Weekly anb02272.txt #7



_____________________________________________________________
WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 27-02-2003      PART #2/7

* Algeria. Strike shuts down Algeria - 25 February: A 48-hour general strike has brought Algeria to a halt. The strike was called by the Algerian General Workers Union (UGTA) to protest against the privatisation of public enterprises and to denounce a wave of price hikes that have swept the country, as well as general economic mismanagement. Some 95% of workers were observing the action, a union representative said. The industrial zones of Oued Smar, Rouiba and Reghaia, in the east are silent. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 25 February 2003)

* Algérie. Assassinats - 21-22 février. Le terrorisme semble prendre pied aussi dans les régions du sud algérien. Quatre gardes communaux ont été égorgés vendredi soir, après avoir été arrêtés à un faux barrage dressé par un groupe armé dans la région de Ouargla (750 km au sud d'Alger), rapporte la presse algérienne. Par ailleurs, deux policiers ont été assassinés samedi par des islamistes armés en plein centre de Draâ El Mizan, dans la région de Tizi Ouzou (est d'Alger). Un civil a été grièvement blessé lors d'une fusillade qui a suivi cet attentat. -- 25 février. Douze personnes ont été tuées et sept autres blessées mardi soir à un faux barrage sur une route près d'Hameur El Aïn (70 km à l'ouest d'Alger). Les forces de sécurité ont entrepris de vastes recherches pour trouver les agresseurs. Depuis le début de février, au moins 53 personnes, dont 24 civils, ont été tuées en Algérie dans des violences impliquant des islamistes armés. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 26 février 2003)

* Algérie. Grève générale de 2 jours - La puissante centrale syndicale de l'Union générale des travailleurs algériens (UGTA), hostile à la politique de privatisation du gouvernement, a lancé un mot d'ordre de grève générale qui risque de paralyser l'Algérie les 25 et 26 février. L'UGTA reproche au gouvernement le manque de transparence et de clarté dans sa politique de privatisation pour aboutir à l'instauration d'une économie du marché. Ces deux journées seront aussi l'occasion, selon la centrale, de dénoncer "la précarité" du système de Sécurité sociale et de retraite, ainsi que "la pauvreté grandissante des travailleurs et de leurs familles". Le salaire minimum est de 120 euros par mois, et le chômage touche officiellement 30% de la population. -- 25 février. La grève était largement suivie. Les transports, notamment aérien, étaient en grande partie paralysés, ainsi que le secteur bancaire, les lycées et les écoles. Dans les hôpitaux, un service minimal a été assuré. Le forage et l'acheminement du pétrole et gaz ne sont pas concernés par le mouvement. -- Le 26 février, la grève a encore paralysé l'Algérie. Le secrétaire général de l'UGTA a indiqué que son organisation ne refusait pas le dialogue avec le gouvernement et ne s'opposait pas aux réformes, mais qu'il était contre le "bradage" des entreprises publiques. Le Premier ministre, M. Benflis, a indiqué qu'une "nouvelle bipartite" avec l'UGTA se tiendrait dans les prochains jours. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 27 février 2003)

* Algeria. Forced disappearances - On 27 February, Human Rights Watch said that Algerian security forces made "disappear at last 7,000 persons, more than the numbers recorded in any other country during the past decade except wartime Bosnia. To date, the Algerian authorities have utterly failed to investigate these "disappearances" or to provide families with answers about the fate of their loved ones. None of the missing have returned and no one has been held accountable for their "disappearance". (HRW, 27 February 2003)

* Algérie. HRW: "Disparitions forcées" - Les forces de l'ordre algériennes ont fait "disparaître" au moins 7.000 personnes, chiffre dépassant celui des disparitions recensées ces dix dernières années dans tout autre pays, à l'exception de la guerre en Bosnie, a déclaré Human Rights Watch dans un nouveau rapport publié le 27 février, intitulé "Disparitions forcées en Algérie: vérité et justice s'imposent". Les autorités algériennes avaient promis de mener des enquêtes sur ces "disparitions" et de donner des réponses aux familles. Ils n'ont cependant pas tenu leur promesse, aucun disparu n'est rentré chez lui, et personne n'a dû rendre compte de ces "disparitions". Le 2 mars, le président français Jacques Chirac débutera la première visite d'Etat d'un président français en Algérie depuis l'indépendance de ce pays. Dans une lettre envoyée le 21 février, HRW a vivement conseillé à M. Chirac d'exhorter le gouvernement algérien à créer une commission indépendante capable de résoudre le mystère entourant le sort de ces victimes. (HRW, New York, 27 février 2003)

