Weekly anb09056.txt #6



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 05-09-2002      PART #6/6

* Uganda. Pressing on against rebels - The Ugandan army will continue its offensive against rebels of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), President Yoweri Museveni has said. In a statement published in the state-owned New Vision newspaper, Mr Museveni said he would only accept a ceasefire declared by the rebels if they assemble in designated areas near the Uganda-Sudan border. The newspaper also reported that the Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) had started a "massive operation" against rebels in the Lira district of northern Uganda. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 29 August 2002)

* Ouganda. Les missionnaires libérés - Les trois missionnaires comboniens, dont le directeur de l'agence Misna, arrêtés le 28 août alors qu'ils poursuivaient des pourparlers avec l'Armée de résistance du Seigneur (LRA) dans le nord de l'Ouganda, ont été libérés. "Je me trouve à Kampala et me porte bien, mais le drame de la population perdure", faisait savoir le père Giulio Albanese de Misna, le 31 août. Les missionnaires avaient été incarcérés dans une caserne de Kitgum, avant d'être libérés vingt-quatre heures plus tard. Le porte-parole de l'armée a justifié l'arrestation et l'interrogatoire musclé des religieux en affirmant que l'armée ne savait pas ce qu'ils faisaient avec les rebelles. En réalité, ces négociations de paix avaient été annoncées par la presse nationale. L'arrestation semble donc motivée avant tout par le souci du gouvernement de faire taire toute opposition aux opérations militaires en cours. (Misna, It., et La Croix, Fr., 31/8-3/9 2002)

* Uganda. Director of MISNA arrested - 29 August: A series of reports coming from the agency MISNA, indicates that its Director Father Giulio Albanese and two other Cobonian missionaries have been held in custody by the Ugandan armed forces since yesterday. Father Albanese had travelled to Uganda to gather first-hand accounts about the latest developments concerning a possible truce between the Ugandan authorities and the Lords Resistance Army (LRA) rebels. On 28 August, while the three Religious were meeting with a rebel delegation in the bush, the Ugandan army carried out a surprise attack. It should be remembered that the military authorities were previously informed about the missionaries' initiative and had given their consent. According to military sources, the three Religious are being held in Kitgum accused of having distributed medicine to the rebels. They were detained for 24 hours. 4 September: In a message to MISNA readers, its Director, now back in Italy, re-affirms that: "We were all three engaged in talks with rebels of the LRA, as part of the long-awaited difficult peace process, when a sudden attack by government forces caused the Olum ("grass", as the rebels are called in the Acholi language) to flee the area, leaving us under a shower of bullets and grenades"...At the moment in northern Uganda, the only sign of hope is epresented by the Acholi Religious Leaders' Peace Initiative, a cartel of religious communities present in the Acholi districts. It is a group of people headed by Gulu's Archbishop John Baptist Odama, that firmly believes in a non-violent solution to the armed crisis". (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 5 September 2002)

* Uganda/Congo RDC. Pulls out troops from Congo RDC - Uganda has officially withdrawn all its forces from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, except for two battalions which would remain to safeguard civilian security in the troubled city of Bunia, official Radio Uganda reported. Ugandan army spokesman Major Shaban Bantariza told the radio the battalions would stay in Bunia pending the arrival of the UN peacekeeping mission. The Ugandan government-owned New Vision newspaper reported that a total of 1,138 troops had returned from Congo. (IRIN, Kenya, 4 September, 2002)

* Zambia. Spending cuts - Zambia has angered unions by suspending food and travel expenses paid to some government staff. The spending cuts are in response to criticism from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). IMF officials raised concerns about a gap in the country's budget during a recent visit to the country. The payments to low and middle-ranking civil servants will stop for a period of three months from the beginning of September. But unions have voiced their strong opposition to the move. In July, President Levy Mwanawasa expressed concern over "lavish spending". (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 29 August 2002)

* Zambie. Levée de l'immunité de Chiluba - Le 30 août, un tribunal zambien a autorisé la levée de l'immunité de l'ancien président Frederick Chiluba, afin qu'il puisse être poursuivi pour corruption. Chiluba est accusé de corruption et de vol des deniers de l'Etat, à hauteur de plusieurs millions de dollars, lors de la période où il était au pouvoir (1991-2001). Les avocats de Chiluba ont immédiatement annoncé qu'ils feraient appel à cette décision devant la Cour suprême. (Le Figaro, France, 31 août 2002)

* Zambia. Zambia refuses GM "poison" - Zambia's president has refused to overturn his ban on genetically modified (GM) food aid despite the food crisis which is threatening up to 2.4 million people. Levy Mwanawasa said he would not allow Zambians to eat "poison". Up to 13 million people face famine across southern Africa, aid agencies have warned. But much of the food aid delivered so far has been GM maize from the United States. Zimbabwe has also banned GM aid in case it contaminates local crops. A deal was done with Zimbabwe, whereby GM food was milled before being distributed, so that it could not be planted. Similar arrangements have placated fears over GM food aid in Malawi and Mozambique. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 3 September 2002)

