22 September 1989

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22 September 1989 Brin Africa South DTACO CORDIA UPROAR Use of school in OTA propaganda footage meets resistance ByDAVIDlUSH------------------------------------------ . PARENTS and teachers ,of a deliberately apolitical, non-r,cial school are outraged at the use of film footage of their college ID a DT A election broadcast. Some teachers at Windhoek's school and if she objected "why Concordia College have accused the didn't she send her children overseas Department of Education of allow­ to be educated by Swapo" . ing the film crew into the school A distressed-sounding Concordia against the wishes of the staff and in principal,Mr Gerald Barber, said the the know ledge that the footage being Department of Education had in­ filmed was to be used to promote the structed that the film crew be al­ DTA.TheOCpartment of Education lowed into the school, and that he had denies this. been told to "!"efer all inquiries to Speaking on behalf of other col­ them". leagues, one teacher - who wished In his six years as principal, Mr not to be named - said they objected Barber has striven to keep politics to the school being-tlmi for political' 6ut af the c ~~e'; purposes. Mr De Klerk at first did not see "What angered us is that they have anything wrong with footage of a been so insistent that we no not par­ school being used in a party political take in politics. Then they do just broadcast. He said he had an agree­ that. They are misusing education." ment with SWABC that its television Some parents also reacted angrily service could use film of schools as to the use of footage of Concordia on "neutral background material" ,and the DTA broadcast, which went out did nOl think that the Cooc:ordia footage on Wednesday night after the SWABC was being used in a non-neutral way news. One parent said the broadcast as any political party could have used gave the impression Concordia was a the film. DTA school. , 'I am unhappy that the paren ts are . The parent said she telephoned moaning. I didn't think that (the film acting director of education. Mr Adolf of Concordia) would cause a reac- de Klerk, to complain, only to be told that Concordia was a govenunent I continued on page 3 ANGLICAN Archbishop Desmond Tutu met Swapo President Sam Nujoma at the latter's Wanaheda NUJOMA· T"ljtT~UY ' AND NUJOMA MEETS MEET IN NAMBIA THE visiting Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu paid a courtesy President. call on the Swapo President Mr Sam Nujoma at his home in The question of intimidation, he Katutura yesterday. said, had fealured in his discussions PIENAAR with the South African Administra­ A smiling Mr Nujoma embraced sojl on his arrival as "the push-ups tor General, Mr Louis Pienaar, add­ SWAPO President Mr Sam Bishop Tutu in the front doorway of you did". For his part Mr Nujoma ing that he hoped the interests of Nujoma is to make a courtesy his house before the two men ex­ asked the Archbishop about the health everybody were being served. call on the Administrator changed greetings,and retreated into of his wife Leah who is not accompa­ Archbishop Turu said Namibia had General Mr Louis Pienaar today the house for discussions. nying him on this trip. tremendous potential for its own future at 09hOO hours. Archbishop Tutu and the Swapo The two men and their delegations as well as the region as a whole. In Election Director Mr Hage leader had personal things to ask one then resumed discussions behind reply to a question Mr Sam Nujoma Geingob said yesterday that his another before the discussions. closed doors before going into a said he saw the visit by Archbishop Bishop Tutu was the first to 'fire organisation would have liked working lunch. Turu was a practical demonstration the shots' saying Mr Nujoma looked When heemerged from thediseus­ to limit the occasion to a 'courtesy of support and solidarity by the An:h­ 'very young' to much laughter by sions, Archbishop Tutu said there bishop himself as well as the people call' but that in view of the serious both men. had been deep concern about the of South Africa. spiral of attacks on Swapo He then went on to ask how Mr suffering of the Namibian people He e)(pressed the hope that sllch targets, matters pertaining to Nujoma felt about being home at last from the repression of the govern­ visits would be forthcoming from security main be raised. to which to which the Swapo leader ment poli cy for some time now. other people. It was not clear yesterday as to replied that he was happy at finally Archbishop Tutu said he had been Archbishop Tutu was :l,;eoTllpa· who would accompany Mr having to "breathe the air he was looking forward to the time when the nied hy th e A~li can Rishop James Nujoma from the Swapo Election born in". Namibian people will be fTee. KauluTlla. Archhistiop Tutu's Sene­ Bishop Tutu also jokingly referred