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Weekly anb0515_6.txt #6



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 15-05-2003      PART #6/6

* Togo. 7 candidats à la présidentielle  -  La Cour constitutionnelle du 
Togo a retenu les dossiers de sept candidats pour l'élection présidentielle 
du 1er juin, a-t-on appris le 12 mai à Lomé. Il s'agit du président Eyadéma 
et de six autres candidats. Le principal opposant, Gilchrist Olympio, a été 
éliminé de la course. Par ailleurs, le chargé d'affaires de la délégation 
de la Commission européenne au Togo a annoncé qu'il n'y aura pas de mission 
d'observation de l'Union européenne pour cette élection, faute d'avoir pu 
mener une "mission exploratoire". Et des associations des droits de l'homme 
ont dénoncé les conditions de la présidentielle et les "manipulations" du 
président Eyadéma, au pouvoir depuis 36 ans, pour obtenir un nouveau 
mandat. - Le 13 mai, la télévision nationale, citant un décret 
présidentiel, a annoncé qu'une "force de sécurité pour l'élection 
présidentielle" d'environ 5.000 hommes a été créée pour "assurer la 
sécurité du processus électoral sur toute l'étendue du territoire". La 
campagne électorale démarre le 16 mai à minuit.   (ANB-BIA, de sources 
diverses, 14 mai 2003)

* Tunisie. 180 clandestins secourus  -  Une importante tentative 
d'immigration clandestine a été déjouée par une unité des garde-côtes 
tunisiens, rapporte l'hebdomadaire Assabah le lundi 12 mai. Selon le 
journal, des agents de la sécurité maritime qui patrouillaient au large de 
Monastir ont arraisonné jeudi dernier une embarcation à bord de laquelle se 
trouvaient 180 personnes originaires de pays de l'Afrique subsaharienne. Le 
bateau qui était tombé en panne en pleine mer, était parti des côtes 
libyennes et se dirigeait "apparemment" vers l'Italie. Les naufragés, dont 
bon nombre était en mauvais état de santé, ont été transférés dans un 
centre d'hébergement à Monastir.   (AP, 12 mai 2003)

* Ouganda. Sept soldats noyés  -  Le 10 mai, sept soldats ougandais, dont 
un commandant de bataillon, se sont noyés dans le lac Albert quand le 
bateau à bord duquel ils voyageaient a chaviré au cours d'une tempête. Ils 
appartenaient aux dernières troupes ougandaises se retirant de l'est du 
Congo-RDC. Leurs corps ont été retrouvés tard dans la nuit.   (PANA, 
Sénégal, 11 mai 2003)

* Uganda. Ebola scare flushes out guerrillas  -  One of Africa's most 
feared rebel groups, the Lord's Resistance Army, has abandoned its bases in 
southern Sudan and crossed into Uganda in an apparent attempt to escape a 
suspected outbreak of the deadly disease Ebola. Several hundred of the 
Ugandan guerrillas were spotted yesterday moving south towards the Ugandan 
town of Kitgum in an unusually large deployment. It is feared that they may 
carry the virus. Biologists from the World Health Organisation are expected 
to arrive in the border region tomorrow to establish what illness has 
killed at least seven people in Sudan in the past two weeks. Health 
officials in Kitgum believe the real death toll is 45 and say that all the 
symptoms -- fever, diarrhoea and vomiting blood -- are characteristic of 
Ebola. If confirmed, it would be the region's third outbreak in as many 
years. Ebola, which starts with a fever and headache which can lead to 
massive internal bleeding, is passed on by infected body fluids, with some 
strains killing 90% of victims. The Ugandan health ministry said that 
although there were no confirmed cases of Ebola fever in the country, eight 
border districts had been put on alert. Ugandan army officials said a 
700-strong rebel force had crossed back into the country from Sudan and was 
moving south through the bush on foot, a concentration seldom seen since 
the government acquired helicopter gunships. The rebels kidnapped 40 young 
Roman Catholic seminarians in Gulu during an attack on Saturday night, the 
Vatican's missionary news agency Misna said yesterday, citing religious 
sources in the region. The 17-year-old civil war which has killed and 
displaced hundreds of thousands in northern Uganda has picked up steam, 
with the army claiming to have killed 27 rebels last week. Villagers have 
crowded into towns to escape rebel bands who roam the countryside, looting 
and abducting children as forced conscripts for a war which they say is 
against the southern-dominated government of President Yoweri Museveni. But 
most victims of the rebel ambushes and massacres are civilians.   (The 
Guardian, UK, 12 May 2003)

