JPRS ID: 10330 SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA REPORT

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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 FUIt UH'H'It'IAL US~ UNLY JPRS L/ 10330 17 February 1982 Sub-~aharan Africa Re ort p FOUO No. ?62 F~IS FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R000500030039-1 NOTE JPRS public~.tions contain information primarily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language - sources are translared; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackpts are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] , or [Excerpt] in the first line of each itam, 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 parent~zeses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the ariginal 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 cuntents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP dF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE OiVLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . JPRS L/10330 17 February 1982 SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA REPORT FOUO No. 762 CONTENTS INTER-AFRICAN AFFAIRS _ 'AFRIQUE-ASIE' Report on U.S., Angola Talka (AFRIQUE-ASIE, 1-14 Feb 82) 1 AN GOLA Angolan Ambassador Surveys National Situation (MAR(HES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 1 Jan 82) 8 Briefs New Opposition Group's Claim 10 CAME ROON Technical, Occupational Training Examined (MARQiES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 25 Dec 81, 1 Jan 82) 11 ! GAB ON ! , Social Measures Included in 1982 Budget , (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 18 Dec 81)............ 23 Favorable Trade Balance Shown for 1980 - (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 25 Dec 81)............ 25 B rie fs , Increased Oil Productioii Prospects 27 GUIVEA-BISSAU B rie fs Increased French Cooperation Discussed 28 - a- [III - NE & A- 120 FOUO] FOR nFFiCIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500030039-1 FQ1R (1~F1('TA1, i 1ti~ nNl.l' MOZAI~BIQUE Spectrum of Cooperation With France Reviewed (MAR~ES TROPICAUX ET 1~DII~RRANEENS, 25 Dec 81) 29 Briefs _ Po r tugal-EE C Conne ction Viewe d 31 Steel Salvage Pro3ect Planned 31 SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE BADEA Loan Will Selp Tb Double Energy Production (MARQiES TROPICAUR ET MEDITERRANEENS, 18 Dec 81)............ � 32 SOUTH AFRICA South African Foreign Minister on Mass Media lxiquiry (Michael Hornaby; 7IiE TIMES, 5 Feb 82) 34 - b - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500030039-1 FOR OFFIC[A,L USE ONLY INTER-AFRICAN AFFAIRS 'AFRIQUE-ASIE' REPORT ON U.S., ANGOLA TALKS PM111221 Paris AFRIQUE-ASIE in French 1-14 Feb 82 pp 7-10 [Simon Malley "exclusive" report: "The Secrets of tt?e Paris Meeting"--passages between slantlines are print~d in italics] [Text] Everything had been perfectly orchestrated. On 29 December, 3 days before the leadership of the U.S. Congress [presumably, House of Representatives] decided to examine, in its turn, the Reagan Administration's request for the lifting of the Clark amendment--which has banned any aid to the Angolan counterrevolutiona-ry forces since 1976--a request already approved by the Senate 30 September last year, [National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA)] Jonas Savimbi arrived in New York at the invitation of "Freedom House" (note 1) (extreme rightwing in- stitute financed by bodies linked tu the CIA and maintaining close ties with South Africa). "In our view there is no doubt that Savimbi's visit is directly connected with the campaign mounted by the White House to have that amendment suppressed...." Howard Wolpe, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Commi~tee's African subcommittee, immediately stated. Indeed, as soon as he arrived in~Washington Savimbi was received at the State De- partment, the White House, the pentagon, the CIA and Congress in turn. Over a 14-day period he met with dozens of prominent officials and private individuals, while the media were pressed by the powerful "Freedom House" "lobby" and by South Africa to have interviews with the UNITA le$der or to hold press conferences for him. But the action supporting him was not isolated. As if by chance Zairian Presi- dent Joseph Desire Mobutu [as published] was quick to foll~w him to the American capital, accompanied by his brother-in-law Roberto Holden and his aecomplices from the National Front for the Liberation of Angola [FNLA] who, with the blessing of some secret services--especially the American, Moroccan, South Africar., Egyptian, Gabonese and Zairian secret services--have formed the military committee of the - Angolan resistance. Thus th~ Kinshasa dictator, who had vowed to the late President Agostinho Neto and then to his successor Jose Eduardo dos Santos never to have any further direct or indirect relations with the Angolan counterrevolutionaries, received Jonas Savimbi and his accomplices at Blair House, where he was staying. He met with them three times. Two of those meetings took place in the presence of tunerican "experts and specialists." What took place in those meetings between the Americans and their interlocutors? 1 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500030039-1 FOR OFF(CIAL USE ONLY The best-informed ~ources in the American capital provided us with so~?e particularly significant elements. Let us not dwell on the positions adopted by Jonas Savimbi, which have been repeated by him on many occasions, especia~ly when talking with rep- resentatives of the imperialist powers and their allies: professions of anti- communism, anti-Sovietism and anti-Cttbanism: assertious that UNITA controls half or even two-thirds of the Angolan population, that if free elections were held it would win 60 percent c~f the votes, that most of its arms come from the PRC (550 tons in 1979?), from Morocco, where hut~dreds of officers are training, from Saudi Arabia, Egypt and some African c~untries like Senegal, the Ivory Coast, Zaire and Sudan: claims about the size of its forces, which allegedly already amount to 15 battallions - equipped with sophisticated weapons [AK-47 automatic weapons, SAM-7.missiles, armor- ed vehicles and helicopters], and about the possibility of turning his guerrilla war into a conventional ~aar, with cities being occupied.... _ However, what should be noted in the positions expressed by this self-confessed agent of the CIA and the former International and State Defense Police [PIDE] (note 2) (Portuguese secret service in the colonial period) is the care he takes in force- fully expounding the arguments and ideas of the Pretoria racist authorities on the settle~ent of the Namibian question: 1--The vital need to link Namibia's independence to the wit:~drawal of Cuban troops from Angola: "Without such a withdrawal," Savimbi stressed to Secretary of State Haig and Chester Crocker, his assistant for African affairs, "not only would Namibia - be turned into a Marxist-Leninist state or be forced to unite witti the People's Republic of Angola [P:ZA] but it would also become a base for aggression from which the securi~y and independence of the neighboring countries would be threatened and a hotbed of agitation and constant destabilization for the whole of Southern Africa." 2--The only way of preventing "this plan by international communist strategy" is to give UNITA a share in a national union government in Luanda, and consequently to ' insist on a"nati~nal reconcilistion" between the ~opular Movement for the Liberatidn of Angola [MPLA] and UNITA. It is these two objectives which Ameri.can diplomacy should try to attain. Savimbi's line of argument coincide~.�-could this be any suprise?--with that used by the South African leaders during their talks with Chester Crocker in Spring 1981 and then by the latter to the House Foreign Affairs Committee's Africa subcommittee 17 June 1981. But the Angolan puppet went even further. In reply to the American secretary of state, who asked him 9 December WilPy~h??" Yle thought it was possible that the MPLA leaders~ip might agree to a reconciliation with UNITA, "which we recognize as a legitimate political forc;~; which should be taken into account," Savimbi said that, although it was true that UNITA was prepared to open expluratory ta~.ks with the Luanda regime with a view to forming a coalition government which would not be very different from the one now existing in Zimbabwe, he did not think that the majority of existing MPLA leadership members would be prepared to envisage such a solution; "that is why I think that the American Government shoul.d play for tim~, allowing the discussions on Namibia and on a.ny normalization with the present : Angolan regime to drag on. For I am convinced that the state of war which exists _ today is bound sooner or later to lead to a deterioration in the internal situation which would facilitate both the overthrow of the regime and the departure of the Cuban troops. And if the latter leave Angola, INITA will seize power within 6 months at the most.... What I know is that the differences of opinion prevaiZing within the MPLA leadership team on ways of reaching a settlement in the Namibian 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE aNLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/42/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 ~~~u ~~rr:i~ ~~~R ~ Affair and on a reconciliation with our movement will ul::imately prove us right. This is our only hope of bringing Angola bacic among the nations of the free world...." Of course, the Zairian president' positions were not substantially different froTn those expressed by Savimbi. His hopes for a positive evolution in Angolan policy after President Neto's death have largely been dashed, he said. "However," he to'_3 President Ronald Reag~in who was accompanied by the secretary cf state, the def ense secretary, the "bosses" of the National Security Council and the CIA and by the - chief of general stai~f [as published; presumably the joint chiefs of staff], "the reports reaching me from Luanda are particularly worrying. The communists are planning new attacks on Zaire's independence, using as proxies Angolans and the - Zairians who have found refuge, support and military training in the PRA. The Angolan military forces, the ~ngolan People's Liberation Armed For~es [FAPLA], have huilt a whole series of military bases on their northern border in which thousands of Zairian ~~~.positionists are trained night and day by Soviet, Cuban, East German and Angolan c-fficers. ~'or those countries know that as long