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Weekly anb0161.txt #8
ANB-BIA - Av. Charles Woeste 184 - 1090 Bruxelles - Belg
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 16-01-2003 PART #1/8
* Africa. Action against the Media - Congo (RDC): Journalist Gisèle
Ossambia and publication director Kabeya Pindi Pasi, both with the
Kinshasa-based bi-weekly newspaper Numerica, were ordered to appear before
a Kinshasa/Gombe court on 10 January 2003 to answer charges of having
directed "harmful accusations" and "insults" against Agathe Mulimbi,
president of the National Bureau for the Promotion of Social Action (BNPS),
a government department accountable to the president. The BNPS was created
by former president Laurent-Désiré Kabila. Malawi: The chairperson of the
Malawi Institute of Journalism's (MIJ) radio station has accused it of bias
and ordered that it not air any political programmes until the board
reviews the station's code of conduct. In an 8 January 2003 letter to MIJ
Executive Director James Ngombe, Henry Chibwana alleged that the radio
station acts as a mouthpiece for one political party. "Since reason does
not seem to prevail, I ask you to desist from broadcasting any political
message, news or advertisements until the code of ethics and/or the
broadcasting licence is reviewed," Chibwana states in his letter. However,
Chibwana fell short of specifying which party the MIJ radio reportedly
favoured. Ngombe said in an interview that his station would continue to
air political items until Chibwana substantiates his allegations.
Mauritania: On 14 January, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) denounced the
Mauritanian government's ban on the latest issue of the weekly
Arabic-language newspaper Sahafa. The issue was censored because it
contained a report on opposition activities abroad. "This ban demonstrates
once again that the authorities will not tolerate the independent press
giving a voice to opposition figures," RSF Secretary-General Robert Ménard
said in a letter to Interior Minister Lemrabott Sidi Mahmud Ould Sheikh
Ahmed, while calling on him to reverse the ban. Uganda: On 8 January, RSF
protested over the Ugandan government's crackdown on live outdoor radio
broadcasts of the views of ordinary Ugandans. "This is just a means of
preventing people from debating national issues and making themselves
heard," RSF Secretary-General Robert Ménard said in a letter to Information
Minister Basoga Nsadhu, while calling on him to allow the broadcasts to
continue. On 2 January, Nsadhu specified that the licences allocated to
radio stations only allow them to broadcast from their studios. The street
broadcasts, known as "ebimeeza", sprung up two years ago, when some
stations organised round-table discussions outdoors and broadcast the
results live. The "people's Parliaments", as they were nicknamed, have
become very popular. Among the stations affected are Radio One, Central
Broadcasting Service and Radio Simba. Zimbabwe: On 10 January, RSF said the
state media and the government have accused Zimbabwean journalist Lewis
Machipisa of spying for the BBC and SW Radio Africa, a London-based
community radio station. In a front-page lead story that appeared in the
state-owned weekly The Sunday Mail on 22 December 2002, the paper said that
Machipisa is now working for the BBC and SW Radio Africa "despite the fact
that the government banned the BBC from operating in Zimbabwe after
accusations that the station was peddling falsehoods." The government has
also labelled SW Radio Africa as a hostile station, which officials accuse
of peddling "anti-Zimbabwe propaganda." (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 14 January 2003)
* Africa. African media watch - Newspapers in Nigeria this week commented
widely on the choice of the two main candidates for April's presidential
election. Incumbent President Olusegun Obasanjo won the nomination of the
ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP). Major General Muhammadu Buhari, a
former military ruler from 1984 to 1985, will represent the opposition All
Nigeria People's Party (ANPP). Many observers predict that voters will be
divided along traditional social fault lines, a point not lost on the
independent daily This Day. We must decide: "To be a nation, or not to be!"
