Return-Path: Received: from kichungi.ocha.unon.org ([194.54.67.234]) by mailin06.sul.t-online.com with esmtp id 13pMGq-0ZB9vxa; Sat, 28 Oct 2000 05:03:00 +0200 Received: from africa-english by kichungi.ocha.unon.org with local (Exim 3.14 #3) id 13pLSF-0006ie-00 for zdwf-@t-online.de; Sat, 28 Oct 2000 05:10:43 +0300 Received: from umva.ocha.unon.org ([194.54.67.232]) by kichungi.ocha.unon.org with esmtp (Exim 3.14 #3) id 13pAJF-0006OS-00 for africa-english@kichungi.ocha.unon.org; Fri, 27 Oct 2000 17:16:41 +0300 Received: from mail.ocha.unon.org ([172.16.1.3]) by umva.ocha.unon.org with smtp (Exim 2.11 #3) id 13pASw-0007un-00 for english@ocha.unon.org; Fri, 27 Oct 2000 17:26:42 +0300 Date: Fri, 27 Oct 2000 17:26:42 +0300 (BEAUT) From: IRIN To: IRIN - English Service Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Subject: HORN OF AFRICA: IRIN Weekly Round-up 8 [2001028] Precedence: bulk X-Filter: mailagent [version 3.0 PL68] for africa-english@ocha.unon.org Sender: IRIN Africa English Service U N I T E D N A T I O N S Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Integrated Regional Information Network for Central and Eastern Africa Tel: +254 2 622147 Fax: +254 2 622129 e-mail: irin@ocha.unon.org HORN OF AFRICA: IRIN Weekly Round-up 8 covering the period 21 - 27 October CONTENTS: SUDAN: SPLM accuses army of breaking polio ceasefire SUDAN: Monitors to check incursions into and from Uganda KENYA-SUDAN: UNICEF chief says conflict biggest obstacle to aid ETHIOPIA-ERITREA: Talks in Algiers ETHIOPIA-ERITREA: UN representative at talks ETHIOPIA-ERITREA: More observers deployed to front ERITREA: Authorities detain journalists ETHIOPIA: World Bank set to offer debt relief SOMALIA: Security Council welcome efforts to promote reconciliation SOMALIA: Factions adopt common strategy SOMALIA: President Hasan courts Arab leaders SUDAN: SPLM accuses army of breaking polio ceasefire The government has ignored its commitment to having 'days of tranquility' in Sudan's civil war during a polio vaccination campaign now under way, and dropped 24 bombs on Nimule town in Eastern Equatoria on Sunday, Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) spokesman George Garang Deng stated on Monday. This was the second timethe government had bombed civilian targets during the current polio campaign, a statement from Garang said. On Tuesday 17 October the army had bombed relief posts in Tali and around Terakeka, also in Eastern Equatoria, it said. Humanitarian sources told IRIN on Monday that seven bombs had reportedly fallen around a church in Nimule, four at the nursery school and an unknown number around the mission house of the Jesuit Refugee Services (JRS). There were no injuries reported, they said. The SPLM/A and the government of Sudan have agreed to have a period of tranquillity in southern Sudan from 16 to 27 October for the polio campaign at the request of the WHO and UNICEF, and the rebel movement said on Monday it was still committed to observing the 10-day truce. [see separate IRIN report of 24 October on the Polio Immunisation Campaign] SUDAN: Monitors to check incursions into and from Uganda Officials of the Sudanese and Ugandan governments were in continuing contact to arrange for the deployment of Egyptian and Libyan monitors to prevent border violations by opposition rebels, the semi-official Ugandan newspaper, 'The New Vision' reported on Tuesday. The monitors were expected to ensure that no support reached the SPLA/M from Uganda, and to help relocate the Ugandan rebel Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) away from the Ugandan border, deeper into Sudan, the paper quoted the Sudanese minister of state for external affairs, Ali Abd al-Rahman Numayri, as saying. The deployment of monitors was agreed at a meeting in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, from 6 to 7 October and, although a meeting of a technical committee to implement the plan was postponed on 20 October, contacts between the two governments were continuing with a view to deploying the monitors at an early date, the report said. Meanwhile, the Ugandan army - the Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) - was on high alert at strategic border areas in Adjumani, Pakelle and refugee settlements for fear of a possible attack by the LRA, humanitarian sources in northern Uganda told IRIN on Monday. The alert followed a report that the rebels had crossed from their Sudanese bases, and were probably heading towards Adjumani or Pakelle, they said. KENYA-SUDAN: UNICEF chief says conflict biggest obstacle to aid Conflict, more than any other issue, posed the biggest problem to relief projects such as the anti-polio campaign launched in Kenya