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Weekly anb12056.txt #6
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 05-12-2002 PART #6/6
* Afrique du Sud. Mouvements xénophobes - Le 29 novembre, le gouvernement
a lancé une vaste opération de police à travers le pays, partie d'une
enquête plus ample qui a pour objectif d'identifier et de neutraliser le
réseau de mouvements d'extrême droite qui veulent déstabiliser le pays et
renverser le gouvernement. 94 maisons et fermes ont été perquisitionnées et
de nombreuses personnes arrêtées pour port illégal d'armes. Deux jours
auparavant, une explosion a pratiquement détruit un pont sur la route qui
relie la province du Cap oriental à celle de KwaZululand. Selon le
gouvernement, cet énième acte de sabotage est lié aux explosions de bombes
le 30 octobre à Soweto. (D'après Misna, Italie, 30 novembre 2002)
* Afrique du Sud. Eclipse boudée - Une éclipse totale du soleil aura lieu
le 4 décembre à 6h18 GMT. Elle durera 80 secondes et balaiera l'Afrique
australe à 100% sur une bande d'une cinquantaine de kilomètres entre
l'Afrique du Sud, le Mozambique et le Zimbabwe. En Afrique du Sud, les
agences de voyages ont cependant noté de très nombreuses annulations de la
part des visiteurs étrangers. Les agressions, ayant parfois fait des morts,
intervenues ces dernières semaines contre des touristes dans la province de
Mpumalanga, ainsi que les attaques terroristes en Indonésie et au Kenya,
ont découragé les visiteurs étrangers. (La Croix, France, 3 décembre 2002)
* Sudan. Rebels plan own currency - 2 December: Sudan's southern rebels
are planning to introduce their own currency, reports say, in the latest
manoeuvring following recent peace talks. According to Uganda's state-owned
New Vision newspaper, the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement has started
putting up posters showing designs for the "New Sudan Pound", to supplant
the Sudanese dinar. The new currency will go into circulation in January
despite protests from the government in Khartoum, the paper says. But
experts believe that the announcement may be a bargaining ploy -- and would
be largely symbolic even if notes actually enter circulation. (ANB-BIA,
Belgium, 2 December 2002)
* Swaziland. High Court judges down tools - 2 December: Swaziland's High
Court judges embark on a work stoppage in protest against the palace's
alleged refusal to submit to the rule of law. "The judges are asking what
we are all asking, whether this is a country of laws? If so, respect for
the law must be complete and absolute," lawyer Lucas Maziya says. Last
week, six South African judges who made up the country's Court of Appeal,
resigned en masse after Prime Minister Sibusiso Dlamini said the government
would not recognise two court judgements that challenged King Mswati's
III's right to rule by decree. Last week, the Court of Appeal ruled in
favour of Maziya's clients, two criminal suspects accused of rape, who
challenged a royal decree which denies bail to rape suspects. The appeal
court ruled that Mswati III had no constitutional mandate to override
parliament by issuing his own decrees. Dlamini also blocked the execution
of another appeal court ruling, that Police Commissioner Edgar Hillary be
arrested for contempt of court for ignoring a high court ruling that he
permit the resettlement of political detainees evicted by Mswati from their
ancestral lands when the king appointed his brother the new chief of their
area. The appeal court judges resigned after the prime minister said their
rulings had been influenced by external forces. 4 December: Amnesty
International says that "the Swazi government's deliberate and flagrant
disregard for the rule of law and its attempts to undermine the
independence of the judiciary, jeopardize the long term protection of human
rights in Swaziland. -- Swaziland's trade unions have announced a
nationwide strike on 19-20 December in protest at government interference
in the judicial system. The Swaziland Federation of Trade Unions and the
Swaziland Federation of Labour said their action was a show of "mourning
for the death of the judicial and executive systems in
Swaziland." (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 4 December 2002)
* Chad. All set for oil production debut - 29 November: Chad is on track
to produce its first barrel of oil next year, according to the World Bank.