as Zaire is independent and anticommunist it will form an insuperable barrier to Soviet penetration into southern Africa." "And what suggestions can you make, Mr President?" the American Government chief asked. [Answer] The political, economic psychological and military pressure of all tYie free world's forces--inclL:ding those of South Africa which are, why not admit it, our objective allies--on Angola's Marxist-Leninist Government should now be stepped up. Granting independence ot Namibia in the present situation would be handling Southern Africa over to the Soviet imperialists and their agents. No solution to the Namibian affair sh~~.:l~ be envisaged before the last Cuban soldier has left Angola. And nothing could serve that ob~ective better than to push for Angolan national reconciliation in order to ensure the restoration of a sense of security in all that coutry's neighbors.... [Mobutu ends] 'After painting this background picture, it is easier to understand the significance and scope of the talks which took place in Paris Fri.day 15 and Saturday 16.December , between PRA Foreign Minister Paulo Jorge--brilliantly supported by Angolan ambassa- dor to Paris Luis de Almeida--and Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Chester Crocker. For more than 13 hours, and virtually without interruption, the two statesmen had a tough debate on two of Southern Africa's thorniest problems; \ Namibia's independence and relations between the PRA and the United States in the context of the war being waged by Pretoria against the progressive states of Southern Africa arid the Indian Ocean. It was the first time in the tense and explosive history of relations between the two countries that such a frank, blunt and incisive--and long--meeting had taken place, one in which the Angolan foreign minister's well-known coolness, calm and sen,e of humor contrasted with the clumsy attempts at education made to the PRA eiivoys by the "brain" of the Reagan Administration's African policy. = Hoo~ did that come about'~ In fact everything began last September wtxen General f1ai~, the American spcretary of state, was received, at his own request, by Paulo Jorge at his hotel, the United Nations Plaza in New York. It was their first 3 ~ FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500034039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USl: ONLI' _ oft~:;ial meeting and, s~nce it was taking place on General Haig's initiative, the two ministers spent more than 2 hours together. Although the discussions, despite their length, did not produce any practical results, the head of American diplomacy expressed this Angolan counterpart his government's wish to resume these bilateral talks not only in order to review Southern Africa's problems together but also to tackle the problems of no�rmalizing relations between the two countries. That was a direct and apparently unambiguous appeal. Some 3 months later, 10 December to be precise, speaking at Cabinda on the 25th anniversary of the MPLA's formation, President Jose Eduardo dos Santos gave a positive reply to Gene-ral Haig's appeal, while violently condemning American inter- ference in An~ola's internal affairs and asking the currE~nt OAU chairman and secre- tary general to lodge a vehement protest with the Americaz Government, which "is having an official meeting with a group of Angolan puppets." It was, the~efore, at the American Government`s initiative that the Paris meeting was held. In keeping with normal practice the Angolan Government planned to send to thos talks an official of the same rank as Chester Crocker. But as President Jose Eduardo dos Santos has decided to send Paulo Jorge to hand an important message to President Francois Mitterrand, it was decided that he would head the Angolan ministerial delegation in person. It was at the hotel intercontinental that the two delegations began their discus- sions Friday, 15 December at 1400 hours. They were to be resumed Saturday and to last all morning and evening. And to avoid having to continue them into Sunday, the two delegations even lunched together. Although discretion was the rule on both sides, diplomatic sources close to the two delegations have enabled us to draw a general picture of the proposals which Chester Crocker put to the Angolan delegation. These proposals show that the American leaders do not seem to have changed their state of mind or behavior. Still less their sense of the e~jective realities of the national, regional and inter- national situation. How does Washington envissage the normalizatiov. of its relations with Angola and Namibia's independence? ~iow does it view the r,astoration of regional security, an end to South African attacks on Angola and ::he other "frontline" countries? How does it pl~n to open a new era in relatio~.,is among the Southern African coun- tries? To discover that you just have to reread first the view expressed by its main agents in the region, Joseph Desire Mobutu and Jonas Savimbi, which we report- ed in the first part of this article. Second, you have to refer to all the state- ments made by "PIK" Botha and the other members of the Pretoria Government. But that is not all. We would not be doing full justice to the strategy of Ronald Reagan's African policy unless we cited the substance of what Chester Crocker said to his Angolan interlocutors. Those statements deserve the greatest attention. /We Americans want to move quickly, very quickly, very quickly/, Chester Crocker stressed. /If you accept our suggestions, things can be settled in a few weeks. _ ror instance by the end of March Namibia could be well on the way to independence, with the implementation of the process of South African withdrawal and our relations with the PRA restored and normalized. Not rendPred commonplace, but normaJ_ized and 4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R044500030039-1 tt11t l)bFll 1~1. l'~1~. IINI ~ developed. Toger.;1Fr Wasi:ington and Luanda ean upset the whole geopolitical MAP of Soutnern Africa. We are prepared to cooperate closely on your national rebuilding, to organize a conference of Western and other donors to guarantee you billions, no tens of billions, [of dollars]. We are prepared to give you real guarantees of our sincerity and our sincere desire to restore peace, and security in the region. But/--because, of course, there is a"but" with a capital B--/for peace to be re- stored there must first be confidence between u~ and among all the states in tre region. Now that confidence does not exist at present. Zaire is worried because you have bases directed against it (note 3) (Chester Crocker produced maps showing alleged Zairian oppositionist bases in Angola). Zambia is destabilized by internal - difficulties. The Congo is uneasy. South Africa is under attack from the South- West African people's organization and the African national congress, which you and other countries support(!)./ Why is there insecurity? The Angolans asked. Because South Africa is attacking, ~ assaulting, killing, massacring and violating the territorial integrity of inde- ; pendent countries, sending its commandos and mercenaries here, there and everywhere, even to the Indian Ocean to sow terror and destruction. Because it i.s illegally occupying Namibia despite 1,001 UN, OAU, Arab League and nonaligned movement resolu- tions. /No! It is quite simply,/ Chester Crocker asserted brazenly, /because there is internal instability in Angola cau~ed by internal dissension und the presence of UNITA, a legitimate movement, which you must take into account and with which you must be reconsiled and must include in the government. And it is because Cuban troops are still in Angola. You say this is to help you defend yourselves against the South Africans? Come on, now! They are there basically to protect you against UNITA, to ensure your internal security.... Let them withdraw and you will see how quickly peace will be restored./ The peace of the graveyard, Mr Crocker? But is Chester Crocker's position not at variance urtth that of the other countries belonging to the contact group? And is it not inconsistent with the assurances given by Secretary of State Haig to the Angolan minister of foreign affairs in September 1981? Have President Francois Mitterrand, British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington and German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt not stated and restated to Paulo Jorge and Luis de Almeida that they were opposed to establishing any linkage at all between the withdrawal of Cuban troops from Angola and Namibia's independence? Have they not said that even though they would like to see the Cubans withdraw from the PRA, they rPcognized that their presence falls exclusively within the province of the two states' sovereignty and that no state, no organization and no authority should interfere in order to dictate to Luanda what attitude it should adopt? /Of course,/ Chester Crocker asserts, /we do not Fri.sh to interfere in your domestic afL-airs. But we knou that the South Africans will not withdraw from Namibia unless Cu~an troops simultaneously withdraw in accordance with a mutually agreed timetable.... ~f we want to reach the third phase of the Namibian plan--that of disengagement-- ~ before the end of March, the disengagement of the Cuban troaps seems to us of funda- mental importance..../ 5 FOR C~FF[C[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500034039-1 ~oa oFF~c'1:11. UtiF: ON1.1' A dialogue of the deaf? An attempt to gain time with a view to continuing to de- stabilize Angola and its allies? And making it possible to strengthen the counter- revolutionary movements and countries subservient to imperialist powers in the region, like Zaire, in order to perpetrate new aggressive acts and seek to overthrow Luanda's people's regime? Undoubtedly. In any case, this is the view which now prevails in Luanda, where the Zairian and American allegations about bases contain- ing members of the Zairian opposition in the PRA are seen as obvious atte?!