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Weekly ANB1127_06.txt #6
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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 27-11-2003 PART #6/6
* Sudan. Garang hopes for peace deal - 22 November: Sudanese rebel leader
John Garang says there is a good chance of reaching a peace deal by the end
of the year. Mr Garang -- leader of the Sudan People's Liberation Army
(SPLA) -- was speaking after talks with US Secretary of State Colin Powell.
The US wants a deal to be reached by the end of December. Mr Garang said he
considered that date more of an expression of hope than a formal deadline
for the peace talks resuming in Kenya on 30 November. The talks, aimed at
ending two decades of civil war, were adjourned for the Muslim holy month
of Ramadan. The 20 years of fighting pitting rebels from the Christian and
animist south against the Islamic government has left more than 1.5 million
people dead. "We hope that we will reach a final, just and comprehensive
agreement before the end of the year," Mr Garang said after a meeting Mr
Powell in Washington. Outstanding issues are: Whether Islamic law will
apply in the capital, Khartoum; How oil revenue is shared out; What type of
international supervision will take place; The status of three central
areas: Abyei; Blue Nile State and Nuba Mountains (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 22
November 2003)
* Sudan. Rebels in western Sudan - 22 November: Rebels in western Sudan
have accused the government of violating a truce with airstrikes and
militia raids that killed 30 people, mostly civilians. The government said
it knew nothing of the attacks in the arid Darfur area, where the rebels of
the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) emerged as a fighting force in
February, saying Khartoum had marginalized the impoverished region. "It's
been very bad. Attacks by government militias and the air raid have killed
30 people and lots of livestock," SLM/A Secretary-General Minni Arcua
Minnawi told Reuters by phone from western Sudan. Minnawi said 24 of the
dead were civilians and the rest rebel fighters. He said the attacks had
started on 20 November and continued into 22 November in the west of
Northern Darfur state, about 850 kilometres west of the capital, Khartoum.
"They used an Antonov airplane to bomb civilians areas today (22
November)," he said. In Khartoum, Internal Affairs Minister Major General
Abdel Rahim Mohamed Hussein said he had not heard of any attacks in the
area. 24 November: Rebels in the west of Sudan have released four aid
workers, and a Sudan government employee they said they rescued from
another militia who kidnapped them. An official from MEDAIR, a Swiss-based
aid agency, confirmed four of its Sudanese workers and the government
employee had been handed over on the night of 22 November, on the border
with neighbouring Chad, and were now in good health in Chad. President of
the rebel Justice and Equality Movement, Khalil Ibrahim, told Reuters from
the Netherlands: "We released the workers in the town of Tina to officials
from Médécins Sans Frontières, witnessed by the Chadian government." He
said his group had rescued the workers after they were captured in the
western Darfur region by Arab militias. His group did not release them
immediately for fear they would be kidnapped again, he said. The Khartoum
government had accused the SLM/A of abducting the workers and killing two
of them, a charge that group denied. (CNN, USA, 23/24 November 2003)
* Soudan. HRW dénonce les exactions - Un nouveau rapport de Human Rights
Watch (HRW) dénonce les violations des droits de l'homme au Soudan et
épingle le rôle trouble des compagnies pétrolières. "Le gouvernement
soudanais a utilisé l'argent du pétrole pour conduire ses campagnes de
terre brûlée, destinées à évincer des centaines de milliers de fermiers et
pasteurs de leurs terres, qui renferment du pétrole", écrit l'ONG. Et "les
compagnies pétrolières opérant au Soudan étaient informées des tueries et
pillages", mais ont "continué à opérer et à gagner de l'argent". HRW
demande que le retour des déplacés des zones pétrolières du Haut Nil sur
leurs terres, "avec garanties pour leur sécurité et compensation des pertes
subies", soit placé au centre des négociations de paix, qui se déroulent
actuellement au Kenya entre le gouvernement et les rebelles du
Sud. (D'après La Libre Belgique, 25 novembre 2003)
* Sudan. Oil companies and human rights abuses - "The Sudanese
government's efforts to control oilfields in the war-torn south have
resulted in the displacement of hundreds of thousands of civilians, Human
Rights Watch said in a report released today. Foreign oil companies
operating in Sudan have been complicit in this displacement, and the death