Ali Khadr, the World Bank's Chad director, said oil would begin flowing
from the country's southern Doba oilfield in July 2003. However, with
transportation and shipping expected to take another three to four months,
the first barrels of Chadian oil are not expected to reach international
markets until November next year. The World Bank has partly financed the
development of the Doba oilfield, and has also helped to pay for a pipeline
designed to carry oil from landlocked Chad to the port of Kribi in
neighbouring Cameroon. The project, backed mainly by US oil giants
ExxonMobil and Chevron and Malaysia's Petronas, cost a total of
$3.7bn. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 29 November 2002)
* Vatican. "Accueillir les immigrants" - Le 2 décembre, à l'occasion de
la Journée mondiale du migrant et du réfugié, le pape Jean Paul II a appelé
les catholiques à combattre le racisme, la xénophobie, le "nationalisme
exacerbé" et le "terrible crime du commerce d'êtres humains", dans un
message rappelant "le devoir chrétien d'accueillir quiconque frappe à notre
porte par nécessité". De même, il a invité "les immigrés à reconnaître leur
devoir d'honorer les pays qui les reçoivent et de respecter les lois, la
culture et les traditions des peuples qui les ont accueillis". Le pape a
aussi souligné que "les immigrés sans papiers, les réfugiés, les demandeurs
d'asile, les personnes déplacées en raison de conflits violents et à l'état
endémique dans de nombreuses parties du monde, et les victimes (en majorité
des femmes et des enfants) du terrible crime du commerce d'êtres humains"
étaient "les plus vulnérables" des étrangers et a souhaité l'élimination de
"toutes les formes de discrimination, de rejet et de
marginalisation". (AP, 2 décembre 2002)
* Zimbabwe. "Mugabe to blame for region's woes" - The crisis in Zimbabwe
is hurting the economies of the region, damaging trade relations and
undermining efforts to reach closer integration, Pascal Lamy, the European
Union trade commissioner, said at the weekend. "Southern African countries
are paying a high price," Mr Lamy said at the end of a trip to southern
Africa. "They know Zimbabwe is a mess, an absolute shambles. Their
solidarity has cost them very dear. They have lost a lot of trade." Mr Lamy
met ministers in all the Southern African Development Community countries,
including the representative from Harare, to outline EU policy, boost trade
co-operation talks and explain the benefits of trade liberalisation. Last
week a meeting between the EU and African, Caribbean and Pacific countries
had to be cancelled when the ACP representatives objected to the EU's
exclusion of two Zimbabwean officials. The SADC has also criticised EU
sanctions against Zimbabwe. But despite shows of unity, SADC is deeply
divided over Zimbabwe. Botswana and Mozambique have been critical of
President Robert Mugabe's policies, which they believe are undermining
efforts at promoting good governance, developing their economies and
attracting investment. (Financial Times, UK, 2 December 2002)
* Zimbabwe. Successeur de Mugabe en 2006 - Le 1er décembre, le parti au
pouvoir au Zimbabwe, la ZANU-PF, a annoncé qu'il allait choisir un
successeur au président Robert Mugabe en 2006, mettant fin aux spéculations
sur un éventuel départ à la retraite du dirigeant de 78 ans. Les
spéculations allaient bon train au Zimbabwe, en prévison d'une conférence
de la ZANU-PF ce mois-ci, au cours de laquelle le chef de l'Etat devait
désigner son successeur préféré et annoncer sa retraite. "La question de
savoir qui va succéder au président Mugabe ne sera abordée que lors du
Congrès du peuple qui va se tenir dans quatre ans", a déclaré le
porte-parole du parti. M. Mugabe a été réélu en mars de cette année pour un
autre mandat de six ans. (PANA, Sénégal, 2 décembre 2002)
* Zimbabwe. Telecoms monopoly ended - 4 December: The government has
broken open its telecoms monopoly by granting a licence to a second fixed
line telephone company, TeleAccess. "This comes as a great relief and gives
us the opportunity to demonstrate our ability to offer services to
subscribers," TeleAccess chief executive Daniel Shumba says. State-owned
TelOne has previously been the only supplier of fixed-line services, but
has been unable to keep up with demand. More than 1 million people are
thought to be on TelOne's waiting list, with many people waiting for
several months to be connected. Only 2-2.5% of Zimbabwe's population have a
connection to a fixed line phone, and Mr Shumba said he hoped to raise this
proportion significantly within two years. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 4 December
2002)
Weekly anb1205.txt - #6/6 - THE END