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Voice of America, 00-02-24

Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>


CONTENTS

  • [01] ALBRIGHT / KOSOVO (L-ONLY) BY KYLE KING (STATE DEPARTMENT)
  • [02] KOSOVO - DIVIDED CITY BY RON PEMSTEIN (MITROVICA)
  • [03] TURKEY / KURDS (L-ONLY) BY AMBERIN ZAMAN (ANKARA)
  • [04] U-S/EUROPE WTO RULING (L-ONLY) BY NICK SIMEONE (WASHINGTON)
  • [05] SECRETARY OF STATE TO VISIT EUROPE (L-ONLY) BY KYLE KING (STATE DEPARTMENT)
  • [06] U-S - NORTHERN IRELAND (L-ONLY) BY DEBORAH TATE (WHITE HOUSE)
  • [07] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)
  • [08] THURSDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)

  • [01] ALBRIGHT / KOSOVO (L-ONLY) BY KYLE KING (STATE DEPARTMENT)

    DATE=2/24/2000
    TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
    NUMBER=2-259532
    CONTENT=
    VOICED AT:

    INTRO: The United States is welcoming France's decision to send more peacekeeping troops to Kosovo, and says additional American forces also may be deployed there. V-O-A's Kyle King reports from the State Department.

    TEXT: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright says the recent ethnic violence in Kosovo's troubled northern city of Mitrovica poses a challenge for international peacekeepers. Clashes between Serbs and ethnic Albanians in Mitrovica have left several people dead in the past few weeks, and NATO's commander, General Wesley Clark, has called for additional troops to be sent to the province. France, which already has about four-thousand troops in Kosovo, says it is ready to send an additional 600 or 700. Secretary of State Albright welcomed the announcement, saying it is important for the peacekeeping force, known as K-FOR, to make clear that it is in charge. Ms. Albright says the United States may send additional troops, too, but will be looking to other countries to do so first.

    /// ALBRIGHT ACT ///

    At this stage, the United States has the largest number of troops, in the area, or in Kosovo as a whole, so we believe we are definitely doing our part. But I don't exclude the fact that there may have to be some Americans [sent in]. But I think in the first instance we are looking to others to plus up [beef up, or increase] their forces.

    /// END ACT ///

    NATO officials have blamed Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic for trying to destabilize the situation in Mitrovica, which has the largest remaining concentration of Serbs in Kosovo. NATO officials have called a special meeting Friday to deal with the situation, which has calmed down in the past few days. NATO's top commander has vowed to end the ethnic violence in Mitrovica, and make the city multi-ethnic. (Signed)
    NEB/KBK/WTW 24-Feb-2000 15:23 PM EDT (24-Feb-2000 2023 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America

    [02] KOSOVO - DIVIDED CITY BY RON PEMSTEIN (MITROVICA)

    DATE=2/24/2000
    TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT
    NUMBER=5-45511
    CONTENT=
    VOICED AT:

    INTRO: The town of Mitrovica in northern Kosovo is divided between the Serbs, who live north of the Ibar River, and the Albanians who live on the river's south side. Tensions in recent weeks have made those divisions deeper. V-O-A correspondent Ron Pemstein reports from Mitrovica that the plans of NATO and the United Nations to bring the town together face some tough obstacles.

    TEXT: The wooden cupboards lining the halls of Mitorvica's technical university have been forced open. Some of them have been split with an axe. Doors of laboratories have had their moldings gouged to open them. Desks have been smashed. These are the physical effects of the search by NATO peacekeepers to find weapons on the north side of Mitrovica where Kosovo's Serbs live. The search found no weapons at the university. Elsewhere on the northern side, the peacekeepers found plastic explosives, rifles and handguns, a grenade, a machine gun and supplies of ammunition. University officials insist nothing was found there despite the damage. ///Opt/// The dean's assistant, Juniya Zivkovic, says students have been staying home since the peacekeepers' search.

    /// Opt Zivkovic Act ///

    They are very afraid because they broke (in) to the students' house. And now they go to their homes. And now (everyone) is very afraid.