~pts to divert the Zairian people's attention from their serious domestic problems. The report prepared by Paulo Jorge after his return to the Angolan capital has sur- prised neither President Jose Eduardo dos Santos nor his colleagues because they know they can expect nothing from an American administration which sees South Africa as its privileged ally in Africa. And the views of the Angolan Government were clearly explained in a presidential message conveyed to French President Pranco's Mitterrand last Thursday, 14 December: First, the government of the People's Republic of Angola r~jects any suggestion that any concommitant linkage be established between any settlement of the Namibian question and the presence of Cuban troops in Angola. Second, under no circumstances will the government of the People's Republic of Angola agree to enter into negotiations with UNITA, a movement of traitors in the pay of foreign powers. Third, relations between the People's Republic of Angola and the nepublic of Cuba fall exclusively within the competence of these two independent and sovereign states. Fourth, Once Namibia becomes indeoendent, aggressive acts by South Africa cease and guarantees are given that the territorial integrity of the People`s Republic of Angola will be respected, the Angolan Government will enter into discussions with a veiw to determining a timetable for the withdrawal of Cuban troops from the country~ Nothing could be more precise and clear. And even though the message from the Angolan head of state was received "very favorably" at the Elysee, it has been - hinted within the entourage of the French head of state that "the American obses- sion about the Cuban troops in Angola could well lead to an unnecessary deteriora- tion of the explosive situation which already prevails in Southern Africa." For, as the Angolan foreign minister has so clearly explained, as soon as South Africa ceases to support UNITA and Namibia becomes independent, that counterrevolutionary movf~ment, which has solely been created to serve neocolonialist interests, will collapse li'~ce all such movements before it has collapsed. Furthermore, what mental aberration has prompted some people to d~aw at all costs a parallel between the independence of Namibia, a territory under international mandate from which Pre- toria refuses to withdraw, and the sovereign rights of an independent state like the PRA? Raising the question of a timetable for a simultaneous withdrakTal of South African and Cuban troops is tantamount to equating in a familiar manner the ag~;ressor and the victim of aggression. 6 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R044500030039-1 FoR o~Frc~ni. us~: oN~,ti, So ho~~ can you explain Chester Crocker's insistence on organizing more meetings either in Paris or elsewhere in February and March? "This is understandable," they say in Paris; "the isolation from African opinion and even from some important areas of Western opinion in which they Y~ave shut themselv~s up has induced the Americans to test tt~e Angolans' resist3nce on the one hand and to seek to acquire a clear conscience by showing that they are continuing their efforts, on the other. They hope to silence their critics in this way...." When do t:iey expect to mislead again? In any case, certainly neither the MPLA revolutionary militant nor the FAPLA combatants. Nor is it among them that they can hope to find gu~lible people, accomplices or traitors. COPYRIGHT: 1982 Afrique-Asie. CSO: 4719/537 7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R004500030039-1 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ANGOLA ~ ANGOLAN AMBASSADOR SURVEYS NATIONAL SITUATION Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French No 1886, 1 Jan 82 p 44 ~ [Report of press conference of Mr Luis de Almeida, Angolan ambassador to France, on 22 December 1981: "1981 was a Hard Year; 1982 Looks Better"] [Excerpts] The year just :;~dir~g has been difficult, but the outlook is better for 1982, said Mr Luis de Almeida, Angol.an ambassador to Paris, on 22 December at a press conference in which he surveyed broadly the economic and political situation of Angola. "Keep on Making Friends Unexc3usively" Naturally, Luanda would like to establish normal relati~ns with the U.S, government on the model of its relations with American multinational companies operating in Angola, especially in the areas of oil pxoduction--in Cabinda, where Presiaent Dos Santos paid a visit on 10 December--banking, and aeronautics. Angola's forc:ign policy has not changed. It was set by former President Neto and consists in contin- ually "making friends unexclusively." Thus, even though Angola thinks the time has come to establish bilateral relations " with the United States, it would b~ inaccurate, Mr de Almeida explained, to speak ' of a "diplomatic offensive." ; Cl.oser Relations Desired with France T}~e /1n~olan authorities wi'sh to welcome the French president on a state visit to Luanda and have already invited the French minister of Foreign Relations, Mr Claude ' C}ieysson, and of Cooperation and Development, Mr Jean-Pierre Cot. The Angolan gov- ernment wishes to "institutionalize"'its relations with Fr~.ince by signing a framework agreem~nt for cooperation, whi~Ti is now being negotiated between the two countries. Among other things, it expects to diminish the cost of French personnel, which seems quite excessive. For example. Mr de Almeida explained that, qualifications being equal, a Portuguese costs thr~e times less than a Frenchman. There are considerable areas in which French cooperation might increase, as Angola's needs are also consider- ~ble, especially in health, industry, construction, agriculture, research, and oil p2�oduction. Some French companies are already doing a large business in Angola, ~uch as Renault, E1-Aquitaine and the French Oil Company, as well as specialized institutes in coffee and cotton. There is room for these businesses to grow and for other F.rench companies to move in. Angola has already 6ecome an important custo;ner 8 FOR OFFICIAL U5E ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 rutc urr~~ ~�r. ~r~v~.t for France, whose exports reached Fr 18~ hillion as opposed to only Fr 395 million in 1980. On the other hand, Prenc~i imports o~ Angolan products are very low, between Fr 3-5 million in 1981. Measured Optimism for the Economic Outlook Economically, the soutfiern part o� Angola and other provi;ices suffered an excepLional drought in 1981, and this seriously affected the country~s agricultural produrtion. Angola has also had its oil prices go down, and these account for 75-80 percant of exports. As a consequence, its imports of capital equipment and food have been reduced. The outlook for 1982 seems to be distinctly lietter. Better-distributed rainfall - promises b etter harvests of co~fee, cotton, corn and manioc. The authorities have undertaken to reorganize distribution pragmatically the better to meet tfie popula- tion's food needs. - The Angolan government is placing great hopes on the discovery of new oil deposits. 'I'he French Oil Company is evaluating offshore oil reserves, which may come to 50-100 million metric tons. Foreign-currency income from gas production could start in 1982. . I;xl~orts of iron and diamonds should also show improvement in 1982, and the government is eager to exploit the mineral deposits abounding in Angola. _ The Angolan ambassador still did not hide the constraints that temper his optimism: the lack of managers and technicians, the threat of the South African army, and the difficulties inherent in tfie Luanda government's learning the ropes of administration. After all, Mr de Almeida noted, Angola fias just celebrated its 6th birthday! COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie, Paris 1982 8782 CSO: 4719/439 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R004500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ANGOLA BRIEFS NEW OPPOSITION GROUP'S CLAIM--A new opposition group in Angola, the Center of Democratic Independence (CID), has claimed responsibility for the sabotage of the PETR.ANGOL [Angolan Petroleum Company] refinery in Luanda saying that this was its "first operation" against the current regime of Luanda. Responsibility for the sabotage of the refinery, an action attributed to South Africa by the Angolan regime, had already been claimed by Jonas Savimbi, leader of UNITA [National Union for the Total Independence of Angola], the main opposition movement in Angola. The attack, which according to the Angolan Ministry of Petroleum, did not damage the refining facilities, was condemned by the African-Arab Solidarity ~ Conference held in Luanda. [Text] [Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French No 1884, I8 Dec 81 p 3382] [COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie Paris 1981.] 8796 CSO: 4719/391 10 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R004500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY CAi~~ROUN TECHNICAL, OCCUPATIONAT. TRAINING EXAMINED Paris riARCFiLS TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRAN~TS in French No 1885, 25 Dec 81; No 1886, 1 Jan 82 [25 Dec 81 pp 3435-3436J ~ext7 Sn this study which is based on several official reports and some personal statements, we will present first the different levels of this teaching and then we will summarize some fundamental prohlems. 1) The Different Levels Technical ~.nd occupational trainin~ in Cameroon has four levels: the post primary, the first stage of secondary, the second stage of secon- dary a.nd higher education. A) The ~ost primary level--It involves the SAl-t ~ural Craft Section7 and SM LDomestic Section] who~se aim is to contain the rural exodus and help young people to adjust to their original environment, while helping to improve it. In the SAR's, they teach carpentry, mas.onry, mainten~,nce mechanics, basket making, weaving and leather ~,nd wood- working. A general education is given,as well as an introduction to boolc~ceeping a,nd or~anization. Studies ],ast 2 years. The SM's repre- sent for ~irls what the SAR's do for boys. In 1978-79, there were 70 SAR's and 4U 51~1's which had about 4,000 students. These institutions are more numerous in the provinces of ttie Center-South (22) and North (14) than in the others, where it is . true they are less extensive. ~ t+lhen we know the difficulties for schools and secondary schools in - equippin~; themselves, to operate and have enough good students, we can im~.gine the problem of the SAR's a.nd the SM's, in spite of their insi~?nificant dema.nds. In addition, these institutions have been blamed for not providin~ a certificate (it was desired) an~l conse- c~uently not allowinQ a continuation of studies, ~,ncl especiall,y of not encouraging the area's development, by only concentrating on young people. 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY It is possible from now on to omit the SAR and SrT in the CET '1'echni- cal Training Schoo] provided you are not over 16 years old ~,nd. you have passed an entrance exam. B) The CET's--Their purpose is "to tr~.in the skilled workers and employees necessary ~or the country's economic life." This training is confirmed by the CAP ~ccupational Aptitude Certificate7. Consequently entrance is by competitive exam for candidates 16 years old at the most, who hold the CEPE ~`erti~icate of Basic Primary Studies7 or recentl,y a SAR or SM certificate. Studies last 4 years, including year of introduction anc7. 