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Weekly anb04265.txt #7
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 26-04-2001 PART #5/7
* Nigeria. Currency battle - Nigeria's government is battling to
stabilise its volatile currency. Over the past month the central bank has
introduced a raft of new measures to stem demand for foreign exchange,
which has caused instability in the value of the local currency, the naira.
A crisis meeting this week at Nigeria's central bank meant that the
governor Joseph Sanusi had to face the press in Lagos and explain how he is
trying to bring order to the local foreign exchange market. He commented on
new measures including higher interest rates in order to stabilise the
naira and bemoaned "the devastating effects of import dependence". Two
weeks ago, the benchmark interest rate was increased to 15.5% and new
restrictions were placed on commercial banks dealing with foreign exchange.
President Obansanjo and his government have been battling to try and bridge
the gap between the official and parallel market exchange rate for the
naira. The official rate has traded this week around 115 naira to the
dollar compared to a black market rate of around 135. A unified exchange
rate has been a long standing demand of the International Monetary Fund
since it signed a standby loan agreement with Nigeria last year. (BBC
News, UK, 25 April 2001)
* Rwanda/Belgium. Facing the Brussels trial - Father Venuste Linguyeneza,
50, is a Rwandan priest from the Diocese of Butare. After receiving threats
to his life, he fled to Belgium where he has lived since February 1995. The
priest knows the two Rwandan Benedictine nuns who are now on trial in
Brussels for genocide. The accused are Sister Gertrude and Sister Maria
Kisito. The Vatican missionary agency Fides asked Father Linguyeneza about
the trial, which opened April 17, and about its effect and possible
outcome. Q: What do you think about the trial? Can any good come from it?
Father Linguyeneza: The genocide tragedy was followed by reciprocal
accusations -- many exaggerated, many false, many true. However, it is sad
to see members of the Church accuse one another -- for example, nuns
accusing their own sisters. It is good for a trial to be held. Here, in
Belgium, much has been written about the Catholic Church being implicated
in general in the massacres. With the trial, the truth will be known. Q: Do
you mean to say that the Church does not fear the truth? Father
Linguyeneza: The Church has nothing to fear from the truth, which
independent justice can bring to light. If her children are found guilty,
the Church will respect the court's verdict and sentences. The Church does
not fear the truth. In the past, and even more recently, the Church has
been accused of trying to protect guilty persons, but the Church has never
hidden anyone. Q: It has been said that the Church tried to hide Sister
Gertrude and Sister Maria Kisito. Father Linguyeneza: This accusation was
levelled mainly by the French magazine Golias. Public opinion was told that
the Church is powerful, it tries to protect its religious personnel from
human justice, it is a Church that wants to falsify the truth. Q: You are
from Butare, the same diocese as the nuns. Do you know them? Father
Linguyeneza: Yes, I have known them for some time. They are quite ordinary
nuns. As mother superior, Sister Gertrude was held in high esteem by her
community. Her Sisters elected her as their superior because they admired
her good sense and great humanity -- hardly a person capable of genocide.
Q: Why is the Belgian government interested in this trial? Father
Linguyeneza: Belgium has always kept an eye on events in central Africa,
[which was] once under its rule. Many Belgians have lived in Rwanda, and
there are many Rwandans, of different ethnic groups, exiled here in
Belgium. I think that Belgium wants to boost its image as a country that
defends human rights and punishes people found guilty of crimes against
humanity. It supported the Pinochet trial and now this one, regarding
Rwanda. Q: What could Rwanda obtain with the trial? Father Linguyeneza: As
regards the genocide, we all have the right to know the truth. Those guilty
of the massacres must be brought to trial; this is a question of truth and
justice. When we speak of reconciliation, we must think of the victims who
died, their suffering families, as well as innocent people unjustly
accused. It is most important to ascertain the truth and re-establish the
good name of innocent persons. (Zenith, Italy, 24 April 2001)
* Rwanda/Belgium. The Brussels trial - The first part of the court case
on specific charges, involving two Rwandese Benedictine nuns -- Sisters
Gertrude Mukangango and Julienne Kizito, and two others -- Alphonse
Higaniro and Vincent Ntezimana, is taken up with providing a background to
the situation in Rwanda at the time of the 1994 genocide. Already lawyer
Serge Wahis, defending the two nuns, had underlined in his opening
statement the difficulty in trying a case on events which took place so far
away, and before a jury which may not be familiar with the Rwanda
situation. 20 April: The Court in Brussels hears descriptions of the early
days of the genocide. The journalist Colette Braekman (Le Soir describes
having seen columns of frightened refugees fleeing the country. She paints
a verbal picture of the general atmosphere then prevailing in Rwanda.
