Weekly anb05314.txt #8



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 31-05-2001      PART #4/8

* Congo (RDC). Rebels warn peace deal collapsing - On 29 May, Congo rebels warned that a peace agreement to end the country's 2 1/2-year civil war could collapse if the government continues to violate key provisions of the deal. Azarias Ruberwa, secretary general of the Rwanda-backed Rally for Congo Democracy, said the government continues to support Rwandan militants who launch attacks on Rwanda from bases in eastern Congo. Many of the Hutu extremists were responsible for the government-orchestrated 1994 Rwandan genocide, in which more than 500,000 people were killed -- most of them Tutsis or politically moderate Hutus. When Tutsi-led rebels stopped the killing and took control of the government 100 days later, the Interahamwe militiamen and soldiers from the former government fled into refugee camps in Congo. They are referred to as negative forces under the 1999 Lusaka Peace Accords, and the government is required to disarm them. "The situation is really bad," Ruberwa said. "There is a whole brigade of negative forces who are beginning to infiltrate into Rwanda after two years of peace in the country." (CNN, USA, 29 May 2001)

* Congo (RDC). Accords de paix en péril - Les accords de paix destinés à mettre fin à trois ans de guerre en RDC, sont sur le point de s'effondrer, a prévenu un dirigeant rebelle. M. Onusumba, chef du RCD-Goma, accuse le président Kabila d'avoir fourni des armes et des munitions à des milices opérant derrière les lignes rebelles, remettant en cause de cessez-le-feu. "La patience a des limites. Nous serons obligés de répondre en ramenant la guerre dans son propre territoire", a-t-il ajouté. A Kinshasa, le gouvernement a rejeté ces accusations, qualifiées de "manoeuvres destinées à déstabiliser le processus de paix". Le responsable de la mission de l'Onu au Congo, Kamel Morjane, a fait part de son inquiétude. (Reuters, 31 mai 2001)

* Côte d'Ivoire. Reprise de l'aide de l'UE - Le 29 mai, la Commission européenne a annoncé qu'elle proposait de reprendre son aide à la Côte d'Ivoire, deux ans après l'avoir coupée à la suite du putsch du général Gueï en décembre 1999. L'exécutif européen a précisé que cette aide reprendra progressivement en reconnaissance des efforts faits en matière de retour à la démocratie. "Cette proposition est une conséquence logique des récents progrès démocratiques", a indiqué le commissaire européen Poul Nielson. Avant le coup d'Etat, l'aide annuelle s'établissait autour de 100 millions d'euros. (AP, USA, 29 mai 2001)

* Côte d'Ivoire. Réfugiés libériens - Plus de 1.200 réfugiés échappant aux combats entre les troupes gouvernementales et les insurgés dans le comté de Lofa, au nord du Libéria, sont arrivés à l'ouest de la Côte d'Ivoire durant ces dernières semaines, selon une source humanitaire. La majorité des nouveaux venus arrive à Danane, à 20 km à l'est de la frontière libérienne, tandis que le reste pénètre plus à l'intérieur, autour de la localité de Guiglo. La Côte d'Ivoire avait hébergé près de 400.000 réfugiés libériens au plus fort de la guerre civile des années 1990 dans ce pays. Leur nombre a baissé à environ 120.000 à l'issue d'une opération de rapatriement volontaire conduite par le HCR en 1999. (IRIN, Abidjan, 29 mai 2001)

* Egypt. Mubarak's party ahead in elections - The National Democratic Party (NPD) obtained the absolute majority in the first stage of the elections for the renewal of half of the Shura, Egypt's Consultative Assembly, held last week in eight Egyptian governorates. The NPD of President Hosni Mubarak obtained 25 of the 30 available seats. The vote, begun on May 16 will conclude on June 12. It involves 89 of the 264 seats that make up the Shura, an assembly analogous to the Senate but without legislative powers. Another 44 members of the Shura will be directly chosen by the President, who has the powers to name a third of its composition. (Misna, Italy, 24 May 2001)

* Egypt. Human rights storm - Foreign governments and local human rights organisations have strongly criticised the decision reached earlier this week by Egypt's state security court to send to prison a prominent activist and critic of President Hosni Mubarak. But Cairo's strategic importance to the West --especially the US, but increasingly with Europe as well -- means that it is unlikely that the condemnation will affect the nearly $2bn a year in aid Egypt receives from Washington. On 21 May a state security court sentenced Saad el-Din Ibrahim, a US citizen and founder of the Ibn Khaldun Centre for development studies, a think tank, to seven years hard labour. He was found guilty of charges including receiving unauthorised funding from overseas, embezzlement and forgery. Alongside him, 27 members of his Centre were also all found guilty of various counts and received sentences ranging from five years hard labour to one year suspended. Most observers were stunned by the speed and the severity of the verdict and believe it was designed to send the starkest possible message to anyone who would gainsay Mr Mubarak's authoritarian regime. (Financial Times, UK, 25 May 2001)

* Eritrea/Sudan. Eritrean refugees leave Sudan at last - This week, convoys of Eritrean refugees started leaving the Shagareb camp in north-eastern Sudan in a rekindled repatriation programme. Eritreans have returned in the past but these are the first long-term refugees returning home. The repatriation programme is being organised by the UNHCR, in conjunction with the Eritrean and Sudanese authorities. (BBC News, UK, 29 May 2001)

