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Voice of America, 99-07-30Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] U-N - KOSOVO - K-L-A (L - ONLY) BY MAX RUSTON (UNITED NATIONS)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252350 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: A senior United Nations official says alleged war criminals still in Kosovo need to be apprehended and tried as soon as possible. He says such measures are needed to reassure residents of the Yugoslav province that justice will be maintained. More from our U-N correspondent Max Ruston. TEXT: The call for swift justice came from Sergio Vieira de Mello, who just returned to New York after serving as the interim chief of U-N civilian operations in Kosovo. /// VIEIRA DE MELLO ACt ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] STABILITY SUMMIT (S-L)CQ BY LAURIE KASSMAN (SARAJEVO)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252335 CONTENT= VOICED AT: //////////INTRO: More than 30 leaders have gathered in Sarajevo to find a way to ensure stability and economic development in the Balkans. The Stability Pact for the Balkans will focus on three key areas -- democratic reform, economic development and regional security. Correspondent Laurie Kassman is in Sarajevo for the summit and files this report. TEXT: In his opening remarks as Conference Chairman, the European Union's current president, Marti Ahtisaari of Finland, set down the goals of the Stability Pact. ///AHTISAARI ACT //////END ACT //////CUT HERE FOR SHORT C-R ////// AHTSAARI ACT ////// END ACT /////OPT//NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] STABILITY SUMMIT -- WRAP (L) BY LAURIE KASSMAN (SARAJEVO)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252343 CONTENT= VOICED AT: // RE-ISSUING TO CORRECT CR NUMBER //INTRO: More than 30 leaders gathered Friday in Sarajevo to talk about the future stability and development of the Balkans. But the summit was clouded by one man -- Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. He was not at the summit but was very much on the mind of those who were. V-O-A correspondent Laurie Kassman in Sarajevo reports summit leaders pledged to rebuild the Balkans and to leave the door open for Yugoslavia - after the departure of Mr. Milosevic. TEXT: Balkan leaders have presented ideas for integrating their region into mainstream Europe. The international community has promised political and financial support. Only one Balkan leader was excluded -- Yugoslav President Milosevic. British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook says Serbia will not benefit from the Stability Pact as long as Mr. Milosevic is in power. /// COOK ACT ONE ////// END ACT //////OPT // COOK ACT TWO ////// END OPT ACT ////// REST OPTIONAL ///NEB/LMK/JWH/KL 30-Jul-1999 15:28 PM LOC (30-Jul-1999 1928 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [04] CLINTON-SUMMIT (L) BY DAVID GOLLUST (SARAJEVO)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252325 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: President Clinton is in the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, for the Stability Pact Summit on economic recovery and political reform in the Balkans. V-O-A's David Gollust reports from Sarajevo. Text: Mr. Clinton and his party arrived here aboard a giant U-S Air Force C-17 transport plane from the NATO air base at Aviano, Italy. Aviano was the main staging point for the allied air campaign against Yugoslavia. Aides say he has brought with him a five-point U-S plan, to be presented at the summit, that would speed the economic recovery of the region. It would give duty-free status to Southeast European products exported to the United States. It would also provide hundreds of millions of dollars worth of credits and incentives for investments in the regional economy. But the officials say Serbia will be excluded from the program as long as Slobodan Milosevic remains in power in Belgrade. As one official puts it, there is one obstacle to their being part of this and that is Mr. Milosevic. The President began his visit here with a meeting with the three-member Bosnian joint presidency. In a brief exchange with reporters at a photo session with the Muslim, Croat and Serb leaders, he paid tribute to post-war reconciliation and rebuilding in Bosnia and dismissed criticism that the process has been too slow: ///Clinton actuality//////end actuality///NNNN Source: Voice of America [05] CLINTON-SUMMIT (L-UPDATE) BY DAVID GOLLUST (SARAJEVO)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252338 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: At the Stability Pact Summit in Sarajevo, President Clinton has offered new U.S. assistance for Balkans economic recovery. But Serbia would be denied benefits as long as Slobodan Milosevic remains in power. VOA's David Gollust reports from the Bosnian capital. Text: Mr. Clinton presented a five-point Balkans aid