3 years of specialization. In 1977-1978, the following number of students were recorded: Commerci~,l Industrial Domestic Total ' Public 1,235 3,684 603 5,522 Private 17,982 4,796 2,310 25,088 Tot~,l 19,217 8,480 2,913 30,610 G~owth ~.s indicated by the f~.ct that the tot~.l number of students `vere 17,400 in 1970, 19 761 ~ic7 and 21,063 in 1974-1975. The CETI ~xpansion unknownf is the schoal which is solely industrial; the CETIC ~xpansion unknown7 also has a commercial branch; the CETIF ~xpansion unknown7 is a domestic training school for girls. Private denominational education has played a leading role, for ex- ample, the School of the Holy Gh~st at Douala for girls. The quali#,y _ of its teaching is generally superior to the private secular institu- tions. The public schools hav~ 66.7 percent.of their students in industrial trainin~, compared with 19.1 percent only for all Private scltoals. An o~fici~.l commentator can say: "This heavy concentration (of private educ~.tion) in the commercial sector is explained by the not ver.y expensive investment in equipment and in buildings in the creation of a school o~ this type." - In 1976-1977 there were 4~~ CET's, of which 13 were Public and 31 pri- vate; amon~ the latter 8 Catholic, 7 protestant and 17 secular; 10 - CET's ~+.re on the coast and 10 in the Center-5outh~ that is to sa,y in the most industrialized provinces. The specialities tau~ht are the following: industri~,l training: me- chanics, automobiles, building and TP ~ublic Works7, electricity, electronics, woodworkin~, textiles, chemistry, telecommunicati~ns; commercial ecluc~.tion: accounting, office-secretarial; domestic train- in~;: sewing, domestic science. On this technic~,l secondary level, a loss of students because of drop- outs is to be deplored, especially in the first 2 years. ~iowever, . 12 . FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504030039-1 HOR OFFI('IA1, l~tiH; ONI.Y the loss is smaller than in ~eneral secondary: 49.5 perce~it in techni- ct~l (first stage) compa,red with 65 percent in general secondary. The c~ua.lity of the teaching staff is thus judge~d, often with amazing - statements sucY} as: "80 to 90 percent of the te~ching staff lacks any teacher training" or moreover: "in one case out of two, the teacher has no practical experience in the trade he is teaching; in one case out of three, the teacher has a standard of training which does nat - exceed the C~'." '!'here are frequent complaints about the teachers' la.c)c of. motivation. These teachers numbered 1~688 in 1977-1978 or 18.1 students per teacher. 2'he ratio is better for public education: 13.1 students per teacher. ~ls re~ards materi~.l facilities, it is especially the C~TI's which lacl~ c~u~,rters, equipment and adequate grants. 1+Thether t}iere are - enou~;h shops or not, there are too many students per shop~ besides the Cameroonian standards are below the French standards: meclianics: ~.8 square meters per pupil, conp~,red with 9.4 in France; building: 7.5 square meters per pupil compared with 25.2 in Fr~,nce. Tloreover these standards are not respected. - "Un the level of investments, it appears that mechanics only has 21 percent of the necessary equipment, while for building;, they have cnl,y 4 percent of what would be neces;sary, in adopting foreign stand- ~ ards." The defects are sometimes d:~amatic: the CET in Bangangte re- ~ portedly "operated" for 5,years without electricity. The machines, ~ahen there are any, ~,re sometimes very old: lathes 20-25 years old; it is still necessary ~or devoted and competent teachers to maint~,in and repair them after working hours: Grants for operations are insufficient and late and this is true al.so ~or the technical secondar,y schools. The head of an auto mechanics shop told us in November 1981 that he had an operation~,l credit of 600,U00 C~'A francs for 50 students, or 12,000 CFA francs per pupil; he liad just bought 60,000 CFA fr~.ncs of soap (2 kilograms per pupil _ for a year) and 4 batteries for 14,000 CFA francs; he must also buy gasoline, oil, ra~s, spare parts etc. Consequently this shorta~e limits shop ~aorlc. Until recentl,y, technical training schools were able to enjo,y subsi- dies from enterPrises, deductible by the latter from the apprentice- s}~iP tax. Since these subsidies went more to some private schools, the ~overnment elimin~.ted tliis conveniencet it collects the appren- - ticeship tax and ttien provides subsidies, ciependin~ on the merit and importance of. t~ie schools. . '.l'hese schools would also h~.ve the o1~por.tunity of doing outside work, b~~t in the case o~f public schools~ they must return the amounts 13 . FOR OFFICIAL U~E ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504030039-1 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY received to the treasury. Some have gotten around the problem by bartering: "I will make some wheelbarrows for you, you will ~ive me some working material.'~ The percenta~e of success in 1977-1978 was 25.8 percent for the indus- trial CAI"s and 7 percent for the commercial and administrative CAP's. We again find the same percentage o~ 7 percent in 1981 f or the commer- cial and administrative CAP's in the coastal examination center. Thus the e~ficiency of the industrial CET's is higher and the percentage of success in the public schools is better. The public school has one passing student for three candidates, the private school, one passing student for four. To these two sources are added the free candidates (a third of the candidates), often the failures of previ- ous years. Nevertheless, a private school such as the CETI de la Salle in Douala stands out: from 1956 to 1975 out of 1,175 candidates who took exams, 749 passed or 63.7 percent. Lo the CET's train enou~*h skilled workers for the occupations in- volved? In 1978, the ratio of skilled workers to the working popula- ~ tion was about 0.3 Percent for woodworking trades, textiles, sewing, mechanics, electricity, radio repairmen, automobile and transport and 0.6 percent for buildin~ and zero for tanneries and boot and shoe manufacture. To appreciate these percentages at their true value, we point out that some of these branches emplo,y very little and that some CET(s have had to close the~r building--TP section''~r ~their woodwork- ing section. Nevertheless, a study of the riinistry of Nationr~.l Educt~.- tion m~l=es the followin~ interestin~ observation: "With ~.n aver~.~e annu~,l sh~,re of 0.4 ~ercent of skilled workers, the aver~ge level of technical d.evelopment cannot rise. It would be necessary to increase the number of skilled workers tenfold to observe a noticeable eflfect." Another finding: companies are n~t very enthusiastic about CAP hold- ers: "50 }?ercent of companies do not employ them and 88 percent of those who employ them are not satisfied: the CET Araduates are re- - proached for lack of efficiency~ poor quality o~ work, their demands and their lack of initiative... On ttie other han~, the students of same schools like the CETI de la Salle in Douala ~.re in demand and have no trouble in finding a job, at least until 1980. At the close of the 1981 examinations, out of ttie 64 graduates of this CETI, it was possible to trace 57 of them: ~ 16 found a job; 21 are continuing in technical secondary schools and general educational schools; 20 are not worlcing yet (5 months after the examinations). Consequently, we observe two innovations: the existence of a rela- tionship between the CET's ~.nd the secondary schools, which is very recent; a phenomenon of unemployment which corresponda, according to - school leaders, to a decline in the labor market and coi.aequently to slowing down of expansion. 14 � FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R004500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Preparation for the vocational license takes place mainly through evening courses given to CAP holders, who have a job. Training is both technical and general and it suffers from the same defects as the rest oP technical tr~,inin~; let us add to th~,t the fact that the Gtudents are tire~ from the day's work' that they are often absent to continue their job and it is understandable that the results are not very striking; in the examinations for the vocational license in 1980 on the coast, 23 candidates out of 134 passed, or 17.6 percent. C) The purpose of the LTS's ~echnical Secondary Schools7 is dual: "to provide for the training of skilled technical personnel and pre- pare the best students for higher technical.~.nd industrial studies." There now exists at least one LT per province: coast: Douala LT founded in 1948, (industrial and commercial courses); Bonaberi I~iultipurpose Seconda.r,y School founded in 1973 (by Canada); it includes both general education and industrial courses: Center-South: Yaounde LT founded in 1963; it is now a mixed secondary school with adminis- trative and commercial and nonindustri~,1 courses; North: Garou~, LT founded in 1977: industrial and economic courses. Since 1978, some CET's have been converted into LT'ss in the West at ~ Bafoussam; in the Southwest at Kumba; in the Northwest at I3amenda; in the I:ast at Bertoua; this with the assistance of the World Bank. Students with the B~PC F.lementary Certificate for the First Stage7 are recruited by competitive examination; in fact, the best go into gener~.l education. A LT headmaster tells us: "Our students come from private schools of all types." Besides the low standard o~ the stu- dents, there is a second handicap, which has now been reduced, since the CAP holders can participate in the competitive entrance examina- ~ tion. "It is regrettable that the old rule which allowed the begin- - ning of technical studies as early as the first form has been elimina- ted. In fact, the 3 years at the present time do not allow compen- sating for the laclc of technical bac~cground and acquiring sufficient kno~aled~e," ~.n offici~,l report says. Another excuse: technolo~ica.l tr~,inin_p, }ias become comPulsory in the first stage of ~!eneral educ~,- tion, but since it is superimposed on many other subjects ~.nd it ex- periences i;he s~,me Problems as technical training (equipment, teach- ers' qualifications and motivations), its theoretic~.