and Sudan at the end of last week, the executive director of the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), Carol Bellamy, said on Tuesday. Speaking in Nairobi at the end of a four-day visit to the two countries, Bellamy said the obstacles were man-made rather than problems associated with logistics or equipment. She expressed anger over ceasefire violations in Sudan, describing them as "extremely unfortunate". Both the government and rebel sides had pledged to abide by a "period of tranquillity" requested by UNICEF, but government aircraft bombed the town of Nimule in Eastern Equatoria on Sunday as the immunisations were in progress. While in Sudan, Bellamy secured a guarantee from the deputy chairman of the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), Salva Kiir Mayardit, that children under 18 would be demobilised from rebel ranks. "This promise is recognition that the military is not in any way a suitable environment for a child," she said, according to a UNICEF press release. UNICEF said there were about 9,000 child soldiers in southern Sudan. Bellamy's visit to Kenya focused on drought-relief activities in the northwestern Turkana area, where she drew attention to particularly vulnerable groups such as women and children. ETHIOPIA-ERITREA: Talks in Algiers Delegations from Ethiopia and Eritrea led by their respective foreign ministers were due to meet in Algiers on Monday. The two sides are holding indirect talks brokered by Algeria, the US and the EU. According to the BBC, the aim of the talks would be to turn the cessation of hostilities signed by both sides on 18 June into a "final peace accord". The main focus of the talks would be the demarcation of the disputed border, and international arbitration. Eritrea wants the UN to demarcate the border first, while Ethiopia insists on arbitration first. The UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has deputed Yogesh Saksena to represent him at the talks. Saksena, who is Officer-in-Charge of the UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE), left Asmara on Saturday to travel to Algiers. ETHIOPIA-ERITREA: More observers deployed to front The UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) has deployed its second batch of military observers. With the deployment on Monday, the operation completed its second phase of the three-phase operation, and had up to 100 observers deployed. The second batch were sent "into forward positions between the two countries", said a UNMEE statement. The new observers were being deployed from Addis Ababa and Asmara to supplement existing observer team sites and open up new ones, said the statement. From Asmara, they were being sent to reinforce teams in Assab, Adi Keyih, Adi Kwala and Barentu, and to open up a new team in Shambiko. >From Addis Ababa, observers were deploying to bolster teams in Inda Silase, Zela Anbesa, Adigrat, and Manda, and open new sites in Rama and Shiraro. On Tuesday, UNMEE took delivery of four MI-8 helicopters at Asmara airport to support UN peacekeepers, according to an UNMEE press release. The helicopters would be used to provide transport and medical and logistical support for the UNMEE peacekeeping force. ERITREA: Authorities detain journalists In a press release on Friday, Reporters sans frontieres (RSF) quoted a letter addressed to the Eritrean information minister, Beraki Gebreselasie, in which its general secretary, Robert Menard, protested against the arrest of eight journalists in Asmara. "We ask you to do everything in your power to ensure that the two journalists who are still detained are released immediately," he told the minister in the letter. The press release said that according to information collected by RSF, eight journalists from private newspapers were arrested in Asmara on 14 October. Six of them were released on 18 October. However, Milkias Mihretab, editor of the Tigrigna-language 'Keste Debene' and Yusuf Muhammad Ali from the 'Tsigenay' weekly remained in a prison near Asmara. They were officially in jail for "national service reasons", but sources in Asmara were quoted as saying the eight had been arrested "because of articles they published regularly criticising the government". ETHIOPIA: World Bank set to offer debt relief A senior official of the World Bank on Monday told government representatives, diplomats and NGO representatives in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, that Ethiopia would be one of the countries to benefit from the Highly-Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) debt relief initiative, the New China News Agency, Xinhua, reported on Monday. HIPC programme manager Jacob Kolster said Ethiopia had a