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Voice of America, 00-08-16Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] TENSE MONTENEGRO BY ED WARNER (WASHINGTON)DATE=8/16/2000TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=5-46866 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Another part of Yugoslavia is threatening to erupt. Montenegro is seeking more autonomy or perhaps independence, while Belgrade is determined to prevent it. Will Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic resort to military force? No one knows for sure, and how the west would react is unclear. VOA's Ed Warner reports the deepening crisis in this isolated, mountainous, defiantly proud region of Yugoslavia. TEXT: On a recent trip to Montenegro, Jeffrey Gedmin of the American Enterprise Institute found tensions rising: /// GEDMIN ACT ////// END ACT ////// GEDMIN ACT ////// END ACT ////// SERWER ACT ////// END ACT ////// SERWER ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/EW/TVM/PT 16-Aug-2000 17:28 PM EDT (16-Aug-2000 2128 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY LARRY FREUND (NEW YORK)DATE=8/16/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-265563 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: U-S stock prices were mixed today (Wedneday). Correspondent Larry Freund reports from New York: TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 58 points or half-of-one-percent, closing at 11-thousand- eight. The broader Standard and Poor's 500 index was down four-and-one-half points, one-third-of-one- percent. But the technology-weighted Nasdaq composite was up almost 10 points or one-quarter-of-one-percent. The government released two economic reports, one on inflation, the other on housing. U-S consumer prices were up in July, but only a relatively modest two- tenths of one percent, within the range of what had been expected. And construction of new homes and apartments was down in July to the lowest level in 32 months, a response to higher interest rates. Analysts say the two reports, taken together, indicate a cooling economy with modest inflation and suggest central bank policymakers will not raise interest rates when they meet next Tuesday. /// REST OPT ////// PETERS ACTUALITY ////// END ACTUALITY ////// BLOOD ACTUALITY ////// END ACTUALITY ////// DRISCOLL ACTUALITY ////// END ACTUALITY ///NEB/LSF/TVM/PT 16-Aug-2000 16:59 PM EDT (16-Aug-2000 2059 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] WEDNESDAY'S EDITORIALS BY FRED COOPER (WASHINGTON)DATE=8/16/2000TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=6-11970 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: With the American political season in full swing, editorial writers in the United States are taking aim at the problem of money in politics. Also discussed in America's newspapers are the controversial remarks by North Korea's leader about his country's ballistic missile program, independence day anniversaries this week in India and Pakistan, the fate of the stranded Russian submarine and what one editorial writer sees as an ironic twist on the legacy of former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. TEXT: The Republicans took criticism earlier this month for what some observers saw as the unseemly contributions American corporations made to their convention in Philadelphia. Now it is the Democrats' turn. The Los Angeles Times takes note of what it terms "gaudy" parties for the Democrats in Los Angeles and lavish tributes for Republican office-holders in Philadelphia, sponsored by private corporations and special interest groups. The newspaper says each of the contributors has a political agenda. VOICE: "The shameless gobbling at corporate troughs...is the new point of political conventions. Each party gets a 13-million dollar public subsidy to hold its national convention, plus goodies from the host city. Why isn't that enough?... At least the Republicans are being true to their anything-goes campaign finance platform plank. The Democrats, who vow to clean the swamp, are the worse hypocrites... From here on in, let's make the parties pay for their own parties. TEXT: One month ago North Korea's leader Kim Jong Il suggested to Russian President Vladimir Putin that Pyongyang might give up its ballistic missile program in exchange for other nations' help in launching North Korean satellites. The statement was taken by many observers as a new effort by Mr. Kim to reduce tensions, until recently when he told South Korean media executives that he made the suggestion "laughingly." A Washington Post editorial says the comments show the hopes sparked by the June summit between the Koreas were from the start, "unrealistic." VOICE: He (Kim Jong Il) seemed to revel in the international clout his basket case of a country has gained by brandishing its arsenal: `Why would I need to (court) bigger countries? If I sit here in Pyongyang, many from powerful nations come to me.' The North Korean leader who seemed so surprisingly charming on that occasion has reverted to steely type. More than that; he is surprisingly open about the until-now undeclared strategy of extortion that he has pursued with such success. It seems there will be no quick fix to the North Korean missile threat, after all. TEXT: Both India and Pakistan this week celebrated the anniversaries of their independence from Britain in 1947. The Dallas Morning News writes that now it is time for the two nations to free themselves from what it calls "their entrenched positions" on the disputed territory, Kashmir. VOICE: India and Pakistan remain locked in a dispute with dangerous ramifications for the rest of the world. U.S. intelligence puts the chances of a conventional war at 50-50 and believes that the chances of it escalating to a nuclear war are increasing. India and Pakistan need to end their reluctance to enter into direct negotiations. Both must take into account Kashmiri expressions of autonomy or independence from both countries. And India needs to overcome its aversion to outside mediation. The United States should continue to work hard behind the scenes to bring the parties together. Nobody wins if the fighting in Kashmir goes nuclear. TEXT: The Chicago Tribune is commenting on what it calls the "democratic legacy," of former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. Last week Chile's Supreme Court stripped General Pinochet of his immunity-for- life from prosecution. The newspaper sees the court decision as the latest in a string of events that has helped the country emerge as Latin America's "most solid democracy." VOICE: The era of fearful silence regarding the Pinochet era has come to an end. The formerly docile judiciary is prosecuting the guilty, including the general himself. The new president (Ricardo Lagos) is reasserting his power of the army. The business community no longer sees the military as the essential guarantor of the social order. In what must be a bitter irony to the general, l'affaire Pinochet has strengthened Chilean democracy and lessened the chances of a return to the days of military dictatorship. TEXT: And finally, editorial writers at the Houston Chronicle, reflecting on the Russian submarine accident and the human drama being played out in the Barents Sea, express gratitude that the incident is not being seen through the prism of the Cold War. VOICE: Twenty years or so ago, the accident that has
befallen the Kursk might have been chalked up as
another Cold War point for the West. Now...it is
difficult to think of those men as anything but fellow
human beings caught in a hellish plight.
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