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Weekly ANB1009_03.txt #9
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 09-10-2003 PART #3/6
* Côte d'Ivoire. Huge march against rebels - 2 October: Tens of thousands
of people have marched in Abidjan, calling for the rebels to disarm. The
government supporters were wearing hats and t-shirts in the national
colours of orange, white and green. The rebels last week pulled out of a
power-sharing government, intended to end a year of civil conflict.
Meanwhile, foreign diplomats have arrived in Abidjan in a bid to save the
shaky peace process. The organisers of the demonstration said it marked the
first anniversary of "national resistance against the armed
insurrection". (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 2 October 2003)
* Côte d'Ivoire. Sauver le processus de paix - 2 octobre. Un ballet
diplomatique intense se déroule à Abidjan pour tenter de recoller les
morceaux entre l'ex-rébellion et le pouvoir. M. Abdou Diouf, secrétaire
général de l'Organisation de la Francophonie, a entamé une mission de bons
offices de trois jours. M. Michel de Bonnecorse, conseiller du président
français, dont c'est le deuxième déplacement en Côte d'Ivoire, devait
également rencontrer le président Gbagbo et le Premier ministre M. Diarra.
D'autre part, sur fond de blocage persistant du processus de paix,
plusieurs dizaines de milliers de personnes se sont rassemblées à Abidjan
pour marquer leur soutien au président Gbagbo. Plus de 70.000 de ses
partisans ont envahi les rues pour dénoncer les agissements des groupes
rebelles. -- 4 octobre. A Bouaké, fief des rebelles, des dizaines de
milliers de personnes ont manifesté à leur tour pour réclamer le départ du
président Gbagbo. "Laurent Gbagbo n'est plus le président de toute la Côte
d'Ivoire", a déclaré devant au moins 80.000 personnes, le leader de
l'ex-rébellion, Guillaume Soro, ajoutant que ses troupes étaient prêtes à
se battre à nouveau contre les forces gouvernementales. -- 6 octobre. Le
président Gbagbo a annoncé la tenue prochaine d'une grande rencontre des
différents protagonistes de la crise. Les principaux partis politiques et
les Forces nouvelles lui ont remis un mémorandum censé contenir tous les
points de blocage du processus de paix. - 7 octobre. Les forces armées
nationales ont demandé à l'ex-rébellion de renouer le dialogue avec elles.
Faute de quoi, elles "en tireront les conséquences". (ANB-BIA, de sources
diverses, 7 octobre 2003)
* Egypte. Nouveau mufti - Cheick Ali Gomaa a été nommé nouveau mufti
d'Egypte. Agé de 51 ans, diplômé de commerce et d'études islamiques et
arabes, il était professeur de théologie à l'université d'Al-Azhar. Il
succède à Mohamed Ahmed Al Tayeb, en fonction depuis mars 2002. (La
Croix, France, 4 octobre 2003)
* Egypt. Militants freed in amnesty - 6 October: Egypt has released more
than 2,000 prisoners under an amnesty to mark the anniversary of the 1973
war with Israel. About 1,000 of those set free were Islamists, most of them
members of the fundamentalist group al-Gamaa al-Islamiya, who are said to
have renounced their militant activities. Three of the group's leaders,
including Karam Zohdi, were released last week after serving a life
sentence for the 1981 assassination of former President Anwar Sadat. In
1999, the group announced it had given up violence after a seven-year
campaign which claimed more than a thousand lives. Al-Gamaa member Ali
Ahmed Abdel Neim, 44, was among those released from Tora prison in southern
Cairo, today. "We will stick to this ceasefire," he told journalists. "The
revision of our violent ideology was undertaken without any government
pressure." (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 6 October 2003)
* Egypt. Tourism turnaround - There's been a remarkable turnaround in
Egypt's tourism industry. At the beginning of the year, with war in Iraq
looming, the authorities here were fearing the worst. During the war itself
the number of tourists visiting Egypt fell by about 25% compared to the
previous year, threatening the country's entire economy. Egypt has long
been one of the world's premier destinations. Its mix of ancient history,
year-round sun and Red Sea diving attracts up to five million visitors each
year. For the Egyptians, tourism is vital. It is the country's number one
foreign currency earner, producing about $4bn a year and accounting for
more than 11% of GDP. But relying on a single industry like tourism can be
a risky business, particularly in a volatile region like the Middle East.
