JPRS ID: 9045 WORLDWIDE REPORT ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4
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APPROVE~ FOR RELEASE= 2007/02/08= CIA-R~P82-00850R000200040038-4 : ~ ~ 1 ~ ~ . ~ _ 1 0F 1. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAI, U~E ONLY - ~ JPRS L/8~69 16 January 1980 Sub-Saharan Africa Re ort _ p = FOUO No. 662 FBIS FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE FOit OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 NOTE JPRS publications contain information prima.rily fram foreign n~~aspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency 'transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language - sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and oth~~r characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text) or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of an item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. The contents af this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of t?~e U.S. Govern.ment. F'or further information on report content call (703) 351-2833 lNear East); 351-2501 (Iran, Afghanistan); 351-3165 (North Africa). COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGITLATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF . MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE OiVLY. - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/8869 16 January 1980 SUB-SAiIARAN AFRI CA REPORT No. 662 CONTENTS PAGE INTER-AFRICAN AFFAIRS � - Status of Communism in Africa Reported (Marc Yared; JEUNE AFRIQUE, 1~ Dec 79) 1 _ Senegal-Guinea Reconciliatioa Bodes Well (NEW AFRICAN, Dec 79) 3 ANGOLA Briafs Alleged East German Massacres 5 BURUNDI Nickel Deposits Possibly To Be Developed (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 16 Nov 79)..... 6 Legislation for Small, Medium-Size Businesses (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 23 Nov 79)..... 7 Briefs - Press Distribution 9 CONGO Briefs President Requests French Aid 10 ETHIOPIA ~ Newsman Reports on Situation in Eritrea (AFRIQUE-ASTE, 26 Nov-9 Dec 79) li 1 - Life in Maquis Described, by Pietro Petrucci EPLF Official Views Er~trean War, Isias Afework Interview Five Ethiopian Offensives Listed - a- ~III NE & A- 120 FOUO] - FOR OFFTCIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY CONTENTS (Continued) Page Ethiopian Attempt To Talk With WSLF Report~d ' (Philippe Rochot; JEUNE AFRIQUE, 28 Nov 79)......... 20 GABON Direct Oil Marketing Planned, Future Oil Resources Studied (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 2 Nov 79)..... 22 MADAGASCAR Report on 1978 Fiscal Year for BNI, BTM (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEl?ITERRANEENS, 9 Nov 79)..... 24 Briefs Malagasy Officers Tr3.ed 27 i_ i MALAWI . Sugar Refinery in Dwanga Inaugurated (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET ME]~ITERRANEENS, 16 Nov 79)..... 28 Training Offered for Modern Fi.shing Techniques Offered _ (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 23 Nov 79)...... 30 Maldeco FishQries Statistics Given (MARCHES TR(?PICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 23 Nov 79)...... 31 I MALI Traore: Sole Party Uni*es All Political Tendencies (JEITNE AFRIQUr., 5 Dec 79) 33 - MAURITIUS Naval Build-!ip in Indian Ocean Cause for Concern (Herve-Masson; AFRIQUE-ASIE, 10 Dec 79) 38 Briefs Rupee Devaluated 41 New Energy Sources Sought 41 - - b - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFI`!CIAL USE ONLY CONTENTS (Continuc:d) Page MOZAMBIQUE Progress Accompli:;hed in Econom;~ Despite Difficulties (NEW AFRI:CAN, Dec 79) 42 - Briefs Official to GDR 45 - SENEGAL Economy Facing Crisis Worse Than Generally Believed (Jean-T,ouis Bucher; JEUNE AFRI~UE, 14 Nov 7y)........ 46 SEYCHELLES ` Foreign Backing of Attempted Coup Examined - (Various sources, various dates) 50 Threats to Socialist Regime, by Marc Yared = Fore:gn Backing of Plot Suspected, by San Fie TANZANIA Nyerere Believed To Be Yielding to IP�IF Demands (JEUNE AFRIGUE, 12 Dec 79) 53 ~ TOGO - Political Changes May Augur Well for End of Crisis (Siradiou Diallo; JEUNE AFRIQUE, 5 Dec 79)..~..~,.,,, 55 ~ - c - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY INTER-AFRICAN AFFAIRS STATUS OF COMMUNISM IN AFRICA REPORTED - Paris JEUNE AFRIQUE in French 12 Dec 79 p 11 [Article by Marc Yared] [Text] J.A. replies to question asked by Abdoulaye Cisse, from Kayes (Mali): Haw many communist parties, or those introducing themselves as such, are there who have gained political power in an - - African country? Nine organizations assuming "scientific socialism" are in power at the present - time in Africa and the Middle East. They are as follows: PCT (Congolese ' Labor I'arty), PRPB (People's Revolution Party of Benin), FRELIMO (Mozambique Liberation Front), MPLA-PT (Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola- - Labor Party), SRSP (Somali Revol~itionary Socialist Party), PSY (Yemeni - Socialist Party), PDPA (Popular and Democratic Party of Afghanistan), STP (Movement for Liberation of Sao Tome and Principe), and in Madagascar FNDR _ (National Front for the Defense and the Revolution). Only the last two do not officially belong to Marxism-Leninism. Since 1977 SRSP does not maintain cor.dial relations with the Soviet Iinion. PCT, PRPB, _ SRPS and FNDR were initially established (in 1969, 1975, 1976 and 1977 re- spectively) by "progressist" officers who held the power. Capt Marien N'Gouabi in the Congo, Capt Matthieu Kerekou in Benin and Gen Mohamed Siad Barre in Somalia (in 1968, 1969 and 1972) had acceded to the highest office following a military coup d'etat. All three created a single party. On the other hand, commander Didier Ratsiraka was first co-opted by the - responsible military officers to be head of the state in June 1975, before being confirmed as president of the republic by referendum in December of the same year, and the front whose principle was adopted by the same referendum is not made up of a single party, but by a coalition of five parties. 