~ aspect is more developed th~.n the pr~.ctic~.l applic~.tions ~~nd it is resented by many students as a useless imposition. - 2'here were 2,126 L`i' students in 1974-1975 compa,red with 1,502 in pri- vnte eclucation (ma.inly commercial ~.nd administrative courses) and 2,733 for public schools in 1977-1978. One f'inds similar situations to those on the CZ~:T level: more students in commercial and adminis- trative courses; che industrial courses are especially represented FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500034439-1 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY in public education, ~aith a fQw exceptions like the denominational industrial schools of Ndoungue (near Nkongsamba) a,nd Bali (near Bamenda). Consequently we take note of the industrial courses of the others. The economic courses include: G1, administrative methods; G2, quanti- tative management methods; G3, commercial methods. Studies in these three courses are authorized by qualifying examination (end of the sixth form) ~,nd the bachelor's degree, as in general education. ~+~e also find here the economic course B, classi~ied here under technical training, because bookkeeping has more of a place here than in France. ~'inatly, various levels of accounting studies: the examination for the D~CS ~xpansion unknown7, the certificate for senior accounting tec~inician (see below). Then the industrial courses. Studies in the E course ~,nd the F1 and F5 courses are also authorized by qu~,lifying examinati~n and the b~,chelor's degree: E, mathematics and. technical (level C~or mathe- matics); F1, technicia.n in mech~,nical construction; F2, electronic technician; F3, technicia,n in electrotechnolo~y; F4, technician in civil envineerin~ a.nd buildin~; F5, refrigeration technician. In the follo~vin~ courses, the stud~es end with the qualifying exami- nation, then a technician certificate: MA, automechanics; Mn, wood- working trades; CH, boilermaki~ig; GT, geometry-topo~raphy. To the credit of the leaciers in technical education, let us note the diversity of the courses: by way of example, the examinations last 2 whole months each year in the examination centers. As re~ards results, on the level of the secondary technical schools alone in 1977-1978, the percentages of success ~~ere the following (qua,lifyin~ ex~,mination and bachelor's degree): economic courses: 27.75 percent in G1, 35~6 percent in G2, 46.75 percent in G3 or an avera,ge of 34 percent; industriaZ courses: 20.8 percent i~ E~ 10.64 percent in F1, 58.4 percent in F2, 40.9 percent in F3, 66.6 percent in F4, 41.6 Percent in F5 or an average of 41 percent. The results indicate ttiat, on the whole, relatively few are called ~.nd even less ar~ selected, especi~,lly on the level of the in- dustri~,l courses: $9 Passed out of 217 candidates (41 percent). In Cameroon, there is a~?re~t disproportion between the bachelors of the ~eneral courses ~,nci tliose of industrial training; it is even truer in hi~l~er education: hundreds of ~radua.tes in economy~ law, letters~come out of the universities every year compared with a~ew dozen senior technici~,ns. The first ~,re Pinding a job more and more difficult. The relatively lo~a rate of success in technica.l tra.inin~ leads not a few students to repeat, which burdensthe educational system. 16 ~ FOR OFFICIAL US~ ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R044500030039-1 - F'OR Orr(CIA1. USE ONI.Y As re~~,rds the adjustment of those who passed, a study made in 1976-77 showed th~.t, out of 108 students ~�~ho passed courses G1 and G2 (conse- uently economic): ~nly 21 went to work; 45 are continuing the BTS - Senior Technici~,n Certificate7 (which is also an assigned ~oal of technical training); 38 joined the faculty a,t a secondary teachers' training college or in a business school; one went into computer tech- nology; two are unemployed; one is not mentioned. Consequently there exists for 39 of them (~aculty plus computer tech- nolo~y) "a forward movement, pursuit of a university type diploma," and "this hemorrha~e deprives the country of the best students it had trained in the technical field." The study referred ta sees two main ca.uses for it: poor understandin~ of the purpose of technical studies (they ~re considered as a roundabout way to rejoin general educa.tion); the fe~.r of st~.rting on a job, either because of a feeling of inadequacy or because of lack of. knowledge of vocational fields. In or~ler to limit this hemorrhage9since 1980, these gradu~,tes c~.n no longer join fa.culties; the measure was resented as a persecution, for they have many large schools available after the technical ba,chelor's de~;ree . We d.o not have any facts for the industrial courses,but only a few - findings. The teclinicians (NIA, F5 etc.) do not find employment easily in their branch, for accordin~ to Cameroon law, they should be hired first in the eighth category, while they do not have any occupational experi- ence~, which would place them above persons with proven experience; under these circumstances team work would be impossible. Second fact, technicians and bachelors in industrial courses ~,re em- ployed by oil companies ~or specialties other than their own, and at hi~;h salaries. A professor declares: "They are paid as much as us, while the,y are only probationers. Unce they are confirmed in their position, the,y are p~,id twice ~.s much, at least." Let us sum up ttte ~osition of enterprises. Many of them tr~,in their personnel and complain about the certificate holders hired: lack of eFficiency, inadec~uate quality of work, too theoretic~.l knowledge, adaptation too lon~;, exag~erated demands and lack of morality. The enterprises prefer those leavin~ the occupational trainin~; centers, ~�,lio, unfortunately are still not very numerous. An official document makes the followin~ observation: "'~~Then i;he enter- prises ~,re not directl,y involved with the educational process, they � ~ underestiinate the trainin~; ~;iven. rhis situation is the reflection _ oi a].~clc of cooper~,tion in the country. At Yaounde, 1;hey prepa,re 17 ~ FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY progxams in the dark without the presence of industrialists;they attempt to z~eproduce foreign programs, without taking into account enough the need. of the country. COPY RIGHT: Rene Moxeau et Cie Paris 1981 jl Jan 82, pp 31-32J - ~ext7 We are rendering below the second pe.rt of the arti.cle on tech- nical and vocational training in Cameroon, whose first part can be _ rea~i in NITI~i ~1AI~CH~S TROPICAUX ET M~:DITERRANEENS7 of 25 December 1981 - pages 3435 and 3436. I) The Different Levels (continuation) - ll) The higher level--we ~.re presenting here the institutions less known by the public at l~,rge, namely, ~:NSET ~econdary Technical Teachers 'rraining College7,the certificates of senior technicians and the National School of Technology. It is no doubt unnecessary to mention the National Higher Polytechnical Institute. 1) ENSET has been detached from the Secondary Teachers Training Col- ~ lege in Yaounde, but it still has not had its own buildings since 1971; a,t present, it is installed in one of the CETI buildings in Bassa, where CENAFUP ~ational Vocational Training Center7, Pounded with the help of the ILO, is also located. ~;NSET has two stages: one,which lasts 3 years,trains the CET student- teachers; the other,which lasts 5 years,trains the LT student- teachers. Each of these two stages includes two divisions: division of industrial methods and division of auxiliary methods for adminis- tration and the economy. It is recognized there that these two divisions correspond to the two important branches of technic~,l train- ing. The third year of the first stage includes teaching courses; likewise, ttie third to ~i~th' years of the second stage. This school has suffered ~.nd still suffers from a lack of suitable space ~znd equipment of its own; it has been hampered by a lack of teachers; thus it h~.s not been possible to create a"school spirit." ftecruitment of CLT student-teachers, division of industrial methods has been limited by the small number of bachelors in the F courses. It is a f~.ct th~,t this school h~,s not attracted students from the be~;inning, perhaps becf~.use of living conditions, which were consic~ered inadequate by the teachin~ staff,on the whole. The number of students enterin~; rose from 6 in 1971-1972 to 34 in 1977-1978. Anottier objection, no doubt connected with the laclc of its own equip- ment: i;tieoretical studies have been extended to a hi~h level and teacher tr~,ining reportedly has been ne~lected. 2) `1'here are two types of BTS: the I3TS f or the management secretar- iat, which is offered in the Yaounde L1` and which attracts mainly 18 FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY ~irls: the IITS for accounting and enterprise management, which is offered in the LT's in Douala and Yaounde and which attra.cts mainl,y bo;rs . The stua.ies las.t 2 years . In 198~~-1981, the BTS m~,nagement secretariat had 25 students in the first yet~r and 17 in the second year; there were almost as many for the bilingual option. As for tlie students in the BTS ~or accounting in Yaounde, there were 24 each year. There are 16 in the second year in 1981-1982 at Douala. We note that these two BTS are connected with the G1 and G2 courses; there is, moreover, a question of creating a BTS distribution which would extend the G3 cours~s. According to the leaders, the holders o~ accounting certificates find openings in priv~,te industry fairly easily. 3} ENAT ~ationa,l Institute of Technology7 in Yaounde is responsible' for"the trainin~, improvement, retraininat~,nd specialization o~ the staffs of land registration survey, rural engineering, civil engineer- ing ~.nd city planning�" Stage B trains senior technicians who are the direct assistants of engineers. Stage C trains technical repre- sentatives. This school works mainly for public administration. In 1980-198Z it was in the process of reorganization and had 344 stu- dents, including 6 girls. After this inventory, we will summarize some problems common to the various levels of technical training. II ) A Few riain Problems 1) The students--They face a not very favorable opinion about tech- nical training which is considered as inferior and reserved for the less ~ifted; technical studies are making the~ir debut under the sign of failure and rejection. If the openings are sufficient a.nd the - sala,ries suitable, this image can be corrected. To tell the truth, we h~.ve found th~.t tfie entrepreneurs distrust these certificate hold- ers; new rejection! In a,ddition, life in the shop or factory is less secure thr~n office ~~rork: we have observed that the certificate holder ~an fear goin~~ to work and. turn towards university teaching. Is.this situ~.tion not the c~,use of the resignation, l~.ck of initiative and responsibility of which the students ~,re sometimes accused? A LT headm~,ster sees another cause for it: the young people are taken c~,re of too long by their families, he tells me,thus a l~ck o~ responsi- bility. It is Possible to see another cause in the students' l~,ck of motivation: they are no~ attracted by a trade~ bu-t r~,ther by a social status; consequentl,y they are not re~.dy for everything to master this trade. 