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BULLETIN
Wednesday, 11 February 2004



North Korea Must Include Uranium in Talks, South Envoy Says
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea must be prepared to discuss its uranium-based nuclear arms program in negotiations this month with the United States and neighboring countries, South Korea's ambassador to Washington said on Wednesday.
Ambassador Han Sung-joo told reporters in Seoul that the confession by Pakistan's top nuclear scientist that he had sold nuclear arms technology to Pyongyang had "further confirmed" the existence of the North's highly enriched uranium program.
Pyongyang said Tuesday that statements by the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb, Abdul Qadeer Khan, that he had sold nuclear secrets to North Korea, Libya and Iran were a "sheer lie" cooked up by the United States to justify an invasion.
Analysts said the combative North Korean reaction was designed to prevent discussion of the issue in negotiations aimed at ending a crisis that erupted in October 2002 when U.S. officials said that Pyongyang had admitted to pursuing an HEU program.
Pyongyang has since denied it had made such an admission. But Han said such denials wouldn't fly when North Korea sits down with the United States, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia for a second round of six-party talks beginning on February 25.
"Even among U.S. domestic critics of the Bush administration, nobody who has seen the evidence doubts that North Korea has an HEU (highly enriched uranium) program," Han said in a briefing with reporters.
"Previous intelligence, what has emerged from Pakistan and other information are more than enough to outweigh (doubts about U.S. intelligence) in the Kay Report," he said. The Kay Report said that the United States went to war in Iraq based on faulty intelligence about that country's weapons of mass destruction.
The HEU program makes North Korea's offer to freeze its plutonium-based nuclear program in exchange for compensation unacceptable to the South Korea, the United States and Japan, Han said.
"From the point of view of South Korea, the United States and Japan, North Korea has in the past already agreed to do that, and it will be difficult to compensate them for it," he said.
North Korea had frozen its plutonium-based program under a bilateral agreement with the United States in 1994 in exchange for energy aid. That deal unraveled last year and North Korea says it has reprocessed more plutonium for a "nuclear deterrent."
Dismantling the plutonium program, the HEU program and any atomic bombs North Korea created before the 1994 freeze was the ultimate goal of the United States and its allies, Han said.
The U.S. has said a verifiable commitment by North Korea to end all those programs would be met by "corresponding measures," include assurances against an American attack and measures to address the North's energy and economic problems.
"The U.S. stance is not that no compensation will be offered until the programs are entirely dismantled, but that North Korea will get aid from the parties at the six-way talks and other countries when it confirms it will do that and begins that process," the ambassador said.
The six countries met in Beijing last August but failed to go beyond stating their respective positions in the dispute.
Copyright ? Reuters 2004. All rights reserved.
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Testimony of Pakistani scientist could influence impasse over North Korea
(AP)
11 February 2004
WASHINGTON - The United States and North Korea have been arguing for well over a year about the breadth of Pyongyang's nuclear program.
Ironically, US officials say that Pakistan's scientist, Abdul Qadeer Khan, for all of his admitted misdeeds, may be ideally positioned to clarify the North's nuclear capabilities. Officials hope that Khan, Pakistan's ace bomb-builder and confessed proliferator of nuclear secrets, will set the record straight before key talks on the North Korean nuclear impasse start Feb. 25.
Khan is uniquely qualified to address the issue, having been linked to the sale of nuclear secrets to North Korea, among other countries on the State Department's terrorism list.
Given his flouting of the US anti-proliferation campaign, it may seem out of character for the United States to accept without complaint the pardon that Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf gave Khan last week. To the extent there is indignation about Khan, officials are keeping it to themselves. Nowadays, they see Khan as more of an opportunity than a problem.
At the same time, however, Secretary of State Colin Powell insisted this week that Pakistan tear out the nuclear black market network "by its roots."
China has refused to accept the US contention that North Korea is developing nuclear weapons based on highly enriched uranium. The United States first made the allegation in October 2002; Pyongyang has persistently denied it. Officials worry that North Korea, emboldened by China's backing, may not back away from those denials in the upcoming talks. If there is no break in the impasse, this could lead to the collapse of the prolonged US effort to seek a negotiated settlement based on the US demand that Pyonyang verifiably eliminate its nuclear weapons program.
The administration is looking to six-nation talks in China that start Feb. 25 for progress toward that goal. Participants will include the United States, the two Koreas, China, Japan and Russia.
As US officials see it, no agreement is possible if Pyongyang insists that it has no nuclear ambitions beyond the plutonium-based nuclear program, which it has publicly acknowledged. North Korea has expressed a willingness to dismantle that program under certain conditions.
More highly enriched uranium is needed to make a nuclear weapon than to make one from plutonium, but enriching uranium is easier to do clandestinely, since it does not require a nuclear reactor. Moreover, uranium-based bombs are considered more reliable.
Some experts believe that if the negotiations reach a dead end, a crisis could ensue, with the United States imposing a blockade on North Korea at some point - perhaps after the US elections in November. The administration has declined to speculate on contingency plans.
David Albright, head of the International Institute for Science and International Security, says Khan's links to North Korea involve assistance for a uranium program and not the country's plutonium program.
Albright says no one would object if Khan had helped the North Koreans with research and development on uranium enrichment. It would be another matter, Albright adds, if Khan were to concede that he has been involved in the construction of centrifuges, an essential element in the development of a uranium bomb.
Miriam Rajkumer, of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said that if Khan confirms what US officials believe, "that would go a long way toward buttressing the US in its conflict with North Korea."
She adds that any such confession by Khan would have no meaning unless Pakistani investigators provide the details. US officials wonder how long China could support North Korea's denial in the face of contradictory information from Khan. On the other hand, if Khan professes ignorance about the North Korean program, that could reinforce Pyongyang's stand - as well as China's backing for it.
Last week, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher made clear the administration is counting on full disclosure from Pakistan concerning Khan's revelations to investigators.
He said the United States expects that Pakistan "will share information that they're unearthing in their ongoing investigation with the international community."


------------------------------------------------------

Malaysian minister arrested in anti-corruption investigation
KUALA LUMPUR : Malaysia's Lands and Cooperative Development Minister Kasitah Gaddam was arrested by the Anti-Corruption Agency, the attorney-general said.
He would be charged in court later in the day, attorney-general Abdul Gani Patail told AFP, but gave no further details.
This is the second high-profile arrest over corruption in Malaysia this week.
The former head of troubled steel giant Perwaja, Eric Chia, was charged Tuesday with fraud after an eight-year investigation by anti-corruption authorities into Malaysia's biggest and longest-running financial scandal.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, who took over from Mahathir Mohamad on October 31, has declared the fight against corruption to be a priority for his new administration.
The action this week against two such high-profile individuals has, however, surprised analysts who were sceptical of Abdullah's ability to tackle graft associated for years with the government and ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO).
Chia was close to former premier Mahathir, who retired on October 31 after 22 years in power, while Kasitah Gaddam was a Mahathir appointee.
Kasitah, 56, an UMNO senator from eastern Sabah state on Borneo island was appointed minister in 1998.
He was previously chairperson of the state-owned Sabah Land Development Board and also chaired the Sabah Development Bank and Sabah Finance Berhad.
Abdullah's move to clean-up graft comes as he gets ready to face general elections, which must be called by the end of the year but are widely expected to be held within months.
Asked during his early days in office why corruption seemed to make him angry, Abdullah replied: "It makes life difficult, it makes the government ineffective, and it creates a bad name for the government and for Malaysia. That's why I'm angry."
After Chia's arrest he said: "If investigations show that corruption had taken place, the law will have to take its course."
Asked then whether there would be more high profile arrests, he told reporters: "Wait, if the attorney-general has anything he will make an announcement.
"I have said the ACA must work hard. All the cases must be given due attention. They must focus on existing cases and where there is clear evidence that can be used for prosecution it is up to the ACA to act."
- AFP
-----------------------------------

>> l'affaire SUHA...

France probes bank accounts of Arafat's wife
By Arnon Regular and Sharon Sadeh, Haaretz Correspondents and Reuters
French prosecutors said Tuesday they had opened an inquiry into transfers totaling nine million euros into bank accounts held in their country by Suha Arafat, wife of Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat.
The Paris public prosecutor confirmed a report in Le Canard Enchaine weekly that an inquiry into financial matters connected to Suha Arafat, who lives in Paris, was launched last October, based on information provided by the Bank of France and a government anti-money laundering body.
The prosecutor's office said it would check transfers from a Swiss-based institution into two separate accounts held by Suha Arafat in Paris between July 2002 and July 2003.
The office said the investigations is at a preliminary stage. Suha Arafat could not be contacted for comment.
An International Monetary Fund report on Palestinian Authority accounts between 1997 and 2003 found that some $900 million in PA funds, some of them contributed by donor nations, had been diverted by PA officials to accounts overseas.
A hefty chunk of these funds, around $10 million, had reportedly been transferred to accounts owned by Suha Arafat in Paris. She allegedly used hundreds of thousands of dollars for personal matters and the rest of the money remained in the accounts.
The IMF report also found that a large sum of $74 million was earmarked for Yasser Arafat's office and there was no explanation of the uses to which this money was put.
In a parallel development, investigators from the European Union anti-fraud office (OLAF), who are looking into allegations that the PA diverted money from European donors into terror activity, have concluded that documents the IDF seized during Operation Protective Shield are authentic.
The documents suggested Arafat ordered that funds from European sources be used to support such activity - some of the money reportedly went to the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, which has been involved in terror strikes.
Investigators from OLAF, an independent body authorized to review matters connected to all spheres of EU activity, came to Israel two weeks ago to collect data on allegations of PA involvement in terror, and to review the documents confiscated by the IDF.
After studying the materials, the OLAF investigators concluded the documents were genuine. Sources close to the investigation said findings based on the OLAF officials' trip to Israel will be incorporated in their final report, which should be completed in two months.
----------------------------------------------------

Carla del Ponte | Karadzic ? Belgrade
L'ex-leader des Serbes de Bosnie, Radovan Karadzic, ?se trouve ? Belgrade?, a d?clar? mercredi ? Bruxelles la procureure du TPI, Carla del Ponte. Selon elle, la capitale serbe est un ?refuge pour fugitifs?. Les autorit?s de Belgrade ont imm?diatement r?agi aux propos de Mme del Ponte. Le premier ministre serbe sortant Zoran Zivkovic a rejet? les affirmations de la procureure.


Karadzic en ligne de mire
Selon la procureure du Tribunal p?nal international, l'ancien leader politique des Serbes de Bosnie recherch? pour crimes contre l'Humanit? se cacherait ? Belgrade.
Par Thomas HOFNUNG
mercredi 11 f?vrier 2004 (Liberation.fr - 18:29)
nculp? depuis l'?t? 1995 de crimes contre l'Humanit? et de crimes de guerre commis durant la guerre en Bosnie (1992-1995), Radovan Karadzic ?chappe toujours ? la justice internationale. Mais la communaut? internationale semble d?cid?e ? resserrer l'?tau autour de l'ancien dirigeant des Serbes de Bosnie pour le d?f?rer devant le Tribunal p?nal international de La Haye (TPI).
Mercredi, la procureure du TPI, Carla del Ponte, a assur? que l'ancien leader politique des Serbes de Bosnie durant la guerre se trouvait ? Belgrade, la capitale de la Serbie voisine. La magistrate a dit tenir cette information d'une ?source cr?dible?. Les autorit?s de Belgrade ont d?menti, ignorant savoir o? il se trouvait. C'est la premi?re fois qu'un responsable du TPI de La Haye ?localise? Karadzic en Serbie. Jusqu'? lors, la communaut? internationale le traquait au sein de l'entit? serbe de Bosnie, la Republika srpska. A la mi-janvier, les soldats de l'Otan d?ploy?s en Bosnie avaient affirm? avoir failli appr?hender le fugitif lors d'une op?ration de grande envergure men?e dans l'ancien fief de Karadzic, ? Pale, sur les hauteurs de Sarajevo.
La d?claration de Carla del Ponte survient alors que la communaut? internationale redouble d'efforts pour tenter d'?ass?cher? le r?seau logistique qui pemettrait ? l'ancien dirigeant bosno-serbe de jouer ? cache-cache avec la justice internationale . Ces derniers jours, le Haut-repr?sentant de la communaut? internationale en Bosnie, le Britannique Paddy Ashdown, a gel? les avoirs de dix responsables bosno-serbes, dont un ancien membre de la pr?sidence coll?giale de Bosnie, qu'il accuse d'aider Karadzic ? se cacher. Trois policiers ont ?galement ?t? limog?s par le Haut-repr?sentant, sorte de proconsul de Bosnie.
Avec Ratko Mladic, l'ancien chef militaire des Serbes de Bosnie qui se terrerait lui aussi ? Belgrade, Radovan Karadzic est le principal inculp? qui ?chappe encore au TPI. Il est notamment recherch? pour son r?le dans le massacre de Srebrenica. En juillet 1995, au lendemain de la chute de cette enclave bosniaque cens?e ?tre prot?g?e par l'ONU aux mains des troupes bosno-serbes, pr?s de 8.000 hommes avaient ?t? liquid?s. En visite ? Belgrade, le sous-secr?taire d'Etat am?ricain pour les affaires ?conomiques et agricoles, Alan Larson, a r?affirm? que l'aide financi?re am?ricaine ? la Serbie ?tait conditionn?e ? la coop?ration de Belgrade avec le TPI.
? Lib?ration
---------------------------------------------------

Karadzic 'has safe haven' in Belgrade
Serbia sheltering 15 war crimes suspects, says Hague prosecutor
Ian Traynor in Zagreb
Thursday February 12, 2004
The Guardian
Europe's most wanted war crimes suspect, Radovan Karadzic, is sheltering with impunity in Belgrade, free from prosecution, Carla Del Ponte, chief prosecutor at the war crimes tribunal in the Hague, said yesterday.
"Belgrade is now a safe haven for our fugitives ... Karadzic is now residing in Belgrade," she said.
She has long argued that General Ratko Mladic, wanted on charges of genocide for the mass murder of up to 8,000 men and boys in Srebrenica, Bosnia, in 1995, is living in Serbia.
Cooperation between Serbia and the Hague tribunal was frozen, she added, a statement that could cost Serbia tens of millions of dollars in US aid.
Mr Karadzic had moved to the Serbian capital following a recent raid on his family home outside Sarajevo by Nato troops.
They carried out the search for Mr Karadzic last month in what was viewed by Bosnian observers as a feeble attempt to apprehend the man who has been on the run for more than eight years.
Ms Del Ponte complained that there were now 15 fugitives from the Hague tribunal in Serbia and showed little hope that the authorities in Belgrade would arrest and transfer the suspects.
Serbia's caretaker prime minister, the reformist Zoran Zivkovic, told Reuters that Ms Del Ponte had never given "either information or any other kind of help which would lead to locating or catching the suspects" or prove they were not on Serbian land.
The interior ministry said: "Serbia does not have information which would confirm the claims of Ms Carla Del Ponte."
Seven weeks after a general election in which the extremist nationalist Radical party, led by the war crimes suspect Vojislav Seselj, came out strongest, Serbia still does not have a government.
The conservative nationalist leader, Vojislav Kostunica, a bitter critic of Ms Del Ponte and the Hague, is frontrunner to become new prime minister, probably of a minority government which will not last long in office.
Mr Kostunica has caused a storm of controversy by recently sounding out the socialist party of Slobodan Milosevic for its tacit support for his minority government. Mr Milosevic, currently on trial in the Hague, is the first sitting European head of state to be indicted for war crimes. Last week Mr Kostunica's candidate for the post of parliament speaker in Belgrade was elected with the support of the Milosevic party.
With the extremist Radicals the biggest party in the new parliament and Mr Kostunica doing deals with the Milosevic acolytes, there seems little chance of the suspects facing international justice soon.
Ms Del Ponte has to close her investigations this year and there is mounting pressure for Mr Karadzic and Mr Mladic to be seized and taken to the Hague.
"Mladic is in Serbia. I could have him tomorrow if there was the political will to arrest him," Ms Del Ponte told the Guardian last week.
She added that there was growing international resolve, particularly from the US, to apprehend Mr Karadzic. "But it's more difficult than eight years ago. He has become an expert at hiding."
Sources in Bosnia believe that in the run-up to the US election in November, Washington could unleash a special forces operation to seize Mr Karadzic.
Mr Karadzic's close associate, Momcilo Krajisnik, went on trial in the Hague last week. But time is running out since the tribunal is under UN orders to wind up all its trials by 2008.
A dedicated trial chamber may, however, be established in the Hague solely to deal with three cases - Mr Karadzic, Mr Mladic, and the Croatian General Ante Gotovina - if they are not resolved within the deadline for closing down the tribunal.
Under a draft resolution at the United Nations in New York, Ms Del Ponte could be forced to forfeit some of her powers of deciding who gets charged with war crimes.
Yesterday, in response to a Guardian report, she and the tribunal president, Judge Theodor Meron, denied that judges at the tribunal were blocking any of her indictments.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

China Executes Former Provincial Vice Governor for Bribe Taking
The Associated Press
Published: Feb 11, 2004
SHANGHAI, China (AP) - A former Chinese provincial vice governor was executed on Thursday for taking more than $600,000 in bribes, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
Wang Huaizhong, 57, was put to death by lethal injection in the eastern province of Shandong after the provincial High People's Court rejected his appeal, Xinhua said. He was allowed to say farewell to his family, it said.
The execution comes amid gathering efforts by China's communist leaders to rein in rampant corruption. Yet, while publicizing cases such as Wang's in hopes of scaring other officials, the party has yet to push changes that would make it more accountable.
Earlier state media reports said Wang at first attempted to bribe investigators into dropping the case, but then admitted the charges at trial.
Wang, who served as vice governor of Anhui province from 1994 to 2001, was sentenced to death in December. He also had
Reports did not say what favors Wang provided in return for the bribes, but such payments are usually made in return for jobs, government contracts and use of state assets.
AP-ES-02-11-04 2249EST
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>> AHEM...
Former Aide to Sen. Biden Pleads Guilty to Stealing Money From Campaign
By Randall Chase Associated Press Writer
Published: Feb 11, 2004
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) - A former campaign aide to Sen. Joseph Biden pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to stealing money from Biden's campaign treasury.
Roger D. Blevins III, 33, pleaded guilty to one count of interstate transportation of stolen property and one count of aiding and abetting the making of a false statement to the government.
Blevins faces a maximum 15 years in prison and $500,000 in fines. He will be sentenced June 18.
In exchange for the guilty plea, prosecutors recommended a reduction in sentencing guidelines.
"We're happy to see that this will soon be resolved," said Margaret Aitken, a spokeswoman for Biden, D-Del.
Blevins, former assistant treasurer for Citizens for Biden, declined to comment after the hearing.
"This is the culmination of a very difficult time in my client's life," said public defender Penny Marshall. "He's very remorseful about what happened ... and extends apologies to Senator Biden."
Blevins pleaded guilty to transferring $80,000 from Biden's campaign treasury to a credit union in Florida in April 2003, the largest of 23 unauthorized transfers alleged by prosecutors.
He also admitted his involvement in submitting a false federal campaign finance statement a week later declaring that there was more than $300,000 in Biden's account.
Blevins allegedly knew the amount was substantially less because of his unauthorized transfers and withdrawals.
According to prosecutors, Blevins improperly transferred or withdrew almost $400,000 from Biden's account in 2002 and 2003.
Some money went to the bank accounts of three men in Florida whom Blevins met on the Internet, prosecutors said. Other money was used for personal and entertainment expenses, and to buy luxury items such as a Porsche Boxster, a BMW convertible and a plasma screen television.
"He apparently was forming or hopeful of a romantic relationship with one or more of the individuals," prosecutor April Byrd said.
AP-ES-02-11-04 2251EST
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

>> LOL OF THE DAY...


Putin Nominates New Human Rights Chief
Feb 11, 4:11 PM (ET)
MOSCOW (AP) - President Vladimir Putin has asked parliament to appoint a former ambassador to the United States as Russia's human rights commissioner, the Kremlin said Wednesday.
Putin nominated Vladimir Lukin in a letter to the State Duma, or lower house of parliament, said a statement released by the presidential press service.
Lukin, a foreign affairs expert who served as Russia's ambassador to the United States in the early 1990s, later became a leader of the liberal Yabloko party and was elected to parliament several times. He lost his parliament seat after Yabloko failed to make it to the Duma in December's elections.
The tenure of Russia's first human rights commissioner, Oleg Mironov, expired in May, but he since has served as interim commissioner because the Duma failed to elect a successor.
Russia has been criticized by human rights organizations for alleged abuses in Chechnya during the war with separatist rebels there. Moscow, however, says the war is its contribution to the global war on terror.
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iran | mise en garde de Khatami

Le pr?sident iranien Mohammad Khatami a lanc? mercredi, ? l'occasion du 25e anniversaire de la R?volution, une mise en garde ? l'aile dure du r?gime. Il l'a accus?e de pousser la jeunesse ? s'?loigner des valeurs de la R?publique islamique. ?S'opposer aux d?sirs du peuple et ne pas tenir compte, au nom de la religion, de ses revendications (...) ne fera que susciter la d?ception de la jeune g?n?ration ? l'?gard de la R?publique islamique (...)?, a lanc? le pr?sident r?formateur.

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Posted by maximpost at 11:36 PM EST
Permalink


>> TROUBLE IN CANADA...

Canada's Chief Auditor Notes Misused Funds
By COLIN McCLELLAND
ASSOCIATED PRESS
TORONTO (AP) - Canada's chief auditor lambasted the governing Liberal Party on Tuesday for giving millions of dollars in contracts to political cronies, calling it "blatant misuse of public funds." Prime Minister Paul Martin responded by ordering an inquiry into the "serious breach of public trust."
Martin tried to distance himself by stressing that the transactions were overseen by his predecessor, Jean Chretien, who retired in December. He said he was unaware of the funding favoritism while he served as finance minister under Chretien before resigning in 2002 to run for the Liberal Party leadership.
The scandal could damage his government's image before a national election expected to be called in April or May, though Martin and his party are favored by far to win a five-year term.
Martin has spent the two months since he succeeded Chretien trying to re-brand the Liberal government as fresh, forward-thinking and ideas-driven.
The report Tuesday by auditor general Sheila Fraser said the Liberals approved multimillion dollar advertising and sponsorship contracts in Quebec from 1997 to 2003 to companies that had donated to the party. It said the government used a select group of middlemen to administer the funds, and gave lavish commissions to a small group of ad agencies.
The auditor also criticized the national railway, VIA, and the national postal service, Canada Post, for benefiting from improper spending. Both are Crown corporations, or public companies that operate at arm's length from the government.
"This is just such a blatant misuse of public funds. It is shocking. ... Words escape me," Fraser told a news conference. "These methods were apparently designed to pay commissions to communications agencies while hiding the source of the funds."
Martin responded in Parliament by ordering a public inquiry into the contracts handed out under the watch of former public works minister Alfonso Gagliano.
"The findings of the auditor general paint a disturbing picture," Martin said. "It is clear there has been serious financial mismanagement and a serious breach of public trust. This is unacceptable; it is intolerable."
The $180 million sponsorship program under Gagliano plastered Canadian flags and federal logos at sports and cultural shows, mostly in Quebec, to sell the benefits of federalism after provincial separatists came within a whisker of voting for independence in a 1995 referendum.
Martin had been preparing damage control in anticipation of the auditor's report. He moved on his first day in office to scrap the government program at the scandal's center.
On Tuesday, he recalled Gagliano from his current post as ambassador to Denmark. Martin also promised tough new rules governing future federal advertising contracts as well as laws to protect whistle-blowers. He said a lawyer would be appointed to retrieve money that was improperly spent.
Canada's national police force, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, is investigating, but even it is implicated in the report for misuse of a $2.25 million 125th anniversary fund. No charges have been filed.
Opposition politicians attacked the government in Parliament. "There aren't enough judges in the country to go after the allegations in this report," said Grant Hill, an opposition member of Parliament.
Fraser's report also said the department overseeing Indian affairs improperly tracked how it spent $900 million in land claims settlements to two tribes in the far north.
Another scandal that has nipped at Martin in recent weeks also relates to government spending, but concerns ties to the family business Martin used to head, Canada Steamship Lines.
The government said almost a year ago that CSL had received about $110,000 in contracts before claiming last month a clerical error had hidden that the figure was actually more than $100 million.
Martin built up CSL but passed leadership to his three sons before he became prime minister. Opposition politicians allege the contracts suggest that the company benefited from Martin's position in government. But they stop short of saying he has done anything illegal.
Fraser, the auditor, has been called on to investigate the CSL government contracts, but any report would appear after an election.