    /// end act ////// end opt ///

    The weapons search on the north side was conducted to try to stop the cycle of violence that began with an attack on a United Nations bus carrying Serbs, in which two were killed. The Serbs responded by killing nine Albanians and forcing two thousand, mostly women and children, to flee to the south side of the river.

    /// Opt ///

    University administrator Vladen Vojnic says Kosovo's Serbs feel they must live apart from their former neighbors.

    /// Opt Vojnic Act ///

    Maybe for two or three years, if conditions are good then maybe they are going south. Maybe Albanians are coming north for two, three years. Now it is not possible, because there is much hatred on the Serbian and Albanian sides.

    /// end act ////// end opt ///

    The United Nations is constructing a pedestrian bridge across the Ibar River to try to speed up the process of returning the Albanians to the north side of town.

    /// Opt ///

    Albanian leader Bajram Rexhepi says the footbridge is no alternative to the main bridge that is patrolled by NATO peacekeepers, with barbed wire and armored vehicles. He scoffs at Serb threats to keep the town divided along ethnic lines for five years.

    /// Opt Rexhepi Act ///

    It is always the same words. Maybe he waits for five years. But after five years if they continue with ethnic cleansing, there cannot be any Albanians in the north.

    ///end act//////end opt///

    The Albanians fear that Serbia is trying to partition northern Kosovo away from this predominately Albanian province with the dividing line along the Ibar River. Mitrovica's United Nations Director, Mario Morcone, says he is trying to help people on both sides of the river, and he cannot worry about Serbian plans to recover Kosovo, or Albanian frustration.

    /// Morcone Act ///

    The problems that we are seeing in the last days don't come from the citizens of Mitrovica. And I am not interested in what (Serbian leader Slobodan) Mr. Milosevic is doing or what others in the south want to do. We must marginalize the extremists. We must find the right solution for the normal life of the citizens of Mitrovica. This was before a multi-ethnic city, and I think it is not really impossible to have a normal co- existence with the people who were citizens before.

    /// end act ///

    Mr. Morcone wants to create a Mitrovica security zone, stretching from the Albanian market place on the south side of town across the bridge to the second intersection on the north side. Only NATO peacekeepers would have weapons in this zone, and demonstrations would be forbidden. Security for both communities in the zone will be guaranteed.

    ///SFX, Music, market sounds///

    In Mitrovica's market place, Kosovo Albanian shoppers rule out reconciliation with the Serbs. "They killed our parents and our brothers," they say. "We cannot live together with them any more."

    ///Opt///

    Mr. Morcone's deputy, Waheed Waheedullah, says the United Nations hopes to get the community leaders to agree to a security zone to change peoples' attitudes and allow Albanian refugees to return to the north side.

    ///Opt Waheedullah Act ///

    We have to follow a top-down, bottom-up approach. We have to discuss this on a political level. We have to also create the conditions in terms of freedom of movement, safety, security, which is the number-one requirement for the return. But it will happen. It will happen slowly, but we are determined that it should happen.

    /// end act ////// end opt ///

    Disagreements within NATO and the United Nations have allowed the Serbs in Mitrovica to create their own place, and Kosovo Albanian anger at the separation within the town is growing. Veton Surroi, the publisher of the Albanian language newspaper, "Koha Ditore," says mistakes were made by Kosovars and the international community in allowing Serbs retreating from Kosovo last year to set up enclaves in the north of the province.

    /// Surroi Act ///

    We have in the northern part of Mitrovica today, actually the administrative continuation of Serbian authorities. And that brings all of us - Kosovars and the international community - a big challenge because of the whole idea of the war and the whole idea of the resolution (of the fighting) was not to allow an administrative continuation of [Mr.]Milosevic's regime. It doesn't make sense at all.

    /// end act ///

    Mr. Surroi says there is a security issue in settling the division of Mitrovica. There are also issues of a proper civilian administration between the Serbs and Albanians and in developing an economic life in Mitrovica. If there is a positive result of the present troubles, he says, maybe Kosovar Albanians will learn tolerance if they have to live as a minority in a Serbian enclave within Kosovo. (Signed) NEB/RP/GE/gm/europe 24-Feb-2000 12:11 PM EDT (24-Feb-2000 1711 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America

    [03] TURKEY / KURDS (L-ONLY) BY AMBERIN ZAMAN (ANKARA)

    DATE=2/24/2000
    TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
    NUMBER=2-259519
    CONTENT=
    VOICED AT:

    INTRO: A Turkish court has sentenced 18 leaders of the pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party - known as Hadep - to jail for staging a hunger strike in support of Kurdish separatist leader Abdullah Ocalan. Amberin Zaman in Ankara reports on the continuing legal crackdown on Hadep, Turkey's largest pro-Kurdish party.

    TEXT: News of the prison sentences against the Hadep members, including party chairman Ahmet Turan Demir and former chairman Murat Bozlak, coincided with the arrests of three mayors accused of links with Abdullah Ocalan and his outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, the P-K-K.

    /// OPT ///

    Mayor Feridun Celik of the largest Kurdish-dominated city, Diyarbakir, and Mayors Selim Ozalp of Siirt and Feyzullah Karaaslan of Bingol, were officially charged of aiding and abetting the P-K-K and sent to Diyarbakir prison to await trial. Lawyers for three men say they were not permitted to sleep during four-days of interrogation in Diyarbakir. . /// END OPT /// The allegations against them include meeting with a wanted P-K-K military commander and diverting municipal funds to the guerrillas. The mayors and 34 other Hadep officials were swept to power in Turkey's largely Kurdish southeast provinces in elections last April. P-K-K leader Abdullah Ocalan has called for the Kurdish people to remain calm in the face of what he described as a provocation. He was sentenced to death for treason following his arrest in Kenya by Turkish security officials more than a year ago.

    /// OPT ///

    Ocalan, in comments published in the pro- Kurdish daily newspaper, "Ozgur Bakis," charged that the arrests had been masterminded by what he called forces opposed to peace between Turks and Kurds. /// END OPT /// Ocalan has called off his armed fight for an independent Kurdish state in a move his critics describe as a desperate attempt to save his life. The Turkish government has postponed the P-K-K leader's execution until the European Court in Strasbourg reviews his case. Despite calls from the Council of Europe and the European Parliament for the immediate release of the mayors, there is little sympathy for their plight among most Turks. Many Turks feel that Hadep is acting as the political wing of the P-K-K That suspicion has been strengthened by the fact that some Hadep officials, including Secretary General Mahmut Sakar, are among Ocalan's lawyers. But some commentators in the pro-establishment Turkish media point out the arrests will complicate Turkey's efforts to become a full member of the European Union (E-U). The European Parliament said Wednesday it would likely review Turkey's recently acquired status as an official candidate for E-U membership. (SIGNED)
    NEB/AZ/GE/RAE 24-Feb-2000 10:17 AM EDT (24-Feb-2000 1517 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America

    [04] U-S/EUROPE WTO RULING (L-ONLY) BY NICK SIMEONE (WASHINGTON)

    DATE=2/24/2000
    TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
    NUMBER=2-259529
    CONTENT=
    VOICED AT:

    INTRO: The World Trade Organization has dealt a major setback to the United States, agreeing with the European Union that a U-S tax law gives American companies an unfair trade advantage by allowing them to avoid paying taxes on a wide range of exports. Correspondent Nick Simeone reports the ruling could end up costing American business billions of dollars and further strain cross-Atlantic trade relations.

    TEXT: At issue is an obscure provision in American law allowing some of the biggest names in U-S business to channel profits from exports through some well- known off-shore tax havens like The Virgin Islands, Barbados and Guam. In the biggest trade dispute before the body so far, the W-T-O agreed with the European Union that companies such as Microsoft, Boeing and General Motors are taking advantage of what they say amounts to an illegal trade subsidy and avoiding billions of dollars in taxes. The Clinton Administration strongly disagrees, and maintains the Europeans are in effect doing the same thing by waiving the value-added taxes on their own exports. If the W-T-O ruling stands, American business claims it would no longer be competing on a level playing field. Washington lawyer Homer Moyer represents more than 50 American exporters affected by the ruling and argues American businesses have been using the tax shelter to counterbalance the European system.