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Kerekou, Siad Barre and Ratsiraka still preside over the destinies of their country, but N'Gouabi was ass~ssinated on 18 March 1977 and replaced as head of the state and of the PCT, first by Gen Yhonbi Opango and then by Col Denis Sassou Nguesso. The PDPA (established in 1964) in Afghanistan also seized power (in 197z) by a military coup d'etat. But these are civilians. Mohamed Nour Taraki in April 1978, then Hafizullah Amin, since last September, held the reins of the party and of the country. Becoming a single party, th.e PDPA was in fact a coalition of two Marxist pro-Soviet organizations, the Khalk (the people) and Parcham (the flag). In July and then in September 1978, the leaders and the cadre of Parcham were supplanted by those of the Khalk in all the wheels of the army, the administration and the PDPA. The South Yemeni FLN, the Angola MPLA, FRELIMO and STP acceeded to power at the time of the proclamatioz of iudependence (in 1967 far South Yemen, 1975 ; for Angola, Mozambique, Sao Tome and Principe). In the past they had stirred i up resistance to colonial occupation. This resistance, except for STP, took i the form of an actual liberation war. After having suffered considerable purging or combining with other political organizations, these four national- istic "mass movements" became "vanguard parties" advocating.scientific sociatism, The MPLA (in De~~~be~.1977), the FLN (in October 1978) then i changed their names to become d~e, the MPLA--the Labor P'arty, and the other ' the Yemeni Socialist Party. ^ - COPYRIGHT: Jeune Afrique, GRUPJIA, 1979 7993 CSO: 4400 . 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY INTER-AFRICAN P.FFAIRS ~ SENEGAL-GUINEA RECONCILIATION BODES WELL London NEW AFRICAN in English Dec 79 pp 25,26 _ [Excerpt] For three days in October the President of Guinea, Ahmed Sekou Toure, visited his once "hostile" neighbour, Senegal. It was his first visit in 16 years but at the end of it the signs are that the two countries have finally decided to bury the hatchet. - Sceptics may have their doubts, but ~.t should be seen in the light of last year's Monrovia accord between Guinea on the one side and Senegal _ and the Ivory Coast on the other. Since that accord Toure has been imbued with a spirit of reconciliation. - At the close of his Senegal sojourn, Toure and his host, President Leopold Senghor, signed ].0 agreements af cooperation. He also had time to tell some of the 600,000 Guinean exiles in Senegal about his new policy of reconciliation within Guinea. "We have decided openly to bury tribalism whatever the cost. It cannot be done without a backlash," Toure said. He must have been referring to the - Foulah ethnic group who make up about one-third of Guinea's population. Since the May 197b attempt to assassinate Toure, the Foulahs have been complaining or a campaign against them. P'ormer OAU secretary-general Diallo Telli (believed to be dead), who was - of Foulah origin, was alleged to be the ~eader of the conspiracy. Many Guineans of Foulah origin were arrested and those who managed to escape the dragnet fled across the border to neighbouring countries. Plot Just before Toure's Senegal tr~.p, five people were arrested by th~: Sene- galese authorities after a pl:ot to assassinate the Guinean leader was hatched. Why should an attempt be made on Toure's life, at a time when he is changing his attitude after all he has made large concessions to exiles - to allow them to invest money in Guinea's development. The logical answer to the question is greed. If relations between Senegal and Guinea are to 3 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY become cordial, the wealthier exiles would stand to lose. They and those in the professions would cease to live their flamboyant lifestyles. They were adequately warned in July 1977 during the 39th Session of the National Council of the Revolution when Toure said of doctors, lawyers and pharma- cists: "These libera~ and lucrative professions do not exist in Cutnc~ri." Most important, hawever, is the seemingly cordial contacts that are beinb extended by Guinea and Senegal after years of discord. In the end the Presidents oi the Ivory Coast, Guinea and Senegal agreed "to end finally, as from naw, all dissension which has affected our rela- - tions; to reestablish diplomatic relations," and so on. 