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Weekly anb09204.txt #6
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 20-09-2001 PART #4/ 6
* Guinée-Bissau. "Dérive dictatoriale" - Le 11 septembre, les avocats
bissau-guinéens ont vigoureusement condamné l'attitude du chef de l'Etat
Koumba Yalla, l'accusant de violer la Constitution, après le limogeage de
trois juges conseillers de la Cour suprême. Ils ont soutenu les magistrats
face à ce qu'ils appellent "la dérive dictatoriale du chef de l'Etat". Le 6
septembre, le président Yalla avait limogé le procureur de la République,
remplacé par l'ancien Premier ministre Caetano Ntchama. Les instances
judiciaires sont à couteaux tirés avec le chef de l'Etat qui avait, le 30
août, traité les magistrats de "menteurs, médiocres et corrompus". Un juge
de Bissau a récemment cassé une décision du président interdisant une
association islamique. (PANA, Sénégal, 13 septembre 2001)
* Guinea-Bissau. Landmine clearance continues around Bissau - Work to
clear landmines from the outskirts of Bissau being carried out by an NGO
called HUMAID is continuing to the satisfaction of the people in charge of
the operation. No person has been injured in the course of this dangerous
work so far, John Blacken, the head of HUMAID, told PANA. He added: "We
have already demined 1,600 landmines over an area of 111,000 square metres.
We have been deactivating at least 25 landmines every 10 meters". Blacken
expressed satisfaction with the work being carried out by a team of
veterans who are paid 200,000 CFA francs monthly (280 US dollars). The mine
clearers are from Angola, Mozambique or elsewhere in Africa, he said. "We
are doing a humanitarian job," he added. Major Abel Nancassa, a
Guinea-Bissau officer, said that the mine clearers were working without any
guidance as to where the deadly weapons were planted. "There is no mine
clearance map," he said, which the searchers could use to guide them. Some
20,000 landmines were buried in Guinea-Bissau, especially around the
capital, the scene of the fiercest fighting between rebel and government
forces in June 1998. The mines were planted during the 11-month war which
killed 2,500 people and left 3,000 houses destroyed, in addition to
displacing 8,000 people. (PANA, Senegal, 18 September 2001)
* Guinée-Bissau. Sauterelles - Dans le sud de la Guinée-Bissau, un essaim
de sauterelles menace des centaines d'hectares de cultures et le cheptel de
quelque 1.400 familles, a rapporté la télévision publique. Quelque 620
champs de paddy à Catchaque et un millier d'hectares à Mato Faroba ont été
envahis par les insectes. Le ministre de l'Agriculture a lancé un appel à
l'aide internationale, soulignant que la Guinée-Bissau ne dispose pas des
ressources nécessaires pour combattre le fléau. (IRIN, Abidjan, 18
septembre 2001)
* Kenya. High salaries for judges - The authorities in Kenya have awarded
high salary rises to judges in what they say is move to help fight
corruption. The rise which takes immediate effect is over 400 percent. The
Chief Justice will now earn about two-thousand-five-hundred dollars a
month. He will also be given transport allowance in addition to the vehicle
which is provided for him by the government. Judges' salaries were last
reviewed in 1996. However, magistrates and junior judiciary officers, who
have not been awarded the increases, are likely to protest against the new
salaries. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 18 September 2001)
* Kenya. Rubbish piles hit Mombasa tourism - Tourists are being driven
from Mombasa after striking refuse workers dumped mountains of rubbish in
the Kenyan coastal city. Thousands of city council workers are on strike
saying they are owed three months wages and there have been angry
confrontations with police. Tour operators said they were staying away from
central Mombasa to avoid clashes -- and the stench from the rubbish piles
which has been made worse by the heat and humidity. "It is disgusting, we
have called off the city tour and we have taken our clients shopping in a
safer part of town," managing director of tour operator African Quest
Tasneem Adamji said. On 18 September, the workers, involved in running
battles with police since they went on strike last week, dumped a dead goat
and piles of refuse inside Mombasa's city hall. They have vowed to continue
littering the Indian Ocean resort until they receive arrears of 65 million
shillings ($824,000) owed to them by the municipal council. "We shall not
resume work until the mayor and his entire council are removed and a
commission set up to run the council," one worker said. (CNN, USA, 18
September 2001)
* Kenya. Hijack attacks revive Kenya memories - Nairobi is thousands of
miles from America, but in this corner of Africa, the news of terrorist
attacks in New York City and Washington D.C. brought back painful memories
for many Kenyans. In 1998, terrorist attacks on the American embassies here
and in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania killed 231 people and injured thousands. A
park was built where the rubble once lay and reconstruction continues.