    /// MOYER ACT ///

    European exporters, when they export a product, don't get taxed on that part of the transaction that takes place outside of their territory and indirect taxes they pay on what they do inside the territory get rebated. Neither of those advantages apply to American companies.

    /// END ACT ///

    Changing the tax law would end up costing American industry billions, a cost that would most likely be passed on to consumers. U-S Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers is disappointed with the decision, but the Clinton Administration says it has no plans to rewrite the tax law -- which would be highly unlikely in an election year. Instead, trade lawyer Homer Moyer expects both sides will negotiate rather than hand the case back to the W-T-O.

    /// MOYER ACT ///

    I think neither side wants to see this situation deteriorate or evolve into measures and countermeasures and further responses. This needs to be resolved by the two governments and I think it can be.

    /// END ACT ///

    /// OPT ///

    Trans-Atlantic trade relations are already strained by a W-T-O ruling penalizing Europe for blocking imports of bananas and hormone-treated beef, a decision that opened the way for the United States to slap several hundred millions of dollars in tariffs on European exports. Those tariffs have gone largely unnoticed by most Americans since they were imposed on mainly high-end E-U exports like Roquefort cheese. /// END OPT /// If this latest dispute is not resolved by October, the W-T-O could authorize sanctions against the United States. (SIGNED)
    NEB/NJS/ENE/JP 24-Feb-2000 15:01 PM EDT (24-Feb-2000 2001 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America

    [05] SECRETARY OF STATE TO VISIT EUROPE (L-ONLY) BY KYLE KING (STATE DEPARTMENT)

    DATE=2/23/2000
    TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
    NUMBER=2-259498
    CONTENT=
    VOICED AT:
    /// Re-running w/must correct in 6th graph from text (change from March to April) ///

    INTRO: U-S Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has announced plans to visit the Czech Republic and Bosnia during a week-long European trip that will include stops in Portugal and Belgium. From the State Department, V-O-A's Kyle King reports.

    TEXT: Ms. Albright's first stop will be Lisbon, Portugal, where she will take part in the U-S -- European Union ministerial meeting on March 3rd. The Secretary is also expected to meet with Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov for talks likely to include recent developments in Chechnya. Ms. Albright, who was born in Czechoslovakia, will be in Prague from March 5th to the 8th, to take part in celebrations marking the 150th anniversary of the first Czechoslovak President. State Department spokesman James Rubin says Ms. Albright will also visit Bosnia, March 8th and 9th to discuss progress in bringing further unity to the ethnically polarized country.

    /// RUBIN ACT ///

    ...and to urge the parties to accelerate the process of refugee returns, economic reform, and the functioning of central institutions and other actions needed to make peace in Bosnia self sustaining.

    /// END ACT ///

    Municipal elections in Bosnia are scheduled for April- Eight, and officials are hoping the defeat of nationalists in Croatia will encourage voters to choose less hard-line candidates in Bosnia. Ms. Albright will wrap up her week-long European trip with a stop in Brussels for meetings with NATO and European Union officials. (Signed) NEB/KBK/TVM/JP/western-europe 23-Feb-2000 20:49 PM EDT (24-Feb-2000 0149 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America

    [06] U-S - NORTHERN IRELAND (L-ONLY) BY DEBORAH TATE (WHITE HOUSE)

    DATE=2/24/2000
    TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
    NUMBER=2-259530
    CONTENT=
    VOICED AT:

    INTRO: The top negotiator for the Irish Republican Army's political wing, Sinn Fein, is blaming the crisis in the Northern Ireland peace process on Britain's decision to suspend the province's power- sharing government - a move he denounces as "illegal." Martin McGuinness, in Washington to meet with Clinton administration officials Thursday, says Britain prompted the deadlock by insisting the I-R-A unilaterally disarm. Correspondent Deborah Tate reports from the White House. Text: Mr. McGuinness is criticizing Britain's Secretary for Northern Ireland, Peter Mandelson, for suspending the 72-day-old joint government between Catholics and Protestants earlier this month -- an action taken despite a last-minute I-R-A proposal on disarmament.

    /// McGuinness Act ///

    What the British have done is totally and absolutely illegal.

    /// End Act ///

    Mr. McGuinness argues that that Mr. Mandelson had no right to suspend a government that had the overwhelming support of the people of Northern Ireland, and says he is considering legal action.

    /// McGuinness Act ///

    If it was a self-determination on the behalf of the people of Ireland, there is no telling us that a British minister, at the stroke of a pen, can do away with the people's rights and the institutions that the people endorsed and set up with their votes. From a legal point of view, we are seeking legal advice.

    /// End Act ///

    The crisis was precipitated by an independent panel's report released earlier this month saying the I-R-A had not made sufficient efforts toward handing over its weapons in its decades-long fight against British rule of the province. The finding had consequences for David Trimble, leader of the Protestant Ulster Unionist Party, who was serving as First Minister in the power-sharing government. To get the support of his party for the new coalition in the absence of any I-R-A disarmament last November, Mr. Trimble pledged he would resign if progress on the issue was not made by February 12th. But Mr. Mandelson saw Mr. Trimble as key to keeping the Ulster Unionists committed to the peace settlement. And in an effort to head off his resignation, he suspended the government February 11th. After a meeting with National Security Advisor Sandy Berger at the White House Wednesday, Mr. Mandelson defended his decision, and in so doing, sought to ease some of the concerns of Sinn Fein's McGuinness:

    /// Mandelson Act ///

    Bear in mind that what is suspended, is simply on hold. Nothing has been destroyed, nothing annulled. It will be as quick and simple to reactivate the executive and institutions as it was to put them on hold as long as we can get people talking again and getting some renewed agreement on how we can take forward all parts of the Good Friday (peace) agreement.

    /// End Act ///

    Just days after the government was suspended, the I-R- A withdrew its disarmament proposal. Protestant leader Trimble, after talks with Mr. Berger Monday, said a break in the deadlocked peace process depends on the I-R-A resubmitting its plan. But Sinn Fein's McGuinness argues the I-R-A is being asked to disarm unilaterally -- saying there is little pressure on Protestant paramilitary groups to hand over weapons.

    /// McGuinness Act ///

    People are focused on decommissioning (disarmament) to the exclusion of all else, and I-R-A guns, to the exclusion of all others.

    /// End Act ///

    Protestant paramilitary groups maintain they will not disarm until the I-R-A begins to do so. (Signed)
    NEB/DAT/ENE/JP 24-Feb-2000 15:22 PM EDT (24-Feb-2000 2022 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America

    [07] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)

    DATE=2/24/2000
    TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
    NUMBER=2-259536
    CONTENT=
    VOICED AT:

    INTRO: U-S stock prices were mixed today (Thursday), as selling gripped Wall Street in a highly volatile session. V-O-A correspondent Elaine Johanson reports from New York:

    TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled more than 250 points before paring its losses in the last hour. The Industrials closed down 133 points, over one percent, at 10-thousand-92. The Standard and Poor's 500 index dropped seven points. Even the technology-weighted Nasdaq composite struggled for footing in a volatile market. The Nasdaq gained one-and-one-half percent, closing at another record high. Analysts said investors are battling an environment of rising interest rates. Federal Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan signaled again Wednesday that rates will likely be going up until the U-S economy slows down.

    /// BEGIN OPT ///

    Investors are still rushing toward the fast growing technology sector, while traditional stocks are languishing. The "blue-chips" are most sensitive to any change in U-S economic fundamentals that could cut into corporate earnings. However, equity strategist Peter Boockvar (PRON: BOOK'VAR) warns that while technology stocks look safe for now, it is only a matter of time before they, too, would be affected:

    /// BOOCKVAR ACT ///

    There certainly is an adage that's been around for a while, "don't fight the Fed (Federal Reserve Board)." And the Fed has already raised (rates) four times and they've signaled they're going to raise multiple times more. And if the action of the "old economy" stocks and the recent activity in the bond market is telling me that we're going to slow down, an eventual slowdown of the economy will eventually affect technology earnings. The question is "when" not "if."

    /// END ACT ///

    /// END OPT ///

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average -- the main barometer of market activity -- is down almost 15 percent from its all-time record high in mid-January.

    /// REST OPT ///

    U-S computer chipmaker Intel saw its prospects grow and its shares trade higher after an analyst raised Intel's stock price target for the year. The bet is that Intel will benefit as Microsoft's new Windows 2000 operating system will drive businesses to buy more powerful computers that use Intel's higher-priced processors. Shares of Lucent Technologies went up, after the U-S maker of telephone equipment said it won a contract from Deutsche Telekom to supply Germany's largest phone company with optical network equipment. Meanwhile, Qualcomm stock dropped after a report that China may be delaying plans to build a digital mobile phone network using Qualcomm technology. On the earnings front, retailer GAP reported fourth- quarter earnings rose a better-than-expected 32 percent. Gap sales surged after it opened hundreds of new clothing stores worldwide. (signed) NEB/NY/EJ/LSF/JP 24-Feb-2000 16:49 PM EDT (24-Feb-2000 2149 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America

    [08] THURSDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)

    DATE=2/24/2000
    TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST
    NUMBER=6-11697
    EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS
    TELEPHONE=619-3335
    CONTENT=

    INTRO: The victories by Arizona Senator John McCain over Texas Governor George W. Bush in the presidential primaries in Michigan and Arizona are the major editorial topics this Thursday. There is also comment on China's latest warnings to Taiwan; and comments on the reformers' victory in Iran's parliamentary balloting last week. Rounding out today's topics are editorials on North Korea's missile threat; Northern Ireland's faltering peace process; and the violence in Kosovo. Now, here is __________ with a closer look and some excerpts in today's Editorial Digest.

    TEXT: The prevailing view of Tuesday's primary results is that the McCain victories are creating a longer than anticipated, and more hotly contested Republican primary, which is good for the voters. It gives more time for an exposition of the candidate's position on issues. Many papers point out that while John McCain, with his strong appeal to Democratic and independent voters, has proven a much stronger opponent than Governor George Bush anticipated, the remaining primaries are limited, for the most part, to only Republican voters, a factor which should favor Mr. Bush. The Houston Chronicle says the race is raising "interesting questions."

    VOICE: The question, of course, is do the non- Republican votes amount to true broad appeal for [Mr.] McCain's message or a sort of sabotage of the integrity of the Republican nominating process. The answer is probably some of both, though maybe more of the latter.

    TEXT: Ohio's [Akron] Beacon Journal suggests that: "Republicans find themselves with the right strategy but the wrong man (George W. Bush) to execute it. [Mr.] McCain can form a majority." In California, the San Francisco Chronicle is pleased at the role that state's primary may now play.

    VOICE: For the first time since 1972 . the outcome of this state's primary could determine the nominee of a major political party. ... the candidates will be focused on California in the next two weeks. It means that issues of importance to the state - - education, technology development, race relations, abortion rights, the environment - - will get a fuller airing than they received in Iowa, New Hampshire and other early states.

    /// OPT ///

    TEXT: The Chicago Tribune breaks down the significance of Tuesday's votes to good and bad news for Republicans.

    VOICE: The good news. ... [is] that they've got a candidate ... John McCain ... who appears to have the broad voter appeal needed to recapture the White House. The bad news is that he may not be able to win his party's nomination.

    /// END OPT ///

    TEXT: In Minnesota, the [Minneapolis] Star Tribune says the problem for Mr. McCain is that:

    VOICE: ... most of the important coming fights do not allow crossover votes. So unless he can successfully win the allegiance of more Republicans, ... [his] Michigan victory could be his last moment in the sun - even though national polls show he is the best thing the G-O-P has going to beat Democrat Al Gore.

    /// OPT ///

    TEXT: Florida's St. Petersburg Times says of George W. Bush, he:

    VOICE: ... began the presidential campaign as a self- proclaimed compassionate conservative who promised to reach out for support beyond the Republican Party's traditional base. Now he's acting as if he's proud of his unpopularity among independents and Democrats ... a strange strategy for success in November.