Several times in the past, Egypt has suffered. Numbers fell after the first
Gulf War and again in 1997, when Islamic militants opened fire and
massacred dozens of tourists in Luxor. Numbers had only just started to
recover when they were hit by the global drop in tourism after the 11
September attacks. This time, though, the recovery has been almost
instantaneous. A mix of heavy discounts and perhaps more intrepid
travellers has seen the number of visitors over summer reach an all-time
high -- 750,000 in August, 30% more than last year. Egypt looks set to
record the highest number of tourists in its history this year. (ANB-BIA,
Belgium, 7 October 2003)
* Egypte/Libye. Chénouda III décoré - Le patriarche des
coptes-orthodoxes, le pape Chénouda III, vient de recevoir à Tripoli le
"prix Kadhafi des droits de l'homme". Le prix a été décerné au pape
Chénouda III "en reconnaissance de ses positions nationales et
humanitaires, et de sa participation à l'établissement d'un dialogue
constructif entre les religions". Le prix, doté de 250.000 dinars libyens
(192.000 dollars), a été remis au dignitaire religieux devant un parterre
d'invités. Le pape Chénouda III a ensuite célébré une messe, retransmise
pour la première fois par la radio libyenne. (Al-Ahram Hebdo, Egypte, 1-7
octobre 2003)
* Erythrée. Démineurs kényans - 62 démineurs humanitaires kényans sont
attendus le 2 octobre à Asmara, afin de renforcer les opérations dans les
champs de mines. Ils se joindront au premier groupe de démineurs à haut
risque kényans déjà engagés dans le déminage de la région de Shilalo, une
région où beaucoup de mines ont été répandues. Cette semaine, une société
de génie civil du Bangladesh, également impliquée dans cette campagne de
déminage, a encore trouvé et désamorcé cinq bombes qui n'avaient pas
explosé. (D'après PANA, Sénégal, 2 octobre 2003)
* Eritrea/Ethiopia. No new Horn border commission - 3 October: The United
Nations Security Council has rejected an Ethiopian request for a new body
to decide on its contested border with Eritrea. The UN "regretted"
Ethiopia's position and urged it to implement last year's border ruling.
Following a two-year border war which left 70,000 people dead, a commission
ruled that the town of Badme where the war began, belonged to Eritrea.
Ethiopia has refused to accept the ruling and last week, Ethiopian Prime
Minister Meles Zenawi asked the UN to set up a new border commission. He
warned that the commission's "unacceptable" decision could lead to "another
round of war" and therefore the UN had an obligation to get involved.
However, he said that he was committed to resolving peacefully the
worsening border dispute with Eritrea. On 2 October, Eritrean Foreign
Minister Ali Said Abdella told the UN General Assembly in New York that
"Ethiopia has wilfully crossed the red line and set in motion an
irreversible process to scuttle the peace agreement altogether." In a
one-page response to the Ethiopian request the Security Council reminded
Ethiopia that it had committed itself under the 2000 Algiers Agreements "to
accept the boundary decision as final and binding". The UN also urged both
sides to resume talks over their dispute. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 3 October 2003)
* Ethiopia. Vital medicines arrive to combat malaria - Vital anti-malaria
medicines to combat a looming epidemic in Ethiopia have been released from
customs. The medicines, worth US $700,000 arrived in the country on 18
August and were released on 2 October. They will be distributed to hard hit
areas early next week. A spokesman from the Ethiopian Customs Authority
told IRIN: "The drugs were subject to urgent clearance. We got them out as
soon as possible." Malaria is the third biggest killer in the country and
claims around 250 lives a day. Some 40 million people in the country are at
risk of infection. Christiane Rudert, head of health and nutrition at the
UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Ethiopia, said the drugs were vital in
combating the potential emergency. (IRIN, Kenya, 3 October 2003)
* Gabon. Gisement de manganèse - La Compagnie minière des trois rivières
(CMTR), filiale d'une compagnie brésilienne, a découvert un nouveau
gisement de manganèse d'une haute teneur et dont les réserves sont estimées
à 100 millions de tonnes, a-t-on appris de source officielle à Libreville.