Kenyans joined Americans in mourning at a special prayer service, and
warned that the emotional recovery can take "a lifetime." Charles Abiud, a
Kenyan computer manager, said he once went to the top of the World Trade
Centre, and "I was proud to see the world on top of that building, and now
when I found it was collapsing, I got shocked. I personally felt I was
sinking down with it, the way I was up there." Abiud's has advice for
victims of the American attacks. Professional counselling he says, didn't
help victims of the Nairobi bombing, as much as sharing their feelings with
a group of people. (CNN, USA, 18 September 2001)
* Kenya. Restructuration à la KANU - Le 18 septembre, le parti de la
KANU, au pouvoir, a annoncé une profonde restructuration de sa hiérarchie,
initiative considérée par les observateurs comme la dernière étape avant la
concrétisation du projet de fusion avec le Parti du développement national
(NDP) de l'opposition. Cinq nouveaux postes seront créés, dont celui d'un
troisième vice-président, probablement réservé au leader du NDP, Raila
Odinga. Le 16 septembre, le journal Standard avait publié un article qui
prévoyait la dissolution du NDP dès le début du mois d'octobre. (D'après
PANA, Sénégal, 19 septembre 2001)
* Liberia. Archbishop attacks corruption - The Liberian Finance Minister,
Nathaniel Barnes, has described accusations of corruption by an outspoken
Roman Catholic Archbishop as unfounded. The Archbishop, Michael Francis,
had said the finance minister was responsible for the alleged disappearance
of large sums of money at the finance ministry. Mr Barnes called on the
Archbishop to provide evidence to support his allegations. Correspondents
say the row between the Minister and Archbishop reflects growing
frustration with allegations of corruption in government circles. (BBC
News, UK, 14 September 2001)
* Malawi. Human rights violations rising - Political violence, ethnic
intolerance and other forms of human rights violations are on the rise in
Malawi, the country's Human Rights Commission has said. The commission said
in a report that human rights violations in 2000 more than doubled those of
1999, while figures for 2001 are projected to rise over 60 percent of last
year's. The most serious violations circle around political violence where
machete-wielding political activists fight each other in a bid to
discourage voters from going to the polls to vote for other parties'
candidates. The report noted that most of the political violence occurred
during elections as parties desperately tried to retain or wrestle seats
from opponents. Chairman of the Human Rights Commission, the Reverend
Father Alfred Nsope of the Catholic Church, said other forms of human
rights abuses included denial or delayed access to justice, unfair labour
practices characterised by nepotism and unfair dismissals and denial to
property rights, among others. "Our study shows that during elections the
process is affected by violence due to political and ethnic intolerance,"
he said. Prisoners were also among the victims of human rights violations.