--

'Sophisticated' group behind sponsorship scandal, Martin says
Canadian Press
Wednesday, February 11, 2004
Prime Minister Paul Martin responds to questions concerning the Auditor General's report during Question Period in the House of Commons on Tuesday.
CREDIT: Canadian Press, Tom Hanson
OTTAWA -- Prime Minister Paul Martin, fending off charges that he must have known about the sponsorship scandal while it was happening, blamed a "sophisticated" group of bureaucrats who acted secretly.

"When they broke those rules, they didn't come to cabinet and say, 'Oh, can we break these rules?"' Martin told the House of Commons. "What they did . . . was engage in a very sophisticated way of camouflaging what they were doing. And as a result the government did not know."
Martin was under attack for a second day following the release of a damning report by the auditor general. The report found that Liberal-connected middlemen pocketed 40 per cent commissions - or $100 million - from a $250-million sponsorship program that was intended to promote Canada at Quebec public events.
Auditor General Sheila Fraser also revealed that Crown corporations such as Via Rail and Canada Post, and even the RCMP, were used in a wide-ranging scheme to funnel cash to Liberal-friendly middlemen.
Fraser focused her criticism on a small group within the Public Works Department, but added that she did not have the power to investigate the Liberal party.
Martin said the public inquiry he has called will leave no stone unturned as it works on the matter.
A parade of Liberals emerged from a closed-door meeting earlier Wednesday proclaiming shock, fury and complete ignorance of a scheme that milked tens of millions from the public purse.
The governing party began the Herculean task of snuffing out the worst scandal of its decade-long reign while at the same time arguing that few of its members were ever involved.
"Am I angry? I'm mad as hell," said Revenue Minister Stan Keyes.
"I think Canadians understand ... that there have been outrageous occurrences in the past and that the new prime minister and the new cabinet have been very active."
Nobody mentioned former prime minister Jean Chretien by name but many Liberals seemed willing to lay all blame for the sponsorship scandal on the former administration.
? Copyright 2004 The Canadian Press
---------------------------------------------------------------
Crown agencies were drawn into scandal
Of $250M in sponsorship money, $100M went to Liberal-friendly firms
Elizabeth Thompson
CanWest News Service
Wednesday, February 11, 2004
Yesterday's report by the federal Auditor-General says the Public Works Department used Canada Post, ...
CREDIT: Kevin Van Paassen, National Post
...the RCMP and ...
CREDIT: Wayne Cuddington, CanWest News Service (Ottawa Citizen)
...VIA Rail as vehicles for transferring unity funds to select companies.
CREDIT: John Kenney, CanWest News Service (The Gazette)
OTTAWA - The federal government's sponsorship program reached into the RCMP, Via Rail and Canada Post to funnel millions of dollars to friends of the Liberal party, Auditor-General Sheila Fraser said in a bombshell report released yesterday.
Scrambling to disassociate himself from the scandal, Paul Martin immediately announced a public inquiry into the affair and fired Alfonso Gagliano, who was public works minister when the scandal took place, from his position as Canada's ambassador to Denmark.
Ms. Fraser revealed Mr. Gagliano's department used fictitious contracts, artificial invoices and elaborate accounting devices to assign tens of millions of dollars to sponsorship projects in Quebec. The "deeply disturbing" practices continued virtually unchecked for four years, often using Crown corporations to make payments the government could not make itself, Ms. Fraser reported.
Liberal-friendly communications firms collected millions of dollars in commissions, at times for simply transferring cheques from one body to another without providing any other service.
Speaking to reporters, Ms. Fraser said she was shocked and angered by what the investigation revealed.
"This is just such a blatant misuse of public funds. It is shocking. ... Words escape me," she told a news conference.
"This wasn't just a matter of missing documentation or bending the rules. These methods were apparently designed to pay commissions to communications agencies while hiding the source of the funds," she said.
"I got angry all over again."
Ms. Fraser's report had barely hit the table in the Commons when Mr. Martin moved to try to contain the damage and take the wind out of opposition sails.
"It is unacceptable, it is intolerable," Mr. Martin said as he outlined a series of measures he said are designed to get to the bottom of the affair, recover lost money and make sure it never happens again.
Ms. Fraser's 34-page report into the sponsorship program run by the Public Works Department's Communications Co-Ordination Services Branch (CCSB) between 1997 and 2001 details how $250-million was spent to sponsor a variety of events in Quebec, and how $100-million of it went to communications agencies in the form of fees and commissions. Using flow charts and diagrams, she also details the role several Crown corporations and communications firms played in the complex web of transactions.
"We found that the federal government ran the sponsorship program in a way that showed little regard for Parliament, the Financial Administration Act, contracting rules and regulations, transparency and value for money," she wrote. "These arrangements -- involving multiple transactions with multiple companies, artificial invoices and contracts, or no written contracts at all -- appear to have been designed to pay commissions to communications agencies while hiding the source of funding and the true substance of the transactions."
Further, she wrote,"The pattern we saw of noncompliance with the rules was not the result of isolated errors. It was consistent and pervasive. This was how the government ran the program."
In the case of a television series on hockey great Maurice Richard, the CCSB got VIA Rail to advance money to the show's producer, L'Information Essentielle. CCSB then awarded a contract to Lafleur Communication to reimburse VIA Rail for the money it advanced -- a process that allowed Lafleur to pocket $112,500 in commission.
"In our opinion, CCSB created a fictitious contract and made payments of $862,500 that contravened the Financial Administration Act ... It appears that these transactions were part of an elaborate process used to obtain funds from current (public works) appropriations, in order to pay for a highly irregular and questionable expenditure incurred by VIA Rail in the previous year and also to facilitate the payment of a commission to the communication agency."
Ms. Fraser also highlighted questionable practices involving the RCMP, which is responsible for the criminal investigation into the sponsorship scandal. Between 1997 and 1999, the force obtained more than $3-million through eight separate contracts for its 125th anniversary celebrations.
"A separate non-government bank account was used for all deposits and payments to the RCMP's Quebec Division; this was a contravention of the Financial Administration Act ... In addition, all transactions for Quebec Division were recorded in a manual accounting system rather than in the RCMP's corporate accounting system. We were unable to verify the transactions from the Quebec bank account because some of the supporting documents had been destroyed."
Ms. Fraser pointed out that the sponsorships were handled by the RCMP's administrative branch, not its criminal investigators.
More than $107,000 of the sponsorship money was improperly used to buy six horses and two trailers, the Auditor-General says. Ms. Fraser called such purchases an "inappropriate use of the sponsorship money."
Ms. Fraser reported that out of the $3-million directed to the RCMP, about $1.3-million went to Liberal-connected ad agencies for commissions and promotional materials.
The report clearly ties Mr. Gagliano to what was going on, citing a number of cases in which he or officials in his office overruled decisions of bureaucrats and ordered sponsorships to go ahead. For example, when the executive director of the CCSB declined in 1999 to sponsor the series called Innovation, the production company went to the Minister's office, which agreed the government would sponsor it.
On another occasion, the Old Port of Montreal wanted a giant video screen and CCSB refused. Following a presentation by the Old Port to Mr. Gagliano, CCSB offered verbally to provide $1.5-million, then used such communication firms as Lafleur Communication Marketing and Media/I.D.A Vision to funnel money to the Old Port.
Ms. Fraser details examples of shoddy record-keeping with few if any documents to explain why different events were sponsored. At times, the paper trail simply stops, Ms. Fraser found, and millions of dollars of taxpayers money would flow on the strength of a single phone call.
The problem, she said, was not a lack of rules for government sponsorships but rather that the rules were not followed.
"We found widespread noncompliance with contracting rules in the management of the federal government's sponsorship program at every stage of the process," she wrote. "Rules for selecting communications agencies, managing contracts and measuring and reporting results were broken or ignored. These violations were neither detected, prevented nor reported for over four years because of the almost total collapse of oversight mechanisms and essential controls."
Government officials, including former prime minister Jean Chretien, have said the sponsorship program was necessary to bolster national unity in the wake of the 1995 referendum on sovereignty, but Ms. Fraser said that explanation is not good enough.
"That has certainly been the story that some people have told us, that they were fighting a war, but I really don't believe that the results always justify the means."
Mr. Chretien was on a trip to China yesterday and could not be reached for comment.
The management of sponsorships improved after Communications Canada was created in 2001, her report notes.
The opposition has charged that the sponsorship program involved an elaborate scheme to recompense firms that helped the Liberals in their election campaigns. However, the audit contains no mention of the Liberal party.
While Ms. Fraser's report sheds light on what happened, she made it clear yesterday that after two years of investigation, she still can't answer the question of why it happened or what exactly happened to all of the money once it left the government's hands. That will be up to the police and a fuller inquiry to determine, she said.
Mr. Martin's government announced yesterday that Quebec Superior Court Justice John Gomery will head such an inquiry into the sponsorship scandal. While the terms of reference of the inquiry are still to be worked out, the government has asked Judge Gomery to move quickly to get to the bottom of what happened.
Bill Graham, the Foreign Affairs Minister, also removed Mr. Gagliano as Canada's ambassador to Denmark yesterday.
Disciplinary procedures of varying degrees are underway against six to 10 government officials who worked on the sponsorship program and are still government employees, said Stephen Owen, the Public Works Minister.
(Montreal Gazette)

? National Post 2004
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Directors fear scandal will rock their firms
KPMG survey finding: 84% expect public company to fall victim by year-end
Peter Brieger
Financial Post
Wednesday, February 11, 2004
Almost half the directors sitting on the boards of this country's largest companies fear their firms could be rocked by an accounting scandal, according to a new KPMG survey.
The "alarming" study also suggests that 84% of respondents believe a Canadian public company will fall victim to a balance sheet imbroglio before year's end.
"I'm not surprised at all," said James Hunter, president of the accounting giant's forensic division, which investigates financial fraud. "We've seen a whole list of corporate manipulation cases over the last few years. But it's pretty worrisome -- these people are stewards of corporations."
Indeed, the survey -- completed by 116 directors sitting on the boards of Canada's 75 largest companies -- warned the harm to a firm's reputation would dwarf a lawsuit, negative press coverage or even going bankrupt.
"If I was an investor, I wouldn't sleep well at night," said J. Richard Finlay, head of the Centre for Corporate and Public Governance. "I think it's a stunning admission on the state of corporate governance in Canada. Frankly it suggests there has been more hype than substantive reform in the culture of the Canadian boardroom.
"I really have to wonder in this environment post-Enron how any director would sit on a board if they had any reservations about the financial integrity of the company."
Despite the serious implications for Canadian investors, KPMG's survey found more than one-third of participants believe the United States is at even greater risk of a balance-sheet scandal similar to those at Enron Corp. and WorldCom Inc.
More than half the directors -- 62% -- blamed compensation models based on profitability for encouraging manipulation by chief executives and chief financial officers, the same people directors believe are most responsible for preventing fraud.
Only 28% of the board members polled feel they are ultimately responsible for ensuring financial statements have not been fudged. The directors put themselves in third spot on the blame hierarchy, behind CEOs and CFOs, but ahead of a company's audit committee.
Almost half said chief executives are most responsible for such improprieties, the survey found.
"This is an interesting choice considering how often CEOs themselves have been implicated when financial statement manipulation occurs," Mr. Hunter said.
But he noted that new legislation in Canada and the United States requires chief executives and financial officers to vouch for the accuracy of their financial statements in writing. "Those are the two guys who are in charge and ultimately responsible. Ignorance is no longer an excuse.
On that issue, 55% of directors polled said they were obliged to sign their company's code of conduct annually, while 62% said they have not received training to spot or deal with balance sheet manipulation.
As for ethics training, the numbers are moving up, Mr. Hunter said.
While most high-profile financial scandals were uncovered by internal auditors or whistleblowers, KPMG found 72% of surveyed directors rely most on external auditors to raise the red flag over balance sheet abuses.
A greater reliance should be placed on internal controls, Mr. Hunter said. "In cases of fraud, usually only 3% to 5% are discovered by external auditors," he added. "They're much more likely to come from whistleblowers and internal auditors."
Meanwhile, the vast majority of respondents felt audit committees should be composed entirely of independent members, while almost three-quarters felt the chairman and chief executive positions should be filled by two different people.
That scenario played out at building products maker Royal Group Technologies Ltd. last year when company founder Vic De Zen announced he was retiring from the firm's chief executive post, but would stay on as non-executive chairman.
The move came after heavy criticism was levelled at Royal's corporate governance.
It's a separation seen as crucial by some of KPMG's respondents. "[It's] the single most important issue in corporate governance and one of the strongest actions that can be taken to avoid the potential of abuse or manipulation," wrote one survey participant.
Despite concern over some of the results, Mr. Hunter said the survey also shows that standards are getting better, not worse.
- WHAT IS THE GREATEST REPUTATIONAL RISK FACING A BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF A PUBLIC COMPANY?*:
Manipulation: 72% Litigation: 24% Bankruptcy: 19% Negative media: 11% Other: 7%
*per cent of total responses
Source: KPMG, National Post
Ran with fact box "What is the greatest reputational risk facing a board of directors of a public company?" which had been appended to the story.; pbrieger@nationalpost.com
? National Post 2004


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Internet plan could become a $2-billion flop
A $2-billion initiative to deliver government services over the Internet risks becoming an expensive flop unless the government quickly resolves technological and management problems, according to Tuesday's auditor general's report.


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Chinese Official Sues for Mistreatment
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SHANGHAI, China (AP) - A county-level Chinese official has sued police for allegedly manhandling her and filming her in her underwear during a prostitution raid, an unusual challenge to the de facto impunity enjoyed by Chinese authorities.
As reported widely in Chinese media Wednesday, the lawsuit filed by Wu Yan, a deputy county chief in the northeastern province of Jilin, is demanding about $200,000 for emotional suffering and medical costs, along with an apology printed in newspapers.
Wu said male officers burst through the door of her room at the Jiaotong hotel in the town of Shulin on the night of Nov. 18 as she was sleeping, according to the Changchun Evening News and other newspapers.
She said officers dragged her into the hallway, leaving her with cuts and bruises, then threw her on the ground and filmed her with a video camera while other guests and hotel staff looked on.
The suit underscores the rising dissatisfaction with the often brutal measures adopted by Chinese police, who are frequently linked to corruption and are seen as largely unable to stem a nationwide surge in crime.
Because they serve a vital function in crushing any challenge to the communist state, China gives police officers considerable latitude in searching, questioning, and presenting evidence against criminal suspects. The ongoing "Strike Hard" anti-crime campaign has significantly broadened those powers and allows for faster trials and more liberal use of the death penalty.
Although police said the raid that involved Wu was prompted by a citizen's tip, she wasn't charged with any crime. Investigators promised Wu a public apology and compensation over the incident, but have so far only offered a private apology from police, the reports said.
Wu's lawyer, Xu Jianping, told newspapers his client's constitutional rights were violated and her physical and emotional suffering left her unable to work or live as before.
"Police didn't just harm her physical rights, they humiliated her personally as a woman," Xu was quoted as saying.
The lawsuit filed Monday with the Shulin Municipal People's Court also demands disciplinary measures against officers who conducted the raid, and the handing over of the police videotape of the incident.

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Beijing Stifles Hopes on Democracy
By DIRK BEVERIDGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HONG KONG (AP) -
Dimming hopes for quick democratic reforms in Hong Kong, a top official said Wednesday the government here can't introduce legislation on changing its election methods without consent from Beijing.
"It is not only a matter for Hong Kong, but it must be thoroughly discussed with and approved by the central government," Secretary for Administration Donald Tsang told lawmakers.
Tsang appeared in the Legislative Council to brief members on meetings he held earlier in the week with mainland officials who have made it clear Hong Kong cannot become more democratic of its own accord.
Ordinary Hong Kong people are unable to choose their leader, although they directly elect some lawmakers. But universal suffrage is set out as an eventual goal in Hong Kong's constitution, and demands for it have grown after six years under unpopular Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa.
The push for democracy gained momentum after a July 1 march by 500,000 people forced Tung to back down on plans to enact an anti-subversion law that critics called a threat to the territory's freedoms.
Tsang's comments underscored that Hong Kong people will have to bow to Beijing's broad views on the matter.
Beijing leaders have "emphasized, when considering this issue, we must look at the big picture, consider the country's interests on the whole, as well as Hong Kong's long-term interests, its legal position and economic development," Tsang said.
On Tuesday, China's state-run Xinhua News Agency quoted unidentified Chinese officials as saying Hong Kong should be governed by local people "with patriots as the main body."
Tsang said China was only reiterating what it had said in the 1980s when it was negotiating the handover with Britain. "The people managing Hong Kong's affairs should be Hong Kongers who love the motherland and Hong Kong," he said.
"Loving the motherland means not doing anything to harm the country's interests, and loving Hong Kong means not doing anything to harm Hong Kong's interests," he said.

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Cuban Police Conduct Boat-Car Inspection
By ANDREA RODRIGUEZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HAVANA (AP) -
Cuban police inspected a house and several auto repair shops Wednesday in a neighborhood where residents recently converted two 1950s cars into boats that refugees used in attempts to reach the United States.
The search came a day after eight residents of the Diezmero neighborhood in Havana were returned to Cuba by the U.S. Coast Guard after their converted 1959 Buick was spotted floating off Key West, Fla.
That was the second time in seven months such a trip was attempted. Last July, a group including some of the same refugees from Diezmero "set sail" in a converted 1951 Chevy pickup outfitted with pontoons and waterproofed doors. They too were stopped by U.S. authorities and returned to Cuba.
On Wednesday, police said they were looking for a red 1951 Ford pickup belonging to the family of Marcial Basanta, one of the refugees returned to Cuba on Tuesday, according to Basanta's father, also named Marcial.
"They broke the door (of the family's house) and said they were going to take the truck away," the elder Basanta said.
But the authorities left without seizing the vehicle, which was parked in an adjacent garage.
The younger Basanta was one of four refugees who participated in both last week's failed journey and the one that took place in July.

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Red Cross Confident It Will See Saddam
By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
GENEVA (AP) - The Red Cross has visited imprisoned officials of Saddam Hussein's toppled regime and expressed confidence Wednesday that U.S. authorities will allow it to see the former Iraqi dictator "sooner rather than later."
"He's a POW and supposed to be like any POW," said Nada Doumani, a spokeswoman for the International Committee of the Red Cross, which requested permission to visit Saddam soon after he was captured Dec. 13 and the United States declared him a prisoner of war.
Doumani told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Amman, Jordan, that the neutral, Swiss-run ICRC had seen most if not all of the 43 other high-ranking Iraqis captured by coalition forces.
"We have no problem of access to other people so far," she said. As for Saddam Hussein, she added, "We believe that we will be able to see him sooner rather than later."
She said the visit to Saddam should happen fairly "automatically" because the ICRC, which is entitled to see POWs under the Geneva Conventions on the conduct of war, has so far had access to all coalition locations for holding POWs and civilian internees.
The agency still doesn't know where Saddam is being held and will know for sure only when its delegates have seen him, Doumani said.
"The Americans are saying that he's somewhere in Iraq, as far as I understand, but we cannot confirm that or deny it," Doumani said.
The ICRC moved many of its international staff out of Iraq following the Oct. 27 bomb attack on its Baghdad headquarters. But it has representatives who continue to visit Iraqi detainees, whether they are ordinary soldiers or among the 55 most-wanted whose faces appear in a deck of cards issued by U.S. authorities. The coalition says it has captured 44 of the 55.
"I cannot tell you by name whom we have seen and whom we haven't and if we have skipped somebody," Doumani said.
She said there is nothing in the Geneva Conventions that would prohibit Saddam's being tried by a coalition tribunal.
"It can also be by an ad hoc international tribunal that can be established by a resolution of the Security Council," she said.
"We could envision that it could happen (that the Iraqis try Saddam) once authority is transferred to the Iraqis in June and military tribunals are established again," Doumani said.
But the ICRC doesn't get into who conducts the trial as long as it is a military tribunal of a sovereign country that is party to the Geneva Conventions. Iraq joined the conventions in 1956 but it has been suspended while under coalition control.
The trial can be for what a POW did before the latest war, including "other war crimes or crimes against humanity," but "not for what he has done during the latest war for being a soldier," she said.
She said there was some misconception about Saddam's rights after he was declared a POW.
"Some people, especially in Iraq, thought that as long as he was given this POW status he cannot be prosecuted, which is totally wrong, because you have plenty of articles in the Third Geneva Convention where it can even go as far as a death sentence.
"But he cannot be tried for simply participating in hostilities because the whole idea for a POW is that he is a soldier doing his job in defending his country, so you cannot try him for defending or for fighting. You can only try him if he went beyond and committed a war crime or a crime against humanity or a crime prior to war."
Doumani noted the conventions omit setting a time frame for the visits and said it was not the ICRC's concern when Saddam's trial would take place.
"Whatever is done, it has to be done according to the law," she said. "Judicial guarantees should be respected, the right to defense, impartiality, transparency and all these things," she said. "This is valid not just for Saddam Hussein, it's valid for any soldier, any Iraqi POW."

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Bin Laden's Driver Chosen to Stand Trial
By PAISLEY DODDS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - Osama bin Laden's $200-a-month driver is being held at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp, but the man had no connection to Afghanistan's ousted Taliban regime or the al-Qaida terror network, his defense attorney said Wednesday.
Salim Ahmed Salim Hamdan, 34, left Yemen in 1996 for Afghanistan. He planned to continue on to Tajikistan to join Muslims fighting against former Soviet communists but was forced to take a job to support his family, said his attorney, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift.
Hamdan began working for bin Laden in 1997 on his farm in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, earning about $200 a month driving a truck and moving farm workers to the fields, said Swift, who just returned from a visit to the U.S. prison camp in eastern Cuba.
"We have the facts going for us," Swift told The Associated Press after speaking to the Miami Herald and the Washington Post. "He has a wife. He has two young children, one of whom he's never seen. The only reason why he took the job as a driver was to support his family."
Neither Hamdan nor any of the other 660 some detainees at the camp have been charged. He is one of four chosen to stand trial at possible military tribunals and given access to defense attorneys. And he is the first detainee at Guantanamo publicly identified as having a link to bin Laden.
Under U.S. law, Hamdan could be charged with conspiracy or being an accessory to a crime but the charges he could face under international law are not as clear, Swift said.
Hamdan says he is a civilian and has asked to be tried in a civilian court.
Unless he agrees to a plea bargain - a possibility that Swift said he could not discuss in detail - prosecutors will have to prove he had knowledge of bin Laden's activities. Bin Laden, accused of masterminding the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, is still at large.
Pentagon policy has prohibited troops and civilians at the Navy base from disclosing specifics about prisoners. Swift received special Pentagon clearances to discuss his client, whom he has met for about 25 hours using an Arabic translator.
Swift says he has been given assurances his conversations with his client are not being monitored. He also says he has been granted access every time he's asked.
Hamdan, who is married and has two daughters aged 2 and 4, was captured by Afghan forces as he tried to return bin Laden's car to the farm during the U.S. attacks, Swift said. He was turned over to the Americans about two years ago but Swift said he could not say how long he had been in Guantanamo.
Since Hamdan was given counsel Dec. 18, he has been held in solitary confinement, segregated from the other prisoners in a windowless, air-conditioned cell, Swift said.
"Physically he's fine, with the exception of being cold," Swift said. "The prolonged solitary confinement has been difficult."
In Spain, meanwhile, Interior Minister Angel Acebes said Wednesday that a Spaniard held at Guantanamo is to be transferred to Spain for questioning by a judge.
The Spanish government last week endorsed a request by Judge Baltasar Garzon for the repatriation of Hamed Abderrahman Ahmad, 29, who has been held at the U.S. military base for more than two years after his capture in Afghanistan in late 2001.
Foreign Minister Ana Palacio said she had been in contact with Secretary of State Colin Powell to arrange the suspect's flight to Spain.
A Spanish military plane carrying seven police who will escort Ahmad left Spain on Wednesday. U.S. officials normally don't comment until transfers are completed.
The Spaniard is one of four Guantanamo inmates that Garzon has alleged belong to a terrorist organization through suspected links with Imad Eddin Barakat Yarkas, the jailed suspected leader of an al-Qaida cell in Spain broken up in November 2001.
Ahmad will appear Friday before Garzon at Spain's National Court for questioning, court officials in Madrid said.

