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Voice of America, 99-09-13Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] KOSOVO UNIVERSITY (L-ONLY) BY TIM BELAY (PRISTINA)DATE=9/13/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253820 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Students at the University of Pristina have started to attend classes under conditions that differ greatly from the past several years. Tim Belay reports from Pristina on the new atmosphere at the top educational institution in Kosovo. TEXT: Professor Ekrem Beciri was one of a three- member board that gathered (Monday) to hear Xhemaji Fejzullahu defend his doctoral dissertation in the field of mechanical engineering. Such an event involving ethnic-Albanian educators would have been impossible at the University of Pristina during most of the 1990's. The school was closed by the Yugoslav government in 1992. A gradual process of re-opening began last year. Mr. Beciri says the past few years have been very difficult for Albanian students and teachers at the university level. /// ACT BECIRI ////// END ACT ////// ACT AUGUSTINI ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] E-U / FOREIGN MINISTER (L-ONLY) BY RON PEMSTEIN (BRUSSELS)DATE=9/13/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253822 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: E-U Foreign Ministers have declared (Monday) an arms embargo against Indonesia for four-months and have suspended military cooperation with that government. Correspondent Ron Pemstein reports from Brussels that the declaration is a political action. Text: The embargo is against the export of arms, munitions and military equipment to Indonesia for a four-month period. The E-U foreign ministers also ban the supply of equipment that could be used for internal repression or terrorism, and they suspend military cooperation with Indonesia. In their declaration the ministers note Indonesia's acceptance of an international force to create peace in East Timor, but they decided to follow-through on the arms embargo since the force has not been deployed. Finnish Foreign Minister Tarja Harlonen could not say how many European exports would be affected by the weapons embargo. But she makes it clear; the arms embargo is a political measure. /// HARLONEN ACT ////// END ACT ////// REST OPT ////// HARLONEN ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/RP/GE/RAE 13-Sep-1999 15:19 PM LOC (13-Sep-1999 1919 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] E-U / TURKEY (L-ONLY) BY RON PEMSTEIN (BRUSSELS)DATE=9/13/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253817 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Turkish Foreign Minister Ismail Cem (pron: Gem) has met with E-U Foreign Ministers in Brussels to argue Turkey's case to be considered as a possible member of the Union. Ron Pemstein reports from Brussels that the meeting is part of a process leading to a possible favorable decision next December for Turkey. Text: The importance of the luncheon in Brussels was the fact that it took place, not that it moves Turkey any closer as a candidate for membership in the European Union. During the luncheon, news came of another earthquake in the same region devastated last month. It was the original earthquake that brought Greece and Turkey closer together, allowing Greece to remove its veto against any European Union aid money for Turkey. As a result, Foreign Minister Cem was invited to Brussels to report on moves the Turkish government has made to satisfy the European Union's human rights concerns. The foreign minister says he made the effort in his luncheon speech to the E-U ministers. /// CEM ACT //////END ACT////// HARLONEN ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/RP/GE/RAE 13-Sep-1999 13:39 PM LOC (13-Sep-1999 1739 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [04] GERMANY / VOTE (L-ONLY) BY JONATHAN BRAUDE (BERLIN)DATE=9/13/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253809 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: For the second time in as many weeks, Germany's ruling Social Democrats suffered a stinging defeat (Sunday) in state elections. The Christian Democrats are now in power in the southeastern state of Thuringia. But Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder says he will not be diverted from his economic reform program. Jonathan Braude reports from Berlin. TEXT: Thuringia was not a Social Democrat stronghold.
But Chancellor Schroeder's party was at least in a
coalition government in the state -- not with the
environmentalist Green Party as at the national level,
but with the conservative Christian Democrats.
The election changed all that. The Christian
Democrats won 51-percent of the vote, giving them an
absolute majority and the chance to rule the
economically depressed southeastern state alone, for
the first time.
The Social Democrats won less than 20-percent, not
enough to qualify as the official opposition. That
role remains with the former East German Communists,
who now portray themselves as Democrats.
Analysts say the Chancellor's defeat comes as no
surprise after his party was thrown out or forced into
coalitions in elections last weekend elsewhere in the
country.
But the surge in the vote for the former communists
appears to have signaled a rejection by the urban
unemployed of the neo-Nazi "Deutsche Volksunion", who
did well in eastern state elections last week.
Neither the neo-Nazis nor the Greens made it into the
Thuringia state assembly.
The defeat will add to the chancellor's worries. His
economic reforms are unpopular country-wide. Even the
army is protesting. An estimated five-thousand
soldiers joined an unprecedented rally Saturday in
Berlin to denounce planned cuts in the defense budget.
Opposition leaders have said they will not block the
reforms in the upper house of Parliament, where the
states are represented at national level and the
Chancellor no longer has a majority. But they say
they will expect the Government to compromise.
Mr. Schroeder said Sunday that he would not be driven
off course. He said there is no alternative to the
planned 16-billion-dollar cut in Government spending.
(SIGNED)
NEB/JB/GE/ENE/RAE
13-Sep-1999 11:00 AM LOC (13-Sep-1999 1500 UTC)
[05] REMAKING NORTHERN IRELAND'S POLICE BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=9/13/1999TYPE=U-S OPINION ROUNDUP NUMBER=6-11467 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 CONTENT= INTRO: One of the most persistent trouble spots in the world, recently squeezed out of the headlines by earthquakes and the turmoil in East Timor, is Northern Ireland. There, the peace deal worked out by former U-S Senator George Mitchell appears to becoming apart, partly due to the Irish Republican Army's refusal to disarm. However, efforts are going forward to try to resurrect the peace plan. The latest development has been publication of a long-awaited report by the last British governor of Hong Kong, Chris Patten, about reforming Northern Ireland's police force. The U-S press has had a generally favorable reaction to the recommendations, although both sides in Northern Ireland proclaimed themselves furious at Mr. Patten's suggestions. As for reaction on this side of the Atlantic, we turn to ____________ for a sampling in today's U-S Opinion Roundup. TEXT: The police force is called the Royal Ulster Constabulary, or R-U-C, and has long been accused by the province's minority Roman Catholics of uneven application of justice. The force is overwhelmingly made up of Protestants, who form the majority in Ulster, and have a long history of antagonizing the Roman Catholics, many of whom have less money and are either unemployed or underemployed. Mr. Patten, who gained world recognition for promoting Democratic reforms in Hong Kong in the last few years before the former British Crown Colony reverted to China, has been working on a reform plan for the police for months. The release of the plan last week brought forth loud condemnation from the Protestants, but a surprisingly reserved "wait-and-see" comment from Sinn Fein leaders. The U-S press generally liked what they heard. We begin in America's most Irish of all cities, Boston, where one of the nation's largest tabloids, The Boston Herald, noted, in part: VOICE: The commission ... has satisfied nobody. But the proposals from the panel ... are essential. Without something like them there is no hope for peace. ... Sinn Fein and others of the republican community had called for abolition of the Royal Ulster Constabulary and the creation of a new force. They won't get it. ... The hated R-U-C reserve will remain. Nonetheless, Sinn Fein's initial reservation of comment was in sharp contrast with the reaction of its adversaries. David Trimble, the leading unionist politician, denounced a "gratuitous insult to the community" in the proposed symbolic measures ... [including] a renaming of the force to remove the designator "royal" ... removal of the Union Jack from police flagpoles and removal of the crown from badges. // OPT // The only way to meet [Mr.] Patten's goal to "take the politics out of policing" ... is to get a force with deep roots in both communities that make up Northern Ireland. // END OPT // TEXT: The opinion of The Boston Herald. In the nation's capital, The Washington Times is also in agreement with much that Mr. Patten's group has produced, suggesting: VOICE: ... These reforms ... may ultimately provide more security protection for the police force itself. The R-U-C is currently 92 percent Protestant in a province that is 45 percent [Roman] Catholic. This has led ... to the accusation ... that the constabulary has been a sort of paramilitary arm of the Protestants. With such an image, the officers take on increased risk every time they enter a Catholic neighborhood. With a new police force split between Protestant and Catholic members, civilians arrested could not complain about being victims of partisan punishment. TEXT: In Ohio, The [Cleveland] Plain Dealer, which tends to editorialize on the Northern Irish situation more than any other major U-S daily, had this to say about the Patten report: VOICE: These provisions [the suggested 175 changes] will cut deeply