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Weekly anb12066.txt #6
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 06-12-2001 PART #6/6
* South Africa. Business group rejects Earth Summit plea - The
Paris-based International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has rejected an appeal
by the South African government for businesses to help fund next year's
United Nations Earth Summit in Johannesburg. Sir Mark Moody-Stuart,
chairman of the ICC's Business Action for Sustainable Development, said
contributions by business to the R550m ($54m) cost of next September's
World Summit on Sustainable Development would undermine its credibility as
an inter-governmental forum. He said: "It is inappropriate for business to
fund the core costs of a United Nations summit. We shall land up with
accusations that business is trying to influence the process. We would have
demonstrators saying, "Mind your own business"." The South African
government is sending warning signals that it is unable to bear the bulk of
the costs. Valli Moosa, the minister of environment, said last week that
funding an international conference would be difficult to justify when the
country's priority was to provide basic social services. Although South
Africa is anxious to attract international conferences to boost tourism,
the government is reluctant to pick up the bill. It struggled to raise
money for the UN Conference Against Racism in Durban in September, which
cost R100m. International donors gave only R11m. (Financial Times, UK, 4
December 2001)
* South Africa. Rivals form coalition - 5 November: A power-sharing
agreement between the African National Congress (ANC) and the former party
of apartheid will become a reality, today. The New National Party (NPP) is
forming a coalition with the ANC in the country's Western Cape Province. It
forms part of an agreement between the former enemies which will see the
two parties co-operate at every level of government. Swearing-in the New
National Party leader as premier of the Western Cape is merely a formality,
but it marks an historic and controversial coalition between two groups
that once stood at either end of the political spectrum in South Africa.
Peter Marais, the former Mayor of Cape Town, will be sworn in as premier of
Western Cape, and there will be a cabinet reshuffle in the province that
will split control down the middle between the ANC and the NNP. (ANB-BIA,
Brussels, 5 November 2001)
* Afrique du Sud. Ex-première dame assassinée - Marike De Klerk,
l'ex-femme du dernier président blanc d'Afrique du Sud, Frederik De Klerk,
a été assassinée. Son corps a été retrouvé le 4 décembre dans son
appartement côtier au Cap. D'après le rapport d'autopsie, elle a été
étranglée et portait une blessure de couteau dans le dos. L'ex-première
dame, âgée de 64 ans, était décédée depuis près de 36 heures. Une enquête a
été ouverte. Marike De Klerk avait divorcé de Frederik en 1998, après 39
ans de mariage, après que l'ancien président eut révélé une liaison avec la
femme d'un armateur grec, qu'il a par la suite épousée. Frederik De Klerk
fut, de 1989 à 1994, le dernier président du régime d'apartheid. Le 4
décembre, il se trouvait en Suède pour assister aux célébrations du
centenaire du prix Nobel. Se déclarant "choqué", il a annoncé son retour en
Afrique du Sud. (Libération, France, 6 décembre 2001)
* South Africa. De Klerk's former wife murdered - The former wife of F.W.
de Klerk has been brutally murdered in her Cape Town flat. Marike de Klerk,
64, was stabbed and strangled, the police said after an autopsy. Her body
had been found after she failed to keep a hairdresser's appointment. At the
time, police refused to speculate on the cause of her death. Mrs de Klerk
becomes the latest high-profile victim of the country's high crime wave. Mr
de Klerk said he was "devastated and deeply shocked". He is returning home
immediately from Sweden where he was to attend a ceremony marking 100 years
of the Nobel Peace Prize. President Mbeki said: "Mrs de Klerk was strong,
charming and dignified". (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 6 December 2001)
* Sudan. USA rejected Sudanese offer to share intelligence - The US
rejected an offer by Sudan to hand over two men suspected of links to the
1998 bombings of US embassies in East Africa and refused offers to share
intelligence on Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, letters between the two
governments reveal. Suspicion of Sudan's government within the Clinton
administration lay behind the decision to reject the offer to share
intelligence, two months before bombs killed 224 people. The stand-off came
to light in the FT's investigation into al-Qaeda's global terrorist
network. Relations between the US and Sudan have thawed since President
Bush's election. Even before the September 11 attacks, Sudan had started to
provide the US with details of individuals suspected of terrorist links who
had lived in Sudan when it provided a haven for radical groups between 1991
and 1996. The rejection of similar co-operation by the Clinton
administration denied US intelligence agencies access to details about
