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weekly anb05111.txt #8
- Subject: weekly anb05111.txt #8
- From: anb-bia <anb-bia at village.uunet.be>
- Date: Thu, 11 May 2000 15:26:55 +0200
ANB-BIA - Av. Charles Woeste 184 - 1090 Bruxelles - Belg TEL **.32.2/420 34 36 fax /420 05 49 E-Mail: anb- bia at village.uunet.be _____________________________________________________________ WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 11-05-2000 PART #1/8 * Africa. Action against the Media - Congo RDC: On 4 May, Article 19 appealed for the immediate release of Freddy Loseke Lisumbu La Yahenga, editor of La Libre Afrique, who has been in custody since his arrest on 31 December 1999. Egypt: In a 3 May letter to President Mubarak, the World Association of Newspapers and the World Editors Forum expressed serious concern at the seizure of the most recent issue of the magazine Al-Tadhamoun. Morocco: On 3 May, the World Association of Newspapers and the World Editors Forum expressed serious concern, in a letter to the prime minister, about the sentencing to jail of journalists Khalid Mechbal and Mustapha Alaoui. Togo: On 3 May, the World Association of Newspapers and the World Editors Form wrote to President Eyadema, expressing concern about the arrest of newspaper director Hippolyte Agboh and the seizure of a number of publications. On 5 May, Amnesty International said that as the OAU July Summit to be held in Togo approaches, the government's pledge to human rights remains rhetorical, as long as attacks against human rights activists and the independent media continue. Tunisia: The International Federation of Journalists said on 5 May, that it is concerned about journalist Taoufiq Ben Brik who has been on hunger strike since 3 April. Zimbabwe: Zimbabwe's Supreme Court has ordered an investigation into the alleged torture of two journalists, Mark Chavunduka and Ray Choto, both of the independent Standard newspaper, while they were in military detention last year. The official Ziana news agency said (4 May) that Chief Justice Anthony Gubbay had ordered Police Commissioner Augustine Chihuri to prosecute "all persons against whom there was reasonable suspicion in the perpetration of such offenses". (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 8 May 2000) * Africa. Children -- The worst place to be a child - 6 May: In Johannesburg, Nelson Mandela speaks at the launch of an appeal for world leaders to improve the lives of children. He lashes out at African tyrants who cling to power. 8 May: The Save the Children agency says thirteen million children throughout the world, are currently uprooted from their homes by war. In a new report "War Brought Us Here", the organisation charts the troublespots where children suffer most. It calls on governments, rebel factions and the UN to respect the rights of what it calls "the most innocent victims of conflict". The report says that in Sierra Leone, thousands of children have been massacred, raped and had limbs severed. Many others are forced to serve as soldiers. "But Angola is the worst place in the world to be a child", states the report. Three decades of strife have left a million young people homeless, and exposed to bombardment, landmines and chronic disease. (ANB- BIA, Brussels, 8 May 2000) * Afrique. Le scandale de la guerre - Dans l'esprit du Jubile, les missionnaires comboniens du monde entier ont lance une invitation "aux hommes et femmes de bonne volonte a rompre le silence et a unir leurs forces pour mettre fin aux terribles guerres qui font rage dans la region qui va des Grands Lacs jusqu'a la Corne d'Afrique". L'objectif de la campagne est de contribuer a promouvoir la paix et la reconciliation en Erythree, en Ethiopie, dans la Republique democratique du Congo, au Soudan et en Ouganda, en mobilisant la societe civile, la classe politique et les medias. Le slogan de la campagne est: "rompre le silence: paix pour l'Afrique". Les missionnaires comboniens ont explique qu'ils etaient a la fois "surpris, peines et indignes par le fait que ce qui se passe en Afrique ne fait l'objet que d'informations sporadiques et filtrees", si bien que "les pertes en vies humaines, l'enorme flot de personnes deplacees et refugiees, les souffrances indicibles, l'appauvrissement et la deshumanisation des populations civiles epuisees, laissent malheureusement indifferente une grande quantite de personnes, et notamment ceux qui detiennent le pouvoir politique et economique". Le P. Alex Zanotelli, qui travaille dans un bidonville de Nairobi, au Kenya, a declare, au cours de la presentation de la campagne, que "s'il est vrai que seulement 0,8 % du PIB mondial vient d'Afrique, la part d'information consacree a ce continent est probablement encore inferieure". (D'apres Zenith, Italie, 10 mai 2000) * Africa. Facing continent-wide conflict - Africa last night faced the prospect of widening conflict, as tensions deepened across the continent. A fresh threat of war between former allies Uganda and Rwanda, and renewed fighting between Eritrea and Ethiopia added yesterday to the conflicts destabilising the region. Efforts to defuse a series of crises, from Sierra Leone in the west, to the Horn of Africa in the east, appeared to be breaking down. A UN Security Council mission led by US