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Voice of America, 00-01-24Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] CROATIA ELECTION (L ONLY) BY RON PEMSTEIN (ZAGREB)DATE=1/24/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-258376 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Despite snow and heavy winds, Croats braved the elements to choose a successor to President Franjo Tudjman, who died last month. V-O-A Correspondent Ron Pemstein reports from Zagreb. TEXT: In more than six-thousand polling stations around Croatia, the voters ignored slippery streets and frigid temperatures to choose their second president. Several express respect for President Tudjman who died last month. But in the same icy breath, they say they now want democratic change. Croats made one change earlier this month when they elected a center-left government in parliamentary elections and reduced Mr. Tudjman's Croatian Democratic Union to a minority. They are completing that change by electing his successor. All of the leading presidential candidates promise to reverse Mr. Tudjman's nationalist policies that have left Croatia isolated from the European Union and NATO. When the votes are counted later this evening, none of the candidates is expected to win the 50 percent needed to be elected. That means the two top contenders will meet again on February 7th for a run- off election. The American Ambassador to Croatia, William Montgomery, tells V-O-A the indications are that Croatia is ready for the political and economic reforms that will change the Balkans. /// MONTGOMERY ACT ONE ////// END ACT ////// MONTGOMERY ACT TWO ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] CROATIA / EUROPE (CQ) BY RON PEMSTEIN (ZAGREB)DATE=1/24/2000TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=5-45300 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Croatians went to the polls Monday to elect a new president to replace Franjo Tudjman, who died last month. Because of President Tudjman's nationalist policies, Croatia has been cut off from assistance by the European Union (E-U) and does not have a partnership agreement with NATO. V-O-A correspondent Ron Pemstein reports from Zagreb that no matter who becomes president, Croatia is ready to take a different road. TEXT: When Croatia was fighting its war of independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, Croatian television inspired patriotic feelings among the people by showing a film montage. It started with the Yugoslav flag dissolving into the Croatian flag. Then the Croatian flag disappeared and became the blue flag with yellow stars of the European Union. That was the dream of a new nation. Reality was different. Under President Tudjman's leadership, Croatia built up its army and in 1995 drove out the Croatian Serbs who were living in territory that had been captured from Croatian forces in 1991 with the help of the Yugoslav army. The Croatian military action in 1995 restored Croatian sovereignty over all of its territory. At the same time, President Tudjman refused to consider allowing Croatian Serb refugees to return to their homes. In response, the European Union cut Croatia off from all of its assistance programs. The E-U now has 13 candidates for new members. Croatia is not one of those. But the death of President Tudjman in December has changed the landscape. In elections for a new parliament on January 3rd, Mr. Tudjman's Croatian Democratic Union was reduced to a minority. The new government has announced plans to reform Croatia's political and economic structures to make it more acceptable to Europe. The leading candidates to replace President Tudjman all promise to support moves to end Croatia's isolation from the European Union. The president of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, visited Zagreb on January 14th to meet the new Prime Minister, Ivica Racan. He says E-U membership for Croatia was not discussed at that meeting but the European Union is ready to help. /// PRODI ACT ////// END ACT ////// LEVI ACT ////// END ACT ////// CUCIC ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] TURKEY / HIZBULLAH (L ONLY) BY AMBERIN ZAMAN (ANKARA)DATE=1/24/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-258379 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Turkey's influential military is denying allegations that it had links with an armed pro- Islamic militant group. As Amberin Zaman reports from Ankara, the group is said to have carried out the murders of at least 33 people whose bodies were found during the past week. TEXT: Turkish police on Monday unearthed two more
bodies of people who were believed to have been
abducted, tortured, and slain by members of a shadowy
armed Islamic group known as Hizbullah. The bodies
were discovered in the southern cities of Adana and
Tarsus.
During the past week, Turkish police recovered the
rotting corpses of victims of the group in houses in
Istanbul, Ankara, and the central Anatolian city of
Konya.
Authorities say many of the bodies bore marks of
torture. Some had obviously been buried alive, their
hands and feet tied behind their back, their bodies
naked.
The victims included an Islamist feminist writer with
liberal views, Konca Kuris, who was reported missing
two years ago.
Hizbullah is believed to have been created in the mid
1980's at the height of an armed separatist Kurdish
rebellion waged by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers
Party known as the P-K-K.
Hizbullah declared war on the P-K-K because of its
(the P-K-K's) Marxist ideology, saying it wanted an
independent Kurdish state based on Islamic principle
for the country's estimated 12-million Kurds.
There have been widespread allegations in the
mainstream Turkish press that Hizbullah was encouraged
by, if not actually linked to, rogue elements within
the Turkish security apparatus who supported the
group's attacks against Kurdish nationalists. Those
allegations were forcefully rejected by the Turkish
military which called the charges "slander devoid of
sense or logic."
Turkish officials say Hizbullah is receiving arms and
training from neighboring Iran and could be
responsible for the murders of several leading Turkish
pro-secular academics and journalists in recent years.