Professor Filip Reyntjens outlines the background history of the conflict
within Rwanda. Allison Desforges (Human Rights Watch) was present in Rwanda
every two or three months for five years, just after the period of the
genocide. From her testimony, it becomes clear that the genocide was well
organised. She says: "Don't say that the Hutus committed a genocide. It's
individuals who killed. Many refused to take part in the killings and, in
danger of their own lives, sheltered neighbours or helped them to flee.
Some did both -- took part in the killings and helped others". This
weekend, the first 19 witnesses coming from Rwanda are due to arrive. They
will be housed in the Royal Military School. 23 April: Two witnesses to the
horrors of the Rwanda genocide are heard today. Yolande Mukagasana lost all
her family except for a brother. She says: "In 1994, to kill was as easy as
drinking a glass of water". Dr Rony Zacharia was Doctors Without Worlds'
coordinator in Butare. He described the events as he experienced them from
13-24 April 1994. He says: "I arrived at the end of February and left on 24
April. All my patients and my personnel had been killed". 24 April: The
Court receives testimony from the last of the background witnesses. One of
the accused, Vincent Ntezimana takes the stand to deny his participation in
a document entitled: "A call to the conscience of the Bahutus". Ntezimana
is accused of taking part in a number of murders at Butare between 6 April
and 27 May 1994. On 2 August he came back to Belgium, to the Catholic
University of Louvain-la-Neuve. 25 April: Much of today is spent in hearing
testimony relating to Ntezimana's involvement in the killing of the Karenzi
family. The father was killed on 21 April 1994 in the centre of Butare, and
the children on 30 April 1994. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 26 April 2001)
* Western Sahara. Kofi Annan asks for extension of UN mission - On 24
April, the UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, asked the Security Council to
extend the UN mission in Western Sahara for two months to allow further
consultations with Morocco and the Polisario Front. In a report to the
Council Annan said that "regrettably" there had been no progress on a
referendum, which has been stalled for years over who is eligible to
vote. (CNN, USA, 24 April 2001)
* Sahara occidental. Prolongation de la Minurso - Le 24 avril, le
secrétaire général de l'Onu a demandé au Conseil de sécurité le
prolongement pour deux mois de la mission des Nations unies au Sahara
occidental (Minurso) afin de permettre de nouvelles consultations avec le
Maroc et le Front Polisario. Dans un rapport, M. Kofi Annan a précisé qu'il
n'y avait "malheureusement" pas eu de progrès sur la question du
référendum. Il a fait en revanche état de "progrès substantiels" sur la
question d'une éventuelle autonomie, un "statut spécial" qui serait accordé
par le Maroc, pour un projet qui bénéficie du soutien de Washington et de
Paris. (AP, 25 avril 2001)
* Senegal. Senegal urged to act against Habre - The United Nations
Committee against torture has urged Senegal to prevent Chad's exiled former
president, Hissene Habre, from leaving the country. The move was welcomed
by a lawyer for the alleged victims, Reed Brody of Human Rights Watch. The
former president was charged with torture in February, but Senegal's
highest court ruled that he could not stand trial because his alleged
crimes were not committed in Senegal. Earlier this month, the Senegalese
president, Abdoulaye Wade, asked Mr Habre to leave the country.But Mr
Habre's alleged victims filed a petition with the UN committee against
torture to put pressure on Senegal to prosecute or extradite him, as
required by the torture convention to prevent his departure. (BBC News,
UK, 24 April 2001)
* Sénégal. Campagne électorale - Trois millions d'électeurs sénégalais
sont appelés à choisir, le 29 avril, les 120 députés de la nouvelle
Assemblée législative. 25 partis et listes de coalition sont en lice pour
se partager les sièges. Parmi les thèmes de la campagne électorale figure
la solution à trouver au conflit qui dure depuis des années dans le sud du
pays, dans la région de Casamance. Mgr Adrien Sarr, archevêque de Dakar, a
invité chacun à faire preuve de responsabilité. Il demande aux hommes
politiques de ne pas dresser les gens les uns contre les autres pour des
raisons de propagande électorale; et d'autre part, aux électeurs de voter
dans le calme, comme ils l'ont fait l'an dernier, lors des élections
présidentielles, qui ont amené au pouvoir l'actuel président Wade dans une
parfaite transparence. (Fides, Vatican, 24 avril 2001)
* Senegal. Peace signals in pre-election climate - Three million
Senegalese will be called to vote on April 29 to elect 120 members of a new
legislative assembly. The competition is between 25 parties and coalition
lists. A major question at the centre of the electoral propaganda is a
solution to almost 20 years of conflict in the separatist region Casamance.