* Uganda. Army looking for Catholic students  -  12 May: The Ugandan army 
is still seeking a group of rebels who abducted more than 40 trainee 
Catholic priests over the weekend. Army spokesman Major Bantariza says that 
at least 100 soldiers have been sent to rescue the boys. An eight-year-old 
boy was shot dead during the attack, which happened early on Sunday morning 
at the Lacor Junior Seminary in Gulu district, about 400km north of 
Uganda.   (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 12 May 2003)

* Ouganda. Dialogue bloqué  -  Les perspectives d'un règlement négocié de 
la rébellion qui secoue depuis 16 ans le nord de l'Ouganda, se sont 
assombries ce week-end, alors que le président Museveni avait ordonné à 
l'armée de reprendre ses opérations militaires contre l'Armée de résistance 
du Seigneur (LRA). Rappelant la proposition de cessez-le-feu qu'il a faite 
en mars dernier, M. Museveni a affirmé que la LRA s'est refusée à observer 
la trêve, continuant à terroriser les civils. De son côté, la LRA a accusé 
le gouvernement de malhonnêteté et réclame un cessez-le-feu total comme 
condition préalable à l'ouverture du dialogue. Une conférence de paix 
organisée la semaine dernière à Gulu impute l'échec des négociations à une 
incapacité à communiquer entre les différents initiateurs, porteurs de 
messages contradictoires. La conférence a recommandé que l'organe national 
unifié, dirigé par l'archevêque Martin Odama, s'attelle à relancer le 
dialogue. Mais Museveni a rejeté cette proposition.   (PANA, Sénégal, 13 
mai 2003)

* Zambia. Hard hit by AIDS  -  10 May: Zambia has set a new record --one 
which no country would wish to hold. The average life expectancy in the 
country is 33 years -- by far the lowest in the world - and it is all due 
to AIDS. The illness has been referred to as the viral genocide, cutting 
down 200 Zambians every day. One in five Zambians is HIV-positive which, 
for a country with a population of only 10 million, is a devastating 
statistic. Dr Desmond Johns, director of UNAIDS, said: "The situation in 
Zambia is pretty much typical of what is going on in the heavily-affected 
countries in southern Africa." He said there is a common set of factors in 
most of these countries that has led to high numbers of HIV-positive 
people. These factors include poverty, wide social disparities, limited 
access to basic services such as education and health, and migration for 
economic and other reasons. A few years ago, it was Botswana and Sierra 
Leone which topped the grim league table of countries with the lowest life 
expectancy. Now, Zambia is up there. The average Zambian can expect to live 
11 fewer years than he or she did a decade ago. Dr Johns says the country's 
government is working to reverse that trend through education, but it will 
take time.   (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 10 May 2003)

* Zambia. Angolans to go home  -  11 May: The voluntary repatriation of 
some of the 200,000 Angolans living in Zambia will begin next month, 
according to the United Nations refugee agency. UN official Fisseha Yimer 
in the Zambian capital Lusaka said about 60,000 Angolan refugees would be 
helped to return home over the next two years. Mr Yimer said the agency had 
received $11m in donations towards the cost of the programme, which is 
expected to cost $40m. Hundreds of thousands of Angolans fled their country 
during nearly three decades of civil war which ended last year after the 
death of the rebel leader Jonas Savimbi. But until now many have been 
reluctant to return to the former Portuguese colony fearing an outbreak of 
fresh fighting. An estimated 500,000 people were killed in the civil war. 
However, peace has held for over a year, although there is a heavy military 
presence on the streets. In April, the World Bank agreed a $100m support 
package for former combatants and their families. Mr Yimer said the Angolan 
authorities had reported that the clearing of landmines in areas where the 
refugees would be settled had progressed well. Zambia is home to more than 
270,000 refugees. Of these, 211,000 are Angolans. The rest are from Congo 
RDC, Somalia, Ethiopia, Burundi and Rwanda.   (BBC News, UK, 11 May 2003)