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State seeks to shift Medicaid patients' basic care
By Liz Kowalczyk, Globe Staff, 2/11/2004
The Romney administration wants to prohibit low-income residents from seeing primary care doctors at hospitals, jumping into a longstanding debate about whether Massachusetts patients are driving up healthcare costs by relying too heavily on expensive medical centers.
State officials want to shift patients enrolled in Medicaid -- the state and federal insurance program for the poor that's facing skyrocketing costs -- to community health centers for basic medical care, which they estimate would save the state $16 million next year.
Ronald Preston, secretary of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, said that Medicaid patients would still be able to make appointments with cardiologists, gastroenterologists, and other specialists at hospitals. But community health center staff have more time to provide basic medical care and can more easily connect patients with a wide array of social-service programs, he said. Comparable services are cheaper at community health centers, which means state fees are lower for health centers than for hospital outpatient departments.
Officials also wonder if, just by seeing a doctor at a hospital, patients are more likely to receive unnecessary expensive tests because they're readily available.
At least 20,000 of the state's 928,000 Medicaid patients and an unknown number of uninsured patients receive most of their primary care in hospitals.
"A hospital is there to be a hospital, to treat emergencies and admit patients overnight," Preston said. "When patients show up at their door, it's a very expensive proposition."
The plan is one of several administration budget proposals --which must be negotiated with the Legislature -- that would reduce state payments to hospitals by $87 million to $100 million for treating poor patients. One proposal would eliminate Medicaid payments to help train young doctors, or residents, a plan that hits academic medical centers especially hard. Another would do away with a special pool of relief money for hospitals like Boston Medical Center and Cambridge Hospital that rely on the funds to treat large numbers of poor patients.
"People are not going to be happy about this," Preston said. "But we're talking about a rate of increase in the cost of the Medicaid program that is way out of proportion to anything else going on in state government."
Dr. JudyAnn Bigby, an internist at Brigham and Women's Hospital, said shifting Medicaid enrollees to community health centers could harm many patients. Bigby, who is Boston Mayor Thomas Menino's personal physician and also cares for about 200 Medicaid patients, said community health centers may not have the space and staff to take on thousands of extra patients. In addition, she said, the administration's proposal ignores patients' personal preferences and the fact that many patients who end up in hospital outpatient clinics are "pretty sick people" who need to see specialists in addition to their primary care doctor.
"The majority of my patients are not coming for prevention," Bigby said. "They're on complicated medical regimens with five or six problems including high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, and arthritis. If you put them in community health centers where they don't have specialists, what's going to happen to continuity of care and communication between doctors?"
Hospital executives said the overall cuts will hurt their already struggling institutions. Medicaid payments for Boston Medical Center, which projects it will post a $15 million operating loss this year, would be reduced to $48 million from $78 million under the governor's proposals, said Thomas Traylor, the hospital's vice president of federal, state, and local programs.
"We're quite concerned," he said. "We don't think they're targeting us specifically. It's just more government money comes our way because we're large, so some of these cuts are going to hit us harder."
The Romney administration is going after a Massachusetts healthcare tradition: the tendency of patients to use hospitals heavily for all types of care, and especially to rely on teaching hospitals. Managed care insurance companies beat back healthcare costs in the 1990s, largely by reducing the number of days patients stay in the hospital and eliminating overnight stays altogether for simple operations. But insurers have had limited success in Massachusetts shifting patients from hospitals to health clinics and doctors' offices.
During the 1990s, the state's hospitals logged 36 percent more outpatient visits per capita than the average US hospital, according to a report two years ago from the Massachusetts Council of Community Hospitals. Medical inflation rose 73 percent in Massachusetts during those years compared to 49 percent nationally, according to a 2000 state analysis. At the time, state health officials said one reason may be residents' heavy use of academic medical centers.
The Medicaid program has become a driving force in the state's budget crisis, with costs growing at a 13 percent annual rate the past two years. The Romney administration is recommending budget cuts for the fiscal year that starts July 1 that will keep growth in the Medicaid budget to 8 percent, or $496 million, for a total cost of $6.7 billion. Many Medicaid recipients already use community health centers. About 319,000 Medicaid recipients are enrolled in the agency's primary care program, in which they are assigned a primary care doctor to coordinate their care, and at least 20,000 of these recipients are enrolled with doctors who work in hospitals.
In addition, the administration no longer wants to pay for uninsured patients to get care at hospitals that they could get in community health centers. The "free care pool," a fund run by the state to reimburse hospitals and other medical providers for treating the uninsured, would no longer pay hospitals for treating such basic care ailments as non-emergency colds and coughs and routine physical exams.
Partners HealthCare System, the parent organization of Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women's Hospital, estimates its Medicaid payments will fall to $110 million from $121 million under the administration's plan. Partners hospitals are generally profitable, but executives complain that Medicaid payments currently cover just 54 percent of the cost of caring for patients. The hospitals make up much of this shortfall with higher payments from private insurers.
Partners executives said they are trying to move patients to lower cost facilities on their own, and recently moved more than 125 patients from Brigham to Brookside Community Health Center in Jamaica Plain for dental care.
Edward Grimes, executive director of Upham's Corner Health Center in Dorchester, said a number of the city's community health centers are newly renovated and expanded and can accommodate more patients.
"But, if it means uprooting patients and interfering with longstanding doctor and patient relationships, that's not appropriate," he said.
Liz Kowalczyk can be reached at kowalczyk@globe.com.

? Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.
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Pentagon: 3 months in Iraq cost $14B
By John J. Lumpkin, Associated Press Writer, 2/11/2004
WASHINGTON -- The ongoing war in Iraq cost about $4 billion in September, spiked to $7 billion in October and hit just under $3 billion in November, the Pentagon said Wednesday in its latest report on how much the military operation costs.
That amounted to roughly $14 billion spent on U.S. military operations in Iraq over the three-month period late last year, the latest figures available, said Dov Zakheim, the Pentagon's chief financial official.
He said analysts were trying to determine why the costs spiked in October.
Officials previously had said the occupation of Iraq is costing $1 billion a week.
Zakheim also sought to allay concerns, expressed by top military chiefs to a congressional committee Tuesday, that the Pentagon would run out of money to finance the efforts.
The Iraq war and occupation, along with the ongoing operations in Afghanistan, are being paid for through supplemental spending bills that are approved by Congress outside of the regular budget process.
Already, Congress has approved $166 billion for those operations. The Pentagon has said it does not expect the Bush administration to seek another spending bill until January 2005, but the chiefs of the Army, Air Force and Marine Corps suggested Tuesday that money will run out by the end of September.
Zakheim said Wednesday that the military can fill the gap by borrowing money from other operations and maintenance accounts. This causes some repairs and maintenance work to be delayed, but Zakheim said this would not lead to permanent problems if a supplemental spending bill were approved by the following spring.
Why wait? Zakheim said the Pentagon wanted to see how events in Iraq unfold this year before deciding how much money it will need.
He denied the suggestion that the Bush administration was waiting until after the November elections to prevent the cost from becoming a political issue.
? Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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>> AHEM 1...

GAO: Defense contractors owe $3B in taxes
By Mary Dalrymple, AP Tax Writer, 2/11/2004
WASHINGTON -- More than 27,000 defense contractors owe a total of $3 billion in unpaid taxes, according to government records reviewed by congressional investigators.
That represents almost 14 percent of the contractors registered with the Pentagon as of February 2003, according to auditors at the General Accounting Office. They tallied total taxes owed by the contractors in the budget year that ended Sept. 30, 2002.
Most of the contractors were small businesses that failed to send to the Internal Revenue Service the taxes withheld from their employees' paychecks for Social Security, Medicare and federal income taxes.
"It's more than irritating. It's outrageous," said Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., who asked the GAO, the investigative arm of Congress, to look into the problem.
The Senate Governmental Affairs Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations planned a hearing Thursday to review the findings.
The GAO found evidence in some cases of abusive or potentially criminal activity in which the contractors diverted the money for personal gain or to fund their businesses. The evidence was uncovered during in-depth investigations into 47 contractors.
Privacy laws prevent the investigators from identifying the businesses and individuals to lawmakers. Coleman, the subcommittee chairman, said he met with IRS Commissioner Mark Everson on Wednesday and asked him to pursue those 47 contractors.
One contractor hired to provide custodial services and owing nearly $10 million in unpaid taxes borrowed almost $1 million from the business and bought a boat, several cars and a home abroad. The Defense Department paid the company $3.5 million in 2002. The business was dissolved in 2003.
An engineering research contractor, delinquent by more than $1 million in taxes, paid $1 million in the mid-1990s to purchase a home and furnishings. About the same time, the contractor stopped paying its taxes in full. The Defense Department awarded the business contracts totaling over $600,000.
In a some cases, the contractors behind in their taxes were not businesses but individuals. A dentist who had a multiyear contract for over $400,000 paid income tax in only one year since 1993. The dentist owed over $100,000 in unpaid payroll and unemployment taxes going back to the early 1990s.
A vehicle repair and painting contractor bought a $1 million home and luxury sports car and owed over $100,000 in taxes. The individual also owed a federal agency for child support.
Congress in 1997 ordered federal agencies to withhold 15 percent of its payments to any individual or business with an outstanding tax debt. The Pentagon did not establish an automated program to enforce the program until five years later.
In 2003, the first year the Pentagon started withholding the funds, it collected less than $1 million. The GAO estimated that the Defense Department should be collecting at least $100 million each year.
Defense officials told investigators it would be difficult to put in place a thorough reporting system because its vendor payment system is split among 22 locations.
The IRS also shares some blame, the study concluded.
A tight budget and large workload prevented the agency from pursuing the contractors. The IRS also works first with taxpayers to encourage them to voluntarily comply with the law before taking more aggressive action.
? Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Taxes Defense Contractors Glance
By The Associated Press, 2/11/2004
Records reviewed by congressional investigators showed that more than 27,000 defense contractors owe a total of $3 billion in unpaid taxes. The investigators selected 34 businesses and 13 individuals for further audit and investigation.
Among those contractors studied in detail, investigators found:
--a contractor who sells and installs office furniture at military installations was paid $38,000 by the Pentagon while owing over $150,000 in taxes. The owners used the business to pay personal expenses, such as a home mortgage and credit cards. One owner is a retired military officer.
--a researcher was awarded an $800,000 contract in 2002 while over $700,000 behind in tax payments. The owner has more than $1 million in loans for cars, real estate and recreational activities and owns a high-performance airplane.
--a business that provides janitorial services at military installations received contracts totaling nearly $12 million from 1998 through 2001. The business owed over $800,000 in taxes and is linked to potential check fraud.
--a construction service company that maintains and repairs housing on military bases was paid $2.4 million in 2002 while owing over $1 million in taxes. The business also owes the Defense Department tens of thousands of dollars because of an overpayment in early 2000.
--an information technology company that provides personnel support has multiple Defense Department contracts valued up to $13 million while owing nearly $1 million in taxes. It received payments from three other federal agencies and may be involved in money laundering activities.
--an individual who provides musicians for religious services has not filed an income tax return since 1997. The Pentagon paid the individual $217,000 in 2002.
? Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


>> AHEM 2...

Kerry opposed gay marriage ban in letter
By John Solomon, Associated Press Writer, 2/11/2004
WASHINGTON -- Democratic presidential hopeful John Kerry, who opposes gay marriage and hints he might support a limited ban, just two years ago signed a letter with other congressional colleagues urging the Massachusetts Legislature to drop a constitutional amendment outlawing homosexual nuptials.
And when Kerry opposed federal legislation in 1996 that defined marriage as a union between a man and a woman, he compared the law to 1960s efforts in the South to criminalize interracial marriages and accused his supporters of engaging in the "politics of division."
"This is an unconstitutional, unprecedented, unnecessary and mean-spirited bill," Kerry declared then, even as 85 senators and President Clinton supported the measure.
As his home state grapples with a historic Massachusetts Supreme Court ruling that could permit homosexual marriages, Kerry's own comments on the campaign trail are being compared by Republicans, Democratic rivals and even his own constituents to his prior record.
Kerry's campaign said Wednesday he has consistently opposed gay marriage while also rejecting legislation, like the 2002 amendment, that he believed jeopardized the civil rights and recognition of gay relationships because it was too broadly worded.
"John Kerry's position has been crystal clear. He opposed a proposed constitutional amendment in Massachusetts in the summer of 2002 because a sweeping proposal would have threatened civil unions, health benefits, or inheritance rights for gay couples that represent equal protection under the law," spokesman David Wade said.
"John Kerry favors civil unions, not gay marriage. It's that simple," he said.
The emergence of gay marriage as an issue has placed several candidates -- including Howard Dean who signed a civil-unions bill during his Vermont governorship -- in a delicate balancing act of trying to avoid looking bigoted while placating heterosexual and religious voters.
The White House refused Wednesday to commit President Bush to supporting a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriages, although conservative leaders said they have received high-level assurances he will take the step.
Spokesman Scott McClellan said the administration was closely watching events in Massachusetts, where lawmakers are on the verge of voting on such an amendment. Bush has denounced the Massachusetts ruling as "deeply troubling."
Kerry has left open the possibility he could support a Massachusetts ban on gay marriage if it recognized civil unions and other protections as an alternative. But in 2002, he joined his congressional colleagues in opposing Massachusetts' last effort to outlaw gay marriage, saying they feared it could be used to prevent communities "from acting as they might wish to provide some form of recognition for same sex relationships."
The letter, organized by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., was sent on congressional stationery on July 12, 2002 as the Massachusetts Legislature first considered a constitutional amendment that limited marriage to "only the union of one man and one woman."
"We believe it would be a grave error for Massachusetts to enshrine in our Constitution a provision which would have such a negative effect on so many of our fellow residents," Kerry and 11 other members of the state's congressional delegation wrote.
The Legislature's 2002 effort failed, but that debate renewed in the last week after the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled gays were entitled to the same marriage as heterosexuals unless the state constitution is changed. Lawmakers debated a possible amendment again Wednesday.
Frank and most of the other congressmen who signed the 2002 letter sent a new letter last month again opposing the constitutional amendment, but this time neither Kerry nor Sen. Edward Kennedy signed.
Frank said Wednesday he didn't ask Kerry or Kennedy to sign this time "because I was in such a hurry," the openly gay congressman said.
Frank said Kerry has always been clear to him that he opposes gay marriage but wants homosexuals to have equal protection under the law through civil unions, and other legislation.
Kerry has said that he believes marriage -- both legally and religiously -- should be reserved between a man and woman.
"I believe and have fought for the principle that we should protect the fundamental rights of gay and lesbian couples -- from inheritance to health benefits. I believe the right answer is civil unions. I oppose gay marriage and disagree with the Massachusetts Court's decision," Kerry said last week.
When asked whether he might support Massachusetts' constitutional amendment, he said it was possible.
"It depends entirely on the language on whether it supports civil union and partnership or not. I'm for civil union, I'm for partnership rights. I think what ought to condition this debate is not the term marriage, as much as the rights that people are afforded," Kerry told National Public Radio on Monday.
Back in 1986, Kerry gave an impassioned 10-minute speech on the Senate floor against an earlier effort in Congress to define marriage only as a union between a man and a woman. He was one of just 14 senators to vote against the Defense of Marriage Act.
"This is a power grab into states' rights of monumental proportions," Kerry said at the time, accusing Republicans of using legislation to drive a wedge between Americans. "It is ironic that many of the arguments for this power grab are echoes of the discussion of interracial marriage a generation ago.
"It is hard to believe that this bill is anything other than a thinly veiled attempt to score political debating points by scapegoating gay and lesbian Americans," he added, while noting his own personal objections to gay marriage.
? Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Posted by maximpost at 10:43 PM EST
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>> HARVARD WATCH...

Committee Approves Porn Magazine
H Bomb will feature nude pictures of undergraduates
By EBONIE D. HAZLE
Crimson Staff Writer
After flipping through the pages of Squirm, a Vassar College erotica magazine, the Committee on College Life (CCL) voted to approve a student-run magazine that will feature nude pictures of Harvard undergraduates and articles about sexual issues at its meeting yesterday.
Fourteen members of the CCL approved H Bomb--a magazine that will be similar to the Vassar publication--as an official Harvard publication. Two members abstained.
Assistant Dean of the College Paul J. McLoughlin, a CCL member, said he consulted University General Counsel Robert W. Iuliano '83, the University news office and University spokesperson Robert P. Mitchell before the decision.
"I needed to see if there were liability issues," McLoughlin said.
In order to avoid liability, students will not be able to take nude pictures inside of Harvard buildings, according to McLoughlin.
He also said that although approved, the magazine will not necessarily be funded by the College.
"They will still have to go through the granting application process. [Approval] gives them the ability to apply for grants but nothing else," he said, adding that "just to get a publication off and running is about $6,000."
In early December, Katharina C. Baldegg '06 and Camilla A. Hrdy '05, the two students who proposed the magazine, met with McLoughlin to begin the approval process for H Bomb.
Baldegg said that she did not think the process was especially difficult. CCL, which is composed of students, faculty and administrators, approves the creation of all new student groups, including publications.
"I don't think we faced any opposition. People have been very open about it," she said.
Hrdy said that "initially there was some concern about the nudity aspect," but that CCL members eventually "got past the fear of porn."
Baldegg added that she does not object to H Bomb being called porn.
"It's a sex magazine that will hopefully be run by students of all sexual orientations and backgrounds," Baldegg said.Baldegg said she expected the magazine, which will also include art and fiction articles, to garner a lot of attention.
"I guess student porn is sort of an underground thing," she said.
Only students of the College will be posing for the magazine's photographs and they will all be 18 or older, Baldegg said.
Associate Dean of the College Judith H. Kidd said officially approved organizations do not necessarily represent the views of the College. She expected varied reaction to the new publication.
"There will be people who will value the free speech [...] and people whose sensibilities are offended," said Kidd, who was also at yesterday's meeting. "[CCL] also very strongly felt we ought to be able to approve these organizations."
"Committee members really sort of look at it as, `Is it something if the student body would want? Is it feasible?' Not `Would I join?'" McLoughlin said.
McLoughlin also said he thought the magazine might generate considerable attention, even outside of the College.
"I guess I can't imagine that it won't," he said.
Baldegg and Hrdy anticipate that their magazine will be published bi-annually, starting this semester. They are thinking about distributing the first issue of the magazine during commencement ceremonies in May, Hrdy said.
Lecturer on the Study of Religion Brian C.W. Palmer '86 said many pornographic publications often walk the line of objectifying women.
"Much depends on the values of the editors. Quite possibly the magazine will sell, as so much else sells, by commodifying women's bodies and including an occasional half-nude man as an alibi," Palmer wrote in an e-mail.
Professor of Psychology Marc D. Hauser, who teaches Science B-29, "Evolution of Human Nature," nicknamed "Sex" by students, will serve as the Faculty adviser for H Bomb.
Hauser could not be reached for contact yesterday because he is out of town.
--Staff writer Ebonie D. Hazle can be reached at hazle@fas.harvard.edu.

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Old Crimson Interview Reveals A More Radical John Kerry
The Crimson reported Kerry called for U.N. control of troops in 1970
By ZACHARY M. SEWARD
Crimson Staff Writer
Ten months after returning home from Vietnam, a young John Kerry strolled into the offices of The Harvard Crimson on Feb. 13, 1970 as an obscure underdog in the Democratic Congressional primary.
The decorated veteran, honorably discharged after a tour of duty in the Mekong Delta, spoke in fierce terms during his daylong interview with The Crimson's Samuel Z. Goldhaber '72.
But almost 34 years later, Kerry's remarks on American military and intelligence operations vastly diverge from opinions expressed by the present-day Sen. John F. Kerry, D.-Mass., the leading candidate in the Democratic primary for president.
"I'm an internationalist," Kerry told The Crimson in 1970. "I'd like to see our troops dispersed through the world only at the directive of the United Nations."
Kerry said he wanted "to almost eliminate CIA activity. The CIA is fighting its own war in Laos and nobody seems to care."
The Kerry campaign, celebrating primary victories in Virginia and Tennessee last night, declined to comment on the senator's remarks.
As a candidate for president, Kerry has said he supports the autonomy of the U.S. military and has never called for a scale-back of CIA operations.
Former Secretary of Labor Robert B. Reich defended Kerry's 1970 statements as appropriate for their time.
"In the context of the Vietnam War, those comments are completely understandable," said Reich, who has endorsed Kerry.
But a spokesperson for President Bush's reelection campaign said Kerry's 1970 remarks signaled the senator's weakness on defense.
"President Bush will never cede the best interests of the national security of the American people to anybody but the president of the United States, along with the Congress," said the spokesperson, Kevin A. Madden.
The increasingly likely matchup between Kerry and Bush has already prompted comparisons of the senator's record in Vietnam and the president's domestic service in the National Guard. And the two Yale graduates, both members of the secret society Skull and Bones, appeared set to square off in future months under the specter of the ongoing war in Iraq.
Goldhaber, whose first-person profile of Kerry ran in The Crimson Feb. 18, 1970, said yesterday he recalled the candidate as an emerging outsider whose campaign focused squarely on his opposition to the Vietnam War.
"We lived, dreamed and breathed Vietnam," Goldhaber said.
Still, Adam Clymer '58, political director of the National Annenberg Election Survey at the University of Pennsylvania, said Kerry's comments would likely find their way into Bush campaign materials.
"If I were them, I'd use this," said Clymer, a former Crimson president. "I'd use it in direct mail."
Kerry's conservative opponents have already begun painting the Massachusetts senator and former deputy governor as an elite, New England liberal, and his 21-year voting record in the Senate may provide considerable ammunition.
Madden said the Bush campaign would highlight Kerry's Senate votes should he win the Democratic nomination.
And Reich forecasted G.O.P. research would extend far beyond Capitol Hill.
"If Kerry is the nominee, Republicans will try and search back into everything he ever said on every issue," Reich predicted.
Kerry's 1970 remarks to Goldhaber portray a fiery, novice politician inspired by his opposition to the Vietnam War.
"He struck me as very ambitious," Goldhaber said yesterday. "He struck me as the sort of person--even back then, newly returned from Vietnam--who was thinking about running for president."
--Staff writer Zachary M. Seward can be reached at seward@fas.harvard.edu.

