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Voice of America, 00-05-09Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] KOSOVO REFUGEES BY IRENA GUZELOVA (OSOJANE)DATE=5/9/2000TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT NUMBER=5-46280 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: After nearly two thirds of Kosovo's Serb population fled their homes in the past year, Serbs from the province have set up a committee to co- ordinate their return. On the third of May, several thousand Serbs gathered in the ethnically divided city of Mitrovica at a rally to demand their right to go home. Kosovo's international administrators are eager to show that they are equally concerned about the future of refugees of all nationalities - be they Albanian, Serb or Gypsy. Irena Guzelova reports on an initiative to get Serb refugees back to Kosovo. TEXT: Rows of metal beds crowd the wards in an abandoned psychiatric clinic near Belgrade. The current residents, Serb refugees from Kosovo, left their homes last June, fearful of Albanian reprisals. Jovanka Zivkovic came with her newborn baby, husband and two children. Like many refugees who crowd Serbia's motels and clinics, she is angry and fearful of the future. /// JOVANKA ZIVKOVIC, IN SERBIAN, FADE UNDER ////// ACT PAULA GHEDINI ////// END ACT //////ACT JANUZ JANUZAJ, IN ALBANIAN WITH TRANSLATION ////// END ACT ////// ACT PAULA GHEDINI ////// OPT ACT ////// END ACT ////// END OPT ////// ACT IVANOVIC ////// END ACT ///NEB/IG/GE/KL 09-May-2000 13:01 PM EDT (09-May-2000 1701 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [02] YUGO OPPOSITION (L ONLY) BY IRENA GUZELOVA (BELGRADE)DATE=5/9/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-262143 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Serb police have stopped demonstrators from entering the hometown of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to protest the arrest of three activists last week. Witnesses say three members of the resistance movement, Otpor, were assaulted outside a nightclub owned by President Milosevic's son. And, as Irena Guzelova reports from Belgrade, the three were then arrested and charged with attempted murder. TEXT: Busloads of policemen and special armed units
were brought into the town, Pozarevac, to prevent the
protest rally from taking place. Police also re-
arrested two of the activists who had been freed on
Monday.
Police also detained about 25 activists in the town of
Novi Sad, north of the capital.
Opposition leaders cancelled their protest rally
because of the heavy police presence and called on
demonstrators to meet in Belgrade on May 15th.
Opposition parties say last week's arrest of the three
activists shows the Yugoslav government is
increasingly ready to use force to maintain control.
The government has portrayed the Otpor resistance
group as a fascist organization. It also says the
opposition is supported by NATO and its allies to
destabilize Yugoslavia.
In an unprecedented move, the Yugoslav army issued a
statement (last week) lashing out at the opposition,
and warning it would not tolerate any threats
against Mr. Milosevic. The statement said the army
has an obligation to take steps against those who make
such threats.
The United States has described President Milosevic's
son, Marko, as one of the wealthiest and most violent
members of the so-called Serbian Mafia. It said armed
thugs, working as bodyguards in Mr. Marko's club,
attacked the activists.
Opposition leaders say they fear the government wants
to create a crisis ahead of local and federal
elections due this year. Opinion polls show only
about one-quarter of Yugoslav voters would back the
government. Some opposition leaders say they fear
authorities may even call a state of emergency.
Meanwhile, government parties tried to hold a counter-
rally in Pozarevac. About 200 government supporters
and anti-government activists jeered at each other,
but no incidents were reported.
The opposition plans to hold a series of rallies in
May and June. But many Serbs wonder if they will be
able to harness the new-found desire for change and
sustain a fight against Yugoslav authorities.