Directorate. Mr Sam Nujoma He declined to go into spcci fics or tary Mr Mall Esau ,md Press OtTicn to Mr Nujoma's kissing Namibian delails of discussions with the Swapo John Alkn. ~'Friday September 22 1989 . THE NAMIBIAN AROUND THE WORLD ... AROUND THE WORLD ... MOSCOW - Five top members of the Soviet leadership, including two prominent conservatives, have been ousted in the biggest purxe of the -R:eglster for ruling PoUtburO since Kremlin leader Mlkball .Gorbacbev caDle. to power in March 1985. ... : NEWYORK-A USAIR80eing 737 witb 61 peopleabcSardcrasbed In New York's East River on take-otr from ~ Guardia airport but at least SO peopl~ survived, pollee at the sce~e said. -SA ,objectors' SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA - Thousands ofVletDamese troOps drove out of the northern Cambodian town of Slem Reap at the sta.rt of Hanoi's ftDaI withdrawal, ending an II-year mlUtary presence in the country. Vietnam bas promised to pull out Its remaining 16 000 troops by ~ptember 20. launched MIAMI-More than 1000 United States troops beaded for the Caribbean lslaDdofSt Croix to try to end lootln& ~arked by Hurricane Hugo. The storm, which killed 23 people in tM Caribbean and caused mWlons of ANTI·CONSCRIPTION. activists aD over South Africa yesterday in Pretoria when he made his dcc:i­ dollars worth of damage, was heading for the United States mainland. baDded themselves together and launcbed a national reg&er designed sion . .. to facilitate contact among them aad ensure tbe spotlight remained He, however, ~ that mmy PARIS-AFrenchalrllnesaldltsuspectedabombblewupltsDC-IOover focused OR oIf"lCial harassment of $IIcb iDdividuals. an;Nnd the couiltry would face in­ the Sabar. desert, ldllIng 170 people, and noted strOIlg similarities with tense pressure both III home and al the bombing of a Pan Am Boeing 747 over Scotland last December. Thecanvener:ofyestcrday'smeet­ change in view of the reconciliatoiy work for today's pubJic stance. inginJ~burz,lawyerChrisde gesture by the state president, Mr Others at the press c:onfaallCle NICOSIA -SaUdi Arabia executed 16 Kuwalds Convicted ofbomblngs In Villiers,reveaJed that more than 780 F.W~ de KIerk, Mr De Villiers said described their expCriences in AD­ the HoIy~lty of Mecca during the annual Moslem pilgrimage fn July, people in JohannClburz, Cape Town. they ~ little hope. gola and Namibia, which led 10 Ibeir the interior minister sald. J>rctaria, Grahamstown, Dmban and "Nodting has changed. The laws disenchantment with military ~­ Bloemfontein hid stood up at simul­ affec:ting objectors remain as stiff u SCription, adding theY were apiaIt JERUSALEM - Egyptian president HOSDI Mubank ~ appealed-to taneous press conferences. ever. There have been no moves for . canscription in Sauth Africa _ I!u'H1 to accept bis proposals for IsraeU-PalestinIail peace talks but the About 75 objecsors attended the altt:marive ClOI1'UJlunjty work for 1hose abroad. Pa~nlans themselves have still pubUcly to adopt his plan. Johannesburg conference which was who want it Many feel that the ini­ Many ex~ cannot be re­ covcml by a wide range of interna- tials of the new administration have ported because of the CIIlCrJCIICY WASHINGTON - Sov1et foreign minister Eduardo Sbevardnadze, aChed­ tional and local m~ia. changed. not the substance," can­ regulations. uled to meet president George Bush, said he carried important propos­ "We have decided in good can­ tested the anti-conscription activist Meanwhile, it is reported fnIm als tha~ could pave the way to a treaty OD rec:iudq conventional forces science and of our own accord that He added that most objec:tors sup- , Grahamstown thatoa further 48 ob­ , in Europe. we cannot serve in the defence force . ~ altanative, non-mililar)', non­ jec~ pvb1icly lidded theirnamca to . Two -hwidi-ed and IDnety-foUr of us punitive methods of serving in the the reglSter. TOKYO - Brldsh prlme minister Margaret Thatcher told former Japa~ have completed our initial period of mny. ( Custodians of the register include nese prime minister· Noboru Takeshita that Western Bloc nations sertice, and 79 have also complelc<t Answering a qucry,Mr De Vjpiers Bishop Reg Orsmondofthe ~Iholic needed to support the Soviet Union's economic reforms, a British '.' some ofoW' camp liabilities, " said a rejec:ted accusations that they were Church, 'Bishop ~ S~y, of abe oIftclal sardo . StalCm.ent on behalf of the objectors. "a bunch of Communists" . Methodist Churc:h, Dr Franz AIa­ Mr De Villiers pointed' out that ,. Among our group are prominent bach of Jews for Social Justice, aDd ATHENS - Former prime minister Andreas Papandreou, the one-time . theirpolitica1 persuasions, back­ scientists, lawyers, doctOrs, academ­ Professor Lourens do Plessis of die popuUst hero who ruled Greece for eight years, hu been ord.ered to· growtds and responses 10 the call-up .
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