ambassador Richard Holbrooke, which visited seven African states in as many days, ended its journey yesterday empty-handed. Attempts to revive peace moves in Congo RDCand defuse tensions between Uganda and Rwanda collapsed. (Financial Times, UK, 11 May 2000) * Africa/UN. Killings in Sierra Leone jeopardise UN mission in Congo - The detention and killings of UN peacekeepers in Sierra Leone, have seriously jeopardised the speedy deployment of 5,500 UN peacekeepers to Congo RDC, as well as the future of UN peacekeeping missions elsewhere in Africa. The timing could not have been worse, UN officials say. The news that four UN peacekeepers were missing presumed dead, and 80 taken hostage by Sierra Leone rebels, came as Security Council members were en route to Kinshasa to begin a week- long tour of five African countries involved in Congo's civil war. The unusual mission led by Richard Holbrooke, US ambassador to the UN, aims to secure a ceasefire long enough for peacekeeping troops to be deployed. (Financial Times, UK, 5 May 2000) * Southern Africa. Zimbabwe decline disrupts trade in the region - The steep decline of the Zimbabwean economy has disrupted regional trade and forced many South African importers to demand "delivery at frontier" terms -- a sure sign of crisis -- for goods from Zimbabwe, South African business leaders said on 4 May. Members of Zimbabwe's ruling ZANU-PF have attacked and killed opposition supporters and occupied white-owned commercial farms as part of a violent election campaign. The trouble has frightened away tourists and foreign investors and prompted the withdrawal of credit limits and export credit guarantees for trade with Zimbabwe. Insurers are also refusing to provide further cover for goods in transit inside the country. South African exporters and importers, already affected by international concern about the southern African region as a result of the violence, have also been hit by Zimbabwean foreign exchange shortages and the country's export controls. (Financial Times, UK, 5 May 2000) * Algerie. Toujours des massacres - Neuf personnes, dont un instituteur et ses cinq enfants, enlevees le 1er mai, ont ete retrouvees le 6 mai assassinees et mutilees, pres de Tissemsilt, a 200 km au sud-ouest d'Alger. Deux repentis ont en outre ete tues dans la region de Lakhdaria. Enfin, un gang specialise dans les "faux barrages" aurait ete demantele par la police a Tizi-Ouzou; il etait dirige par un tenancier de bar proxenete. D'autre part, selon la presse algerienne du 6 mai, 34 membres de groupes islamistes ont ete tues ces derniers jours lors de deux operations de ratissage menees dans la region de Bouira, a 120 km a l'est d'Alger, et a la frontiere avec le Maroc. Le journal Le Matin rapporte par ailleurs que des elements de l'Armee islamique du salut (AIS) et du Groupe islamique arme (GIA), qui ont beneficie de la loi sur la concorde civile en se rendant aux autorites, ont recemment beneficie officiellement d'armes pour assurer leur propre securite. Le journal indique que des citoyens ont denonce cette situation. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 8 mai 2000) * Algerie. Lettre du FIS - Profitant de la presence en Algerie d'une mission d'Amnesty International, trois membres fondateurs du Front islamique du salut (FIS) ont adresse une longue lettre ouverte a quatre ONG de defense des droits de l'homme. Rappelant "la necessite imperieuse" d'une visite a Abassi Madani, le leader historique du FIS en residence surveillee depuis trois ans a Alger, ils evoquent les principaux dossiers brulants concernant le drame algerien, notamment les massacres collectifs, les disparus, les assassinats de prisonniers, ainsi que l'etat d'urgence en vigueur depuis huit ans, qui a facilite "l'etouffement de la vie politique" et l'exclusion politique pratiquee a l'endroit de "l'opposition veritable, seule capable de representer le peuple". (AP, 10 mai 2000) * Angola. Distribution of food aid may cease - Over one million two thousand displaced people survive in Angola thanks to international aid. Unfortunately, due to a lack of funds - warned the World Food Programme (WFP) on 5 May in Geneva (Switzerland) - the distribution of food aid may soon cease. Theatre to a devastating and endless civil war, Angola is overrun with anti- personnel mines which on a daily basis claim innumerable defenceless lives. The situation is characterised by a constant increase of ambushes and attacks by the numerous armed groups present in the territory. The displaced people that have found precarious shelters in the small and larger cities, are too afraid to return to the countryside. The WFP, which foresees the necessity to assist some one million six hundred thousand people by the end of 2000, is currently in need of $100 million. The WFP had already launched a previous appeal at the beginning of the year for $158 million to finance the distribution of 17,000 tonnes of food aid each month. The WFP only received 60% of the funds requested, while the number of needy people has in the meantime increased significantly. The organisation may not be able to distribute sufficient supplies already starting from next August. (MISNA, Italy, 8 May 2000) Weekly anb0511 - End of part 1/8
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