(Signed)
[03] NATO / CROATIA (L ONLY) BY RON PEMSTEIN (BRUSSELS)DATE=5/9/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-262149 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: NATO ambassadors are expected to invite Croatia to join the alliance's Euro-Atlantic council - a program of military cooperation with prospective NATO members. V-O-A correspondent Ron Pemstein reports from Brussels. TEXT: Croatian Prime Minister Ivica Racan met with NATO ambassadors to discuss his government's efforts to reform the military and to put the Croatian army under civilian control. Following the meeting, NATO officials said the ambassadors will invite Croatia to become a NATO partner when they meet again on Wednesday. NATO Secretary-General George Robertson denies an Italian news report that France might oppose Croatia's inclusion in the alliance's Euro-Atlantic council. He tells reporters he told the Croatian foreign minister to make plans to come to Florence, Italy later this month, when NATO foreign ministers meet their counterparts from the partner countries. /// ROBERTSON ACT ONE ////// END ACT ////// RACAN IN CROATIAN W/ INTERPRETER ////// END ACT ////// ROBERTSON ACT TWO ////// END ACT ///NEB/RDP/JWH/KL 09-May-2000 14:12 PM EDT (09-May-2000 1812 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America [04] U-N/ BOSNIA (L-ONLY) BY BARBARA SCHOETZAU (UNITED NATIONS)DATE=5/9/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-262164 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: In New York Tuesday, the United Nations official in charge of implementing the peace agreement in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Wolfgang Petritsch, said the Dayton Accord is working. Correspondent Barbara Schoetzau reports from the United Nations. TEXT: In a briefing to members of the Security Council, Mr. Petritsch described the current situation in Bosnia as "tedious and slow, but working." Mr. Petritsch says he believes the peace process will ultimately succeed if reform moves forward in three key areas. The first, he says, is the consolidation of institutions necessary to build a state. The U-N diplomat says ethnic bickering among Bosnia's political leaders continues to divide the nation. But Mr. Petritsch says municipal elections in April were encouraging, because moderate parties made a good showing against nationalist parties. In addition, Mr. Petritsch says the Bosnian government must reform its bureaucratic command economy in order to attract urgently-needed investment. /// PETRITSCH ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [05] IRISH PEACE PROCESS RESUMES BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=5/9/2000TYPE=U-S OPINION ROUNDUP NUMBER=6-11811 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= INTRO: For months, the peace agreement between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland, negotiated by former U-S Senator George Mitchell, has been moribund. The problem was the refusal of the largest and most influential Republican (EDS: those who favor union with Ireland) paramilitary group, The Irish Republican Army, to disarm. This past weekend, the I-R-A agreed to a disarmament compromise, putting its guns and bombs "beyond use" as it said. The organization also named two internationally known monitors to inspect some of its arsenals to see that the agreement was being honored. The announcement amounts to a breakthrough for behind- the-scenes diplomacy by the British and Irish governments to restart the peace process. And in the United States, there was much editorial comment, mainly expressing cautious optimism that a final end to the "troubles" in Ulster may be in sight. We get a sampling now from ____________ in today's U-S Opinion Roundup. TEXT: The U-S press has always taken a great interest in Irish affairs because there are so many Americans of Irish descent. Editorial writers here have been quick to comment on the weekend announcement by the Irish Republican Army that it will put its weapons "beyond use" and open the arsenals to international inspection. The Los Angeles Times is one of many dailies viewing the news with more than a glimmer of hope. VOICE: For years, the citizens of Northern Ireland have awaited a signal of Irish Republican Army willingness to discuss disarmament. Last weekend, that signal came. The I-R-A not only offered to open its secret weapon caches to regular inspections, but to meet the demands of peace negotiators to have its weapons "completely and verifiably" put out of commission. The I-R-A statement, along with a plan announced last weekend by the British and Irish governments, should revive a peace process that has been declared dead many times. With confidence restored, all quarters should deliver a firm commitment to end the communal violence that has racked the island for centuries. TEXT: Here in the nation's