Dakar soutient Rabat pour ’’une autonomie entière au Sahara’’, selon Pape Diop
Le président du Sénat Pape Diop a réaffirmé que le Sénégal soutient plus que jamais ''la position'' du Maroc tendant à accorder ''une autonomie entière au Sahara'' avant de préciser que cette position est celle ''de tous les parlementaires sénégalais'' et de ''l'ensemble'' de ses compatriotes, rapporte la MAP reçue à l'APS. Source : Aps Le Sénégal soutient "toujours la proposition marocaine (pour la négociation d'un statut d'autonomie de la région du Sahara), tendant à donner une autonomie entière au Sahara, mais une autonomie qui ne doit pas altérer l'indépendance du Maroc, ni sa souveraineté", a notamment indiqué Pape Diop, lors d'un entretien vendredi à Rabat avec le ministre marocain des Affaires étrangères et de la Coopération, Taïb Fassi Fihri. M. Diop, arrivé depuis mercredi au Maroc pour une visite officielle, a ajouté qu'en sa qualité de ''président du Sénat sénégalais'', il s'agit là d'une position qui reflète celle "de tous les parlementaires sénégalais, et reflète également la position de l'ensemble des Sénégalais". "Les positions de l'Etat sont celles du peuple sénégalais", a-t-il souligné. Rappelant les liens étroits et solides entre les deux pays notamment sur le plan des échanges économiques et de la coopération en matière d'éducation, Pape Diop a déclaré que que "SM le Roi Mohammed VI a beaucoup fait pour nous" avant d'affirmer avec force : "le Sénégal sera toujours aux côtés du Maroc quelles que soient les situations parce que le Maroc est un pays frère". Taïb Fassi Fihri a, pour sa part, souligné l'importance de ses entretiens avec M. Diop qui ont permis de mettre "en exergue la solidarité sans faille et réciproque du Maroc face à d'éventuelles préoccupations sénégalaises, et du Sénégal face à la question nationale, et au total l'engagement du Président sénégalais et de son Gouvernement concernant la "Marocanité" du Sahara". Cette rencontre a également été "une occasion pour se féliciter des relations exceptionnelles qui unissent les deux pays", a-t-il précisé, signalant que ces "relations millénaires portées par les Peuples" sont le "résultat de l'histoire, du sang et de la religion partagés". Il a affirmé que "sur un socle aussi exceptionnel, les relations ne peuvent que se développer et s'approfondir, et ce à quoi veille SM le Roi Mohammed VI qui, à travers cinq visites au Sénégal depuis son intronisation, démontre aux deux opinions publiques sénégalaise et marocaine que le Sénégal est l'un des plus grands partenaires du Maroc". Le ministre marocain des Affaires étrangères a par ailleurs indiqué avoir évoqué avec le président du Sénat les moyens de développement des relations bilatérales dans leur contenu économique, commercial et financier.
1. Posté par
modou
le 20/07/2008 14:41
bien parlé ,pap .une autonomie vaut mieux que rien et suis certain que si cette autonomie s'applique ,elle pourra ouvrir plus tard à l'independance si le peuple sarahoui le souhatait .
2. Posté par
mor
le 20/07/2008 14:43
pppppppppeeeeeeeee
3. Posté par
Mamazda
le 20/07/2008 14:49
4. Posté par
lambinaas
le 20/07/2008 14:52
je me demande ce qu'il y a dans ce désert ( dessert ? ) pour qu'on refuse d'octroyer la indépendance des nomaddes .
5. Posté par
Pécos
le 20/07/2008 14:56
ah yeah
6. Posté par
Lettre adressee aux journalistes ayant invite Wade a Chicago
le 20/07/2008 16:28
Letter to UNITY : Journalists of Color, Inc.
from Radio Nay Leer
tonabj@nabj.org,
info@unityjournalists.org
info@cpj.org,
foreign@nytimes.com,
letters@nytimes.com,
foreign@washpost.com,
letters@washpost.com,
letters@nypost.com,
news@nydailynews.com,
RADIO NAYLEER NEW YORK
dateSun, Jul 20, 2008 at 6:39 AM
subject : Letter to UNITY : Journalists of Color, Inc.
mailed-bygmail.com
To: Onica Makwakwa
Executive Director New York, July 19th, 2008
UNITY: Journalists of Color, Inc.