The bodies uncovered over the past week, however, are
thought to belong mostly to Kurdish businessmen with
pro-Islamic leanings, who refused to pay protection
money to Hizbullah. (Signed)
[04] FRANCE / GERMANY SCANDAL (L ONLY) BY PAUL MILLER (PARIS)DATE=1/24/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-258369 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The political funding scandal in Germany has spread to France. Allegations have been made that a French government-owned oil company gave millions of dollars to the party of then German Chancellor Helmut Kohl. As Paul Miller reports from Paris, investigators were already looking at payments the ELF-Aquitaine oil company may have made to the Germans. TEXT: A joint investigation by television networks in
France and Germany alleges that ELF made a 15-million
dollar contribution to the Christian Democratic Party
on the express order of the late French President
Francois Mitterand.
The report quoted sources close to the late President
as saying the money was not intended as a bribe, but
rather to serve French interests in Europe.
At the time, France considered its alliance with
Germany, to be vital -- both as a basis for European
security and as a means of keeping Germany's focus on
western Europe, rather than the new democracies of the
east. President Mitterand had a close relationship
with Chancellor Kohl and wanted it to continue.
The report says the payments were part of the
commissions that ELF paid for the right to purchase an
oil refinery in the former East Germany. Those
commissions totaled 44-million dollars and have been
the subject of investigations by French and Swiss
magistrates for some time.
The "LeMonde" newspaper quotes what it says are French
and German intermediaries as saying Chancellor Kohl
asked for the payments through a company run by one of
his close political advisors. Mr. Kohl's spokesman
denies the reports which he called part of a campaign
of character assassination. The ELF Company declined
comment.
But the French newspaper "le Figaro" said it suspects
the accusations are true. The paper said it was a
different era in 1994 -- one when Germany's commitment
to Europe was not certain, and when its chancellor was
ready to use any means to achieve his goal of a united
and prosperous Germany. (SIGNED)
[05] GERMANY SCANDAL (L-ONLY) BY JONATHAN BRAUDE (BERLIN)DATE=1/24/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-258378 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: After hours of debate behind closed doors, the leadership of Germany's Christian Democratic Union - or C-D-U - has said former Chancellor Helmut Kohl would not be taken to court to force him to break a silence over secret bank accounts, which have damaged the party's reputation since November. Jonathan Braude has this report from Berlin. TEXT: Almost two hours behind schedule, the German opposition Christian Democratic Union came out with the statement the country had been waiting for. Former Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who has already been forced to resign as honorary chairman of the party and is under pressure in some quarters to resign his seat in parliament, will not be taken to court. Political observers said the C-D-U came to the only conclusion it believed could keep the party together. His successor as C-D-U chairman, Wolfgang Schaeuble, described Mr. Kohl's silence as unacceptable and a breach, not only of German law, but of the principles of internal party democracy. Yet the decision was taken to put legal pressure, not on the former Chancellor, but on the former party auditor, Horst Weyrauch. Every possible legal means would be used to get him to shed more light on where the money had come from. /// OPT ///NEB/JB/GE/KL 24-Jan-2000 13:56 PM EDT (24-Jan-2000 1856 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [06] MONDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=1/24/2000TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11646 CONTENT= INTRO: The first formal event of the 2000 election occurs today, with the Iowa caucuses, and many editorial pages are commenting on the caucuses. There is also interest in improving relations between Greece and Turkey, and a tough speech at the United Nations last week by one of its strongest critics, North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms. Another topic being discussed this Monday is the political donation scandal in Germany. Now, here is ____________with a closer look and some excerpts in today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: After months of campaigning, the presidential race finally has its first official vote today in Iowa, where a comparatively small group of the state's registered voters will gather in clusters all over the state and argue over whom to support for president. The Los Angeles Times is glad the "real start" has finally come. VOICE: The two-thousand run for the White House begins for real today as 150-thousand or so Iowans trudge through the snow to attend precinct caucuses and register their support for Democratic and Republican candidates. The race for the presidential nominations started earlier than ever and could - don't blink - be over by the time California ballots are counted March seventh. Of course, the winners in Iowa, and in New Hampshire's primary on February first, will not necessarily become the Democratic and Republican presidential nominees. But these states can wield enormous influence on the selection process. TEXT: That these two, mostly rural, mostly white populated states do wield such influence, far disproportionate to their size or population, is bothering USA Today, the big, national, daily, published in a Washington, D-C suburb. VOICE: ... for all of the attention being heaped on Iowa, fewer than 200-thousand Iowans of both parties are expected to turn out. That's less than seven percent of the population in a single, unrepresentative state where residents are better educated, older and whiter than the country at large. /// OPT ///TEXT: Today's Washington Times sums up how crazily the results of tonight's caucuses can be interpreted this way: VOICE: ... The lesson today's candidates ... should draw from the results: Failure to meet expectations can doom a promising candidacy, but meeting or exceeding expectations in no way means victory in November. TEXT: Internationally, today's Los Angeles Times is