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Weekly anb09261.txt #8
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 26-09-2002 PART #1/8
* Africa. Sahara desert frontiers turn green - Satellite pictures of
northern Africa show that areas lost to the Sahara desert during decades of
drought are turning green again. Analysis of images show deserts retreating
in a broad band stretching from Mauritania to Eritrea, according to
research in British magazine New Scientist. The driving force behind the
retreat of the deserts is believed to be increased rainfall. Better farming
methods have also played a critical role, according to researchers. Twenty
years ago, severe droughts turned much of northern Burkina Faso into a
desert. But satellite surveys of the region have shown that vegetation is
returning to the country -- and, indeed, across the southern edge of the
Sahara desert. The surveys were funded by Dutch, German and American aid
agencies, and will be presented to ministers in Burkina Faso later this
year. And new comparisons with archived images also show increasing
grassland and forest vegetation in southern Mauritania, north-western
Niger, central Chad, as well as in Sudan and parts of Eritrea. And the
researchers say that while overall improvements have been steady, dramatic
progress has been made in particular villages and areas, particularly those
where donor agencies have invested consistently in soil and water
conservation. One particularly successful farming technique is known as
"contour bunding". It consists in placing lines of stones along slopes and
contours on the land to help rainfall soak in, and to stop topsoil washing
away. And that is helping to transform thousands of hectares into
productive fields -- where nothing grew just a decade ago. (BBC News, UK,
18 September 2002)
* Afrique. Méningite - Des dizaines de milliers d'Africains risquent de
mourir d'une méningite à méningocoque de type W135, dit "de la Mecque",
faute d'un vaccin à prix abordable, selon Médecins sans frontières (MSF) et
l'Organisation mondiale de la santé (OMS). Cette souche de méningite a été
identifiée en Afrique pour la première fois en février au Burkina Faso.
Plus de 12.000 personnes ont été contaminées et près de 1.500 en sont
mortes. Le vaccin généralement utilisé dans la "ceinture méningitique", qui
s'étend du Sénégal à l'Ethiopie, protège uniquement des types A et C. Selon
l'OMS, une campagne de vaccination permettrait d'empêcher 70% des nouvelles
contaminations. MSF a appelé les gouvernements à faire pression sur
l'industrie pharmaceutique pour qu'elle augmente sa production du vaccin et
en baisse le prix, qui varie actuellement de $4 au Moyen-Orient à $50 aux
Etats-Unis. Selon l'ONG, les deux compagnies qui produisent ce vaccin
devraient le proposer à moins d'un dollar l'unité. La méningite tue environ
170.000 personnes par an, la plupart en Afrique. (AP, 19 septembre 2002)
* Africa. New meningitis strain threatens Africa - Tens of thousands of
Africans could die this year from a Middle Eastern strain of meningitis
because of a lack of affordable vaccine, aid agencies said on 19 September.
The aid agency Médecins Sans Frontières claimed the problem stemmed from
lack of government and international pressure on drug companies. The W135
strain, believed to have been carried from the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca,
was identified in Africa for the first time this year. The vaccine usually
used in Africa's "meningitis belt" that stretches from Senegal to Ethiopia
only protects against strains A and C. The World Health Organization and
government officials, donors and drug companies will meet next week in
Burkina Faso to discuss the problem. Drug makers say they are doing all
they can but are open to ideas. The first outbreak of W135 meningitis was
discovered in Burkina Faso in February. More than 12,000 people were
infected, with almost 1,500 deaths. Meningitis is a bacterial infection of
membranes around the brain and spinal cord that is spread through close
contact with an infected person or by droplets in the air from coughing or
sneezing. The disease kills around 170,000 people per year, almost all in
Africa. (CNN, USA, 19 September 2002)
* Africa. AU ministers approve anti-corruption laws - African Union (AU)
ministers meeting in Addis Ababa have backed tough new laws aimed at wiping
out corruption that has cost the continent an estimated US $148 billion.
They signed up to 26 articles which are expected to be adopted as a
convention by African heads of state at the AU summit in Maputo, Mozambique
next year. The move will see countries agreeing to extradite officials who
are suspected or have been convicted of corruption. Governments will also
have the power to confiscate documents from banks to help with convictions.
