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Voice of America, 99-09-01Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] KOSOVO RUSSIANS (L-ONLY) BY TIM BELAY (ORAHOVAC, KOSOVO)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253344 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The deployment of Nato-led Russian-peace- keeping forces in Southern Kosovo is still being blocked by local residents. Tim Belay reports from Orahovac that there is no immediate end in sight to the standoff. TEXT: Local residents say they don't want the Russian peacekeepers in their town because they say Russian mercenaries helped Yugoslav armed forces commit atrocities in the town. They also say the Russian troops will favor the town's Serb population during the mission. The ethnic Albanian response has been to form a roadblock on a major highway in the southern part of Kosovo in order to keep the Russian troops out. The NATO-led peacekeeing force had been negotiating with representatives of the protesters to find a way to allow the deployment. But now, the talks are on hold. Major Arnold Shkollanach represents the Dutch peacekeepers currently deployed in Orahovac. /// Act Shkollanach ////// End Act ////// Act Shkollanach ////// End Act ////// Act Hasku ////// End Act ////// Act child reads poetry, fades under. ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] CLARK-SPY (L ONLY) BY JIM RANDLE (PENTAGON)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253336 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: NATO's top general says Belgrade had advance information about the alliance bombing campaign against Serb targets across Yugoslavia. General Wes Clark says Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic may have used the information to move his soldiers and police out of harm's way, but he will not confirm stories that there was a spy in NATO's ranks. V-O-A's Jim Randle reports from the Pentagon. TEXT: General Clark says Serb forces took actions during the Kosovo conflict that might indicate they knew where and when air raids would strike. /// FIRST CLARK ACT ////// END ACT ////// SECOND CLARK ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] SERBIA SPIES (L ONLY) BY PHILIP SMUCKER (BELGRADE)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253348 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= VOICED AT: /// Rerunning with correct CR number ///INTRO: Serbia has pardoned and released two Australian aid workers who spent nearly five months in prison on spy charges. Philip Smucker reports from Belgrade. TEXT: Two Australian workers with the humanitarian
organization CARE were released from a Belgrade prison
Wednesday and headed to Croatia for a flight home.
Serbian state television said President Slobodan
Milosevic pardoned Peter Wallace and Stephen Pratt in
recognition of the "great support Serbian Australians
gave to Serbia" during the NATO bombing campaign.
Mr. Wallace and Mr. Pratt had been accused of passing
military secrets, but pleaded not guilty to the
charges. It was revealed during the trials that the
two men had unclassified documents concerning the
local security situation.
Both men passed to freedom through the same border
post into Croatia where they had been taken captive
and in April. Australian Foreign Minister Alexander
Downer said they were on their way home.
The release appears to be part of a lessening of
Belgrade's anger over the NATO bombing raids that
destroyed great swaths of the country's
infrastructure.
With billions of dollars needed to rebuild the
embattled country, Mr. Milosevic has opened his
country up in recent weeks to a flood of independent
aid organizations that believe the Serbs deserve
reconstruction assistance.
A Yugoslav colleague of the two Australian CARE
workers, Branko Jelen, who received a three-year
sentence, remained in jail. He also pleaded not guilty
to the charges.
Mr. Milosevic appears to have made the deal for the
release of Mr. Pratt and Mr. Wallace during a meeting
with a delegation of Serbs from Australia and
representatives of a 300,000-strong Serb community in
Australia.
The state news agency Tanjug said that the Serbs from
Australia agreed during the meeting to help rebuild
Serbia.
CARE Australia and many other aid organizations had
been involved in providing assistance to Serbian
refugees both during and after the war in Kosovo.