capital, The Washington Times hopes the unionists - those who favor union with Britain -- will greet the I-R-A proposal without much delay. VOICE: For unionist leaders to rally support for the offer as soon as possible would mean decreasing the likelihood that extremists from both sides interrupt the peace process. Both sides have now verbalized their willingness to take risks for the sake of peace. If those intentions become reality ... during the disarming process over the next year, there could [be] hope for the future. TEXT: South Carolina's Charleston Post and Courier is pleased, but cautious. VOICE: Saturday's stunning announcement ... appears to be the long-hoped breakthrough to peace in Northern Ireland. But because the I-R- A has been so evasive in responding to the plea to disarm, some caution is prudent. ... even if on closer examination the disarmament offer falls far short of the expectations aroused by the I-R-A's sudden proposal, it would be foolish to refuse it out of hand. TEXT: The Chicago Tribune says the I-R-A has "breathed life back into a peace process that had been rendered moribund by disagreements over the issue of "disarmament." And in Cleveland, Ohio, The Plain Dealer, which has editorialized on developments in Ulster more than most other major dailies, notes: VOICE: ... the I-R-A's pledge to open some of its arms dumps to the scrutiny of international inspectors is a significant move toward meeting the concerns of Unionists that guns should have no place in Northern Ireland's politics. ... Now the Unionists will want additional reassurances on I-R-A intentions. To that end, it should be helpful that a weapons inspector announced yesterday the work of checking I-R-A dumps could begin before summer. TEXT: In the Pacific Northwest, The Seattle Times feels the "door to peace reopens" in Ulster. VOICE: Gerry Adams of Sinn Fein, the political arm of the I-R-A, and David Trimble of the Ulster Unionists represent groups whose internal bickering make it difficult, if not dangerous for moderates. Last February, [Mr.] Trimble's weakening position among hardliners within his own party set in motion the suspension of the power-sharing government. [Mr.] Adams and [[Mr.] Trimble need gestures from the other to maintain their credibility. With this concession, the I-R-A has given something that certainly falls short of some unionists' demands, but gives impetus for both sides to keep talking. In Northern Ireland, the awful alternative is bloodshed. TEXT: On Long Island, Newsday says it "took courage for the I-R-A to agree, at last, to disarm..." adding: VOICE: The surprise I-R-A announcement came a day after the British and Irish governments made public plans to transfer power back to the province's suspended Catholic-Protestant administration and to extend the deadline for a total I-R-A disarmament to June 2001. The power-sharing system of home rule for Ulster, which operated for only eight weeks, was suspended in February after the I-R-A's refusal to disarm had frozen the entire peace process. ... The significance of the I-R-A's disarmament offer cannot be overstated. Without it, the stalled peace process could easily have slid backward and new bouts of sectarian violence broken out. A good deal of courage was required for the I-R-A to lift this barrier. ... It's now incumbent on arms inspectors to ensure that Protestant paramilitaries live up to their side of the disarmament deal with equal openness. TEXT: Nearby, The New York Times chose to lead its editorial column with these thoughts. VOICE: The Irish Republican Army's commitment over the weekend to subject its secret arsenal of weapons to international inspection should reopen the path to peace in Northern Ireland. By ending its longstanding refusal to make a meaningful gesture toward disarmament, the I-R-A has removed a critical barrier to fulfilling the two-year-old Good Friday peace agreement and establishing a new political order in Ulster. ... With the prospect of renewed self-rule, there are grounds for optimism in Northern Ireland among the overwhelming majority who yearn for a fair and lasting peace. TEXT: The national daily, U-S-A Today, published in a Washington, D-C suburb, is a bit more cautious, citing the vagueness of the I-R-A promise. VOICE: Saturday's pledge by the Irish Republican Army to place its weapons "beyond use" is being greeted with something that sounds a lot like anxious optimism. If so, no wonder. ... the offer ... is pretty vague. It's not clear what the term "beyond use" means. The pledge contains no timetable or deadlines. The I-R-A did not agree to destroy the weapons or to surrender them. And the I-R-A, which considers itself undefeated, has punted on disarmament promises before. TEXT: On that note, we conclude this sampling of
comment on the recent breakthrough in the Northern
Ireland peace process.