'Itao months later diplomatic relations were established between Guinea and Senegal. Since then Toure has visited the Ivory Coast and he now looks set to work _ amicably with both countries. It had taken a l~ng time for these former French colonies to come to some sort of mutual understanding. But this long period of open hostility could well serve a: the foundation of an even longer and b etter period of harmony. ~ COPYRIGHT: 1979 IC Magazines Limited ~ I CSO: 4420 ! 4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFI;IAL USE ONLY - ANGOLA BRIEFS ALLEGED EAST GERMAN MASSACRES--East German soldiers committed massacres in Angola, a miiitary official of the Angolan National Liberation Front (the FNLA, which is opposed to the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola--the MPLA, in office in Luanda) claimed in disclosuz~es in the We~t German daily newspaper DIE WELT of 16 October. According to Manzana Ranca, the commanding officer of an FNLA unit, members of the "Felix Dzierzynski" East German elite regiment shot to death about 100 inhabitants of the vill.ege of Diowadu Lundu, 25 km from the port city of AmbrizEte. The victims were old people, women and children. The adolescents were sent to - "reeducation camps" in Cuba. DIE WELT specified that Manzana Ranca was unable to furnish proof of his accusations. The "Felex Dzierzynski" regiment bears the name of the founder of the "Cheka" (the Extraordinary Commission - for Fighting Counter-Revolution and Sabotage created under Lenin). It is a"political" unit placed under the command of General Markus Wolf, the head of the S5D [State Security Service]. Some of its members are "cooperators" in Angola. [Text] [Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French 2 Nov 79 p 2973J 9380 CSO: 4400 5 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPROVED F~R RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY BURUNDI NICKEL DEPOSITS POSSIBLY TO BE DEVELOPED ' Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRAP?EENS in French 16 Nov 79 p 3223 [Article: "A Study of Nickel Deposits"] [Text] Lateritic deposits of nickel and associated metals such as copper, cobalt and platinum group metals, which have been discovered and prospected in Burundi by the mining research project under participation of the United Nations, are reported to contain reserves in excess of 300 million tons of - ore. One of these deposits has been investigated in detail since 1973, using drill- ings, analyses and various studies, and has now made the object of a prelimi- nary feasibility study. Metallurgical tests carried out by the U.S. comp~iny Universal Oil, Product Mineral Sciences Division, and the preliminary feasi- _ bility study carried out by anotr,er U.S. company, Ralph M. Parsons Co., have yielded positive results. ~ The Burundi Government is c~ntemplating s~tting up a mixed group, including an important international participat-ion, to develop these deposits. - COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie Paris 1979 9294 CSO: 4400 6 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040240040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONT.~Y , BURUNDI LEGISLATION FOR SMALL, MEDIUM-SIZE BUSINESSES Paris MARCHES TROFICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French 23 Nov 79 pp 3283-3284 , [Article: "New Legislation for Small and Medium-Siz2 Businesses"] [Text] On 10 October 1979, President Bagaza signed a decree establishing a code for small and medium-size businesses in Burundi. ~ j These businesses include those with no more than 30 salaried employees and j engaged in production, processing, repairing, or in providing services. ; Certain categories of personnel are not counted as salaried employees. They are the spouse of the head of thQ business, its parents or grandparents, children or grandchildren, collaterals and relatives up ta the third degree, three associatee or assistants actually sharing in the work, as well as three _ app~:entices or handicapped salaried employees. _ Are not considered to be small and medium-size businessPs those whose activ- ity is restricted to the sale or leasing "as is" of objects previously pur- - chased, agricultural enterprises, those working on commission, agencies or business offices, and, under certain conditions, those whose services are of a purely intellectual nature. All enterprises concerned shall be registered in the trade register. The minister respousible for small and medium-size businesses may authorize the registration of businesses whose services are related to the arts. - Any business subject to registration shall file an application within 3 munths of its creation or of ~the publi~ation of the present decree; this - application is to be filed by the head of the business. When a business registered in the trade register no long~er fulfills the con- ditions provided under the p~esent decree, its head or, ~s the case may be, his heirs or the liquidator, shall apply within 3 months to have it striked off the register. A Chamber of Trades is also created: it is a public establishment of an administrative nature, over which the minister in charge of su?all and medium- 7 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 20071Q2/08: CIA-RDP82-OQ850RQ00200040Q38-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY size businesses shall have the right of oversight, and the statutes of which shall be established by a decree. The