(Signed)
Neb/ps/gm
01-Sep-1999 17:49 PM EDT (01-Sep-1999 2149 UTC)
[04] SERBIAN OPPOSTION LEADER (L-ONLY) BY PHILIP SMUCKER (BELGRADE)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253342 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Intro: Serbia's opposition leaders say that Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic is gaining politically from the continuing violence in Kosovo and the exodus of tens of thousands of Serbian civilians. The leader of the Serbian Renewal Party, Vuk Draskovic, says that he feels betrayed by the Western governments, which have not provided better protection to the Serbs in Kosovo. Philip Smucker reports from Belgrade. TEXT: Serbian opposition leaders say that ethnic Albanian violence against Serbs in Kosovo is only helping Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic remain in power. Many of the party leaders are already preparing for possible multi-party elections in Serbia as early as November. Vuk Draskovic, who heads the Serbian Renewal Movement, says that Mr. Milosevic stands to gain immensely from the failure of NATO troops to protect the embattled Serbian minority in Kosovo. He predicts a strong campaign from Mr. Milosevic and his followers. /// FIRST DRASKOVIC ACT////// END ACT ////// SECOND DRASKOVIC ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [05] RUSSIA / DAGESTAN (L-ONLY) BY PETER HEINLEIN (MOSCOW)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253332 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Russian forces say they have occupied a village in the southern Dagestan region that had been under control of Muslim militants for almost a year. From Moscow, V-O-A correspondent Peter Heinlein reports that Russian jets and artillery are pounding suspected hideouts used by the militants. TEXT: Russia's Interior Ministry says its troops are at a decisive stage in efforts to restore federal authority in Karamakhi, a Dagestani village where leaders last year renounced Russian rule and proclaimed Islamic law. Karamakhi, about 40 kilometers south of the regional capital, Makhachkala, has a population of about 10-thousand people, but most fled when federal troops arrived last week and announced they were going to retake the village by force. An interior ministry spokesman (Wednesday) said soldiers are making a house to house search in Karamakhi, while helicopter gunships and artillery pound suspected militant hideouts nearby. Russian and Dagestani authorities chose to ignore the imposition of Muslim Sharia law in Karamakhi last year. But after crushing a Chechen-led insurgency in Dagestan's western mountains last month, federal troops shifted their attention to other areas believed to be sheltering rebels. Karamakhi, known as a stronghold of the fundamentalist Wahhabi sect of Islam, was the first target. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, appointed last month just as fighting broke out in the Dagestani mountains, Wednesday said his government would use force against any Russian regions that try to break free of Moscow's rule. /// Putin act in Russian, then fade to... ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [06] E-U ENLARGEMENT - TURKEY (L ONLY) BY RON PEMSTEIN (BRUSSELS)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253334 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The European Parliament is continuing confirmation hearings on the nominees for the new European Commission. V-O-A Correspondent Ron Pemstein in Brussels reports the designated commissioner for European Union enlargement had some encouraging words for Turkey's prospects for future E-U membership. TEXT: Turkey has not been accepted for membership negotiations with the European Union. However, the man nominated to take charge of the E-U's enlargement favors making Turkey a candidate next December when European leaders meet in Finland. The designated Enlargement Commissioner, Guenter Verheugen, speaking through an interpreter, told a European Parliament confirmation hearing he believes Europe needs engagement with Turkey. /// VERGEUGEN ACT ONE / W/INTERPRETER ////// END ACT ////// VERHEUGEN ACT TWO / W/INTERPRETER ////// END ACT ////// VERHEUGEN ACT THREE / W/INTERPRETER ////// OPT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [07] NORTHERN IRELAND (L ONLY) BY LAURIE KASSMAN (LONDON)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253333 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Northern Ireland's political leaders remain divided over how the peace process should continue as Britain's Secretary of State for the province, Marjorie Mowlam, tries to encourage both sides not to boycott a review of the process next week. V-O-A Correspondent Laurie Kassman reports from London. TEXT: Britain's top official for Northern Ireland is urging Republican and Unionist leaders to return to the peace table next week. Ulster Unionists have threatened to boycott the peace process review. Mrs. Mowlam made the plea in a brief speech to schoolchildren in Belfast. She insists the Good Friday peace agreement is the best way to end Northern Ireland's violence. /// MOWLAM ACT ONE ////// END ACT ////// OPT ////// OPT // MOWLAM ACT TWO ////// END ACT // END OPT ////// HAGUE ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [08] N-Y ECON WRAP (S & L) BY BRECK ARDERY (NEW YORK)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253347 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Stock prices in the United States were up today (Wednesday) in what analysts called a rebound rally. VOA Business Correspondent Breck Ardery reports from New York. TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 10- thousand-937, up 108 points or one percent. The Standard and Poor's 500 index closed at 13-hundred-31, up 10 points. The NASDAQ index gained almost one-half percent. Analysts say bargain-hunters entered the market after four straight sessions of losses for the major averages. Art Cashin of the Paine Webber investment company says some major economic statistics due out Thursday and Friday should hold the key to the near-term direction of the stock market. /// Cashin Act ////// End Act ////// Rest Opt ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [09] WEDNESDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=9/1/1999TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11421 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 CONTENT= INTRO: Scanning the editorial pages as we begin a new month, the issues under discussion include: criticism of President Clinton for a possible pardon for jailed Puerto Rican terrorists; the money-leaking Russian economy; a new strongman in Venezuela; and peacekeepers leaving Haiti. Rounding out the editorials are thoughts on the suffering children of Iraq and the important vote in East Timor. Now, here with a closer look and some excerpts, is _____________ and today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: President Clinton and, by implication, his wife Hillary continue to take criticism