Weekly anb05175.txt #8



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 17-05-2001      PART #5/8

* Morocco. Activists jailed - A court in Morocco has given jail sentences of three months to 36 human rights activists for organising unauthorised public protests against torture and arbitrary arrests. The activists from the Moroccan Association for Human Rights held their protests last year in the capital, Rabat on International Human Rights Day. The verdict comes less than two months after the organisation released its annual report which stated that -despite promises of reform - the human rights situation remained alarming, with journalists continuing to face regular intimidation -several having been given prison sentences this year. (BBC News, UK, 17 May 2001)

* Niger. Le Premier ministre à Bruxelles - Le 11 mai, le Premier ministre nigérien Hama Amadou, accompagné de ses ministres des Finances et du Plan, entame une visite d'une semaine à Bruxelles, pour faire le point sur la coopération entre l'Union européenne et le Niger. La Commission européenne est très satisfaite du niveau atteint par la coopération entre Bruxelles et Niamey depuis le rétablissement de celle-ci en mai 2000. L'UE avait gelé sa coopération avec le Niger à la suite du coup d'Etat sanglant d'avril 1999. Dans le cadre du 9e Fonds européen de développement, l'UE a mis à la disposition de Niamey un montant global de 345 millions d'euros, ce qui représente un des engagements les plus importants de Bruxelles en faveur d'un pays ACP. Le Niger a aussi bénéficié d'une aide financière de 5 millions d'euros pour lui permettre de faire face au déficit alimentaire consécutif à une baisse des récoltes. (D'après PANA, Sénégal, 10 mai 2001)

* Niger. Recensement de la population - Un recensement général de la population et de l'habitat débutera officiellement le 20 mai sur toute l'étendue du territoire national, annonce-t-on de source officielle à Niamey. L'opération devrait durer 20 jours. Quelque 11.600 agents ont été recrutés et formés et 1.100 véhicules seront mobilisés pour l'opération. Le dernier recensement général estimait la population nigérienne à un peu plus de 8 millions d'habitants. L'opération vise notamment à renforcer la prise en compte des questions de population dans les plans et stratégies de développement. Dans l'immédiat, elle fournira l'effectif et la structure de la population, sa répartition géographique et par sexe, ainsi que les caractéristiques de l'habitat. (PANA, Sénégal, 12 mai 2001)

* Niger. Students switch tactics - Students in Niger have held a peaceful demonstration in the capital, Niamey, after abandoning an 11-day hunger strike at the parliament building. The students are protesting against the continuing detention of 16 colleagues, charged with killing a police officer during a demonstration at Niamey University in February. The leader of the Niger students, Tasiu Dan Lamso, told the BBC they had decided to change their tactics and would now just use marches and demonstrations to make their point. But Mr Lamso said the 16 students in detention remained on their own hunger strike. (BBC News, UK, 13 May 2001)

* Niger. Grève des enseignants - Les 17.000 enseignants du secteur public se sont mis en grève de 72 heures, du 16 au 18 mai, en dépit de l'appel à la modération lancé par le ministre de l'Education nationale. Les grévistes réclament la satisfaction de leur plate-forme revendicative, mais selon le ministre, 6 des 9 points de cette plate-forme ont déjà trouvé solution. Pour les observateurs, ce mouvement de grève participe à une stratégie classique: mettre à profit la période très sensilble des examens scolaires pour faire aboutir des revendications. (PANA, Sénégal, 16 mai 2001)

* Nigeria. Seeking closer ties with USA - President Olusegun Obasanjo is on a diplomatic mission to the United States in order to build up relations with President George Bush. The United States has extensive interests in Nigeria's oil industry and the American government has described Nigeria's transition to democracy as crucial for all of Africa's future. This is the first time the two leaders will have met and President Obasanjo will hope to build the same personal bond with President Bush that he enjoyed with the previous American leader Bill Clinton. Most of Nigeria's elite were disappointed that George Bush won the American election. They would have preferred a Democrat as that party is generally perceived to have more sympathy for African concerns. But President Obasanjo needs American support in his campaigns for debt relief and for more foreign investment in Nigeria's struggling economy. President Bush will want to be seen as helpful. This is because he is sensitive to the interests of oil companies like Chevron, Texaco and Exxon Mobil, all of which have big investments in Nigeria. The two men are likely to discuss America's controversial military assistance to Nigeria. The Americans say they would like Nigeria to consolidate its role as a regional peacekeeper. But some Nigerian soldiers and politicians have criticised an American training programme that they believe has threatened Nigerian sovereignty. (BBC News, UK, 10 May 2001)

* Nigeria. Bombe à retardement - Donald Boham, porte-parole de la compagnie pétrolière Shell, a prévenu les autorités nigérianes que les puits de pétrole abandonnés depuis 1993 dans l'Etat de Delta pourraient exploser du jour au lendemain. Sur quatorze forages, deux seulement ont été correctement scellés avec du béton. Des fuites ont été repérées sur l'un des douzes autres. Le gaz qui s'exhale des fissures pourrait provoquer un terrible incendie. La Shell s'inquiète d'éventuels actes de sabotage de la part des Ogonis, les habitants de la région, particulièrement actifs dans la lutte contre les multinationales qui exploitent les hydrocarbures sans en partager équitablement les bénéfices. (J.A./L'Intelligent, France, 8-14 mai 2001)