7950 Jones Branch Drive
McLean, VA 22107
Main (703) 854-3585
Fax: (703) 854-3586
nabj@nabj.org, info@unityjournalists.org
Dear Onica,
My name is Samba Prosper Mbaye and I am writing you on behalf of thousands of my fellow countrymen who are outraged by the fact that your organization is inviting Mister Abdoulaye Wade, President of Senegal, to address Journalists of color in Chicago on July 25th, 2008.
We Senegalese, living in Senegal or abroad, are deeply concerned by the fact that Mister Wade's visit to your organization coincide with a time when Senegalese journalists are witnessing the worsening of their working conditions.
On June 26th 2008, Mister Joel Simon, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, wrote a letter to president Wade after the brutal beating of two Senegalese journalists, Boubacar Kambel Dieng and Karamoko Thioune by police. Those police officers involved in the beating are still on the job as if nothing has ever happened. In his letter Mister Simon expressed the "deep concern of his organization about an ongoing culture of impunity for crimes against journalists." You can read the letter by visiting CPJ website at www.cpj.org. This incident is the last of a long list of abuses to journalists by president Wade and his close collaborators.
Here are few facts.
On august 2007,Transport Minister Farba Senghor threatened to "beat up" private daily Walf Grand-Place's reporter Pape Sambaré Ndour, after calling him a "bastard." The threats were later linked to a comment made by mister Ndour alleging that mister Senghor has lied about a diploma he said he earned from a management school in italy.
On april 2007 a critical comment made by an anonymous caller at Radio Disso FM located in Mbacké, 105 miles east of the capital Dakar earned the radio station a 45 minutes standoff and its staff threats by Moustapha Cisse Lo, a candidate of the ruling PDS party and its followers.
President Wade himself has been caught in an act of abuse to journalists. During the june 3rd, international conference on World Food Security held in Rome, Italy, president Wade threatened Yakham Mbaye, editor of the daily Le Populaire, according to journalists who have witnessed the incident.
As you can see the abuse of journalists is not an isolated act of police officers out of control. It is, in fact, a culture at the highest level of government. What should be the exemption is in fact the general rule.
To add insult to injuries, journalists are not only suffering abuses at the hands of those who were elected to protect them but they are also victims of laws enacted by the same people to keep them in check.
In July 2004 Madiambal Diagne, owner and managing editor of the popular independent newspaper Le Quotidien, was jailed for more than two weeks for articles he wrote in 2004 about alleged executive interference in the judiciary and corruption in the customs service. Diagne was imprisoned under a controversial national security provision known as Article 80 of the penal code.
Despite president's Wade promise to reform this controversial article, it is still in the books and extensively used to control the press. It was also used to send Idrissa Seck, the former prime minister, in jail for several months.
In may of this year the Committee to Protect Journalists has reiterated its call to Senegalese authorities "to end a pattern of criminal defamation prosecutions against the press" after many journalists were brought to court to face criminal proceedings for the expression of their opinions.
This year, Papa Moussa Guèye, director of the private daily L'Exclusif, based in the city of Rufisque, 24 miles east of Dakar, was the third Senegalese journalist handed a six-month suspended prison term within a week for alleging presidential late-night "escapades."
This same year the director Jules Diop and Editor-in-Chief Serigne Saliou Samb of private daily newspaper L'Observateur were handed six-month suspended prison sentences and heavy damages over a critical story.
As I write these excesses and abuses are still going on.
Few weeks ago one of the veteran Senegalese journalist and media professor, Abdou Latif Coulibaly, was prevented from traveling to the US, where he was invited to speak at a conference organized by sengalese living in the New York City. He was handed an order to appear in court on july 19th to answer questions about accusations he made in his latest book on the pillaging of the LONASE, the national lottery entity.