and destruction that have accompanied it. The report, "Sudan, Oil, and
Human Rights," investigates the role that oil has played in Sudan's civil
war. This 754-page report is the most comprehensive examination yet
published of the links between natural-resource exploitation and human
rights abuses. "Oil development in southern Sudan should have been a cause
of rejoicing for Sudan's people," said Jemera Rone, Sudan researcher for
Human Rights Watch. "Instead, it has brought them nothing but woe." The
report documents how the government has used the roads, bridges and
airfields built by the oil companies as a means for it to launch attacks on
civilians in the southern oil region of Western Upper Nile (also known as
Unity state). In addition to its regular army, the government has deployed
militant Islamist militias to prosecute the war, and has armed southern
factions in a policy of ethnic manipulation and destabilization. Human
Rights Watch urged that the current peace negotiations deal comprehensively
with the legacy of Sudan's oil war, particularly the ethnic divisions that
persist in oilfields of the south and threaten the long-term peace. (HRW,
25 November 2003)
* Uganda. MPs walk out over conflict - 20 November: MPs from north and
east Uganda, worst hit by a 17-year brutal rebellion, are boycotting
parliament until the security situation improves. The 34 MPs accuse the
government of not taking the conflict seriously. Last week, a senior United
Nations said the humanitarian situation in northern Uganda was worse than
anywhere in the world, even Iraq. Lord's Resistance Army rebels are
notorious for abducting children to be sex slaves and fighters. Cecilia
Ogwal, MP for Lira, scene of several recent attacks, said President Yoweri
Museveni should call for international help or resign. Another MP accuses
the army of sending soldiers to Congo RDC instead of protecting civilians
in the north and east. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 20 November 2003)
* Ouganda. Massacres sans fin - Ces huit derniers jours, aux alentours de
Lira (nord du pays), des "dizaines" de civils ont encore été tués lors des
attaques menées contre des villages par les rebelles de l'Armée de
résistance du Seigneur (LRA) et leurs combats contre l'armée. L'armée a tué
dix rebelles de la LRA dans le même secteur, un soldat a été tué et trois
autres blessés. (Le Figaro, France, 25 novembre 2003)
* Zambia. Bishops and constitutional review - On 20 November, Zambia's
Roman Catholic bishops released a Pastoral Letter entitled: "Let My People
Go", asking President Levy Mwanawasa to submit amendments to the
Constitution, to a constituent assembly. The bishops want the government to
address four main issues in the Constitution, including the Bill of Rights,
to which the Catholic Church wants economic and social rights added. They
also asked for the right to employment, labour relations, housing,
education, health, culture to have "a clear place in the Zambian
government's priorities and the Constitution." They also insist that the
new Constitution be very clear about the protection of the electoral
process to "ensure free and fair elections." They called for an end to the
discrimination against presidential candidates whose parents were not born
in Zambia -- a clause that was specifically inserted by former president
Frederick Chiluba. They also want a return to the requirement that a
presidential candidate be declared winner only if he attains the minimum of
51 percent of the vote. (PANA, Senegal, 20 November 2003)
* Zambia. Free land offer - On 21 November, Zambia's central bank
governor tried to woo foreign farmers, including white landowners forced to
leave Zimbabwe, to the country with an offer of free land in a bid to
revive the agricultural sector. Food shortages have affected a number of
countries across southern Africa in the past two years, increasing
governments' eagerness to attract commercial farmers with access to the
capital needed to create large, productive farms. "There are two areas
where a total of 200,000 hectares of farmland is ready for occupation,"
central bank governor Caleb Fundanga told journalists. "The government is
ready to give farmers from 50 hectares to 2,000 hectares depending on the
size of the land they want." He hopes crops such as vegetables and roses
will reduce Zambia's dependence on copper and cobalt mining. Treasury data
shows that 70 percent of Zambia's arable land is not being used. Fundanga
said some established farms were also up for sale or lease to interested
investors, but gave no further details. He said Zambia had invited over 100
foreign and local farmers to an agricultural investment conference starting
on 24 November in a bid to boost the agricultural sector. Growing numbers