package that includes a proposal for duty free- treatment for most products from the region in the U-S market, and hundreds of millions of dollars in credits and incentives for American investments there. The U.S. initiative, which Clinton aides hope will be matched by the European Union and other summit participants, came in a closed-door presentation by the President which included scathing criticism of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, the only Balkans leader excluded from the gathering. In a text of his remarks released to reporters, Mr. Clinton said all meaningful economic activity in Serbia is controlled by Mr. Milosevic and his "cronies" and that any reconstruction aid that reached that country would only "perpetuate the Milosevic regime." Serbia, Mr. Clinton said, will have a future only when Mr. Milosevic and his policies are consigned to the past. Briefing reporters later, Clinton National Security Adviser Sandy Berger said the summit partners are eager to extend a hand to (eager to aid) Serbia and its people once there is a change of leadership in Belgrade: ///BERGER ACTUALITY////// END ACT ///NEB/DAG/KL 30-Jul-1999 11:11 AM LOC (30-Jul-1999 1511 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [06] CLINTON-SARAJEVO WRAP (S) BY DAVID GOLLUST (SARAJEVO)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252340 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: President Clinton, at the Stability Pact Summit in Sarajevo, announced a U-S program of aid and trade benefits to help speed Balkans economic recovery after the Kosovo war. V-O-A's David Gollust reports from the Bosnian capital. Text: The President's plan would give duty-free status to Balkans products and provide hundreds of millions of dollars in investment incentives for the region. But he told students at a multi-ethnic high school being rebuilt after Serb-inflicted war damage that Serbia - which was excluded from the summit - also excludes itself from reconstruction aid until there is new leadership in Belgrade. ///CLINTON ACT//////END ACT///NEB/DAG/RAE 30-Jul-1999 12:06 PM LOC (30-Jul-1999 1606 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [07] BOSNIAN LESSONS BY LAURIE KASSMAN (SARAJEVO)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=5-43982 CONTENT= VOICED AT: /// Eds: Will hold through weekend use ///INTRO: In Sarajevo, the site of this weeks (today's) Balkans Stability Summit, the United Nations' special High Representative for Bosnia-Herzogovina, Carlos Westendorp, is winding up his two-year mission. He spoke with a small group of reporters about his experience administering Bosnia and the lessons it could provide for Kosovo. Correspondent Laurie Kassman was there and has this report. TEXT: The 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement ended four years of bloody conflict in Bosnia and laid the framework for its international administration to help the republic regain political and economic stability. Carlos Westendorp is optimistic as he completes his mission as Bosnia's international administator. Bosnia, he says, can serve as a model for Kosovo, which will also be run by a special U-N-appointed representative. But Mr. Westendorp says there are several lessons from Bosnia, where ethnic strife nearly destroyed a country and has made its reconstruction difficult. The first advice he offers is to make sure the administrator in Kosovo establishes a clear chain of command and a substantial budget to pay for rebuilding the civic institutions. ///Westendorp act //////end act //////Second Westendorp act //////end act ////// Third Westendorp act ////// end act ///NEB/LMK/PCF 30-Jul-1999 06:05 AM LOC (30-Jul-1999 1005 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [08] RELIGIOUS LEADERS-KOSOVO BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252353 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Two religious leaders in the United States - recently back from a visit to the Balkans - urged governments today (Friday) to recognize that re- building Kosovo also means finding a way to heal ethnic hatreds. VOA correspondent Elaine Johanson reports from New York: TEXT: Roman Catholic Archbishop Theodore McCarrick and Rabbi Arthur Schneier believe a physically restored Kosovo will unravel unless political leaders also start building a peaceful multi-ethnic society. To do that, they have encouraged the United States and Europe to recognize the importance of utilizing religious leaders in the area to heal the hearts and minds of the Kosovars. Archbishop McCarrick says too many Kosovars want revenge. They must be convinced, he says, that justice does not mean payback violence and that peace, in the end, must include tolerance: //McCARRICK ACT////END ACT//// SCHNEIER ACT ////END ACT//NNNN Source: Voice of America [09] EDITORIAL: KOSOVO WAR CRIMESDATE=8/1/1999TYPE=EDITORIAL NUMBER=0-08394 CONTENT= THIS IS THE ONLY EDITORIAL BEING RELEASED FOR
BROADCAST 08/01/99.
(Resending to fix formatting)
Anncr:
The Voice of America presents differing points
of view on a wide variety of issues. Next, an
editorial expressing the policies of the
United States Government:
Voice:
On July 23rd, British troops with the Kosovo
peacekeeping force, or KFOR, on a routine
evening patrol near the village of Gracko,
heard the sound of automatic weapons fire
coming from nearby fields. Forty minutes
later, a British army unit found the bodies of
fourteen ethnic Serbian men. All had been
brutally murdered. The victims had been
harvesting wheat at the time of the attack.
Additional NATO troops were brought into the
area to begin the search for the perpetrators
of the massacre. KFOR commander Mike Jackson
ordered KFOR to "leave no stone unturned to
get hold of the murderers. . .and bring
security to all the people of Kosovo."
The massacre in Gracko brings to more than
one-hundred forty the number of civilians
murdered in Kosovo in the past six weeks.
About half were ethnic Serbs, and the other
half were ethnic Albanians. Many other people,
including ethnic Roma, have been assaulted,
robbed, or had their homes burned.
This comes against a background of conflict in
which many thousands died, many under the most
brutal circumstances.
KFOR is determined to suppress violence and
lawlessness of any kind and from any source.
Nearly two hundred people, most of them ethnic
Albanians, have been arrested for murder,
arson, looting, and other crimes committed
against ethnic Serbs. KFOR is cooperating with
the international criminal tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia in efforts to bring to
justice accused Serbian war criminals,
including Yugoslav president Slobodan
Milosevic.
It was to put a stop to such horrors that the
U.S. and NATO carried out the air campaign
against Milosevic's military. That same
resolve will be applied in maintaining peace
and security in Kosovo.
Anncr:
That was an editorial expressing the policies
of the United States Government. If you have
a comment, please write to Editorials, V-O-A,
Washington, D-C, 20547, U-S-A. You may also
comment at www-dot-voa-dot-gov-slash-
editorials, or fax us at (202) 619-1043.
30-Jul-1999 12:19 PM LOC (30-Jul-1999 1619 UTC)
[10] YUGOSLAV WAR CRIMES (L ONLY) BY LAUREN COMITEAU (THE HAGUE)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252347 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Two years after it began, the trial of Croatian General Tihomir Blaskic is finally over. The general is accused by prosecutors at the Yugoslav War Crimes Tribunal of commanding troops who murdered Muslims and burned and pillaged their villages in an attempt to get them to leave central Bosnia. Lauren Comiteau in The Hague reports the tribunal's judges now face the huge task of deciding guilt or innocence. TEXT: The job of lawyers on both sides this past week was to go over two years worth of evidence and then instruct the three-judge panel how to rule. In closing arguments, prosecutors asked for a life sentence for General Tihomir Blaskic, the man they say played a pivotal role in ethnically cleansing central Bosnia of its Muslims in the early 1990's. The ultimate plan, say prosecutors, was to create an ethnically pure Croatian state, linking parts of Bosnia to Croatia. Prosecutor Gregory Kehoe says the plan was devised by Croatian President Franjo Tudjman himself in Zagreb and carried out by his handpicked men, including General Blaskic. /// KEHOE ACT ////// END ACT ////// NOBILO TRANSLATOR ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/LC/JWH/KL 30-Jul-1999 14:14 PM LOC (30-Jul-1999 1814 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [11] N-Y ECON WRAP (S & L) BY BRECK ARDERY (NEW YORK)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-252354 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Stock prices in the United States were down today (Friday) as inflation fears continued on Wall Street. V-O-A Business correspondent Breck Ardery reports from New York. TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 10 thousand 655 down 136 points, more than one percent. For the week, the Industrial Average lost 256 points or almost two and one-half percent. The Standard and Poor's 500 index closed Friday at 13 hundred 29, down 12 points. The NASDAQ index lost just a fraction