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Voice of America, 00-06-08Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] GREECE / BRITAIN (L) (CQ) BY LAURIE KASSMAN (LONDON)DATE=6/8/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-263294 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Britain's military attache in Athens was ambushed and killed Thursday by two unidentified gunmen. Police suspect a Greek terrorist group, known as November 17, was responsible for the killing. Correspondent Laurie Kassman has reaction from London. TEXT: Two gunmen on a motorcycle shot at Stephen Saunders as he was driving near the diplomatic suburb of Athens early Thursday morning. The 52-year-old father of three died in the hospital a few hours later. Foreign Secretary Robin Cook has expressed his anger over the murder. /// COOK ACT ////// END ACT ////// COOK ACT TWO ////// END ACT ////// OPT ///NEB/LMK/GE/KL 08-Jun-2000 10:28 AM EDT (08-Jun-2000 1428 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] KOSOVO/CLARK (L-ONLY) BY PAMELA TAYLOR (WASHINGTON)DATE=6/8/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-263298 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The outgoing military commander of NATO, General Wesley Clark, is defending the alliance against accusations that some of its bombing of Serbia last year amounted to war crimes. The accusations were made by the human rights group, Amnesty international. V-O-A's Pamela Taylor reports General Clark made his defense today/Thursday at a Washington public policy institute (Brookings). TEXT: Using charts and computer-generated graphics, General Clark defended the NATO war effort he directed last year. He said the Kosovo campaign of April 1999 was a success in that it achieved its objective: ousting the Serb forces that were ethnically cleansing or attacking Albanian civilians. Referring to the report this week by Amnesty International, which criticized NATO's bombing of civilian targets, the General had this to say: /// CLARK ACT ONE ////// END ACT ////// CLARK ACT TWO ////// END ACT ///NEB/PAM/JP 08-Jun-2000 13:13 PM EDT (08-Jun-2000 1713 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] ROMANIA POL (L-ONLY) BY STEFAN BOS (BUDAPEST)DATE=6/8/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-263309 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Election results in Romania indicate that country's former Communists and other left-wing opposition groups have won the first round of nationwide municipal elections. This week's ballot was seen as a key test of public opinion before general elections scheduled later this year. As Stefan Bos reports (from Budapest), the leftists' gains are seen as a danger sign for Romania's current center-right government. TEXT: The Central Electoral Bureau, which supervised the vote, says the party of former President Ion Iliescu received around 25 percent of the ballots cast on Sunday. Although second-round [run-off] voting lies ahead, analysts say Mr. Iliescu's Party of Social Democracy, which includes former Communists, is likely to win a dominant share of Romania's mayoral posts and council seats. In addition to their victories at the village, town and provincial level, the leftists are likely to take control of local government in Bucharest (the capital) for the first time in eight years. Voting results released Thursday show none of the four parties that make up Romania's center-right coalition received more than 10 percent of the vote. Analysts are predicting a further decline in the ruling parties' popularity before presidential and parliamentary elections, due later this year. Opinion polls indicate former President Iliescu could defeat the current head of state, President Emil Constantinescu, an outspoken Christian Democrat. These political developments come at a time of growing disillusion with politics, a decade after Romania abandoned communism. Elderly people can be seen burning candles and whispering prayers near the grave of former dictator Nicoleau Ceausescu and his wife, Elena, who were overthrown and executed during a bloody revolution in 1989. An increasing number of Romanians have been protesting against what they see as empty promises by politicians, in a nation where the average income is still less than 100 dollars per month. The International Monetary Fund has extended a standby loan of nearly 540-million dollars to Romania until next February, but the country is under pressure to continue tough reforms, despite social consequences. /// REST OPT ///NEB/SJB/WTW 08-Jun-2000 19:26 PM LOC (08-Jun-2000 2326 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [04] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)DATE=6/8/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-263306 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: U-S stock prices were lower across-the-board Thursday. Corporate profit concerns led to a day-long sell-off among the "blue-chips." V-O-A correspondent Elaine Johanson reports from New York: TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 144 points, over one percent, to 10-thousand-668. The Standard and Poor's 500 index closed nine points lower. And the technology-weighted NASDAQ composite lost 13 points - about four-tenths of one percent. The drop in the Dow industrials was largely the fault of Procter and Gamble. It led the decline. The household products giant projected flat quarterly earnings after previously saying they would be up 15 to 17 percent. The company's chairman has stepped down. /// BEGIN OPT ////// GALVIN ACT ////// END ACT ////// END OPT ////// REST OPT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [05] THURSDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=6/8/2000TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11860 TELEPHONE=619-3335 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= INTRO: A federal judge in Washington has ordered the breakup of Microsoft, the huge, Washington state-based computer software company, on anti-trust grounds and the editorials are beginning to pour into the papers. There are also comments about Monday's Supreme Court decision limiting the rights of grandparents to see their grandchildren. Political turmoil in Israel is another popular topic, as is the U-S economic embargo against Cuba. There are also comments on Peru's election; Mexico's coming election; Fiji's coup and Ukraine's disposal of a deadly nuclear relic. Now, here is ___________ with a closer look and some excerpts in today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: Near the home of Microsoft in Redmond, Washington, the Seattle Times reacts: VOICE: /// OPT /// The hammer has dropped on Microsoft. /// END OPT /// Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson yesterday formally ordered a breakup of the (Microsoft) company into two parts, one for the Windows operating system