CY.amber of Trades sha11 be, on the one hand, an organization representing the general interests of small and medium-size businesses with the adminis- tration, and it ehall also be in charge of promoting the trade sector, partic- ularly modern and traditional crafts. The Chamber may be authorized to borrow, either to cover part or all of its . expenses, or to organize professional training programs. Various measures in favor of small and medium-size businesses are announced, especially a Credit and Guarantee Fund with the National Economic Develop- ment Bank, under oversight from the competent minister. Credits and guaran- tees shall be subject to arbitration by a technical commission created for this purpose. The titles of craftsman and master craftsman in a given trade shall be pro- - tected. Those entitled to call~*hemselves craftsmen in their. trade shall be: the heads of the businesses entered into the trade r~gister, or the managers of such businesses appointed according to the articles of association, both of whom shall submit proof of a degree of qualification and personally share in ~ the work. ~ Those entitled to call themselves master craftsmen in their trade shall be those who have had the title of craftsman for at least 2 years, who are tech- nically proficient and have a higher degree of qualification in their trade, as evidenced by ownership of a master craftsman's certificate. _ Another provision in favor of craftsmen and master craftsmen: where there is equality of price, they may be given preference in awarding public contracts, ~ either by tender or by mutual agreement. COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie Paris 1979 9294 CSO: 4400 _ $ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 - FOR OFFICIAL USE OI~IL,Y BURUNDI y BRIEFS PRESS DISTRIBUTION--A press and book distribution company, Sodipresse, has just been created within Burundi's ministry of information. This company shall be in charg~ of promoting and distributing newspapers, magazines and - books for the general public, at reasonable prices. Sodipresse shall also ensure the diffusion of any publication dealing with Burundi. For this pur- _ pose, Burundi has joined the JEUNE AFRIQUE group which has already gained ~ experience in the field of distribution. [Text][Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French 30 Nov 79 p 3347] 9294 CSO: 4400 " I i~ ~ , i 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFk' ~CIAL IJSE ONLY CONGO BRIEFS PRESIDENT REQUESTS FRENCH AID--Financial aid to fill in the "holes" in the Congolese budget: ~his was the request made by the President of the Congo, Colonel Nguesso, during his recent trip to Paris. In exchange, the Congolese - President promised to promote contracts to exploit the petroleum deposits for French enterprises. And to reduce the Cuban officering of the Congolese armed forces. [Text] [Paris VAT~EURS ACTUELLES in French 31 Dec 79 p 13] CsO: 4400 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ETHIOPIt1 ~ ~ . I I I ~ NEWSMAN REPORTS ON SITUATION IN ERITREA ' Life Zn Maquis Described Paris AFRIQUE-ASIE in French 26 Nov-9 Dec 79 pp 30-33 [Art=cle by Pietro Petrucci] - [Tex~] Eritrea has definitely rebelled aga3.nst the ger~graphic maps. To the 1,5U0 km of "clandestine roads" which the c~PLF (Eritrean Popular Liberation Front) partisans has constructed across the country before 1978, a new "freedom trail" has been added in recent months. Used nightly by lines of trucks and vans which travel with their lights out, this "trail" begins somewhere in the desert sands of the Sudan and crosses the inhospitable mountains of the Sahel, the fortress region of Eritrea which, for 18 months, the Ethiopian army has been vainly attempting to penetrate. The most sophisticated air reconnaissance is unable to spot this partisan road. If, in fact, it appears at the top of the tiighest crests, it is only to disappear again amid the acacias and rocks at the bottom of the narrowest ravines, losing itself in dry stream beds or concealing itself in the crevasses. This is the first of many surprises I received when I returned to Eritrea 2 years after having witnessed the great offensive which, in 1977, permitted the combatants to liberate 90 percent of the territory and nearly all the inhabited centers. ~ In 1978, the tide turned. As the result of massive aid. in men, arms and technology furnished by certain socialist countries, the Ethiopian army, in June 1978, attempted to find a"military solution" to the Eritrean question. The first alarming news circulated in the corridors of the OAS summit which in Fact met in Khartoum in July 1978. Some 140,000 Ethiopian soldiers (soldiers and militamen), thousands of foreign advisers, in addition to 500 armored vehicles and dozens of fighter planes tried to retake the "14th province" of Haile Selassie's empire. At that time, the ~ritrean revolution was considered condemned to death. At all times fought by Western imperialism and in large measure torgotten by the Third World, members of the Eritrean maquis now found themselves abandoned 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY by Ct~t~ USSR and its allies which i1ad, however, }ielped them Cor years and years. W}io could save them? "The governments and parties which had