Weekly anb06135.txt #7



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 13-06-2002      PART #5/7

* Libya. Mandela goes back to jail - The prison visitor arrived at Barlinnie (Scotland) mid-morning in a flurry of cars and police outriders. He bypassed the bleak waiting room with its metal benches and chipped linoleum and was led, without being searched, straight to a suite of cells deep within the grim Victorian fortress on Glasgow's eastern edge. The inmate he had come to see greeted him with a handshake. They sat and talked for more than an hour. The statesman and the convicted mass killer: Nelson Mandela and the Lockerbie bomber. For Mr Mandela, it was a defining experience. Emerging to talk to the press, the former South African president called immediately for a fresh appeal and for Abdel Baset al-Megrahi to be transferred from Britain to a Muslim prison. The Libyan's solitary confinement in Scotland's toughest jail was nothing short of "psychological persecution", he said. And too many questions had been raised about his conviction to let the matter rest. An urgent meeting would be sought with both Tony Blair and the US president, George Bush, to plead Megrahi's case. Mr Mandela, 83, has long been troubled by Lockerbie. He played a crucial role in persuading the Libyan leader, Colonel Muammar Gadafy, to hand over the two men suspected of involvement in the 1988 atrocity which left 270 people dead, and has followed events closely. Last week he announced he intended to travel to Glasgow to check on Megrahi's welfare. (The Guardian, UK, 11 June 2002)

* Madagascar. Rivals meet on neutral turf - 9 June: Madagascar's two rival presidents are meeting in Senegal, in an internationally mediated attempt to resolve a violent power struggle. Marc Ravalomanana and Didier Ratsiraka hold talks separately with regional heads of state who are trying broker a settlement. Today, the two leaders meet face to face for the first time. Participants decline to comment on the progress of negotiations. The diplomatic push follows a surge in fighting between forces loyal to Mr Ravalomanana, who was sworn in as president last month, and militants aligned with Mr Ratsiraka, who led Madagascar until a disputed election last December. The fighting appears to signal the start of a new, more violent, turn in the six-month dispute that has split Madagascar between rival presidents, governments and armies. 10 June: The talks end without agreement, but African heads of state have drawn up a plan aimed at ending the crisis. The document calls for parliamentary elections to be held before the end of the year and for a balanced transitional government. The two presidents were not on hand at the end of the talks to give their own opinions on what had been discussed. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 10 June 2002)

* Madagascar. Après Dakar II, affrontements - 9 juin. Les deux présidents rivaux, Ravalomanana et Ratsiraka, se sont de nouveau rencontrés à Dakar, sous l'égide du président du Sénégal, qui a réuni pour l'occasion quatre autres chefs d'Etat. Chacun d'eux a rencontré séparément les deux présidents malgaches. Finalement, le dimanche soir, les deux hommes se sont séparés sans avoir conclu un accord, mais avec un "plan de sortie de crise" proposé par les chefs d'Etat facilitateurs. Ce plan propose "l'organisation d'élections législatives anticipées avant la fin de l'année" ou, en cas de difficulté, "à l'échéance normale des mandats des députés, en mai 2003". Le plan prévoit que M. Ravalomanana nomme le Premier ministre de la transition, les autres ministres devant être nommés partiellement par les deux protagonistes. La proposition des chefs d'Etat sera soumise à l'OUA, qui devra déterminer une position commune africaine. Elle reste cependant vague sur la question essentielle, consistant à désigner le véritable président de Madagascar. - 10 juin. Pendant ce temps, de nouveaux fronts militaires se dessinent. Selon des sources journalistiques, les troupes fidèles à Ravalomanana avanceraient vers Tuléar (sud). Ils chercheraient l'affrontement à plusieurs endroits du pays pour diviser les forces de Ratsiraka, mieux armées et entraînées. M. Ravalomanana a rallié sous son autorité la très grande majorité des effectifs de l'armée malgache mais plusieurs unités d'élite, très bien entraînées et armées, sont restées fidèles à M. Ratsiraka. Il multiplie le recrutement de jeunes pour gonfler les rangs de ses milices. Ses troupes resserrent leurs tenailles autour d'Antsiranana, dans l'extrême-nord, grand port-arsenal tenu par les militaires d'élite pro-Ratsiraka. Elles ont lancé une offensive depuis la région de Sambava, dans le nord-est, et d'Antsohihy, dans le nord-ouest, et s'apprêtaient à ouvrir un nouveau front dans le sud, vers Tuléar. Des combats entre partisans de Ratsiraka et fidèles de Marc Ravalomanana ont éclaté mardi sur l'île Nosy-be, la principale destination touristique de Madagascar. De partout, on pouvait entendre les échanges de tirs qui ont éclaté sur "l'île aux parfums" située dans le nord-ouest de cet Etat de l'océan Indien. - 12 juin. L'armée de Ravalomanana a réussi à briser le blocus de la capitale en prenant un barrage stratégique sur le pont de la rivière Betsiboka (barrant la route entre Antananarivo et le port de Mahajanga) et elle continue son avancée sur Mahajanga. Elle a progressé sur tous les fronts, à l'exception de la petite île de Nosy-be, où un de ses généraux a été encerclé et capturé. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 12 juin 2002)