of one percent as many technology stocks held up better than the general market. An index of U-S manufacturing activity shows the prices-paid component rose at a higher-than-expected rate this month. Coming on top of Thursday's report that U-S labor costs are rising, the manufacturing cost figures renewed inflation fears on Wall Street. There is a growing consensus that the U-S Central Bank will again raise short-term interest rates to dampen inflationary pressures. /// REST OPT ////// WEISBERG ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [12] FRIDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=7/30/1999TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11403 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 CONTENT= INTRO: A series of developments in Asia, either occurring or contemplated, is causing a good deal of reaction this Friday in the U-S Press. Domestically, President Clinton's fine in the Paula Jones lawsuit is under discussion, as is the early sacking of the U-S General who won the Kosovo war. There are also comments aplenty on the tax cut battle in Congress; yet another multiple shooting; and the first woman space shuttle commander brings the spacecraft home safely despite several mechanical problems. Now, here with some excerpts and a closer look is ___________ and today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: A U-S intelligence report that North Korea is about to launch a long range missile capable of striking Hawaii or parts of Alaska with a nuclear or chemical warhead, is drawing a good deal of comment. In Oklahoma, "The Tulsa World" says in part: VOICE: The new Taepodong-two missile changes the game entirely. The United States and its allies must make it clear to North Korea that the firing will freeze any further relationship with the Pyongyang government. . This is no time for cajoling. The United States should make it clear that the missile test and the threat it carries will not be tolerated. TEXT: "The Boston Globe" is also upset, noting: VOICE: At last week's gathering of foreign ministers and guests of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, the principal topic of concern was the . launch . ASEAN members are worried because the missile's firing may unravel the patchwork of Asia's tacit security order. /// OPT ///TEXT: Understandable concern is also found in Hawaii, where Thursday's "Honolulu Star-Bulletin" wrote: VOICE: The Clinton administration hoped to eliminate the threat of nuclear attack with the 1994 pact,[offering to build two new nuclear reactors in return for an end to nuclear weapons development] but the North continues to keep the accord's viability in doubt. With its customary rhetorical belligerence, North Korea has threatened to withdraw from the nuclear agreement unless the United States began to show `good faith' by removing economic sanctions. The regime maintains that missile testing is its sovereign right. [Defense Secretary] Cohen's mission is to . [warn] Pyongyang in a credible manner of the consequences of exercising that right. But with North Korea you never know. ///END OPT ///TEXT: As regards neighboring China, comment continues over the so-called `One China' policy debate. In the Connecticut capitol, "The Hartford Courant" notes: VOICE: . The `one China' fiction has kept the peace between the communists on the mainland and the nationalist remnants on Taiwan for decades. /// OPT ////// OPT ///TEXT: Just to the North, "The Providence [Rhode Island] Journal" wonders why the government in Beijing should be so upset by the Falun Gong sect, which it has been harassing. combining economic freedom and political and cultural repression. This won't work in the long run, but the authorities are still trying - - witness their crackdown last week on Falun Gong . This is not a matter of supporting the tenants of Falun Gong, but of acknowledging the right to engage in peaceful activities, including peaceful demonstrations. It is disgraceful that the leaders in Beijing still do not get it. President Clinton must be forceful in explaining things to them next time, and every time, he has a chance. /// END OPT ///TEXT: Domestically, papers are commenting on a federal judge's ruling that President Clinton must pay more than 90-thousand dollars in court costs in