al-Qaeda gathered while the organisation had its headquarters and training
camps in Sudan in 1991-96. On 5 February, 1998, Gutbi al-Mahdi, then head
of Sudan's external security bureau, wrote to the regional head of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, expressing a "desire to start contacts and
co-operation between our service and the FBI". Mr al-Mahdi, now political
adviser to Sudan's president, Omar Hassan el-Bashir, also invited the
official, David Williams, to visit Sudan. Mr Williams declined the
offer. (Financial Times, UK, 30 November 2001)
* Tanzania. Tanzanian to head new East Africa Assembly - 29 November:
East Africa's new Assembly elect a Tanzanian as its first Speaker, placing
him at the helm of a parliament aiming to foster European Union-style
integration in the region. The newly-elected Speaker is Abdulrahman Kinana,
a former Tanzanian defense minister. 30 November: The East African
Community (EAC) of Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania inaugurates the Assembly, as
part of the region's efforts to forge a common market and closer political
integration for its 80 million people. The inauguration takes place at the
EAC's headquarters in Arusha, Tanzania. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 30 November 2001)
* Uganda. Herders hand in arms - The Ugandan Government says Karamojong
cattle herdsmen have handed in more than 3,000 guns at the start of a
disarmament campaign in the remote north-east of the country. A government
statement said President Yoweri Museveni witnessed the exercise in Moroto
district and thanked the Karamojong for responding positively to his call
to hand in illegal guns voluntarily. He reassured them that the army would
protect them from cattle rustlers who cross from Kenya and Sudan. But he
warned that whoever failed to hand in illegal guns by 2 January 2002 would
be arrested, prosecuted and jailed. It is estimated that the Karamojong
have about 40,000 guns which they use in inter-clan and cross-border cattle
raids, which sometimes claim hundreds of lives. Cows are at the centre of
the Karamojong value system, and cattle-raiding is a way of life. Raids
principally take place to pay for dowries, but they are also a chance for
men to prove their strength to the community. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 3
December 2001)
* Zimbabwe. Journalistes étrangers interdits - La loi sur la presse au
Zimbabwe est de plus en plus restrictive. Le 30 novembre, le gouvernement a
approuvé une norme qui interdit aux journalistes étrangers de travailler en
tant que correspondants, ne permettant qu'aux Zimbabwéens autorisés
d'accomplir de telles fonctions. Selon la presse locale, la mesure doit
encore être examinée par le Parlement. Des centaines de sympathisants du
parti au pouvoir, le ZANU-PF, ont manifesté en faveur de la nouvelle loi,
lançant des pierres contre les bureaux de journaux indépendants et
agressant des vendeurs ambulants de journaux. (Misna, Italie, 1er
décembre 2001)
* Zimbabwe. Court backs Mugabe land reforms - Zimbabwe's Supreme Court
has ruled that President Robert Mugabe's land reform programme complies
with the constitution. The Commercial Farmers Union (CFU), which represents
the majority of white farmers, said the decision taken on 3 December was
unexpected and confirms an interim decision taken by the court last month.
The ruling removes the last remaining legal obstacle preventing the
government from processing claims to white-owned farms. Zimbabwe's land
reform programme has been marred by violence since government supporters,
calling themselves war veterans, began occupying white farms 18 months ago
demanding that they be redistributed to landless blacks. (ANB-BIA,
Brussels, 4 December 2001)
* Zimbabwe. Les expropriations légalisées - La Cour suprême du Zimbabwe a
jugé que les plans gouvernementaux d'exproprier des terres des fermiers
blancs ne sont pas contraires à la loi. La Cour a ainsi annulé un jugement
précédent en décembre de l'année dernière, où l'expropriation avait été
considérée comme inconstitutionnelle et illégale. Récemment, le président
Mugabe a remplacé le président et plusieurs membres de la Cour suprême par
des hommes à lui. Selon le gouvernement, quelque 4.500 fermes (environ 95%
des terres appartenant à des Blancs) sont susceptibles d'être expropriées.
- D'autre part, le 4 décembre, la Chambre des représentants américaine a
approuvé une mesure visant à renforcer la pression sur le président Mugabe,
afin qu'il garantisse des élections libres et la protection de la propriété
foncière. Le texte prévoit plusieurs mesures d'aide économique à condition
que le gouvernement du Zimbabwe arrête de soutenir la violence et mène une
réforme agraire équitable pour les fermiers blancs. - Le 5 décembre, le
gouvernement zimbabwéen a approuvé le protocole de l'Union africaine
portant création d'une Cour africaine des droits de l'homme et des
peuples. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 6 décembre 2001)
Weekly anb1206.txt - End of part 6/6
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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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