The AU also wants both civil society and the media to play a role in the
fight. But within the anti-corruption blueprint is also an article
guaranteeing fair trials to those arrested for corruption. The laws also
include a "Double Jeopardy" rule, which means that no-one can ever be tried
for the same crime twice. (IRIN, Kenya, 20 September 2002)
* Afrique. Les pays développés devant leurs promesses - Le 24 septembre,
à la veille des assemblées générales de la Banque mondiale (BM) et du FMI,
le président de la BM, James Wolfensohn, a demandé aux pays développés de
respecter leurs promesses, en revenant sur leurs politiques commerciales
protectionnistes qui tendent à aggraver la pauvreté des pays en
développement. Faisant allusion aux engagements pris par les pays riches à
l'issue des sommets de Doha, Monterrey et Johannesburg, il a exhorté les
pays riches à prêcher par l'exemple, en réduisant notamment les tarifs
douaniers, les subventions et autres obstacles aux efforts consentis par
les pays pauvres. "Les tarifs douaniers progressifs (des droits de douane
qui sont au plus bas sur les matières premières non transformées et qui
augmentent de manière abrupte à chaque étape de la transformation) nuisent
à l'activité de la transformation et à l'emploi dans les industries dans
lequelles les pays en développement seraient, en temps normal,
compétitives", a dit M. Wolfensohn. Par exemple, les crêtes tarifaires ont
confiné le Ghana et la Côte d'Ivoire à l'exportation de fèves de cacao non
transformées, l'Ouganda et le Kenya à l'exportation de grains de café brut,
et le Mali et le Burkina Faso à l'exportation de coton brut. Le président
de la BM a par ailleurs critiqué les subventions à l'agriculture consenties
par les pays riches pour un montant de quelque 350 milliards de dollars par
an, soit environ un milliard de dollars par jour et qui provoquent la
faillite des paysans des pays pauvres. (PANA, Sénégal, 24 septembre 2002)
* Africa. Action against the Media - Congo RDC: A journalist with the UN
peace-building radio network in Congo, has been arrested in the
northwestern city of Gbadolite by the Mouvement de liberation du Congo
(MLC) of Jean-Pierre Bemba. Franklin Moliba-Sese, who works for the UN's
Radio Okapi, has been held by the MLC since 13 September. They were angered
by a report of Moliba's on the wretched living conditions of thousands of
child soldiers serving in the MLC army. He was freed on 21 September. Côte
d'Ivoire: On 23 September, the Ivorian government explained new measures to
censor the media, in what it described as a "state of war". Foreign
journalists are finding it increasingly difficult to operate. The BBC and
RFI have been blamed for stirring things up. Eritrea: The Committee to
Protect Journalists (CPJ) confirms (on 20 September) that four more
journalists are in prison. The CPJ had previously confirmed the detention
if 14 journalists. Senegal: In a 23 September press release, the
International Federation of Journalists condemned the death threats against
journalists in Casamance. Sudan: On 24 September, Reporters sans Frontières
(RSF) said that three newspapers and one journalist in Sudan have incurred
the wrath of the Sudanese government after they publicly chastised it for
withdrawing from peace talks in Kenya. Zambia: On 16 September, freelance
photographer Henry Salim was assaulted from a stone thrown by opposition
United Party for National development supporters. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 24
September 2002)
* Africa. African countries may be source of uranium - On 24 September,
Tony Blair, Britain's prime minister, said Iraq was suspected of sourcing
significant quantities of uranium that could be used for a nuclear weapons
programme from deposits or nuclear stockpiles in Africa. Africa accounts
for 20 per cent of global production of uranium. Namibia, Niger, South
Africa and Gabon are the main producers. However, Congo RDC, which has been
destabilised by a four-year civil war, is a more likely source of smuggled
uranium. Congo's largest uranium mine is Shinkolobwe in the southern
province of Katanga, an area under the control of Zimbabwean forces. But
the mine is flooded and in a state of disrepair, according to mining
sources. In 1998 Italian police arrested 13 men as they were about to sell
an unirradiated uranium fuel rod to the Mafia. The rod had been stolen from
a nuclear research reactor in the Congolese capital Kinshasa. Nuclear
industry sources said that a second uranium fuel rod which went missing
from the Kinshasa reactor has never been found. The reactor, still
operational despite five years of civil war, was built by Belgium and
fuelled by US uranium sent in 1971. Its outer wall was hit by a mortar