strong commitment to poverty reduction over the past decade - notwithstanding the Ethio-Eritrean war having had a negative impact of poverty reduction in the past two years - and would be admitted to the debt relief initiative once the World Bank's governing board had accepted its poverty reduction strategy, currently being revised. Ethiopia was working on a second draft of its poverty strategy and the purpose of Kolster's mission was to discuss the provisions of the paper with the Ethiopian government, he said. Ethiopia currently has a debt of US $2.4 billion and alleviation of its debt burden would free up significant sums to be used for poverty reduction activities. SOMALIA: Security Council welcomes efforts to promote reconciliation Members of the Security Council have welcomed the efforts of the transitional government of Somalia to promote national reconciliation. In a press statement issued on Wednesday after closed-door consultations on the situation in Somalia, Council members "encouraged the participation of all parties with the new transitional government towards this end". SOMALIA: Factions adopt common strategy Mogadishu faction leaders have attempted to draw up a common strategy towards the new government. According to 'Qaran', a south Mogadishu daily, faction leaders Husayn Aydid, Husayn Haji Bod, Muse Sudi Yalahow, Uthman Hasan Ali Ato and Muhammad Qanyare Afrah issued a signed statement calling for a dialogue "at national level to avert anything that may bring about confrontation". Somali political sources said the common strategy approach may be a signal to the new government to negotiate with them, and reach some sort of a compromise. The statement went on to urge the international community "to help the country achieve sustainable peace and stability". SOMALIA: President Hasan courts Arab leaders President Abdiqasim Salad Hasan has had several meetings in Egypt with key members of the Arab League, and appealed to them to assist in the task of rebuilding Somalia after years of war, Somali media reported on Monday. Hasan met Presidents Husni Mubarak of Egypt, Abdelaziz Bouteflika of Algeria, Ali Abdallah Salih of Yemen and Umar al-Bashir of Sudan, among others, in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, they said. Mubarak praised the manner in which the Djibouti peace process seemed to have resolved the apparently intractable Somali conflict, and said Egypt would respect its outcome. The Arab leaders promised in bilateral and multilateral talks with the new Somali president that their countries would offer moral and material assistance for Somalia's rehabilitation, the Mogadishu newspaper 'Xog-Ogaal' reported. Meanwhile, Somaliland leader Muhammad Ibrahim Egal has said he would never hold talks with President Hassan as long as he disregarded Somaliland's secession and independent existence, according to press reports monitored by the BBC. Egal's reiteration of his position came after a recent visit by diplomatic envoys from Italy, Ethiopia and Somalia to Hargeysa, capital of the self-declared republic of Somaliland, to mediate and try to effect a reconciliation between the two leaders, the reports said. SOMALIA: Two killed in grenade attack Two people were killed and five others seriously wounded in a grenade attack in Bosaaso in the self-declared autonomous region of Puntland in northeastern Somalia, the BBC reported on Thursday. Police said the attackers threw the grenade into a temporary shelter for people intending to travel to Yemen. The police said the violence was probably related to a dispute between boat owners involved in smuggling illegal immigrants to Yemen. The victims are believed to be Ethiopians who had come to Bosaaso to make the crossing. Earlier, on Monday, fighting between different clans with rival claims to land left at least 10 dead and 15 injured in Qoroley, 75 km south of the Somali capital Mogadishu, the Associated Press agency (AP) reported. The fighting, which began on Sunday, pitted members of the Jiddu sub-clan, which claims to own all the land around Qoroley, and farmers from other clans who it claims have occupied its land, the report said. Nairobi, 27 October 2000 [ENDS] [IRIN-CEA: Tel: +254 2 622147 Fax: +254 2 622129 e-mail: irin-cea@ocha.unon.org ] [This item is delivered in the "africa-english" service of the UN's IRIN humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations. For further information, free subscriptions, or to change your keywords, contact e-mail: irin@ocha.unon.org or Web: http://www.reliefweb.int/IRIN . If you re-print, copy, archive or re-post this item, please retain this credit and disclaimer. 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