* Algérie/Russie. Livraison d'armes - L'Algérie a demandé à être dotée d'une technologie de l'aviation de guerre, d'un système de défense aérienne et d'armes spécifiques pour sa Marine, a rapporté le quotidien algérien Al-Khabar le 23 février, en citant le président de la commission de coopération militaire et technique de la Fédération de Russie, Mikhaïl Dmitriev, qui animait une conférence de presse à Moscou. Les deux pays sont sur le point de parvenir à "des résultats concluants", a-t-on précisé. Les déclarations du responsable russe interviennent au moment où est annoncé un projet d'avion algéro-russe, qui s'inscrit dans le cadre de l'accord stratégique ratifié entre les deux pays en avril 2001. Par ailleurs, le journal algérien a souligné que les préparatifs allaient bon train en Algérie pour la visite d'Etat que doit effectuer le président Poutine dans le pays au cours du premier trimestre de l'année en cours. (AP, 24 février 2003)

* Angola. Radio Ecclesia accusée - Le gouvernement angolais a accusé Radio Ecclesia d'être un instrument de propagande négative contre les citoyens angolais et les institutions du pays, a rapporté l'agence Cisa. Dans une déclaration du 14 février, le ministre de la Communication a reproché à la radio catholique de servir d'instrument d'offenses et de diffamation. Radio Ecclesia rejette ces accusations. Selon un journaliste angolais, M. Marques, la radio catholique est la seule station digne de foi où les Angolais ordinaires peuvent exprimer leurs opinions sur la transition politique du pays. Bien que ne disposant pas de ressources financières suffisantes, Radio Ecclesia a un avantage sur la station publique, indique le journaliste: elle permet d'émettre des critiques sur le gouvernement. En 2004, Radio Ecclesia commémorera son jubilé d'or. La station, qui appartient maintenant à la Conférence épiscopale d'Angola et de Sao Tomé, a vu le jour en 1954 et se veut aujourd'hui un outil de promotion de la paix et du développement. (DIA, Kinshasa, 24 février 2003)

* Angola. Frustration increases as ex-soldiers await govt assistance - Costa, a former soldier with the Angola's former rebel group, UNITA, thought he was finally going home last December. Since the end of the civil war he had been living in the Madimbe gathering area in Zaire province. But the truck that fetched him from there deposited him at the Kituma transit centre, more than 250 km from his home town of Maquela do Zombo, in the north of Uige province. "When I arrived here I understood that in terms of the peace accord this was a transit area, and within two or three days I would be able to move on to my home area," he told IRIN. Kituma is a collection of simple brick houses sprawling across a hillside on the edge of Uige city, and was originally built to house displaced people. Since late last year the population has grown to around 1,000 as increasing numbers of exUNITA soldiers and their families have arrived -- and stayed. United Nations staff blame the situation on the failure of different provincial authorities to co-ordinate their operations. Trucking the soldiers from gathering areas to transit centres was the task of the authorities in the province where they had been living. But it is the authorities in the home province who are responsible for transporting people to hundreds of home villages scattered throughout the province. (IRIN, Kenya, 26 February 2003)