* Malawi. High Court decision upholds Muluzi's ban on demonstrations - In an about-turn, a Malawian High Court on 6 June overturned a previous court ruling declaring unconstitutional a ban by President Bakili Muluzi on public protests over his third term in office. The move is seen as a boost for Muluzi, who said on Monday he would ignore the previous court ruling as it was "irresponsible and insensitive". On 3 June, Malawi's High Court had ruled that Muluzi could not ban demonstrations over a controversial campaign urging him to stand for a third term in office. The court ruling came after influential religious groups, including the Roman Catholic Church and the law society of Malawi, applied for an injunction against Muluzi's threat to stop demonstrations around the third term issue. Judge Dunstain Mwaungulu ruled that Muluzi's ban violated the constitutional rights of freedom of expression and assembly. But that ruling was overturned following an application by Justice Minister and Attorney-General Henry Phoya, who accused lawyers representing groups opposing Muluzi's controversial third-term of shopping for sympathetic judges. (IRIN, 6 June 2002)

* Malawi. Permis d'interdire - Le 5 juin, un juge du tribunal de grande instance du Malawi, Antanazio Tembo, a annulé le jugement prononcé le 3 juin par un de ses collègues contre l'interdiction par le président Muluzi des manifestations contre sa tentative de se présenter à un troisième mandat. Le juge Tembo a pris cette décision, suite à l'introduction d'une demande par le ministre de la Justice, qui a accusé les avocats d'être impliqués dans une coalition hostile au 3e mandat. Viva Nyimba, un célèbre avocat de Blantyre, a accusé le ministre de s'ingérer dans les affaires de la justice et d'utiliser sa position pour intimider les magistrats. "C'est honteux et c'est un jour triste pour l'indépendance de la justice au Malawi", a-t-il dit. - 7 juin. L'Eglise catholique du Malawi a ouvertement pris position dans la dispute politique concernant la possibilité d'un troisième mandat pour le président Muluzi, indique l'agence Misna. Dans un communiqué, la Commission pour la paix et la justice (CCJP) a dit être "absolument contraire à un troisième mandat", appuyant ainsi le mouvement populaire luttant contre une révision de la Constitution. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 8 juin 2002)

* Malawi. Churches pray for term limits - Thousands of people prayed on 9 June for divine intervention to thwart the ruling party's bid to abolish presidential term limits. At the interdenominational prayer session, church leaders condemned efforts by the ruling United Democratic Front to change the constitution in order to allow President Bakili Muluzi to run for a third term in 2004. The session, organized by church and civil rights groups, and a protest the day earlier defied a ban called by Muluzi against gatherings relating to the third term bid. Felix Chingota, one of the church leaders, said changing the constitution, which limits a president to two five-year terms, amounted to criminal treason. Muluzi, speaking to a political rally, the same day, dismissed the prayer session as being motivated by politics, not democracy. "My government is for peace but some opposition leaders are using churches to fuel political and religious tension in the country," Muluzi said. (CNN, USA, 10 June 2002)

* Mali. New President sworn in - 8 June: For the first time in Mali's history, one elected president has handed over power to an elected successor. After 10 years in power, Alpha Oumar Konare welcomed president-elect, retired General Amadou Toumani Toure, to the presidential palace on a cliff overlooking the capital, Bamako. The two men consulted for 40 minutes behind closed doors. Then Konare vacated the palace graciously, heading off to a new palatial residence built for him by the Chinese Government, on the outskirts of Bamako. Konare was not present at the Congress Palace two hours later for the official swearing-in ceremony. The official explanation was that protocol could not handle two presidents at a time. His absence did not dampen enthusiastic attendance at the ceremony. Many thousands of invited dignitaries and Malian citizens tried to squeeze into the main auditorium of the Congress Palace, which holds only 1,000 people. The official ceremony was delayed by an hour as organisers tried to convince Malians to cede their places to foreign guests. The congestion in the Congress Palace was exacerbated by the presence of 11 African heads of state from Mali's neighbours -- Côte d'Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Guinea, Mauritania and Guinea, as well as Gabon, Chad, the Central African Republic, Congo-Brazzaville and Congo RDC. It was shortly before midday that Amadou Toumani Toure arrived with his spouse, Lobo Toure, and the ceremony could begin. Mali's attorney general reminded the incoming president that he was "an ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances" and that the country faced serious social and economic problems, with the youth "refusing to respect their elders". The Supreme Court then officially declared Toure president of Mali. (BBC News, UK, 8 June 2002)

