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Weekly anb05174.txt #8
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 17-05-2001 PART #4/8
* Eritrea/Ethiopia. Arms embargo to expire - A year-long arms embargo
against Ethiopia and Eritrea expired on 16 May but the Security Council has
warned the Horn of Africa neighbours that it will take "appropriate
measures" if their border war erupts again. The Council imposed the embargo
on May 17, 2000, to pressure the warring neighbours to make peace. A month
later, they agreed and on December 12 their presidents signed a formal
peace agreement in Algeria to end the 2 1/2-year conflict. In a statement
on 15 May,, the Security Council emphasized the countries' commitments to
peace and said that "under the current circumstances" the arms embargo was
not being extended. The UN sanctions barred all countries and individuals
from selling or supplying weapons, ammunition, military vehicles and
equipment, and spare parts to both countries. Military-related training and
technical assistance also were prohibited. The Council urged both countries
"to ensure that efforts are redirected from weapons procurement and other
military activities and toward the reconstruction of development of both
economies, and regional reconciliation, with a view to achieving stability
in the Horn of Africa." (CNN, USA, 15 May 2001)
* Ethiopie. Droits de l'homme - Le 9 mai, un tribunal d'Addis-Abeba a
refusé la mise en liberté sous caution de deux éminents universitaires et
militants des droits de l'homme qui sont en détention pour, dit-on, avoir
incité le mois dernier les étudiants à la violence et à l'émeute. Il a
accédé à la requête du ministère public, mais a ordonné à la police
d'achever son enquête et de produire des preuves écrites et des témoignages
d'ici le 18 mai. Le Pr Mesfin Wolde-Mariam, fondateur et premier président
du Conseil éthiopien des droits de l'homme, et Berhanu Nega, assistant à
l'université d'Addis-Abeba, ont été placés en détention le 8 mai. Le
boycott des étudiants, qui revendiquaient des infrastructures minimales sur
le campus, a conduit les 17 et 18 avril à de nombreux troubles qui se sont
soldés par plusieurs morts et blessés. L'organisation des droits humains
Human Rights Watch a affirmé que les forces de sécurité ont fait usage
d'une "force excessive" pour contenir ces manifestations et que le
gouvernement a profité du mouvement pour réprimer des opposants. Ces
méthodes brutales ont envenimé ce qui avait commencé comme une marche
pacifique des étudiants, affirme l'organisation. La détention des deux
professeurs fait suite à celle de plusieurs douzaines de militants
d'organisations de défense des droits civiques et de groupes politiques qui
se montrent critiques envers le gouvernement, indique encore HRW. (PANA,
Sénégal, 10 mai 2001)
* Ethiopia. Security chief shot - An army officer shot dead Ethiopia's
security chief as the official, an ally of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi,
entered an officers' club in Addis-Ababa. Kinfe Gebre-Medhin was killed
early on 12 May by an army major as he entered the armed forces officers'
club in Addis Ababa. One man was arrested. (The Guardian, UK, 14 May 2001)
* Ethiopie. Chef de la sécurité assassiné - Le chef des services
éthiopiens de sécurité, Kinfe Gebre-Medhin, a été tué le 12 mai à Addis
Abeba, par un commandant de l'armée. Proche du Premier ministre Meles
Zenawi, il était membre du bureau politique et du comité central du Front
de libération des peuples du Tigré (TPLF), au pouvoir depuis
1991. (Libération, France, 14 mai 2001)
* Ghana. Deuil après la tragédie - Le 10 mai, au lendemain de la tragique
bousculade au stade de football d'Accra qui a fait 126 morts, le président
ghanéen John Kufuor a annoncé un deuil national de trois jours et la mise
en place d'une enquête. Le 11 mai, des incidents ont éclaté lors des
funérailles des premières victimes. Des jeunes ont attaqué la police à
coups de pierres et brûlé pneus et kiosques. (ANB-BIA, de sources
diverses, 12 mai 2001)
* Ghana. Country shaken by stadium disaster - 10 May: Thousands of
desperate relatives besiege a mortuary in Accra to search for victims of a
stampede that killed at least 126 people in Africa's worst football
tragedy. Authorities have promised an inquiry into the disaster, which
spectators said was triggered by police firing teargas after fans hurled
missiles at the end of a 9 May game between Ghana's two leading teams,
arch-rivals Hearts of Oak and Asante Kotoko. President John Kufuor calls an
emergency cabinet meeting to discuss the tragedy, one of the worst in
football's history. Fights between rival fans broke out towards the end of
the game, and police responded with tear gas. 11 May: In an address to the
nation, President Kufuor says that this is "no time to seek scapegoats. Let
us not rush to judgement. I am aware of the anger that many of you feel
about the conduct of the police", he says. Hundreds of youths attack police
stations in Accra and set fire to kiosks and tires in protest at what they
say is the police role in the 9 May disaster. 13 May: A memorial service is
held in Accra for the victims of the diaster. President Kufuor says his
country must never allow a repetition of disasters like that at the
stadium. He says: "This is a time for the healing process to begin. We owe
it to the memory of those departed". (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 14 May 2001)
* Ghana. Police detain suspect serial killer - Police in Ghana said they
had detained a 36-year-old man in connection with the murder of more than
30 women over the past three years. Charles Quansah, a mechanic and
two-time rape convict, had been in custody since February and had confessed
to strangling eight women since 1993, the police said in a statement
released on 15 May. A police source said a second person was also being
held in connection with the murders. Women in Accra, the capital of Ghana,
have been terrified by the killings of at least 33 women since
1998. (CNN, USA, 16 May 2001)
* Kenya. Police launch swoop to combat city killings - Police in the
Kenyan capital Nairobi said they launched an all-out swoop on 13 May to
round up suspected criminals after a series of armed raids in the city. Two
Asian businessmen were shot dead in their clothing store in central Nairobi