Le gisement est situé dans la province du Haut Ogooué, dans la localité
d'Okondja, à quelques kilomètres d'un autre gisement exploité depuis 1962.
Une étude de faisabilité est en cours pour la construction d'un tronçon
ferroviaire de près de 200 km qui relierait Okondja au chemin de fer
gabonais et au port d'Owendo, à Libreville, où la CMTR envisage aussi de
construire un port minéralier. Le Gabon est le deuxième producteur mondial
de manganèse, après l'Afrique du Sud. (PANA, Sénégal, 5 octobre 2003)
* Guinea-Bissau. Transition regime sworn in - 3 October: Today, Guinea
Bissau swore in a new transition government to lead the tiny West African
state until presidential elections in 18 months following a military coup
in September. The new interim president, businessman Henrique Rosa, issued
a decree appointing the government whose members were chosen by a 56-member
National Transition Council. The panel is serving in place of parliament
until the new assembly is elected. The broad-based executive, led by Prime
Minister Artur Sanha, 38, is made up of 11 ministers and five secretaries
of state. Sanha was named by the coup leaders against the wishes of a
majority of political parties. The military also appointed Rosa as interim
president. Only two members of the previous government -- the defense and
social infrastructure ministers -- maintained their posts. Both are from
the Social Renewal Party of former president Kumba Yalla, ousted in a
bloodless putsch on September 14. (CNN, USA, 3 October 2003)
* Kenya. Three charged over murder - 2 October:Three people have been
charged with the controversial murder of a senior official of the Kenya
constitution review commission. The suspects -- two minibus touts and a
houseboy -- were charged after a newspaper editor were taken to court in
connection with the alleged theft of a videotaped statement to the police
investigating the high-profile murder of Crispin Mbai. The killing has
generated heated debate, with politicians from both the ruling National
Rainbow Coalition (Narc) and the opposition alleging that it was a
political assassination meant to derail the constitution review process.
The two-day detention of the editor of the Sunday Standard, David Makali,
following his publication of an alleged confession from one of the
suspects, provoked strong domestic and international criticism. Collins
Ketore Kilel, Ramadhan Karume Otieno and Moses Gitogo Mbuthi were charged
with the murder of Mr Mbai, who headed a committee on the devolution of
powers in the commission. The three were not allowed to plead and were
remanded in custody for two weeks because they did not have legal
representation. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 2 October 2003)
* Kenya. "Africa can attain food sufficiency" - On 23 September, Rev. Dr.
Samuel Kobia, the World Council of Churches (WCC)'s secretary-general
elect, held a press conference in Kenya, in which he said: "My vision is
that Africa could attain food sufficiency within a decade. All it takes is
political will and strategic planning". Dr Kobia was referring to the fact
that some countries, which could be self-sufficient in food production,
depend heavily on the outside world for their people's food needs. He said:
"A nation which cannot feed itself cannot command respect among the family
of nations. But Africans have the capacity to utilize their own resources.