According to Nsope, Malawian prisons were more like condemnatory
institutions rather than reformatory ones. "Our visits to prisons indicated
that there is a great need to improve and rehabilitate all prisons in our
country in order to transform prisons into reformatory rather than
condemnatory institutions they currently portray," he said. Another subtle
form of human rights violations on the increase in Malawi is poverty. The
report noted that there has been a widening gap between the rich and the
poor in the country. (PANA, Senegal, 17 September 2001)
* Malawi. Violations des droits humains - La violence politique,
l'intolérance ethnique et les autres formes de violations des droits
humains sont de plus en plus fréquentes au Malawi, estime la Commission
nationale des droits de l'homme. La commission constate dans un rapport
que, pour l'année 2000, les violations des droits humains ont plus que
doublé par rapport à l'année précédente, tandis que déjà les projections
pour 2001 laissent envisager une progression de 60% des chiffres de l'année
dernière. Les violations les plus graves sont généralement constatées dans
le domaine politique, avec des bagarres qui opposent des militants porteurs
de machettes et motivés par le désir de décourager les électeurs de se
rendre aux urnes. D'autres abus ont été relevés, notamment le déni de
justice, les droits à la propriété, les pratiques abusives dans le domaine
des relations du travail caractérisées par le népotisme et les
licenciements abusifs. Les prisonniers font aussi partie des violations des
droits humains, a observé le Rév. Alfred Nsope de l'Eglise catholique,
président de la commission. Le rapport en appelle à des efforts concertés
de la part du gouvernement, des partis politiques et des ONG pour renverser
la tendance. (PANA, Sénégal, 17 septembre 2001)
* Malawi. Tobacco growers ban child labour - The Tobacco Association of
Malawi says it has formed a task force to eliminate child labour on tobacco
farms. The association's vice-president Amin Mponda-Lungu said the practice
was evil and had to stop. Malawi has been accused of being the worst
offender in the region for exploiting child labour. The minimum working age
in Malawi is fourteen, and those found breaking the law can be jailed for
up to five years. Tobacco provides seventy-percent of Malawi's foreign
exchange earnings. (BBC News, UK, 18 September 2001)
* Malawi. Scrambling for livestock feed - On 18 September, there was
shoving and pushing in Blantyre's main business district of Limbe, as
desperate hungry people scrambled for maize bran normally sold for
livestock feed. Some of these people came from as far as 200 km. They had
not been able to buy the maize itself which is becoming increasingly scarce
and very expensive for the average Malawian. President Muluzi has assured
malawians that he will not allow them to starve. He says he has negotiated
with South Africa -- the only country in the region to produce surplus
maize -- to export some to Malawi. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 19 September 2001)
* Mali. Flood situation - There has been criticism of the authorities in
Mali following floods in the capital. Residents of Bamako say the National
Energy Corporation failed to take the right precautions and opened floods
gates on the Niger river. Thousands of people have fled their homes and are
living in temporary shelter, after flood waters swept through their
neighbourhoods. The authorities say rains, said to be the heaviest in 40
years, caused the floods. Government officials have been touring affected
areas to assess the damage. (BBC News, UK, 14 September 2001)
* Maroc. Militants des droits de l'homme - Le procès en appel de 36
militants de l'Association marocaine des droits de l'homme (AMDH,
indépendante) condamnés à trois mois de prison en mai, a été reporté au 16
octobre. La cour d'appel de Rabat a décidé de l'ajourner parce que trois
prévenus n'étaient pas présents. Les prévenus restent en liberté
provisoire. Ils avaient été condamnés le 16 mai dernier pour avoir organisé
le 9 décembre 2000 une manifestation non autorisée à Rabat à l'occasion de
la journée internationale des droits de l'homme. L'ouverture du procès en
appel s'est déroulée en présence d'un collectif de défense d'une
cinquantaine d'avocats ainsi que de nombreux observateurs étrangers. (La
Libre Belgique, 18 septembre 2001)
* Namibia. Land redistribution - Ministers from nine southern African
countries are meeting in the Namibian capital, Windhoek, to try to find a
solution to the problem of land redistribution in the region. Opening the
three-day meeting of the South African Development Community (SADC), the
Namibian President, Sam Nujoma, said lasting peace and development in
southern Africa hinged on the land redistribution issue which had been one
of the main aims of the liberation struggles in African countries. The
meeting is being held against the background of the seizure of white-owned
farms in Zimbabwe by supporters of President Robert Mugabe. The Zimbabwean
government has said it will end the seizures in exchange for British
funding for its land reform programme. (BBC News, UK, 18 September 2001)
* Namibie. SADC: la réforme agraire - Le 18 septembre, les ministres de
la Terre de la Communauté pour le développement de l'Afrique australe
(SADC) ont entamé à Windhoek une réunion de concertation destinée à
échanger leurs expériences sur la réforme agraire dans la sous-région.
Ouvrant la rencontre, le président namibien Sam Nujoma a indiqué que des
progrès significatifs doivent être faits en matière de réforme agraire dans
son pays pour que celui-ci conserve sa stabilité politique et son harmonie
raciale. Les fermiers blancs y détiennent 30,4 millions d'hectares contre
2,2 millions pour les Noirs. Le programme de réinstallation est resté très
modeste jusqu'ici: 30.000 personnes ont été réinstallées depuis
l'indépendance. Selon M. Nujoma, la SADC a besoin de corriger les
déséquilibres extraordinaires. (D'après PANA, Sénégal, 19 septembre 2001)
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