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Posted by maximpost at 3:51 PM EST
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Beyond Disarmament
Does President Bush mean what he's said about promoting democracy?
By Farid N. Ghadry
Little by little, the world is getting a glimpse of the mechanisms of the Iraqi Baath party. The latest discovery of Iraqi files buried deep in government buildings exposes many of the atrocious measures taken by Saddam and his henchmen to subdue the Iraqi population.
One of the most revealing findings was a system of rewards and punishments based on the quality of a "catch" by the secret police. Informants were punished for producing an inadequate number of offenders by denial of pay. Conversely, they were rewarded generously for the delivery of information that led to more prisoners, more tortured citizens, and, ultimately, more coffins -- a trickle-down economic system of fear and terror.
In Iraq, thanks to the U.S-led Coalition, this kind of oppression has finally been halted. But another Baathist state still utilizes such tactics against its people. Syrians have been living in hell for 35 years. The Baathist party there, under the patronage of the Assad family, seized power in a military coup in March of 1969. Hafez Assad ascended to power on the false premise that he would enact reforms. Reality struck quickly, however, as the Assad clan turned the country into one of the most regressive and brutal states in the world.
To its everlasting shame, most of the world stood in silence while Saddam oppressed millions -- and slaughtered hundreds of thousands -- of Arabs and Kurds. Today, the world is again silent. In Syria, stories abound about parents who are afraid to speak in front of their children for fear that they too have been recruited as informants. The Assad regime, like Hussein's, has taken a devastating toll on Arab society. The question now is: Will the Syrian Baathists meet the same fate as their Iraqi counterparts to the East?
On November 6, President Bush suggested they might. In a speech to the National Endowment for Democracy, he called for democracy "from Damascus to Tehran." This bold new "forward strategy of freedom in the Middle East" forecasts the end of despotism in the region. The landmark commitment by the United States has been viewed by many in the Middle East as an encouraging sign that democracy may one day be nurtured in nations that have lived in darkness for too long.
But the president's worthy words ultimately will ring hollow if a new set of substantial and lucid policies to bring about this democracy are not enacted. If the United States does not translate the president's ideas into deeds, the Middle East will be lost forever to authoritarians who utilize terrorism as their tool of diplomacy and extreme Islamists bent on using any weapons available to return the region to medieval times.
Syria continues with the policies of yesterday by arming and funding terrorism in all its forms. On Friday, the New York Times revealed that Assad has resumed sending weapons to Hezbollah and Hamas terrorists based in Lebanon. This is just one more piece of evidence that Syria, under Assad's rule, cannot or will not change -- no matter how great the pressure. With that in mind, democracy is the only solution for a new and free Syria.
In the Middle East, action does have consequences as the sudden willingness of dictator Muammar Khaddafi to dismantle Libya's weapons of mass destruction and to halt development of his nuclear program has clearly demonstrated. But Syrian intellectuals, at least, interpret what's happening in Libya as the fruit of a U.S. policy only intended to separate terrorists and their state sponsors from weapons -- not as part of a more ambitious democratization effort. While disarming tyrants is both admirable and necessary, it is less than President Bush has pledged to do.
Once Libya dismantles all its WMDs, we will certainly open business channels with the rogue nation (already Conoco and Marathon Oil have publicly showed interest in that nation's oil resources). This will cement Khaddafi's power -- and pave the way for his son and grandson to rule a few years later. If that happens, Syrians will see it as confirmation that the president's call to facilitate democratization in the Middle East is more rhetorical than real. There is nothing tangible on the horizon to indicate that U.S. foreign policy, when it comes to countries other than Iraq, has shifted from the pre-9/11 status quo.
As disturbing as that may sound, there is an endless flow of optimism among Syrians in the Diaspora. They continue to believe that President Bush will move forcefully to support those in the Arab and Muslim worlds who hope to live in freedom.

-- Farid N. Ghadry is president of the Reform Party of Syria.
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ConocoPhillips to end business in Syria, Iran
Reuters News Service
NEW YORK -- ConocoPhillips, the No. 3 U.S. oil company, is ending its operations in Syria and Iran after a New York City official asked the company to examine its ties with countries that "promote terrorism."
New York City Comptroller William Thompson Jr. today released a letter from the Houston-based company which said it had agreed not to "approve business ventures in sensitive countries unless it is convinced that it can do so legally and within the spirit of U.S. law."
Thompson last year made a proposal on behalf of the New York City Police and Fire Department Pension Funds -- which have $34.8 million invested in ConocoPhillips -- that the company ensure oversight of operations in Iran and Syria.
ConocoPhillips has now ended its business connections with Iran and plans to end its connections with Syria "in the future," Thompson said in a statement.
The agreement also extends to the company's domestic and foreign subsidiaries.
ConocoPhillips has an interest in a natural gas processing facility in Syria that will terminate by contract in 2005.
The investment started in 1999 "in compliance with U.S. laws and with full knowledge of the U.S. government," a company spokesman said. "This investment has been and continues to be permitted under U.S. laws."
As for Iran, ConocoPhillips "does not have any operations, assets or investments either directly or via subsidiaries or affiliates," the spokesman said.
Previous financial documents indicate ConocoPhillips had a a subsidiary in Iran in name only, with no money, investments, operations or people. That subsidiary no longer exists. Companies like ConocoPhillips often set up subsidiaries in countries such as Iran so they can do business if sanctions are ever lifted.
New York City's five pension funds, overseen by Thompson, have more than $164 million invested in ConocoPhillips.
"I hope that these decisions will encourage other companies to thoroughly examine their relationships with rogue nations, and any ties that can promote terrorism," Thompson said.
"Over the next few months, my office will expand the scope of our efforts and increase pressure to ensure responsible relationships," he added.
Thompson has also asked General Electric Co. and oil field services company Halliburton to end their operations in countries that sponsor terror.
However, he expressed "displeasure" that neither company has taken measures similar to ConocoPhillips.
He recently submitted a renewed shareholder proposal calling on Halliburton to review its operations in Iran. Halliburton in February 2000 opened an office in Iran through a Cayman Islands unit, Halliburton Products and Services Ltd.
Thompson expects to submit another shareholder resolution with GE later this year.

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EU states pressuring Syria over WMDs
BEIRUT, Feb 6: EU member states have stepped up their pressure on Syria to show it is fighting the spread of weapons of mass destruction since Libya said it would scrap its banned weapons programmes, diplomats say.
The 15-nation bloc had been expected to initial an economic and political cooperation pact with Syria by the end of 2003, but diplomats say it is being held up because some governments want Damascus to show a greater commitment against WMD.
Syria has repeatedly denied accusations by the United States that it is developing chemical weapons. Libya's decision to halt its banned arms programmes and Iran's move to allow snap U.N. nuclear inspections has increased Syrian isolation over the issue. Some European Union member states are now pushing for a tougher text on WMD before signing the Association Agreement.
"The member states have to take a decision in the context of the wider political situation because of what happened in Libya and Iran and the American position," a European diplomat said.
"The question is should we weaken the Western front on Syria by allowing the EU to sign this agreement with the Syrians?" Syria is hoping to counter-balance mounting US pressure by accelerating the signing of the economic pact. -Reuters

--------------------------------------------
FIR against Dr Khan sealed: ISPR
By Mohammad Asghar
RAWALPINDI, Feb 6: An FIR was registered against Dr A. Q. Khan by the Airport Police a few days back on the complaint of Brigadier Shoaib, KRL's director of security.
Talking to Dawn on Friday, ISPR chief Maj-Gen Shaukat Sultan confirmed the registration of the FIR and said it was sealed after President Pervez Musharraf pardoned Dr Khan.
"The FIR was specifically against Dr Khan," Maj-Gen Sultan said and added: "I do not know contents of the FIR and the date of its registration."

------------------------------------------------
N-issue not an internal matter, says India
By J.N
NEW DELHI, Feb 6: Indian Foreign Minister Yashwant Sinha said on Friday that revelations of nuclear proliferation by Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan were an international issue and his pardon by President Gen Pervez Musharraf could not be considered the end of the matter.
Mr Sinha suggested an IAEA debate on the issue and indicated that though NPT clauses did not apply to Islamabad, they were applicable to Iran and Libya.
"Obviously, there were some charges and the Pakistan cabinet decided to recommend to the president that A.Q. Khan should be pardoned. The Pakistan president has pardoned him," Mr Sinha said in reply to a question at a joint news conference with visiting British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw.
"Obviously, it appears to me that things will not stop here because it is not merely an internal matter of Pakistan but it is a matter concerning the entire international community. Pakistan itself is not a signatory to the NPT but Libya and Iran are".
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US accepts Pakistan's decision: Powell - Scientist's pardon 'odd' - UN
UNITED NATIONS, Feb 6: US Secretary of State Colin Powell said on Friday that Washington accepted Pakistani leader Pervez Musharraf's decision to pardon nuclear scientists Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan. But Mr Powell added that he would raise the matter in talks with Musharraf in the days to come.
"This is a matter between Mr Khan, who is a Pakistani citizen, and his government. But it is a matter also that I'll be talking to President Musharraf about," he told reporters at UN headquarters in New York.
"The action he took with respect to pardoning Mr Khan is something that he felt it was appropriate for him to do and he has explained his position thoroughly," Mr Powell said.
"I expect to be talking to President Musharraf over the next several days to make sure that there is a full understanding of what the A.Q. Khan network has done over the years so that there are no remnants of it left, and then there's no possibility of further proliferating activities coming out of that network."
He said the desire to make sure there was no more proliferation was "goal number one with respect to his accountability."
Mr Powell deflected criticism that Washington has failed to condemn Gen Musharraf's decision and called the uncovering of the black market nuclear network a "success."
"The biggest (proliferator) is now gone and so we don't have to worry about proliferation from Mr A. Q. Khan or his network. And this is a success for the international community," Mr Powell said. Mr Powell said he would tell Gen Musharraf to ensure there was no chance of Pakistan selling secrets again.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said the Khan affair indicated that nuclear proliferation is "alive" and said that Musharraf was faced with a "difficult situation" because of Khan's hero status to many in the country.
"There has been quite a lot of black market activities that we have not been aware of or have not been able to contain," Mr Annan said.
Admitting that it "sounds rather odd" to have pardoned Mr Khan amid efforts to stop the spread of nuclear weapons, Mr Annan said: "Obviously the president of the country has to manage his own national situation."
He added: "What is important is the commitment that they are going to plug the loopholes and deal with everyone involved severely." Taking a line similar to the United States, Mr Annan chose not to criticize President Pervez Musharraf's decision.
He noted the president had faced a tough call because Abdul Qadeer Khan was revered as the father of Pakistan's atomic bomb. Further, Gen Musharraf had pledged to stamp out such proliferation from the South Asian country.
"Obviously it is a very difficult situation that he has to deal with - he is dealing with a national hero," Mr Annan told reporters.
He said Gen Musharraf had assured him he would "take whatever measure to ensure this sort of trafficking does not take place and deal very firmly with those involved."

-----------------------------------------------
Amin contests president's authority on pardon
By Ashraf Mumtaz
LAHORE, Feb 6: ARD chairman Makhdoom Amin Fahim, disputing Gen Musharraf's authority to pardon nuclear scientist Dr A.Q. Khan after holding him guilty of nuclear proliferation, demanded on Friday that the matter should be taken to parliament for a final decision.
In case the government was not in a mood to take people's representatives into confidence, parliament should be dissolved as there was no justification for such a powerless and helpless house to stay, he said while talking to Dawn.
The ARD chief said no individual, least of all the one who was not the constitutionally elected president, was competent to first hold somebody responsible for a serious offence and then let him off the hook the same day.
He said the nation must be apprised of the inquiry report and the justification for waiving the punishment.
Amin Fahim was of the view that it was unfair on the part of the relevant authorities to exonerate the military people and hold the civilians guilty.
He said the dubious proceedings of the entire episode had no credibility and the matter should be referred to the bicameral legislature.
In response to a question, he said the status of the nuclear programme during various periods and the contribution made by various presidents and prime ministers to advance it should be debated by parliament. Also, he said, the legislators, including those belonging to the treasury, should have the permission to ask questions.
Gen Musharraf had alleged on Thursday that by reducing the level of uranium enrichment to five per cent then prime minister Benazir Bhutto and army chief Gen Aslam Beg had in fact rolled back the country's nuclear programme.
The ARD chairman said parliament was the best judge. It should see which government had done what in the nuclear field and what should be done in the future.
Replying to a question, Amin Fahim said that the MMA was an ally of the government, having no linkage with the opposition. He said MMA's Friday strike call had failed to get any response because the electorate fully knew that the religious parties were part of the ruling coalition.
He said the MMA had decided on its own to support the government and the ARD respected its decision. He indicated that there was no possibility of the two alliances joining hands in the future.

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Opposition to raise N-issue in Senate
By Our Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD, Feb 6: The opposition Democratic Alliance has decided to raise the issue of scientists' questioning over nuclear proliferation in the forthcoming Senate session on Feb 13, sources told Dawn on Friday.
They said the Democratic Alliance, comprising members of the ARD and other parties in the Senate, had prepared adjournment motions and notices to raise the issue.
The opposition would demand a debate in the Senate as "it is a matter of great concern for people of Pakistan and of national importance".
The motion has been signed by PPP's parliamentary leader Mian Raza Rabbani, PML-N's parliamentary leader Ishaq Dar, PPP Senator Safdar Abbasi and Sanaullah Baloch of the Balochistan National Party.
The opposition would also seek a debate on the statement of International Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei in which he had stated that the IAEA had been working with Pakistan to arrest those involved in proliferation. The motion, signed by Mr Rabbani and Mr Dar, says that the house should adjourn normal proceedings to discuss Mr ElBaradei's statement which had appeared in newspapers on Jan 25.
The sources said opposition senators would draw the house's attention to contradictory statements by two ministers. Information Minister Shaikh Rashid Ahmed had stated on Jan 28 that no scientist had been placed on the exit control list. On the other hand, giving an interview to Voice of America next day, Interior Minister Faisal Saleh Hayat had stated that names of some scientists had been put on the ECL. The opposition would seek to know the actual position, they added.
Talking to Dawn, ARD's parliamentary secretary Izhar Amrohvi said the opposition would make suggestions to the government for handling the issue in a more responsible manner.

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Malaysia to investigate N-related supply
KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 6: Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi on Friday vowed a full investigation into charges that a company controlled by his son supplied parts for Libya's nuclear weapons programme , as the firm's factory threw open its doors to the media.
"I have directed the police to carry out the investigations without fear or favour," Mr Badawi said. The premier said the components produced by Scomi Precision Engineering Sdn Bhd (SCOPE), which allegedly supplied centrifuge components for Libya's uranium-enrichment programme, were "generic".
He said they could be used for a multitude of non-nuclear purposes, and Malaysian police were working with the International Atomic Energy Agency on the investigation.
The SCOPE is a unit of listed oil and gas firm Scomi Group, in which the premier's son, Kamaluddin Abdullah, is the biggest shareholder.
Abdullah Badawi said he hoped the investigation would "reveal the truth" about claims that Malaysia was linked to a proliferation syndicate exposed by the admission of Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan.
Factory manager Che Lokman Che Omar said SCOPE was told the parts were for use in the oil and gas industry and that no special export permit was needed for the products because they were not seen as sensitive items, adding that they went through normal customs procedures.
"If you show me a part I will not be able to tell you what it would be used for. We were told that it was for the oil and gas industry. We produced strictly according to the drawings provided by GTI," he said.
The factory was set up in 2001, specifically to produce the components for Gulf Technical Industries LLC (GTI) in Dubai in a deal arranged by Dubai-based Sri Lankan businessman B.S.A. Tahir.
The company said the last consignment was shipped in August last year and there had been no order since.
Police on Wednesday said they had launched a probe after US and British intelligence services told them in November about SCOPE's role and identified Tahir as the middleman.
The intelligence revealed that five containers allegedly containing centrifuge components were seized from a ship, BBC China, in Taranto, Italy, on Oct 4. Police said Tahir and SCOPE were "cooperating fully" in the probe and denied reports that Tahir was in custody.
The New Straits Times quoted intelligence agency sources as saying that the owner of GTI, which ordered the components from SCOPE, was a British citizen named Peter Griffin.
Raw materials for the components were sourced in Singapore from a subsidiary of a German company called Bikar Metalle Germany, the sources said.
They said US, British and Malaysian intelligence services and the IAEA were investigating the two links.
Scomi spokeswoman Rohida Ali Badaruddin said during the factory tour: "The message here is that we are not the subject of investigations. We are merely facilitating the investigations and the investigation is into one of our customers."
Lokman said that in its first year of operation the order from GTI made up 80 per cent of the factory's turnover, but the company had now expanded and had other overseas customers in the oil, gas and auto industries. None of its customers was in Libya, the Middle East or North Korea, he said. -AFP


Posted by maximpost at 2:52 PM EST
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>> L'AFFAIRE SUHA CONTINUED...

Arafat's wife focus of transfers probe
PARIS (Reuters) -- French prosecutors said yesterday they had opened an inquiry into transfers totaling $11.5 million into bank accounts held in France by Suha Arafat, the wife of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
The Paris public prosecutor confirmed a report in Le Canard Enchaine weekly that an inquiry about Mrs. Arafat, who lives in Paris, was started in October after information provided by the Bank of France and a government anti-money-laundering body.
The prosecutor's office said they wanted to check transfers from a Swiss-based institution made between July 2002 and July 2003 into two separate accounts held by her in Paris.
The office said the probe is in the preliminary stage, meaning its aim is to determine whether there is sufficient grounds to take matters further.
Mrs. Arafat could not be contacted for comment.
Neither she nor her husband has previously been subject to a criminal investigation involving their finances, though both have repeatedly been accused of receiving misappropriated funds.
A report by the International Monetary Fund in September found that Mr. Arafat had diverted $900 million donated for the Palestinian people to his own private bank account, according to news accounts, and CBS News reported late last year that the Palestinian leader had diverted $800 million in Palestinian aid money to a private account for his wife and daughter.
Other accusations that donor money has been siphoned off by corrupt officials or diverted to militants carrying out a suicide bombing campaign against Israel have contributed in a drop in foreign contributions to the Palestinian Authority.
On Saturday, more than 300 members of Mr. Arafat's ruling Fatah movement resigned collectively, demanding an end to corruption and greater democracy within Fatah and the Palestinian Authority.
Mr. Arafat has rejected all charges of corruption in the organization.
Palestinians were surprised when word emerged in 1992 of Mr. Arafat's secret marriage to the much younger Suha.
With her uncovered hair and expensive, Western-style clothes, she cut an unlikely figure during visits to Gaza. Her visits appear to have become rarer in recent years.
She has caused Mr. Arafat a fair number of headaches over the years with denunciations of purported corruption, cronyism and human rights abuses in the Palestinian Authority.
French prosecutors said the result of their preliminary probe would be known in a few months. They then have the option of opening a formal investigation, which under French law is the final step before any charges are filed.
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>> PICTURE...
http://www.nypost.com/news/worldnews/17687.htm
SUHA'S MOOLAH
By ANDY SOLTIS
SUHA ARAFAT
- Getty Images
February 11, 2004 -- Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's wife is being investigated by French prosecutors to determine how more than $11 million ended up in her Paris bank account.
Amid allegations that Arafat has siphoned millions in Palestinian funds, the public prosecutor in Paris confirmed the probe was triggered four months ago by confidential information about the financial affairs of his wife, Suha.
The data was provided by the Bank of France and a government agency that fights money laundering, officials said.
The investigation focuses on how the equivalent of $11.5 million in euros was transferred by checks between July 2002 and July 2003 from an unidentified Swiss institution to two accounts Suha holds in Paris.
How Suha, the 40-year-old spouse of the Palestinian president, has been able to afford her lavish lifestyle has long been the subject of speculation from the West Bank to the Left Bank.
Palestinian and Western critics say that Yasser Arafat, confined to his headquarters in Ramallah, provides a $100,000- a-month allowance to his wife and their 8-year-old daughter.
Arafat has repeatedly denied siphoning off Palestinian government funds but has also refused to disclose his personal finances.
Estimates of Arafat's wealth have ranged from $300 million, as Forbes magazine said last year, to the billions.
In August 2002, Israel's chief of military intelligence said the Palestinian president had secretly amassed $1.3 billion in assets hidden across the world.
A source told The Post at the time that Suha controlled some of the secret accounts.
Last September, the International Monetary Fund said its own audit showed Arafat had diverted $900 million in Palestinian Authority money to a bank account he controlled.
A Palestinian legislator, Hanan Ashwari, acknowledged some of the authority's money had been misused in the past but she accused the critics of waging a propaganda war to discredit Arafat and his government.
"This is a campaign against the president and the [Palestinian] Authority," she said.
The diverted money is believed to include both foreign aid to the authority and the income from authority investments in Arab world businesses ranging from cement to telecommunications.
An estimated $5.5 billion in foreign aid, much of it from Europe, has flowed into Palestinian Authority accounts since Arafat returned to the Gaza Strip ten years ago.
The French investigation could turn into the first major criminal probe of the Arafat family.
French prosecutors said they expect to decide within a few months whether to launch a formal investigation. Under French law, that is the final step before charges are made.
With Post Wire Services

------------------------------------
PROCHE-ORIENT
L'eau rapproche la Jordanie et la Syrie
Pierre Prier
[11 f?vrier 2004]
La sc?ne a dur? cinq minutes. Le roi Abdallah de Jordanie et le pr?sident syrien Bachar el-Assad sont arriv?s chacun dans leur h?licopt?re. Le temps de poser la premi?re pierre du barrage el-Wehda devant deux brochettes de ministres et les deux chefs d'?tat sont repartis. Mais cette br?ve inauguration a fait figure d'?v?nement. Abdallah et Bachar el-Assad ne s'?taient pas rencontr?s depuis un an, depuis la mont?e en puissance de l'offensive am?ricaine en Irak. La Syrie avait soutenu l'Irak. La Jordanie n'avait pas condamn? la guerre, et m?me accueilli des soldats am?ricains sur son sol.
Le souverain jordanien et le pr?sident syrien se sont ensuite envol?s vers Damas, la capitale syrienne, pour poursuivre leur conversation. Le barrage lui-m?me, pr?texte de cette rencontre, est l'aboutissement d'un vieux projet datant de 1953. Situ? sur le Yarmouk, ? la fronti?re entre les deux pays, il posait un probl?me strat?gique. Le Yarmouk se jette dans le Jourdain, qui alimente le lac de Tib?riade, principale r?serve d'eau potable d'Isra?l. C'est seulement en 1994, apr?s le trait? de paix entre Isra?l et la Jordanie, que le barrage est redevenu possible, la Jordanie s'engageant ? garantir ? Isra?l un quota des eaux de la rivi?re.
La construction d'el-Wehda, qui devrait ?tre achev?e en 2005, repr?sente une petite victoire de la paix dans la guerre de l'eau qui sous-tend les conflits de la r?gion. La Syrie, bien que techniquement en guerre avec Isra?l, permet au souverain jordanien de toucher les dividendes de son alliance avec l'?tat h?breu. L'ouvrage b?n?ficiera surtout ? la Jordanie, qui, selon le ministre jordanien de l'eau, paiera la presque totalit? de la facture, estim?e ? pr?s de 90 millions de dollars.
Selon l'accord syro-jordanien, la Jordanie doit en effet recevoir 81 millions de m?tres cubes d'eau sur 110 millions. Pr?s de 50 millions de m?tres cubes seront utilis?s pour la consommation d'eau potable de la capitale Amman et de la ville d'Irbid, le reste ?tant utilis? pour l'irrigation. Toutefois la Jordanie restera d?ficitaire en eau, tant sont criants les besoins de ce pays ? 92% d?sertique, consid?r? comme l'un des dix pays les plus secs du monde. Selon le ministre, le barrage r?duira de 10% le d?ficit, estim? ? 250 millions de m?tres cubes par an.
Ces amabilit?s syriennes font partie de l'approche prudente de Damas pour reprendre pied sur la sc?ne internationale. Bachar el-Assad tente de louvoyer au plus pr?s entre les pressions am?ricaines et l'attitude un peu plus conciliante de l'Union europ?enne, qui fait miroiter un accord d'association. Le 13 d?cembre dernier, le congr?s am?ricain a vot? la ?loi pour la responsabilit? de la Syrie et sur la souverainet? du Liban?, qui autorise le pr?sident Bush ? mettre en oeuvre une s?rie de sanctions ?conomiques et politiques. La Syrie se voit somm?e de renoncer ? tout programme d'armes de destruction massive, en particulier chimiques, de limiter de mani?re drastique les activit?s de plusieurs mouvements palestiniens et du Hezbollah, la petite arm?e chiite libanaise qui entretient la tension ? la fronti?re du Liban et d'Isra?l. La loi am?ricaine pr?voit aussi de contraindre Damas ? mettre fin ? son occupation du Liban.
L'Europe, elle, manie plut?t la carotte. Mais la signature de l'accord d'association a ?chou? en d?cembre, la Syrie refusant de signer la clause lui interdisant les armes de destruction massive. L'Europe pose une seule condition, un veto total sur les ADM, mais elle y tient. Bachar el-Assad avait vivement r?agi en d?clarant que la Syrie se r?servait le droit de d?tenir des ADM tant qu'Isra?l poss?derait l'arme nucl?aire. la Syrie esp?re toujours un compromis. Il faudra sans doute un peu plus qu'un barrage pour le signer.

