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Voice of America, 00-03-10Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] ALBRIGHT ONITER (S ONLY) BY KYLE KING (BRUSSELS)DATE=3/9/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-260036 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: U-S Secretary of State Madeleine Albright meets with NATO and European officials in Brussels today (Friday) for talks on the situation in Kosovo and Montenegro. The Secretary arrived in the Belgian capital after a two-day visit to Bosnia, where she again blamed much of the trouble in the region on Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. V-O-A's Kyle King has this report from Brussels. TEXT: A U-S official traveling with Ms. Albright
said the situations in Montenegro and Kosovo are
expected to come up at all of her meetings Friday,
because everybody is concerned.
In the past week, Serb police have blocked the border
with Montenegro, the smaller of the two remaining
Yugoslav republics. And along Kosovo's border, Serb
police have clashed with armed ethnic Albanians,
sending dozens of people fleeing for safety in Kosovo.
U-S officials say they are watching both hot spots
very closely, and Ms. Albright will discuss the
situation with NATO and European officials.
She will meet (Friday) with European Commission
President Romano Prodi and E-U High Representative
Javier Solana before holding talks with NATO Secretary
General George Robertson.
Secretary of State Albright has blamed extremists on
both sides in Kosovo for stirring up tensions, but
officials say the only government involved is the one
controlled by President Slobodan Milosevic. (Signed)
NEB/KBK/ENE/gm
09-Mar-2000 19:27 PM EDT (10-Mar-2000 0027 UTC)
[02] ALBRIGHT / KOSOVO (L) BY KYLE KING ()DATE=3/10/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-260060 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: U-S Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has expressed concern about the possibility of renewed fighting in Kosovo this spring. The comments came in Brussels, where the secretary is meeting with NATO and European Union officials. VOA's Kyle King reports from Brussels. TEXT: Secretary of State Albright's talks come amid rising tensions in Kosovo, where clashes between Serbs and ethnic Albanians erupted again this week in the town of Mitrovica. At least 40 people were injured in the violence, including a number of French peacekeepers. Speaking to reporters after talks with E-U Commission President Romano Prodi, Ms. Albright said she was concerned about the possibility that further violence could erupt as the weather in Kosovo turns warm. /// ALBRIGHT ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/KBK/KL 10-Mar-2000 09:40 AM EDT (10-Mar-2000 1440 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] YUGOSLAV WAR CRIMES TRIAL BY LAUREN COMITEAU (THE HAGUE)DATE=3/10/2000TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=5-45615 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: On Monday morning, a top military leader goes on trial at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal. Bosnian Serb General Radislav Krstic is charged with genocide for commanding the execution of thousands of Muslims after the fall of the United Nations-declared safe area of Srebrenica in 1995. Lauren Comiteau has more from The Hague on what is likely to be the tribunal's most highly-publicized trial to date. TEXT: Srebrenica. The name of this town once known for its silver mines has become almost synonymous with slaughter. It was the scene of the worst massacres in Europe since the Holocaust. Five years ago, Bosnian Serbs overran the enclave in eastern Bosnia, which the United Nations had declared a safe haven. Thousands of Muslim men and boys were killed over the course of 5 days. Now for the first time, prosecutors say they have someone in a position of power to answer for those crimes. /// END ACT ////// RISLEY ACT ////// END ACT ////// DE COCQ ACT ////// END ACT ///NEB/LC/GE/WTW 10-Mar-2000 12:56 PM EDT (10-Mar-2000 1756 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [04] ROMANIA - HUNGARY / RIVER POLLUTION (L-ONLY) BY STEFAN BOS (BUDAPEST)DATE=3/10/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-260081 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Six weeks after a damaging cyanide spill that polluted rivers in three countries, Eastern Europe is bracing for another ecological disaster. Twenty- thousand tons of mud and water polluted with toxic heavy metals escaped Friday from a mine in northwestern Romania. Stefan Bos reports from Budapest, authorities in Hungary are on high alert. TEXT: Romanian officials say two days of torrential rains and a rapid snow melt caused the new spill. A dam broke at Romania's state-owned Baia Borsa lead and zinc mine, near (Baia Mare and) the border with Hungary and Ukraine. Romania's Environment Ministry says 20-thousand tons of "metal-bearing waste" escaped from a pollution containment lake and spilled into (the Tisza River) a tributary of the Danube, Central Europe's biggest river system. Friday's spill flowed into Hungary, fouling waters already damaged by another accident in Romania, on January 30th, when 100-thousand cubic meters of waste water laced with cyanide escaped from another mine. // OPT ///// 1st HORVATH ACT ////// END ACT ////// 2nd HORVATH ACT ////// END ACT ////// REST OPT ////// 1st GADO ACT ////// END OPT ///NEB/SJB/WTW 10-Mar-2000 18:55 PM EDT (10-Mar-2000 2355 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [05] SPANISH ELECTION (L-ONLY) BY GIL CARBAJAL (MADRID)DATE=3/10/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-260069 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Today/Friday is the last day of campaigning for Spain's general elections on Sunday. Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar's Popular Party is favored in the balloting, but an alliance between the Socialist and Communist parties could upset predictions. Gil Carbajal reports that 34-million Spaniards are eligible to vote, but that a threat of separatist terrorism could cause many to stay home in the Basque region. TEXT: Public opinion polls predict that Prime
Minister Aznar's Popular Party will win up to four or
five percent more votes than its closest rival, the
Spanish Socialist Workers Party led by Joaquin
Almunia. Prime Minister Aznar is expected to add
anywhere from two to 15 seats to the 156 seats his
party currently holds in parliament. That would still
leave him short of the 176 seats necessary for an
absolute majority in the 350-seat parliament.
