Return-Path: Received: from kichungi.ocha.unon.org ([194.54.67.234]) by mailin05.sul.t-online.com with esmtp id 13rmkj-1gPMKOa; Fri, 3 Nov 2000 20:43:53 +0100 Received: from africa-english by kichungi.ocha.unon.org with local (Exim 3.14 #3) id 13rkED-0004xA-00 for zdwf-@t-online.de; Fri, 03 Nov 2000 20:02:09 +0300 Received: from umva.ocha.unon.org ([194.54.67.232]) by kichungi.ocha.unon.org with esmtp (Exim 3.14 #3) id 13ri6g-0005ig-00 for africa-english@kichungi.ocha.unon.org; Fri, 03 Nov 2000 17:46:14 +0300 Received: from mail.ocha.unon.org ([172.16.1.3]) by umva.ocha.unon.org with smtp (Exim 2.11 #3) id 13riGa-0001cu-00 for english@ocha.unon.org; Fri, 3 Nov 2000 17:56:28 +0300 Date: Fri, 3 Nov 2000 17:56:28 +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 9 [2001103] 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 9 covering the period 28 October - 3 November CONTENTS: SUDAN: Government again accused of bombing civilians SUDAN: Ummah Party to boycott elections HORN OF AFRICA: Eritrea says "little progress" in Algiers HORN OF AFRICA: Fears mount over Gulf livestock ban HORN OF AFRICA: UN mission commander appointed ETHIOPIA: Annual food needs assessment set to begin SOMALIA: UN calls for support for transition SOMALIA: Faction leaders call for a federal state SOMALIA: Parliament holds inaugural session in Mogadishu SUDAN: Government again accused of bombing civilians The government bombing of civilian targets in Eastern Equatoria in southern Sudan was having "devastating effects on traumatised local people", the Roman Catholic Church stated on Wednesday. Those worst affected were children, who now fled at the sight or sound of any aircraft, according to a statement issued by the Nairobi-based Sudan Catholic Information Office (SCIO). Fr Maurice Loguti, stationed in the Catholic Diocese of Torit - the site of regular bombings - said the way the air raids were now conducted would leave even the most daring soldier terrified, and said that on 25 October an Antonov bomber dropped 12 bombs - two by two over two hours - on Ikotos, near the Ugandan border. The government has frequently been accused of deliberately bombing civilian targets ever since the civil war broke out in 1983. SUDAN: Ummah Party to boycott elections The opposition Ummah Party (UP) on Wednesday said it would be boycotting the Sudanese presidential and parliamentary elections in December, becoming the second major opposition party to do so, Associated Press (AP) reported. The party of former Prime Minister Al-Sadiq al-Mahdi - whose government was overthrown by Umar al-Bashir, the current president, in 1989 - would not consider the elections legitimate, AP quoted the party's spokeswoman, Sarah Nuqdallah, as saying. UP was asking that the elections be postponed until a comprehensive political solution to the Sudanese civil war was reached, and that the money earmarked for the elections be used to treat medical patients and develop services, she added. Nuqdallah's statement came a day after Mahdi said he would return to Sudan on 24 November after four years in exile, reportedly to use the limited political freedom available to work for peace and democracy, AP added. The former Speaker of parliament, Hasan al-Turabi, said last month that his part, the Popular National Congress (PNC), would not take part in elections until Bashir stood down. Turabi formed the PNC earlier this year after his former close partner, Bashir, sidelined him for allegedly trying to oust him. HORN OF AFRICA: Eritrea says "little progress" in Algiers The Eritrean foreign ministry said on 28 October that little progress had been made in the latest Ethiopian-Eritrean peace talks in Algeria, and expressed doubt over Ethiopia's readiness for peace, given its continued fortification of positions and movement of artillery towards the front line between the two countries. Eritrean Foreign Minister Ali Sa'id Abdella told journalists in the capital, Asmara, that the late arrival and hurried departure of Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin meant the Algiers meeting ended "without having reached any substantial agreements", the Eritrean Visafric news agency reported on Sunday. The summit had also failed to set the exact date and place for a proposed follow-up meeting, Ali Sa'id stated. The Eritrean delegate said his country's two major priorities in Algiers had been demarcation of the border and compensation for Eritreans deported and displaced by Ethiopia. He also claimed that while Eritrea had begun demining areas in accordance with the OAU peace agreement, Ethiopia was "busy planting new mines" in complete disregard of it, the report said. HORN OF AFRICA: Fears mount over Gulf livestock ban The negative effects of the recently imposed ban by the Gulf states on livestock imports from Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan, Djibouti and Kenya, along with those of Uganda and Tanzania, were expected to be much worse than in 1988-1999, "due to the lack of alternative markets, general poor condition of livestock and the fact that the ban came into effect before the peak period for Ramadan livestock sales", WFP stated in its latest emergency report on 27 October. The livestock ban is related to suspicion among the Gulf states that a recent outbreak of Rift Valley fever - which has claimed 80 lives in Yemen and at least 85 in Saudi Arabia - is linked to livestock imports from the greater Horn of Africa. [for full report, go to: http://www.reliefweb.int/] HORN OF AFRICA: UN mission commander appointed Maj-Gen Patrick Cammaert of the Netherlands has been appointed Force Commander of the UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE). The appointment, by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, took effect on Wednesday, and Cammaert was scheduled to take up his command when he arrived in the mission area on Saturday, 4 November, a UN press release stated. Denmark and the Netherlands are to form the first contingent of the UN's new Standby Forces High-Readiness Brigade, which will provide 2,000 of the 4,200 troops authorised by the UN Security Council in October to oversee the cessation of