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Weekly anb03226.txt #6



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 22-03-2001      PART #6/6

* Tunisie. Fête de l'indépendance  -  A l'occasion du 45e anniversaire de 
l'indépendance, le 20 mars, le président Ben Ali a décidé de gracier un 
certain nombre de détenus. Dans son discours lors de la fête, il a souligné 
sa "détermination de continuer à aller de l'avant dans la voie de la 
démocratisation". Il a indiqué les multiples mesures prises, notamment en 
faveur des partis d'opposition. Il a par ailleurs plaidé pour "le 
renforcement de la présence de la femme dans la vie publique", ainsi que 
l'ouverture d'horizons plus larges pour les jeunes, auxquels il a consacré 
une bonne partie de son discours. - D'autre part, 48 heures avant la fête, 
un manifeste signé de 93 personnalités de la société civile tunisienne a 
été rendu public. Le texte dénonce la "dérive sans précédent" du régime, 
caractérisée par "un pouvoir personnel et absolu", ainsi qu'un "étouffement 
de la société civile, annonciateur de tous les dangers". En conclusion, les 
signataires rappellent que le président Ben Ali effectue en ce moment ce 
qui est en principe son dernier mandat. Un nouveau mandat (grâce à une 
modification de la Constitution) quivaudrait, estiment-ils, à lui ouvrir la 
voie de la présidence à vie. - Le 20 mars, plus de 250 personnalités 
(universitaires, avocats, médecins, syndicalistes) ont publié une pétition 
réclamant "des réformes audacieuses et radicales" avant des scrutins 
présidentiel et législatif prévus en 2004. Ils demandent aussi l'abrogation 
des "lois qui étouffent les libertés".   (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 22 
mars 2001)

* Ouganda. Besigye ne peut quitter le pays  -  Le 17 mars, les services de 
sécurité ont empêché l'ancien candidat à l'élection présidentielle, Kizza 
Besigye, de se rendre en Afrique du Sud, suggérant qu'il pourrait être lié 
aux trois attentats qui ont eu lieu la semaine dernière dans le pays. Deux 
explosions à Kampala et à environ 100 km au sud-ouest de la capitale ont 
fait deux morts et une dizaine de blessés, le 14 mars. Le 16 mars au soir, 
une femme a été tuée et quatre autres personnes blessées dans un attentat à 
la grenade dans le centre de Kampala.   (La Libre Belgique, 19 mars 2001)

* Uganda. Elections outcome  -  14 March: Yoweri Musveni is declared winner 
of the 12 March presidential elections. He was elected with 69.3% of the 
valid vote, compared to 27.8% for his main rival, Colonel Kizza Besigye, 
and a tiny percentage for the four other candidates. Besigye says he 
rejects the election results and calls for fresh elections. He hints at a 
legal challenge, citing "massive rigging and irregularities". 16 March: 
Amnesty International calls on president Museveni and opposition political 
leaders in Uganda to re-affirm their commitment to human rights. 20 March: 
Kizza Besigye is summoned to police headquarters to explain comments he had 
made, which were allegedly uttered with seditious intent. The summons is 
supposed to be the reason why Dr Besigye was prevented from travelling to 
South Africa on 17 March.   (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 21 March 2001)

* Uganda/Congo (RDC). Ugandan troops withdraw in Congo  -  A battalion of 
Ugandan troops began to withdraw from north-western Congo on 21 March and 
their commander said more could follow once the United Nations deployed 
peacekeepers in the country. About 110 soldiers flew out of the town of 
Gemena on their way to Gulu in northern Uganda, with the rest of the 
battalion of about 750 men expected to leave over the next week. Another 
battalion is remaining behind to secure Gemena airport, but the Ugandan 
army said further withdrawals were possible in the coming months. "Once we 
see the footprint of the UN on the ground in those areas we consider of 
national security importance to us then the whole process will continue," 
Edward Katumba-Wamala, commander of the Ugandan forces in the Congo, said. 
Uganda and Rwanda moved into Congo in 1998, backing rebel groups opposed to 
then president Laurent Kabila. Uganda said it was trying to eliminate the 
threat of the Allied Democratic Forces rebel group, which has bases in the 
Ruwenzori mountains along the Uganda/Congo border and which is allegedly 
supplied from airbases in northern Congo. The Congo war has also sucked in 
Angola, Zimbabwe and Namibia on the government side. The ensuing conflict 
is thought to have led directly or indirectly to the deaths of hundreds of 
thousands of Congolese civilians. A peace deal signed in Lusaka, Zambia, in 
1999 failed to stop the war. But when Kabila was assassinated in January, 
his son Joseph took over as president and immediately began to extend the 
hand of peace to his enemies. Last month the UN demanded all troops in the 
Congo withdraw 15km from frontline positions.   (Financial Times, UK, 22 
March 2001)

