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dam-l SA secures LHWP dam site/LS




This is off the CNN web site; note the reference to the troops securing the
dam site.



                        5 dead as S. African troops intervene
                        in Lesotho

                        September 22, 1998
                        Web posted at: 11:18 a.m. EDT (1118 GMT)

                        MASERU, Lesotho (AP) -- South African
                        troops crossed into Lesotho at dawn Tuesday to
                        quell weeks of anarchy. They secured two army
                        bases and the royal palace after heavy fighting in
                        which three soldiers died, the South African
                        military said.

                        Protesters firebombed government buildings,
                        looters were rampaging through downtown and
                        cars with South African license plates were being
stoned, reports said.

                        At least five South African soldiers were killed
and at least nine wounded, the military said.

                        The action, post-apartheid South Africa's first major
                        military intervention, follows weeks of opposition
                        party demonstrations over allegations of
                        election-rigging and an army rebellion that had
                        effectively paralyzed the government in this tiny
                        mountain country.

                        Lesotho, a poor kingdom of 2 million people, is
                        entirely surrounded by South Africa and dependent on
                        its neighbor's economy.

                        The troops, backed by eight helicopters, battled
                        Lesotho army soldiers siding with the opposition at the
                        royal palace, South African Broadcasting Corp. radio
                        said.

                        There also was heavy gunfire at the main army
barracks and the high court building, and other
                        structures were firebombed, SABC said.

                                                              An SABC
cameraman also was injured, and
                                                              four Lesotho
soldiers were led away as
                                                              prisoners,
SABC radio said.

                                                              American
citizens -- who number about 60 or 70
                                                              in Maseru out
of 300 in the country -- were told
                                                              to stay
indoors, said Ambassador Katherine
                                                              Peterson.

                                                              "There are
roving bands of protesters who are
                                                              out and about
who are targeting South
                                                              Africans,"
she said, a worry for Americans
                                                              because most
have South African license plates.

                                                              It was not
immediately known if other
                                                              embassies had
issued similar warnings to their
                                                              nationals.

                        The intervention force secured two Lesotho military
bases near the capital, as well as a dam
                        project, the South African military said.

                        Flights halted

                        Flights to Maseru airport were halted. The palace
gates were reopened, but there was no word on
                        the whereabouts of King Letsie III, mainly a
figurehead, the spokeswoman, Air Force Lt. Col.
                        Laverne Machine said by telephone.

                        She said that, contrary to earlier reports, 200
troops from Botswana had not yet arrived but were
                        expected later in the day. Six-hundred South
African troops, armored personnel carriers, attack
                        helicopters and mortar units were involved so far,
she said.

                        The military said the besieged Lesotho government
had called for intervention by the Southern
                        African Development Community.

                        "The aim of the intervention is to restore
stability as quickly as possible and to withdraw from the
                        kingdom of Lesotho as soon as this has been
achieved," it said.

                        The troops crossed the border at 5 a.m. (0300 GMT)
and were targeting the state radio building,
                        police, government buildings, utility stations,
military bases, embassies and airports.

                        Under apartheid, the nation's rulers sent troops
across its borders to countries that included
                        Angola and Namibia to take part in wars. But since
all-race elections in 1994, South Africa had
                        stuck to a policy of peaceful mediation in African
conflicts.

                        Weeks of unrest

                        The mobilization caps weeks of unrest by
                        opposition demonstrators who claim May
                        elections swept by the Lesotho Congress Party
                        were rigged. A report by a commission of
                        representatives from South Africa, Botswana
                        and Zimbabwe last week cited "serious
                        concerns" about the voting but did not suggest
                        the election be invalidated.

                        The Congress party won 79 of 80 seats but
                        scored only 61 percent of the vote because of
                        voting rules, to which the opposition parties had
                        agreed. The discrepancy is part of the source of
                        opposition dissatisfaction, Peterson said.

                        A distraught opposition spokeswoman, Mamello
Morrison, condemned the intervention in a
                        radio interview from Maseru.

                        "President Mandela, the president of South Africa,
has sent a troop of soldiers to come and
                        butcher innocent Lesotho (people) who are fighting
for their democratic rights," she said.

                        A faction of the Lesotho army rebelled 11 days ago,
deposing the military leadership. The new
                        commanders had refrained from restoring order in
the streets.

                        The intervention follows fruitless efforts by South
African mediators over the weekend to bring
                        the government and opponents together in talks.

                           Copyright 1998   The Associated Press. All
rights reserved. This material may not be
                                          published, broadcast, rewritten,
or redistributed.

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      Lori Pottinger, Director, Southern Africa Program,
        and Editor, World Rivers Review
           International Rivers Network
              1847 Berkeley Way, Berkeley, California 94703, USA
                  Tel. (510) 848 1155   Fax (510) 848 1008
                        http://www.irn.org
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