Weekly anb02135.txt #7



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 13-02-2003      PART #5/7

* Mali. Promoting holiness throughout Africa - "In Africa tormented by suffering and death because of war and violence, Africa plunged into total discouragement, in a world ever more hostile and indifferent to Christ and his Gospel, it is urgently necessary to announce the Good News of Jesus Christ." This was said by Archbishop Robert Sarah, Secretary of the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, representing the Prefect Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe, at the 15th plenary assembly of the French-speaking Bishops' Conferences of West Africa (CERAO), in Bamako, Mali, 3-9 February. The theme of the assembly was: "Planning and Programming Holiness". In his address, Archbishop Sarah encouraged the Bishops "not to give in to discouragement, and even less to pessimism which is contrary to the Christian experience of which you are guarantors." (Fides, Vatican City, 8 February 2003)

* Mali. Pour un retour des immigrés - Le 7 février, le ministre français de l'Intérieur, Nicolas Sarkozy, a entamé une visite de trois jours au Mali, qui selon un communiqué officiel, devrait "renforcer les projets de co-développement engagés par la France dans le cadre d'une politique d'immigration positive". "Je voudrais essayer de créer un partenariat pour permettre un retour (au Mali) dans de bonnes conditions d'une partie des immigrés maliens présents en France", a déclaré M. Sarkozy. La communauté malienne est estimée en France à quelque 100.000 personnes, dont environ 60.000 en situation irrégulière. Plus de 80% viennent de la région de Kayes, où la tradition autant que la nécessité pousse les jeunes à partir. Les transferts d'épargne des immigrés maliens sont estimés à près de 90 millions d'euros, alors que l'aide publique au développement de la France au Mali s'est élevée à 54,8 millions d'euros en 2001. M. Sarkozy s'est notamment rendu dans la région de Kayes où, après avoir rencontré les élus locaux et la population, il a visité les chantiers engagés par des Maliens de retour de France, avec le soutien du gouvernement français. Il s'est engagé à porter à 7.000 euros (contre 3.400 auparavant) l'aide consentie à chaque immigré malien qui désire rentrer dans son pays. La France va également consentir un appui de 3 millions d'euros pour appuyer les projets de co-développement financés par le gouvernement français pour atténuer le flux de l'immigration. (ANB-BIA, de sources diverses, 10 février 2003)

* Maroc/Algérie. Rapprochement - Le 6 février à Rabat, le chef de la diplomatie algérienne Abdelaziz Belkhadem a confirmé que le président algérien Bouteflika et le roi Mohammed VI devraient se rencontrer "très prochainement". Ni le lieu, ni la date n'ont été précisés, mais la rencontre pourrait avoir lieu vers le 15 février. Le ministre algérien a ajouté que la question du Sahara occidental y serait abordée "si les amis marocains l'évoquent". L'annonce de ce sommet survient au lendemain d'un entretien à Paris entre le président français et son homologue algérien, au cours duquel cette question a été évoquée. Cet interminable conflit, dans lequel Alger soutient le Front Polisario, mine les relations entre les deux pays. (D'après Libération, France, 7 février 2003)

* Mozambique. Thousands starving - 6 February: Tens of thousands of people face severe food shortages in drought-ravaged southern Mozambique and more deaths by starvation are reported in the north. Nine people starved to death in January in the remote northern province of Tete, where floods had driven thousands of people from their homes and hampered food relief efforts. The World Food Program (WFP) and UNICEF also confirmed the deaths after an assessment trip, adding a 10th person had already died in November. According to the victims' families, the deaths were due to hunger, the agencies said. "On 29 January, three more deaths were reported in Chitete. This could not be verified yet," the agencies said in a joint statement. Chitete is in Tete province. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 6 February 2003)

* Mozambique. Mozambique poet a national hero - Mozambique's greatest poet, Jose Craveirinha, has been laid to rest at Maputo's heroes monument. The Mozambican cabinet declared 10 February a day of national mourning for Craveirinha's funeral. Craveirinha died of cardio-vascular problems at a South African clinic last week. He was the first Mozambican citizen who did not use a gun to fight for the country's independence, to be declared a national hero. Mozambique's greatest painter, Malangatana Valente Nguena, sang in memory of one of the country's great poets, Jose Craveirinha, as he was being buried at the Maputo monument for national heroes on 10 February. Craveirinha inspired many national and foreign citizens because --according to most of the messages read out on 10 February --of his works of art, his nationalism, his fight against illiteracy, his fight for the country's development and his passion for sports. In his message, Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano said it would be hard to fill the gap left by Craveirinha. "The gap left by Craveirinha will not be filled easily. All Mozambican families must join efforts to fill it. Through his pen, Craveirinha fought for Mozambique's independence from colonialism, against illiteracy and for the spread of Mozambican culture," Mr Chissano said. (BBC News, UK, 10 February 2003)

* Niger. Interconnexion électrique - Les travaux d'interconnexion électrique de certaines localités du Niger à partir de l'énergie en provenance du Nigeria, viennent d'être lancés, rapporte le quotidien Le Sahel. D'un coût de 9,5 milliards de FCFA, dont 3 milliards sur fonds propres de la Société nigérienne d'électricité (Nigelec), le projet consiste dans la connexion de la région de Tahoua (nord) à Maradi (déjà connecté au Nigeria), et la construction d'une autre ligne d'interconnexion dans l'est du pays, reliant Damassak (Nigeria) à Chétimari (Niger). Le programme permettra à la compagnie nigérienne d'arrêter huit centrales diesel et de baisser le prix de production du kwh de 170 à 24 FCFA. Pour son énergie, le Niger est très dépendante de l'extérieur: en 1999, 84,71% de sa consommation électrique provenait du Nigeria. La Nigelec est une des 13 sociétés et entreprises publiques que le gouvernement envisage de privatiser. (D'après PANA, Sénégal, 11 février 2003)

