco crop in an auction that last until October. Chief is the government's deafness to repeated calls from all sectors of industry for a devaluation of the Zim dollar in response to economic deterioration. Without that, farmers will be forced to sell at enormous loss. One farmers says: "Political instability and economic slump mean many of us will have to play a game of wait and see". British point of view: Britain has said it is ready to negotiate a land reform settlement that will end the crisis in Zimbabwe. The deal will involve millions of pounds worth of British support for the transfer of farming land to impoverished black Zimbabweans, but will only go ahead if the current wave of farm occupations and violence is stopped and fair elections are held. The Churches point of view: The Zimbabwe Council of Churches has reaffirmed its mandate to advocate for justice, peace and reconciliation. The Opposition point of view: Following the deaths in recent days of five party activists of the Movement for Democractic Change (MDC), party leader Morgan Tsvangirai says: "We believe that as MDC that the time has come when, in the face of these attacks and without protection, it is certainly a moment when the MDC will have to devise strategies to defend ourselves". (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 26 April 2000) * Zimbabwe. Violent unrest and its consequences - 18 April: Nigeria's Foreign Minister arrives to deliver a message to President Mugabe from Niberia's President Obasanjo. 19 April: The High Court has found the war veteran's leader, Chenjerai Hunzvi, in contempt of court for inciting illegal occupation of white-owned farms. he was found in "clear and wilful contempt" for disobeying a court order last month, and is given a 5 May deadline to instruct his followers to end their illegal occupations or face imprisonment. Immediately after the verdict, leaders of the white commercial farmers and the war veterans went straight to President Mugabe's residence for crisis talks. The Commercial Farmers' Union director, David Hasluck and the Zimbabwe Tobacco Association leader, Richard Tate, both failed to have a meeting with the President. Tate was asked to leave and Hasluck was turned away. The squatters' leaders promise to negotiate with the farmers and end the violence. 21 April: African leaders, at a regional summit held at Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, back President Mugabe's call for land redistribution. The regional summit, supposedly to chew over the war in Congo RDC, was hijacked by the host country's cash crisis. 24 April: New reports from the north-east of violence by war veterans and government supporters. The situation is extremely confused. Some white farmers have returned to their properties they left last week in the Macceke area, but incidents of violence and intimidation by government supporters have been reported in Mvurwi, in the north-east, Glendale, close to Harare, and Wedza, east of the city. - Members of the Commercial Farmers Union hold talks with the leaders of the veterans in a fresh bid to curb violence. 25 April: Two more members of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) are reported as being killed. MDC spokesman Nomore Sibanda says one man was beaten to death in Shamva, about 80 kms northeast of Harare, on 24 April, and another was killed in the city. Amnesty International says that "politically motivated violence, is deliberately targeting opposition political activists and farming communities in rural areas". Over 300 white farmers have sought information on purchasing land in neighbouring Mozambique. A four-man Zimbabwean ministerial delegation has left for UK for talks on the land issue. 26 April: The major tobacco growers in Zimbabwe have boycotted a tobacco auction that is normally vital to the country's economy, because of violent unrest over land reform. Only half the usual quantity of the crop was up for sale: a marketing spokesman said the status of this year's export crop was unclear, and the disruption had already cost millions of dollars. Zimbabwe is the world's third largest tobacco producer and the crop is its main export. In an attempt to defuse the tense situation, the Zimbabwe Council of Churches is organising a breakfast meeting of the country's political parties. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 26 April 2000) * Zimbabwe. Violences - 19 avril. Les chefs des squatters qui occupent des centaines de fermes appartenant a des proprietaires blancs, ont promis de negocier avec les fermiers et de mettre fin aux violences, mais aucun accord n'a encore ete trouve. Chenjerai Hunzvi, leader des anciens combattants de la guerre d'independance qui font partie des squatters, a cependant declare: "Nous sommes d'accord sur la necessite d'arreter les hostilites et de travailler pour trouver une solution". Pour la premiere fois aussi, Hunzvi a admis que le climat pre-electoral n'est pas etranger aux troubles. - Le 21 avril, les chefs d'Etat et emissaires de sept pays africains (Afrique du Sud, Namibie, Angola, Mozambique, Ouganda, Rwanda et Zimbabwe) se sont retrouves a Victoria Falls, a un sommet regional place sous les auspices de la Communaute de developpement d'Afrique australe, pour tenter d'enrayer la crise qui risque d'avoir des consequences graves sur la stabilite de la region et sur son economie. Mais le president Mugabe avait fait savoir qu'il ne tolererait pas de pressions de la part de ses homologues. Le sommet a appele la Grande-Bretagne et les donateurs internationaux a financer la reforme agraire au Zimbabwe, se gardant bien de critiquer le president Mubage. - Le 22 avril, la Grande-Bretagne a reaffirme ses conditions de financement de la reforme agraire, notamment la transparence des elections, la fin de la violence et le retour a la legalite. Par ailleurs, le president du syndicat des fermiers blancs a accuse les squatters d'avoir choisi une nouvelle tactique en attaquant les ouvriers agricoles noirs; plusieurs de leurs logements ont ete incendies. Le soir du meme jour, un attentat a la bombe s'est produit dans le centre de Harare, visant les locaux d'un journal independant zimbabween, le Daily News, lance en 1999 pour concurrencer le quotidien gouvernemental The Herald. - Le 23 avril, des anciens combattants ont envahi deux autres fermes appartenant a des Blancs, et dans la nuit ils en ont encore envahi une troisieme, incendie des granges et tue le betail. Des assaillants ont aussi, pour la premiere fois, mis le feu a la recolte de tabac d'une ferme a l'est de Harare, s'attaquant ainsi symboliquement a la principale source de devises du pays. - Le 25 avril, un porte-parole du Mouvement pour le changement democratique (MDC), qui rassemble les adversaires de Mugabe, a annonce que deux de ses representants avaient ete tues par des adherents du parti gouvernemental ZANU-PF. Les meurtres ont eu lieu a Shamba (80 km au nord-est de Harare) et a Mhangura, un petit centre minier. A Shamba, d'autres membres de l'opposition ont ete severement battus. Le bilan des meurtres, depuis le debut des occupations des exploitations agricoles, s'eleve deja a neuf. L'opposition semble maintenant etre devenue la veritable cible du pouvoir. - Ce 27 avril, le Zimbabwe et la Grande-Bretagne renoueront le dialogue; une rencontre ministerielle est prevue visant a "discuter de tous les problemes auxquels est confronte le Zimbabwe". (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 27 avril 2000) Weekly anb0427 - End of part 6/6 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 anb04275.txt #6
- Next by Date: L'ultima opera sui SAHRAWI
- Previous by thread: Weekly anb04275.txt #6
- Next by thread: L'ultima opera sui SAHRAWI
- Indice: