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Voice of America, 00-08-31Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>CONTENTS
[01] TURKEY / ISLAM (L ONLY) BY AMBERIN ZAMAN (ANKARA)DATE=8/31/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-266021 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Turkey's military has stepped up pressure on the government to dismiss thousands of government workers accused of links with Islamic fundamentalists and Kurdish separatists. Amberin Zaman in Ankara reports the head of Turkey's military general staff made the appeal after the country's new president rejected a decree that authorized the dismissals. TEXT: Turkey's military chief, General Huseyin
Kivrikoglu, said thousands of Islamic militants are
working within the civil service to destroy what he
termed the secular structure of the Turkish state.
The general said the militants are working in various
levels and sectors of the bureaucracy, including
governors' offices and the judiciary. He said the
government's credibility now hinges on the adoption of
a draft law by the Turkish parliament that would
empower the government to dismiss civil servants
accused of links with Islamic radicals and Kurdish
separatists.
Turkey's new president, Ahmet Necdet Sezer, earlier
this month twice refused to sign a decree that give
such powers to the government. The president rejected
the decree on legal grounds, saying it violated the
constitution and was not compatible with the
supremacy of law.
The president's rejection has sharply cooled his
relations with Turkey's prime minister, Bulent Ecevit.
Mr. Ecevit said Mr. Sezer's refusal to accept the
decree had -- in his words -- jeopardized the
government's efforts to combat religious militancy.
Prime Minister Ecevit says he will now bring the
decree before the parliament when it reconvenes in
October. But analysts say the government will have a
tough time getting support for the measures. The
proposals have been widely criticized both by
lawmakers and the media as being undemocratic and
vulnerable to abuse.
Turkey's generals continue to cite Islamic militancy
as the main threat facing the nation.
In a related development, a government prosecutor
formally charged one of Turkey's most prominent
Islamic leaders, Fetullah Gulen, with trying to
overturn Turkey's secular order with the aim of
establishing an Islamic state in its place.
Mr. Gulen -- the leader of a powerful Islamic
brotherhood named after him -- faces a 10-year jail
term if convicted as charged. Evidence against Mr.
Gulen reportedly includes secretly made video tapes in
which the preacher is said to be heard instructing his
followers to -- in his words -- slowly and patiently
penetrate the state.
General Kivrikoglu confirmed that the majority of
officers dismissed from the army every year had links
with Mr. Gulen's brotherhood.
Mr. Gulen is in the United States for medical
treatment and will be tried in absentia. (Signed)
NEB/AZ/JWH/ENE/JP
31-Aug-2000 11:50 AM LOC (31-Aug-2000 1550 UTC)
[02] EUROPE / INTEREST RATES (L-O) BY RON PEMSTEIN (BRUSSELS)DATE=8/31/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-266019 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The European Central Bank has raised its interest rates for the fifth time this year. Correspondent Ron Pemstein in Brussels reports the bankers are trying to control inflation and to boost the value of their common currency, the Euro. TEXT: The initial reaction in European markets to the latest interest rate rise is a yawn. The currency markets had already expected the central bank to raise rates when the bankers returned from a five-week vacation. Rather than strengthening the Euro, the bank's move to increase rates by one-quarter of one- percentage point sent the common currency back down below 89-cents against one U-S dollar. A bank statement explains the move up to four-and-one- half percent by saying that the depreciation in the exchange rate of the Euro and the renewed rise in oil prices have put upward pressure on import prices and consumer prices. Inflation in the 11 countries using the Euro is exceeding the bank's two-percent limit. The low value of the Euro makes imports of oil more expensive. The European Commission here in Brussels has been trying to convince OPEC to increase oil production to bring prices down. Commission spokesman Jonathan Faull says through an interpreter that the commission plans to discuss the issue when it meets next Wednesday. /// FAULL INTERPRETER ACT ////// END ACT ///NNNN Source: Voice of America [03] FRANCE / FISHERMEN (L-O) BY PAUL MILLER (PARIS)DATE=8/31/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-266029 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: French fishermen have called off a blockade of Channel ports that disrupted connections to Britain via ferry and the Channel tunnel. Paul Miller in Paris reports the fishermen are claiming victory in a battle to get the French government to lower the cost of fuel. TEXT: The three-day protest at Calais and other
French ports prevented ferries from leaving - or
vehicles entering the channel-tunnel trains that carry
passenger cars and freight trucks.
Angry British tourists, stranded in France by the
fishermen's blockade, scuffled with protestors. And
British officials complained that their citizens were
being held hostage to a French domestic dispute.
The fishermen called off the blockade after apparently
reaching an agreement with French Agricultural
Minister Jean Glavany. They removed boats from the
port of Calais, allowing ferries to sail, and vans
that had blocked access ramps to the tunnel.
Ferry companies said it would take several hours to
clear the backlog of passengers and freight between
Britain and France.
The details of the agreement with the government were
not made public. Agriculture Minister Glavany's
office said they still needed to be worked out.
The channel fisherman said the French government had
agreed to compensate them for a 75-percent increase in
the price of diesel fuel for fishing boats. But
fishermen in the south of France, where the protests
started, said the government was making empty promises
and they would continue to blockade oil refineries and
other facilities. (SIGNED)
[04] GERMANY / TRIAL (L-ONLY) BY JONATHAN BRAUDE (BERLIN)DATE=8/31/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-266016 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder called for his countrymen to stand together in the fight against racism (Thursday), a day after a court imposed heavy sentences on Neo-Nazi youths who kicked a Mozambican immigrant to death. Jonathan Braude reports. TEXT: Chancellor Schroeder came to the East German
city of Dessau Thursday to lay a wreath in memory of
Alberto Adriano, a German citizen of Mozambican origin
murdered by neo-Nazis in June.
Gerhard Schroeder says it is time for all Germans to
stand together and fight against such terrible acts as
the murder of a fellow citizen. He stresses that the
vast majority of Germans, whether they come from the
former Communist East or the West, want to fight
racism.
That reference is particularly poignant as Germany
celebrates 10 years of unity and the disappearance of
the separate East German state. It also is a reminder
that much of the worst racial violence and most of the
neo-Nazi activity has taken place in the eastern part
of this country.
The eastern states still lag behind the West
economically, unemployment is high and neo-Nazi
propaganda blaming foreigners for the country's woes
falls on fertile ground. But there have been bombings
and racial attacks on foreigners and Jews in the West,
too.
Chancellor Schroeder's call for action follows a court
decision (Wednesday) that sent a 24-year-old man to
life in prison for Mr. Adriano's murder. Two 16-year-
olds were sentenced to nine years each.
Mr. Schroeder welcomed the courts' new toughness and
said he will join other politicians in examining a
possible ban on the neo-Nazi national party.
The government, the police and the courts appear to be
taking a new, tougher approach toward bringing racist
thugs to justice, but it not clear what the effect
will be. Already, police are considering providing
special around-the-clock protection for Mr. Adriano's
widow, who has received threatening letters. She was
too afraid to appear in court Wednesday to see her
husband's killers sentenced.
And now, just one day after the judgment, police are
investigating the fire-bombing of an East German youth
club -- another attack apparently carried out by neo-
Nazis. (Signed)
NEB/JB/WTW/
31-Aug-2000 09:20 AM EDT (31-Aug-2000 1320 UTC)
[05] NY ECON WRAP (S&L) BY ELAINE JOHANSON (NEW YORK)DATE=8/31/2000TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-266034 CONTENT= INTRO: Stocks rallied on Wall Street today (Thursday), as fresh data indicated the U-S economy is on track to grow at a more sustainable rate. VOA correspondent Elaine Johanson reports from New York: TEXT: The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 112 points, one percent, closing at 11-thousand-215. The Standard and Poor's 500 index went up 15 points, also one percent. And the technology-weighted Nasdaq composite added another two and one-half percent to its winning streak a gain of more than 100 points. It has been a strong month for the stock market across-the-board. The Dow Industrials gained about seven percent in August. The Nasdaq also went up seven percent. Many analysts believe the pieces are in place for the market to move higher for the rest of the year. Key to such upward momentum is growing evidence that U-S economic growth is slowing, without taking too much out of corporate profits. ///BEGIN OPT//////GOLDMAN ACT//////END ACT//////END OPT//////REST OPT///NNNN Source: Voice of America Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next Article |