Weekly anb02215.txt #7



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 21-02-2002      PART #5/7

* Rwanda/Uganda. Meeting again - 14 February: Rwanda's President Paul Kagame and his Ugandan counterpart, Yoweri Museveni, will meet today on the border between their two countries. The talks, mediated by Britain's International Development Minister Clare Short, are aimed at further patching up relations after a summit meeting in London three months ago. It had seemed in November as if Rwanda and Uganda were on the brink of war. Now that the risk of conflict has subsided, it is hoped that this meeting will reduce tensions still further. In concrete terms, the two former allies will discuss measures taken to dispel mutual distrust, notably Rwanda's suspicions that Uganda was training and arming Rwandan dissidents. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 14 February 2002)

* Rwanda/Ouganda. Décrispation - La rencontre cordiale, le 14 février, entre le président rwandais Paul Kagame et son homologue ougandais Yoweri Museveni, concrétise la décrispation de leurs relations et laisse entrevoir une possible issue à la "querelle de famille" entre dirigeants des deux pays. Un proche collaborateur de Kagame a parlé de "retrouvailles" entre les anciens frères d'armes. Les deux présidents se sont dits satisfaits des progrès dans la mise en oeuvre de l'accord obtenu lors de leur dernière rencontre le 6 novembre à Londres, sous médiation britannique, qui a contribué à "une réduction significative de la tension". Les deux hommes ont aussi exprimé leur volonté de "résoudre directement tout éventuel malentendu par un contact bilatéral, plutôt que par voie de déclarations publiques ou d'articles de presse". (La Libre Belgique, 16 février 2002)

* Rwanda. Ntezimana remis en liberté - Le théologien rwandais Laurien Ntezimana, un Hutu qui avait réussi à sauver 120 orphelins tutsi durant le génocide de 1994, a été remis en liberté le 20 février par la cour d'appel de Nyanza. M. Ntezimana avait été arrêté fin janvier en tant que directeur de la revue "Ubuntu", qui prône la réconciliation entre les deux ethnies, avec un rédacteur tutsi, Didace Muremangingo, survivant du génocide. Selon les amis des deux Rwandais, le dossier du premier était vide et le second ne contenait qu'un plainte l'accusant... d'avoir vendu la revue. (MFC, La Libre Belgique, 21 février 2002)

* Sahara occidental. Quatre options - Le 19 février, le secrétaire général des Nations unies, Kofi Annan, a proposé au Conseil de sécurité quatre options pour l'avenir du Sahara occidental: l'organisation d'un référendum d'autodétermination, une autonomie sous souveraineté marocaine, une partition du territoire ou le désengagement total de l'Onu. Dans un rapport "pessimiste mais réaliste", Kofi Annan prend acte du blocage dans lequel se trouvent actuellement les négociations de son représentant, James Baker. Il constate notamment "l'inutilité" de poursuivre la médiation entre le Maroc, les indépendantistes du Polisario et leur allié historique l'Algérie, sur une solution négociée ouvrant la voie à un statut d'autonomie. Kofi Annan suggère à M. Baker de définir lui-même un statut d'autonomie à présenter comme "une base non-négociable". Autre possibilité, la remise en route de l'organisation d'un référendum d'autodétermination. M. Annan évoque par ailleurs la solution d'un "désengagement" pur et simple de l'Onu d'un réglement engagé il y a 11 ans et qui a coûté près d'un demi milliard de dollars à la communauté internationale. Enfin, pour la première fois, Kofi Annan a demandé au Conseil de sécurité de réfléchir à l'hypothèse d'une "division" du territoire entre le Maroc et le Polisario, une partition qui a toujours été catégoriquement rejetée par le Maroc. Le Conseil de sécurité devrait se prononcer sur ce rapport à la fin février. (AP, USA, 20 février 2002)