* Botswana. Bushmen's land exploited - Botswana is letting mining companies explore for diamonds in parts of the Kalahari desert from which San Bushmen were recently evicted, renewing the accusation that the country's oldest ethnic group is the victim of a plot by the government and multinational companies. Sections of the central Kalahari game reserve, which the government said would not be touched, have been opened only months after an assurances that relocating the Bushmen had nothing to do with diamonds. Concessions to explore have been granted and one company, Kalahari Diamonds Limited, has got $2m from the World Bank to fly a surveillance plane over territory thought to be rich in kimberlite, one of the volcanic rocks associated with diamonds. The London advocacy group Survival International, which opposed the Bushmen's removal, said on 19 February that it had been vindicated in linking it to diamonds. "There has been a complete explosion in the number of concessions given out, and this funding for the exploration is further proof that there is a link," its spokeswoman Sophie Thomas said. But mining companies and a Botswanan group representing the dwindling number of Bushmen said they were moved for other reasons. The 15-year programme to move them from bleached scrub closer to settled areas ended in February last year. The authorities said they moved voluntarily to benefit from better healthcare and resources, but critics said they had been coerced. Self-sufficient communities had had their water supplies cut off before being dumped in bleak settlements with derisory compensation. (The Guardian, UK, 20 February 2003

* Botswana. Boys' bleak future - A 15-year-old boy living in Botswana has a 90% chance of dying of HIV/AIDS during his lifetime, according to new analysis of World Health Organisation statistics. "This is a chilling statistic," says Professor Rodney Phillips of Oxford University, who carried out the analysis. Botswana has the highest instance of HIV infection in the world. Over one in three of the population is infected. The countries in the rest of southern Africa are not much better off. In Zimbabwe and South Africa the statistics are nearly as high. Hopes of finding an effective vaccine in the near future are fading, says Professor Phillips. (BBC News, UK, 27 February 2003)

* Burkina Faso. Meningitis kills 401 since October - Meningitis has killed 401 people out of 2433 cases in Burkina Faso since the beginning of the 2002-2003 meningitis season in late October, Souleymane Sanou, head of meningitis control in the health ministry said on 20 February. Sanou, speaking in an interview on the national radio, said analyses of the cases show persistence of the new W135 meningitis strain which was first reported a year ago. Before that time, Burkina Faso was only affected by the A and C strains. Five health districts out of 53 in the country, had been declared meningitis epidemic areas, the official said. These included Batie in the South west, Manga, Po in the south Pama and Diapaga in the east. Each of these districts had reported 10 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. "They are epidemic spots and we are undertaking in the next days a reactive vaccination of people in affected areas," Sanou said. Some 150,000 doses of the 500,000 trivalent (A,C,W135) vaccine doses sent last week by the World Health Organization (WHO) to contain the epidemic would be allocated to these areas, he added. (IRIN, Kenya, 21 February 2003)

* Burkina Faso. FESPACO -- 2003 - 21 February: Moroccan director Ayouch Nabil has lashed out at the organisers of Africa's biggest film festival, Fespaco, on the eve of its opening. Speaking from Paris, he says that Fespaco is "disorganised" and "lacks respect for the film makers." Nabil, who scooped Fespaco's top prize in 2001, adds that he had become disillusioned with the event. "People from the ministry are taking care of this festival and they don't know about cinema and they don't have the respect. If they don't respect me I don't see why I should respect them," he says. Nabil says he is angry with the treatment given to directors by the organisers. Nabil is now refusing to enter his latest film, entitled "A Minute Less Sunshine", into the race for a prize this year. Attracting thousands of visitors, Fespaco, the Pan-African film and television festival, is the biggest regular cultural event on the continent. This year, FESPACO runs from 22 February to 1 March and is being held in the capital, Ouagadoudou. 25 February: Controversy has struck Africa's top film festival, Fespaco, again after Ivorian movie fans boycotted the event. The source of their anger is the exclusion of the film "Roues Libre", directed by Sidiki Sijiri Bakaba. Some Ivorians believe the film has been deliberately rejected as part of the wider picture of political antipathy between the two countries. It had been included in an earlier shortlist for the long feature films competition, but failed to make the final 16. But Fespaco Director Baba Hama defended the exclusion of the film, adding that there was nothing unusual about Bakaba's film not making it through to the final shortlist. "It's normal for a film-maker to be sad because they all want to be in the competition," Hama said. But it's impossible to enter everybody. So there's not any explanation to give. It's just the result of the work done by the selection committee. That is all." Newspapers in Burkina Faso have alleged that Ivorians have not travelled because the authorities in Abidjan advised them that their lives would be at risk in Ouagadougou. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 25 February 2003)

WEEKLY anb0227.txt - 2/7