Weekly ANB1023_07.txt #7



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WEEKLY NEWS ISSUE of: 23-10-2003      PART #7/7

* Ouganda. Attaque rebelle à Soroti - Au moins trois personnes sont mortes au cours d'une nouvelle attaque des rebelles de l'Armée de résistance du Seigneur (LRA) dans le nord de l'Ouganda. Le 20 octobre, à 4 h. du matin, un groupe d'une trentaine de rebelles a pris d'assaut Nakatunya, un des faubourgs de Soroti (290 km au nord-est de Kampala). Après avoir saccagé et incendié des maisons, ils ont fui dans la brousse, prenant en otage un nombre indéterminé de personnes. Quelques équipes de l'armée ougandaise se sont lanceés à leur poursuite avec l'aide des habitants de la zone. Cette attaque a de nouveau semé la terreur au sein de la population. (Misna, Italie, 20 octobre 2003)

* Uganda/Congo (RDC). Kampala rejects Amnesty report on Ituri - Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and the spokesman of the Ministry of Defence, Maj. Shaban Bantariza, have dismissed a new report by advocacy group Amnesty International, accusing the government of Uganda of continued involvement in eastern Congo RDC. Amnesty International Secretary-General Irene Khan had released the report on 21 October during a news conference in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, and called on Uganda to face up to its responsibilities to stop supporting armed factions in eastern Congo. "The Ugandan government must take immediate steps to end its continued support of armed groups and the economic plunder which fuels the atrocities," she said. The Amnesty report, documenting human rights abuses committed since the beginning of the year in eastern Congo's troubled district of Ituri, Orientale Province, said many of the atrocities recorded earlier in the year were still going on in Ituri and were becoming accepted because they were now commonplace. (IRIN, Kenya, 22 October 2003)

* Uganda. A spot of history - The king of one of Africa's oldest kingdoms is threatening to take Britain to court for war crimes committed by UK troops during the colonial era of more than 100 years ago. Using evidence from field diaries of British officers who colonised east Africa in the 1890s, the king says he can prove that Britain broke existing humanitarian laws when her imperial forces plundered the Bunyoro kingdom in what is now western Uganda. Solomon Iguru, the king of Bunyoro, is seeking £2.8bn compensation from Britain for "acts of pillage, rape and murder". These actions, he says, were committed by soldiers -- under the command of Colonel Henry Colville, the consul of Uganda -- against the kingdom of his grandfather, Kabalega, when Bunyoro was annexed under the British protectorate of Uganda in 1894. "We are still open to settling out of court but we want an official apology and compensation," said King Iguru, who has purely ceremonial powers over the hilly, rural kingdom of a million people. The charges include organised pillage, crop destruction and abuses against prisoners of war, including Kabalega, who was jailed without trial in the Seychelles for 22 years. A demand for compensation was sent first in August 2001, via Tom Phillips, then British high commissioner to Uganda. Mr Phillips rejected it, saying the claim relied on the Geneva convention, which did not then exist. But some lawyers say the convention embodies international laws widely accepted in the late 19th century. (The Guardian, UK, 23 October 2003)

* Western Sahara. Polisario's congress - 21 October: It is one of Africa's longest ongoing wars. Forgotten, but still not over. Every four years the Polisario Front holds a congress, to discuss how to proceed with their 27-year battle against Morocco for self-determination of the disputed Western Sahara. Hundreds of Polisario representatives based as far a field as Australia make their way back for the event. This year, for the first time since a ceasefire was signed with Morocco in 1991, the Polisario held their congress in the heart of what they proudly call "liberated territory". Most of the international community consider it to be in south-west Algeria, just 300 kilometres from Tindouf. For some it is a no-mans land under de facto control of the Polisario. For Morocco, it is just a threat; Tifariti is 100 kilometres from the Moroccan wall of defence, a wall in the middle of the Sahara desert, stretching the length of the Moroccan-controlled Sahara border with Algeria. Holding the congress here was a ratcheting up of the pressure for a settlement. Polisario Secretary General Mohamed Abdelaziz says the choice of venue was intended to remind Morocco that the Polisario is there, occupying its land, and pursuing the struggle for independence with firmness. He also told the congress that a return to all-out war with Morocco was one option to be considered. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 21 October 2003)