the courage to - Lmmediately condemn this new aggression against Eritrea." I was told with ~ bLtterness by Ramadan Nour, secretary general of the EPLF, "can be counted on the fingers of one h~~nd." A year and a half have gone by since then, and the military authority of Addis Ababa continues to publish victory bulletins. If we are to believe them, the "separatist bandits" from the north are now on their knees. If we listen to the spokemen of the Eritrean resistance, on the other hand, the story is quite - different. It was to directly find out for myself that I asked for and was given permission to spend the month of October in the interior of liberated . Eritrea, observing this war which today has entered its 18th year, living in the liberated zones, discussing with combatants and meeting Ethiopian prisoners - and deserters. Male and Female Partisans One thing is certain and obvious: the Eritrean revolution is not dead. On ~ the contrary, it has entered its age of maturity and is an example of "a popular war of long duration," rich with valuable lessons for all oppressed , people. While the Ethi.opian army--now that the initial enthusiasm has waned-- is wearing itself out on the banks of the Red Sea, south of Nakfa and in the _ occupied cities, with cannon shot and useless bombs, the partisans are tempering themselves like steel in the mountains of the Sahel. An example? I had been in Eritrea for several days when I received my second - surprise after that of the new road: I learned there that, for over a year, the front's leadership after a long debate had promulgated a law which authorizes and regulates marriages between combatants. That is nothing. Beginning in 1975, in fact, when the EritrPan cities were themselves drawn into the war of liberation, the female population of the liberated zones _ increased sharply. Today, although women on the frontline are still a minority-- - I have seen them performing tasks in combat--entire sectors of the "partisan ~ state" are nearly monopolized by wome~: health and education, for example. _ Many city families prefer to send their sons and daughters to live with the ; partisans rather than expose them to the risks and horrors of occupation and terror. And the EPLF, from the revolutionary army that it was, has thus , transformed itself into a"clandestine society" which has learned to be self- _ sufficient, even from the demographic standpoint. Moreover, most of the combatants are of military service age--20 years--and, in the rear, their babies, born in the clandestine society, are alre~;,dy beginning to cry. I arrived in Nakfa, the administrative center of the Sahei and moral capital of liberated Eritrea, after 3 nights of travel. I again found the same phantom village I had visited in April 1?77. At that time,.Nakfa, with its four small, Turkish forts, had just been abandoned by the Ethiopians after an 8-month siege. Having returned to life for a year, since the end of 1978, - the city with lines of white houses finds itself the preferred target of the artillery and air force. There is no longer a single inhabitant among these ' 12 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY roofs of twisted sheet metal and torn wall sections which creak in the wind. TYie mosque is a pile of stones and; in the principal public square, cows and - - goats come to quench their thirst in bomb craters which the rain has filled with water. The front, which is trenched as in conventional wars of position, has been stabilized for 7 months a few kilometers south of the city. However, the bombings continue to prevent the partisan society not only from living there but also from cultivating the fields around Nakfa and its river. It was there at night, when liberated Eritrea awakens and works, that I met Maj Petros Salomon, who in a way is the grand old man of the EPLF. Not having yet reached the age of 40 but already a veteran of the war of liberation, Petros is one of the historical leaders--like Secretary General Ramadan and Deputy Secretary Isias Afework--who, 10 years ago, gave Eritrean nationalism _ its revolutionary character. I asked him how the men of the EPLF, numbering from 30,000 to 40,000 combatants according to the most likely estimates, have managed to stop the steamroller set in motion by Colonel Mengistu. "The operation which resulted in certain socialist countries reorganizing and rearming the Ethiopian army," he replied whiie smiling, "was a surprise on the political level but not on the military - ~ level. Technically speaking, we had not excluded the internationalization of the war nor the risk of a grand style counteroffensive. And, so, we did not fall into the trap set for us: to force us to engage in conventional war throughout the territory of the country. Thanks to our mobility, we _ were able to witdraw in order and save all our human and military resources in the interior of our base zone. And, because of this, when the enemy - arrived, not without having suffered initial serious losses, at the 'edges' of c~ur defensive perimeter, he stopped. We can say that we neutralized the military 5uperiority of the Ethiopians." And now? "Now, time is on our s~_de. The war of long duration continues. Ethiopian morale is being broken against our trenches, in a conflict of the conventional kind; and it is wearing itself out even more beyond the lines, where we have returned to guerrilla warfare. For several weeks, we have been working on - what we call thc tactical co:~ditions necessary to move to the counteroffensive." 