The Socialists, who won 141 seats in the last
elections four years ago, are projected to win
anywhere between 131 to 144 seats. They are counting
on an alliance with the Communist-led United Left
Coalition, negotiated in January, to bring them back
to power.
Joaquin Almunia of the Socialist Workers Party has
pointed out that in 1996 the combined votes of the two
parties totaled two-point-five-million more than those
won by the Popular Party. But the two left-wing
parties had been bitterly divided since the Spanish
Civil War, preventing any sort of political
accommodation until now.
Prime Minister Aznar, who in 1996 ended 14 years of
Socialist rule under Felipe Gonzalez by a bare one
percent margin, has been campaigning on his record of
efficient management of the Spanish economy. This has
included cutting taxes, reducing inflation
drastically, generating one of the highest growth
rates in the European Union and reducing unemployment
to 10 percent from 17 percent under the Socialists.
Casting a shadow over the Spanish elections on Sunday
is the threat of terrorism by the Basque pro-
independence group, ETA. Since it called off a 14-
month truce in late November 1999, it has set off
three car bombs in as many months, killing three
people. ETA's political wing, Euskal Heeritarok, is
boycotting these elections. Pro-ETA hooligans have
harassed Socialist and Popular Party politicians.
The climate of fear in the Basque country is such that
nearly 48-thousand Basque voters have decided to cast
absentee ballots rather than go near polling booths.
This is twice the number of absentee voters than in
the last elections.
Terrorism and the left-wing coalition are making these
general elections in Spain anything but boring.
(SIGNED)
[06] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)DATE=3/10/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-260077 CONTENT= VOICED AT: /// Eds: Use Opt graphs for long ///INTRO: U-S stock prices were mostly lower today (Friday), as sellers unloaded more of the "blue-chips" and locked in profits from the big run-up in technology. VOA correspondent Elaine Johanson reports from New York: TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 81 points, less than one percent, closing at 99-hundred- 28. The Dow is down four percent for the week. The Standard and Poor's 500 index dropped six points. The Nasdaq composite managed to hold on for only a fractional gain, but enough for another record high. Wall Street is still enthralled by the Nasdaq's stunning, first-ever close over five-thousand Thursday. The Nasdaq had climbed to three-thousand not too long ago - just last October - with hardly a break in momentum since then. ///BEGIN OPT//////ACUFF ACT//////END ACT//////END OPT////// REST OPT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [07] FRIDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ERIKA EVANS (WASHINGTON)DATE=3/10/2000TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=6-11722 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-2702 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The possibility that China may be admitted to the World Trade Organization is drawing attention in today's U-S editorials. Other topics being given consideration are Chile's legal dilemma about prosecuting former ruler Augusto Pinochet, the situation in the Balkans, and the state of Iranian reform. Domestically, there is also some commentary on the shifting climate in the U-S presidential campaign. Now here with a closer look and some excerpts is ______________ with today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: This week President Clinton presented Congress with a bill that would grant China normal trading status under American law. U-S newspapers are supporting his efforts and calling on Congress to pass the new legislation. The New York Times believes the China trade bill serves broad American interests and deserves strong bipartisan support. VOICE: Congress should quickly approve legislation needed to smooth China's admission to the World Trade Organization. By helping China into the W-T-O, lawmakers would not be endorsing Beijing's policies in other areas, like human rights and Taiwan. They would be speeding the opening and reform of China's economy and subordinating Beijing's arbitrary authority in trade matters to the rule of international law. ...Unless Congress approves the China trade legislation by the end of this spring, the issue is likely to get caught up in [US] campaign politics and delayed until next year. By then China might back off from some of the market-opening concessions it is now offering. Neither the Taiwan issue nor labor's misplaced opposition should hold up an early, positive vote. TEXT: That was the opinion of the New York Times. The Wall Street Journal holds a similar view, but warns that establishing permanent normalized trading ties with China will not be a simple task - especially in a U-S election year. VOICE: Congress would do well to reject the arguments of protectionists and human rights activists and approve this measure, primarily to preserve America's own interest, but also to further the cause of economic freedom in China. ...This won't be easy. Just granting China a yearly extension of normal trade ties has historically provoked a pitched battle. But granting permanent