pleased at the warming relations between two long- hostile neighbors on NATO's southern flank. VOICE: Peace is breaking out ... with longtime Aegean Sea adversaries Greece and Turkey promising to enter a "new era" of friendly relations. Cooperation between the two countries, which came close to a war less than four years ago, is significant and may well hold the key to the resolution of territorial disputes in the Aegean and the reunification of Cyprus. ... Icy relations between Turkey and Greece showed the first significant signs of thawing last August when a devastating earthquake in Turkey triggered an outpouring of sympathy in Greece, and Turks later reciprocated when Greece was struck by an earthquake. TEXT: Comment continues, in this case from the Washington Times, about the political money scandal in Germany that has seen former Chancellor Helmut Kohl fall from grace within his party. VOICE: Political housekeeping in Germany's Christian Democratic Union (C-D-U) looks more like Hurricane Floyd these days than the honest, orderly process for which Germans have been known. The opposition party's attempt to deal with allegations of campaign-finance wrongdoing has generated silence, resignation and worse from some of the party's key leaders. Last week their leader of 25 years, former Chancellor Helmut Kohl, stepped down from his voluntary chairmanship of the C-D-U because of the growing scandal. Then came the news that the C-D-U-s chief financial officer for the parliamentary delegation had hanged himself. ... If nothing else ... the ordeal has shown Germany and the world that anyone can fall prey to dishonest tactics - - even chancellors. TEXT: Still in Europe, today's Wall Street Journal laments Vladimir Putin's surprise alignment with the Communists last week in the Duma, Russia's Lower House of parliament, and suggests it may show his true political colors. VOICE: The kindest interpretation of Mr. Putin's stunning move is that it's merely a somewhat ruthless attempt to deny [former Prime Minister Yevgeny]. Primakov a platform from which to challenge him in the presidential race. But it may also be our first real glimpse of the true political colors of this Russian on whom so many have pinned such varied hopes. ... He is, after all, an ex-K-G-B agent ... Some even question whether he ever left the agency at all. TEXT: Today's New York Post is expressing pleasure at the candid speech at the United Nations last week by North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. VOICE: While the United Nations continually rebukes America over the issue of payment of dues, the body ignores the fact that the United States bears the lion's share of responsibility for peace-keeping missions. The (U-S government's) General Accounting Office estimates that Washington spent some 9-billion dollars last year providing the United Nations with teeth to enforce its edicts. ... Thus, the average citizen sees America repeatedly putting its resources and soldiers on the line - - and get U-N carping in return. ... his message was overdue. /// OPT /// To the extent ... [the speech] ... [helps] U-N delegates better understand the complex role the sole remaining superpower has in world affairs, he has performed a real service. /// END OPT /// TEXT: In this hemisphere, the Miami Herald is upset at the increased use of Haiti as a way station for cocaine trafficking into the United States. VOICE: Washington continues to make elections in Haiti its top priority, unarguably a crucial step to helping Haiti relieve its misery. But Washington mustn't miss the forest for the trees. Drugs are the greatest threat to the establishment of democracy in Haiti, and the administration must do more to blunt its influence. This poor country is awash in drug money. /// OPT /// ...Narco-traffickers find it incredibly easy to cozy up to Haitians at all levels of society. And Haiti lacks sufficient political stability to fend off the traffickers' embrace. Washington's lackadaisical response is troubling and unbefitting the looming crisis. ... Seven D-E-A [Drug Enforcement Administration] agents are stationed in Haiti. /// END OPT /// ... Washington must take appropriate action before Haiti's weak democratic institutions and infrastructure crumble before the powerful drug lords. TEXT: Lastly, concerns that the case of the Chinese- born nuclear scientist, Wen Ho Lee, accused of mishandling U-S nuclear secrets at the Los Alamos weapons lab, may breed anti Asian bias is troubling the San Francisco Chronicle. VOICE: Perception is becoming reality for Asian Americans examining the case of [Mr.] Lee ... The case is generating fears of racism, racial profiling and workplace discrimination. It's important to note none of the leaders speaking out on [Mr.] Lee's case declare he is innocent of the serious charges. But his supporters, including a [San Francisco] Bay Area- based defense committee, believe a wave of public fear over espionage is unduly harming his chances for a fair trial. TEXT: On that note, we conclude this sampling of
comment from Monday's editorial pages in the U-S
press.
[07] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY JOE CHAPMAN (NEW YORK)DATE=1/24/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-258385 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: U-S stock prices closed sharply lower today (Monday) after a dramatic late session selloff. V-O- A's Joe Chapman reports from New York. TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 243 points, two percent, to 11-thousand-eight at the close. The broader and more representative Standard and Poor's 500 finished off 39 points, nearly three- percent, to 14-hundred-one. The high technology Nasdaq closed down 139 points to four-thousand-95 in its heaviest trading day ever. The steep decline was a surprise to most analysts who had expected a modestly positive trading day. Basic materials stocks were a modestly negative drag on the averages until with 90 minutes left in the trading day, a selloff began that quickly spread to other sectors. Average volume on both the New York and Nasdaq exchanges continues to grow. The Nasdaq exchange set a volume record for the second session in a row with one-point-55 billion shares traded. Analysts say a two billion share day is likely to occur soon. /// REST OPT FOR LONG VERSION ////// RETTEW ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next Article |