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weekly anb05114.txt #8
- Subject: weekly anb05114.txt #8
- From: anb-bia <anb-bia at village.uunet.be>
- Date: Thu, 11 May 2000 15:26:59 +0200
_____________________________________________________________ WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 11-05-2000 PART #4/8 * Ethiopie/Erythree. Echec des negociations - 5 mai. L'Ethiopie et l'Erythree se rejettent mutuellement la responsabilite de l'echec des negociations indirectes engagees la semaine derniere a Alger pour regler le contentieux territorial. Le mediateur algerien, Ahmed Ouyahia, avait tente de mettre en oeuvre le plan de paix de l'OUA qui prevoit une treve, un retrait des zones occupees et le stationnement d'une force de paix le long des 1.000 km de frontiere commune. L'OUA, presidee par l'Algerie, a confirme l'ajournement des discussions de paix et a lance un appel a la retenue aux deux parties. - 7 mai. Le Conseil de securite de l'Onu a decide d'envoyer sept de ses ambassadeurs (representant les Etats-Unis, la Grande-Bretagne, la France, le Mali, la Tunisie, le Nigeria et les Pays-Bas, et qui se trouvent actuellement en Afrique centrale pour discuter du processus de paix au Congo) en Erythree et en Ethiopie pour tenter de relancer les pourparlers de paix. Ils vont exhorter les deux camps a "s'abstenir de recourir a la force et a d'autres hostilites, et d'engager immediatement, serieusement et sans conditions prealables des negociations". -10 mai. La delegation de l'Onu, dirigee par M. Holbrooke, s'est entretenue le 9 mai avec le Premier ministre ethiopien, et le 10 mai avec le president erythtreen. Aux journalistes, M. Holbrooke a declare que les deux pays etaient sur le point de reprendre les hostilites. "Nous sommes tout pres d'une reprise des hostilites et de l'eruption de nouveaux combats", a-t-il affirme. - D'autre part, des elections legislatives se tiendront le dimanche 14 mai en Ethiopie. Ce scrutin doit designer les membres des conseils des huit Etats federaux et des regions administratives particulieres, ainsi que les 548 deputes de la Chambre des representants (le legistlatif federal). (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 11 mai 2000) * Ethiopia/Eritrea. Talks collapse - 5 May: Mutual recriminations have followed the collapse of peace talks aimed at ending the conflict between Eritrea and Ethiopia. The indirect talks, which began last weekend, were organised and hosted by Algeria's President Bouteflika, the current chairman of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU). An Ethiopian statement blamed Eritrea for the failure of the talks. But Eritrea said the talks foundered on Ethiopia's refusal to sign a peace plan drawn up the OAU, which Eritrea had accepted. Following the breakdown of talks, the United States urged Eritrea and Ethiopia to re-commit themselves to solving their border war. 8 May: A team of UN ambassadors has met Ethiopian President Meles Zenawai in Addis Ababa to discuss ways of ending the war. The ambassadors will continue on to Eritrea. 9 May: After talks in Asmara, the UN team has decided to extend its stay in the region by a day. The delegation has returned to Ethiopia but plans to go back to Asmara tomorrow. 10 May: The members of the UN Security Council delegation visiting the Horn of Africa fear war may resume there, after the failure of their mission to resolve the Eritrea-Ethiopia border dispute. "We are very close to a resumption of hostilities and the outbreak of a new round off fighting which...would constitute the largest war on the continent", warned UN envoy Richard Holbrooke, after 3 days of fruitless but intense diplomacy between the leaders of Ethiopia and Eritrea. The difference between the opposing sides, Holbrooke said are "real, but small". (ANB-BIA, Brussels 11 May 2000) * Kenya. White-owned farms invaded - 9 May: A white Kenyan government minister says hundreds of families have invaded two white-owned farms, but the government says it has nothing to do with the current land crisis in Zimbabwe. "The government wishes to acknowledge that there has indeed been a land dispute involving the two farms and the matter is in court", said a statement from Richard Leakey, the country's chief civil servant and himself a white Kenyan. "The invasion is not new...There is no connection whatsoever between events in Kenya and Zimbabwe". Earlier the same day, Basil Criticos, an assistant minister in the Kenyan government and a white Member of Parliament, said his sisal farm in the south of the country had been invaded by over 300 families. (CNN, 9 May March 2000) * Kenya. Fermes blanches squattees - A l'appel de deux parlementaires apparemment inspires par la situation au Zimbabwe, des centaines de familles noires occupent deux domaines agricoles blancs juges sous-exploites, a annonce le 9 mai le vice-ministre kenyan des Routes et des Travaux publics, Basil Criticos, lui-meme blanc. Criticos a precise que sa propre ferme avait ete envahie par 300 familles qui auraient maltraite son personnel et que 200 autres familles occupent une autre exploitation. Depuis le debut des occupations au Zimbabwe, des craintes se sont fait jour a Nairobi sur une extension de cette campagne au Kenya. Le gouvernement kenyan a cependant affirme que l'invasion des deux fermes n'etait pas liee a la crise des terres au Zimbabwe, mais qu'il s'agissait d'un litige foncier dont l'affaire est en cours de jugement. Il faut noter qu'a l'independance du Kenya, la plupart des fermiers blancs ont quitte leurs proprietes; toutefois celles-ci ne sont pas allees a la population noire, mais ont ete vendues a des prix derisoires a des multinationales. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 10 mai 2000) * Kenya. Parliament publishes "list of shame" - Kenya's parliament has published an unprecedented name-and-shame list of politicians, linking some of President Moi's closest aides and relatives to graft and scandal. The report names dozens of the country's leading politicians and civil servants as being responsible for corruption which has cost the country hundreds of millions of dollars. The report, dubbed "the list of shame" by the country's press, says Mr Moi's son Philip should be prosecuted for allegedly evading duty worth $400,000 on six vehicles. President Moi himself is not named in the report. (Financial Times, UKI, 11 May 2000) * Libya/The Netherlands. The Lockerbie Trial - 3 May: Libya's President Gaddafi says he will respect the trial's verdict. 4 May: Graphic eye-witness accounts of the scenes in the Scottish town of Lockerbie after the explosion of Pan-Am flight 103 caused by a terrorist bomb, dominates the second day of the trial of the two Libyans accused of murdering 270 people in the attack. Abdel Bassett Ali Mohamed al-Megrahi and Lamin Khalifa Fhimah are accused of the murders. They are also accused of conspiracy to murder and breaching an aviation security act. 5 May: Detectives investigating the disaster tell of the painstaking investigation to find those responsible. They present vivid evidence of the devastation at Lockerbie in Scotland. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 6 May 2000) * Malawi. Likoma Island receives more courtesy calls - Malawi's newly established 27th District, Likoma, continues to receive visitors. Within a short space of time, the Government has sent three delegations on needs assessment missions. Likoma is situated on Lake Malawi in the country's Central Region. It lies some 8 kilometres from Mozambique and to the north lies Tanzania. Chizumulu's population is about 4,000, and Likoma's about 12,000. The new district also includes Chizumulu Island. In an effort to boost tourism, the local Chief says: "There is need to construct good roads, establish a reliable water and electricity supply, instal modern telecommunication facilities, improve education and establish viable business enterprises". Existing development projects were established by the Anglican Church which built a church, schools and a hospital to serve the people. Missionary work started as early as 1895. Patients attend the hospital from both Tanzania and Mozambique in addition to the local people. Because of its situation in the middle of Lake Malawi, this district has enormous potentiality to attract tourists, but much has to be done to develop the area. (Benedict R. Chimeya, Malawi, 4 May 2000) * Maroc. Journaliste condamne - Les autorites marocaines ont interdit a M. Mustapha Alaoui, redacteur en chef de l'hebdomadaire Al-Ousboue Assahafi, d'excercer le journalisme pendant trois ans, apres sa condamnation par un tribunal pour diffamation du ministre des Affaires etrangeres Mohamed Benaissa. L'interdiction prend effet immediat le 9 mai. M. Alaoui a aussi ete condamne a 20.000 dirhams (1.881 dollars) d'amende et a un million de dirhams de dommages et interets au ministre. Son journal avait accuse Benaissa de "mauvaise gestion et corruption" lorsqu'il etait ambassadeur du Maroc a Washington. (Reuters, 10 mai 2000) * Mozambique. Donors surpass aid need - 4 May: International donors meeting in Rome have promised Mozambique nearly $453 million to help rebuild its economy and infrastructure after the worst floods in living memory. The figure is $3 million more than the Mozambique Government had requested when presenting its re-building programme at the two-day aid conference. "Today is a very good day for Mozambique, a very good day for Africa and a very good day for development cooperation", said UNDP head Mark Malloch Brown. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 5 May 2000) * Namibia/Angola. Namibian forces set up bases inside Angola - Namibian forces have set up bases inside Angola in an operation aimed at ending UNITA rebel raids in northeastern Namibia. This is a move that a local human rights group, Namibia's National Society for Human Rights, has condemned as a dangerous escalation in Windhoek's involvement in the Angolan conflict. Namibia's President Nujoma says that the Angolan government has been informed. (IRIN, 8 May 2000) Weekly anb0511 - End of part 4/8
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