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Weekly anb0528_04.txt #5
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 28-05-2003 PART #4/5
* Nigeria. Bank fraud up 40% - 22 May: Nigeria's banks have seen almost
$10m disappear through employee fraud in 2002, a rise of more than 40% on
the year before, a survey by the country's banking regulator has found. The
total amount stolen was 1.29bn naira, up from 906.3m in 2001, the Nigerian
Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) reported. Ten times that amount --
12.91bn naira --was recorded in attempted fraud, up from 11.24bn for a rise
of 15%. Most of the thefts, NDIC said, were the result of either forgeries
or illegal withdrawals from customers' accounts. The figures may well be an
understatement, though, as NDIC said it believes financial institutions
routinely underreport fraud losses for fear of negative
publicity. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 22 May 2003)
* Nigeria. Avant l'investiture d'Obasanjo - Le Nigeria a déployé 250.000
policiers à travers les 36 Etats et la capitale fédérale Abuja, pour
assurer, le 29 mai, une cérémonie d'investiture impeccable, sur fond de
menaces de certains hommes politiques de l'opposition de perturber la
cérémonie. L'armée a aussi été placée en état d'alerte maximale. La
cérémonie aura lieu simultanément dans les 36 Etats. Au moins 47 leaders
étrangers sont attendus à Abuja lors de l'investiture d'Obasanjo qui se
succède à lui-même. Le principal parti d'opposition, All Nigeria Peoples
Party (ANPP), soutenu par une coalition de groupes d'opposition, a rejeté
les résultats des élections du 19 avril et demandé leur annulation. Mais le
27 mars, la cour d'appel a rejeté la requête introduite par l'opposition
pour faire annuler la cérémonie de l'investiture, déclarant que son
approbation entraînerait un vide au sommet de l'Etat. (PANA, Sénégal,
25-27 mai 2003)
* Nigeria. Obasanjo faces a rocky start - Plans for the swearing-in this
week of Nigeria's President Olusegun Obasanjo for a second four-year term
are being overshadowed by opposition attempts to annul his election victory
and by a constitutional stand-off between the presidency and parliament.
More than 40 heads of state and government, mostly from other African
countries, are expected to attend the inauguration, which follows a
contested 62 per cent ballot for Mr Obasanjo in elections last month. The
country's top police officer last week spoke of widespread concerns about
attempts to disrupt Thursday's event - including planned anti-government
demonstrations that were also aimed, possibly, at making the country
"generally ungovernable". The tense run-up to an event that ought to be a
political formality highlights continuing controversy about the conduct of
the elections at national and local state level. International and domestic
observers pointed to evidence of ballot fraud in parts of the country. Mr
Obasanjo, a former military ruler, was first elected four years ago in a
return to democratic government after more than 15 years of dictatorship.
His chief opponent, Muhammadu Buhari, a retired major-general who thwarted
the country's last attempt at democracy, has called for peaceful
demonstrations to protest against vote-rigging. He is also trying to obtain
a court injunction to stop Mr Obasanjo assuming office. The threat of fresh
military intervention in Nigeria's politics is seen as remote. However, in
an interview with the Weekly Trust, a newspaper based in his own northern
region, Gen Buhari was quoted as saying a bloodless coup d'etat would have
been "much, much neater" than the election that took place. Another
unsuccessful candidate, Emeka Ojukwu, secessionist leader in Nigeria's
civil war in the late 1960s, has also disputed the validity of the election
in his eastern region. Despite legal moves to try to block the inauguration
and calls for the setting-up of an interim government, most observers
expect the ceremony to go ahead. (Financial Times, UK, 27 May 2003)
* Rwanda. Le sanctuaire de Kibeho - "Le sanctuaire de Kibeho deviendra un
phare de foi et d'espérance de paix dans toute la région des Grands Lacs".
C'est le souhait formulé par Mgr Augustin Misago, évêque de Gikongoro, à la
veille de la consécration du sanctuaire le 31 mai. A cette occasion,
plusieurs évêques des pays voisins se rendront à Kibeho en signe d'unité
entre Eglises. A Kibeho, de 1981 à 1989, il y a eu plusieurs apparitions de
la Sainte Vierge, qui ont été reconnues, après enquête, par l'évêque du
lieu en 2001. "Dans une Afrique bouleversée par les guerres et les
persécutions, nous espérons beaucoup que la Vierge Marie nous aidera à
parcourir les voies de la paix", a déclaré Mgr Misago. (Agence Fides,
Rome, 23 mai 2003)
* Rwanda. Voting on a new Constitution - 26 May: Rwandans are voting on a
draft constitution that the government says will prevent a repeat of the
1994 genocide. Thousands of people queue to cast their ballots on hilltops
and at schools. The Tutsi-dominated transitional government says the new
constitutional framework safeguards against the dominance of a single
political party. However, critics say it is geared toward keeping the
Rwandan Patriotic Front in power and includes significant powers to curtail
civil rights. Turnout is reported to be high and voting peaceful. The draft
Constitution: Prevents one party-dominance; bans inciting ethnic hatred;
allows parliament to curtail free speech. At least half of registered
voters must have participated for the results to be validated. It has
already been approved by parliament. The ballot paper asks the question:
"Do you accept the new constitution?" Voters put their thumb-prints in one
of two boxes: "Yes" or "No". Up for approval in this vote is a framework of
a national assembly, senate, and president eligible to hold up to two
seven-year terms in office. Shops and offices are closed to allow people
time to vote. It should be noted that Human Rights Watch has voiced concern
about the proposed constitution, saying it serves only to perpetuate
control of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), led by President Paul Kagame.