[06] NY ECON WRAP TUESDAY (S&L) BY JOE CHAPMAN (NEW YORK)DATE=5/9/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-262158 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Another high technology stock selloff pulled the major stock averages lower today (Tuesday). VOA's Joe Chapman reports from New York. TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 66 points, well under one percent, to 10-thousand-537 in what analysts agreed was a listless session. High technology and internet stocks moved sharply lower with the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite falling 84 points to three-thousand-585. The Standard and Poor's 500 fell 12 points to finish at one- thousand-412. Solid gains in a few stocks such as Walmart, up nearly two percent on a good earnings report, failed to offset lower prices for companies such as I-B-M, Hewlett-Packard or E-Bay. /// REST OPT ////// FRANK ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [07] TUESDAY'S EDITORIALS BY ANDREW GUTHRIE (WASHINGTON)DATE=5/9/2000TYPE=U-S EDITORIAL DIGEST NUMBER=6-11810 EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 INTERNET=YES CONTENT= INTRO: The weekend announcement by the Irish Republican Army that it would compromise on weapons turnover, rejuvenating the Northern Ireland peace process continues to play in U-S editorial columns. Another topic of discussion is Russia's new president, Vladimir Putin. The meeting today of Senator John McCain and Texas Governor George W. Bush, his former presidential primary rival, is also drawing comment. There are other editorials on the China trade debate; the Puerto Rican island-Navy bombing controversy; and more potential trouble for President Clinton in his home state. Now, here with a closer look, together with some quotes, is ___________ and today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: Several papers are commenting on the weekend announcement by the Irish Republican Army that it will put its weapons - beyond use - and open the arsenals to international inspection. South Carolina's Charleston Post and Courier is one that is pleased, but cautious. VOICE: Saturday's stunning announcement ... appears to be the long-hoped breakthrough to peace in Northern Ireland. But because the I-R- A has been so evasive in responding to the plea to disarm, some caution is prudent. ... even if on closer examination the disarmament offer falls far short of the expectations aroused by the I-R-A's sudden proposal, it would be foolish to refuse it out of hand. TEXT: The Chicago Tribune says the I-R-A has breathed life back into a peace process that had been rendered moribund by disagreements over the issue of disarmament. And in Cleveland, Ohio, The Plain Dealer notes: VOICE: ... the I-R-A's pledge to open some of its arms dumps to the scrutiny of international inspectors is a significant move toward meeting the concerns of Unionists that guns should have no place in Northern Ireland's politics. ... Now the Unionists will want additional reassurances on I-R-A intentions. To that end, it should be helpful that a weapons inspector announced yesterday the work of checking I-R-A dumps could begin before summer. /// OPT ///TEXT: In the Pacific Northwest, The Seattle Times feels the "door to peace reopens" in Ulster. VOICE: Gerry Adams of Sinn Fein, the political arm of the I-R-A, and David Trimble of the Ulster Unionists represent groups whose internal bickering make it difficult, if not dangerous for moderates. Last February, [Mr.] Trimble's weakening position among hardliners within his own party set in motion the suspension of the power-sharing government. [Mr.] Adams and [[Mr.] Trimble need gestures from the other to maintain their credibility. With this concession, the I-R-A has given something that certainly falls short of some unionists' demands, but gives impetus for both sides to keep talking. In Northern Ireland, the awful alternative is bloodshed. /// END OPT ///TEXT: Still in Europe, the inauguration this week of Russia's new president, Vladimir Putin also draws a good deal of comment. The Los Angeles Times calls him a mixed picture. VOICE: Sunday's inauguration ... [of Mr. Putin was] the first democratic succession of leadership in the country's history ...[and is] rich in symbolism and promise. [Mr.] Putin, a former K-G-B officer, likes to invoke the word "democracy," but it does not come naturally to him. At 47, he is younger and more vigorous than his predecessor, Boris ... Yeltsin, and ... shares none of the ideological baggage of the Kremlin leaders before him. // OPT // He is taking charge of a country that has accomplished a great deal on the democratic front but disappointed in its economic transformation. // END OPT // ...