The two chosen candidates bring Nigeria to "another testy juncture", the
paper says. "Because of where they hail from... they are likely to bring to
the fore again the deep divides of the Nigerian project. Ethnicity and
religion may leap to the centre stage again, creating noise and distortion
in the electioneering process and, more importantly, pushing the country to
the precipice," the paper says. The "moment of truth has dawned for
Nigeria", the independent Vanguard proclaims. "Most Nigerians abhor the
truth, because they have lived, or been made to live a lie, but now, like
Shakespeare's Hamlet, we must decide: "To be a nation, or not to be!"" Some
papers take an even more downbeat line. An editorial in the Guardian warns
that "there is the genuine fear that history is about to repeat itself". It
says there is suspicion that the country's political atmosphere is polluted
with "greed, bitterness, acrimony, vindictiveness". There is "a propensity
to rig elections and to corrupt the process, a disposition towards violence
and an inordinate exercise of the power of incumbency", the paper adds
gloomily. The Daily Trust, a newspaper with wide circulation among the
Muslims in the north, agrees. It says that Nigerians are faced with a
"stark choice that plays up the fault lines binding the nation
together". (BBC News, UK, 10 January 2003)
* Horn of Africa. Anti-terror alliance - 13 January: The foreign
ministers of Ethiopia, Sudan and Yemen say they have established a regional
alliance that will attempt to combat terrorism in the Horn of Africa. The
announcement came at the end of a two-day meeting in the Sudanese capital,
Khartoum. The foreign minister of Sudan, Mustafa Ismail, said countries in
the region needed to be coordinated to fight terrorism. The foreign
ministers of the three countries said in a joint statement they would urge
their leaders to hold an annual summit. The ministers also said they would
get together every six months and they confirmed their next meeting would
be in mid-June in the Yemeni capital, Sana'a. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 13
January 2003)
* Southern Africa. USA to negotiate trade deal - On 13 January, the USA
announced the start of negotiations aimed at reaching a free trade
agreement with five southern African countries by next year, saying it
would go further than the European Union to remove barriers to trade with
the region. The talks -- the latest in a flurry of bilateral trade
initiatives from Washington -- will be held with the members of the
Southern African Customs Union (Sacu). They are Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia,
South Africa and Swaziland. Robert Zoellick, the US trade representative,
who met his counterparts from the five in Pretoria on 13 January, said
negotiations would start on the understanding that no products would be
excluded. "The FTA has the objective of covering all areas and all products
and eliminating all barriers. Unlike the European Union, we offer totally
free trade," he said. The negotiations will aim for improved reciprocal
market access in areas including agriculture, industrial products and
financial services, as well as strengthened protection of intellectual
property rights. The FTA aims to build on the US African Growth and
Opportunity Act (Agoa), which since 2001 has allowed duty and quota-free
access to the US market for thousands of products and helped to create many
jobs in the 38 eligible countries. Unlike Agoa, a unilateral US concession
due to end by 2008, the FTA would provide certainty. "We hold the belief
that the positive experience we have had with Agoa is something we should
consolidate and make more permanent," Alec Erwin, South Africa's trade
minister, said. (Financial Times, UK, 14 January 2003)
* Algeria. Resurgence of violence - 8 January: Mounting insecurity, and a
deepening economic crisis, have pushed large numbers of Algerian young men
to find ways of making the short hop across the Mediterranean to Europe.
Some are just after employment and a better life, others are Islamist
sympathizers fleeing repression by the security forces. And a third
category include radicals involved in violent activities seeking a safe
haven. "The inability of the Algerian state, and indeed the international
community to resolve the problems in Algeria has contributed to the spread
of these militant networks in Europe," a European terrorism official said.
He says, however, that not all of the Algerians who join illegal groups in
Europe have a history of supporting Islamic militants in their own country.
Some may have been radicalised by the repression in the Algeria, and others
have become radical through the connections they make in Europe. 9 January:
Fifteen people have been killed by suspected Islamic militants in various
parts of Algeria. One of the attacks took place in a mountainous area where
the radical Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) is active. The
Algerian Government says the group has links with the Al-Qaeda network.
More than 100 people -- most of them members of the security forces -- have
been killed since 4 January in attacks blamed on Islamic groups. Eight
soldiers died when two home-made bombs were exploded as their convoy drove
by in Sidi Ali Bounab, near Tizi Ouzou, in the Kabylie region, on 7
January. The same day, a family of five were killed in the province of
Chlef, 200km west of Algiers. The family, including two young children, a
woman and a disabled person, where shot dead at close range. In a separate
attack, a soldier and an armed civilian were killed in Batna, southeast of
Algiers. Never since the start of the Islamist insurgency in 1992 have so
many security forces been killed in successive attacks. On 5 January, the
press reported one of the worst attacks on the army, with more than 40
soldiers killed in an ambush blamed on Islamist rebels near Batna. The
daily El-Watan said it was difficult to accept that an entire platoon of
paratroopers could be decimated in such an easy way despite the
government's repeated assertions that it has won its war on terror. Many in
Algeria blame the resurgence of violence on President Abdelaziz
Bouteflika's policy of national reconciliation. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 9
January 2003)
* Algérie. Embuscades et assassinats - Le mardi soir 7 janvier, lors
d'une embuscade tendue par un groupe islamiste armé, huit militaires ont
été tués dans la région de Tizi Ouzou en Kabylie (110 km à l'est d'Alger).