* Mali. Touré prête serment - Le 8 juin, le nouveau président malien, Amadou Toumani Touré, élu le 12 mai, a prêté serment à Bamako, lors d'une cérémonie d'investiture, en présence de onze chefs d'Etat africains. Il s'est engagé à "construire un pays qui n'exclue personne, travailler dans l'intérêt du peuple et travailler à l'unité africaine". La veille au soir, le président sortant Alpha Oumar Konaré avait fait ses adieux au peuple malien après ses dix années passées à la tête du pays. Il n'a pas manqué de faire une auto-critique, mais a laissé entendre qu'il ne se retirerait pas de sitôt de la politique. "Je ne prendrai pas ma retraite", a-t-il affirmé. - 9 juin. L'ancien ambassadeur du Mali à Rabat et à Bruxelles, Mohamed Ag Amani, a été nommé Premier ministre selon un décret signé par le président Touré. Le nouveau Premier ministre, 60 ans, est économiste-statisticien de formation. Il fut plusieurs fois ministre sous Moussa Traoré. On ne lui connaît aucune appartenance politique. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 10 juin 002)

* Morocco. Al-Qaeda plot - 10 June: Reports from Morocco say three Saudi members of al-Qaeda have been arrested as they prepared attacks on American and British naval ships in the Straits of Gibraltar. There has been no formal announcement from the Moroccan authorities, but officials are quoted as saying the three had been arrested in May with the help of the intelligence services of several friendly countries. The men, aged between 25 and 35, are reported to have links to the al-Qaeda, the organisation suspected of carrying out the 11 September attacks in the United States. Officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the suspects planned to sail inflatable dinghies loaded with explosives alongside ships patrolling the straits. The suspects were planning to sail the dinghies from Ceuta and Melillia, the Spanish enclaves on Moroccan territory, the officials said. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 10 June 2002)

* Maroc. Cellule Al Qaida démantelée - Le ministre marocain de l'Intérieur a confirmé, le 12 juin, le démantèlement d'une cellule d'Al Qaida infiltrée au Maroc et qui "préparait des actes terroristes contre les navires de l'OTAN" dans le détroit de Gibraltar. Les membres de la cellule, trois Saoudiens, comptaient mener des opérations à l'intérieur du Maroc et à partir des deux enclaves espagnoles dans le nord du Maroc, Ceuta et Melilla. L'enquête de la police judiciaire se poursuit. (PANA, Sénégal, 12 juin 2002)

* Mozambique. Hunger and Aids stalk Mozambique - 6 June: The great Zambezi flows lazily by the town of Tete, on its way to the Indian Ocean. But a mere 40-minute drive away, rivers have dried to a trickle, some are mostly mud or reduced to stagnant pools, or simply filled with sand. Hunger or drought is stalking southern Africa and Mozambique has not escaped it. It has already set in here, right in the province of Tete, wedged in by colonial-era frontiers of Zimbabwe, Malawi and Zambia. Withered stalks of maize and sorghum litter the dusty fields. Malaria is rampant and cholera killed many here in the first three months of the year. In the village of Cachembe, in Changara district, people are desperately scouring the bush for wild fruit and nuts as they try to stay alive. But, with everyone doing the same, even this source of food is becoming scarcer by the day. Many children have bloated stomachs, a classic tell-tale sign of malnutrition. The Mozambican Government has already appealed for emergency aid and the UN's World Food Programme is sounding the alarm, saying that at least 12.8 million people in six countries across southern Africa need help. According to their latest estimates 515,000 people in Mozambique need food aid. The drought in Mozambique has been catastrophic, but thankfully it has not covered the whole country, parts of which have had good rains and harvests. But the rains have failed in much of the centre and south of the country. Many of these areas were already devastated by massive floods at the end of 2000 and beginning of 2001. The floods washed away crops, houses, bridges and infrastructure and also drowned cattle and other farm animals. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 6 June 2002)

* Mozambique. Menace de famine - Les Nations unies attirent l'attention sur la situation de disette dans le sud et le centre du Mozambique. Une analyse réalisée par la FAO et le PAM relève que plus d'un demi million de personnes aura besoin d'une assistance alimentaire avant les récoltes de 2003. A l'origine de la chute de la production agricole, il y a la sécheresse de cette année qui a frappé particulièrement les zones rurales du centre et du sud du pays. Dans les aires de Zambezia, de Tete, de Manica, de Sofala et dans les provinces au sud de Maputo, le manque d'eau aura pour conséquence un déficit de 70 mille tonnes de récolte. Pour le moment, plus de 150.000 personnes nécessitent une intervention humanitaire. Mais ce nombre, signalent les deux agences onusiennes, est destiné à augmenter dans les mois qui viennent, quand les familles auront épuisé leurs réserves de denrées alimentaires. (Misna, Italie, 7 juin 2002)

Weekly News - anb06135.txt - #5/7