We can go on and on. Nothing has prevented the authorities to do away with this controversial provision of our penal code but their willingness to keep in check and domesticate the press.
In Ghana criminal sanctions for libel, publication of false news, and defaming the president were repealed in 2001. We can do the same in Senegal but as I said the authorities, for their own comfort, prefer to set limits journalist can't cross.
In a June 13th article posted in your website and talking about the address president Wade will give at your convention in Chicago, you quoted the International League of Human Rights, which recognized him" as an African leader of great conviction and accomplishments whose tireless work to advance democratic values, multi-party elections and transparent governance has promoted human rights and economic development in Senegal and throughout Africa."
This appreciation contrasts profoundly with a memo written in the june 18th, 2008 issue of the New York Times, sent from Dakar by Lydia Polgreen and titled Shadows Grow Across One of Africa's Bright Lights. I am inviting you to read that article to catch a glimpse of what is really going on in Senegal.
Let me travel through few anecdotes contained in that article. In may of this year Senegal hosted the organization of the Islamic Summit which was much financed by Islamic donors. Little accounting has been given for the money spent during the summit. Do you know who was in charge? Karim Wade, the only son of president Wade. In the same New York Times article you can read that "when the speaker of the National Assembly tried to question the president's son about spending for the summit meeting, the speaker's party leadership position was abolished and the assembly introduced a bill to cut his term to a single year." The article also states that a study commissioned by the United States Agency for International Development last year Concluded that"a lack of transparency in public affairs and financial transactions, as well as chronic corruption, plague Senegal today."
Are these two examples good illustrations of "transparent governance" to you?
Last year, after a badly run presidential election, the opposition called for reform in the electoral code in order to ensure acceptable legislative elections. Mister Wade refused to hear that call and pressed ahead with the organization of the election. The major parties refused to take part, "so the national assembly is made up almost exclusively of Mr Wade's allies." Is this an "advancement of democratic values, and the promotion of multi-party elections" to you?
In the same article of the New York's Time it is stated that "once a darling of international donors, who have spent millions to help Senegal build schools and clinics, pay off its debts and plan infrastructure projects, the country has found itself criticized by representatives of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank over public spending and policies that have worsened the effects of rising food prices." Is this a "promotion of human rights and economic development in Senegal ?"
Dear friends at Unity, here are the real deeds of the man who will be speaking at your convention in Chicago. He is denying to his people, specially to journalists, the freedom you are granting him.
You can argue that this letter is out of context because Mr Wade will be speaking about climate change and not human rights. Don't you think that there is an intimate link between the physical environment and the social one? Can one achieve progress in the first one by ignoring the second one?
On the preservation of the environment front president Wade is not a model in the continent. He is known for declassifying forests in Senegal and giving them to his allies for mere political reasons despite the advice of experts in forestry not to do so.
This year 18 children died of lead poisoning in Ngagne Diaw, a neighborhood in the suburbs of the capital, Dakar. His policies have so impoverished our people that they do whatever they can to survive, including exposing themselves to toxic such as lead.
Dear friends at UNITY, welcome to Senegal.
Let me finish by telling you that as minority journalists I don't have to teach you about the oppression and social injustice journalists in Senegal are going through. But I can tell at least that since you have seen the light don't keep it to yourself. Because no journalist will be free until all journalists are free. You owe it to your colleagues in Senegal.
Again welcome to our country.
By Samba Prosper Mbaye, M.P.H., C.H.E.S.
For Radio Nay Leer a one hour political show broadcasting every Monday FROM 9-10PM on WPAT 930 AM in New York City
Email : radionayleer@gmail.com
7. Posté par
Diambour
le 20/07/2008 16:37
Merci
8. Posté par
alt
le 20/07/2008 21:40
Salut
Vive le polisario
9. Posté par
Boy dakar
le 21/07/2008 13:48
Pape Diop est un véritable menteur. Au nom de quoi peut-il dire que son point de vue est celui de tous les parlementaires et de tous les sénégalais? Vraiment, quand on allie la médiocrité à la malhonnêteté, on devient franchement dégoûtant.
Nouveau commentaire :
|
|
|