and another for everything else. What once was unthinkable is a now a court order. ... [Judge] Jackson saw little choice, given the facts and the law. But ...you ... have to ... wonder whether antitrust law adequately deals with matters such as when two products can be stitched into one with a few programmer's key strokes. .... The company vows an appeal, so this fight will go on, perhaps for years. TEXT: The New York Times says that although the content of the ruling was not surprising: VOICE: ... the tone was startlingly stern. Microsoft, (Judge Penfield) says, has been "not credible," "untrustworthy," "disingenuous." /// OPT /// END OPT ///TEXT: The Los Angeles Times says Judge Jackson "deserves praise for his determination" but calls the proposed breakup "a clumsy means of remedying the company's so-evident wrongs." And today's Washington Post worries that: VOICE: ... the judge's remedy is too drastic. Microsoft has serious questions to appeal. /// OPT ///TEXT: The Detroit [Michigan] Free Press calls the decision "well founded" but wants a speedy appeal directly to the Supreme Court, adding: VOICE: ... very likely, this changes everything in the highly competitive high-tech industry. ... this is just as likely the beginning of the end of Microsoft as we know it. TEXT: Across town, /// END OPT /// The Detroit News is furious at the decision: VOICE: ... the government's victory constitutes a stunning defeat for consumers and the American free enterprise system. A full reversal by a higher court is in order. ... the so-called remedy poses a far greater danger to market competition than any of Microsoft's admittedly tough tactics. ... A breakup of Microsoft is only justified if the core principles of free enterprise are abandoned. TEXT: Another popular topic also involves a Supreme Court ruling this Monday limiting the visitation rights of grandparents with their grandchildren. Today's San Jose [California] Mercury News points out that grandparents still have rights to visit their grandchildren, but those rights now have limits, and with good reason. VOICE: During the last two decades many states have gone overboard in giving grandparents the legal muscle to win visitation over parental objections. These laws often don't require the grandparents to show that the mother or father is unfit - - or even that the grandparents had a significant role in raising the child. TEXT: To the Middle East now, where a political crisis, in the form of a call for new Israeli elections, is facing Prime Minister Ehud Barak on the eve of a new peace initiative. In Denver's [Colorado] Rocky Mountain News, foreign affairs columnist Holger Jensen says, "Israel's internal squabbles may put peace out of reach." VOICE: The Mideast peace process, now at its most critical juncture, hinges on political infighting in Israel that has nothing to do with peace at all -- at least on the surface. It involves funding for a bankrupt, scandal-ridden Jewish Orthodox school system run by Shas, second strongest party in Prime Minister Ehud Barak's governing coalition. [When] ... he refused to cave in to Shas' fiscal demands, it joined the opposition in voting to dissolve parliament. ... (That) could freeze the peace process for months. And it could unravel [Mr.] Barak's coalition... TEXT: The New York Times is also upset, noting: "Regrettably, Mr. Barak must now divert attention from peacemaking to repairing his coalition." TEXT: Turning to affairs of this hemisphere, today's Grand Forks [North Dakota] Herald joins a growing list of papers calling for an end to the U-S economic embargo against Cuba. VOICE: The case against the embargo can be made on humanitarian grounds. It can be made on the basis of consistency ... [or] by pointing out that the embargo has failed... Or by noting that engagement helps change minds much more often than estrangement. ... But another argument rings more clearly in this part of the continent. Cuba is potentially a big market for American farm products. TEXT: Still with Latin American affairs, Peru's questionable, one-candidate presidential election poses a thorny dilemma for the Clinton administration according to the Providence [Rhode Island] Journal. VOICE: Alberto Fujimori's victory ... was tainted, to say the least ... [but] ... Peru's leader has done much that would please officials in Washington ... especially the Pentagon and the White House's anti- drug czar... /// OPT /// And even many of those who don't particularly like him would be upset about the United States throwing its weight around - - within the Organization of American States, for example -- in a way that would be portrayed as intervening in others' domestic affairs. /// END OPT /// This is a tricky - - and potentially hazardous -- situation for American diplomacy. TEXT: Elsewhere, Mexico's uncharacteristically competitive presidential campaign draws this cheer from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, which suggests: "Democracy is the winner with a real race in Mexico. VOICE: Mexico has changed dramatically in recent years, thanks in part to the North American Free Trade Agreement, and the P-R-I's [Spanish acronym for The long-governing "Institutional Revolutionary Party"] internal democratization reflects these changes. Also in this election cycle, Mexicans have been engrossed in a series of presidential debates. Time was when opposition candidates couldn't get on television at all, let alone share the stage with the P-R-I man. TEXT: Unrest out in those supposedly idyllic South Pacific Islands is bothering the Wall Street Journal, which advises: VOICE: /// OPT /// Toss out those old copies of National Geographic that depict the islands of the South pacific as amiable outposts ... Nothing could be further from today's truth. Paradise, in fact, is going to the dogs. /// END OPT /// In ... Fiji and the Solomon Islands, armed thugs asserting ethnic claims have taken the prime ministers hostage. /// OPT TEXT: Lastly, The Los Angeles Times bids farewell to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant that spewed out huge amounts of radioactive material back in 1986. VOICE: This week Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma said he will meet his commitment to shut down the remaining Chernobyl reactors [by] December 15th ... [However] Chernobyl's full consequences have yet to unfold. The reactor explosion ... polluted millions of [hectares] with tons of radioactive strontium, cesium and plutonium. ... much of western Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Europe were exposed to fallout. ... Cases of thyroid cancer in children living downwind from the plant are rising. ... [and] a 1995 U-N report warned, the tragedy could have many years to run. TEXT: On that note, we conclude this sampling of
editorial comment from Thursday's U-S press.
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