* Zambia. National Dialogue opens... - On 17 October, Zambia's main opposition parties and civic groups boycotted the launch Friday of a national dialogue on the country's political future after President Levy Mwanawasa refused to allow discussion of constitutional and electoral reform. President Mwanawasa organized the four-day forum, or "indaba," to give Zambians a chance to criticize the direction of government since he succeeded President Frederick Chiluba in 2001. But the main opposition United Party for National Development said it saw no commitment by Mwanawasa's government to address the main issues threatening the country. "It is sad to see a government that can ignore concerns of organizations which together represent the voice of more than 56 percent of the people of Zambia," said Sakwiba Sikota, the group's acting president. Speaking at the launch in the capital, Lusaka, Mwanawasa said there were already constitutional and electoral review processes in place, so delegates should focus on other issues. Mwanawasa has come under attack for prosecuting politicians and government officials for corruption and theft, including Chiluba. He has been accused by the opposition of ignoring the constitution by overriding court decisions. (CNN, USA, 18 October 2003)

* Zambia. National Dialogue closes... - A national conference that President Levy Mwanawasa hoped would promote national healing in Zambia ended on 20 October just as divisively as it had begun. The government said the four-day "indaba" was a success because over 600 delegates showed up. But key civil society groups that had boycotted the conference maintained it was a waste of the reported US $1.5 million it cost to host it. The major recommendations from the indaba were issues that civil society had long championed: the need to have a constituent assembly to adopt a new constitution, a reduction in the size of the cabinet, and electoral reform to ensure that an elected president receives more than 50 percent of votes cast. "There is nothing that Mwanawasa did not already know, because we have given him these recommendations time and again. Did he really need to spend four days and all that money to hear it again?" asked Lucy Muyoyeta, chair of the Non Governmental Organisations' Coordinating Committee (NGOCC). Muyoyeta, whose NGOCC stayed away from the meeting, said the most important issues in the country were the growing political tensions manifested in increasing violence, an ongoing public workers' strike, and the controversy over the government's insistence on a Constitutional Review Commission (CRC), rather than a constituent assembly. (IRIN, Kenya, 21 October 2003)

* Zimbabwe. Police accused of beating lawyer - On 16 October, a Zimbabwean lawyer who has defended many prominent press freedom and human rights cases filed charges of assault against police who she alleges severely beat her on 13 October. Beatrice Mtetwa needed medical treatment for severe bruising and cuts to her face, throat, arms, rib cage and legs. The lawyer defended and won acquittal for the Guardian correspondent, Andrew Meldrum, when he was tried for "publishing a falsehood", a criminal charge carrying a jail term of two years. She also won court rulings ordering the government to allow Mr Meldrum to stay in the country, but he was illegally abducted and expelled from the country in May. Police were called to assist Mrs Mtetwa on 13 October in the afternoon when her vehicle was attacked by car thieves. But instead of pursuing the criminals, the police took Mrs Mtetwa into custody for allegedly driving while intoxicated. "They said the tables have turned, you are no longer a lawyer, you are a suspect," said Mrs Mtetwa. During three hours in custody, an officer beat her in the police car and also at Borrowdale police station, according to a complaint she has filed. "A policeman, identified as Officer Mutumwa, beat me with his fists on my face and my body," said Mrs Mtetwa. "I tried to defend myself as best I could. I bit him. The assault continued in the police car as we drove to the Borrowdale police station. At the station he kicked me all over my body in addition to the blows he had inflicted on my face. The assault was in full view of the other details who were at the charge office and who refused to intervene." At one point the officer gripped her in a stranglehold until she could not breathe, she said. "Afterwards I lost my voice from the bruising." Because police said she was suspected of intoxication, Mrs Mtetwa insisted that they test her with a breathalyser or give her a blood test to prove her sobriety but they refused. After her release she went for medical treatment and documentation of her injuries. (The Guardian, UK, 17 October 2003)