'i,hen the acceptance of the technical world is the result of a type of conversion which requires several ~enerations. For not a few oP the r~eopl.es of the Third 1+Torld, technology is more a"magic of the whites" than the product of gre~,t e~fort. The A~rican cities and countryside 19 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007142/09: CIA-RDP82-40854R040500030039-1 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONL`l still T~resent n, picture of technolo~;ical deterior~Ltion: t:~~ roads, buildin~~s, vel~icl.es, m~,chines are not regul~.rly m~,intained. Repairs - tind imProvements ~.re don~ sporadically ~.nd often come from outside or a forei~n enterprise. This environment certainly affects the stu- - dents. A bre~,kdown is not disastrous because it is the return to the traditional life w~ich is, not without charm. Similarly, the young Afric~.n does not live in an atmosphere saturated with technology; r~,re are those ~aho have played ~aith erector sets, Leaos or electric tra.ins; rare a.re those who have le~,rned to t~.ke care of t}leir bicycles. Guntrary to a young European, the Cameroonian of the same age who attends the LT does not have the money to buy parts to build himself a quartz alarm cl~ck or a transistor device: he does not have pocket money and the necessary parts are rare and expensive here. This fact and the environment cause the student to be slow in his studies: a teacher of electronics says tliat to do all the program he would need 50 hours besides. 2) The teachers--National education is making eff orts to improve the competence of technical education teachers; these efforts e,re not eliminatino the dissatisfaction of the teaching sta~f ~,nd results w}iich proceed from it: irresponsibility, absenteeism, resign~.tions. Thus, when II~TSET still ~nly had the stage of CET student-teachers, Canada (ACDI ~xpansion unknown]) trained 35 LT Cameroonian student teachers, often former teachers. After 5 or 6 years, 24 of these teachers moved into private enterPrises and only 11 remain on the job. One of them declares: "I am still here, ~or I ha,ve been waiting for 6 years to be reclassified in accordance with my certificates; then I would not rem~.in, unless I am satisfied; if not, I will. seek employment elsewhere." 'rhis situation is not unusual in Cameroon: offici~.ls w~,it years to be reclassified and they must be absent from their work for 15 days, several times, to go to Yaounde to speed up their file. 1`Iany official reports mention excessive administrative delays. There is ~,~;rowin~; disparity in Cameroon between the standard of living of professional workers in the private sector and tli~t of pro- fessional worlters in administration, particul~,rly those in teaching wliose ~zork is demar~.~in~. This disparity ~avors the c~dministration's corruption a,nd inertia. The salary of a secondary school teacher at tlie beginning of his career is about 120,000 CFA fr~,ncs per month a,ncl t}i~,t of a technical teacher still at the beginnin~; of his career is about 80,000 CFA francs; to these amounts is added a lodging allow- ance equal to 20 percent of the salary. Just as bonuses have been gra,rted in secondary teachin~, it has been proposed th~.t a system of bonuses be estab].ished for technical teachin~ and, at the present time we do not know if it }ias been approved. 20 = FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R044500030039-1 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY Let us emph~,size here the considerable assistance provided by French , cooperation ~vorkers to Cameroon technical training. 3) I~la,teria,l facilities--A LT headmaster admitted tliat with the rapid development of technical training, it is difficult to increase sig- nificantly the credit for each school. Overall, technical training's resources have developed faster than the number of students trained, except for the investment budget whic}i has declined from 1971 to 1973; moreover, this budget rose to 15 million CFA francs in 1973 for ~.11 public technical training, which made it possible quite appro- priately to buy a system of some importance. The total equipment bud~ei; for all technical ~,nd vocational training durin~ the Fourth Ylan (1976-1981)--including agriculture, the national civic service for participation in development etc.--provided for 15 billion CFA francs in buildings and equipment. '1'wo problems often recur in reports and conversations: the ?ge and backwardness of some installations, administrative delays in releasing moderate credits. Age and backwardness. The equipment is old and prevents instruc~~ion of students in recent technologies. Thus in rIA ~uto I`techanic~, , they do not have an electronic inspection system, so that the stud.ents _ learn understandably to be j~.cks-of-all-trades like in the "neighbor- hood garages." In mechanics, a milling machine with a. cubic c~�cle ~ and pneumatic controls is a labor~.tory curiosity. There is talk about ~ establishing television in Cameroon, bu~ the electronics teacher says ' he would need an addition~.I year to initiate the students. A profes- ; sor of electrotechnolo~y told me that Cameroon is 20 years behind and he adds: "The ~ap is widening witti EuroPe; and, nevertheless, they are buildin~ modern pla,nts here. Well, ea,ch time we are forced to brin~ in foreign technicians." That is not quite exa,ct, for in the case of Sonara (petroleum refinery), the future Cameroonian operators wer~ trained in Furope for 2 years, as well as other technicians. Administr~.tive del~.ys and lack of coordination. Here are a few facts: "at the Dou~.la LT, four milling machines out of seven were broken do~rn because of lack of parts, ~ahich did not cost over 200,000 CPA francs. In June 1978, the suppliers h~,d not been paid for the raw material used for the hachelor's degree examinations in June 1977.'~ i~x~Lr,?Ples of lack of coordination: "In coniiection wi ~h a gra.nt of creclit: b~T the World ~3ank for the physics laboratories of the Doual~, LT, t}ie arbitr~,r,y elimination of some items by administrative services m~,lces some equipment delivered unusable. ~'or the Bona,beri secon.dary school, same of the ec~tiipment delivered is not usable (60 Hertz oscil- lof7r~tiph) or short~,~;es of equipment make all trn,inin~; impossible (no en~;ine in the T1A section) 21 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R044500030039-1 h't)R t)h'N'it'IAI. l~tih: UNt.I But tlie responsibilities are not only on the part of the central ad- ministration; we could mention such a school where school equipment has not been maintained (numbers of tables wnd chairs were allowed to deteriorate in the sun and the r~.in) ~.nd where the students them- selves are assessed to buy a padlock to prevent their Property ~rom heing stolen. Conclusion This summary shows some positive aspects ~,nd indicates some solutions. Un the government level, we find a real desi�re to encourage tectlnical training although this desire is slow to be realized and an interest in clarity. To go further in this field, the National Aiinistry of Education has established a standin~ committee for the development of technic~.l trai.ning. Students in seconda,ry technical definitely increased, rising from 4,400 in 1960 to 57,000 in 1980, compared with 8,500 and 1$0,000 for = secondary gen~ral on the same dates. Nevertheless, thP increase of secondar,y gener~,l has been more rapid, since technical which ~Jas - 51.7 percent of secondary general in 1960, was no more than 31.6 per- cent in 1980. Certainly, the government would like for technology to increase m.ore rapidly. There is no simple solution in such a complex ~ield. It would even be deceptive to believe that there where qu~,lified and valu~,ble people are necessary, as well as considerable funds, the atmosphere ~ of technical training can be rapidly changed. The problems will con- tinue for many ye~,rs. It ~aill be necessary to increase expenditures for equipment,to reno- � v~,te the schoots a.nd au~;ment their stock of tools; also necessary to increa.se operatin~ expenses to provide more opportunity for Practical shop trainin~; necessary finally to reev~.lu~.te the tes~cher's function. It is desirable to improve cooperation between the teacher ~,nd the enterprises; it has be~n discussed for years in France; in Cameroon, the f~.ct th~,t ma,n,y enterprises ~.re still managed by foreiAners shoul.a no lon~er be an obstacle to this cooperation, f or there are man,y enterprises managed by nationals. If we want the enterj~rises to hire certific~,te holders, it is advisable to interest them more in train- ing, by consulting them about progr~.ms and goals; the employers' associ~.tion could have some influence in the creation and development of voc~.tion~,l schools; it would be necessar,y to moderate wa~e legis- lation; it would be possible to expedite the tr~.nsfer o~ some equip- ment frorn enterprises to schools; finally, if it is desired to spread the pra,ctice of tr~,ining courses, it is necessary to consult the enter.prises. CUYYRIG'rIT: kene Moreux et Cie Paris 1982. 8490 C.