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Weekly anb06081.txt #6
- Subject: Weekly anb06081.txt #6
- From: anb-bia <anb-bia at village.uunet.be>
- Date: Thu, 08 Jun 2000 17:29:45 +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: 08-06-2000 ******> DOCUMENT DISPONIBLE SUR DEMANDE <********* On vient de recevoir la version francaise du document de Amnesty International: "Rwanda - Le cours perturbe de la justice". Ce document avait paru fin avril en anglais, avec le titre: "The troubled course of justice" - cfr Weekly News du 27 avril, a la voix: "* Rwanda. The course of justice". La versione francaise (traduite et diffusee par le Service des Coordinations de la section francaise de Amnesty International) est disponible et vous pouvez la demander chez nous avec la reference suivante: ======> < \AI\RWANDA\JUST-FR.EXE > <======= Merci de ne pas utiliser la commande "REPLY" pour demander le document ======== et de ne mettre que la reference dans votre message ================ &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
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: 08-06-2000 PART #1/6 * Africa. Action against the Media - Morocco: On 6 June, the Committee to Protect Journalists said that so far this year, the Moroccan Government has taken a number of punitive measures against the Media. Mozambique: The Media Institute of Southern Africa reports that the Mozambican Attorney-General's office has made an attempt to force the independent newsheet Metical to reveal the name of one of its sources. The editor, Carlos Cardosa, received a summons on 30 May from the Attorney-General's office demanding his presence to make a statement. Zimbabwe: The trial of three newsmen from the Standard has closed in the Harare Magistrate's Court, with judgement expected to be passed on 16 June. They faced charges of criminal defamation. On 6 June, Chenjerai Hunzvi, chairman of the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans' Association, gave what he called, a "last warning" to the independent daily The Daily News, to desist from publishing articles that tarnished his image and that of his organisation. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 8 June 2000) * Africa. River Blindness - Scientists say they have made a major breakthrough in the battle against River Blindness, a disease affecting 17 million people. Antibiotics could be a cheap, safe and effective way of wiping out the disease, which is caused by a parasitic worm. Scientists from the UK, Cameroon and Germany, say their experiments show that using antibiotics to kill bacteria living on the parasite, also kills the parasite itself. River Blindness, or Onchocerciasis, causes severe itching, disfiguring lesions and lesions of the eye that can cause blindness. It is most prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa, though the World Health Organisation says it will have stamped out the disease in West Africa by 2002. (BBC News, 7 June 2000) * Afrique. Rapport de la Banque mondiale - "L'Afrique peut-elle revendiquer le 21e siecle?", c'est le titre d'un rapport de la Banque mondiale, rendu public le 31 mai, et qui passe en revue sans complaisance les handicaps africains. L'Afrique est confrontee a une dramatique recession economique. Le revenu par habitant est aujourd'hui inferieur a celui de la fin des annees 1960 et pres de la moitie de la population vit sous le seuil de la pauvrete. Le cout de la corruption est extremement grave: 30 milliards de dollars d'aide internationale auraient ete detournes en Afrique. Le rapport voit neanmoins nombre de raisons qui pourraient favoriser l'emergence des 49 pays africains sur la scene economique et financiere. Le moteur en est la croissance mondiale, que tous les economistes voient vigoureuse et durable pour la decennie qui vient. Toutefois, "l'aide doit changer", note le document. Elle doit etre plus selective dans le choix de ses beneficiaires; elle doit etre preparee avec le concours de ses beneficiaires potentiels; enfin, les beneficiaires doivent etre rendus totalement responsables de son utilisation. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 5 juin 2000) * Afrique. Esperance de vie? - L'Organisation mondiale de la sante a publie un classement de l'esperance de vie "saine", base sur un nouveau systeme de calcul. Nouvel indicateur cree par les scientifiques, le DALE (Disability Adjusted Life Expectancy, soit l'esperance de vie ajustee aux infirmites) represente le nombre escompte d'annees de vie en bonne sante. En tete se trouvent les Japonais avec 74,5 ans, en derniere position les Sierra-Leonais avec 26 ans. Au plus bas du classement se trouvent les pays d'Afrique subsaharienne, qui ont connu ces dix dernieres annees une chute considerable de l'esperance de vie totale en raison du sida, devenu la premiere cause de deces dans cette region. De 51,1 ans, cette esperance de vie est tombee a 46,3 ans pour les filles et de 47,3 ans a 44,8 ans pour les garcons. Dans les cinq annees a venir, elle devrait passer sous la barre des 40 ans dans pas moins de 32 pays d'Afrique. (D'apres Liberation, France, 6 juin 2000) * Afrique. Le sida menace le monde du travail - Ce jeudi 8 juin, la 88e session de la Conference internationale du travail examinera a Geneve un rapport sur un etude commandee par le BIT mettant en garde contre une "catastrophe" previsible pour les travailleurs et les employeurs: l'impact du sida. Selon cette etude, la maladie va provoquer un "declin spectaculaire en taille et en qualite de la main-d'oeuvre dans un certain nombre de pays au cours des 20 prochaines annees". L'Afrique subsaharienne est la region la plus touchee. Dans 8 pays ayant un taux de prevalence du VIH superieur a 10% de la population adulte, la main-d'oeuvre en l'an 2020 sera jusqu'a 21% inferieure a ce qu'elle aurait ete sans le sida. Dans les pays les plus touches, le sida va induire un accroissement du travail des enfants et annuler les efforts de promotion de la femme. (La Libre Belgique, 8 juin 2000) * Algerie. Recrudescence d'attentats - L'ouest algerien, ou opere le Groupe islamique arme d'Antar Zouabri, connait ces derniers jours une recrudescence d'attentats. Le 2 juin, sept personnes ont ete tuees par des islamistes dans deux attentats a Hassi Ben Okba, une localite proche d'Oran. D'autre part, le quotidien El Watan rapportait le 5 juin que 14 elements d'un groupe arme ont ete tues dans la region de Sidi Daoud (70 km a l'est d'Alger) lors d'une importante operation de l'armee declenchee il y a une semaine. Cette offensive a ete lancee au lendemain d'une attaque contre un poste de l'armee dans la region, qui avait fait 2 morts et 6 blesses dans les rangs des militaires. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 6 juin 2000) * Botswana. Havoc in Game Reserve - Wildlife authorities in Botswana have said that illegal immigrants from South Africa and Zimbabwe are at the centre of poaching activities in one of the country's game reserves. As a result of this the anti-poaching unit at the Tati reserve which is located at the Tuli block in the central district has raised concern over the high number of illegal immigrants from the two countries entering Botswana at un-gazetted border crossings in the area for poaching purposes. Game-wardens say that every weekend over 100 illegal immigrants are arrested in the area. Apart from poaching the illegal immigrants rob the anti- poaching officials of personal belongings. Members of the anti- poaching unit have therefore appealed for guns to protect themselves against the poachers, wild animals like elephants, tigers and lions. They say that effort to eradicate poaching in the area and control crime has been hampered by the fact that the game reserve's management does not allow the arrest of the poachers some of whom cross by boats from South Africa. At the same time some of the game-reserve workers are not helping the situation by allowing illegal foreigners to live with them at their camps. (PANA, Dakar, 5 June 2000) * Burkina Faso. Slaying gives life to Opposition - Norbert Zongo, this country's most popular journalist, playwright and human rights activist, knew a lot about political murders, and he apparently paid for that knowledge with his life. Now the continuing public outcry over his assassination 18 months ago is threatening to bring down one of the most durable and secretive governments in West Africa. "They made a mistake in killing Zongo," said Jean Claude Meda, president of the Journalists Association here. "They thought it would be like other murders and that it would instill fear, but the opposite happened. People lost their fear, started a whole movement and began to question authority, forcing the government to take small steps toward democracy. That is Norbert Zongo's legacy." Zongo investigated allegations of murder ordered from within President Blaise Compaore's inner circle, and he was assassinated in December 1998, allegedly by members of the elite Presidential Guard. For the past 15 months Compaore's government has faced an unprecedented wave of strikes, student unrest and opposition demands for justice in the Zongo case, forcing the government to loosen its once-iron grip on political activities. International aid from Europe and the United States has been lost over the case and a coalition of 57 unions, human rights organizations and opposition political parties have pushed the limits of political expression far beyond what previously had been allowed. Using the slogan "Enough is Enough," the coalition, called the Collective of Mass Democratic Organizations and Political Parties, has kept up pressure for an investigation that many believe would lead to the presidential palace. The coalition says it has documented 91 political killings carried out by the Compaore government, but in the past public reaction was always muted and fragmented. "Zongo's death led to the birth of our coalition," said Chrysogone Zougmore, secretary general of the Burkinabe Movement for Human Rights, a coalition leader. "We are not after political power, we are fighting against impunity.... It was one death too many." (The Washington Post, 4 June 2000) * Burkina Faso. Deces du cardinal Zoungrana - Le cardinal Paul Zoungrana, archeveque emerite de Ouagadougou, est decede le dimanche 4 juin vers midi. Les funerailles solennelles, presidees par le cardinal Tomko, seront celebrees le 10 juin dans la cathedrale de Ouagadougou, suivies de l'inhumation. Le cardinal Zoungrana est ne a Ouagadougou le 3 septembre 1917. Il avait ete ordonne pretre en 1942. Apres son entree dans la Societe des Missionnaires d'Afrique (Peres Blancs) il fut nomme archeveque de Ouagadougou en 1960. En tant que jeune eveque, il a participe aux travaux du concile Vatican II, dont il a ete le fidele temoin dans tout le continent. Il avait ete designe cardinal en 1965. Avec son depart, l'Eglise perd un grand acteur de l'epoque de la decolonisation et de l'inculturation post-conciliaire. (D'apres Fides, Rome, 5 juin 2000) * Burkina Faso. Cardinal Paul Zoungrana - Cardinal Paul Zoungrana, a member of the Society of Missionaries of Africa and for decades, a leading voice of the Catholic Church in Africa, died on 4 June. he was 82. The Cardinal retired five years ago as Archbishop of Ouagadougou (remaining Emeritus Archbishop of Ouagadougou). In a condolence message, Pope John Paul II praised the Cardinal as "a zealous and faithful servant of the Church and an eminent son of Burkina Faso and Africa". He was ordained bishop by Pope John XXIII in 1960 and appointed Cardinal by Pope Paul VI in 1965. He spoke out frequently on the plight of Africa and the impoverished sub-Saharan region, and said the Church and the world must not neglect the suffering. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 6 June 2000) Weekly News anb0608.txt - End of part 1/6
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