* Zimbabwe. Plus de carburant - La compagnie nationale de pétrole du Zimbabwe n'a plus une seule goute d'essence ni de gasoil dans ses réservoirs, selon le quotidien gouvernemental. Les ambulances du service public, les véhicules de l'armée et les transports publics sont immobilisés, ainsi que certains trains. (La Libre Belgique, 20 octobre 2003)

* Zimbabwe. Mugabe desperate to find evidence of British plot - President Robert Mugabe, is said to be living in fear of a British "plot" to kill him and has ordered the Zimbabwe spy agency to do a more "thorough job" of monitoring the activities of the British high commissioner, as a prelude to his possible expulsion. Intelligence sources say Mr Mugabe is eager to collect evidence to justify expelling Sir Brian Donnelly from Zimbabwe, but has, so far, found none. His various conspiracy theories against Sir Brian, including one that the high commissioner has spent most of his time preparing the ground for an Anglo-American invasion of Zimbabwe, have not been backed up by any tangible evidence. But Mr Mugabe believes his Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) is being incompetent and it has not done much to uncover Sir Brian's alleged activities, despite a similar order last year to place him under close surveillance. Sir Brian is under instructions to advise the Zimbabwean Foreign Ministry when the high commission's diplomats leave the country, an order which also applies to the US ambassador on the movements of American diplomats. Mr Mugabe has convinced himself that Britain wants to kill him after failing to help the opposition remove him from power in the presidential election last year, sources said. A special task force of CIO officers will now work full time on monitoring Sir Brian. (The Independent, UK, 21 October 2003)

* Zimbabwe. Economy -- from bad to worse - 17 October: Less than half the number of supposed beneficiaries have been resettled under Zimbabwe's land reform programme, an official report says. The government had previously said that 300,000 black farmers had been given land seized from whites in the past three years. But a report prepared by Charles Utete, a close ally of President Robert Mugabe, puts the figure at 127,192, according to leaks in two local newspapers. The report also says that bureaucratic failings and political interference have hindered the process. One part of the land reform programme was meant to create 50,000 black commercial farmers but just 7,260 families have been given land under this scheme, according to the privately-owned Financial Gazette. 18 October: Zimbabwe's state-controlled oil company has run out of fuel, plunging national infrastructure and emergency services into crisis, fuel officials have reportedly said. The country's state-controlled newspaper, The Herald, quotes a source at the National Oil Company of Zimbabwe (NOCZIM) as saying: "There is not a drop of fuel here, though some is expected next week." However, the country's Minister of Energy and Power Development Ambassador, Amos Midzi, told the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation there was adequate fuel in the country. In August, fuel prices in Zimbabwe rose by up to 500% after the government announced it had ended price controls. The Herald reported the lack of fuel at NOCZIM had led to ambulance fleets, army vehicles and the public transport sector becoming "paralysed". 22 October: Zimbabwe's tobacco production has halved this year compared with 2002. The Tobacco Industry Marketing Board says the country's output of its main export crop has fallen to its lowest level since independence in 1980. Less than 80 million kilograms of the country's once lucrative crop was auctioned off durin this year's sales season which started in April. (ANB-BIA, Belgium, 22 October 2003)

* Zimbabwe. Manifestants arrêtés - Le 22 octobre, la police zimbabwéenne a arrêté des dizaines de manifestants qui s'étaient réunis pour protester contre la dégradation de leur situation économique qu'ils attribuent au gouvernement du président Robert Mugabe. Des membres de la NCA (l'Assemblée constitutionnelle nationale, coalition de partis politiques et d'associations étudiantes, religieuses et de défense des libertés civiques) ont déclaré que près de 400 personnes avaient été arrêtées et emmenées dans des commissariats. (Le Figaro, France, 23 octobre 2003)

Weekly anb1023.txt - #7/7 - 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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