6,000 Living-dead A few days later., I was to observe that Major Petros had there announced to me military operations already in preparation. What I had already understood by visiting this "southern front" in Nakfa wa.s that even Colonel Mengistu realized the impossibility of militarily conquering a national liberation movement in its age of maturity. That is also the opinion of all the Ethiopian officers--deserters and prisoners-- with whom I was ab~.e to talk. - 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY As for Addis Ababa, the 6,000 men who were captured alive by the EPLF no longer exist. "Die or kill yourself," such is the watchword. Anyone who is captured by the "bandits" ipso facto becomes one of their accomplices. The International Red Cross has been able to overcome the resistance of F.t}iiop~a to intervene on behalf of the b,000 living-dead uf Eritrea. In ltir lr~~[ fe~w months, it has fin~lly tiucceeded in sendi.n~; hJcmkets, ci~;arette4, water flasks, notebooks and penct.ls directly to the pri5oners. On a sln~;lr occasion I met more than 500 of these "Ethiopian phantoms" in one of the many caps scattered throughout the Sahel: they were the survivors of t}ie "fifth offensive" of Addis Ababa which ended in tragedy i.n July. A column of 6,000 men wiped out. I spoke about this with Capt Yimar Tiakonnen (serial number 1,673, 37 years of ~ age, six children) and with Lt Yilma Beyene (serial number 4,239, 32 years of age, four childr~n), both members of the ill-fated Brigade, Unit 503. "That was to have been a quick-strike operation," the captain recounted, "to penetrate the Eritrean lines midway between the Nakfa front and that of Alghene, to the north. Men coming from Massawa, Marsa Teklai and Asmara i joined us at the foot of the mountain. Instead of engaging in battle, the ~ Eritreans allowed us to penetrate on foot into their valleys. At the end of ! 2 days, logistics ceased functioning. We received neither water nor food. ~ The helicopters were no longer able to evacuate the wounded who, after 3 days, ! numbered more than 300. When we were attacked, we could do no more, with - our water flasks filled with urine and dying of hunger. Men were falling like flies. They became cannon fodder. None of us had imagined anything like that. Now I understand what our companions used to tell us: 'Eritrea , swa.llows up entire divisions,' companions who at the time were the subject of uur mockery in the classrooms of the Milltary Academy or in the barracks." The fate of deserters is preferable to that of prisoners. They voluntarily surrendered to the partisans; and if they manage to gain their confidence, they can work and live in a state of semi-freedom in the rear, with the hope of regaining their freedom. Among them, I met Lt Tadesse Merej, age 38, with seven children waiting for - him in Addis Ababa. He was in the "Ogaden campaign" and compares the two experiences in this manner: "Here, it was quite a different matter. In the Ogaden, above all there were planes, artillery, armored vehicles, etc. Here, in Eritrea, once the cities and big roads were retaken, the infantry had to intervene, otherwise all the rest would have been for naught. But every time our soldiers attacked the Eritreans, it ended in extermination. When we arrived in Eritrea, everything was all right; however, in short order we became. aware of the situation and understood that it was useless, that we could not win this war and that we were continuing to die for nothing." Printing Plants and Hospitals The forces of Eritrean resistance is evident to anyone ~vho travels through the Sahel and to anyone received by the various departments; i.e., the 14 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY various "ministries" which permit the "partisan state" to organize its life. - Inevitably, visits take place at night, tiecause this big anthill, which liberated Eritrea is, seetns to be alive only at night. When the sun comes up and the air force begins to cut across the skies and drop explosives, napalm, phosphorous and fragmentation bombs, the anthill pauses and holds its breath until twilight. Paradoxically, the trying experiences endured in the five Ethiopian offensives stimulated the organizational abilities of the EPLF instead of extinguishing them. 