* Nigeria. Arrests follow Lagos explosion - 6 February: Eight people are arrested following the deadly explosion which ripped through Lagos' business district on 2 February. At least 33 were killed in the blast. The eight arrested include a bank employee. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 6 February 2003)

* Nigeria. Election fees illegal - 6 February: A High Court in Nigeria has ruled that political parties do not have to pay fees to contest April's general elections. The judge accepted a suit filed on behalf of 24 smaller parties against the Independent National Electoral Commission (Inec). The parties had argued that the fees, ordered by Inec last month, were an attempt to exclude smaller, poorer parties from the poll. Inec has said that it will abide by the court's ruling. President Olusegun Obasanjo is standing for re-election under the banner of the ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP), while ex-military ruler Muhammadu Buhari and former foreign affairs minister Ike Nwachukwu are presidential flagbearers respectively of the All Nigeria People's Party and National Democratic Party. The court ruled that the fee, which Inec had said was for "processing" purposes, was unconstitutional. "Going through the constitution and the 2002 electoral act, I fail to see where Inec was empowered to prescribe and demand such processing fees," Judge Binta Murtala-Nyako said in her ruling. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 6 February 2003)

* Nigeria. Public hearings on corruption - Nigeria's national assembly, long seen as one of the main centres of graft in a notoriously corrupt polity, is expected to begin within weeks public hearings on a document that will cause it great embarrassment. A 300-page annual report on government spending submitted last month by Vincent Azie, the country's auditor-general, reads like an extended charge sheet against parliament, the president's office, government ministries and the judiciary. The report, which covers the 2001 financial year, amounts to a rare and unusually detailed attempt to anatomise the kind of public-sector corruption that has enriched elites and deprived ordinary people of development in poor countries around the world. Coupled with news last month of investigations into a number of Nigeria's politically powerful state governors, the audit has raised cautious hopes that a country struggling to entrench civilian rule is facing up to one of its most serious problems. "It's a step down the road of government accountability," says one foreign diplomat in Nigeria. The auditor's report, extracts of which have been seen by the Financial Times, sketches a devastating outline of a system plagued by invented expenses, apparent attempts at influence-buying and the charging of private costs to the public purse. The section on parliament, which runs to more than a dozen pages, includes an attack on the decision to pay a member N3m ($23,400) to "defray burial expenses of his deceased wife". The unnamed man had initially asked for N5.5m. The report draws attention to a series of ethically questionable payments, including N5m by the protocol officer of the deputy Senate president on a "media round table" in December 2001 for journalists from the country's Muslim north. The expenses for the 500 attenders comprised N1m for accommodation, N1m for dinner, N2m for "gift items" and N1m for an "honorarium" of N2,000 per person. (Financial Times, UK, 7 February 2003)

* Rwanda. Coffee farmers head upmarket - Rwanda has launched itself into the speciality coffee market to reclaim the revenues of what was once its main export earner. A combination of the record low coffee prices and the aftermath of the genocide in 1994 -- which claimed the lives of more than 800,000 people -- have left the country's economy devastated. ""It is terrible because some smaller holders have abandoned the plantations because they are not sustainable," Rwanda's Commerce Minister Dr Alexandre Lyambabaje has said. "The prices they were receiving were reduced by half last year and are lower than what it costs to produce." Tea has now overtaken coffee as Rwanda's main export. The Abahuzamugambi co-operative is pioneering the project to produce speciality coffees -- which became popular in the US and Europe in the 1990s -- and to sell them through fair trade deals. Last year, Community Coffee of Baton Rouge in the US was its biggest customer and Union Coffee Roasters has now launched the co-operative's Maraba bourbon coffee variety in Britain. "For the small holder, when he produces a kilo of ordinary coffee he receives 28 US cents a kilo," Dr Lyambabaje said. "But once he produces specialty coffees he receives almost 80 cents." In 1990, Rwanda exported 45,000 tonnes of coffee a year, but now only ships only 17,000 tonnes. With competition growing from newcomers such as Vietnam, the market is becoming increasingly difficult. (BBC News, UK, 10 February 2003)

* Rwanda. Elections reportées - Le référendum sur la nouvelle Constitution du Rwanda, initialement prévu pour début mars 2003, ne se tiendra pas avant fin mai, ce qui entraînera également le report des législatives et de la présidentielle qui étaient prévues pour début juillet, a-t-on appris le 12 février de sources proches de la Commission électorale nationale. La date précise pour le référendum reste à préciser par le Conseil du gouvernement. Ce report est essentiellement dû au retard pris par la promulgation du projet de la nouvelle Constitution. L'avant-projet n'a pas encore été adopté par le gouvernement, étape préalable avant sa transmission au Parlement pour examen et adoption avant sa promulgation par le chef de l'Etat. Les dispositions légales stipulent que les législatives et la présidentielle doivent avoir lieu dans les six mois suivant le référendum sur la nouvelle Constitution. (PANA, Sénégal, 13 février 2003)

* Sahara occidental. Prisonniers libérés - Le Front Polisario, qui réclame l'indépendance du Sahara occidental annexé par le Maroc, a décidé de libérer 100 prisonniers de guerre marocains, a rapporté l'agence de presse sahraouie SPS. Ces libérations portent à 1.100 le nombre de prisonniers marocains libérés par le Polisario depuis 1975. (Le Soir, Belgique, 12 février 2003)

Weekly anb0213.txt - #5/7