hostilities agreement signed by Ethiopia and Eritrea. While Canada has agreed to contribute troops to the Brigade, it has now officially announced its decision to join up with UNMEE, the 'Montreal Gazette' newspaper reported on Wednesday. On Thursday, an UNMEE press release said UNMEE's phase two deployment was now complete with some 100 UN military observers in the mission area. During the next few weeks, specialist military personnel wearing UN patches and blue berets would be arriving in the mission area to help pave the way for the phase three deployment. Their task would be to conduct detailed reconnaissance in those areas where their national contingents were likely to be deployed. The reconnaissance teams would be drawn from the military forces of The Netherlands, Canada, Jordan, Kenya, Denmark and Italy. ETHIOPIA: Annual food needs assessment set to begin Preparations for the emergency food needs assessment for Ethiopia for 2001 were proceeding, and the exercise was scheduled to begin in Tigray State on 4 November, WFP's emergency report stated on 27 October. Twenty-two teams were expected to take part, with assessments in Somali State starting on 11 November, Afar State (11 November), Oromiya State (19 November), Derashe and Konso Special Woredas of the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples State (SNNPR), starting on 19 November, and Amhara State (25 November). Three years of poor rains and their failure again in April this year has generated food assistance needs among some 13.4 million people in the greater Horn of Africa, of whom about 10 million are in Ethiopia, according to UN sources. SOMALIA: UN calls for support for transition The United Nations operating in Somalia on Tuesday launched 'First Steps: An Operational Plan to Support Governance and Peace-building in Somalia', outlining how they could help the emerging Transitional National Government, as well as the peaceful autonomous areas of 'Somaliland' and 'Puntland' in the north of the country. The UN was calling for almost US $20 million in donor support to fund phase one of the plan, through to the end of this year, a UN press release stated. "Now is the time for Somalia's international friends to supports Somalis' struggle for peace in real and tangible ways," said UN resident Representative and Humanitarian Coordinator Randolph Kent. [see also IRIN separate of 2 November headlined "UN unveils plan to support peaceful transition" or, for full details of the plan: www.unsomalia.org] SOMALIA: Faction leaders call for a federal state Three Somali factions, who met in Garowe, capital of the northeastern autonomous territory of Puntland, on 27 October, have described the establishment of the government of President Abdiqasim Salad Hasan as "a hostile action", and called for four regional states to join in a new Federal Republic of Somalia. Puntland leader Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmad, the commander of the Rahanweyn Resistance Army (RRA), Hasan Muhammad Nur 'Shatigudud', and Adan Abdullahi Nur 'Gabyow' of the Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM) suggested that the four federal states should be the self-styled independent republic of Somaliland in the northwest, Puntland in the northeast, a third state in central Somalia, and a fourth in the southwest, Agence France Presse (AFP) reported. The outcome of the Garowe meeting was endorsed by the chairman of the Southern Somali National Movement (SSNM), Abdullahi Shaykh Isma'il, who asked the international community "to show political and diplomatic restraint, and not to extend financial assistance [to Abdiqasim's government], which could provoke further violence in Somalia", AFP added. Meanwhile, business interests supporting President Abdiqasim Salad Hassan on 28th October flew a large shipment of Somali shillings into the capital Mogadishu to help finance the formation of a new government, Reuters news agency reported on Sunday. The notes, printed in Canada, were expected to be used to pay for a militia put together by Abdiqasim's allies to provide security for the president, his cabinet and the new 245-member parliament. The businessmen who organised the shipment said it contained about 30 billion new Somali shillings, representing almost US $3 million, but sources said it was three times that amount. Subsequently, on Wednesday, security men guarding the Lafweyn Hotel, where a group of MPs from the interim Somali parliament are based, fired on demonstrators protesting against the government, and the rampant inflation that has attended the importation of the new currency. The head of security at the hotel, Colonel Abdulle Muhammad Hasan (alias Abdulle Dere), said the demonstrators started firing at his men and not the other way round, Radio Banaadir reported. The cabinet of the interim government met in emergency session at Hotel Ramadan in Mogadishu on Thursday to discuss the currency shipment, inflation and a proposal for the government to print new banknotes, Somali reports added. Government spokesman Idris Hasan Diriye was quoted as saying that the government was fully aware of the economic problems the money was causing, and that the administration would establish agencies to print legal banknotes and prohibit anyone from shipping in new illegal banknotes. SOMALIA: Parliament holds inaugural session in Mogadishu Somalia's new parliament has held an inaugural session in Mogadishu, AFP reported on Thursday, thereby marking the first such assembly in the capital for almost a decade. At least 175 members of the 245-seat parliament attended the session, which discussed the new government appointed by Prime Minister Ali Khalif Galayr. Some MPs, who had earlier met in a Mogadishu hotel, criticised President Abdiqasim Salad Hasan "for swearing in the ministers and their assistants at his residence without parliamentary approval". The session appointed a committee "to vet the ministerial appointments and report back to parliament again on Saturday", AFP quoted parliamentary sources as saying. [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. 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