27 May: A huge majority of Rwandans has backed the draft constitution,
electoral officials say. Some 93% of the electorate voted "Yes" in the
referendum, said electoral commission chairman Chrysologue Karangwa.
Turnout was 87% of registered voters. Earlier, President Paul Kagame said
that the first presidential elections since 1988 would be held in August
and parliamentary polls in September. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 27 May 2003)
* Rwanda. Référendum constitutionnel - Le 26 mai, près de 4 millions de
Rwandais étaient appelés à se prononcer sur le projet de la nouvelle
Constitution, en chantier depuis 2002. Les bureaux de vote étaient
supervisés par plus de 600 observateurs, dont une quinzaine d'observateurs
internationaux. Les résultats du référendum conditionneront la suite du
programme électoral qui doit marquer la fin de 9 ans de transition
politique au Rwanda. Ils devraient être annoncés dans les cinq jours. Tout
le monde pense que le "oui" l'emportera largement. -- Le projet de
Constitution est à la fois novateur (notamment pour les droits de l'homme
et l'environnement) et restrictif, surtout pour les partis politiques.
Ainsi, les partis ne peuvent "porter atteinte à l'unité nationale", une
notion assez vague pour inquiéter les adversaires du régime, qui voient là
une porte ouverte à la répression de ceux qui menaceraient le pouvoir du
Front patriotique rwandais (FPR). Le 22 mai, le Mouvement démocratique
républicain (MDR), allié du FPR depuis 1992, a dû annoncer son
autodissolution, parce qu'accusé d'"idéologie ethniciste". Le Premier
ministre, Bernard Makuza, membre du MDR, a officiellement abandonné toute
ambition présidentielle "au profit du président Kagamé, un homme plus
compétent", selon ses propres mots. -- 27 mai. Selon de premiers résultats
provisoires du référendum, le "oui" a recueilli 93% des suffrages, a
indiqué le président de la commission électorale. Aucun parti n'avait
appelé à voter non. Le scrutin s'est déroulé sans incidents. Le président
Kagamé a annoncé que la présidentielle devrait avoir lieu en août et les
législatives en septembre prochain, bien que ces dates restent des
"estimations". (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 28 mai 2003)
* Sénégal. Décès du fondateur du MFDC - Sidy Badji, fondateur du
Mouvement des forces démocratiques de Casamance (MFDC, mouvement
séparatiste), est décédé le 26 mai à son domicile de Ziguinchor des suites
d'un cancer du foie, a annoncé sa famille. Il avait 88 ans. Il était sorti
du maquis casamançais en 1995 pour s'installer à Ziguinchor où il animait
une aile dissidente du MFDC. Né en 1915, il n'a cessé, après l'indépendance
du pays, de lutter pour la séparation de sa région, fondant le MFDC en
1983. Les autorités sénégalaises ont toujours considéré Sidy Badji comme un
extrémiste, contrairement à l'abbé Diamacoune Senghor, chef de l'aile
politique du mouvement. Son décès intervient à quelques jours de
l'ouverture de nouvelles négociations entre le gouvernement sénégalais et
les rebelles de Casamance. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 27 mai 2003)
* Sierra Leone. Fighters turn friends - Although the war is over in
Sierra Leone, the fighters -- or at least, the ex-fighters -- still have a
role to play. When Rashid Sandy first met Foday Sajuma in Freetown's
Talking Drum studios, he was dismayed to find an ex-combatant from an
opposing faction. But they began talking and before long found that Mr
Sajuma was actually related to Mr Sandy on his mother's side. "All this
time we had been throwing bullets at one another," Mr Sandy, a former
high-ranking official in the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), said. "Now,
besides being a co-worker, Foday is also my uncle. It's amazing." The RUF
were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in West Africa in recent
times. Mr Sajuma is a former fighter of the Civil Defence Forces (CDF)
--also known as Kamajors -- who supported the government of the now
President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah. CDF forces held Rashid Sandy for 6 months
towards the end of the war. "They could see I was committed to peace,
that's why they didn't kill me," he said. This kind of banter continues on
and off the microphone -- the two are co-presenting a programme in the
local Krio language, originally entitled "Throw Away the Gun". Now that the
disarmament process has advanced, they have changed the name to "Let's
Build Sierra Leone". It was a brave move by the directors of Talking Drum
studios, who are even sponsored by a peace-building organisation, Search
for Common Ground. And they went further -- as soon as Rashid was
comfortable with his role as a producer and presenter, he was put in charge
of the studio's Makeni office in northern Sierra Leone, the former national
headquarters of the RUF. The decision to place Rashid in Makeni has had a
big impact on the numbers of former fighters coming in on the peace process
there. (BBC News, UK, 23 May 2003)
* Somalia. Puntland university seeks peace dividend - 23 May: A new
university in Somalia's semi-autonomous region of Puntland is giving
students the chance to study for degrees for the first time. And the
university hopes the recent ceasefire in Puntland between government and
rebels will allow it to expand further. The ambitiously named East Africa
University opened its doors to students two years ago, but construction of
the new campus -- on the seafront close to the port of Bossaso -- is still
continuing. Abdi Weli Abdirahman is Dean of the Faculty of Business
Administration. Like many of the teaching staff, he has returned from
abroad. "I am an economist from the United States. I came back to teach my
people in Puntland. I am a Puntlander", he says. But the past two years of
fighting in Puntland has made it difficult for the new university to
establish itself. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 23 May 2003)
Weekly anb0528 - #4/5