-----------------------------------------
Un s?isme secoue la Jordanie, Isra?l et les territoires palestiniens
AMMAN,11 f?vrier (XINHUA) -- Un tremblement de terre a s?cou? mercredi matin ? 10h15 locales (0415GMT) Amman, la capitale de la Jordanie et quelques autres villes.
Le Centre g?ographique jordanien a indiqu? ? Xinhua que la magnitude de ce s?isme avait atteint 5,9 sur l'?chelle de Richter.
La secousse a aussi atteint 4,5 degr?s et dur? quelques secondes en Isra?l.
Selon des t?moins palestiniens, un tremblement de terre important a dur? cinq secondes mercredi matin dans la ville de Gaza et dans d'autres villes et villages de la bande de Gaza.
Le tremblement de terre n'a fait ni de victimes ni d?g?ts, mais a suscit? un d?but de peur et de panique parmi la population dans la bande de Gaza. Fin

---------------------------------------

>> L'AFFAIRE BETANCOURT CONTINUED...

Bogota proteste aupr?s de Paris ? propos de l'affaire Betancourt
[mercredi 11 f?vrier 2004 - 17h33 heure de Paris]
Ingrid Betancourt ? la t?l?vision colombienne Noticias Uno le 30 ao?t
? AFP
BOGOTA (AFP) - Le gouvernement colombien a transmis une note de protestation aupr?s de Paris apr?s la mise en cause mardi du pr?sident Alvaro Uribe par l'ex-mari d'Ingrid Betancourt, Fabrice Delloye, diplomate fran?ais ? Quito, a appris mercredi l'AFP de source pr?sidentielle ? Bogota.
Dans un entretien au quotidien Le Monde dat? de mardi, Fabrice Delloye, divorc? de l'ex-candidate des Verts ? la pr?sidence de Colombie, qui est otage des Forces arm?es r?volutionnaires de Colombie (FARC) depuis deux ans, avait accus? Alvaro Uribe d'avoir "manipul?" sa famille puis refus? de n?gocier avec les gu?rilleros pour obtenir sa lib?ration.
Depuis Rome, o? elle accompagne le chef de l'Etat colombien dans sa visite officielle en Italie mercredi, la ministre des Affaires ?trang?res, Carolina Barco, a de son c?t? qualif? "d'inacceptables" et "calomnieuses" les affirmations de Fabrice Delloye, dans une d?claration ? la radio W de Bogota.
Vingt-et-un otages politiques, dont Ingrid Betancourt, enlev?e le 23 f?vrier 2002, une cinquantaine d'officiers de l'arm?e et 800 civils sont otages des FARC, certains depuis six ans. Plus de 400 gu?rilleros purgent des peines de prison en Colombie.
Fabrice Delloye et Ingrid Betancourt ont eu deux enfants, M?lanie et Lorenzo.
Les projets d'?change humanitaire entre otages et rebelles d?tenus n'ont abouti jusqu'ici ? aucun accord entre le pouvoir et les FARC, principale gu?rilla de Colombie avec 17.000 hommes.
? 2004 AFP. Tous droits de reproduction et de repr?sentation r?serv?s.


---------------------------------------------------
Alvaro Uribe et la gu?rilla veulent un accord humanitaire, mais diff?rent
11/02/2004 - 06:21
BOGOTA, 11 f?v (AFP) -
Chahut? mardi au Parlement europ?en de Strasbourg, le pr?sident de Colombie Alvaro Uribe a r?it?r? son accord pour un ?change de prisonniers, y compris Ingrid Betancourt, partag?, mais avec des diff?rences de taille, par les Forces arm?es r?volutionnaires de Colombie (FARC).
Pr?sident le plus populaire de Colombie pour sa fermet? dans une guerre civile qui a fait plus de 200.000 morts en 40 ans, ce chef de l'Etat de droite a ?t? mis en cause par la gauche et les Verts europ?ens pour la situation des droits de l'homme, et sa pr?sum?e bienveillance ? l'?gard des paramilitaires.
M?me s'il a renouvel? son exigence d'un cessez-le-feu pr?alable ? toute n?gociation de paix globale avec les FARC, principale gu?rilla avec 17.000 hommes, Alvaro Uribe, cr?dit? en Colombie de 80% d'opinions positives, a rappel? son oui conditionnel ? un accord dit "humanitaire" en Colombie pour un ?change entre les otages des rebelles et leurs militants d?t?nus.
21 otages politiques, dont la Franco-colombienne Ingrid Betancourt, ex-candidate des Verts ? l'?lection pr?sidentielle dans le pays andin, 47 officiers de l'arm?e, 3 Am?ricains et 800 civils sont otages des FARC. 400 gu?rilleros purgent des peines de prison.
Le pr?sident colombien a confirm? ?tre pr?t, par le biais d'une "n?gociation men?e par l'ONU", ? faciliter une "lib?ration de tous les s?questr?s" contre celle des gu?rilleros d?tenus, mais ? la condition que les rebelles sortis de prison "ne recommencent pas ? commetre des d?lits", avec comme possibilit? "leur envoi dans un pays ?tranger dispos? ? parapher un tel accord". Alvaro Uribe avait notamment cit? l'an dernier la France comme l'un des pays "amis" susceptibles d'?tre partie prenante dans ce cas de figure.
Les FARC exigent de leur c?t? la d?militarisation de plusieurs zones pour concr?tiser un ?change de prisonniers, limit?, selon leurs aveux, ? la lib?ration des politiques et militaires, ? l'exclusion des 800 civils.
Une remise en libert? d'Ingrid Betancourt ou de certains otages n'est plus ? l'ordre du jour, tant elle appara?trait comme un aveu de faiblesse apr?s le coup port? avec la capture le 2 janvier de Simon Trinidad, le conseiller financier des FARC, actuellement jug? ? Bogota.
Ingrid Betancourt, 42 ans, a ?t? enlev?e le 23 f?vrier 2002 par les FARC. Elle a ?t? nomm?e citoyenne d'honneur par plus de mille municipalit?s dans le monde, dont Bogota, depuis le d?but de sa captivit?.
Les tentatives de dialogue entre le pouvoir et la gu?rilla n'ont abouti ? aucun accord, ni cessez-le-feu, ni ?change de prisonniers depuis l'investiture du pr?sident Alvaro Uribe en ao?t 2002.
? 2004 AFP. Tous droits de reproduction et de repr?sentation r?serv?s.
---------------------------------------------------------------------

>> DR. STRANGELOVE IN ISLAMABAD CONTINUED...

Le chef de L'Etat est accus? par les islamistes de ?collusion? avec les Etats-Unis
Musharraf embarrass? par les aveux du ?p?re de la bombe? pakistanaise

New Delhi : de notre correspondante en Asie du Sud Marie-France Calle
[11 f?vrier 2004]
Pour Pervez Musharraf, l'?affaire Khan? tombe mal. Le g?n?ral pr?sident pakistanais, qui a r?chapp? de peu ? deux attentats en d?cembre, est de plus en plus fragilis? dans son propre pays. Le voici pris, une fois encore, en tenailles entre les extr?mistes islamiques, qui lui reprochent son all?geance aux Etats-Unis, et les puissances occidentales qui le pressent de mettre un terme ? la prolif?ration nucl?aire. Des accusations que les responsables d'Islamabad avaient toujours d?menties. Seulement voil?, d?but f?vrier, Abdul Qadeer Khan, le ?p?re de la bombe atomique pakistanaise?, le ?h?ros national?, a avou?. L'embarras de Musharraf n'en est que plus grand. D'autant que les aveux de Khan ne lui ont ?t? extorqu?s que parce que Washington, justement, a insist? pour qu'Islamabad donne enfin un bon coup de pied dans la fourmili?re nucl?aire pakistanaise.
En fin strat?ge, le g?n?ral pr?sident a tr?s vite mis au point une tactique ? double d?tente. Admettant que, oui, il y avait bien eu des fuites, que l'Iran et la Libye, notamment, en avaient profit? ; faisant en sorte, dans le m?me temps, de prot?ger la toute-puissante arm?e et l'Etat pakistanais de l'infamie. Se lavant lui-m?me, au passage, de tout soup?on. Comment ? En ?personnalisant? le crime. En un mot, pour Musharraf, ce n'est pas le Pakistan qui est un ?Etat voyou?, mais il y a bien, au sein de son ?lite scientifique, des hommes aiguillonn?s par l'?app?t du gain?.
?Nous les punirons, nous allons ?tre tr?s durs avec eux car ce sont des ennemis de l'Etat?, avait d?clar? le pr?sident d?s le 26 janvier. Faisal Saleh Hayat, le ministre pakistanais de l'Int?rieur, avait rench?ri : ?Il fut un temps o? ils se donnaient eux-m?mes le titre de h?ros du Pakistan. Mais ? pr?sent, le vrai visage de quelques-uns de ces h?ros a ?t? perc? ? jour.? Le nom de Khan ?tait d?j? sur toutes les l?vres. Le gouvernement d'Islamabad se refusait encore ? le donner en p?ture.
Une semaine plus tard, les aveux de Khan ont sem? la panique dans les all?es du pouvoir ? Islamabad. Et forc? Musharraf ? changer sensiblement de tactique. Dans un rapport de 11 pages, le scientifique aurait confess? avoir fourni des renseignements secrets ? Tripoli et ? T?h?ran, destin?s ? aider deux pays musulmans ? devenir des puissances nucl?aires. ?Le but ?tait de renforcer le monde islamique?, aurait-il expliqu?. Dans un ?lan de patriotisme, Abdul Qadeer Khan aurait cependant blanchi l'arm?e pakistanaise.
Ce blanc-seing est sujet ? caution. Selon certaines rumeurs, Khan aurait confi? ? sa fille, en partance pour l'?tranger, une cassette vid?o mettant largement en cause l'arm?e pakistanaise et les gouvernements successifs sous lesquels il a servi. Le document devait ?tre rendu public au cas o? le scientifique serait pris comme ?bouc ?missaire pour des agissements collectifs et des d?cisions pass?es? dont il estime ne pas avoir ?t? le seul responsable.
Ceci explique-t-il cela ? Il y a une semaine, Musharraf choisissait de ?pardonner? ? Khan, expliquant que l'on ne pouvait pas traiter un homme de sa nature comme le commun des mortels. Plac? en r?sidence surveill?e, Khan ne sera pas jug?. Cette nouvelle strat?gie, sorte de ?voie moyenne?, accuse Khan mais exon?re l'arm?e et Musharraf. Un r?pit pour Islamabad. Conscients des risques que court leur alli? strat?gique, les Am?ricains ont donn? leur b?n?diction ? Musharraf.
Car si la presse anglophone pakistanaise a tir? ? boulets rouges sur le ?p?re de la bombe atomique?, les partis islamiques n'ont pas manqu? de d?noncer une fois de plus la collusion entre Musharraf, les Etats-Unis, Isra?l. Ils sont mont?s au cr?neau pour d?fendre leur ?h?ros?, accusant les pays occidentaux de tenter de d?pouiller un Etat islamique de sa capacit? nucl?aire. Ils ont mis Musharraf en garde, le sommant de renoncer ? la lutte antiterroriste aux c?t?s des Am?ricains et d'arr?ter de se faire l'alli? des ?crois?s? qui veulent inclure le Pakistan dans l'?axe du Mal?.
Khan n'a jamais fait myst?re de son militantisme. N? ? Bhopal, en Inde, cet homme de 69 ans n'a immigr? au Pakistan qu'en 1952. Il a connu les ?meutes intercommunautaires qui ont accompagn? la Partition, en 1947. Il a toujours r?v? de se venger des ?brigands hindous?. En 1963, il est ? Delft, en Hollande, o? il devient ing?nieur. Puis il passe un doctorat en m?tallurgie ? l'universit? de Louvain, en Belgique. Rien ne le pr?destinait ? devenir le ?p?re de la bombe atomique pakistanaise?, si ce n'est... l'espionnage industriel. En 1975, employ? aux Pays-Bas d'Urenco, un consortium anglo-hollandais, il vole les plans d'un appareil pouvant produire de l'uranium enrichi. Il rentre aussit?t au Pakistan o? il vend son savoir-faire. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, alors premier ministre, lui confie la direction du programme nucl?aire pakistanais. Bhutto avait eu cette phrase fameuse : ?Si l'Inde construit sa bombe, les Pakistanais auront la leur, m?me s'il leur faudra se priver au point de manger de l'herbe ou des feuilles pour y parvenir.?


------------------------------------------------------------------------

PROLIF?RATION Les r?v?lations se succ?dent sur un trafic plan?taire contre lequel trait?s et organismes internationaux s'av?rent impuissants
Le march? noir du nucl?aire s'?tend
Luc de Barochez
[11 f?vrier 2004]
Petit ? petit le voile se l?ve sur un incroyable trafic de mat?riel nucl?aire organis? ? partir du Pakistan. La Libye, l'Iran, peut-?tre aussi la Cor?e du Nord, ont profit? des connaissances acquises par les experts atomiques pakistanais. Le march? noir de la bombe nucl?aire a une source d?sormais identifi?e : le ?Docteur Folamour? Abdul Qadeer Khan, qui fut pendant de longues ann?es le chef du programme nucl?aire d'Islamabad.
Des ?quipements de centrifugation (qui sert ? enrichir l'uranium pour le rendre utilisable dans une bombe atomique) et des plans d'ogives nucl?aires ont ainsi ?t? trouv?s en Libye. Origine : Islamabad. Depuis que Tripoli a accept? de collaborer avec les Am?ricains et les Britanniques pour d?manteler ses programmes d'armes non conventionnelles, les r?v?lations se succ?dent. L'Iran, qui a ouvert ? la fin 2003 les portes de ses installations nucl?aires secr?tes aux inspecteurs de l'ONU, a contribu? ? faire la lumi?re sur le trafic. L? aussi les m?thodes employ?es ?taient manifestement d'origine pakistanaise. L? aussi des ?quipements retrouv?s provenaient du Pakistan.
Loin de se trouver en Irak, o? Am?ricains et Britanniques ont vainement cherch? ces derniers mois les stocks d'ADM cens?s s'y trouver, la prolif?ration nucl?aire la plus dangereuse ?manait donc du Pakistan, dirig? par un r?gime ?ami? des Etats-Unis. L'affaire ?branle le g?n?ral pr?sident Pervez Musharraf, condamn? ? manoeuvrer entre les r?cifs. Il cherche ? la fois ? prouver qu'il est capable de neutraliser le trafic et qu'il n'y ?tait pas m?l?, tout en ?pargnant le p?re de la bombe atomique pakistanaise, consid?r? comme un h?ros par une large part de la population.
Le march? noir du nucl?aire poss?dait des ramifications aux Emirats arabes unis, en Malaisie, en Allemagne, en Espagne, et m?me en France, selon l'hebdomadaire allemand Der Spiegel de cette semaine. Et encore n'a-t-on d?couvert que ?la partie ?merg?e de l'iceberg?, si l'on en croit Mohamed ElBaradei, le directeur g?n?ral de l'Agence internationale de l'?nergie atomique, l'agence sp?cialis?e de l'ONU. ?Beaucoup de pays ont ?t? impliqu?s?, dit-il.
L'affaire souligne l'?chec des trait?s et syst?mes internationaux cens?s emp?cher la prolif?ration nucl?aire. Le trait? de non-prolif?ration nucl?aire fait eau de toute part. La Cor?e du Nord, qui l'avait sign?, l'a jet? au panier. L'Iran, a contrario, a pu pr?tendre respecter le trait? de non-prolif?ration nucl?aire tout en d?veloppant un programme nucl?aire complexe. Le trait? d'interdiction des essais atomiques, sign? en 1996, n'a toujours pas ?t? ratifi? par suffisamment de pays pour entrer en vigueur. Les Etats-Unis ont refus? de le faire.
Au Conseil de s?curit?, des discussions sont en cours, ? l'initiative de Washington, pour mieux contr?ler le commerce international de mat?riel nucl?aire pouvant avoir un usage ? la fois civil ou militaire. Mais les Etats-Unis, d'un autre c?t?, donnent le mauvais exemple en poussant les recherches sur la minibombe atomique, relan?ant ainsi les risques de course ? l'arme nucl?aire. Du c?t? fran?ais, le pr?sident Jacques Chirac plaide en vain depuis deux ans pour un sommet du Conseil de s?curit? de l'ONU consacr? ? la prolif?ration. Peut-?tre aura-t-il satisfaction cette ann?e ?


Posted by maximpost at 2:32 PM EST
Permalink

Tear Down This Regime
Let's negotiate North Korea's dictatorship out of existence.

BY CLAUDIA ROSETT
Wednesday, February 11, 2004 12:01 a.m. EST

"General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization: Come here to this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!"

--U.S. President Ronald Reagan, June 12, 1987
When President Reagan spoke these words 17 years ago, in front of Berlin's Brandenburg Gate, he had on his side not only the military might of the United States but the considerable power of sound principle and straight speaking. Just over two years later, the Berlin Wall fell.

Would that President Bush, in approaching the current crisis with North Korea enlisted the same allies: right and truth. Instead, Mr. Bush's 2002 "axis of evil" speech notwithstanding, we are heading for a second round of six-way talks in Beijing. There, on Feb. 25, around one table will gather the envoys of the U.S., Japan, China, Russia and South Korea, plus the focus of all this fuss, the guest of honor: North Korea. And so will begin a new round of efforts to calm down, appease and buy off the nuclear-happy, missile-vending, death-camp-running North Korean despot, Kim Jong Il.

In keeping with America's North Korean diplomacy for most of the past decade, expectations are that Washington may offer some kind of security agreement and aid to Kim's regime in exchange for a Pyongyang promise to end a nuclear bomb program Kim already agreed to give up 10 years ago, but didn't. This sort of narrowly tuned discussion is what passes right now for U.S. diplomacy in dealing with North Korea. There has been a mighty forgetting that diplomacy's finest moments can sometimes sound most honestly undiplomatic. The great virtue of Mr. Reagan's Berlin Wall demand was that it served notice not only to Mr. Gorbachev but to the people living under Soviet sway--those who finally brought down not just the wall, but the empire--that we were on the side not only of our own freedom but of theirs. Mr. Reagan was, by the way, confronting a Soviet regime that most definitely had nuclear bombs and long-range missiles.

But today, for North Korea's 22 million people, there seems to be no such plan. Mr. Bush has spoken splendid words about the rights of all human beings to liberty and the need for democracy as the only real road to security. In Iraq, to his credit, he has followed up with deeds, expecting freedom will spread in the Middle East. When it comes to North Korea's killer regime, however, the script sounds less like "Tear down this wall" than "Let's make a deal." Last Sunday we had Mr. Bush telling us on "Meet the Press": "In Iraq--I mean, in North Korea, excuse me, the diplomacy is just beginning. We are making good progress in North Korea."

Apart from the salutary slip in which Mr. Bush confused North Korea with Iraq--and I hope Kim Jong Il quaked--what progress is he talking about? North Korea has been gaming our endlessly credulous system for years. Having admitted in 2002 to running a secret uranium-enrichment program, North Korea is now denying it ever had one. And although revelations about the marketing activities of Pakistan's nuclear godfather, Abdul Qadir Khan, suggest that North Korea was very much in the uranium game, the Washington diplomatic establishment is now gravely pondering whether the U.S. envoy, James Kelly, really heard what he thought he heard. Never mind that North Korea has since pulled out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, fired up its old reactor, announced that it is making bomb fuel and--with all the courtesy of Tony Soprano fingering his gun--invited an unofficial delegation last month to come have a look.

By the accounts of that delegation, by the presumptions of our narrow negotiating concerns, by the lights of the same illogic that looks to despotic and self-interested China to help save our bacon in North Korea, we are for the umpteenth time invited to believe that North Korea's regime is striving to achieve serious internal reform and aching to abandon its nuclear program, if only the U.S. would help.




Well, here's how we can help. We could reframe the talks not on North Korea's terms, but on ours. That means asking not at what price we can pay off Kim & Co., but what we might with true integrity put on the table.
Let's start with the problem that North Korea craves aid because it is poor; so poor that in recent years an estimated two million North Koreans have starved to death. There's no mystery about the cause. In this age of global trade and high technology, abysmal poverty is the result of one thing, and one thing only: atrocious government. We know how to fix that, and it is not by sending more food and fuel to be stolen by the same regime causing the poverty in the first place.

So how about making a generous offer to instruct North Koreans in the ways of serious prosperity, meaning genuine capitalism? Let's start by plunking down a copy of Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations," followed by the works of F.A. Hayek and, for easier reading, Milton Friedman's "Capitalism and Freedom"--plus a Sears catalog and a copy of the U.S. Constitution. We could offer translation into Korean. We could recruit tutors from Eastern Europe, versed in the pitfalls of transition. That would be aid, at last, in a form Kim could not steal.

We could follow that up with a list of places where Kim Jong Il, his family and other top officials could reasonably expect asylum should they choose to depart North Korea. Hawaii worked pretty well for Ferdinand Marcos.

We could underscore the asylum offer, and provide a great big centerpiece for the six-way talks, with a list of prosecutions carried out since World War II for crimes against humanity. We could submit lists of questions about recent reports of chemical weapons experiments on North Korean political prisoners, about massive testimony of infanticide, torture, exposure and targeted starvation, as deliberate policy of Kim's state. We could ask for not only the names but also the addresses of the top 15 or so officials responsible for overseeing North Korea's death camps and state security apparatus--because our diplomats would like to send each of them a personalized dossier, in Korean of course, on the Nuremberg trials.

Finally, having put all this on the table, we could expand our own miserly $1.4 million annual budget for Radio Free Asia's North Korean service. Instead of broadcasting only four hours a day to North Koreans, who risk their lives to tune in, we could start broadcasting around the clock, including news of all these offers that belong on the table. (It's not that hard to modify even a North Korean radio to receive RFA. In a recent survey of 200 North Korean defectors, conducted by the Intermedia Survey Institute, almost half, before defecting, had tuned in to foreign broadcasts.)

Then--and it doesn't really matter if North Korea's envoy is still in the room, or has gone off to sulk near the national plutonium repository; he'll be listening, he's got plenty at stake--we could add to the stack on the table our complaints about Kim's nuclear program. If we must discuss this extortion racket, let's start from the premise that as the world's leading democracy and superpower, we are the makers of manners--and it's high time in our dealings with North Korea that we brought some Reagan etiquette to the negotiating table.

Ms. Rosett is a fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and the Hudson Institute. Her column appears here and in The Wall Street Journal Europe on alternate Wednesdays.

Posted by maximpost at 12:36 PM EST
Permalink
Tuesday, 10 February 2004

>> SOME CONVERSATIONS...

http://www.moretothepoint.com/
Iraq and the Issue of Imminence listen
The failure to find Iraq's weapons of mass destruction has produced heated controversy over the adequacy of US intelligence as the basis for pre-emptive war. George Tenet's CIA never said the threat from Iraq was "imminent," and that has been the accepted standard for pre-emptive attack. But President Bush says, in this age of terrorism and nuclear weapons, waiting until the threat became "imminent" would have been waiting too long. Was removing Saddam Hussein the right thing to do, even if the intelligence reports were all wrong? Has Pakistan's worldwide sharing of nuclear secrets made it a far more "imminent" threat than Iraq ever was? We get perspective from experts in national security, domestic policy, and foreign affairs.

http://www.theworld.org/latesteditions/20040210.shtml
Scowcraft interview (6:00)
Brent Scowcroft, National Security Advisor to Presidents Ford and Bush-Senior, warned against launching a war against Iraq in an opinion piece for "The Wall Street Journal." Host Lisa Mullins speaks with Mr. Scowcroft about the state of affairs today and whether he feels his warning have been vindicated.

http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000100&sid=a.qynHww4aTY&refer=germany
ECB's Trichet News Conf.: G-7 Currency Statement, Economies Listen
Feb. 7 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet speaks at a news conference in Boca Raton, Florida, about the Group of Seven's condemnation of "excess volatility" in exchange rates, ECB monetary policy, strategy for the euro and Europe's economic conditions. He speaks at a meeting of G-7 finance ministers and central bankers. (English and French)

>> thinking through...
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/bl/episodes/current
Getting the Lead Out
Bill Perkins New York City Deputy Majority Lader (D-9th District-Northern Manhattan)
discussing the new lead paint law the city council passed over the Mayor's veto


China Posts $20 Mln Trade Deficit for January, 1st in 10 Months
Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) -- China had a $20 million trade deficit last month, the country's first in 10 months. Imports rose 15.2 percent to $35.74 billion from a year earlier, while exports gained 19.8 percent to $35.72 billion, the Commerce Ministry said on its Web site.

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>> WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE...

Islamic extremists invade U.S., join sleeper cells
By Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Islamic radicals are being trained at terrorist camps in Pakistan and Kashmir as part of a conspiracy to send hundreds of operatives to "sleeper cells" in the United States, according to U.S. and foreign officials.
The intelligence and law-enforcement officials say dozens of Islamic extremists have already been routed through Europe to Muslim communities in the United States, based on secret intelligence data and information from terrorists and others detained by U.S. authorities.
A high-ranking foreign intelligence chief told The Washington Times in an interview last week that this clandestine but aggressive network of training camps "represents a serious threat to the United States, one that cannot be ignored." The official said as many as 400 terrorists have been and are being trained at camps in Pakistan and Kashmir.
U.S. intelligence officials said the camps, located in the remote regions of western Pakistan and in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, are financed in part by various terrorist networks, including al Qaeda, and by sources in Saudi Arabia.
Pakistani Ambassador Ashraf Jehangir Qazi denied in an interview that terrorist camps are operating in his country, including the remote regions of western Pakistan or in Kashmir.
"We have never accepted the allegation that there were training camps here, not now, not ever," Mr. Qazi told The Times. "These allegations have persisted despite our repeated denials. I assure you there is absolutely no reason to believe that any terrorist camps exist in Pakistan or Kashmir."
Al Qaeda sleeper cells are believed to be operating in 40 states, according to the FBI and other federal authorities, awaiting orders and funding for new attacks in the United States. Financed in part by millions of dollars solicited by an extensive network of bogus charities and foundations, the cells use Muslim communities as cover and places to raise cash and recruit sympathizers.
Last month, Pakistan and India announced a new round of peace talks on Kashmir, in which Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, the target of two recent assassination attempts, said Pakistan had agreed "not to allow the use of Pakistan's territory anywhere in the world" for terrorism.
In announcing the talks, Gen. Musharraf said his military-led government would act to "eradicate" religious extremists in Pakistan. "We will get to them, I am sure," he said.
But U.S. and foreign intelligence authorities said terrorist training camps have been documented in some of western Pakistan's remote areas and in the disputed regions of Kashmir, and that military officials and others in the Musharraf government have not fully disassociated themselves from al Qaeda or the former Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
Some U.S. officials have privately expressed concern that members of Pakistan's intelligence community have assisted in the concealment of al Qaeda members and associates.
In December, the government of India said terrorist training camps in Pakistan and Kashmir that had been closed after the September 11 attacks on the United States had been reactivated, mostly along the disputed border area near the so-called Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir.
The Indian government said its army had photographs and other evidence of ongoing terrorist training, much of which was turned over to U.S. officials. That information included satellite photos and communication intercepts, U.S. law- enforcement authorities said, that documented 60 to 70 camps in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir as well as in Pakistan.
Officials at the Indian Embassy in Washington declined comment.
Since September 11, Pakistan has publicly ordered a clampdown on terrorism and arrested hundreds of suspected al Qaeda members and associates, transferring many of them to the United States. The captured include Abu Zubaydah, the organization's top recruiter; Ramzi Binalshibh, paymaster for the September 11 hijackers; and Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, chief of operations for Osama bin Laden and mastermind of September 11.
One veteran U.S. law-enforcement official with an extensive history in counterterrorism said many of the training camps in the Pakistan-controlled regions of Kashmir are operated by the Harakat ul-Ansar, an Islamic militant group tied to bin Laden.
The group's leaders joined with bin Laden in signing a February 1998 "fatwa" calling for attacks on U.S. and Western interests. Also known as the "Movement of Holy Warriors," Harakat ul-Ansar has been tied by U.S. and foreign intelligence officials to the January 2002 abduction and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.
Several other camps are being operated by an anti-U.S. Muslim group known as Lashkar-e-Taiba, according to U.S. and foreign intelligence officials. Listed by the State Department in 2001 as a terrorist organization, Lashkar-e-Taiba is the armed wing of the Pakistan-based religious organization Markaz-ud-Dawa-wal-Irshad.
Eleven men, including nine U.S. citizens, were arrested last year in Virginia in what authorities called the "Virginia jihad." The men were accused in a 41-count grand jury indictment of engaging in "holy jihad" to drive India out of the disputed Kashmir territory. Six have since pleaded guilty.
The indictment said some of the men traveled to Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist camps in Pakistan, where they were trained in the use of various weapons, including small arms, machine guns and grenade launchers. The indictment also said the trips occurred both before and after the September 11 attacks.
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Palestinian Panel Probes Qureia Cement
By RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI
Associated Press Writer
JERUSALEM (AP) -- A Palestinian parliamentary committee is investigating whether Palestinian cement companies are providing Israel with material for a controversial West Bank barrier and have been selling concrete to Jewish settlements.
A Palestinian lawmaker, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Tuesday there is evidence that a company owned by Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia's family is among them. But other lawmakers said Qureia was not part of the investigation.
Israel's Channel 10 TV also reported that the Al-Quds Cement Company - owned by Qureia's family - has been providing the materials to help build the barrier, allegations Palestinian officials denied.
The TV report said Qureia was providing the cement to build the concrete slabs right outside his house in Abu Dis, a town near Jerusalem divided by a 25-foot wall.
Television footage also showed cement mixers leaving the Al-Quds company and driving to the Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim, just a few miles away.
The lawmaker who spoke on condition of anonymity said there was "evidence" that Al-Quds was selling cement to Maale Adumim. He said Qureia transferred ownership of the company to another member of his family a few months ago.
The lawmaker said this strengthened suspicions that Qureia was involved in improper activities.
The Palestinian premier was in Rome and unavailable for comment.
Qureia is one of the most vocal opponents of Jewish settlements and the barrier, and he is leading a Palestinian effort to garner global support for the Palestinian position.
Israel says the barrier is needed to prevent Palestinian suicide bombers from entering the country. But the structure dips into the West Bank in some areas, and Palestinians have condemned it as a land grab.
Palestinian efforts led the U.N. General Assembly to ask the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, to hand down an advisory opinion on the barrier's legality. The court is to begin its hearings at the end of the month.
Palestinian lawmaker Jamal Shati, a member of a parliamentary committee that is going to Jordan and Egypt on Thursday to investigate whether Palestinian cement companies are providing Israel with material for the barrier, denied Qureia was part of the investigation.
"But when we open the issue of the concrete it will include everything, not only the wall but also the settlements, because building the settlements is the same as building the wall. There is no difference," Shati told The Associated Press. "This is a very dangerous national issue. This is something that belongs to the core of the Palestinian cause."
Lawmaker Hassan Khreishe, who is also on the inquiry committee, also denied the team was investigating Qureia.
Khreishe told AP the committee was investigating allegations - which originated in an Egyptian newspaper report published in November - that three Palestinian cement companies had illegally imported concrete from Egypt and sold it to an Israeli businessmen.
"We want to know if this cement was used to build the barrier or any other Israeli needs. This is the information we are investigating," Khreishe said. "There are several names mentioned, but for sure, the name of Abu Ala (Qureia) is not mentioned in this issue."
Palestinian Cabinet minister Jamil Tarifi is among those being investigated, said Palestinian officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
---------------------------------------------------------

Embassy Row
By James Morrison
Moscow mayor upset
The mayor of Moscow is alarmed by the influence of the United States, which he accused of abusing its superpower status.
Yuri Luzhkov, on a recent Washington visit to promote his new book, criticized the Bush administration for pre-emptive strikes against what it deemed terrorist states and called on the United States to explore the root causes of terrorism, our correspondent Megan McCloskey reports.
"Perhaps efforts should have been made to identify the fundamental cause of those acts," Mr. Luzhkov said of the September 11 terrorist attacks.
He complained that the United States is trying to impose its will in international affairs.
"One country is making the decisions for the entire world," he said.
The sovereignty and self-determination of smaller nations are concepts that have "disappeared into thin air," he said.
Mr. Luzhkov, a popular politician in Russia, was re-elected recently to a third term. After his remarks at the Library of Congress last week, he signed copies of his book, "The Renewal of History," for admirers who crowded around him for photographs.

Japan's straight talk
Japanese Ambassador Ryozo Kato wants to recruit Japanese-Americans to help promote greater understanding between Washington and Tokyo, but he does not want apologists for his country.
"To strengthen this relationship, I would like to seek the help of the Japanese-Americans who possess in-depth understanding of the United States, not as 'no-matter-what' kind of defenders of Japan and its policies but as fair-minded, enlightened and effective public arbitrators between the peoples of the two countries," he said after a recent meeting in Washington between Japanese diplomats and U.S. leaders.
Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, Hawaii Democrat and a Japanese-American, pledged to help Mr. Kato improve communications between the two countries, Japan's Kyodo news service reported.
"The time has come to ensure that the relationships between Japanese-Americans and Japan are strong at all levels from business and politics to arts and academia," Mr. Inouye said.
"We want to build bridges of understanding so that our children and grandchildren will be Americans proud of their Japanese ancestry."
Mr. Inouye and Mr. Kato endorsed an education initiative to increase mutual understanding and to encourage Japanese-Americans to participate in the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program, a government program to promote foreign languages in Japanese schools.
They also endorsed a tourism program that will include building support for the 2005 World Exposition in central Japan.

2nd term in Colombia
William Wood, the U.S. ambassador to Colombia, says Washington supports a constitutional amendment to allow President Alvaro Uribe to run for a second term and keep up his tough fight against Marxist rebels.
Mr. Uribe is limited to one term under the Colombian Constitution, but some legislators are seeking an amendment to allow presidents to run for re-election.
Mr. Wood noted Mr. Uribe's popularity, especially because of his fight against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), which has been hiding in the country's jungle and mountain strongholds for several months to avoid troops.
"When the country has a firm and popular president like Uribe, this group has always used the tactic of waiting for the next president," Mr. Wood told the El Tiempo newspaper during the weekend.
He said an amendment to the constitution is "an element that the Colombian people ... need to consider."

*Call Embassy Row at 202/636-3297, fax 202/832-7278 or e-mail jmorrison@washingtontimes.com.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Canadian Government to Probe `Scandalous' Spending in Quebec
Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin announced an investigation of a government program that promoted federalism in Quebec after the auditor general called it a ``scandalous'' use of taxpayers money.
Sheila Fraser, in a report released today, widened her probe of the C$250 million ($188 million) program to include government- owned companies such as the Business Development Bank of Canada, Canada Post Corp., the Old Port of Montreal Corporation Inc. and Via Rail Canada Inc.
Fraser said the spending was often designed to funnel money to advertisement agencies. The agencies received C$100 million between 1997 and 2001 to arrange conferences and sporting events that promoted a united Canada. The program was canceled in December.
Government bureaucrats intended ``to provide commissions to communications agencies while hiding the true source of the funds,'' Fraser said in the report. ``Some officials of the Crown (government-owned) corporations were knowing and willing participants in these arrangements.''
Fraser told reporters in Ottawa she referred the report to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which also received money from the advertisement agencies.
The federal police force is already investigating some of Fraser's past findings about government advertising and sponsorships contracts.
The cabinet minister in charge of the program, Alfonso Gagliano, was recalled from his job as ambassador to Denmark today, before Fraser's report was presented to Parliament.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Greg Quinn in Ottawa at gquinn1@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor of this story:
Boyd Erman at baerman@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: February 10, 2004 15:11 EST

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>> SINGAPORE FILE...

Hyflux May Have S$1 Billion in Sales From Desalination Plant
Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Hyflux Ltd., Singapore's biggest publicly traded water-treatment company, may reap as much as S$1 billion ($596 million) in water sales from its desalination plant over its 20-year contract with the Singapore government.
``By selling water, we can actually get a very stable income,'' chief executive Olivia Lum said in a televised interview with Bloomberg News. She said revenue from selling water from the desalination plant will range between S$30 million and S$50 million per year.
Companies like Hyflux are benefiting from a dispute over the price Singapore should pay Malaysia for water that has soured relations between the countries and led the city to try to reduce its dependence on its neighbor. Hyflux last month started building Singapore's first desalination plant.
``The company will be definitely much more stable because you now have recurring income,'' said Tan Chong Koay, who oversees $450 million at Pheim Asset Management in Singapore.
Hyflux reported sales growth slowed to 66 percent in fiscal 2002, from a five-year peak of 154 percent in 2000. Potentially up for grabs are management contracts from Singapore's government, which has built three water treatment plants and is reportedly working on a fourth.
The company said it will seek waste-water treatment contracts if the return is at least 10 percent, Lum said.
``Given their track record with desalination projects, that is certainly a workable strategy for them,'' said Roy Phua who helps to manage the equivalent of $5.6 billion at DBS Asset Management including Hyflux shares. It ``should be positive,''
Rivals
Other companies are also seeking such contracts. SembCorp Industries, Southeast Asia's biggest civil engineering company, is keen to bid to build Singapore's fourth water treatment plant, the Straits Times reported last month, citing Tang Kin Fei, chief executive of the group's SembCorp Utilities unit.
Shares of Hyflux have risen about 61 percent in the past year, compared to a 46 percent gain in the benchmark Straits Times Index.
Hyflux is aiming to expand in countries like China, where its more than 50 contracts are mainly for factory water systems, and India. It wants to help produce drinking water in both countries, which have a combined population of more than 2.3 billion people.
``We want to cooperate with people from the home consumer line,'' Lum said. ``The market is huge -- even for the bottle market, it's exceeding a billion dollars in the whole of Asia.''
`Truck Load of Water'
At present, more than 90 percent of the company's fiscal 2002 sales came from water treatment projects for municipal and industrial customers in China and Singapore. The company wants to expand sales of its Aquosus air-to-water devices, which can extract water from vapor in the air, to homes, schools, and factories.
It's now in talks with several potential Indian distributors and Lum said that with ``polluted rivers everywhere in China,'' the country may need to tap the company's ``membrane'' technology if it's to produce quality water.
In much of Asia, ``they practically can't get access to clean drinking water,'' Lum said. ``They have to depend on the truck load of water delivered to the township and yet they cant be guaranteed of the clean quality of the water.''
To contact the reporters on this story: Leslie Tan in Singapore
at lestan@bloomberg.net Haslinda Amin in
Singapore at hamin1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor for this story:
Bruce Grant at bruceg@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: February 10, 2004 19:01 EST
----------------------------------------------------

Posted by maximpost at 10:36 PM EST
Permalink

"PART" of the Solution: The Performance Assessment Ratings Tool
by Keith Miller and Alison Fraser
WebMemo #418
February 9, 2004
Released in concert with the President's budget proposal, the second set of Performance Assessment Ratings Tool (PART) marks are now available. The President's budget proposes that twenty programs either be eliminated or have their budgets significantly reduced because of low PART scores. While there is still great room for improvement, this first step is a good sign that the administration is starting to take public accountability of government spending seriously.
Finding Waste
PART, commissioned in 2002 and produced by the White House's Office of Management and Budget (OMB), assesses the purpose, planning, management, and accountability of individual government agencies. Based on an agency's response to the PART questionnaire, OMB evaluators grade its programs as "effective," "moderately effective," "adequate," "ineffective," or "results not demonstrated." "Results not demonstrated" indicates that are no objective criteria in place to measure the program's effectiveness; a failing that the PART evaluation process seeks to remedy.
To this point 399 programs--representing nearly half of the federal budget--have received PART scores. One hundred and forty-seven of these have been rated "results not demonstrated." Of the remainder, most have received poor marks. While the OMB judges the 232 programs with scores of above 50 percent to be "adequate" or better, the raw scoring isn't nearly so rosy:
PART Score # of Programs Grade Equivalent
90% - 100% 20 programs A
80% - 90% 56 programs B
70% - 80% 70 programs C
60% - 70% 47 programs D
50% - 60% 39 programs F
0% - 50% 20 programs "F-"
As the table above demonstrates, if these scores were children's grades, 59 programs would be flunking. Programs that have not yet received a grade may be struggling undetected, but by the spring of 2007, when PART's first 5-year cycle concludes, the entire federal government will have been rated.
The PART score is a very effective tool to identify which programs should have their budgets pared. While nearly every politician rails against "waste, fraud, and abuse" in government, it can be difficult to identify such spending items. PART points out where the waste is. Politicians can cut the failing or mistargeted programs knowing that they are cutting fat from the federal ledger.
The Ineffective
Programs graded by PART to be "ineffective," that is, those scoring under 50 percent, epitomize "wasteful federal spending." While the President's budget cuts some of these programs, it deals leniently with others: fewer than half face cuts and, overall, only 6 percent less money is budgeted to them - still $17.3 billion in total. This may be the beginning of accountability for federal programs, but in this time of record spending more forceful action may be in order. Ninety percent of the federal government performed better than these "ineffective" agencies. If the budget needs tightening, this is the place to do it.
Table: Ineffective programs
The Ill-Conceived
Another place to find candidates for cuts is among those programs that have a "Purpose and Design" score of less than 50 percent. Such a score indicates that a program possesses three of the following five faults:
The program lacks clear purpose;
The program does not address any specific need;
The program is redundant;
The program has a major flaw in design; and
The program fails to reach its target audience.
These programs, no matter how effectively managed or held accountable to standards, cannot be effective because they are ill-conceived. One example of this sort of program is the Advanced Technology Program (ATP). Although this program has good planning, capable management, and decent results, it only benefits wealthy corporations who could--and do, in other circumstances--fund their research without government money.[1] The President advocates terminating ATP in his 2005 budget proposal.
Still, the President's budget actually proposes that the government spend more on similarly challenged programs. Much of that increase comes from the mandatory spending for Veterans Administration disability compensation.[2] Under the President's budget, discretionary spending on purposeless programs would decline by 11 percent--from $15.4 billion to $13.8 billion--but there is room for much more to be cut.
Table: Programs without a purpose
Many Opportunities
The PART program could be a great aide to those trying to trim the federal budget. Although the tool is only two years old and has yet to address half of the federal government, it has already identified many targets for cuts. Taken together, its lists of ineffective and ill-conceived programs show many opportunities for the President and Congress to cut spending based on a systematic analysis using objective criteria.
While the President deserves praise for cutting programs poorly ranked by PART from his 2005 budget proposal, much remains to be done. If the administration and Congress are serious about holding the line on spending, cutting more of these programs would be a great place to start.
Keith Miller is Research Assistant in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies, and Alison Fraser is Director of the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies, at The Heritage Foundation.
[1] For more on ATP, see Brian M. Riedl, "The Advanced Technology Program: Time to End this Corporate Welfare Handout," http://www.heritage.org/Research/Budget/bg1665.cfm.
[2] Since World War II, no study has been completed to determine appropriate levels of disability compensation. This lack of accountability is the main reason the PART score was so low. For more information see the VA chapter in the President's 2005 Budget, http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2005/va.html.
? 1995 - 2004 The Heritage Foundation
All Rights Reserved.

---------------------------------------------------
Social Security Reform: An Idea Whose Time Has Come
by Jack Kemp
Posted Feb 4, 2004
Before Ronald Reagan came on the scene, the Republican Party presented itself as the fiscally responsible party, which meant the Democrats had the political pleasure of spending money while Republicans dolefully raised taxes to pay for it - what one quick wit later characterized as being the "tax collector for the welfare state." Reagan figured out that not only wasn't that role politically successful, it also was bad policy and very harmful to the economy.
In his run for the presidency in 1964, Barry Goldwater had attacked the Kennedy tax cuts, which lowered the top income tax rate from 91 percent to 70 percent, as fiscally irresponsible. The economy boomed after the Kennedy tax cuts took effect. When Richard Nixon became president, he raised the capital gains tax in 1969, the economy tanked and the deficit swelled. Then he raised taxes again, implicitly, by taking America off the gold standard and allowing inflation to push average workers into tax brackets formerly reserved for the truly rich. President Gerald Ford also tried his hand at raising taxes and was promptly voted out of office.
It wasn't until Reagan offered a way out of the austerity box that Republicans regained their political footing and the economy recovered from a decade of stagnation. Reagan's great insight was that economic growth and the marvel of compound interest on saving put into productive investment is the only solution to the problem of big government. If the economy is flourishing and people have jobs, they don't clamor for the government to "do something" to ease their distress.
I never thought I would live to see the day when both political parties are clamoring for the fiscally responsible label. In order to feed the big-government beast, most Democrats insist on raising taxes, and too many of them refuse to consider allowing workers to place a significant portion of their payroll taxes into personal retirement accounts. Republicans, on the other hand, are reverting to the austerity rant, and while many of them want to allow workers to invest a small portion of their payroll taxes into personal retirement accounts, too many of them believe Social Security benefits must be cut to pay for it.
To my Democratic friends I would say the problem is not that tax rates are too low; the problem is that government spending is growing too fast. Moreover, we don't have to slash government spending to get it under control; we merely have to slow its growth.
To my Republican friends I would say scheduled Social Security benefits are not too high; retirees' incomes are, in fact, too low because the payroll taxes workers pay into the Social Security system are not put into productive investment in the private sector.
To both parties I would say the solution is not to raise taxes or, heaven forbid, cut Social Security benefits; the solution is to allow workers to invest at least half the payroll taxes into personal retirement accounts so that their retirement income can increase. Just as Reagan had to convince his party to take bold action to cut tax rates across the board in 1980, this president and the other presidential candidates must convince their own parties to take similar bold action today to reform Social Security.
I'm not alone in this belief. Former House Majority Leader Dick Armey and former Social Security Commissioner Dorcas Hardy are joining me as co-chairs of a brand-new coalition, the Alliance for Retirement Prosperity, that is embarking on a single-minded campaign to transform Social Security for the 21st century by making it possible for all workers to invest in personal retirement accounts at least half the payroll tax they and their employers currently pay (i.e., at least 6.2 percent) without cutting benefits or increasing taxes. And, rather than raising taxes or cutting benefits to pay the cost of transitioning from the old system to the new, we will work tirelessly to convince Congress and the president to restrain other government spending growth and to borrow the balance required to make the transition.
Joining me, Armey and Hardy as founding partners in this effort are some of the countries most influential conservative leaders and organizations, including CNN commentator Larry Kudlow, Grover Norquist and Americans for Tax Reform, Steve Moore and the Club for Growth, David Keene and the American Conservative Union, Art Linkletter and the United Seniors Association, Social Security guru Peter Ferrara with the Institute for Policy Innovation, the 60-Plus Seniors Organization, the National Tax Limitation Committee, the American Civil Rights Union, the Black American Political Action Committee, the Small Business Survival Committee, the Leadership Institute, Wall Street financial analyst Don Luskin along with Star Parker and the Coalition on Urban Renewal and Education.
We are energized and ready for this campaign to transform Social Security into a wealth-generating opportunity for workers and retirees. As the country learns more about this formidable coalition and its mission in the days and weeks to come, the American people will rally to the cause and make it their own.
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Copyright ? 2003 HUMAN EVENTS. All Rights Reserved.