into the psyche of Unionists, who profess to revere Northern Ireland's links with the British crown. They certainly will be exploited by politicians already opposed to the 1998 Good Friday Agreement that was intended to bring minority Roman Catholics into power-sharing legislative and executive bodies with Protestants. ... To outsiders, a name change to the Northern Ireland Police Service may not seem worth controversy, but ... [Mr.] Patten, ... rightly sees the move as an essential step toward creating a more representative security establishment. TEXT: While suggesting that "the recommendations stop short of some needed reforms," such as banning potentially deadly plastic bullets, The New York Times goes on to say that "Britain should quickly pass the laws necessary to carry out the report." In the Pacific, in the island state of Hawaii, The Honolulu Star-Bulletin calls the recommendations "sensible," adding: VOICE: ... But it won't be easy to win acceptance. The report fell far short of recommending R-U-C disbandment, the goal of Catholic Sinn Fein politicians and their allies in the Irish Republican Army. ... Protestants also voiced objections to the recommendations. The Ulster Unionists ... decried [Mr.] Patten's call to change the force's name and emblem and to ban the flying of the British flag on police property. ... Creating a neutral police force could be crucial to the effort to reconcile Northern Ireland's Catholics and Protestants. The Patten commission has provided a basis for action, but implementation is likely to arouse another storm of controversy in a land that has known little else for decades. TEXT: On that somber note, we conclude this sampling
of U-S press comment on the recent report suggesting
changes in the Northern Ireland police force.
[06] N-Y ECON WRAP (S&L) BY BRECK ARDERY (NEW YORK)DATE=9/13/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-253833 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Stock prices in the United States were mostly down today (Monday), in lack-luster trading. V-O-A Business Correspondent Breck Ardery reports from New York. TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 11- thousand-42, up almost two points. The Standard and Poor's 500 index closed at 13-hundred-44, down seven points. The NASDAQ index lost almost one and one-half percent after closing at a record high on Friday. There was no economic news to move the market. Analysts say traders lacked any clear sense of direction, with many of them waiting for Wednesday's release of the U-S consumer price index (for last month). That could provide another clue on whether the U-S central bank will be inclined to raise interest rates at its meeting in early October. /// REST OPT FOR LONG ////// ALLEN ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [07] MONDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=9/13/1999TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11466 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 CONTENT= INTRO: At the beginning of a new work week here in the United States, the daily press is still pondering the fiery end of a 1993 siege by the F-B-I at a religious cult outside Waco, Texas, and a new investigation of the circumstances. Other topics include Congressional stalled ratification of the latest nuclear weapons test ban treaty; the situation in East Timor; a battle over a tax cut; and ongoing calls for campaign finance reform. Now, here is _________ with a closer look and some excerpts, in today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: Recent revelations that the Federal Bureau of Investigation used flammable teargas at the Branch Davidian compound outside Waco, Texas, where a fire killed more than 80 people, have prompted new calls for the resignation of Attorney General Janet Reno. Today's Washington Times is upset with her on several counts. The paper begins by invoking Ms. Reno's own words from a 1993 news conference: VOICE: "I am accountable," Miss Reno insisted. "The buck [responsibility] stops with me." By seemingly "taking responsibility" for the colossal failure, Miss Reno's public approval soared. Her half-hearted offer to resign was, of course, rejected by President Clinton. Throughout her six-an-a half-year tenure as Attorney General, it has become increasingly clear that Miss Reno has no idea what accountability means. .. Indeed, if Miss Reno had even the slightest understanding of responsibility and accountability, to say nothing about self-respect in the wake of years of humiliating herself and being humiliated by the Clintons and their pals, she would have resigned long ago. /// OPT /// That she has the nerve to remain at Justice following two extraordinarily damaging revelaltions last week confirms she is simply incapable of comkprehending accountability. /// END OPT /// TEXT: Former Missouri Senator John Danforth was appointed last week as a special investigator of the F-B-I's actions at - and after - Waco. The Akron [Ohio] Beacon