during fighting, and the reactor is widely seen by experts as highly
insecure. At Africa's main uranium producers, production is strictly
monitored and sales to power stations for electricity generation are made
under exclusive contracts. Experts say it is highly unlikely that any
uranium could be smuggled out. In the former French colonies of Niger and
Gabon, production is in the hands of Cogema, the French company which
specialises in the nuclear fuel cycle and is number two in the field. In
Namibia, production is controlled by Rio Tinto, the global mining giant,
and largely sold to French electricity supplier EdF under a long-term
supply agreement. In South Africa, uranium is produced by AngloGold, the
mining company, as a by-product of gold production. South Africa, however,
is the only sub-Saharan African state to have had an advanced programme to
produce enriched uranium. It dismantled its weapons capability in 1991, but
analysts have long suspected it sparked a trade in nuclear secrets,
expertise and materials seeking a new home. "The controls on nuclear
material are uneven. Security is as good as its weakest link and loose
nuclear material in any country is a potential threat to the entire world,"
said Mohamed el-Baradei, the director-general of the International Atomic
Energy Agency. On 25 September, a senior Congolese official, Victor Mpoyo,
a minister of state who was previously the closest adviser to Laurent
Kabila, said that requests to have the uranium removed from the Kinshasa
reactor have yet to bring a decision, but that negotiations were
ongoing. (Financial Times, UK, 25 & 26 September 2002)
* Africa. Developing countries "hooked on aid" - An evaluation of lending
programmes has concluded that many countries have become stubbornly reliant
on aid from international lending bodies. The report, produced by the
Independent Evaluation Office (IEO) of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF), also found that prolonged use of IMF initiatives has expanded
considerably over the past two decades. "Prolonged use is a large, growing
and persisting issue," said David Goldsbrough, IEO deputy director. "It
raises questions about the effectiveness of programmes." The report noted
that while most prolonged users were low-income countries, protracted use
was also a feature of so-called middle-income nations, such as the
Philippines. Such examples showed that long-term use of IMF resources was
not always of concern, Mr Goldsbrough said. For the purposes of its report,
the IEO defined "prolonged users" as countries which had been involved in
IMF programmes for at least seven years in any 10-year period. By that
definition, about one-third of all countries are long-term
users. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 25 September 2002)
* Afrique de l'Ouest. Améliorer la vie des enfants - Des experts des
droits de l'enfant ouest-africain, qui ont achevé le 20 septembre une
réunion de trois jours à Bamako, sont convenus d'adopter un cadre en cinq
points destiné à améliorer les conditions de vie des enfants et à
promouvoir leurs droits. Les domaines ciblés sont en premier lieu la
promotion générale du bien-être de l'enfant (nutrition, vaccination...).
Les efforts seront ensuite axés sur l'éducation, grâce à des réformes du
système scolaire. Le troisième domaine prioritaire est le VIH/SIDA.
Finalement on aborde la violence, les mauvais traitements et l'exploitation
des enfants, ainsi que la nécessité d'associer les enfants à la recherche
de solutions à leurs problèmes. Le document devra être approuvé par les
ministres chargés des questions de l'enfant, avant de pouvoir être adopté
par les chefs d'Etat lors du prochain sommet de la CEDEAO en octobre
prochain à Dakar. (IRIN, Abidjan, 23 septembre 2002)
* Horn of Africa. Almost polio free - The World Health Organisation (WHO)
and its partners have reported that polio is close to being eradicated from
the Horn of Africa. The WHO says Sudan may have beaten polio altogether,
with no reported cases of the disease for over a year. However the health
agency is appealing for continued funding to eradicate polio worldwide. Two
years ago, there were more than 300 cases of polio a year across Ethiopia,
Somalia and Sudan. This year, only Somalia has reported cases so far. At a
meeting of the Polio Eradication Initiative in Kenya, the initiative's
director, Bruce Aylward, said that polio's days in Africa are numbered,
even in countries where conflicts have ravaged domestic health systems. Dr
Aylward praised the work of thousands of health officials and volunteers,
whom he said had on occasion literally dodged bullets to carry out
scheduled mass immunisation campaigns. (BBC News, UK, 25 September 2002)
Weekly anb0926.txt - Part #1/8