    /// END OPT ///

    TEXT: The New York Times, noting that the "odds against Mr. McCain's insurgency . remain formidable," nevertheless suggests that he:

    VOICE: ... has spawned a genuinely new phenomenon that could defy the logic of the professionals and keep right on building. Mr. Bush has to figure out how to overcome it or risk being washed away. ... Mr. McCain's success is of a different order than anything seen in many years. ///OPT /// His presence on the ballot is driving voter turnout ... He pulls big crowds that clearly adore him. Their excitement undercuts the conventional wisdom about citizen apathy ... /// END OPT ///

    TEXT: Turning to Asian affairs, the latest "white paper" (official statement) from Beijing about Taiwan's eventual reunification with the mainland, by force if necessary, prompts this from Charleston's [South Carolina] Post and Courier.

    VOICE: With its unerring sense of bad timing, China has once again stirred up tension over Taiwan at the same time ... it is trying to persuade the world's other nations to let it join the World Trade Organization. The Clinton administration must firmly tell China that its new position on Taiwan is unacceptable, and that the roles of regional bully and peaceful trading partner cannot go together.

    TEXT: The San Francisco Chronicle believes that: "China had little to gain with its latest saber- rattling" ... but adds:

    VOICE: It makes sense that the United States did not overreact.

    TEXT: Still in the Orient, Honolulu's Star Bulletin is worried about North Korea's long-range missile threat.

    VOICE: North Korea has issued another statement denouncing the United States for planning to build a missile defense system. The North Koreans are inadvertently providing ammunition [Editors: "support"] for continuing the problem, because North Korea is one of the so-called rogue nations that are the chief threats to launch missiles against this country.

    TEXT: To the Middle East, and these thoughts about the reformers' victory in Iran's recent parliamentary elections from today's Dallas Morning News.

    VOICE: The victory ... signals that the Islamic nation is sowing seeds of change. It is indeed a historic moment ... [However] ... hard-line elements ...still present serious obstacles to warmer communications. Cautious pragmatism must reign on both sides.

    TEXT: As for the deadlock in the Northern Ireland peace process, the New York Times suggests what needs to be done now:

    VOICE: The Irish Republican Army should commit itself to resubmitting its disarmament plan in coordination with the restoration of local rule in Northern Ireland. Ulster's leading Protestant politician, David Trimble, should withdraw his threat to resign his party leadership ... Britain can then revive the power-sharing government institutions in Ulster. ... These steps will require political courage all around. But the people of Northern Ireland ... deserve no less.

    TEXT: To another trouble spot now, the ethnically divided city of Mitrovica in Yugoslavia's Kosovo province, where escalating violence between Serbs and ethnic Albanians has caused civilian deaths and injuries to NATO peace-keeping troops. The Rocky Mountain News foreign affairs columnist Holger Jensen says the recent events:

    VOICE: ... demonstrate the futility of trying to persuade implacably hostile Serbs and Albanians to live together in a multiethnic Kosovo. They also show how ludicrous it is for the Western powers to recognize Serbian sovereignty over a province that is now only five percent Serbian, with 100-thousand Serbs surrounded by two million Albanians who don't want nor recognize rule from Belgrade.

    /// OPT ///

    TEXT: Lastly, some good news for lovers of chocolate from today's Orlando Sentinel.

    VOICE: Recent headlines touting the health benefits of chocolate were as comforting as an extra-large Three Musketeers bar [Editors: a popular American chocolate candy bar.] ...Could fat, sugar-and calorie- laden chocolate really be good for you? Preliminary research ... offers that hope. The study that University of California researchers conducted suggests that the flavonoids in cocoa ...effectively boost blood flow. [But] before unwrapping another Hershey's bar, chocoholics should read the fine print. Participants in the study consumed only moderate amounts of cocoa, sugar and water - - not the fattier milk chocolate. [And] The study was small ... Only about 40 people participated. Researchers didn't look at the side effects of overindulgence. ... The comfort food may or may not help the heart, but it sure is good for the soul

    /// END OPT ///

    TEXT: On that note, we conclude this sampling of comments from the editorial pages of Thursday U-S press.
    NEB/ANG/KL 24-Feb-2000 11:48 AM EDT (24-Feb-2000 1648 UTC)
    NNNN
    Source: Voice of America


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