I it tTHE CAROLINA TIKES SAT MAY 12, 1878 1 llDII A Wochly Digost of African Affairs v . .'t '5 ' ' m . 1 .' r UGANDA The Beginnings Of Normalcy (AN Ttnzanian and Ugandan government troops have now secured the road from Kampala into Kenya. The impor tant Owens Falls dam and hydro-electric plant at the town of Jinja were secured April 22 and Tororo fell the following week. Ugandans, who have been without trade links to the sea by either road or rail for months, are eager for traffic to resume. With food and gasoline especially in desperately short supply there are fears of famine if supplies are delayed much longer, and government officials consider success in meeting the food crisis to be essential to gaining the public's confidence. To this end, a Ugandan team spent month's end negotiating in Kenya with exporters who are com plaining about large debts run up in the past by Amin. The exporters want millions of dollars in back payment before resuming credit to Uganda. The Mitchell Cotts con glomerate alone wants $14 million. Uganda, however, has no foreign exchange what soever and is urgently , seeking massive foreign aid to help deal with its problems. Ugandan Finance Minister Sam M.K. Sebagereka estimates that Uganda will need $2 billion in emergency aid for the first year. Assistance offers have been quick to appear, primarily from Western countries. The U.S., Bri tain, Canada, and Australia have all recognized the new government, as have a dozen other countries mostly African, andBrl- tain's envoy has already reopened the Kampala embassy. The U.S. Con- Sress is soon expected to ft the trade ban it had Imposed on Amin's Ugan da and to allocate emergency relief as well. The U.S.S.R., a major source for Amin's arms purchases, has also finally criticized the Amin regime and indicated guarded pleasure at the new government's promises of a return to the rule of law. In the meantime, mop up operations continue in both the north and the east. Remnants of Amin's troops have reaked havoc as they retreated, killing hundreds and comandeer ing vehicles and other private property. One group tried to enter Kenya but was turned away because it refused to lay down its arms and turn in its vehicle. It then headed north where other similiar fugitives are fleeing, into southern Sudan. Accor ding to Kenya's Weekly Review, however, Tanza nian troops have advanced well into northern Ugan da, meeting little resistance, by the beginn ing of May . Kenya, which has received a new influx of Ugandans in the past months, has agreed to repatriate all Ugandans found to have been Amin supporters. It has already extradicted one top Amin aide, British-born Robert Astles. Former vice president Mustapha Adrisi is also reportedly in deten tion in Uganda, having been found in a Kampala hospital when the govern ment changed hands. In Uganda itself, mean while, there are the begin nings of a return to order. Local elections have been held in Kampala and in some sections of the south. Farmers are begin ning to bring crops to market again. Furniture and . equipment looted from government offices in the euphoria of the fall of Amin are gradually be ing returned as the new regime urges public cooperation In making it possible for, the ad ministration to function. If gasoline and food supplies also begin to flow in Uganda this week, the new government's first major crisis will have been averted. LIBERIA Monrovia Quiets Down (AN A relative calm has returned to the Liberian capital of Monrovia after a spontaneous uprising three weeks ago deeply shook the government of President William Tolbert. A demonstration on April 14 against the pro posed increase - in rice prices turned into a large scale riot when . police opened fire on the pro testers, and millions of dollars of damage was done to the downtown area before order was restored. Thirty persons were killed in the incident, and hundreds more were woundedV President Tolbert, who said he regarded the upris ing as an organized at tempt to overthrow his government, moved swift ly to arrest key opposition leaders, and offered $5,000 rewards for the capture of those who had gone into hiding. Togbah Nah Tipoteh and Dew Mason of the Movement for Justice in Africa (MOJA) and Prof. Amos Sawyer of SUSUUKU were detained and quickly released by y the authorities. At least two other dissident figures, however, James Yarsiah of the All Peoples Freedom Atiance and Gabriel Baccus Matthews of the Progressive Alliance of Liberia (PAL), the group that organized the April 14 protest march, remain in jail after turning themsleves in dur ing the police manhunt. While cracking down on the political opposition, President Tolbert moved to mollify public opinion, deciding against the pro posed 6Qo increase in rice frices. The ' Liberian eader declared the government still intended to strive for self sufficiency in rice produc tion by 1980, but Would find incentives or sub: sidies for rice, farmers other than the proposed price hike. , To assess just how suc cessful Tolbert has been in defusing the dissident movement political observers will be watching to see how many turn out for an anti-government rally scheduled for May 14 in downtown Monrovia. in defiance of a govern ment ban. The protest has reportedly been organized by market women and laborers in the capital city, and will likely be attended as well by university students, whose campus has been closed indefinite ly by presidential order. Fearful of' further tur moil, Tolbert has assumed emergency powers for a period of one year, and he has kept on a contingent of troops from neighbor ing Guinea Conakry that arrived in the aftermath of April 14 demonstrations. "We intend to deal mer cilessly," Tolbert has warned, "with these vicious and wicked people and all their diabolical designs and conspirators; but the lives and property of our people will be heroically