trading status will require Congress to dispose of its yearly human rights review, fully de-linking trade from human rights. Republicans, generally more disposed to free trade than Democrats, can't do it alone, despite their congressional majorities. Mr. Clinton will need to rally more than 70 Democrats - a third of the caucus - to win final passage. .This should be a fascinating test of real intentions on all sides. TEXT: Former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet is back home in Chile, after almost 17 months of house arrest in London. He was being held on an international extradition request for human rights abuses during his 17-year rule. He was only allowed to fly home when British authorities determined he was too ill to stand trial. Some Chileans are cheering his return while others are cursing his freedom. Here in the United States, The Washington Times says the Pinochet dilemma has finally been returned where it belongs. VOICE: Chileans must now wrestle with the difficult question of what to do with the general, as the rest of the world watches. Still, they are best equipped to pass judgement on the former dictator. ...There are steps the general could now take to help Chile heal. Many families haven't had even the satisfaction of burying their dead. Mr. Pinochet should urge military officials to help locate the disappeared. In the twilight of his life, the general should also apologize to the family members of those murdered during his rule. In Chile, issues related to Mr. Pinochet have always been particularly divisive but the people and the country's judicial and political institutions have proved to be mature enough to reckon with the past on their own. TEXT: The situation in the Balkans and international peacekeeping efforts in the mostly ethnic Albanian province of Kosovo in Serb-dominated Yugoslavia are getting some attention from the Washington Post. The paper's editors regard Western policy on Kosovo's status ambiguous and problematic. VOICE: War came to Kosovo after [Yugoslavia's president] Mr. (Slobodan) Milosevic stripped the province of the political autonomy it enjoyed under [former Yugoslav communist leader] Tito and substituted a kind of Serb-dominated apartheid. Even without last year's savagery, it would be hard to imagine how Kosovo could ever live under Mr. Milosevic again. Yet the United States and Europe, through a U-N Security Council resolution, insist both that Kosovo is part of Yugoslavia and that it should enjoy "substantial autonomy and meaningful self- administration." An interim U-N government is somehow to make this mandate succeed. .As extreme Serb and Albanian elements try to fill the political vacuum, U-N Secretary General Kofi Annan has called for the Security Council to debate and define the notion of "substantial autonomy." Such a discussion is necessary.... . But even more urgent is a credible allied strategy for bringing about internal political change in Belgrade, without which no stable political arrangement in, or around, Kosovo can be achieved. TEXT: The Boston Globe is concerned with Iran and whether the country will truly be capable of reforming itself democratically following recent parliamentary elections. VOICE: One immediate test of reform in Iran is the pending trial of 13 Iranian Jews who are accused of espionage by hard-liners who control the country's judicial system. Until now, the justice system under the Iranian theocracy has been arbitrary, political and unfair. Reformers were imprisoned on trumped-up charges, as were journalists, artists, and intellectuals. ...The plight of the Iranian Jews should become not merely a gauge of the power balance between reformers and reactionaries inside Iran, but also a test of Iran's readiness to overcome its international pariah status. ///OPT/// The 13 pawns in the Iranian power struggle should be released immediately. If they are brought to trial, they must have genuine legal representation, and the proceedings should be open to outside legal observers and human rights monitors. ///END OPT/// TEXT: And in our final item, Republican U-S Senator John McCain and Democrat Bill Bradley halted their presidential campaigns Thursday after suffering significant losses to each party's front-runner in primary elections this week. The Chicago Tribune in Illinois comments on the efforts given by both candidates and the lessons to be learned. VOICE: If you run for president, you can hope to capture lighting in a bottle (an impossible task) or you can patiently, painstakingly line up the support of your party's leaders and its bedrock voting blocs. Bill Bradley, and even more, John McCain, tried to capture lightning in a bottle. Each man went through the primary season hoping to find a spark that would ignite a flame that would turn into a conflagration, a wildfire voter enthusiasm that would rout his party's favorite and clear his own way to nomination. It was not to be. On Tuesday - Super Tuesday - [Vice President and Democrat] Al Gore and Republican Texas Governor George W. Bush demonstrated that ...there is no substitute for the support and resources of a party organization. TEXT: With that perspective from the Chicago Tribune,
we conclude this sampling of comment from Friday's U-S
press.
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