Africa should claim the 21st century as the new era of self-sufficiency in
food production, primary health care, public safety, security, and living a
life of dignity in just, peaceful and sustainable communities". (Francis
Njuguna, ANB-BIA, Kenya, 2 October 2003)
* Kenya. Calls to sack judges - 2 October: Kenyan lawyers have called on
the government to take firm action following the release of a report that
says more than half of the country's judges are corrupt. The lawyers asked
the government to sack the judges and reconstitute the judiciary. The
report, released today, is compiled by a probe committee set up by the
country's chief justice, Aaron Ringera. The committee said it had evidence
of crimes, including a video tape showing a judge receiving a bribe. The
report has caused ripples within the judicial system and is viewed as the
Kenyan Governments' litmus test over its commitment to stamp out
corruption. The chairman of the law society of Kenya, Abdillahi Nassir,
wants the corrupt judicial officers immediately sidelined. 3 October:
Kenya's Daily Nation publishes a list of what it costs to bribe a judge.
For an appeal judge -- 15 million shillings ($190,800); for a magistrate --
as little as 4,000 shillings ($50). Other "tariffs" are also published by
the newspaper. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 3 October 2003)
* Liberia. Rebel offensive - 6 October: Liberian army commanders have
accused the main rebel group of an offensive in the north-east of the
country, breaking a ceasefire agreement. One commander said that fighters
from the Lurd group were advancing from Gbarnga towards Nimba county. He
said that more than 65 people had been killed and civilians were fleeing
towards Guinea and Côte d'Ivoire. It's difficult to assess the extent of
the fighting because there is no access to Nimba from the
capital. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 6 October 2003)
* Liberia. Tentatives d'apaisement - Jeudi 2 octobre. Les heurts qui se
sont produits à Monrovia mercredi, entre rebelles et soldats loyalistes,
lors de l'arrivée du chef du LURD, Sekou Conneh, ont fait 9 morts et 15
blessés selon un nouveau bilan. La rencontre prévue entre Conneh et le
président Blah n'a pas eu lieu. Jeudi, M. Blah a affirmé à la radio
nationale que les rebelles ont tenté de le renverser pour installer leur
chef au pouvoir. Il a également reproché aux Casques bleus de ne pas avoir
désarmé les rebelles à leur entrée dans la ville. -- 5 octobre. Le
médiateur des pourparlers de paix, Abdulsalami Abubakar, est arrivé ce
dimanche à Monrovia où il devrait finaliser le processus devant mener à
l'installation du gouvernement de transition. L'accord conclu entre les
parties belligérantes le 18 août à Accra, prévoit la mise en place d'un
gouvernement national de transition, organisé en trois pouvoirs distincts:
une assemblée nationale, un pouvoir exécutif et un pouvoir judiciaire. Le
gouvernement sera chargé de gérer le pays pendant une période de deux ans,
jusqu'en janvier 2006. Il sera dirigé par Gyude Bryant, et devrait être
installé le 14 octobre. -- Lundi 6 octobre. Le commandant de la force des
Nations unies (UNMIL), le général Opande, s'est entretenu avec les parties
belligérantes, alors que des rapports font état de nouveaux affrontements
entre forces gouvernementales et le LURD au centre et au nord-est du
Liberia. Pour sa part, M. Abubakar devait se rendre mardi à Tubmanburg, le
bastion du LURD à 60 km à l'ouest de Monrovia, pour y rencontrer M.
Conneh. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 6 octobre 2003)
* Liberia. UN starts peace patrols - 2 October: United Nations
peacekeepers are patrolling the streets of the Liberian capital, Monrovia,
a day after a gun-battle marred the official launch of their mission. Some
3,500 West African troops already deployed in the capital swapped their
green berets for blue ones of the UN as authority was transferred to the
world body. They are manning the same check-points and roadblocks -- only
the colour of their helmets has changed. 6 October: IRIN reports that the
force commander of the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL), General
Daniel Opande, has met jointly with representatives of both the Liberian
government and the two main rebel groups, LURD and MODEL, in Monrovia. 7
October: General Opande says that Monrovia will be cleared of weapons by 9
October. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 7 October 2003)
Weekly anb1009.txt - #3/6