* Western Sahara. UN may end W. Sahara mission - Frustrated at an 11-year United Nations bid to solve the Western Sahara dispute, Secretary-General Kofi Annan has put forward four options. One of them is withdrawing UN personnel from the conflict entirely. In a report to the Security Council on 19 February, Annan said, "We are currently faced with a rather bleak situation with regard to the future of the peace process in Western Sahara." Perhaps, he said, after 11 years and the expenditure of some $500 million, the United Nations should terminate its peacekeeping mission and acknowledge "it is not going to solve the problem." (...) The report was drafted by former US Secretary of State James Baker, who has spent the last five years as a special UN envoy trying to solve the dispute. Since November he has met both Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika and King Mohammed VI of Morocco in an effort to find common ground. But Annan said the "high level of animosity" between Morocco and the Polisario, accompanied by a "winner-take-all mentality" had made it impossible to hold the referendum both sides once wanted the United Nations to organize. Specifically, Annan's four proposals were: -- Resumption of trying to implement the referendum plan, which would involve settling more than 48,000 pending voter registration appeals. -- Revising a plan suggested earlier by Baker for Western Sahara autonomy within Morocco, which the Polisario rejects. The Security Council would present the plan to both sides "on a non-negotiable basis." -- Baker could explore a partition of the Western Sahara. If the parties could not negotiate an agreement, the council would present a take-it-or-leave-it proposal to them, giving each side "some but not all of what it wants." -- The 260-strong peacekeeping operation, known as the UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara or MINURSO, would end in recognition that the world body could not solve the problem. In the interim, Annan recommended extending MINURSO's mandate until April to give the 15-member Security Council time to reach a decision. (CNN, USA, 20 February 2002)

* Sierra Leone/Belgium. Key African arms dealer arrested - One of Africa's most notorious arms dealers, a man who has been banned from entering Britain and been described by the government as "odious" for his alleged role in illegally supplying weapons to rebel forces in Sierra Leone, has been arrested in Belgium. Sanjivan Ruprah, a Kenyan national of Indian extraction, was charged in Brussels with criminal association and travelling on a false British passport; other more serious charges are expected to follow. Mr Ruprah was named by the UN two years ago as one of four men who sold arms to the now defunct Revolutionary United Front (RUF) in Sierra Leone in clear breach of international sanctions, fuelling a bloody decade-long civil war against the government that claimed at least 50,000 lives. Last month, the UN declared the civil war officially over as the last of 47,000 combatants laid down their arms. The world body has moved to establish a war crimes tribunal to try those responsible for atrocities in a conflict noted for horrific treatment of civilians, particularly children. British paratroopers were sent to Sierra Leone to ensure the safety of British nationals in the capital, Freetown, and clashed on numerous occasions with rebel forces only to find themselves fighting rebels armed by Mr Ruprah and his associates. The UN says that Mr Ruprah worked closely with Victor Bout, a Russian arms dealer known as "Africa's merchant of death", who supplied weapons to the rebels from eastern Europe in exchange for diamonds. The arrest follows a lengthy surveillance operation by the Belgian secret service. They have been watching Mr Ruprah since the middle of last year when he arrived in a Brussels suburb to be with his wife. Like many said to have been involved in the "blood-for-diamonds trade" during Sierra Leone's civil war, Mr Ruprah operated out of neighbouring Liberia, where the government backed the RUF. (...) Mr Bout remains at large and is reported to be in either the Congo or Sharjah, in the United Arab Emirates. (The Guardian, UK, 16 February 2002)

* Somalia. New cabinet without key warlords - The prime minister of Somalia's transitional government has named a cabinet but failed to obtain the participation of rival warlords widely seen as vital to help end a decade of anarchy. Prime Minister Hassan Abshir Farah has decided on his list and will shortly submit the names to the 245-seat parliament for approval. None of the warlords opposed to the Transitional National Government are included in the 31 posts, reflecting their rejection of painstaking attempts by Farah in the three moths since his appointment to persuade them to take part. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 18 February 2002)


Weekly anb0221.txt - #5/7