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Voice of America, 99-08-16Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] RUSSIA DAGESTAN (L-ONLY) BY PETER HEINLEIN (MOSCOW)DATE=8/16/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252825 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Russian president Boris Yeltsin has pledged to take tough measures to restore order in the troubled northern Caucasus. But he has ruled out declaring a state of emergency. As we hear from VOA's Peter Heinlein in Moscow, Russian government forces in Dagestan are reporting progress in battling a Muslim insurgency. TEXT: On day 10 of the Dagestan campaign, Russian news agencies say troops inflicted heavy casualties on Muslim insurgents. The Interfax service reports that phase-two of the anti-insurgency plan has begun. A dispatch from the Dagestani capital, Makhachkala, says government troops have surrounded several rebel-held villages and are laying mines along escape routes. Helicopters and jet planes are also reported resuming air strikes on mountain strongholds used by rebels to raid government positions. The heightened military activity in the Dagestani Mountains prompted neighboring Chechnya to impose a state of emergency, effective Monday (today). But President Boris Yeltsin says there will be no similar declaration in Russia. ///Yeltsin act in Russian, then fade to...//////2nd Yeltsin act in Russian, then fade to.../////rest opt//NEB/PFH/PCF/PLM 16-Aug-1999 07:02 AM EDT (16-Aug-1999 1102 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] NORTHERN IRELAND - VIOLENCE (S) BY LAURIE KASSMAN (LONDON)DATE=8/16/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252829 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Britain's Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Marjorie (Mo) Mowlam, is in Belfast to confer with security and police officials about recent violence. Correspondent Laurie Kassman in London reports Mrs. Mowlam is checking on possible breaches of the peace process cease-fire. TEXT: The question is whether the Irish Republican
Army paramilitaries have violated the cease-fire.
Under the year-old Good-Friday peace agreements, any
political party linked to paramilitary groups can be
excluded from the peace process if the cease-fire is
breached. That means Sinn Fein could be excluded if
the I-R-A is judged to have breached the agreement.
Mrs. Mowlam is meeting with top police and security
officials in Belfast to determine if the murder last
month of a Catholic who allegedly informed on a gun-
running operation violates the cease-fire. She says a
final decision will not be made for several days.
The I-R-A says it did not sanction the gun-running
operation and upholds the cease-fire.
Mrs. Mowlam's consultations will also cover street
violence sparked by marches and protests Saturday and
Sunday in Londonderry. (SIGNED)
[03] N-Y ECON WRAP (S & L) BY BRECK ARDERY (NEW YORK)DATE=8/16/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252848 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Stock prices in the United States were up today (Monday) although trading was generally lackluster. VOA Business Correspondent Breck Ardery reports from New York. TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 11- thousand-46, up 73 points. The Standard and Poor's 500 index closed at 13-hundred-30, up three points. The NASDAQ index gained a fraction of one percent. Although the major averages were up, analysts say many traders turned cautious in advance of Tuesday's release of the U-S Consumer Price Index for July. A lower-than-expected Producer, or wholesale, Price Index triggered Friday's explosive rally. There was speculation the Producer index might influence the Federal Reserve Board Governors to refrain from an interest rate increase when they meet next week. But some economists say it is wrong to assume that the wholesale price index will carry over into consumer prices, especially since the consumer index contains prices for services, which the wholesale index does not. ///Rest opt//////HENDERSON ACT///////END ACT///NNNN Source: Voice of America [04] MONDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ERIKA EVANS (WASHINGTON)DATE=8/16/1999TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=6-11425 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-2702 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The battle over financial assistance to U-S
farms is the subject of many of today's editorials.
Other topics provoking comment include the U.S. policy
toward Iraq; the U-S response to threats made by North
Korea; and new statistics concerning AIDS.
Now, here is ___________ with a closer look in today's
Editorial Digest.
Text: The U-S Senate has voted to give billions of
dollars of emergency financial aid to the nation's
farmers, who are having to deal with drought and
record low commodity prices. Food exporters outside
the U-S are questioning whether the assistance is
being given for the sole purpose of subsidizing
exports of American farm produce. This has U-S
newspapers commenting on the government's intentions.
In California, the Los Angeles Times is certain that
U-S emergency aid to farmers will be an important
issue at world trade talks in Seattle this November.
Voice: The United States passed a law in 1996
to dismantle the Depression-era farm subsidies
program by gradually diminishing payments to
farmers.. The idea was that farmers would grow
crops according to market demands, not according
to the level of government support. But now
market dislocations have driven government aid
to farmers to levels unseen since the mid-1980s.
.Still, Washington will go into the WTO (World
Trade Organization) talks with a strong case.
U-S price supports are being made in the form of
cash payments to farmers after the harvest.
They are aimed at easing their dire financial
woes, rather than influencing their planting
decisions. .Clearly, the WTO can expect a fight
over agriculture. But it's a fight worth having
if the aim is to assure the world an adequate
supply of food at affordable prices.
Text: The Chicago Tribune in Illinois questions
whether the government's financial assistance is
really being given in the interest of "saving the
family farm".
Voice: Those mainly benefiting from farm aid
are the politically generous. and the corporate
farms that supply them - a fact certainly not
lost on Capitol Hill. .Many farmers are hurting
and Congress should explore ways to help those
hurting the most. But throwing billions of
dollars at the industry because Congress can't
break the habit is outrageous.
Text: U-S editorial writers are also commenting on
the U-S policy toward Iraq. The Washington Times, in
the District of Columbia, argues that U-S Senators, in
a letter addressed to President Clinton, are justified
in their call for immediate steps to re-focus American
attention on Iraq.
Voice: Not so long ago, toppling Saddam Hussein
and eliminating his weapons of mass destruction
was a national security priority to the point of
obsession. .Since the beginning of this year,
however, Iraq has fallen off the political
radar. Preoccupied with bringing another
dictator to heel, this time the Balkans, the
administration has clearly allowed our policy to
drift even further out to sea. .As the Senators
note, we have a lot of lost ground to make up
for.
Text: Also, reports that the Clinton administration
is offering North Korea a deal has editorial writers
worried. Newsday, on Long Island, New York, warns
that the U-S would be making a mistake if it decides
to remove the U-S trade embargo on North Korea in
exchange for a guarantee that Pyongyang will not
test long-range missiles.
Voice: Washington fears a North Korean missile
launch would generate an arms race in East Asia.
.Those are justifiable fears, but they cannot be
addressed by capitulating to North Korea. That
would simply tell every rogue nation that the
United States can be blackmailed into
concessions. And that's not a game that
Washington should play.
Text: And finally, although there have been dramatic
declines in the United States in the number of babies
getting AIDS from their mothers, the Chicago Tribune
points out that the situation is different in other
countries.
Voice: The vast majority of mother-to-child HIV
infections today are taking place not here (in
the U-S) but in the Third World, particularly
sub-Saharan Africa, beyond the reach of AZT (an
anti-HIV drug) or the medical infrastructure
required to take advantage of it. .AIDS has
been accurately described as the greatest public
health catastrophe since the bubonic plague. It
will take a comparably large and concentrated
worldwide effort before we begin to control it.
Text: That concludes our sampling of comment from
Monday's U-S editorials.
NEB/ENE/kl
16-Aug-1999 16:07 PM EDT (16-Aug-1999 2007 UTC)
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