* Zimbabwe. A risk to Southern Africa  -  8 May: A senior US official says 
that a crisis in Zimbabwe poses a risk to southern Africa but welcomes 
efforts by three African leaders to resolve the political deadlock in the 
country. The leaders of South Africa, Nigeria and Malawi flew to Zimbabwe 
on 5 May to hold talks with President Mugabe and his main political rival 
Morgan Tsvangirai. "Zimbabwe remains an issue for the southern African 
region, but I am getting a readout on what the regional leaders think of 
the situation there," Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs 
William Kansteiner says in neighbouring Botswana. "We are thrilled that the 
three Presidents have engaged Mugabe and are encouraged by their 
efforts".   (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 8 May 2003)

* Zimbabwe. Tsvangirai's trial re-opens  -  12 May: The trial of opposition 
leader Morgan Tsvangirai is due to resume today. He is leader of the 
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and has been charged with plotting to 
assassinate President Mugabe before last year's presidential elections. 
Tsvangirai denies the charge saying he has been framed by the 
government.   (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 12 May 2003)

* Zimbabwe. Réouverture du procès des leaders MDC  -  Le lundi 12 mai, le 
procès pour trahison de trois leaders du Mouvement pour le changement 
démocratique (MDC, opposition), accusés d'avoir ourdi un projet 
d'assassinat contre le président Mugabe, a repris à Harare, après une 
suspension d'un mois. Morgan Tsvangirai et ses deux co-accusés ont nié les 
accusations qui pourraient mener à la peine de mort s'ils étaient reconnus 
coupables. La plupart des preuves sont basées sur des enregistrements audio 
et vidéo des réunions qu'ils auraient eues avec une société canadienne pour 
tuer Mugabe. Un témoin à charge, un officier de police, a admis lundi 
devant la cour que certains enregistrements étaient tellement inaudibles 
qu'on ne pouvait rien en tirer. La défense insiste sur le caractère 
prétendument inaudible des cassettes et sur la crédibilité de certains 
témoins de l'Etat. Selon les trois accusés, les autorités zimbabwéennes et 
la société canadienne auraient aussi "falsifié" les cassettes pour pouvoir 
les incriminer. La reprise du procès survient au moment où des dirigeants 
de la région tentent de renouer le dialogue entre le MDC et le parti de 
Mugabe, afin de réduire les tensions dans le pays.   (D'après PANA, 
Sénégal, 12 mai 2003)

* Zimbabwe. All-round shortages  -  9 May: The Zimbabwe government can no 
longer afford to pay for the ink and special paper needed to print the 
local currency according to the state-controlled Herald Newspaper. It said 
the government had no foreign currency to pay for the materials, which have 
to be imported. Local money will now be added to the long list of shortages 
in the country. Long queues of people waiting outside banks to withdraw 
cash are already a familiar sight in the capital, Harare. The shortage of 
banknotes will add to the frustrations for people who are already coping 
with shortages of fuel and basic commodities. The newspaper report said 
banks had resorted to issuing the small 100 and 50 Zimbabwe dollar bills. 
But that is unlikely to help in a country where inflation stands at 228% 
and prices increase weekly. 12 May: The electricity crisis set to worsen as 
Zimbabwe does not have enough foreign currency to pay for power supplied by 
neighbouring countries. 14 May: The EU approves humanitarian aid worth 13 
million Euros to help Zimbabwe cope with drought, food shortages and 
AIDS.   (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 14 May 2003)

* Zimbabwe. 500 morts du paludisme  -  Au cours des quatre premiers mois de 
2003, au moins 500 personnes sont mortes du paludisme, comparées à 300 
morts pour toute l'année précédente dans ce pays, selon un responsable de 
la santé zimbabwéen. Entre 200.000 et 300.000 décès liés au paludisme sont 
enregistrés chaque année en Afrique australe.   (Libération, France, 14 mai 
2003)

* Zimbabwe. Aide humanitaire européenne  -  Le 14 mai, la Commission 
européenne a approuvé une aide humanitaire de 13 millions d'euros en faveur 
du Zimbabwe, destinée à "améliorer la nutrition, la qualité de la 
nourriture, de l'eau et de l'hygiène et de combattre le VIH/sida". Le 
Zimbabwe connaît une situation humanitaire précaire liée à la sécheresse, 
un déclin économique permanent et la violence politique. En février 
dernier, l'Union européenne avait prolongé d'un an les sanctions à l'égard 
du Zimbabwe.   (La Libre Belgique, 15 mai 2003)

Weekly anb0515.txt - #6/6 - THE END



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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)
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Everytime somebody keep silent when faced with tyranny, someone else dies 
(Wole Syinka, Nobel Prize for Literature) *
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