on Saturday in an attack lasting only a few minutes. On the night of 12
May, a police intelligence officer was shot dead in a car hijacking and
another businessman was killed in an unrelated shooting, local TV stations
reported on 13 May. "All available police officers have been mobilized to
pick up known criminals in the city," Nairobi police commander Godfrey
Mwale told a news conference after an urgent meeting of Nairobi police
chiefs on 13 May. "This operation is going to inconvenience a few innocent
people but that cannot be avoided." (CNN, USA, 13 May 2001)
* Kenya. Hundreds flee deadly clashes - Hundreds of Kenyans fled their
homes on 15 May after four people were killed in the latest fighting
between rival ethnic groups in the southwest of the country, police and
witnesses said. Fresh clashes between members of the Kisii and Masai
communities on Monday brought the death toll in two months of sporadic
fighting to at least 20, police said. "We are still assessing the
situation. It is very tense," District Police Commissioner Hassan Noor
Hassan told Reuters. He said police had drafted in reinforcements to quell
the conflict which was triggered by a land dispute. Ten people from the
Kisii group were admitted to hospital with bullet wounds on Monday night in
the town of Kisii, about 240 kms (150 miles) west of the Kenyan capital
Nairobi, medical sources said. The Kisii area was hit hard by inter-tribal
land clashes in the build-up to Kenya's last general elections in 1997 and
at the time of its first multi-party polls in 1992. Kenya's next general
elections are due before the end of 2002. (CNN, USA, 15 May 2001)
* Liberia. Liberia's President blames Guinea for cross border
attacks - The BBC has obtained the first independently verified
information about the widespread nature of the rebel war in northern
Liberia. Independent medical sources say that in the last few months of
fighting hundreds of Liberian Government soldiers have been wounded. It is
likely that a similar number of combatants were wounded or killed on the
rebel side as fighting has raged between rebel forces reportedly backed by
neighbouring Guinea and Liberian Government troops. The war in northern
Liberia is the latest flare up in one of the world's most unstable regions,
where most of the battles are for control of diamonds. Until now the only
publicly available information about the war in northern Liberia was
unverifiable military claims by the Liberian Government or the rebels.
Liberia recently had UN sanctions imposed because of its role in diamond
smuggling and support for rebels in neighbouring Sierre Leone, so some
sources opposed to the Liberian regime had claimed it was exaggerating the
war in the north to get international sympathy and have the sanctions
lifted. (BBC News, UK, 10 May 2001)
* Liberia. Fresh war threat - Five years after Liberia's long-running
civil war ended, United Nations officials say they are worried the country
could be returning to war. UN relief co-ordinator Carolyn McAskie told a
meeting of the UN Security Council that the political and military
situation in Liberia is deteriorating rapidly. She said she had found a
growing despair there on a recent visit to West Africa, and this contrasted
with moves towards ending the civil war in neighbouring Sierra Leone.
"There was a nervousness in the air, and the sense was that the political
and military situation was rapidly deteriorating," she said. Fighting along
the borders of Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia broke out late last year,
forcing hundreds of thousands to flee their homes and refugee camps. Both
Guinea and Liberia accuse the other of being behind rebel attacks into
their countries. Ms McAskie emphasised that peace could only be restored to
the region if the instability in the three neighbouring countries was
tackled together. A ban on Liberia's diamond experts and travel by top
officials took effect last week after the Security Council decided Liberia
had not completely cut ties with the rebels in Sierra Leone. The Council
has accused Liberian President Charles Taylor of selling guns to Sierra
Leone's rebels in exchange for an illegal diamond trade. But Ms McAskie
said the sanctions only increased Liberia's isolation and make it more
difficult for the country to receive aid. (BBC News, UK, 15 May 2001)
* Libye. "Aveux" contestés de Kadhafi - Le dirigeant libyen Mouammar
Kadhafi aurait reconnu devant un haut responsable allemand la
responsabilité de la Libye dans un attentat anti-américain en 1986 à Berlin
et dans l'attentat contre l'appareil de la PanAm à Lockerbie, affirmait le
15 mai le quotidien Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Kadhafi aurait concédé
ces "aveux" lors d'un entretien avec le conseiller politique du chancelier
Schröder, Michael Steiner. Le gouvernement allemand a répliqué que Kadhafi
et Steiner n'ont discuté que du terrorisme en général et non de "cas
particuliers". Tripoli a dénoncé ces aveux présumés comme "un complot
suspect". (D'après La Libre Belgique, 16 mai 2001)
* Malawi. Lilongwe water supply "cut off" - There were running battles in
the Malawian capital, Lilongwe, on 11 May as armed police officers in riot
gear chased striking workers of the Lilongwe Water Board out of their
premises. The workers have been on strike since 10 May after talks with
management to improve their working conditions broke down. As part of the
strike the workers have cut off the water supply into Lilongwe. The workers
are demanding an immediate 100% pay increase and improvements in their
working conditions. Workers have fired their union leaders because after a
year of negotiation they have failed to convince the management to improve
their conditions of service. The workers accuse board members, who are
mostly politicians appointed by Malawi's president, of plundering company
resources by allocating themselves expensive cars and hefty perks. Things
turned acrimonious when, after the talks broke down, the irate workers
locked up senior management and board members in their offices. To seal
their anger they deflated tires of a top-of-the-range Toyota Prado
belonging to board chair Greenwell Mponela. They also did the same to
vehicles of senior management. (BBC News, UK, 12 May 2001)
weekly anb0517.txt - #4/8