* Zimbabwe. Radio building blown up - A building housing an independent radio station in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, has been destroyed in an explosion. The building's roof caved in after the blast. Staff at the Voice of the People station said they suspected that the building had been bombed -- there has been no confirmation of this from the police. The incident occurs against a background of government action to control the independent media and criticisms by ministers that the media is conducting a campaign against the government. Journalists in Zimbabwe accuse the government of trying to muzzle the media. The Reuters news agency reported that a bomb had caused the blast. It says that two armed men confronted the security guard on duty at the privately-run radio station shortly after midnight and told him to leave. The agency says Takura Zhangasha, an advocate with the Media Institute of Southern Africa told them that the men "then hurled an explosive device into the one-storey building". The French agency, AFP, also reported that a bomb exploded early on the morning of 29 August at the Voice of the People offices. New media laws introduced in Zimbabwe in March restricted the activities of private radio stations. The Voice of the People recorded radio material which was sent to the Netherlands from where it was broadcast on short-wave to avoid breaking the media curbs. (ANB-BIA, Brussels, 29 August 2001)

* Zimbabwe. Mugabe se défend à Johannesburg - Le président zimbabwéen Robert Mugabe, de plus en plus contesté pour sa réforme agraire et ses atteintes aux droits de l'homme, a profité du Sommet de la Terre à Johannesburg pour justifier sa politique au nom du développement durable. Son discours a été applaudi par de nombreux délégués de pays du Sud. "Nous, au Zimbabwe, comprenons trop bien que le développement durable n'est pas possible sans réforme agraire", a-t-il affirmé. Les violences contre les fermiers et leurs ouvriers noirs ont fortement perturbé la production et contribué à l'aggravation de la situation économique du Zimbabwe, où la moitié de la population est menacée de famine dans les mois à venir. Le Premier ministre britannique, Tony Blair, a vivement réagi, dénonçant "ces foutaises sur le néocolonialisme" qui servent "à camoufler un régime corrompu et désastreux". (Libération, France, 4 septembre 2002)

* Zimbabwe. "We must help Zimbabwe's hungry" - Clare Short, the UK's minister for international development, on 4 September appealed to the donor community not to let misgivings about President Robert Mugabe's regime blunt the generosity of food relief efforts for Zimbabwe. Only 23 per cent of the 450,000 tonnes of food aid needed in the country have so far been pledged by international donors, and Ms Short's call followed a sharp divergence of views this week between Mr Mugabe and Tony Blair, UK prime minister, at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg. About 6m people face severe food shortages in Zimbabwe as a result of a drought. But a controversial land reform scheme to resettle landless blacks on white-owned land, which has disrupted farming, has intensified the threat of widespread starvation. A dispute over genetically modified (GM) food aid from the US has meanwhile left maize stranded in the region's ports. "We can't allow the people of Zimbabwe to starve because the government is misbehaving," said Ms Short. (Financial Times, UK, 5 September 2002)

* Zimbabawe/Mozambique. Zimbabwe's loss, Mozambique's gain - The chaos in Zimbabwe's farm sector is exacerbating the effects of drought in the region. The consequences are still unfolding but could be catastrophic. And the region is losing one of Africa's scarcest resources: a group of people who, whatever their shortcomings in terms of vision and tact, are technically qualified, experienced and dedicated. The reality, however, is that Mr Blair still has cards he could play. The problem is that he may not realise he holds them in his hand. For a start, in Joaquim Chissano, president of Mozambique, and Thabo Mbeki, South Africa's leader, Mr Blair has two important allies in southern Africa. He should draw on the respect and influence they command in the region. But he should not ask them to apply sanctions: Zimbabwe's tourism, once the leading foreign exchange earner, has dwindled to near insignificance, agriculture is in rapid decline, inflation is in three figures and the currency is grossly overvalued. These problems are pushing Zimbabwe ever closer to collapse and the two men fear that any additional measures could precipitate the crisis they want to avoid. Over the border in Mozambique, there is land available and, more importantly, the government has a pragmatism born of experience: it is still coming to terms with the economic effects of the exodus of its white minority in the tumultuous months that marked independence from Portugal in 1975. One result of that pragmatism is that the government has made land available for purchase, or long-term lease, to the commercial farmers of Zimbabwe. So far, no more than a handful of them have taken it up. Most of the 3,000 who are being evicted do not have the capital; what they have is tied up in Zimbabwe, in the near-worthless local currency. And even if they do have the capital, life is tough in Mozambique: there is only rudimentary infrastructure in much of the country. (Ironically, that was destroyed in the 1970s by white Rhodesia's armed forces and their local allies, but that is another story.) (Financial Times, UK, 5 September 2002)


Weekly anb0905.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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