'ftie most evident symbol of this progress, in the military sector, is th~ appearance in the interior of the liberated zones of Soviet "T54" and "T55" tanks and artillery pieces of the most sophisticated type. The EPLF has 5~ armored vehicles and tanks which were wrested intact from the Ethiopian army. Some cadres had to be sent to Syria and Iraq to familiarize themselves with modern weaponry. And the Eritreans often call upon the PLO for their training. However, progress is not only in the military sector. A resistance radio broadcasts in four languages from a mountain top in the Sahel while maquis _ printing plants supply books and a half dozen periodicals. Field hospitals and mobile health units now have sterile operating rooms and laboratories . for analysis. Transport vehicles travel to workshops or suppy points hidden in the most unlikely uut-of-the-way places. The anthill repairs weapons, casts spare parts for airplanes, fixes radios and watches and manufactures footwear and clothing. In training camps, among the thousands of young people, boys and girls, who continue to flow toward the Sahel, there is not one ~ recruit who does n~t have his personal weapon in operating condition. Cultural promotion groups entertain and cement this society which is destined to continue engaging in this communism of Spartan warfare for many years. During my stay, on Sunday, 7 October, I had the opportunity of witnessing the battle of Gureito from a mountain peak more than 2,000 meters high in the center of the northern front--that of Alghena--the beginning of the Eritrean counteroffensive. The objective of the battle was to drive the Ethiopians out of a line of crests about 10 km long which was threatening partisan defenses. ~ I can say that I witnessed a small chef d'oeuvre of military art. The Ethiopians, entrenched on these mountain peaks for over 2 months, suspected nothing. After having spent the night removing mines placed below the enemy trenches, the Eritreans attacked at daybreak, while tlie mountain tops ~ oceupied by the Ethiopians were still hidden by the clouds, as they were every morning. At the end. of an hour, the combined effect of surprise, Eritrean spirit and the precision of mortars had c~mpletely cleaned out the 10 km of crests. The Ethiopians had withdrawn toward the Red Sea, leaving oii the field 250 dead, 25 prisoners, and an entire arsenal. The following day, retaliatory strikes by airplanes and artillery had no effect. 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Ten days later, on 17 October, the partisan radio announced the first laige mil.itary oper.ation beyond the l~.nes: a small Ethiopian garrison was wiped out a]on~ tl~e Massawa-Asmara road. ldhen I leEt the Sahel, the morate oC the "antiiill" had ctimbed to seventh heaven. , EPLF Official Views Eritrean War Paris AFRIQUE-ASIE in French 26 Nov-9 Dec 79 pp 31-33 ' ~Interview with Isias Afework, EPLF deputy secretary, by Pietro Petrucci, date not givenJ [Text] In the EPLF, which has made guerrilla warfare an exact science, the ~ cult of personality has been banned. There are no portraits of leaders ' nur written or verbal praise, no difference in lifestyles. In 1977s in ' _ Eritrea, I had the opportunity of spending several hours talking with three "ordinary combatants"; on the following day, I learned that they were three ~ of the seven members of the Politburo. The writing of the biographies of the Eritrean leaders is an almost impossible task. About Isias Afework, - perhaps one of the most remarkable theoreticians of revolutionary warfare in ' Africa, we learn very little: he is not yet 35 years old; he is from Asmc;ra and has lived in the maquis for 12 years, since leaving the school of sciencPs _ of the University of Addis Ababa. He almost never travels, preferring to i= reread the classics of guerrilla warfare--which he knows by heart--rather ' than continually seeking new solutions to adopt. A fe*~a hours before leaving ' the liberated zones of Eritrea, I had a long talk with Isias. [Question] Is it true that the tide has already turned in your favor? ' _ [Answer] When a war machine set in motion by Ethiopia with the help of powerful allies frets and fumes, it is as if it had half lost. And the - Ethiopians have been stopped since January, since the t:~~ird offensive. During the fourth offensive, they did not advance an inch. In the fifth ~ offensive, which was to.have been "definitive," they suffered the worst of their defeats. Yes, the tide has turned. [Question] The Ethiopians number 30 million and you are only 3 million. Will ' you not wind up by being crushed? ' [Answer] If there is anyone with problems of troop numbers, it is the I Ethiopians. After a year and a half of mobilization to supply the front ~ with militiamen, the farmers are tired. Revolts against forced recruitment are increasing in the villages, and we understand why. They put a rifle in the hands of the farmers and promised them: no longer than 1 year of war. Now their pay as well as family allowances have been suspended. The economic crisis and the conduct of the war have swept away all promises. _ [Questionj Are you talking about the advance signs or a phenomenon already underway? 16 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY [Answer] Our side never stops evaluating the enemy forces, seeking to learn ' liow m~iny ~r where they are. Well, for tnany months, the effective cadres of t}ie Et}iiopian troops have tended inexorably to decrease. The "human waves" which they send against us are becoming smaller. So much so that they are now sending village se~urity patrols to the front. - [Qu~:stion] That takes care of the militia. What about the army? - [Answer] An army is not improvised. The militia serves as cannon fodder; however, it is also the natural reservoir of an army. At present, militiamen are asking why they are receiving 20 Ethiopian dollars per month while the ~ private gets at least 100. The farmers in uniform are rebelling and do not hesitate to revolt against the