* Zambia. Chiluba's third term bid  -  Zambia's ruling Movement for 
Multiparty Democracy (MMD) national secretary Michael Sata is under 
pressure to convene a National Executive Committee meeting to decide on the 
proposal to allow President Frederick Chiluba seek a third mandate later 
this year. The pressure is coming from party members who want the NEC to 
deliberate among other issues, on the resolutions of the just ended MMD 
provincial conferences. Seven out of the nine provinces endorsed a 
resolution to allow Chiluba run for a third term of office. Only Lusaka and 
Southern provinces opposed the third term bid. MMD party official Michael 
Bwalya was on 20 March quoted by the local media as saying that members in 
Lusaka wanted the NEC to meet and resolve all issues raised at provincial 
conferences. These include the call to amend both the party and Republican 
Constitutions to allow President Chiluba to run for a third term of office. 
Bwalya who is also Kafue district administrator warned that any delay in 
the NEC to resolve on-going emotive issues could derail party programmes. 
(Editor's update: 22 March -- A fourth minister who has spoken out against 
a possible third term of office for President Chiluba has been sacked. 
Tourism Minister William Harrington was dismissed just a few days before a 
key meeting on the issue).   (PANA, Senegal, 20 March 2001)

* Zimbabwe. Airlines plan for fares  -  International airlines have 
announced an effective 32% devaluation in the exchange rate they use to 
compute air fares out of Zimbabwe. Amid talk of a devaluation of the 
Zimbabwean dollar in the next few weeks, airlines will convert US dollar 
air fares to local currency at a rate of 85 to US $1, compared to 58 at 
present.   (Financial Times, UK, 15 March 2001)

* Zimbabwe. Catholic Church leaders say the people live in 
fear  -  Catholic Church leaders have said in a statement, that people live 
in abject fear of violence and that the rule of law is no longer respected. 
They say that the fast-track land redistribution programme is inflicting 
untold misery on farm labourers who are made redundant and that even those 
people who are resettled, face great hardships and appear to be pawns in a 
political power game.   (IRIN, Southern Africa, 19 March 2001)

* Zimbabwe. Réforme agraire: résultats positifs  -  Après un an de travail 
sur de nouvelles parcelles de cinq hectares prises sur une vaste ferme de 
4.000 hectares qui appartenait auparavant à un fermier blanc, 70 paysans 
nouvellement implantés dans le district de Gutu (sud-est du pays) ont eu 
une bonne récolte de maïs, de coton et d'arachides, malgré les pluies 
torrentielles qui ont dévast la plupart des régions du pays. Ces 70 
nouveaux colons font partie des plus de 70.000 familles réinstallées par le 
gouvernement depuis l'année dernière. A travers tout le pays, les paysans 
nouvellement installés ont produit de bonnes récoltes même pour le tabac 
qui est cultivé principalement par les gros exploitants. Cette performance 
a pu être réalisée grâce à une meilleure exploitation des terres, ainsi 
qu'à une assistance financière et technique fournie aux paysans noirs par 
le gouvernement. Les nouveaux colons ont reçu des semences, des engrais, 
des tracteurs pour labourer la terre, et des conseillers agricoles 
d'Agritex, une agence d'exploitation agricole dirigée par le gouvernement, 
ont été déployés sur les parcelles redistribuées pour superviser les 
opérations.   (PANA, Sénégal, 20 mars 2001)