Journal wonders how Mr. Danforth will be allowed to operate: VOICE: A tangential question that [Senator] Danforth will address merely by his investigation . is . how, in the wake of the oft-criticized, now-expired independent-counsel law, will he function? Will he be influenced or controlled by Attorney General . Reno? She says no. Will he have enough time and resources to succeed? She says yes. A nation is watching. TEXT: In Florida, The Orlando Sentinel is calling for a speedy investigation that "doesn't drag on," but also rejects calls for Ms. Reno's resignation at this time. And in Boston, The Christian Science Monitor says the incident suggests there is "a culture, within the bureau [F-B-I] or the Justice Department, that allows mistakes to be hidden and superiors misled. As with Watergate and the Monica Lewinsky affair, the cover-up becomes the central concern. . The public needs the facts. On the subject of disarmament, The Detroit News expresses support for the U-S Senate as it continues to hold up ratification of the current nuclear test ban treaty. VOICE: Arms control enthusiasts believe the test ban is in America's interest, because it would discourage other countries from developing weapons of mass destruction. But that premise is doubtful. America unilaterally stopped above-ground testing long ago and has not tested any weapons underground since the early 1990s. Yet that did not "encourage" Pakistan and India to resist testing A-bombs of their own last year. National interest and military necessity will always override altruistic feelings. TEXT: Still an area of great editorial concern is the chaos in East Timor, wracked by deadly violence since a pro-Independence vote two weeks ago. The Washington Post cautiously hails the announcement by Indonesia's president that he will accept a U-N peacekeeping force to regain order. VOICE: A break in the slaughter is now a live prospect in East Timor as a result of the decision . Or is it? Mr. Habibie invited the United Nations to send an international peacekeeping force of "friendly" nations - presumably a force heavy with fellow Asians - to protect the population of East Timor, to restore security and order there and - of highest importance - to put into effect the results of the referendum of August 30th. . What is urgent now is Indonesia's prompt and full delivery on President Habibie's promise to undo all that can be undone of Indonesia's atrocities-atrocities that are not yet at an end. TEXT: On the domestic front, The Los Angeles Times remains skeptical of tax cuts pushed forward by Congressional Republicans and approved by both the House and Senate: VOICE: It's wishful thinking to assume that one or two years of black ink mean the nation has entered an era of perpetual budget surpluses that would justify either huge tax cuts or greater federal spending. Projected surpluses are based on assumptions about all kinds of things . that simply can't be perceived clearly even a few years ahead, let alone a decade. Downturns happen. Unexpected overseas events ripple through the global economy. . If surpluses do grow in coming years - a possibility, though far from a certainty - the prudent choice would be to commit them to reducing the five-point-six trillion-dollar national debt. TEXT: Speaking of money, The New York Times again calls for some kind of campaign finance reform, as fundraising for the upcoming presidential campaign sets new records. VOICE: One of the most important election events of the current season takes place this week ...[as] the House of Representatives votes on the Shays-Meehan campaign finance reform bill to ban unregulated "soft money" donations to political parties, regulate phony "issue ads" on television and impose new fund-raising disclosure rules. The bill . appears likely to pass. But the more votes it gets, the better the chances will be for Senate approval of what would become the most sweeping electoral reforms in a generation. TEXT: The topic of press freedom around the world is
the focus of a pair of editorials. The Wall Street
Journal sharply criticizes Malaysia for failing to
provide justice for journalists like Murray Hiebert.
He is a Canadian staffer of the Far Eastern Economic
review who has been detained in Malaysia for about two
years while his case is heard by a succession of
courts. He is accused of "scandalizing the court"
after he wrote about a lawsuit involving the son of a
prominent judge who was accused of cheating by his
high school debating team. Mr. Hiebert remains in
jail, pending another appeal.
By contrast, The Miami Herald is pleased at some
comments from the new president of Panama, Mireya
Moscoso, who is pledging to remove what it calls a
"plethora of gag laws that harass, punish and
intimidate Panama's journalists."
On that note, we conclude this sampling of comment
from the editorial pages of Monday's U-S press.
NEB/ANG/bk
13-Sep-1999 11:35 AM EDT (13-Sep-1999 1535 UTC)
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