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Voice of America, 99-12-16Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] NATO / KOSOVO (L-ONLY) BY RON PEMSTEIN (BRUSSELS)DATE=12/16/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-257213 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The U-N high representative in Kosovo, Bernard Kouchner, has brought his plea for money to the foreign ministers of NATO and their partners in the Euro-Atlantic council. Correspondent Ron Pemstein reports from NATO headquarters in Brussels. TEXT: NATO sees the past six-months of peace in Kosovo as a success story. The 850-thousand refugees have returned home, minority Serbs are starting to come back, the murder rate has been reduced to that of large cities in Western Europe. Civil institutions are beginning to function again. Into this picture comes Bernard Kouchner, the man who runs civil affairs in Kosovo for the United Nations. He says he needs more support. /// KOUCHNER ACT ////// END ACT ///// KOUCHNER ACT ////// END ACT ////// KOUCHNER ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/RP/GE/RAE 16-Dec-1999 09:20 AM EDT (16-Dec-1999 1420 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] KOSOVO DEATH (L) BY JIM RANDLE (PENTAGON)DATE=12/16/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-257227 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: A U-S soldier died Thursday from injuries suffered when his vehicle hit a mine in Kosovo. Pentagon officials identify the dead man as Staff Sergeant Joseph Suponcic [pron: soo-`PON-ik] of (Jersey Shore in) Pennsylvania. V-O-A's Jim Randle reports from the Pentagon, Sergeant Suponcic was a member of the elite Green Berets. TEXT: Pentagon spokesman Ken Bacon says the dead soldier was a passenger in a small military vehicle that triggered a blast from an explosive hidden in a road about 30 kilometers east of Pristina. /// BACON ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/JR/TVM/WTW 16-Dec-1999 15:55 PM EDT (16-Dec-1999 2055 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] MACEDONIA PRESIDENT (L-ONLY) BY STEFAN BOS (BUDAPEST)DATE=12/15/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-257196 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Macedonia's new President, Boris Trajkovski, was sworn in Wednesday, pledging not to allow ethnic hatred to undermine stability in the small Balkan republic. Stefan Bos reports from Budapest that the inauguration was boycotted by an opposition party that calls him an illegitimate president. TEXT: The opposition Social Democrats, who allege
widespread election fraud, boycotted the parliamentary
ceremony where Mr. Trajkovski was sworn in.
According to the official results, the new president
beat his Social Democratic challenger, Tito Petkovski,
by a wide margin during a runoff vote on December 5th.
International observers did find evidence of election
fraud at some polling stations, but they concluded
that the vote was generally in order. As most
suspected irregularities were at polling stations in
areas where ethnic Albanians predominate, the voting
controversy increased tensions between them and
Macedonia's Slav majority.
Ethnic Albanians -- perhaps 30-percent of the
population -- have complained about discrimination in
jobs and education.
Western diplomats have expressed concern about the
situation in Macedonia, which since gaining
independence from Yugoslavia in 1991 was seen as an
island of relative stability in the Balkans.
That was one of the reasons why President Trajkovski
stressed the need for ethnic tolerance in his
inauguration speech. Mr. Trajkovski said that his
republic of just over two million people should also
have good relations with its neighbors, including
Yugoslavia.
Yugoslavia has criticized Macedonia for serving as a
base for thousands of NATO troops supporting
peacekeepers in neighboring Kosovo, where the United
Nations and ethnic Albanian leaders set up an
alternative administration on Wednesday.
But President Trajkovski -- a former deputy foreign
minister in the center-right government and a
Methodist minister -- stressed that he will continue
to extend a warm hand of cooperation to Yugoslavia and
all other neighbors in the troubled region. (Signed)
NEB/SB/TVM/gm
15-Dec-1999 19:11 PM EDT (16-Dec-1999 0011 UTC)
[04] ROMANIA POLITICS (L-ONLY) BY STEFAN BOS (BUDAPEST)DATE=12/16/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-257233 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Romania's president has appointed a new prime minister: the governor of the country's central bank, Mugur Isarescu [pron: moo-gur ih-sah-`RESS-koo], who has no political affiliation. Many Romanians hope the new prime minister will be able to revive the country's economy. From Budapest, Stefan Bos has more on this story. TEXT: President Emil Constantinescu has nominated
Mugur Isarescu, a 50-year-old economist, to be
Romania's new prime minister.