Posted by maximpost at 1:54 AM EST
Permalink

>> WHAT - NOT HIS MEDALS?

NICE PHOTO...
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/2/9/134218.shtml
The picture Democrats have been hoping nobody had: John Kerry sitting behind Jane Fonda during an anti-war rally at Valley Forge, PA in September 1970.
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_020904/content/eib_extra.guest.html

Kerry Photo Shocker: Candidate Teamed Up With 'Hanoi' Jane Fonda
Jane Fonda and John Kerry at an anti-war rally in Valley Forge, Pa. (Corbis Images)
A photo seemingly showing Democratic presidential front-runner John Kerry protesting the Vietnam War with anti-American actress "Hanoi Jane" Fonda - the photo Dems fear most - exists, and has been obtained by NewsMax.com.
On Labor Day weekend 1970, Kerry - then a rising star with Vietnam Veteran Against the War - teamed up with Fonda as the two headlined an ugly anti-war in rally in Valley Forge, Pa., railing against U.S. policy in Southeast Asia from the back of the same flatbed truck.
The photo shows "Hanoi Jane" listening raptly as speakers denounced American soldiers for committing "genocide" in Vietnam and accusing the U.S. of "international racism."
Three rows behind 'Hanoi Jane" sits a man who bears a striking resemblance to the Democratic presidential front-runner.
According to Corbis Images, which owns the image, the photo was taken at the same 1970 Valley Forge protest that turned Sen. Kerry into an anti-war star.
Douglas Brinkley's biography "Tour of Duty" chronicles Kerry's exploits at Valley Forge, where he reportedly followed Fonda onto the back of that pick-up truck to deliver his own diatribe against the war in Vietnam.
"We are here because we above all others have earned the right to criticize the war on Southeast Asia," Kerry shouted into the microphone, as Fonda and the crowd cheered wildly.
"By the time [Kerry] hopped off that pick-up truck to thunderous applause," writes Brinkley, "he was the new leader of the VVAW by popular default."
The Massachusetts Democrat's speech also cemented his alliance with Fonda, and the two traveled to Detroit to organize a January 1971 event they called the "Winter Soldier Investigation."
At a Detroit motel, Kerry and Fonda assembled a myriad of disgruntled witnesses claiming to be Vietnam vets, each with his own story of American atrocities.
According to Jug Burkett, whose landmark Vietnam war history "Stolen Valor" chronicles some of Kerry's anti-war misadventures, Fonda played a key role at the Detroit event.
"There's no doubt that Jane Fonda financed the Winter Soldier hearings," Burkett told NewsMax on Monday.
He said that several of the witnesses who testified at the protest's "hearings" later turned out to be complete impostors.
The event prompted "Hanoi Jane" to "adopt" Kerry's group "as her leading cause," writes Brinkley. It was at Kerry's Winter Soldier protest that the anti-American actress met her future husband, Students for a Democratic Society radical Tom Hayden.
The next year Fonda was off to Hanoi, where she mounted an anti-aircraft battery and pretended to shoot down American pilots.
Of Kerry, Burkett told NewsMax, "Any Vietnam veteran who knows what Kerry did after he came home from Vietnam is definitely not a fan of John Kerry."


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A Question Russert Should Have Asked
Posted Feb 9, 2004
Week in and week out, Tim Russert is the best interviewer on network television. But he didn't perform to his normal high standard, when he interviewed President Bush for the February 8 edition of NBC's "Meet the Press."
The questions Russert asked Bush about U.S. intelligence on Iraq roughly mirrored the politically motivated accusations that Democratic presidential candidates have been flinging at Bush from the stump. These Democratic accusations are uniformly disingenuous, lacking the hard factual predicate that is the hallmark of the typical Russert question.
For example, Russert asked Bush: "How do you respond to critics who say that you brought the nation to war under false pretenses?" In asking this, Russert presented no analysis of the credibility of the "critics'" underlying assumption that Bush had any reason before the war to believe Iraq did not possess weapons of mass destruction.
What could Russert have asked that he didn't? Here's a suggestion:
"Let me read you, sir, a remarkable thing that David Kay told the Senate Armed Service Committee when he testified January 28. Kay said: 'In interviewing the Republican Guard generals and Special Republican Guard generals and asking about their capabilities and having them [WMD], the assurance was they didn't personally have them [WMD] and hadn't seen them [WMD], but the units on their right or left had them [WMD].' My question to you is: Given that even Iraqi Republican Guard generals were convinced that Iraq did have WMD, would it have been reasonable for the American President to assume that Iraq did not have WMD?"
Russert missed the chance to put this question to President Bush. He should not miss the chance to put it to Sen. John Kerry--the next time Kerry appears on "Meet the Press."
Copyright ? 2003 HUMAN EVENTS. All Rights Reserved.

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Intelligence war: Pentagon faults CIA finding on Iraqi WMD
SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Friday, February 6, 2004
The U.S. military community has disputed a CIA determination that Iraq was unlikely to have transferred weapons of mass destruction to neighboring Syria and Lebanon's Bekaa Valley in early 2003.
Defense Department officials said U.S. Army intelligence and the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency have concluded that Saddam Hussein might have transferred Iraq's WMD arsenal to Syria a year ago, according to reports by Geostrategy-Direct.com and Middle East Newsline.
The officials said the U.S. intelligence community has amassed sufficient evidence to press Syria to open its facilities to British-U.S. inspection.
Pentagon sources said Rumsfeld and Tenet have long been at odds regarding WMD programs under Saddam as well as in other Middle East regimes. The sources said Rumsfeld has advocated a shakeup in the intelligence community.
"The record of the [U.S.] intelligence community, particularly with respect to the Middle East and the Persian Gulf, is an appalling record," Richard Perle, former chairman of the Defense Policy Advisory Board, which advises the Pentagon, said.
Geostrategy-Direct.com reported in its Aug. 19, 2003 edition that Israeli intelligence had identified what were believed to be Iraqi weapons of mass destruction goods in Hizbullah-controlled Lebanon. The Israelis used a spy satellite to photograph several tractor-trailer loads of suspected weapons into the Bekaa Valley, where the Islamist terrorist group is based, according to U.S. officials cited by the report. Shipments were made between January and the first week of March in 2003.
The Iraq Survey Group - the 1,300-member team examining WMD issues - was told by members of the Saddam regime that Iraq sent biological weapons to Syria and chemical weapons to the Syrian-controlled Bekaa Valley in Lebanon, Pentagon officials said. In addition, Middle East Newsline reports that the group was told that components of Saddam's chemical weapons program were shipped to Syrian Air Force facilities in central Syria.
In contrast, the State Department and the CIA leadership back the view that Saddam was unlikely to have transferred his arsenal of WMD and extended-range Scud missiles in March 2003. Officials said the department, as well as significant elements in the CIA, has quietly concluded that Saddam would not have trusted Syria or any other of its neighbors with Iraq's WMD arsenal.
On Wednesday, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Iraq might have transferred its weapons of mass destruction arsenal to other countries. In testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee, Rumsfeld cited the transfer of Iraq's WMD as the second of three possibilities regarding the whereabouts of Saddam Hussein's. He did not say where the WMD was transferred to, but earlier U.S. intelligence officials said the most likely destination was Iraq's neighbor Syria.
But Rumsfeld discounted the possibility that Iraq did not have WMD in March 2003, when the United States launched a war to oust the Saddam regime.
"That's possible, but not likely," Rumsfeld said.
Rumsfeld did not discount the other prospects. One is that the WMD was transferred "in whole or part to other countries. The other theory was that Saddam concealed WMD throughout Iraq or destroyed such weapons before the start of the war."
"And once something is buried, it stays buried," Rumsfeld said. "In a country the size of California, the [chance] of finding something buried in the ground - without being led to it by someone knowledgeable -- is minimal."
In January, David Kay, director of the Iraq Survey Group, said Baghdad did not have WMD when the United States invaded Iraq in March 2003. Kay also said that Iraq could have transferred its WMD arsenal to Syria.
Yet another prospect, Rumsfeld said, was that Iraq contained small quantities of biological or chemical agents and a surge capability, which means the ability to produce weapons on short notice. Such a prospect would mean that the Iraq Survey Group could find these weapons in the months ahead.
"Finally, there is the possibility that it was a charade by the Iraqis," Rumsfeld said. "Saddam Hussein himself might have been fooled by his own people, who may have tricked him into believing he had capabilities he didn't really have."
Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Sen. Pat Roberts has supported the Pentagon assessment that Iraq transferred WMD components to Syria. On Thursday, the committee reviewed a 300-page classified report of the panel's eight-month inquiry into the fate of Iraq's WMD arsenal.
On Thursday, CIA director George Tenet did not raise the prospect that Iraq transferred WMD to Syria or other countries. Instead, he cited a finding by the Iraq Survey Group that the Saddam regime systematically destroyed and looted forensic evidence before, during and after the war. "We have been faced with organized destruction of documentary and computer evidence in a wide range of offices, laboratories and companies suspected of weapons of mass destruction work," Tenet said. "The pattern of these efforts is one of deliberate, rather than random, acts."
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Planned railroad would connect Mideast with Europe, Asia
SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Monday, February 9, 2004
ABU DHABI - Arab countries have completed a plan to establish a railway network throughout the Middle East.
The multi-billion dollar plan would form a rail link between the Middle East and Europe and Asia as well as connect the Gulf region to the rest of the Arab world. The plan was completed at a recent meeting of the Directors General of the Mideast Railways Organizations.
"We will convene the next meeting of the Middle East railways organization in Damascus, Syria in March or April, and in this meeting all the parties to the regional railway link will present their respective plans to execute their individual expansions, including the financing scheme to fund their country's railway expansion program," Abdul Razak Abdul Feilat chairman of the group, said in late January.
Israel was not cited in the railway plan, Middle East Newsline reported.
Under the plan, a railroad would run through Gulf Cooperation Councl states and proceed through Saudi Arabia's Red Sea system toward Jordan, Syria and Turkey. From Turkey, the train network would move northwest toward the rest of Europe or Asia. Jordan, Syria and Saudi Arabia have also been discussing a railway link.
Officials said the regional network would depend on whether member countries of the Middle East agree to finance their portion of the railway.
Abdul Feilat told the Riyad-based Saudi Gazette that the organization was trying to coordinate funding from a consortium of regional banks or international financial institutions. He said the cost of a rail link betweeen Amman, Jordan and the Syrian border would cost $200 million. The cost from Damascus to the Turkish border was estimated at $600 million.
A key obstacle to the plan is Iraq, which does not yet have a permanent government. Abdul Feilat said the rest of the Arab world would have to wait for the emergence of a permanent Iraqi government until Baghdad could be linked to the rest of the planned network.
Saudi Arabia is expected to be the hub in two-phase GCC railway system. In the first phase, Manama, Bahrain would be linked to Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province and Doha, Qatar. That phase would include construction of a bridge that connects Bahrain to Qatar.
The second phase would link Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Oman with Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Saudi Arabia is expected to begin construction of a rail link from the Arabian Gulf to the Red Sea, in 2005. Each of the countries has plenty of disused rail lines. They include the Saudi line to Syria as well as railways between Syria and each of the following Arab countries - Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon.
In a related development, Iran has delivered 180 railroad cars to Sudan worth $10 million. Iranian Transportation Minister Ahmad Khorram said Teheran would deliver another 320 railway carriages to Sudan.
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Arafat's bodyguards recruited for suicide attackes
Special to World Tribune.com
MIDDLE EAST NEWSLINE
Thursday, February 5, 2004
JERUSALEM - Bodyguards of Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat have been recruited for suicide operations against Israel.
Israel military sources said special operations forces have arrested at least one member of Arafat's Force 17 praetorian guard. Force 17 is responsible for Arafat's security and has branches throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Arafat's ruling Fatah movement has been cited for being the leading force in suicide operations against Israel. But the Israeli arrests marked one of the first times that Arafat's bodyguards have been involved in such attacks.
Israeli security agents captured Muhammad Abu Lil, 18, on Dec. 13 along with another Fatah agent from the West Bank city of Nablus, both of whom were on their way to bomb a restaurant in the Israeli city of Petah Tikva. The statement said Abu Lil's accomplice, Ahmed Abu Hawila, had been recently recruited to Force 17.
A Fatah commander was said to have recruited suicide attackers from Force 17. The sources identified Nader Abu Lil, a 25-year Fatah commander, for responsibility for the recruitment of Force 17 and other Palestinian security officers, as well as planning operations.
The information of Fatah's recruitment from Arafat's guard came in wake of the arrest of suspected suicide squads in December. The suicide squads were said to have been recruited and organized in Nablus.
Nader Abu Lil was also accused of having planned to launch a suicide attack in January 2004. The military statement said an Israeli raid on Jan. 2 in Nablus's old city quarter yielded two large bombs meant for use in Israel. A suspected suicide squad composed of Palestinians from Nablus-area refugee camps was captured.
Military sources said the use of Arafat's bodyguards for attacks has been encouraged by Iran and Hizbullah, which finance up to 90 percent of Fatah insurgency operations. They said that in many cases Fatah has teamed with the Iranian-sponsored Islamic Jihad or Hamas to launch operations in Israel.
On Wednesday, Israel's military reported that troops captured a Fatah commander in the northern town of Tubas in the West Bank. The commander was identified as Jihad Sawafta, who survived a previous assassination attempt by Israeli forces.
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Rumsfeld invites 7 Mideast allies to sign up for counter-terror duty
SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Monday, February 9, 2004
WASHINGTON -- The United States wants its allies in the Middle East to participate in NATO efforts to intercept shipments of weapons of mass destruction.
U.S. officials said the Bush administration has approved a program for a range of states located in the Mediterranean to help intercept suspected WMD and ballistic missile shipments to such countries as Iran and Syria. They said these countries comprise the seven that participate in the Mediterranean Dialogue.
The countries are Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia. The countries have been participating in a NATO dialogue effort since 1994.
"We can look at ways to strengthen and expand NATO's Mediterranean Dialogue so the alliance can better engage nations in North Africa and the Middle East," Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told a security conference in Munich on Saturday. "Strengthening the Mediterranean Dialogue, I believe, should be high on our agenda for the NATO Summit in Istanbul."
Rumsfeld cited two key areas of cooperation: the interdiction of WMD and what he termed counter-terrorism. Other areas cited by the secretary were peacekeeping missions, border security, opportunities for attendance at NATO schools, and participation in the Partnership for Peace exercises.
The Mediterranean Dialogue has failed to achieve multilateral cooperation amid Arab differences with Israel on numerous issues, particularly Israel's nuclear program and relations with the Palestinians. Instead, NATO has focused on separate efforts with each of the seven members of the dialogue. The last NATO consultation with the seven members took place in September 2003.
In 2003, scientists from Algeria, Jordan, Mauritania and Morocco were recruited for NATO's science program. The panel sought to obtain input from scientists from Arab League states "concerning the implications for civil science of the fight against terrorism," a NATO statement said. The activities -- which included the detection of WMD, decontamination, medical countermeasures and agro-terrorism -- were termed as unclassified.
Administration officials said the United States plans to press for the inclusion of the seven Middle East states in the Mediterranean Dialogue in NATO's PfP. They said Turkey has agreed to support the U.S. demand at the Istanbul summit in June.
At the same time, the United States has pressed the European Union to delay an economic and political cooperation agreement with Syria because of its WMD program. Several EU members have agreed with Washington that any pact with Syria must be preceded by guarantees that Damascus will eliminate its biological and chemical weapons programs.
For its part, Iran canceled its participation in the Munich conference.
The administration has also determined that several Middle East states began steps toward democracy that should be encouraged by NATO. The developments cited by the administration include the establishment of a new parliament in Morocco, the 2002 parliamentary elections in Bahrain, the decision by Oman to allow men and women to vote, the adoption of a constitution in Qatar, elections in Jordan in the summer of 2003 and direct elections for Kuwait's parliament.
[On Monday, the Washington Post reported that the Bush administration plans to promote democracy in the Middle East via a model similar to the 1975 Helsinki accords with the former East Bloc. The reported initiative would commit Arab and South Asian regimes to adopt democratic reforms and be held accountable on human rights.]
"Our challenge is to think creatively about how we can harness the power of the alliance and to contribute to similar democratic progress across the Middle East," Rumsfeld said.
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Gigantic Outlay Party
Republicans stuff record pork down federal piehole
Ralph R. Reiland
"The pledge not to waste our tax dollars rings hollow," says Stephen Moore, president of the Club for Growth and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, "given that in a matter of days [President Bush] will sign into law a budget-buster that provides money for Alaska skating rinks, Michigan swimming pools and Iowa indoor rain forests."
Moore is referring to the president's pronouncement in his State of the Union address that "we must spend tax dollars wisely" and the complete lack of opposition from the White House to the mile-high pile of pork in the recently passed fiscal 2004 Omnibus spending bill.
In addition to the tropical forest, the new Michigan pools and the Alaska skating rinks, the Omnibus bill gouges taxpayers to the tune of $725,000 for the Please Touch Museum in Philadelphia, $2 million for the Appalachian Fruit Laboratory, $1 million for the Alaska SeaLife Center, $300,000 for the National Wild Turkey Federation, $500,000 for the Montana Sheep Institute, and $2 million for a golf awareness program in St. Augustine.
The indoor rain forest gets a whopping $50 million. This faux paradise for parrots will be built in Coralville, Iowa, a town with a population of 17,246 according to the latest Census Bureau survey, or about 5,000 households. The $50 million, in other words, averages out to $10,000 per household, not bad for a place that doesn't even have an airport.
For taxpayers wanting to visit their money, Coralville boasts a low crime rate (there was one murder back in 2001) and a "Nightlife" section in the town's Convention & Visitors Bureau guide that lists 12 restaurants. None stays open past 9 p.m.
The "star attraction" in Coralville is fossil watching, according to the Visitors Bureau, thanks to the flood of 1993. "For the first time in the history of the dam, water overtopped the emergency spillway," the guide tells us. "The overflow lasted a month, washing away tons of soil, huge trees, and part of our new road. When the waters receded, the 375-million-year-old fossilized Devonian ocean floor was revealed."
On top of all that, with things still up in the air in Iraq and Afghanistan, George W. Bush says he wants to have a U.S. base on the moon, by 2015 or so, for "human missions to Mars and to worlds beyond." This interplanetary escapade comes with a price tag of $50 billion per year in spending that will supposedly be pulled from other federal programs over the next decade, plus an extra $200 million per year in new spending.
Add to that, on the more evangelical side of things, the President's proposal to have the federal government spend $1.5 billion to promote "healthy marriage." Between the lines, that means we'd better stop thinking it might be okay to have a wedding cake with two little plastic grooms sticking in the icing. But on the spending side, it means federal abstinence instructions for anyone in need of what the President is calling "character education"--plus some communication courses for the poor, so they quit fighting so much and getting divorced and driving up the deficit.
The bottom line? The Congressional Budget Office is projecting that the federal government will build up $2.4 trillion in red ink spending over the next decade, a number $1 trillion higher than the CBO's estimate in August.
"The big story is Republicans have become a big spending party," says Moore. "And I think the White House is really the ring leader of the spending spree."
With the federal budget costing more than $20,000 on average per year for every family in America and this year's deficit projected to hit a record $477 billion, Moore points to a philosophy in George W. Bush's State of the Union address that only promises to hike the level of unnecessary and wasteful spending.
"The State of Bush's Union has become in some ways a State of Dependency and a State of Entitlement," says Moore. "He has this unattractive tendency to believe that there's a government grant program for every problem that afflicts America. He wants to spend millions to promote holy matrimony. He wants to spend $200 million to fight obesity. Why can't we just tell fat people to stop overeating?"
The numbers tell the story. The average annual real increases in domestic discretionary spending were 2.0 percent under Jimmy Carter, minus 1.3 percent in the Reagan years, 4.0 percent with George H.W. Bush, 2.5 percent in the Clinton years, and 8.2 percent with George W. Bush.
Ralph R. Reiland is a columnist for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and the B. Kenneth Simon Professor of Free Enterprise at Robert Morris University.
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Tbilisi: Russia Was Warned of Attack
By Anatoly Medetsky
Staff Writer
AP
Abu Walid, third from left, seen at an undisclosed location in the North Caucasus.
A man showed up at the Russian Embassy in Tbilisi a day before the metro blast and warned that Chechen rebels planned to carry out a "huge" terrorist attack in Moscow on Friday, Georgia's state security minister said Monday.
The announcement came as investigators said Friday's explosion bore the trademarks of a train suicide bombing in Stavropol last year and Moscow observed a day of mourning.
The blast in the metro tunnel near the Avtozavodskaya station killed at least 39 people. President Vladimir Putin has blamed Chechen rebels.
Georgian Security Minister Valery Khaburdzania said the man was recruited by authorities in the breakaway region of Abkhazia who knew of the bombing in advance and plotted to place the blame for the attack on Georgia, Interfax reported.
He said the man, Nazir Aidabolov, a Russian citizen from the republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, was told to go to Georgia's Pankisi Gorge and collect the names of several Chechens there that he could later give to Federal Security Service officials at the Russian Embassy. The Pankisi Gorge has long been a hideout for Chechen rebels.
This would have created "the impression that the terrorist acts had been planned specifically in the Pankisi Gorge," Khaburdzania told reporters in Tbilisi, Interfax reported.
He said Aidabolov went to the embassy and warned an FSB officer there that Chechens were planning a major attack for Friday.
Abkhaz officials denied Khaburdzania's allegations Monday.
New Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili arrives for his first official visit to Russia this week.
Aidabolov also warned the FSB officer that a second attack would be carried out at an outdoor market in the southern Stavropol region two or three days later, Khaburdzania said.
Stavropol authorities ordered all regional markets closed for three days after the Moscow bombing for sanitary inspections, local media reported.
The FSB has detained Aidabolov for questioning, Ekho Moskvy radio reported.
FSB officials could not be reached for comment late Monday.
But earlier in the day, the FSB, which is in charge of the metro bombing investigation, reiterated that Friday's blast was most likely the work of a suicide bomber.
"This terrorist act is identical to the one committed last year in Yessentuki," FSB deputy director Vyacheslav Ushakov told a gathering of State Duma deputies in the Moscow region.
In December, a suicide bomber blew up a train near the Stavropol region town, killing 46 people.
Ushakov did not elaborate on the similarities.
But sources close to the investigation said Monday that the explosive device used Friday had been packed with nuts and metal bolts -- shrapnel meant to increase the force of the blast and used by Chechen suicide bombers in a series of attacks last year, Interfax reported.
The investigation is being headed by Alexander Zhdankov, the FSB's point man for combating terrorism and a former commander of the federal forces in Chechnya. Local media said his involvement might help investigators trace possible links between the explosion and Chechen rebels.
As one of his first acts, Zhdankov ordered FSB departments in the North Caucasus region to search for possible accomplices in the Moscow bombing and focus on the families that have lost relatives in the ongoing war with federal troops, Kommersant reported Monday.
FSB sources said the blast might have been ordered by Arab warlord Abu Walid, who is thought to be responsible for distributing foreign financial aid among Chechen rebels, Moskovsky Komsomolets reported.
While the main theory being investigated is that a suicide bomber detonated the explosives, the FSB is also looking into the possibility that a time bomb might have been left on the train and exploded when a passenger picked it up, Kommersant said. Investigators earlier established that the device detonated about 50 centimeters above the floor. A third theory is that the blast might have been accidental.
Although the official death toll has been placed at 39, reports from a morgue official familiar with the situation and in the local media put the number at between 50 to 120 people.
Gazeta reported Monday that City Hall has a list of the actual number of people killed that is much higher than the official one, but the FSB has barred it from releasing the information.
The FSB denied this. "We are ignoring this report. The main thing now is to conduct the investigation," an FSB spokesman said by telephone.
The Moscow prosecutor's office issued a vague statement saying that 39 is not the final figure but it was unlikely to change.
Prosecutors said 34 bodies had been identified as of Monday -- 18 men and 16 women. They said the dead included two Armenians and one Moldovan. The youngest was a teenager who was to turn 18 this month, and the oldest was a man of 57.
Pavel Ivanov of the Russian Forensic Medicine Center said the exact death toll could be established in four weeks, after experts study all the body fragments, RIA Novosti reported.
The type of metro car that exploded can carry up to 200 passengers, which was probably the case when the blast occurred during the Friday morning rush hour, metro spokeswoman Yelena Krylova said.
Russian newspapers gave heartbreaking accounts of how relatives identified the dead. Natalya Kiselyova, 35, died as she was headed for work at the Central Elections Commission, her parents told Izvestia. They said they recognized her by a finger with a ring and a piece of a fur coat. Kiselyova was among the election officials who oversaw the legality of last year's Chechen referendum.
TV Center television reported that one of those killed was the wife of a man who died in the Dubrovka theater hostage crisis in 2002.
Ushakov on Monday called for new laws giving more power to the FSB to prevent terrorism, saying that among other things the FSB needs to be able to arrest suspects without a court warrant, Interfax reported. He urged the government to study the experience of the United States, which passed security laws after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Amid the accusations that rebels are behind Friday's bombing, Chechens complained of a growing animosity Monday. Rudnik Dudayev, head of the Chechen Security Council said authorities have received hundreds of calls from Chechen students in other regions complaining of "cynical treatment" and "reproaches" by teachers.
Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov condemned what he called "the instigation of ethnic enmity."
Nationalities Minister Vladimir Zorin echoed his comments, saying, "International terrorism is no doubt enemy No. 1 today, but it is no less dangerous to instigate anti-Caucasus and xenophobic sentiments in a great multinational country like Russia."
As of Monday, 102 people remained hospitalized, Interfax reported.
Flags flew at half-staff in Moscow and theaters canceled shows as the city held a day of mourning. Residents placed hundreds of red and white carnations at the entrance to the tunnel between Avtozavodskaya and Paveletskaya stations.
The first two victims were buried at Moscow's Danilovskoye and Kotlyakovskoye cemeteries on Monday, and more funerals were planned for Tuesday.
A poll released Monday indicated that 59 percent of residents -- mostly elderly people and women -- are now afraid to ride the metro, Interfax reported. Some 38 percent said they were not affected by the blast, according to the poll of 500 Moscow residents carried out Saturday and Sunday by the Romir Monitoring agency.
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Blast Stirs Up Conspiracies
By Pavel Felgenhauer
Moscow police and FSB operatives are still investigating last Friday's blast in the metro that killed 39 people and injured more than 100. It seems there is still no clear answer as to whether it was a terrorist attack or an accident.
Terrorist bombs usually include nails, bolts etc. to kill as many people as possible, but no traces of prepared shrapnel have been found in the ripped-up subway car or in the bodies of the dead and wounded. The intent to inflict maximum damage has not been established. The attack cannot be unquestionably declared a terrorist outrage -- it may still conceivably be an accident.
Muscovites regularly carry dangerous items on the metro. Once, in the late 1970s, I went into the metro with a 20-liter container filled with liquid nitrogen gas at -196 degrees Celsius and frozen radioactive biological specimens. I wanted to take it from Kazansky Station to my institute and could not get a car. The container was a cone of shining metal that looked like a ballistic missile warhead. A policeman did not like the way it looked or my explanation, and turned me away. I covered it with my coat, re-entered the metro and made the journey.
Someone could have been carrying explosives in the metro, stolen from army stockpiles or from an industrial plant (together with detonators), to sell to someone on the black market. In the rush-hour crowd, someone could have accidentally pushed and activated the detonator.
We may never know for sure whether it was an accident or not, just as we do not know for sure who planned the explosions of apartment blocks in 1999 in Moscow and other cities. The authorities blamed Chechen separatists and used the outrages as a prime motive for going to war. Since then, independent investigators have questioned this official narrative; and a number of people have been charged in connection with the bombings, but none of the accused have been ethnic Chechens.
The day after the metro blast, when the facts had not yet been established and nothing was known about who did it and why, President Vladimir Putin accused the Chechen rebels and their leader, Aslan Maskhadov, of being behind it. Maskhadov's foreign envoy, Akhmed Zakayev, denied the rebels were involved. In today's Russia, it's virtually impossible to imagine that any FSB investigator would have the nerve to say that Maskhadov was not guilty, when Putin publicly says that he is.
Talking to journalists, Putin announced: "Once more we hear calls from abroad to hold talks with Maskhadov. This would not be the first time we have encountered a synchronization of crimes committed in Russia and calls to hold talks with terrorists. The fact that we are called to hold talks with Maskhadov after crimes are committed is in itself indirect proof of Maskhadov's connection with bandits and terrorists. As a matter of fact, we do not need this indirect evidence. We know for sure that Maskhadov and his bandits are linked to this terror."
In his statement, Putin cited as a "call to hold talks with Maskhadov," a letter signed by 145 members of the European Parliament in Strasbourg that envisages a withdrawal of Russian troops from Chechnya and the creation of a temporary UN administration to bring peace to the region. Apparently, Putin assumed that the fact the publication of the EU letter coincided with the metro explosion is in itself evidence (albeit indirect) that Maskhadov was behind the blast. Putin has also announced that "certain elements in the Russian Federation" also "synchronize" their sinister activities with Chechen terrorist attacks. but "Russia does not conduct negotiations with terrorists -- it destroys them."
Taken at face value, Putin's statement exposes an amazingly complicated and widespread conspiracy. It is reminiscent of things uttered at different times by Belarussian dictator Alexander Lukashenko, Yugoslavia's Slobodan Milosevic or Josef Stalin.
This may be a glimpse of Putin's true mind-set as formed by the reports of his spooks, diplomats and prosecutors. In this world, the Kremlin is besieged by unscrupulous Westerners who aspire to grab our oil and other natural wealth and synchronize their antics with deadly Chechen terrorist attacks, as well as with "certain elements in the Russian Federation."
If that's Putin's true outlook on the world, no one should be surprised that in several days' time our military will be holding an exercise that simulates a nuclear war with the West as part of Russia's "war on terrorism."
Pavel Felgenhauer is an independent defense analyst.
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Germany Offering 200 Used Airplanes
By Lyuba Pronina
Staff Writer Germany says it has the answer to one of the most pressing problems facing Russia's booming airline industry -- aging fleets.
The German government has sent a letter to Transportation Minister Sergei Frank offering Russia the chance to lease up to 200 secondhand mid-range passenger jets to replace some of the roughly 500 Soviet-era Tupolev Tu-134s and Tu-154s that make up the backbone of Russia's commercial aviation sector.
Once the world's most prolific producer of civilian aircraft, Russia's aviation industry has virtually ground to a halt in recent years, a decline the government is trying to reverse with a project to develop a new and affordable line of mid-range craft. Mass production, however, is still years away, and most of Russia's hundreds of airlines cannot afford foreign-made craft.
The German government, together with international carriers SAS and Germania, as well as American leasing company General Electric Capital Aviation Services, is offering to negotiate the lease of up to 200 McDonnell Douglas MD-80s and Fokker-100s.
"This could be an interim solution for Russian airlines," said GЯnter Zaibt, who heads Germania's operations in Russia.
Russian aviation authorities were mixed on the idea.
"The arrival of these jets will crush the industry, but something has to be done," said one State Civil Aviation Service official who asked not to be named.
Viktor Samokhin, deputy head of the State Civil Aviation Service's flight airworthiness department, was more categorical. "We are not preparing any reply," he said. "We have enough old aircraft of our own and don't need another's old aircraft."
Zaibt dismissed concerns that a deal would retard efforts to revive domestic aviation production.
"It will help Russian airlines to bridge the demand gap until Russian manufacturers will be able to provide sufficient number of new airplanes," he said.
Zaibt declined to go into the specifics of the proposal, saying talks are at an early stage. But he did say that the 172-seat MD-80s are 14-years-old on average, while the 107-seat Fokker-100s are at least 8-years-old, and that both models are valued at under $10 million.
He said the money airlines will save operating more efficient Western aircraft will allow them to buy domestically produced jets when they become available.
"This will not require any investment from the Russian government," he said.
Although top domestic carriers have been struggling to find ways to modernize and expand capacity to keep up with surging demand, they were mixed on the German pitch.
Sergei Koltovich, head of fleet planning and procurement for Aeroflot, which operates 27 Boeings and Airbuses, said that the flagship carrier is not interested in the American-made MD-80s, but it may be interested in the Dutch Fokkers. "Aeroflot has a shortage of regional craft, and Fokker-100 is a proven and reliable aircraft that has been used extensively by foreign airlines," he said.
Mikhail Koshman, spokesman for Sibir, said that although both aircraft are not quite what his company is looking for, it still may be interested. "All will depend on the price," he said.
Sibir last week leased its third Airbus for its Armenian subsidiary Armavia, and a second ATR-42 regional craft.