arnry which often thrusts them into our line of fire by means of rifle blows. There is general malaise. [Q~iestion] Two years ago, you described Soviet support of Mengistu as an "error." What do you think of it today? [Answer] We are trying to analyze Soviet foreign policy not only from our Eritrean point of view but also in the general context. Well, we must con- clude that in our opinion there is now a recurrent flaw in the manner in which the USSR shows its opposition to American imperialism: we feel that each ~ struggle should be examined in the light of anti-imperialist interests such as we understand them and such as those fighting for. their liberation analyze - � them. (Question~ Some persons continue to forecast a spectacular alinement on your part with China. E [Answer] All the rumors concerning our contacts with China are false. We have never had nor do we have formal relations with the Chinese Communist Party. Naturally, we are always looking for new allies; and we are seeking to convince the whole world of the rightness of our cause, even the Chinese. But we have not succeeded in doing so. The fact is that we consider the ~ foreign policy of China abherrant and that we do not understand much about - its foreign policy. The view of the world proposed by Peking is the most absurd ever proposed by a communist party. Even in our case, the Chinese leaders are only concerned about knowing whether we share their sma11 formulas, whether we are ready to mimic their slogans in exchange for a little aid. We have no need of such friends. We are content with the fact that other Chinese taught us by making their revolution. [Question] Does Af rica continue to ignore you? [Answer] No. It is true, in the past, we neglected contacts and diplomacy; however, that, too, is changing. The fact is that a single courageous = initiative marks a turning point. That is what happened when Mozambique broke silence and alined themselves at our side. And Mozambique knows how to recognize a popular struggle for liberation. Today, many progressive countries are with us: Guniea-Bissau, Cape Verde and Madagascar, for example. 17 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Even Tanzania }~as told us clearly that it recognizea the rightness of our cause. Others~will follow, we are sure. The Zimbabwe Patriotic Front has shown us its sympathy. The wall of silence, therefore, has been broken; and our natural allies are coming closer to us. [Question] Among the progressive Arab countries, Algeria has authorized the opening of a representation of the EPLF and is maintaining relations with your delegates.... [AnswerJ That is true. The PLO, Syria, Iraq and others are at our side. Algeria has never stopped recognizing our rights. That is the principal _ reason for the rather cool relations between that country and Ethiopia. , Algeria had even tried to open negotiations between us and Mengistu. And, in this way--Algerian comrades have told us this--Algeria was able to learn first hand that Addis Ababa is playing with words and continues to utilize ~ the "military solution." For this particular reason, Algeria broke off and is making ready to move from diplomatic-political solidarity to another more concrete kind of solidarity. ~ [Question] Do you think that the socialist countries which are supporting ~ the Mengistu government will change theiY position? ' [Answer] The arms supplied to Ethiopia have proved to be too sophisticated, therefore, ineffective in the case of the Eritrian war. What then, send them more modern arms? They would serve no useful purpose. There remains the hypothesis of total disengagement. I think that the USSR should take another look at its policy in the Horn of Africa. Our revolution was the downfall of Fl:ii]c Selassie, and the present government knows that ~ritrea is tt~e most immediate threat to its stability. ' Five Ethiopian Offensives Listed ~ Paris AFRIQUE-ASIE in French 26 Nov 79 p 32 - [Text) With the help of some of the principal Eritrean military leaders, I have reconstructed the course of the campaign to retake Eritea which began in June-July 1978. First offensive: Summer of 1978. Recapture of the cities (Agordat, Barentu, Tessenei) and the roads held by the ELF (Eritrean Liberation Front) in the western lowlands. Reopening of the Asmara-Addis Ababa road. Everything takes place as in the Ogaden: hammered by the air force, "saturated" by the - artillery and surrounded by armored columns, the Eritreans begin to fall back. Second offensive: November 1978. This is the first attack against the EPLF. Recapture of Massawa and Keren (but there, while falling back, the partisans will wipe out an entire column of tanks and capture 50 of them). Defeat of an attempt to land on the side of the Red Sea near Niassawa. 18 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200040038-4 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ Third offensive: January 1979. After a double successful landing on the coast at htarsa Teklai and Marsa Gulbub, the Ethiopians attempt an assault ~~n rhe~ hc~art ~F thc mountains in the Sahel. refiion. They have to hal t south u I N;ik I:~ cind r;~~; t~~ f thc~ smal l r i ty c~ C A1 ~;lienn . I~~~urUi c,lt~en:;ive: Marcli 1.979. `f'liis is the first serious setb.ick for Addis Ab,~b