protected, secured and preserved ai all cost." Among those who fear reprisals arc some Liberian students in the United States who registered their anti government protest at the embassy in Washington, D.C. Liberia's foreign minister, Cecil Dennis, and one other high official traveled to the U.S. to meet with Secreiary of State Vance last week, and student sources alleged that the subject under disucssion was the possi ble deportation of radical Liberian students. A State Department official, however, simply said the meeting "reviewed various aspects of bilaterial relations." South Africa Can Botha , Afford Wiehan? AN South , Africa's edifice of discriminatory labor laws and practices may not be tumbling down, despite the recom mendations made last week by the fourteen-man Wiehahn Commission, ac cording to observers in South Africa and the United States. The commission's key recommendations, which have been accepted "in prinicple" by the govern ment, include legalization of black labor unions, the opening of union appren ticeship programs to all races, and the relaxation of restrictions which have reserved some jobs for ' whites only. However, white job reservation will Ije preserved in the vital min ing sector "Because of the reluctance of the trade unions concerned," the . commission said, "summary removal" of certain restrictions could cause "unrest." The continued existence of the all-white unions was also proposed. And the 1.5 million migrant workers from neighboring African countries appear to be excluded from full union rights. According to labor law specialist, William B. Gould from Stanford University, even what ap pear to be far-reaching changes could have a limited affect: "The government persistently and systematical ly. ..discourages employers from dealing with black unions, and that could continue to take place despite the report. I think 'we will have to watch the government very careful ly." Despite their shortcom ings, however, the recom mendations are being viewed by blacks in South Africa as an improvement Zwelakhe Sisulu. depu ty editor of South Africa's Transvaal Post newspaper told AFRICA NEWS "what the report does recommend is the phasing awav of job discrimina tion"." ..- "You'll notice that it's not in fact completely do ing away with it," he said, "but phasing it away piecemeal.". It's not certain, however, that the commis sion's recommendations will become law. White labor unions are already gearing up to fight against the proposed changes. And last week Wessel Bor man, a union leader in the iron and steel industry Was quoted saying: "If this is accepted by the govern ment, one wonders how long it will take before other legislation near and dear to the hearts of the whites will disappear." Three months ago white mine workers engaged in wildcat strikes to oppose advancement of black mineworkers. South Africa's ruling National Party can ill af ford a major battle with a constituency as key as the white unions, which have been longtime backers of the party, especially since it is already being shaken by scandal and disruptive internal political rivalry. Noting that the Na tional Party is under "tremendous pressure," Sisulu went on to explain: "If these (recommendations are implemented then the Na tionalist party will have to sacrifice quite a large por tion of it's electorate, and one wonders if it can in fact afford to do that at this stage." ; . -3. . Probably not, most analysts think few obser,versu beUeve i. thai Prime Minister' Botha iv prepared to risk a signifi- cant part of his consti- tuency to increase the power of blacks.' Even at the U.S. State Department, which is anx iously looking for some concrete signs of change iri South Africa to point to, the response has been cautious. Sources there acknowledge that legislative implementation is a long way off. One State Department of ficial described Botha as being in the process of "tactical adjustment." He, like other political analysts and obsevers, thinks South Africa is at tempting to buy time by giving the appearance of major reform when in fact Pretoria is only prepared to make minor changes. Good sources of vitamin E include wheat germ oil, grten leafy vegetables, legumes, nuts, eggs and meat. Lauch Henry hefced find the missing ingredient to educate minority engineers. Money. Lauchland Henrys a teacher And a scentet And an engineer He s gen uinely concerned about other people And he has expressed some of that concern in his participation with the National Fund 'for Minority Engineering Students. The funds a non-profit organiza tion attempting to increase the number of Blacks. Puerto Rcans. Chicanes. , Mexican-Americans and American Indians enrolled in engmeenng schools These under-represented minorities WKf ite ft nrh i ntarrwl myv writ in neptiitnvgromigneeotorengineers. ys a need that s expected to continue through the md-1980's IBM s social leave program enabled Dr Henry to take a year 's leave to assist the fund And IBM continued to pay him his hJ salary IT National finlbrMrvrity' f EngnieenngStuderitssa worth- v whie program yVethinkso. Lauchland Henry thinks so. But most important of el, tots ofmmomy engmeenng students erroted at colleges and universities ai Cr the country think so JJsJ -.I..M.. mi nil ) urnniri ir in li iwifl I 11 . :..',. tA.v.l. : - ' t v , - ' I - Wilson Student r k Miss Clarissa Lewis of 1811 Farrior. Avenue. Wilson, has been awarded a Chancellor's Scholars ship by, North Carolina Central University. Miss, lewis5; will begin her freshman year . at I NCCU in August, 1979. I lie Skiiuiai 3111, laiucu ill $500 for the academic year 1979-80,' is awarded on the basis' of academic merit and is renewable for a period of four- years of study. '; - The award was an nounced by Mrs. Maria B. Creed, director of admis- i sions at NCCU.; . f? 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