[He] should use the center-right majority in the Duma, the lower house of parliament, to push for much needed tax reform and a law clearly establishing the right of private ownership of land. TEXT: The New York Times focuses first on the significance of the inauguration and what a dramatic change it is for Russia. VOICE: It completed the first transfer of power from one freely elected leader to another in more than one-thousand years of Russian history. After the ceremony, the energetic new president and his aging predecessor stepped into the bright sunshine of Cathedral Square, the very place where generations of czars appeared after being crowned in the Cathedral of the Assumption. Little more than a decade ago, the idea of a democratically chosen president occupying that ground would have seemed unimaginable. VOICE: Turning to domestic politics, a long-awaited meeting took place between Republican Presidential front runner George W. Bush and his former number one adversary, Arizona Senator John McCain. The Washington Times suggests; VOICE: ...today's meeting ... could go a long way toward determining ... to what degree [Mr. McCain] will actively campaign for Mr. Bush in the fall. Mr. Bush wants and needs the support of Mr. McCain, who has pledged to campaign vigorously for Republican congressional candidates. ...It is time to bury the hatchet (make peace). /// OPT ///TEXT: In Pennsylvania, the Greensburg Tribune-Review is concerned about the possibility that George Bush might reward John McCain for his endorsement by asking him to be his vice-presidential running mate. VOICE: John McCain ... is something less than a conservative. And pairing a questionable conservative with the confused conservative that [Governor] Bush sometimes portrays is not what the G-O-P should be ordering. Mr. Bush, be careful what you ask for today. /// END OPT ///TEXT: The San Jose [California] Mercury News has some thoughts about why Congress should grant China normal trade relations. It lauds the president's plan to: VOICE: ...establish an office in the Commerce Department, with a dozen specialists, to monitor China's compliance with the trade agreement it negotiated with America. ... The latest proposals for monitoring Chinese exports and human rights ... add one more element to the overriding and compelling argument for permanent normal trade and China's admission to the W-T-O. TEXT: In Jacksonville, The Florida Times-Union comments upon a report in Hong Kong's South China Morning Post that China's leader, Jiang Zemin, will retire in 2002. VOICE: By the time he leaves the presidency, he will be 76. In all likelihood, he wants to spend his final days relaxing - and does not want to jeopardize his reforms by perhaps becoming less capable in office. ... In announcing his plans, [Mr.] Jiang also called for the ouster of all but two of the seven most senior party leaders, something that he said was needed to invigorate the party. ... [President] Jiang has accomplished a great deal, but time is running out. He apparently realizes that ... and is putting his causes over his own personal interests. TEXT: In the Netherlands, two Libyans accused of the Pan Am jetliner bombing in 1988 over Lockerbie, Scotland, are being tried under Scottish law, and before Scottish judges. Today's Akron [Ohio] Beacon Journal fears that prosecutors have a difficult case to prove conclusively, after years of delay. VOICE: ... it is one thing to bring an indictment, and quite another to prove the defendant's guilt. The burden is on the prosecutors to prove that Abdel Basset Ali- Megrahi and Lamen Khalifa Fhimad did, indeed, cause the explosion... They hope to do so over the next several months, calling perhaps ... one-thousand witnesses and introducing hundreds of pieces of evidence. The rule of law demands that those accused of even the most heinous crimes get a fair hearing. TEXT: The Atlanta Constitution looks at the controversy over the Puerto Rican island of Vieques, where protestors were peacefully removed by Federal agents, in a dispute over a U-S Navy bombing range. The paper feels the long-term results of the controversy may aid the island Commonwealth. VOICE: No doubt Vieques would have been rid of its bombing headache long ago if it had two senators and a representative or two in Congress arguing its case, but that would have required Puerto Ricans voting for statehood, which they have declined to so several times over the last half-century. The lesson here is that if they want to be treated like a full partner, they need to commit to our indivisible union. TEXT: And lastly, as President Bill Clinton pleads with the Arkansas Supreme Court not to disbar him for lying under oath during the Monica Lewinsky affair, the Augusta [Georgia] Chronicle calls for the full penalty. VOICE: Matthew Glavin, president of the southeastern Legal Foundation, which filed suit to strip the president of his law license, characterizes the president's response [to the charges] "as a pathetic attempt to defend the indefensible." ... It is hard to see how [Mr.] Clinton can win on those points. Impeachment was a political exercise, whereas disbarment is a legal proceeding. And the legal cards are, or should be, stacked against him. TEXT: That editorial from the Augusta Chronicle
concludes this sampling of comment from Tuesday's U-S
press.
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