Les militaires, qui menaient des opérations dans le maquis de Sid Ali
Bounab, ont été surpris par l'explosion de deux bombes actionnées à
distance. L'attaque est attribuée par la presse au Groupe salafiste pour la
prédication et le combat (GSPC) d'Hassan Hattab. Elle se situe trois jours
après une autre embuscade, attribuée au même groupe, qui a coûté la vie à
plus de 40 militaires dans les Aurès. - Dans la nuit de mardi à mercredi,
cinq personnes ont été assassinées par un groupe islamiste dans la région
de Chlef (200 km à l'ouest d'Alger). Les victimes appartiennent à la même
famille: la mère, ses deux enfants et leurs deux oncles. La région est
réputée être une zone d'activité du Groupe islamique armé (GIA). - Le
mercredi, sept islamistes armés ont été tués à Relizane (400 km au
sud-ouest d'Alger) lors d'une opération de ratissage de l'armée dans les
monts Ouancharis. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 11 janvier 2003)
* Algérie. Kabylie: fin de la grève de la faim - Le 13 janvier, les six
délégués des âarchs (coordination des comités de villages kabyles) en grève
de la faim depuis le 3 décembre à la prison de Tizi Ouzou, en Grande
Kabylie, ont annoncé la cessation de leur action, a rapporté l'agence
algérienne APS. "Après 41 jours de grève de la faim, nous avons décidé de
répondre favorablement aux multiples appels (...) en mettant fin à cette
action", ont expliqué ces délégués dans une déclaration. -D'autre part, le
dimanche 12 janvier, la Kabylie avait fêté le nouvel an berbère sous les
bombes lacrymogènes lancées lors d'affrontements entre jeunes manifestants
et forces de l'ordre. Les manifestants voulaient marcher pour exiger la
libération des délégués emprisonnés. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 14
janvier 2003)
* Angola. Airdrops for inaccessible areas - The World Food Programme
(WFP) is to conduct airdrops of food aid to Angolans in inaccessible areas.
Humanitarian agencies have been unable to reach many parts of the country,
either because of the danger of landmines or poor road infrastructure. WFP
spokesman in the capital Luanda, Marcelo Spina-Hering, says the agency was
in the process of preparing for the airdrops. "There are many different
areas throughout the country that are inaccessible...in three locations, in
the north, south and centre of the country, there are 40,000 people
isolated. That's only in those three areas, we do not know the total number
of people cut-off from aid," he says. (IRIN, Kenya, 10 January 2003)
* Burundi. At least 10 killed in attack - 13 January: At least 10 people
have been killed in Burundi during an attack on a convoy of vehicles
travelling towards the capital, Bujumbura. The attack is reported to have
taken place at Kangunzi, 55 kilometres north-west of the capital. Most of
the vehicles were buses, and there are reports that many passengers were
injured. The army say they have been chasing rebels of the Forces for the
Defence of Democracy (FDD) in the area. The FDD signed a ceasefire with the
government in December, but a spokesman has denied his group is responsible
for the ambush. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 13 January 2003)
* Burundi. Army returns loot - 14 January: The army in Burundi has
returned possessions that undisciplined soldiers looted last week during an
operation in a suburb in the north-east of the capital Bujumbura. The move
to return the looted property has been welcomed by locals but it has also
been seen as proof that people in that part of the city had good reasons to
distrust the army. It has been a long exercise trying to identify one's
belongings from a pile where the military had mixed up the objects that
were looted from Taba, a location in the district of Kamenge, north-east of
the capital, Bujumbura. But the people were respectful of one another's
property and did not take belongings that were not theirs. Many, still,
could not trace their possessions and asked the military authorities to
continue the search in every area where they suspected the looters had
hidden them. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 14 January 2003)
Weekly anb0116.txt - #1/8