U N I T E D  N A T I O N S
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Integrated Regional Information Network 

WEST AFRICA: WEST AFRICA: IRIN-WA Weekly round-up 366 for 17-23 February 2007

SIERRA LEONE: War crimes indictee's death is blow to Special Court
LIBERIA-SIERRA LEONE: Refugees reluctant to return home
WEST AFRICA: New meningitis vaccine could halve deaths
GUINEA-BISSAU: Hunger in a land of plenty
NIGERIA: FAO warns more effort needed to check worsening bird flu crisis
GUINEA: Martial law relaxed but strike continuing
CAMEROON: Secessionist minority Anglophone group silenced
CHAD: Obstacles to getting peacekeepers on ground


SIERRA LEONE: War crimes indictee's death is blow to Special Court

Sam Hinga Norman, the leader of the local civil defence militia that helped 
defeat the rebel Revolutionary United Front (RUF) during the 1991 to 2001 civil 
war but who was later indicted by the UN-backed court in Sierra Leone, has died.

"A verdict in the case was to have been delivered shortly," according to a 
press release issued on Thursday by the Special Court for Sierra Leone which 
had had him in detention.

Norman collapsed on Thursday morning following a medical procedure at a 
military hospital in Dakar, Senegal. "Initial indications are that Mr. Norman 
suffered heart failure during post-operative care," the statement said.

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70324


LIBERIA-SIERRA LEONE: Refugees reluctant to return home

Thousands of Liberian refugees sheltering in camps in eastern Sierra Leone are 
reluctant to be repatriated, saying they would rather stay where they are or 
resettle in another country.

Some of the refugees in two of the eight camps in Sierra Leone's eastern border 
province of Kenema said they felt conditions back in Liberia were not yet 
favorable for their return, despite assurances by the United Nations refugee 
agency (UNHCR) and the Liberian government that life had improved.

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70310


WEST AFRICA: New meningitis vaccine could halve deaths

Every year between December and June winds combined with seasonal respiratory 
infections trigger outbreaks of deadly meningitis throughout West Africa's 
Sahel belt, which stretches from Senegal to Chad.

Just four cases of the fast-spreading illness are enough for health officials 
to declare an epidemic. But at least 1,300 people have already been infected 
this year in Burkina Faso, and 36 in northern Côte d'Ivoire, and 150 people 
have died.

As authorities in Burkina Faso and Côte d'Ivoire rush with emergency 
vaccinations, scientists in Mali are experimenting with a drug produced in 
India that they say could halve the disease's impact once tests are finished in 
2009.

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70308


GUINEA-BISSAU: Hunger in a land of plenty

Driving through lush farmlands, forests and mangrove swamps south from 
Guinea-Bissau's coastal town of Buba, it is hard to believe that the roughly 
100,000 people who live and farm here could not find a way to feed themselves 
last year.

But the fact is that malnutrition shot up to beyond what the United Nations 
World Health Organisation (WHO) calls the 'emergency threshold' and relief 
agencies shipped in over 1,000 tonnes of food aid in 2006.

And although the crisis is over for now, next time it could be far worse.

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70272

NIGERIA: FAO warns more effort needed to check worsening bird flu crisis

At the Costain live animal market in Nigeria's main city of Lagos chickens, 
turkeys and geese are still crowded together in the portable coops they arrived 
in from upcountry. Teenage boys helping buyers kill, clean and cut up the birds 
still do so with knives and bare hands, unprotected by gloves or face masks.

More than one year after Nigeria reported sub-Saharan Africa's first cases of 
the deadly H5N1 avian flu virus and one month after the illness claimed its 
first human life in the country, little has changed in the way birds are 
handled or slaughtered.

But old habits need to change and control measures must be improved in markets 
and on farms if Nigeria is to the curb the worsening spread of the virus, the 
Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said on Tuesday.

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70281

GUINEA: Martial law relaxed but strike continuing

Life is slowly returning to relative normalcy in Guinea now that the government 
has eased a curfew imposed after nationwide unrest, but a general strike is 
ongoing.

President Lansana Conte called the curfew on 12 February to curb widespread 
looting and rioting, which had swept the capital, Conakry, and towns across the 
country during protests calling for his resignation.

Originally in force for 20 hours every day, authorities cut the curfew to six 
hours at the end of last week, and on Monday reduced it further to keep 
Guineans off the streets between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m.

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70282

CAMEROON: Secessionist minority Anglophone group silenced

About 20 members of an Anglophone secessionist group in Cameroon have been 
jailed for the past month without charge, reflecting what their lawyers say is 
the latest effort to silence government critics without providing due process.

The members of the Southern Cameroons National Council (SCNC) were detained on 
20 January when they attempted to hold a press conference led by the group's 
vice chairman, Nfor Ngala Nfor. Two scheduled hearings on the case have been 
postponed.

"The authorities arrested them under the pretext that they weren't authorised 
to hold the meeting," said Blaise Berinyuy, a lawyer for the group. "In recent 
years arrests of this kind have been commonplace and the situation hasn't 
improved."

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70258

CHAD: Obstacles to getting peacekeepers on ground

As the United Nations Security Council prepares for discussions this week on 
sending peacekeepers to eastern Chad, aid agencies working there are pressing 
the humanitarian need for rapid deployment, but observers in New York say 
significant political and logistical obstacles remain to getting boots on the 
ground.

Aid agencies have been complaining for months that frequent attacks on their 
staff and facilities in eastern Chad are making their work to help hundreds of 
thousands of refugees from Darfur and displaced Chadians impossible in some 
areas.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) says fighting between Chadian rebels and the army 
has sometimes spilled over into the 12 refugee camps for people from Darfur. It 
has also accused the Chadian government of not doing enough to stop the camps 
from becoming militarised by rebel fighters crossing over from Darfur.

http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70240

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