Enero 10, 2005


Y Kosovo tampoco...

... aparece en el discurso de los medios de comunicación de masas. La organización independiente International Crisis Group (ICG) habla en su último dossier de Kosovo y avisa de que es muy posible que en las próximas fechas se reactive el conflicto. De todo ello no se informa, porque estos días sólo se tratan los temas relacionados con la catastrofe en Asia, explica en su comunicado de prensa el ICG, en el que también analiza la situación de los países afectados por el maremoto. Asimismo, los conflictos se clasifican periódicamente como "situaciones deteriorades", "mejoradas" e "invariables".

CrisisWatch N°17, 1 January 2005

All conflict related developments around the world in December 2004 were overshadowed by the devastating natural disaster of the 26 December Indian Ocean tsunami, with a death toll now estimated at over 150,000. The longer term implications of the tragedy for conflicts in the countries most severely hit are as yet unclear. In Indonesia's Aceh, much will depend on how the relief and reconstruction effort is handled: if done well, the central government stands to win major new support, but if poor coordination continues, or serious corruption takes place, the GAM independence movement will be the major beneficiary. In Sri Lanka, despite some reported attempts by the LTTE to politicise aid delivery, early signs are of cooperation between the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE, and a return to open conflict is seen as unthinkable in the immediately foreseeable future.

Elsewhere, conflict situations deteriorated in six countries in December 2004 according to January's CrisisWatch bulletin. Violence surged in Iraq as insurgents stepped up their efforts to derail the 30 January elections, and fighting between Maoists and the military escalated across Nepal with the approach of a 13 January government deadline for the Maoists to agree to peace talks. The situations in Ecuador, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan and Zimbabwe also worsened in December.

In Sudan, the long-awaited signing on 31 December in Naivasha of a final peace accord between the government and Southern SPLA rebels was offset by deteriorating security in Darfur.

Three conflict situations showed improvement in December. Victor Yushchenko's victory in the 26 December re-run of Ukraine's presidential election brought a so-far peaceful conclusion to the month-long political crisis, though challenges remain ahead. Newly elected Afghan president Hamid Karzai appointed a new cabinet, in which the influence of warlords was significantly reduced. And Russia brokered an agreement to end the standoff in the Abkhazia region of Georgia over a disputed presidential election.

For January 2005, CrisisWatch identifies Kosovo as a Conflict Risk Alert, or situation at particular risk of new or significantly escalated conflict in the coming month; no new Conflict Resolution Opportunities are identified for January.

TRENDS AND WATCHLIST SUMMARY
DECEMBER 2004 TRENDS

Deteriorated Situations
Ecuador, Iraq, Nepal, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Zimbabwe

Improved Situations
Afghanistan, Georgia, Ukraine

Unchanged Situations
Albania, Algeria, Angola, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Basque Country (Spain), Bolivia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Chechnya (Russia), China (internal), Colombia, Cote d'Ivoire, Cyprus, DR Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia/Eritrea, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Haiti, India (non-Kashmir), Indonesia, Iran, Israel/Occupied Territories, Kashmir, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Liberia, Macedonia, Maldives, Mauritania, Moldova, Myanmar/Burma, Nagorno-Karabakh (Azerbaijan), Nigeria, North Korea, Northern Ireland (UK), Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Rwanda, Serbia & Montenegro, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Syria, Taiwan Strait, Tajikistan, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Venezuela, Western Sahara, Yemen

JANUARY 2005 WATCHLIST

Conflict Risk Alert
Kosovo

Conflict Resolution Opportunity
None

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Publicado por magda Enero 10, 2005 11:53 PM | TrackBack

Comentarios

Pues sería una muy triste noticia, algunos, como yo, conocimos la cara mas amarga del conflicto a través de tus lineas, conocimos las atrocidades de los tchetniks y la amarga supervivencia de los que allí quedaron demostrando una vez mas hasta donde puede llegar la barbarie y la maldad del ser humano. Y todo sucedió a nuestro lado, en nuestra querida Europa de la que tanto alardeamos.

Pero es que hay tanto por hacer.... hoy amanezco con el gesto de Bush hacia el electo sucesor de Arafat, le invita a la Casa Blanca en lo que será un claro gesto de acercamiento que esperemos ayude a incrementar la presión crítica sobre Israel y su política hacia Palestina (auque conociendo al psicópata de Bush seguro que todavía le recrimina la violencia callejera).

Tambíen amanezco con la posibilidad de que un asesino condenado por mas de 25 asesinatos cumpla mas pena por dos artículos de prensa que por las 25 vidas que segó... curioso, se me viene a la cabeza que aquello de la pluma y la espada.

En fin, que España va bien, y el mundo, de coña.

Enviado por: metamike en Enero 11, 2005 08:04 AM