Mr. Isarescu will replace Radu Vasile, who was fired
by the president earlier this week, amid continuing
economic difficulties and political in-fighting.
Mr. Isarescu is not a member of any political party,
but President Constantinescu says he feels this will
give him greater credibility. The president said he
conducted wide-ranging political consultations before
naming the central-bank chief.
Analysts hailed Mr. Isarescu's nomination, saying
Romania needs a prime minister who can introduce
economic reforms, at a time when the country is
preparing to apply for membership in the European
Union.
Mr. Isarescu has led Romania's central bank since the
revolution that ousted the country's dictator, Nicolae
Ceausescu, 10 years ago. He has won praise for
keeping the bank free from political influence during
a series of government changes in Bucharest.
In a recent interview, Mr. Isarescu said he practiced
"the politics of reality" as the central bank
governor. He predicted the prospect of European Union
membership will help Romanian lawmakers decide to
implement what he called "coherent" economic reforms.
Bankers say Mr. Isarescu is a good diplomat -- a
talent he may need in negotiations with striking
workers and students, who are protesting the fall in
Romania's living standards.
Thursday marked the anniversary of the beginning of
the protest movement that climaxed in Ceausescu's
overthrow in 1989, but there were few celebrations in
Bucharest.
Analysts say they are not surprised, since recent
opinion polls suggest that more than half of all
Romanians believe their lives have changed for the
worse since the country abandoned communism.
(Signed)
[05] ROMANIA PRESIDENT (L-ONLY) BY STEFAN BOS (BUDAPEST)DATE=12/15/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-257199 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The former President of Romania, Ion Iliescu, has described Tuesday's firing of the Prime Minister as unconstitutional and warned of more political turmoil. Stefan Bos reports from Budapest that European Union leaders, who only last weekend invited Romania to prepare for membership, have expressed concern about the situation. TEXT: Former Romanian President Iliescu, who is the
leader of the main opposition Party of Social
Democracy, or P-D-S-R, criticized President Emil
Constantinescu for dismissing Prime Minister Radu
Vasile earlier this week.
Mr. Iliescu's comments came as the P-D-S-R walked out
of parliament when it became clear that Mr. Vasile
would not return as prime minister any time soon.
The P-D-S-R called for early elections, but President
Constantinescu said that Romania's stability is better
served if the coalition government lead by a new prime
minister stays in power until its mandate ends later
next year.
Mr. Constantinescu said he dismissed Prime Minister
Vasile because he was unable to fulfill his duties as
leader after a power struggle within the Government.
But there are also indications that the prime minister
was fired because of the perceived failure of the
cabinet to speed up economic reforms. In recent
weeks, thousands of students and workers have held
massive demonstrations against the Vasile government,
which they blamed for their declining standard of
living.
The crisis comes at a politically sensitive time for
Romania, which was last week invited by the European
Union to join the 15-nation bloc along with other
former Communist countries. European Union officials
said Wednesday that the present political situation
could hinder Romania's efforts to improve its economic
situation, which is a requirement for E-U membership.
(Signed)
NEB/sb/tvm/gm
15-Dec-1999 19:35 PM EDT (16-Dec-1999 0035 UTC)
[06] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)DATE=12/16/1999TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-257231 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Stock prices in the United States were higher today (Thursday). But interest rate concerns dampened enthusiasm for almost everything except the technology sector. V-O-A correspondent Elaine Johanson reports from New York: TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average struggled for a fractional gain of 19 points, closing at 11- thousand-244. The Standard and Poor's 500 index rose five points. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq composite soared for a gain of two and one-half percent, setting another record high. The price of the 30-year government bond fell, pushing yields up to a seven-week high, on the news that the U-S trade deficit widened in October - in part because of higher oil prices. Also, first-time jobless claims fell last week to a 26-year low, indicating the U-S labor market remains tight. Now, no one believes the U-S Federal Reserve Board will raise short-term interest rates when it meets next Tuesday - just four days before Christmas. But the "Fed" is expected to act when it meets early next year. /// Rest Opt ////// COHEN ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [07] THURSDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=12/16/1999TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11596 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 CONTENT= INTRO: President Clinton is being sharply criticized for avoiding the Panama Canal turnover ceremony in many daily papers. Other editorials deal with the admission by the president that his policy toward homosexuals in the military has failed; the Israel- Syria peace talks and prodding the U-N to re-monitor Saddam Hussein's weapons development. Other editorials concern restitution for slave labor; Croatia's chance for a new beginning; and mourning for a pair of literary figures passing from the scene. Now, here is _________ with a sampling in today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: President Clinton's absence at the turn-over ceremony of the Panama Canal is directly in the cross- hairs of several editorial writers this Thursday. "Clinton Missed The Boat in Panama" proclaims the headline in "The Chicago Tribune", which adds: VOICE: Just as its construction in the early 1900's signaled America's debut as a major world player, the turning over of the . Canal to Panama at the end of the century ought to have showcased United States at the apogee of its power - a nation confident, unafraid and willing to reshape its relationship with its Western Hemisphere neighbors. Instead, the ceremonies ... turned into a display of American churlishness, insecurity and petty politics. President Clinton should have been there ... TEXT: In New Hampshire, "The Manchester Union-Leader" combines criticism of Mr. Clinton with fears of some in Congress about possible Chinese influence in the canal's future. VOICE: .[Mr.] Clinton's decision to not attend Tuesday's ceremony turning over control of the Panama Canal from the U-S to the Chinese company Hutchison Whampoa Limited (under the supervision of the Panamanian government.) is a clear indicator of how badly this deal reeks and how embarrassing it is for the U-S. /// OPT /// Is it possible [President] Clinton felt shame about the transfer? . Just last Sunday, Colombian rebels attacked a navy base 15-miles from the Panamanian border, killing 36 people. . This is an unstable time for the region and forfeiting the canal . puts American interests in jeopardy. /// END OPT ///TEXT: In Hawaii, the president's absence is viewed as "a blunder" by the "Honolulu Star-Bulletin", but the "Houston Chronicle" insists that -- retaining [the] . Canal would have threatened stability. VOICE: Turning over control of the canal to Panama signals U-S recognition of history's course. It may have been our canal, but it was not situated in our country. TEXT: Domestically, concerning President Clinton's admitted failing policy toward homosexuals in the military, "The St. Petersburg Times" says -- Let gays serve openly in [the] military. VOICE: President Clinton has finally acknowledged the obvious: that his do not ask, do not tell" policy for gays in the military is "out of whack . .Before the issue becomes even more politicized, the president and the nation's military leaders should take this opportunity to do the right thing. It is time to end the military's discrimination against good soldiers who just happen to be homosexual. /// OPT ///TEXT: "USA Today", the national daily published in a Washington, D-C suburb says Mr. Clinton's policy, has been a failure from the start. And in Maine, "The Portland Press Herald" says: VOICE: In a Catch-22 worthy of the late author Joseph Heller's best satire, the U-S military has a policy that forbids harassment and discrimination against gay and lesbian soldiers. That same policy, however, allows the military to discharge a man or woman who admits to being a homosexual. Gay soldiers, then, have a right to not be discriminated against, but they may only exercise that right if they are willing to risk exposure of