* Zimbabwe. Un groupe minier ferme  -  L'une des plus grandes sociétés 
zimbabwéennes de prospection minière, Falgod, a annoncé qu'elle cessait ses 
activités pour une durée indéterminée, du fait d'un environnement 
difficile. L'escalade des coûts de l'énergie, la rareté du carburant, la 
forte inflation et la dépression prolongée des cours de l'or ne lui avaient 
pas laissé d'autre choix que la fermeture, a-t-elle indiqué. Falgod est la 
dernière société minière à annoncer sa fermeture en raison de la constante 
dégradation de la situation conomique du pays. Plusieurs autres ont déjà 
suspendu ou cessé leurs opérations. Le Zimbabwe est plongé dans une grave 
crise économique, la plupart des produits importés, comme le carburant et 
l'énergie électrique, étant rationnés et le gouvernement ne disposant pas 
d'assez de devises pour les importer en quantité suffisante.   (PANA, 
Sénégal, 20 mars 2001)

* Zimbabwe. Commonwealth to send mission to Zimbabwe  -  Commonwealth 
foreign ministers on 20 March agreed to send a fact-finding delegation to 
Zimbabwe in a move described by Robin Cook, UK foreign secretary, as "a 
very serious statement of our concern that will be seen as such in 
Zimbabwe". But the Harare government was quick to reject the plan, with 
Stan Mudenge, foreign minister, insisting Zimbabwe would not comply with 
"the British diktat". It was "an unwarranted attempt to interfere in the 
internal affairs of a member state". The Commonwealth Ministerial Action 
Group (CMAG), which has a limited mandate to advise heads of state on 
progress towards the restoration of democracy in member states under 
military rule, said foreign ministers from Australia, Nigeria and Barbados 
would "conduct consultations with the Zimbabwe government, convey its 
concerns and offer any appropriate Commonwealth assistance". Commonwealth 
ministers had called on Zimbabwe to co-operate with the mission to help it 
complete its work in time for the organisation's summit in Brisbane later 
this year. The vehemence of Mr Mudenge's response underlines Harare's alarm 
at this latest development. Earlier, government officials appeared 
confident that a majority of CMAG members would veto the plan to send the 
mission, and the foreign minister was clearly dismayed and angry at 
Zimbabwe's growing isolation. Meanwhile, in Harare a group of "rebel" white 
farmers belonging to the Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers' Union (CFU) is 
seeking to oust the existing leadership, replacing it with less 
"confrontational" officers.   (Financial Times, UK, 21 March 2001)

* Zimbabwe. Concerned IMF refuses new aid  -  The International Monetary 
Fund has refused Zimbabwe any new financial assistance, officials said on 
21 March at the end of a two-week mission to the country. In a statement, 
the IMF expressed concern at the deteriorating economic crisis, pointing to 
escalating inflation, a build-up of external payment arrears of several 
hundred million dollars on foreign loans and shortages of fuel and other 
basic goods. If Zimbabwe fails to meet a scheduled $73.6m payment later 
this year it could be suspended from the fund. The mission said it had left 
behind suggestions for resolving the economic crisis and "creating the 
basis for sustained recovery". It applauded the government's medium-term 
budget plans, but warned that these needed to be supported by "stronger and 
more balanced policies" in other macroeconomic areas. The IMF avoided 
direct comment on the government's controversial proposals for compulsory 
redistribution of land held by the country's predominantly white commercial 
farmers. Instead it repeated calls for "an orderly land reform process 
tailored to absorption capacity and resource availability". The fund also 
said it would stay in contact with Harare regarding progress on policy 
issues and "prospects for eventual IMF support". The statement comes amid 
growing speculation of an early devaluation of the Zimbabwe dollar and the 
tightening of exchange controls. The shortage of foreign currency in the 
formal sector has helped to encourage a flourishing parallel market, 
operating at close to double the official rate of Z$55 to the US 
dollar.   (Financial Times, 22 March 2001)

WEEKLY ANB0322 - END OF PART 6/6 - THE END

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Un homme meurt chaque fois que l'un d'entre nous se tait devant la tyrannie 
(W. Soyinka, Prix Nobel litterature)
                      --------
Everytime somebody keep silent when faced with tyranny, someone else dies 
(Wole Syinka, Nobel Prize for Literature) *
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