the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit. "The New York Times" calls it -- a Deserved Fine for Mr. Clinton -- but "The New York Post" is even more caustic in its headline, which reads - The Lying President Must Pay - then adds: VOICE: . Yet another dubious distinction to Bill Clinton's shameful legacy. The second president ever to be impeached and the first president ever to be held in contempt of court, [Mr.] Clinton now becomes the only president ever to be sanctioned for making false statements under oath. . Thanks to Judge [Susan Webber] Wright, history will record that the president of the United States was a contemptible, willful liar. TEXT: There is also more strong, editorial criticism of the sacking of NATO commanding General Wesley Clark, who won the war against Yugoslavian forces in Kosovo, while aggravating Pentagon officials and politicians at home. The "Arkansas Democrat-Gazette" quotes some famous lines by Rudyard Kipling about civilian contempt for the military, before concluding: VOICE: Despite all the pretenses, the message . is undeniable: This is how America treats commanders who face and overcome constant political obstacles in the conduct of a war. .This is how America treats a soldier who understands that in war there is no substitute for victory. TEXT: Congress and the White House are feuding over the size of a tax cut for the American people, and in the West, "The Colorado Springs Gazette" is strongly in favor of the Republican plan for the bigger cuts. VOICE: Here we go again. Anytime Republicans propose meaningful relief for overburdened taxpayers, you can count on Democrats to resort to what they do best: rank demagoguery. Once again, liberal lovers of big government hope to romance gullible voters with their all too familiar refrain:'Republican tax cuts benefit the rich.' Ofcourse they do, and they should. That is who pays most of the taxes, especially income taxes. TEXT: However in Hawaii, "The Honolulu Star-Bulletin" says of some expert testimony to Congress on the subject: VOICE: Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's advice to go slow on tax cuts should be heeded. TEXT: Reaction to yet another mass killing by a deranged person, this time a chemist and occasional stock market trader in Atlanta, Georgia, who killed nine people and possibly 12,and himself, when cornered by police. "USA Toda", the national daily published in a Washington, D-C suburb submits: VOICE: . he used two powerful handguns. This is part of the true horror of these mad outbursts. Even in the first hours, as the body count was mounting and the descriptions of mayhem were beginning to unfold, it was obvious that the killings could not have been so extensive with any common weapon other than a firearm. .what speaks to every community in the nation . is that guns allow killers to kill quickly, surely, haphazardly. /// OPT ///TEXT: "The Providence [Rhode Island] Journal", looking toward the Balkans where President Clinton and other leaders are mapping plans for a renewal, the Rhode Island paper asks: Do we need this summit?, then adds: VOICE: It is difficult to see how the leaders of 40 nations, including President Clinton, meeting today in Sarajevo to discuss stabilizing the Balkans will get much done. It is just too unwieldy a number. . Today's summit is mostly a photo op for the benefit of the leaders junketing to Sarajevo to display their statesmanship to the folks back home. Pretty much everything . done at the summit could be done . far more cheaply and . better on the phone . /// END OPT ///TEXT: "The Denver Post" and "The Orlando Sentinel" are saluting Eileen Collins, the wife and mother and U-S Air Force colonel who successfully piloted the Shuttle on its most recent mission, despite several serious technological problems. Says "The Sentinel": VOICE: Mrs. Collins successfully shattered yet another one of those barriers often encountered by women who seek to stretch the limits of opportunity. And she paved the way for other women to follow in her inspirational path.. Congratulations to Mrs. Collins - not only for her success, but for allowing others to dare dream of a future in the heavens. TEXT: On that celestial note, we conclude this
sampling of opinion from today's U-S press.
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