of white farmers have already settled in Zambia, bringing more than $100
million in investments with them, a Zambia Investments Centre official said
last month. (CNN, USA, 21 November 2003)
* Zambie. Naufrage: 26 morts - Un bateau de passagers surchargé a chaviré
sur le lac Mweru en Zambie, faisant 26 morts et 14 disparus, a-t-on appris
auprès des autorités. L'accident s'est produit par mauvais temps dans
l'après-midi du lundi 24 novembre, selon le porte-parole de la police. 51
passagers et leurs bagages se trouvaient à bord du navire, d'une capacité
de 36 personnes. Onze personnes ont survécu. Les efforts de secours ont été
retardés, les autorités n'ayant été averties que mardi. (AP, 26 novembre
2003)
* Zimbabwe. Grim budget unveiled - On 20 November, Finance Minister
Herbert Murerwa presented a grim national budget for 2004 in Parliament, in
which inflation is projected to top 700 percent in the first half of the
year, among other worrying macro-economic indicators. He told MPs the
economy, steeped in its worst crisis since independence from Britain in
1980 declined by 30 percent this year, surpassing even the most pessimistic
projections. This is the fourth year running that Zimbabwe's economy has
registered negative growth, and the registered 12.4 percent slump in growth
is the steepest year-on-year fall yet. Murerwa blamed the crippling
depression on rising inflation, lack of fiscal restraint and widespread
corruption. He pledged an invigorated government-led recovery plan with
tight control on spending, anti-graft campaigns and the development of
agriculture. "Inflation remains our number one enemy whose containment
requires concerted efforts," he urged. The minister said inflation would
top 600 percent at the end of the year, and rise further to around 700
percent in the first quarter of next year before a variety of planned
fiscal and monetary measures hopefully begin to bring it down. He said weak
fiscal controls were largely responsible for the inflation spiral, adding
that in the new budget, "unbudgeted spending would be limited to national
emergencies." (PANA, Senegal, 20 November 2003)
* Zimbabwe. Budget inflationniste - Le 20 novembre, le ministre
zimbabwéen des Finances, Herbert Murerwa, a présenté au Parlement un budget
2004 aux sombres perspectives, dans lequel il est prévu un taux d'inflation
de 700% dans la première moitié de cette année, en plus d'autres
indicateurs macro-économiques alarmants. Il a déclaré devant les
parlementaires que l'économie, plongée dans sa crise la plus grave depuis
l'indépendance, a régressé de 30% au cours de l'année 2003, dépassant même
les prévisions les plus pessimistes. Il a préconisé un plan de redressement
rigoureux, avec un contrôle strict sur les dépenses, des campagnes de lutte
contre la corruption et le développement de l'agriculture. M. Murerwa s'en
est pris au gouvernement et au secteur privé, précisant que "l'éthique et
la déontologie dans le travail et les affaires sont en train de
disparaître", laissant placé à "une économie fantôme créée par des
personnes avides au détriment du pays tout entier". (PANA, Sénégal, 20
novembre 2003)
* Zimbabwe. No invitation for Mugabe - 25 November: President Mugabe has
not been invited to the Commonwealth Summit to be held in Abuja, Nigeria,
5-8 December. Nigeria's President Obasanjo who is hosting the summit says:
"He will not have an invitation. If there is no invitation, they (Zimbabwe)
will not come". (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 25 November 2003)
<$TSpAbove=75>* Zimbabwe. Patchy strike - 20 November: A two-day general
strike has not shut down Zimbabwe, as unions had hoped. Reports say that
the centre of the capital, Harare, is as normal, although some factories
and industries are closed in the second city, Bulawayo. There is a heavy
police presence in both cities. The strike was called after the arrest of
more than 80 people during protests on 18 November. Unions are upset about
the economic crisis and called the strike to coincide with today's budget.
The slow start to the strike illustrates the trouble non-government bodies
have in reaching the general public. The government controls all radio and
TV stations and has shut the only privately-owned daily newspaper. 21
November: A court has released 52 activists and union leaders. Among those
freed is the head of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, Lovemore
Matombo. They are due to return to court to face charges of organising
illegal demonstrations. 24 November: The police say that trade unionists
and pro-democracy leaders arrested during the strike, have all been
released. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 24 November 2003)
Weekly anb1127.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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