* Nigeria. Nigeria rejects foreign debt claims - Nigeria says it has rejected foreign debt demands worth two-hundred-and-forty million dollars. The head of the Nigeria's Debt Management Office, Akin Arikawe, said after talks with members of the international credit regulatory organisation, the Paris Club, that it emerged that creditors had no proper documentation for one-hundred-and-fifty million dollars. He said Nigeria also rejected a claim from Brazil for ninety-million dollars. Mr Arikawe said at the end of March that Nigeria's external debt stock stood at twenty-eight billion dollars. (BBC News, UK, 15 May 2001)

* Nigeria. Kaduna: tribunaux différents - En raison des affrontements confessionnels meurtriers de juin dernier, musulmans et non musulmans seront jugés, dès novembre, par des tribunaux différents dans l'Etat de Kaduna (nord), où la sharia est en application depuis mai 2000. Des tribunaux islamiques seront chargés de juger les musulmans; les non musulmans comparaîtront devant des cours de droit coutumier ou civil. (La Croix, France, 15 mai 2001)

* Nigeria. "Power for the people" - After decades of living in darkness, Nigeria expects to be able to generate enough electricity to supply its citizens with light by the end of the year, government officials said on 15 May. Power and steel ministry spokesman Clinton Adebolu Oni said the government aims to increase the supply of electricity to 4,000 megawatts from 1,500 MW by the end of the year. "We have signed contracts with some companies and the refurbishment of the Shiroro, Kainji, Egbin, Ughelli, Jebba and Afam power plants, among others, which have been idle over the years, due to official neglect, has commenced and will soon be completed," Adebolu Oni said. "The contractors have started work and it is planned that by the end of December the contractors would have completed the job and power generation would have been improved to about 4,000 MW," he said. Africa's most populous country with more than 110 million people, needs about 3,400 MW daily but the state-run National Electric Power Authority (NEPA) generates only 1,500 MW because of the poor state of its facilities after 15 years of neglect during military rule. Industry in Lagos, the commercial capital, is running at only 30 percent of its installed capacity due largely to the lack of power supply, according to the Lagos state government. (CNN, USA, 15 May 2001)

* Rwanda. Church members in the dock for role in genocide - Earlier this month, an Anglican Bishop appeared before the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) accused of committing genocide and crimes against humanity in Rwanda in 1994. In Belgium, four Rwandans including two Benedictine nuns are currently on trial for their alleged role in the mass murder of Tutsis. Coming after the trial and acquittal last year in Rwanda of Catholic Bishop Augustin Misago, these events are reopening debate about what role the Church played in Rwanda during the genocide, and how it should respond in the aftermath. Such events also raise questions about the relationship between the church, the state and the judicial system, especially in a country like Rwanda which has one of the highest rates of church membership in the world. While reliable figures are hard to come by, at least two-thirds of Rwanda's population are Christian and about half are Roman Catholic. In Rwanda, the Catholic Church in particular has come under fire for involvement in the genocide. (...) Anglican Bishop Samuel Musabyimana is the second churchman now in the ICTR's custody along with Seventh Day Adventist Pastor Elizaphan Ntakirutimana. Appearing before the court in full ecclesiastical robes, Bishop Musabyimana on May 2nd pleaded not-guilty to four charges including genocide, conspiracy to commit genocide and extermination as a crime against humanity. He said he wished to protest his innocence to the Christian community and his colleagues in the Anglican church, including the Archbishop of Canterbury. "They should be assured that there is no blood on my hands," he said. "My conscience is quiet." During the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, Musabyimana was bishop of the Shyogwe diocese in central Rwanda. The Prosecutor alleges that he ordered refugees who fled to Shyogwe to be registered according to their ethnic group, and that soldiers and militia used these lists, with his knowledge, to single out Tutsi refugees and take them to their deaths. (...) Musabyimana's indictment says he held meetings with the Rwandan interim government that presided over the genocide, and that he carried out missions abroad on behalf of that government. Reacting to Musabyimana's arrest, the Archbishop of Canterbury's office said that Archbishop George Carey (head of the Anglican church) "has supported and encouraged the setting up of an independent inquiry into the role of the Church in the genocide. The legal process now in train should be allowed to run its course. Any decision on a Church investigation would need to be taken after appropriate consultation in the Anglican Communion and in the light of the outcome of the legal process". (...) (Hirondelle, Arusha, 14 May 2001)

* Rwanda. Tribunal "racism" row - A leaked letter reveals why seven prosecutors at the UN tribunal for Rwanda in Arusha have controversially not been reappointed. The letter obtained by journalists, written by chief prosecutor Carla Del Ponte, was a response to a complaint made by the seven lawyers to the UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. The six African and one Indian lawyer attributed Ms Del Ponte's decision not to renew their contracts beyond May to racism. Rebuffing the charge, Ms Del Ponte said the lawyers were not suited as prosecutors. Her letter, obtained by the AP news agency, said the lawyers' complaint to the secretary-general reinforced her decision about their professionalism."The memorandum is symptomatic of professional incompetence of each of the signatories... instead of directing their energy toward the ends of international justice, they are absorbed in their own narrow self-interest," the letter said. A spokesman for the tribunal in Arusha would not comment on the letter or the accusations. The Rwandan Government has criticised the Rwanda tribunal in the past for their slow work rate. Very few genocide suspects have been successfully prosecuted since it was set up. More than 750,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed in the genocide. (BBC News, UK, 15 May 2001)

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