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Voice of America, 00-08-29Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] KOSOVO MINES BY ED WARNER (WASHINGTON)DATE=8/29/2000TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=5-46941 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Controversy is growing over NATO's recent seizure of a Serbian mining complex in Kosovo. NATO says it seized the mines to stop heavy pollution coming from a lead smelter at the complex. While acknowledging there is pollution, critics of the NATO action say its real purpose was to drive more Serbs from the area and further the independence of Kosovo. V-O-A's Ed Warner reports on the controversy. TEXT: Wearing surgical face masks, hundreds of NATO troops seized a smelting factory at the vast Trepca mines in Kosovo, while outraged workers tried in vain to stop them. Bernard Kouchner, chief U-N administrator of Kosovo, explained the plant's pollution could no longer be tolerated. He said it was endangering everyone, especially pregnant women and children. Former NATO Commander General Wesley Clark says cleaning up Trepca is vital for Kosovo: /// CLARK ACT ////// END ACT ////// DEMPSEY ACT ////// END ACT ////// BLAUSTEIN ACT ////// END ACT ////// DEMPSEY ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/EW/TVM/JP 29-Aug-2000 17:00 PM LOC (29-Aug-2000 2100 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] SPAIN / ATTACK (L-ONLY) BY GIL CARBAJAL (MADRID)DATE=8/29/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-265950 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The latest victim in a wave of terrorist violence in northern Spain was a councilman for the country's ruling Popular Party in a small town in the Basque Country. There was no immediate claim of responsibility, although police blamed the attack on the separatist group, ETA. Gil Carbajal reports from Madrid. TEXT: Gunmen shot a 29-year-old councilman (early
Tuesday) in the Basque town of Zumarraga near San
Sebastian in northern Spain.
Manuel Indiano Azaustre was killed as he was opening
the candy shop he set up just two-months ago. He died
soon afterwards in the hospital with 14-bullet wounds.
The councilman was 29-years-old and held one of two
seats won by Spain's ruling Popular Party - the P-P -
in the last municipal elections.
Although he ran as an independent, Manuel Indiano was
sixth on the party's list and took a seat on the town
council after those ahead of him had turned it down.
In early April, he gave up the police escort assigned
to Popular Party politicians because he found the
protection inconvenient.
Manuel Indiano is the 12th victim of a bloody terrorist
campaign since ETA called off a 14-month long truce.
Businessmen, security agents, and politicians of the
Popular Party and opposition Socialist party have been
the targets of the terrorist campaign. In the past
month-and-one-half, seven people have been killed in
various parts of Spain. Carbombs set off in Madrid
and in the Basque Country have injured scores of
people.
Meanwhile, pro-ETA gangs have continued almost daily
acts of vandalism against banks, business and the
property of Popular Party and Socialist politicians.
ETA has been linked to hundreds of deaths since the
late 1960s when it began a violent campaign for an
independent Basque state.
The latest killing increases the pressure on the
moderate Basque Nationalist Party - or P-N-V - to
break with ETA's political wing, Euskal Herritarrok.
Leaders from both the Popular Party and the main
opposition Socialist Party once again called for that
break. And the Spanish government continues to refuse
to include the P-N-V in multi-party talks to deal with
terrorism until it breaks completly with ETA's
political wing.
Spanish Prime Minister Jose' Maria Aznar learned of the
latest killing in Gdansk, Poland where he was
participating in ceremonies commemorating the 20th
anniversary of the foundnation of labor movement,
Solidarity.
Standing next to Nobel Peace Prize winner, Lech
Walensa, Mr. Aznar said that at a moment in which he
was helping celebrate a victory against tyranny, he
was sad to say that in Spain there were people still
being killed for believing in freedom, respect for
human rights and democracy. Prime Minister Aznar said
that Manuel Indiano's only crime was to belive in
those values. (SIGNED)
[03] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)DATE=8/29/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-265957 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: U-S stock prices were mixed today (Tuesday), but there was not a lot of movement in either direction. VOA correspondent Elaine Johanson reports from New York, it was a rather tepid day of trading after Monday's solid gains. TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 37 points, for a fractional loss, to 11-thousand-215. The Standard and Poor's 500 index lost four points. Meanwhile, the technology-weighted Nasdaq composite inched up almost 12 points for a fractional gain. The latest report on the U-S economy shows consumer confidence slipped this month - though confidence is still at historically high levels. A measure of consumer optimism came from the housing market. New home sales went up almost 15 percent in July -- the biggest jump in seven years. Investors found little in the economic news to support the view that the outlook on interest rates is improving. The U-S central bank left rates unchanged last week, persuaded that the economy is starting to slow down. ///BEGIN OPT//////SMITH ACT//////END ACT//////END OPT//////REST OPT///NEB/NY/EJ/LSF 29-Aug-2000 16:44 PM EDT (29-Aug-2000 2044 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [04] TUESDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=8/29/2000TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11979 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= INTRO: Regional newspapers around the United States are focusing in on the African AIDS pandemic, and President Clinton's comments about it on his trip there. There are also thoughts about bringing peace to Burundi and Nigeria's promise under a fledgling democracy. Other topics include the latest distress for Burma's legitimate leader; telling the C-I-A role in Chile's dictatorship; Northern Ireland's troubled peace efforts; and how the Philippines are handling the hostage situation in its Muslim majority islands. Now, here with a closer look is __________ and today's U-S Editorial Digest. TEXT: President Clinton's brief trip to Africa, and his concern about the toll AIDS is taking there registers in several editorial columns. Maine's Portland Press Herald says: VOICE: President Clinton's words were right on the money [Editors: "on target"] when he told leaders in Nigeria over the weekend that solving the problem of AIDS that is decimating many sub- Sarahan nations would require "breaking the silence" about how the disease is spread. However, he fell short when it came to providing the money itself, offering no more direct aid ... than the ten million dollars this country currently provides. TEXT: Newsday on New York's Long Island, under a headline reading: In Africa, [Mr.] Clinton Offers Symbolism but No New Aid," the paper comments: VOICE: ... by speaking as frankly as he did about AIDS he may have opened up a desperately needed dialogue and inspired African leaders and their people to start to come to grips with a disease that is killing more Africans than all the continent's war's. TEXT: Northern New Jersey's [Bergen County] Record is upset that the U-S Export-Import Bank is offering a one-billion dollar annual loan to 24 needy nations to buy medicine, an offer rejected because the nation's don't want to add to their existing debt burden. The paper says a greater effort is needed to help. On the subject of trying to build peace in Burundi, where President Clinton joined forces with former South African president Nelson Mandela, in witnessing a peace treaty, The Boston Globe glumly notes: VOICE: ... the antagonisms in Burundi go so deep that the international community should prepare for repeated involvement to avoid violence that could rival the genocide in neighboring Rwanda in 1994. ... Many Tutsis do not want to give up any power for fear the Hutus will take their revenge for decades of oppression. TEXT: As for the President's Nigerian visit, supporting the return to democracy there under President Olusegun Obasanjo, Charleston's [South Carolina] Post and Courier suggests; VOICE: ... the visit ... appears to have inspired Nigerians to look at President Obasanjo even more critically. ...[one] young Nigerian [asked] "How is debt cancellation going to help the poor people? Will we see any benefit from it? Or will it simply benefit the people who have already stolen our money?" TEXT: On to Burma, where the SLORC military junta is giving that country's legitimate leader, for years under house arrest, more trouble, according to The Washington Post. VOICE: ... acts of courage on behalf of democracy and justice that become the stuff of legend can seem like clear moments on a preordained path. ... At the moment, Aung San Suu Kyi is trapped on a soggy, mosquito-ridden rice field halfway around the world ... Last Friday she set out from her home in ... Rangoon ... to attend a party meeting south of the city. The regime ... sent goons to force her off the road and deflate the tires of her vehicle. ... Burma's rulers explain [laughably] ... they have blocked Aung San Suu Kyi to protect her from unrest and terrorism south of Rangoon... TEXT: In Latin American issues, there is a new call for more truth about the U-S Central Intelligence Agency's role in Chile's 1980s Pinochet dictatorship from The San Francisco Chronicle. VOICE: Now we face a new test of our national character. ... In a recent visit ... Secretary of State Madeleine Albright promised Chilean officials, who have charged [General Augusto] Pinochet with human rights abuses, that the United States would release "The fullest possible declassification of files" related to the coup. ... But [President] Clinton and [Mrs.] Albright's promises have run into strong opposition from C-I-A Director George Tenet, who resists revealing methods used in covert intelligence operations. [Mr.] Tenet must not prevail. /// OPT /// An honest history of the Cold War requires a full disclosure of what the united States did to our neighbors in South America. We have a right to know... /// END OPT /// TEXT: In defense of General Pinochet, today's Waterbury, Connecticut Republican-American scoffs at the portrayal of "his 17-year reign of terror" and suggests the three-thousand people who died or disappeared during it were: VOICE: ... mostly international terrorists, agents of [Cuban President Fidel] Castro and the Kremlin who clandestinely entered Chile after General Pinochet toppled the repressive regime of Marxist Salvador Allende in 1973. ... by overthrowing Comrade Allende, General Pinochet ... avoided a bloody civil war that would have killed tens of thousands of his countrymen. ///OPT ///TEXT: President Clinton's one-day visit to Colombia comes in for some critical views from Andres Oppenheimer, Latin American correspondent for The Miami Herald, writing in today's St. Paul [Minnesota] Pioneer Press. VOICE: ...[the visit] ... may be just a photo opportunity to help the Democratic party look tough on drugs in the November U-S elections, but the trip also has the potential to produce a dangerous backlash in Latin America. By visiting Colombia only days after releasing one- point-three billion dollars in military aid to help President Andres Pastrana ... fight drug traffickers and their Marxist guerrilla allies, [Mr.] Clinton will draw international attention to what critics are prematurely calling a "new Vietnam." ... human rights groups ... say the U- S military aid package will worsen human-rights abuses by the Colombian military and the paramilitary groups they often protect. /// END OPT ///TEXT: New violence in Northern Ireland is causing concern for the peace process at The Sun in Baltimore. VOICE: ... British troops are back in the street - properly so - for this internecine warfare in the Protestant slums. It shows the weakness of having declared a return to politics without "decommissioning" or destruction of weapons by those who held them. ... Northern Ireland will not have peace until the paramilitaries of both communities have packed up and quit... TEXT: To the Pacific for our final item, some criticism of how the Philippines handled the hostage situation in its rebel-held, Muslim-dominated islands, from today's Honolulu [Hawaii] Advertiser. VOICE: It is of course heartening to see the release of hostages from a bandits' lair in the southern Philippines. It is to be hoped that the remaining captives...will also soon be freed. But it is galling to see the bandits receive ransom beyond their wildest dreams... The fault lies with the ambivalence of Philippines President Joseph Estrada, who ... has tried to have it both ways: He has tried to appear tough, refusing to pay ransom, while welcoming [a ransom payment given by Libyan leader Moammar] Gadhafi's payment. Such vacillation only encourages more kidnappings. TEXT: With that note from Hawaii's morning daily, we
conclude this sampling of editorial comment from
Tuesday's U-S press.
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