~U : 4719/463 22 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY GABON SOCIAL MEASURES INCLUDED IN ].982 BUDGET Paris MARCHES TR.OPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French No 1884, 18 Dec 81 p 3375 _ [Text] An official communique, issued after a meeting of the Gabonese Council of Ministers on 5 December (see MTM of 11 December 1981 p 3313), gives the following detaila about Gabon's budget for 1982 which amounts to 453.5 billion CFA francs. The budget, 10 percent higher than the 1981 budget, is broken down as follows: public debt, 120 billion CFA francs; operating expenditures, 132.1 billion; transfers and operations 18.6 billion; investments, 182.8 billion. In the development budget, special emphasis is given to social, educational and health expenditures as well as to agriculture and infrastructures. The various chapters of the development budget are: vocational training: 1.71 billion CFA francs (7.9 percent increase compared to 1981); national education and higher education: 11.24 billion (up by 7.1 gercent); health, 4.04 billion (up by 2.6 percent); social affairs, 850 million (up by 0.5 percent); subsidized housing, 7.08 billion (up by 4.5 percent); agriculture, 12.5 billion (up by 7.8 percent); energy, 14.13 billion (up by 8.9 percent):; roads and bridges, 29.26 billion (up by 18.6 percent). Social Policy Since the purpose of the government's social policy is to improve the living standard of all social strata, in the course of the Council of Ministers' meeting the head of state ordered the minister of economy and finance to seek additional funds to accelerate the implementation of the national housing program. Also, in an effort to lessen some of the social burdens of the Gabonese people, the government has decided: (1) Starting next year, to grant f amily subsidies to the poor; the method of pay- ment will be announced at a future date. (2) Star.ting on 1 January 19.82.,and applicable to.the entire national~territory, the rates for ordinary medium voltage electricity will r.emain frozen at the level of 31 DecembPr 1981. . ~ 23 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 tuk urh~i~ i.~~ ~~yr_ ~~Nl.~ "This measure consolidates the decisj.on made by the president of the Republic in July 1980, which is now in effect, to freeze all charges for low voltage electricity throughout the country and the water rates in towns other than Libreville and Port-Gentil. These measures...are mainly intended to lighten the burden of the Gabonese people's family budget and to encourage small and medium- size businesses." (3) To study the possibility of having SOTRAVIL (Libreville Transport Company) - purchase an additional batch of buses for the urb.an transport services. COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie Paris 1981. 8796 CSO: 4719/391 24 FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R044500030039-1 . FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY GABON FAVORABLE TRADE BALANCE SHOWN FOR 1980 Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French No 1885, 25 Dec 81 p 3438 [Article: "Balance of Payments Surplus in 1980"J [Text] Gabon's Balance of Payments Committee met recently in Libreville and noted a surplus of 20.3 billion francs CFA [African Financial Community] for the 1980 f~scal- year, as opposed to a deficit of 3.5 billion CFA in 1979, according to the account given by the Gabonese daily L'UNION. The volume of balance of payments transactions reached the recoxd level of 800 billion francs CFA in 1980 (up 30 percent over 1979). These quite favorable results were achieved despite large expenditures (232.5 billion CFA for the operating budget and 102.4 billion CFA for tfie development budget), as well as payback on the national debt. The surplus is due mainly to increased income from oil production. Despite a production drop of 900,000 metric tons [mt], receipts rose from 273 billion CFA in 1979 to 413 billion CFA in 1980 because of the combined effect of an increase in the price per barrel on the international market and the great strength of the dollar at the end of the year �ollowing spectacular increases in value. The amount of the paid, direct and guaranteed Gaboriese national debt on 31 December 1980 still came to 406.8 billion CFA. The 1981 budg2t allocates 270 billion CFA to partial retirement of the national debt. Gabonese exports other than oil (manganese, uranium and wood) had some trouble in 1980 because of the internatiional economic situation. Still, the trade surplus reached a record level at 390 billion CFA in 1980 as opposed to 263 billion CFA in - 1979. This increase largely made up for service expenses, which are still large, wheareas the overall positive balance of goods and services came to 202 billion CFA as opposed to 72 billion in 1979. Free loans removed a deficit of 26 billion CFA caused by foreign workers' sending their wages home. The deficit in the balance of services increased concurrently with increased expenditures due to o~l prospecting and development. 25 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500034039-1 NOR OFFICIAL USE UNLY The deficit in long- and short-term capital was much greater (up 152 billion CFA) mainly because of payments on foreign d'ebt and especially commercial credit to finance increased exports. The committee also noted that the 1981 balance of payments is expeeted to show another large surplus. COPYRI~tiT: Rene Moreux et Cie, Paris 1981 ~ 8782 � CSO: 4719/439 26 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500034039-1 FOR OFFICIAL US~ UNLY GABON BRIEFS INCREASED OIL PRODUCTION PRO~PECTS--Gabon now produces 7.5 million metric tons [mt] ~ of oil a year and could, "with time," bring production up to 10 million mt a year, said the 2nd vice-prime minister of Gabon, the minister of Mines a~~d Oil, Mr Etienne - Buy Mouvagha-Tchioba, in the journal PETROLE ET GAZ ARABES. The ~abonese minister minister expl.:Fined that recent discoveries have doubled Gabon~s (cnown oil reserves but that the government has not yet deci.ded on the production le+vel to be reached. Mr Mouvagha-Tchioba admitted that Gabon had had ~'some trouble" in selling its oil at $35 a barrel. Since 1 November the price of Gabonese crude h,,3s fallen to $34, " and Mr btouvagha-Tchioba thinks it is still too early to say whetlier this decrea~e "has.been enough for customers to increase their orders." As for relations with foreign oil companies operating in Gabon, the minister revealed that the Gabonese government's objective is to increase its share in tfieir capital from 25 percent to a 35-41 percent portion. Negotiations have been undertaken with ELF [Gasoline and Lubricants Company of France], which accounts for most of Gabon's production, and Shell. The Gabonese minister fiopes to reach an agreement before the end of 1982. ` ~Text] [Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDTTERRANEENS in French No 1885, 25 Dec 81 p 3438] 8782 ,CSO: 4719/439 , 27 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540030039-1 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY GUINEA--SISSAU i ' BR~EFS INCREASED FRENCH COOPERATION DTSCUSSED--General Joao Bernardo Vieira, president of Guinea-Bissau, discussed increased cooperation between Paris and Bissau with Mr Fran- cois Mitterrand in a 3/4-fiour conversation in Paris on 17 December. After tfie dis- cussion, General Vieira, wfio was meeting the president of France for the first time, mentioned that he fiad brougfit up with Mr Fraricois P4itterrand tfie possibility of "tri- angular cooperation" between France, Portugal and Portuguese-language African countries. This theme had been stressed by Mr Francois Mitterrand during his visit to Portugal last week. As concerns bilateral cooperation, tfie Aid and Cooperation Fund (FAC) ~provided 13.7 million French francs in subsidies in 1980 and directs its efforts - mainly toward restoring peanut production, wfiich is Guinea-Bissau's main source of foreign currency. The FAC is also participating 'in developing the country's hydro- electric resources and in taking a mineral resources inventory (especially in pros- - pecting for pfiosphates), as well as aiding fisheries. About 40 Guinea-Bissau citizens hold French scholarships, while about 30 French technical assistants are presently in Guinea-Bissau. France has been giving Guinea-Bissau wheat and corn in food aid annually since 1977. In 1980, this aid amounted to 1,~00 metric tons [~ntJ of wheat flour and 1,000 mt of corn. The Central Fund for Economic Cooperation (CCCE) has been aiding , Guinea-Bissau with loans since 1976. Loans amounted to Fr 8.4 million in 1980. The 3rd meeting of the joint France-Guinea-Bissau commission was held in Paris in March 1981. [Excerpt~ jParis MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French ~~0 1385, 2~ Dec 81 p 3426] 8782 CSO: 4719/439 28 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500034039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MOZAMBIQUE SPECTRUM OF COOPERATION WITH FRA~ICE REVI�WED Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French No 1885, 25 Dec 81 p 3449 [Article: "Franco-Mozambican Financial and Economic Relations"] [Text] The following is a summary of France's financial and economic relations with Mozambique as of the date of Mr Jean-Pierre Cot's visit to that country and the signing of a general cooperation agreement. (A) Public and private financing: On 23 April 1977 a group of French banks,including the General Company and"IndoSuez, and the Bank of Mozambique concluded a purchasing credit framework agreement. This agreement was made for 2 years and included a Fr 50 million credit ceiling that was later raised to Fr 75 million and Fr 125 million. This agreement was renewed in April 1981 for a maximum of Fr 175 million in credit usable till April 1983. Also, financial agreements were concluded in Paris on 18 March 1980. Tfiey included ~ a Fr 117-million contract (mixed loan) for buying 15 shrimp boats from France, opening a Fr 1Q0-million line of credit for miscellaneous purchases in France, a Fr 50-million to buy various food and agricultural products from France, and financing for two large contracts in the energy sector. At present these various lines of credit have been exhausted, and the framework of financial relations between France and hlozambique consists of the aforementioned interbank agreement and the balance of the mixed loan. Negotiations were undertaken taetween the governments of the two countries to set up a new cooperation agreement, which was signed in Maputo recently on the occasion of the visit by Mr J.