for a White House offer to commute the sentences of 16 convicted Puerto Rican terrorists on the condition that they, among other things, renounce violence. Many papers, including today's Arkansas Democrat Gazette in Little Rock, are suggesting the motive behind the presidential offer is to give Mrs. Clinton's potential New York Senate race a boost with New York City's Puerto Rican voters. VOICE: Is anybody surprised? Against the advice of the Justice Department, against the advice of the F-B- I, against the advice of prison officials, and against the advice of the U-S attorneys in New Haven and Chicago who prosecuted them, sixteen Puerto Rican terrorists now have been (offered) clemency. By a president whose wife is deep into her unannounced campaign for senator from New York, where the Puerto Rican vote can be crucial. . what a bad idea it would be to turn them loose. TEXT: The big Arkansas daily goes on to speculate that the next person to be pardoned to help Mrs. Clinton's election chances would be a U-S citizen convicted of passing U-S intelligence secrets to Israel, Jonathan Pollard. Israel has been asking for Pollard's release for years. Now to the troubled Russian economy, where U-S papers are commenting on the huge outflow of money from that country, presumably from both private and official sources. The Detroit News is one of several U-S dailies commenting: VOICE: Now, it has been revealed that between four billion and ten billion dollars in Russian funds may have been funneled through a New York bank by top figures in Russian government and industry. U-S law enforcement figures claim the funds flowed through a department of the bank overseen by the wife of Russia's former I-M-F delegate. Separately, Russia's central bank deliberately misled the I-M-F about the size and location of at least one billion dollars of its financial reserves. . A country, like a person, learns accountability by being held accountable. It won't acquire the discipline to participate in capitalist markets by being given loans to pay off earlier loans. /// OPT /// A central bank that deliberately misleads the International Monetary Fund, which is in large part funded by U-S taxpayers, ought to lose its credibility. . The Clinton administration and International Monetary Fund should stop throwing good money after bad in Russia. /// END OPT /// TEXT: The view of The Detroit News. Turning now to South America, there are additional concerns about the anti-democratic path Venezuela's relatively new president, Hugo Chavez, is taking, seven months after his election. The Chicago Tribune writes: VOICE: After 20 years of steady progress toward democratic rule in most of Latin America, Hugo Chavez Frias' first seven months as president of Venezuela seem like a rerun of an old, bad movie. His supporters insist-and the U-S State Department concurs-that [Mr.] Chavez hasn't broken any laws. He's popular with around 80 percent of the public. Yet his actions point ominously to a return to Latin- style caudillismo-one analyst compared him to Argentina's Juan Peron-and to an undermining of key democratic principles.. /// OPT /// Venezuelans so far have given him a free ride. . But unless he devises a clear economic plan, and soon, [President] Chavez' honeymoon inevitably will sour. . How the imperious [Colonel] Chavez deals with popular discontent then will reveal far more - to his own people and to other countries in the hemisphere - about the true nature and intent of his "revolution." ///END OPT /// TEXT: The Chicago Tribune on the situation in Venezuela. Still in this hemisphere, there is also fear that the imminent withdrawal of U-N peacekeepers from Haiti is premature, and could be costly. The fear is that the island is ripe for more violence, due to the on-going instability caused in part by the deadlock between the assembly and the president. The Philadelphia Inquirer says: VOICE: Here's an example of foolish thrift: Saving 20-million dollars by pulling the last 450 American troops out of Haiti. . solving Haiti's underlying problems has proved neither simple, quick, nor cheap./// OPT /// Democracy hasn't taken firm root; educated expatriates haven't flocked home. The United Nations is still trying to train an effective police force to replace the one that did the bidding of dictators. /// END OPT /// . Two reasons [for the U-S troop withdrawal] are given, the cost and worries about chaos erupting as Haiti approaches a November election. Meanwhile, the U-N police mission is scheduled to depart November 30th. . the symbolism of the pullout is disastrous at a moment when, as one Haitian human-rights activist put it, the specter of anarchy is "in the back of everybody's mind." /// OPT TEXT: There is growing concern that the economic sanctions placed on Iraq at the end of the Gulf War are putting an unfair burden on the nation's children. The San Francisco Chronicle is the latest of several papers to raise the issue. VOICE: The plight of Iraqi's children should remind the world of the vicious and calculating nature of Saddam Hussein. A United Nations' report details that since the Persian Gulf War in 1990, the death rate for children under age five has more than doubled. . Still, this lamentable leader survives. This month, a new U-N session will reconsider the tough sanctions imposed on Iraq after the Gulf War. . there is no evidence that loosening the leash on Saddam will produce peace or changed behavior in a dangerous neighborhood. In addition easing restrictions on the Iraqi dictator hands him a victory for his inhuman survival tactics. TEXT: To the South Pacific now, and the election in East Timor. The Washington Post writes: VOICE: An astonishing 98-point-six percent of those eligible turned out to vote Monday in East Timor in a referendum on independence . People risked attack and braved intimidation to register their views. . The militias . remain the dangerous wild card for East Timor, a former Portuguese colony that was brutally recolonized by Indonesia two decades ago and has strived for independence ever since. . How will the militias . respond? The answer lies to a large extent with Indonesia, which can control the militias if it chooses. . Mr. Clinton and Indonesia's other friends overseas may once again be called on to communicate to Mr. Habibie how much is at stake, for Indonesia as well as for East Timor. TEXT: Lastly, new revelations that officials within the Justice Department may have kept Attorney General Janet Reno uninformed about the use of incendiary tear gas in the attack by law enforcement personnel on the religious cult in Waco. The Dallas Morning News writes: VOICE: .calls for the truth are coming from across the political spectrum, and the national interest demands that Congress help the Justice Department get the full accounting Ms. Reno has been unable to obtain before now. TEXT: On that note, we conclude this sampling of
editorial comment from Wednesday's U-S press.
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