Archbishop Theodore Sarr of Dakar, president of the Senegalese Bishops'
Conference, calls on all citizens to demonstrate a sense of responsibility.
He calls on political leaders not to incite the Senegalese one against the
other for electoral reasons. He calls on voters to make a responsible
choice as last year when President Abdoulaye Wade won in a transparent
vote. There is a flourishing of efforts and signals for peace as the
electoral campaign continues. For there first time, since his election in
March 2000, President Wade met the secretary general of the Movement of
Democratic Forces for Casamance (MDFC) Catholic priest Rev. Augustine
Diamacoune Senghor. "We are building a lasting peace for this land of
Casamance" the President said after the meeting held in
Ziguinchor. (Fides, Vatican City, 24 April 2001)
* Sierra Leone. Boost for peacekeepers - The United Nations peacekeeping
mission in Sierra Leone says it has been promised 5,000 new troops, which
should allow it to complete its deployment throughout the country. The
extra soldiers from Pakistan and Nepal would bring the number of
peacekeepers in the country to some 15,000, making it the largest UN
operation in the world. Senior UN officers said the troops are due to
arrive within the next few weeks and would allow the UN to extend its
deployment in areas held by the rebel Revolutionary United Front (RUF),
especially the crucial diamond areas in the east of the country. The
decision came as the UN announced the deployment on Wednesday of troops in
Kailahun, an eastern region held by the RUF for 10 years. BBC West Africa
correspondent Mark Doyle says the near collapse of the UN mission last year
-- in the face of a rebel offensive -- has galvanised the UN into pouring
resources into Sierra Leone. He says the UN is trying to prove that it can
run a successful peacekeeping operation. (BBC News, UK, 20 April 2001)
* Sierra Leone. Hundreds flee fighting - Government militiamen in Sierra
Leone have clashed with rebels in what is being described as the most
serious breach of last November's ceasefire. Military officials say it is
unclear who started the fighting, but the rebels have accused government
forces of attacking their positions. The fighting threatens to disrupt the
deployment of United Nations peacekeepers as part of efforts to end the
10-year civil war. A senior UN official confirmed that serious fighting had
been going on since 19 April, near the eastern diamond mining area of Tongo
Fields. The fighting has involved rebels of the Revolutionary United Front
and a pro-government militia known as the Kamajors. Correspondents say the
clashes come when the outlook for Sierra Leone seemed more positive -- the
ceasefire had been holding, and UN peacekeepers had been advancing into
some rebel-held areas. (BBC News, UK, 21 April 2001)
* Sierra Leone. Uncertainties in the funding of the Special Court - On 24
April, Amnesty International expressed concern about the uncertainties
surrounding the Special Court for Sierra Leone, as result of the UN
Security Council's decision to fund the court entirely by voluntary
contributions rather than from the regular UN budget. Amnesty International
said that the investigation and prosecution of crimes under international
law are a responsibility which must be shouldered by the international
community as a whole. (Amnesty International, 24 April 2001)
Weekly anb0426.txt - End of 5/7