-P. Cot (mentioned above). (B) Operations and investment: The development of economic and commercial relations between France and the People's Republic of Mozambique goes back to 1979-80. It is, then, recent in date and has so far been implemented by large sales of semi-finished ~ ~~roducts, agricultural and food products and equipment. (a) In engineering, nothing concrete has been achieved, but contacts and studies have involved the energy sector, transports and communications, civil aviation, telecommu- nications, industry and agriculture. (b) Equipment is being supplied and installed by the group CGEE [General Electrical Equipment Company]-Alsthom for the Cabora Bassa dam (2,250 megawatts) and, jointly ~i~c, ~talian company SAE [expansion unknown] it has been building the electric line linking this dam with the Center and 2o~rth regions of Mozambic~ue. It has also FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R040500034039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY been participating in buildi.ng the Mavusi fiydroelectric plant, T[ie Campenon-Bernard Company has been taking part in constructing a bridge on the Zambezi. (c) In industrial construction, the group Renault Industrial Vehicles has been closely involved in repair operations on Be"rli.et fieavy vehicles. The Cifal company has contracted to build a 15,000-metric ton [mt] capacity refrigerator warehouse in Maputo to receive potatoes and onions. (C~ Mining and oil production: The BRGr4 [xureau of Geological and Mining Exploration] and the General Geophysical Company are doing geophysical and photogeological studies _ for mineral prospecting in the North and West regions of the country. No mining is - being done at present by French companies, as this sector is the object of close cooperation between Mozambique and the GDR. However, some projects in this sector have been discussed by the Mozambican coal autorities and the French. Similarly, the national hydrocarbon authorities would like to bring France into seismic gas - exploration. French companies fiave not done any oil exploration in Mozambique since _ the country became independent in 1975. (D) Trade: In 1979, France's trade with Mozambique came to Fr 137 million of exports from France and Fr 53 million of imports to France. France was then the 8th largest supplier to Mozambique (4.1 percent of imports to Mozambique) and its 7th largest customer (3.1 percent of imports from Mozambique). The financial agreements concluded on 18 March in Paris between the two countries as complemented by the credit agreement o� 21 May 1980 on various agricultural food products, as well as excellent use made of the framework agreement on purchase credit signed 12 April 1979 have all contributed much toward improving the French position on the Mozambican market. Inde~d, French sales fiad reached Fr 215 million or an increase of 56.93 percent. This increase was due largely to capital equipment, as French purchases declined by 16.98 percent, amounting to only Fr 44 million. At the end of the first 7 months of 1981, French exports to Mozambique are considerably more than Fr 231 million, and imports amount to Fr 29 million. - French exports are made up mainly of 3 main groups, which are all up: semi-finished products and intermediate goods, 53.06 percent of the total; agricultural and food products, 21.59 percent; capital equipment, 18.4. percent. Mozambican exports also fall into 3 main groups: agricultural and food products, 48.42 percent; consumer goods, 30.9 percent; and raw materials, 18 percent. - COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie, Paris 1981 8782 CSO: 4719/439 30 ' FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R044500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MOZAMBIQUE BRTEFS PORTUGAL-EEC CONNECTION VIEWED--According to Mr Prakash Ratilal, vice-governor of the Bank of Mozambique, Portugal's eventual entry into the EEC could favor increased eco- nomic cooperation between Lisbon and Maputo. Mr Ratilal sees Portugal's access to EEC ~inance sources as possibly helping Portuguese industrialists overcome their investment problems, which are preventing them from putting into effect several eco- - nomic development projects in Mozambique. Mr Ratilal says that Portugal's cooperation should involve particularly the sectors of light and heavy industry, petrochemicals, cattle raising, shipyards, and the pfiarmaceutical industry. [Text] [Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French No 1886, 1 Jan 82 p 43] 8782 STEEL SALVAGE PROJECT PLANNED--Some Frenchmen may remember the slogan popular in 1939- 40: "We shall forge scrap metal into the steel of victory." This is what Mozambique intends to do now. The CIFEL [expansion unknown], in Maputo, has set up a project that should start about the middle of tfie current decade and eventually produce about ' S0,000 metric tons of steel a year. CIFEL plans to use as .raw material old, scrap ship hulls purchased abroad. [Text] [Paris MARCHES T~ROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in ~ French No 1886, 1 Jan 82 p 43] 8782 CSO: 4919/439 I ~ 31 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/42/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE . ~ BADEA LOAN WILL HELP TO DOUBLE ENERGY PRODUCTION Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French No 1884, 18 Dec 81 p 3373 [Text] The Arab Bank for African Economic Development (BADEA) decided, at the end of October, to extend to the Republic of Sao Tome and Principe a$5 million loan to help that country launch a pro~ect to increase its production of electricity. This is the first time that the BADEA is participating in a pro~ect in that country which, however, received assistance from the FASA (Special Arab Fund for Africa) on 2 occasions ($10 million to finaace several small investment pro3ects and $500,000 to help with its balance of payments) and several other contributions from Arab sources. The power pro~ect, partly financed by the BADEA loan, represents a total invest- ment of $12.85 million and its other financial backers are the IDA [International ~ Development Association] with $5.1 million, the Portuguese Government with $2.2 million and the Government of Sao`Tome and Principe with $550.000. Currently the country has an installed capacity of 4,270 kilowatts generated by public (81 percent) and prl.vate (19 percent) facilities. Out of that total, 2,358 kilowatts are produced at hydraulic power plants and the rest at thermal power plants. The total amount of electricity needed ia estimated to be 5,600 kilowatts which means that there is a supply deficit of 1,330 kilowatts. This deficit, caused by a 10 percent rate of growth in the demand, will be as high as 3,5~0 kilowatts in 1983 which is why the government urgently must rectify the situation and why it has worked out the current plan. The various aspecte of the plan involve building, in the industrial zone of Sao Tome and Principe, a new power atation equipped with two diesel generators capable of generating 2,000 kilowatts each; carrying out the necessary civil engineering works; building tanks which can hold 380 cubic - meters of fuel and oil; training techniEal personttel for the.power statior?, supplying various electrical equipments; giving technical assistance to and training staff for the Electricity and Water Company. When this project is completed, the result will be a significant inerease (almost I00 percent) in electricity generation to meet domestic and industrial demand. This project is the first answer to the problem of limited hydroelectrical power generation in the islands (particularly during the dry season and when the volume of the river flow goes down) and to the need to turn to thermal power. The ~ problem will have an indirect effect on the national economy and will enable the government keep the same rates as in 1978 for electricity and water supplied for household use. 32 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R004500030039-1 NOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY According to the construction billbook, the pro~ect which will be supervised by the Electricity and Water Company (attached to the Ministry of Construction, Housing and Industry), is scheduled to be completed in August 1983. COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie Paris 1981. 8796 CSO: 4719/391 33 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SOUTH AFRICA SOUTH AFRtCAN FOREI(~I MINISTER ON MASS MEDIA .INQUIRY PM0512~~9 London THE TIMES in English 5 Feb 82 p 8 [Article by Michael Hornsby: "Hostility to Press Plan Rejected as Hysterical"] ~ [Text] Cape Town, 4 Feb--Mr R. F. Botha, the South African foreign minister, today described as hysterical and premature the hotile press reaction here and abroad to the proposaZs of the Steyn Commission of inquiry into the mass media. In an interview with THE TIMES, Mr Botha maintained that the press coverage of the Steyn report had been deliberately "dished up in such a fashion as to give the impression to the reader abroad that the government intends to ki11 press freedom in this country", "Some papers here obviously expected the government to react immediately, and to clamp down on the press, and the government did exactly the opposite", Mr Botha maintained. "The present hysterical outburst is apparently based on frustration that the government did not react as expected". The Steyn report, accompanied by draft bills embodying its proposals, was tabled in parliament earlier this week. If implemented, the draft laws would, among other things, require all ~ournalists to be licensed by a statutory board of controls. This has been widely condemned as a means of imposing political conformity. i The prime minister's response in parliament to the Steyn report had been 'bery, ' very categorical and clearly stated", Mr Botha declared. "He said that the government could not give a conclusive 'yes' or 'no', thaf it , was a voluminous report, that it required study and that negotiations would take place with the press. Now what more reasonable attiCude can any government adopt?" It was impossible, Mr Botha insisted, for the government to indicate that its final position might be when it was still only "at the beginning of discussion with - the press Nor could he be able to express any personal view on the Steyn pro- ~ posals until he knew what the outcome of these negotiations were. Mr Botha's co~ent will do little to calm the fears of editors and ~ournalists here who question the motives of the government in commissioning the Steyn report in the - first place and are alarmed that the government should be prepared even to consider a measure like the compulsory registration of ~ournalists. 34 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The foreign minister's remarks tend to confirm the view gaining ground here that the government's initial strategy will be to try and persuade the press to exercise self-censorship while halding over its head the threat of legislation as a weapon of last resort. The government's main target is the inf luential English-language press, which is by far the freest in Africa and ~Ceeps up a constant nagging assault on the policy of apartheid. Pretoria would dearly love to see this criticism muffled. In response, newspaper owners and editors have set up a committee to draw up a plan for remodelling the existing, though largely ineffectual, South African Press Council. COPYRIGHT: Times Newspapers Limited, 1982 CSO: 4700/664 END 35 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500030039-1