their sexual orientation and discrimination by the military. /// END OPT ///TEXT: Internationally, several papers are talking about the peace talks underway in Washington between Syria and Israel, and a potential American price tag for success. Here is "The Houston Chronicle". VOICE: Talks between Syria and Israel began . amid the expected signs that the going will not be easy or quick. Yet, already the issue has been raised whether the United States would be a guarantor of any eventual agreement by providing peacekeeping troops, specifically on the hotly contested Golan Heights. The Clinton administration . is letting it be known that a multi-national peace force might be required to allay Israel's security fears. TEXT: Even if the U-S does not have to provide troops, "The Detroit News" is worried about a possible 18-billion dollar payment to Israel for the costs of its pullout from the area. VOICE: If this is the final accounting, and if it achieves lasting peace in the Middle East, it might be [worth it.] But there are good reasons to question whether Syria can be relied upon to live up to its end of the bargain -- and whether this would be the end of the American commitment. TEXT: Still in the region, the debate continues over how to convince Saddam Hussein's friends in the United Nations to agree to a new weapons inspection program in Iraq. "The Boston Globe" takes aim at France. VOICE: When the French government abruptly postponed a U-N Security Council vote Tuesday on a resolution mandating resumed inspection of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, France was not only displaying a shameless susceptibility to Saddam Hussein's petro-dollar blackmail, but also repeating the error that has haunted every effort to solve the world's chronic Saddam problem. . France and other members of the Security Council are leaving Saddam free to develop and hide weapons of mass destruction. TEXT: The issue of slave labor during World War Two and just compensation for its victims is back in the news, and "The San Francisco Chronicle" says of the latest German agreement: VOICE: German industry and the country's government have agreed in broad outline to pay five-point-two-billion-dollars to the victims of Nazi slave labor policies. . the long delay for compensation, is a shameful legacy of the century's worst war. . But to the extent that painful history can be resolved, the agreement marks progress. /// OPT ///TEXT: Turning to Russian affairs, "The Washington Post" decries both Moscow's ongoing assault on Chechnya and potential U-S financial support for aid to a possibly corrupt Russian Oil company. VOICE: After Tyumen [Oil company] gained control of a large Siberian oil field last month, depriving British-American rival B-P Amoco of ownership, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development called the transfer ownership "a sham" and "wholly contrary to the concepts of fairness and transparency." So why is the United States preparing to assist Tyumen? . [Because] . the proposed aid comes from the Export-Import Bank .. [that is] not [required] to consider the foreign policy implications of its efforts, so it is not bothered by the Chechnya conflict. /// END OPT ///TEXT: "The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette" sees the death of Croatian leader Franjo Tudjman as an opportunity for Croatia to "reform" itself: VOICE: . his death marks a watershed in Croatia's maturation as a sovereign state. . Though despicable, President Tudjman's record as an ethnic cleanser is often overlooked because it was his army that finally drove the Bosnian Serbs to the bargaining table at Dayton in 1995. History will remember Mr. Tudjman, who was often compared to Mussolini for his fondness of military pomp and ceremony, as the man who did NATO's dirty work in this regard. TEXT: Also being noted is the retirement of Charles Schulz, author of the beloved comic strip Peanuts, who says he will end the strip and retire in the New Year to fight colon cancer. Among the many laments for the Peanuts gang of neurotic children is this from Maine's "Press Herald": VOICE: No longer will Schroeder perform Beethoven on his toy piano as lovelorn Lucy gazes adoringly into his eyes. No longer will Linus have a blanket to hold, or Lucy dispense psychiatric advice to Charlie Brown ... Sadder still, no longer will the little red-haired girl spurn Charlie Brown's advances, nor will snoopy ever again dance with happiness around his supper dish or fly off to fight the Red Baron. ... We are going to miss the little round-headed kid and his friends. They were all our friends, too. /// OPT ///TEXT: "The Los Angeles Times" laments that the comic strip: VOICE: .provided us with something invaluable and hard to find nowadays, a sort of gentle guide to getting along. TEXT: While in Philadelphia, "The Inquirer" adds: VOICE: The strip's creator suffused it with a theological wisdom. Grace is not cheap. Grief can be good. Hope is more essential than success. To be human is to be ever willing to test whether this really might be the time you get to kick the ball. /// END OPT ///TEXT: On that farewell note, we bid goodbye as well,
to this compilation of quotes from Thursday's
editorials from the U-S press.
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