* Ethiopia. 10 years after Mengistu - On 28 May, Ethiopians celebrate a decade since the overthrow of the Marxist military regime of Mengistu Haile Mariam. On 28 May 1991, the rebel movement known as Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), who are now the ruling party, marched into Addis Ababa and took control. Many in Ethiopia flinch at the thought of the 17 years of oppression under Colonel Mengistu. He is regarded by most as a bloodthirsty psychopath for orchestrating the so called Red Terror campaign where tens of thousands of people were killed, tortured or disappeared. In 1974 Mengistu led a coup d'etat which overthrew Emperor Haile Selassie, who was widely criticised for feudal elitism and neglecting a severe famine in the north where millions perished. The 28 May will be a time for reflection in the country and an opportunity to look back over the past decade of EPRDF rule. Ethiopia's permanent secretary to the UN, Ambassador Abdulmejid Hussein, believes much has been achieved. "Economically, we have done a lot. We have achieved an average of about 6% GDP growth rate," he said. (BBC News, UK, 27 May 2001)

* Ethiopia. Government cracks down on corruption - Eighteen senior Ethiopian government officials and prominent businessmen have been arrested in a major crackdown on corruption. Amongst those arrested in police raids on offices and homes are politicians who were once highly regarded and trusted by Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. They are being accused of embezzling millions of dollars from state coffers. The government has warned that this was "just the first step" in its war against corruption. Two of those arrested, Seye Abraha and Bitew Belay, were until recently senior members of the Tigray People's Liberation Front, the main party in the ruling coalition government. The two men and eight others were expelled from the party in March after challenging the prime minister's authority. Sources say they opposed Mr Meles's attempts to address corruption in the country. (BBC News, UK, 30 May 2001)

* Ethiopia. Russia writes off Ethiopian debt - Ethiopian officials say Russia has agreed to write off almost $5bn in debt which Addis Ababa owed to the former Soviet Union. The agreement was reached after lengthy negotiations between the two countries. The money makes up 80% of the total debt owed by Ethiopia to Moscow, which was incurred mainly during the seventeen-year rule of the former military regime of Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam. The funds were used to purchase arms from the former Soviet Union. (BBC News, UK, 30 May 2001)

* Gabon. Putting Christ at the centre of life via the Media - To revise pastoral plans for evangelisation and make more use of the media to spread the Gospel: these are two major objectives at the beginning of the new millennium for Archbishop Basile Mve Engone of Libreville, who is president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Gabon. The country, lying on the Atlantic Ocean coast and cut through the middle by the equator, is rich in timber and minerals, although most of the population 1,200,000, is excluded from the benefits of the nation's economic growth. Catholics in Gabon are about 653,000. Mgr Basile Mve Engone, aged 60, was appointed Archbishop of Libreville three years ago, after being Bishop of Oyem for 18 years. He has played an important role in Gabon's National Sovereign Conference set up in 1990 to guide a process of democratization after 23 years of one party rule. In an interview with FIDES, The Archbishop said that "Our bishops must give priority to study and penetration of the Gospel in the re-organisation of pastoral work in their dioceses and that the Media offers a powerful offers a powerful means of evangelisation. I am convinced that every local Church must have its own media: this is essential in our pluralist world. We need programmes able to form Christian consciences. In Libreville we are still waiting for final official permission for our Radio Saint-Marie which all our dioceses will then relay. The radio has a contract with Radio Notre Dame based in Paris which has offered us its programmes free of charge. The radio broadcasts twenty four hours a day contributing to education to peace. Its director is Andre Obame a layman who studied in Rome. After the radio I hope to launch a newspaper similar to publications started by the Bishops' Conference of Cameroon and Congo Brazzaville. At the moment these are only ideas: I am looking for the right people to start a Church newspaper for Gabon". (Fides, Vatican City, 23 May 2001)

* Ghana. Rawlings loses military guard - Ghana's former president Jerry Rawlings lost his military guard this week in a move that has angered him and his opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC). The NDC failed to block the move to replace soldiers with 12 civilian police. They said that Mr Rawlings' safety was compromised as the policemen did not know him whereas the soldiers had been with him for 20 years. The government says that the plan is simply part of their effort to demilitarise civilian institutions. Government spokeswoman Ms Elizabeth Ohene said President John Kufuor's own security guards were from the police service. She said the government would not accept a situation where 24 soldiers from one unit were permanently outside the control of their commander. (BBC News, UK, 25 May 2001)

* Guinée. Evacuation quasiment achevée - Le 25 mai, le porte-parole du HCR a annoncé que l'évacuation de dizaines de milliers de réfugiés du Bec de perroquet dans le sud de la Guinée est quasiment achevée. Quelque 2.000 réfugiés restés en petits groupes dans des camps et des villages à l'intérieur du Bec, une région instable jouxtant la Sierra Leone, seront transférés dans les deux prochains jours au camp de transit de Katkama au nord. La majorité des camps de la région sont désormais vides et ont été incendiés par les villageois locaux. Jusqu'à présent, 12.000 réfugiés ont été évacués du Bec depuis le début de l'opération organisée par le HCR à partir du 2 mai. (IRIN, Abidjan, 25 mai 2001)

* Guinée/Libéria/Sierra Leone. Appel de Kofi Annan - Le secrétaire général des Nations unies, Kofi Annan, a appelé les dirigeants du Liberia, de la Sierra Leone et de la Guinée à engager des pourparlers aussi vite que possible afin de mettre un terme aux conflits régionaux qui ont provoqué le départ de la Sierre Leone d'un million de réfugiés. Dans un rapport, M. Annan a qualifié le déracinement de la population "d'une des crises humanitaires et politiques les plus graves qu'ait à affronter la communauté internationale aujourd'hui". Selon les derniers chiffres de l'Onu, début mai, 2,3 millions de personnes ont été déplacées en Guinée, 400.000 en Sierra Leone, et 120.000 Libériens ont fui en Côte d'Ivoire. (AP, USA, 30 mai 2001)

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