Reuters AlertNet
Full site
Homepage |
Newsdesk |
NGO Latest |
Crisis briefings |
Country profiles |
MediaWatch |
Jobs |
Alerting |
Login
NEWSDESK
CrisisWatch N°42, 1
February 2007
01 Feb 2007 18:09:22 GMT
Source: Crisis Group
Seven actual or potential conflict situations around the world deteriorated in January 2007, according to the new issue of CrisisWatch,* released today.In the Occupied Territories,
assassinations and clashes between Hamas and Fatah reached unprecedented levels, leaving over 30 dead and further diminishing prospects of an agreement on a unity government. The political deadlock
between the Siniora government and Hizbollah-led opposition in Lebanon escalated sharply, with sectarian and factional violence erupting in several parts of the country. In Sri Lanka, fighting
intensified in the east, where government forces made major advances, including capturing the strategic town of Vakarai, which had been held by Tamil Tiger rebels for 11 years.Guinea descended
into violence as security forces battled thousands of demonstrators calling for the departure of the country’s ailing president, Lansana Conté. The situation also deteriorated in Uganda,
Nigeria and India.Two situations showed improvement in January. North Korea and the U.S. held surprise bilateral talks in Berlin, reportedly reaching a compromise that could ease sanctions on
Pyongyang and pave the way for further progress in the next round of six-party talks, due in early February. In Northern Ireland, Sinn Fein ended its long-standing opposition to the Police Service of
Northern Ireland, removing a major obstacle to the establishment of a power-sharing government.
JANUARY 2007 TRENDS
Deteriorated
Situations
Guinea, India (non-Kashmir), Israel/Occupied Territories, Lebanon, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, Uganda
Improved Situations
North Korea, Northern Ireland
(UK)
Unchanged Situations
Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Basque Country (Spain), Belarus, Bolivia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Burkina
Faso/Niger, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Chechnya (Russia), Colombia, Corsica, Côte d’Ivoire, Cyprus, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ethiopia,
Ethiopia/Eritrea, Fiji, Georgia, Haiti, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kashmir, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Liberia, Macedonia, Mauritania, Moldova, Myanmar/Burma, Nagorno-Karabakh (Azerbaijan), Kyrgyzstan, Nepal,
North Caucasus (non-Chechnya), Pakistan, Philippines, Rwanda, Senegal, Serbia, Sierra Leone, Solomon Islands, Somalia, Somaliland (Somalia), Sudan, Syria, Taiwan Strait, Tajikistan, Thailand,
Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Western Sahara, Yemen, Zimbabwe
FEBRUARY 2007 WATCHLIST
Conflict Resolution Opportunity
None
Conflict Risk Alerts
None
*NOTE: CrisisWatch indicators - up and down arrows,
conflict risk alerts, and conflict resolution opportunities - are intended to reflect changes within countries or situations from month to month, not comparisons between countries. For example, no
"conflict risk alert" is given for a country where violence has been occurring and is expected to continue in the coming month: such an indicator is given only where new or significantly escalated
violence is feared.
Search current and all past editions of CrisisWatch by using the CrisisWatch database.
To subscribe to CrisisWatch click here.
Read full report
AlertNet news is provided by
Email this article
Send comments
•
Sri Lanka conflict
•
Lebanon crisis
•
Israeli-Palestinian conflict
•
After peace, warmth comes to Lebanon during the cold winter
CWS
•
WER strengthens commitment to Middle East relief work
WER - UK
•
West Bank and Gaza – ICRC Bulletin No. 18 / 2007
ICRC - Switzerland
•
New clinic in Palestinian village eases life for hundreds of patients
WV MEERO - Cyprus
•
The UMCOR Hotline
UMCOR - USA
•
CrisisWatch N°42, 1
February 2007
•
FEATURE-Losing hope, Lebanese seek future abroad
•
Chronology of Middle East peacemaking
•
Hamas gunmen ambush Gaza convoy, five killed
•
INTERVIEW-Quartet must act now on Palestinian war risk -EU
Disclaimers |
Copyright |
Privacy |
Contact Us |
Feedback |
About Us |
RSS
Last updated:Thu Feb 1 18:11:13 2007