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Ivanov Says Russia May Pull Out of Arms Treaty

By Greg Walters
Special to The Moscow Times Russia may abandon a security treaty limiting conventional weapons and troop deployments in Europe, Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said at an international security conference in Munich on Monday, unless it is changed to rule out NATO forces in the Baltic states.
Ivanov protested that the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty, negotiated in the 1980s between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Warsaw Pact, does not include Baltic countries, which are scheduled to become NATO members in April.
"With NATO enlargement, they start operating in the zone of vitally important interests of our country," Ivanov said, The Associated Press reported. "They should -- in deed, not only in words -- take into account Russian concerns."
Ivanov's comments come as the United States is considering a wide-ranging reorganization of its forces based in Europe.
Talks between Russia and NATO have broken down in recent years over an updated version of the CFE, which reworked the treaty to take the collapse of the Soviet Union into account.
Europe and the United States have protested Russia's reluctance to withdraw troops from Georgia and Moldova, despite commitments made by Moscow when the treaty was updated in 1999.
Since then, Russia has repeatedly delayed ratification of the new version of the treaty. On Monday, Ivanov said the CFE could become a relic of the Cold War.
Speaking at the conference, U.S. Senator John McCain said, "Undemocratic behavior and threats to the sovereignty and liberty of her neighbors will not profit Russia -- but will exclude her from the company of Western democracies," The New York Times reported.
Independent military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer said Monday that despite Ivanov's rhetoric, Russia is not likely to unilaterally pull out of the treaty. "This will not bring Russia any kind of gain," he said. "There's no real need for withdrawal, just to make some noise."
But in its current form, the treaty appears to be unworkable, Felgenhauer said.
"Russia is clamoring for ratification of the treaty to happen, and the Baltic states to be included," he said. "But the West says Russia must first withdraw from Georgia and Moldova."
The Baltic countries' exclusion from the CFE means that, in theory, NATO could mass any amount of troops and weaponry there when those countries join the alliance.
But Felgenhauer said such an action would be highly unlikely. Both NATO and Russia maintain forces well below the treaty's limits.
On Monday, Lithuanian Defense Minister Linas Linkevicius told The Associated Press that there are no "concrete plans" to set up NATO bases in Lithuania, but also said, "It's not excluded in the future."
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Rybkin's Location Is a Mystery to Police

By Caroline McGregor
Staff Writer The mystery shrouding the disappearance of presidential candidate Ivan Rybkin deepened Monday, amid conflicting reports of his whereabouts and the abrupt opening and closing of a murder investigation.
Local media reported Monday afternoon that police had located Rybkin, a former State Duma speaker who has been bitingly critical of President Vladimir Putin. The reports did not specify his location.
But police spokesman Alexei Vakhromeyev said Rybkin reportedly surfaced on his own and police were in the process of verifying that information. "For now, we haven't found him," he said by telephone.
Rybkin's campaign manager, Ksenia Ponamaryova, who with Rybkin's wife signed a missing persons report Sunday night, said Monday that they have had no contact with him since he disappeared Thursday evening.
His wife, Albina, said both of his cars are in his garage and she feared he might have been kidnapped.
At the request of Rybkin's relatives, the Presnenskaya district prosecutor's office opened a criminal inquiry into Rybkin's disappearance on suspicion of premeditated murder at 11 a.m. Monday.
The Moscow city prosecutor's office learned of this and canceled the inquiry at noon, spokeswoman Svetlana Petrenko said. "It was judged as premature," she said.
She said the city prosecutors were, however, continuing to investigate Rybkin's disappearance and would decide within 10 days whether the facts warranted a criminal case.
Gennady Gudkov, a member of the State Duma security committee, said Monday afternoon that security service officials had told him that Rybkin might have been located at a sanatorium in Odintsovo, just west of Moscow.
Calls to the sanatorium indicated that Rybkin had never been there. The presidential administration, which owns the sanatorium, also denied Rybkin had ever been there.
Gudkov later retracted his statement, saying that his sources might have been joking.
The search for Rybkin comes as a Moscow court is trying six suspects in last year's murder of his former colleague in the Liberal Russia party, Deputy Sergei Yushenkov. (See story, Page 2.) A third colleague from Liberal Russia, Vladimir Golovlyov, was also gunned down in murky circumstances, in August 2002. Liberal Russia is backed by businessman Boris Berezovsky, and he and Rybkin are closely associated.
Fueling confusion about Rybkin's disappearance, Berezovsky said in a telephone interview Sunday night that he was "pretty certain" that Rybkin was safe and would reappear Monday.
Ponamaryova said she remained skeptical about that prediction. "There is information that Boris Abramovich [Berezovsky] interprets in a certain way. I have the same information, but my interpretation is different," she said.
Rybkina said in an interview published in Berezovsky-owned newspaper Kommersant on Monday that she thought her husband's disappearance was intended to remove him as a challenger to President Vladimir Putin in the March 14 election.
Central Elections Commission chief Alexander Veshnyakov said Rybkin's registration, granted Friday, remains in place. Until Friday, some had doubted that the commission would approve the 2 million signatures submitted by Rybkin to register his candidacy.
Viktor Fedoruk, 49, the head of one of Rybkin's signature-drive teams, was arrested Wednesday night on suspicion of falsifying signatures, and a Moscow court has ruled that he should remain in custody.
Late last month, state television cast doubt on the validity of Rybkin's signatures, suggesting in news reports that students had been hired to falsify them.
Rybkin fired back that the lists of signatures shown on television were not his but Putin's, bearing the president's date of birth at the top. He argued this in a letter sent to Veshnyakov and media outlets on Thursday, the day he disappeared.
As a candidate, Rybkin was allotted free airtime to participate in televised debates by the Central Elections Commission on Monday. Deciding how to handle it, though, is complicated, because only in the two "exceptional cases" of illness or official obligations can a candidate send a representative to appear in his stead, Veshnyakov said.
Ponamaryova said Rybkin would "most likely" forgo the debate slots, since no one is prepared to stand in for him.
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Fact or fiction? The truth is out for politicians
A poll of what voters want offers a reality check for those in power and those who are seeking it
By Brendan Pereira
MALAYSIA CORRESPONDENT
KUALA LUMPUR - One of the interesting things about politics anywhere is that assumptions and hunches once put into the spin cycle often come out dressed up as fact.
It is no different here in Malaysia. Take the current buzz over elections and preoccupation with the choice of candidates.
Some say the Muslim electorate here expects its assemblymen and elected representatives to be packing impressive religious credentials.
Recycled enough times by journalists, political pundits and even seasoned politicians, this information acquires a veneer of truth and authority.
But occasionally, along comes a study or survey that separates fact from fiction. One such survey was conducted recently by Universiti Utara Malaysia (UUM) to gauge the political climate in Kedah, where the battle for the Malay vote is going to have the intensity of an iron cage wrestling match.
Several hundred people were surveyed and they were categorised as Umno supporters, Parti Islam SeMalaysia (PAS) supporters or those without political affiliation. The findings turn a few assumptions on their heads.
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FACT? In an increasingly religious Malaysia, religious credentials are a crucial factor.
SIX out of 10 respondents said leaders should be trustworthy. The public also wanted them to be disciplined, hardworking and accessible.
Sure, it was important that candidates be grounded in religion, but it was not among the top five criteria that voters looked for in their potential elected representatives.
Voters also did not expect leaders to be visionaries or corporate figures.
From this, it is clear that what most want is clean politicians who visit their constituencies regularly, rub shoulders with the electorate often and listen to voters' woes with some empathy.
This finding could come in useful for those among the senior Umno leadership who are in the midst right now of choosing candidates for the coming general election.
Some politicians have been making a beeline for Putrajaya, the administrative capital, to lobby Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and other senior figures.
They have touted their educational qualifications, corporate credentials and loyalty to the political party.
Some have gone the extra mile, backing up their claim for candidacy by conducting street polls among Umno members in their divisions.
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FACT? In the Muslim heartland up north, it is the future of religious schools and corruption that weigh heavily on the minds of rural voters.
GUESS what? Umno supporters, PAS supporters and fence-sitters all share the same concern: Worry about how little money is flowing into their pockets.
More than half of poll respondents were perturbed about the low price of padi, and many others complained that it was tough to make a living as a rubber smallholder.
A significant number of them were concerned about the unemployment rate for young people in Kedah.
The survey findings were supported by focus group discussions which Universiti Utara Malaysia lecturers had with Umno members, PAS members, non-governmental organisations and civil servants.
Dr Mansor Mohamed, a member of the team, said: 'By and large, people are concerned about their economic well-being. They are also tired of the politicking.'
These findings point a way forward for those eyeing the Malay vote. It suggests that the pride over Alor Star being granted city status and the Kedah Menteri Besar's fixation on achieving developed status for the northern state may be misplaced.
The hungry and disenchanted voter cares less about what lies ahead, more about concrete answers for his woes today.
This suggests that despite years of economic progress, there are significant pockets of Malaysians who have yet to taste the fruit of development.
Such people are not interested in flash, skyscrapers or an Islamic state.
Perhaps all they want is simply a better life
Copyright @ 2003 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved.
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"Dominate. Intimidate. Control."
The sorry record of the Transportation Security Administration
James Bovard
When 9/11 exposed the holes in American airport and airline security, the Bush administration and Congress responded with the usual Washington panacea: a new federal agency. Congress quickly deluged the new Transportation Security Administration (TSA) with billions of dollars to hire an army of over 50,000 federal agents to screen airport passengers and baggage.
But before the agency was even a year old, it was clear that it had "become a monster," to quote the chairman of the House Aviation Subcommittee, John Mica (R-Fla.). Arrogant, abusive, incompetent, and expensive, the TSA is, in the words of the House Appropriations Committee, "seemingly unable to make crisp decisions...unable to work cooperatively with the nation's airports; and unable to take advantage of the multitude of security-improving and labor-saving technologies available."
The attacks of September 11, 2001, changed many things, but they did not make the federal government more competent or effective, and they did not make it more willing to respect the dignity or liberty of its citizens. For proof, one need only examine the TSA's sorry record.
Jumpy Screeners
In June 2002 news leaked out that TSA airport screeners missed 24 percent of the weapons and imitation bombs planted in the government's undercover security tests. At some major airports, screeners failed to detect potentially dangerous objects in half the tests. The results were worse than they first appeared, because the testers were ordered not to "artfully conceal" the deadly contraband and instead pack their luggage "consistent with how a typical passenger in air transportation might pack a bag." Although the tests seemed designed to see if screeners could catch terrorists with single-digit IQs, they still failed to find the weapons much of the time.
That does not mean TSA screeners don't find anything. Notable triumphs have included seizing a tiny pair of wire cutters from a Special Forces veteran who had been shot in the jaw in Afghanistan and needed the cutters to snip his jaw open if he started to choke; evacuating terminals in Los Angeles upon discovering that travelers were carrying such dangerous devices as a belt buckle or a tub of jam; and shutting down several concourses in St. Louis after a federal security screener spotted what appeared to be a "cutting tool" in a carry-on bag. After detecting the suspicious object, the St. Louis screener followed proper procedure: He fetched his supervisor to take a look at the frozen image on the video screen at the checkpoint. A few minutes later, the supervisor concluded that the bag was indeed suspicious and needed to be manually searched. But the passenger had long since retrieved it and headed to his or her flight. Hundreds of passengers were evacuated and up to 60 flights were delayed; despite many searches, the suspicious item was never found.
On January 15, 2003, the Tampa airport was evacuated after screeners discovered an abandoned briefcase that appeared to be packed with bombs. The ticketing level of the terminal was cleared, the roads outside were closed,
and the bomb squad arrived. An hour later, it was determined that the briefcase was a TSA dummy designed to test airport security. "We use these bags repeatedly, so the fact that the bag was in that area was not surprising," TSA Security Director Dario Compain told the St. Petersburg Times. "That it was unattended, that there was no one with it who knew its true nature and could stop the escalation of our action before it reached the evacuation stage, is what's troubling."
The TSA detains more than just packages. More than 1,000 people have been arrested at airport checkpoints since the feds took over security in February 2002. A regulation passed that month made it a federal crime to interfere with airport screening personnel. A single word can be sufficient to trigger an arrest.
Betsylew Miale-Gix, a 43-year-old personal injury lawyer and former world boomerang record holder, was stopped at a security checkpoint at Hartford's Bradley International Airport on June 30, 2002, and informed that she could not carry her boomerangs onto the plane. The boomerangs weighed less than three ounces each and were fragile -- the type of item that is routinely crushed if sent as checked luggage. Miale-Gix had flown many times after 9/11 and had never encountered any objections to her boomerangs. They wouldn't be much use as weapons, after all; as one of her fellow boomerang enthusiasts commented, throwing a competitive boomerang at someone is "like throwing a first-class letter."
The state trooper who banned the boomerangs from the flight refused to listen to Miale-Gix's explanation, and she swore at him as she was departing the screening area. She was quickly arrested, handcuffed, charged with breach of the peace, and compelled to pay $500 for bail. TSA spokeswoman Deirdre O'Sullivan told The New York Times that although boomerangs are not on the official list of prohibited carry-on items, "the screeners have the discretion to decide whether or not that item could be used as a weapon."
Travelers who assert their legal rights can find themselves bounced. Della Maricich was banned from a Portland-to-Seattle flight on May 1, 2002, after she asked an airport screener to keep her purse where she could see it while he searched it. (Many airport screeners have been accused of theft since the new search procedures were introduced.) The screener refused, and Maricich demanded to speak to his supervisor. A National Guardsman arrived on the scene a few minutes later and, Maricich later told The Wall Street Journal, "He told me that because I had disrupted the line by calling for a supervisor, I would not be allowed to fly out of PDX that day. He told me that I was a troublemaker and I was the only one who had ever complained."
On August 2, 2002, a screener at Hartford's Bradley International Airport poked through the wallet of Fred Hubbell, an 80-year-old World War II combat veteran who had already undergone two full searches in that airport that morning. "What do you expect to find in there, a rifle?" the exasperated Hubbell asked. He was then arrested for "causing a public disturbance" and fined $78. Dana Cosgrove, the TSA airport security chief, later justified the arrest on the grounds that "all that the people around him in the waiting room heard was the word rifle."
The TSA flaunts its power to bar people from flights. A group of 20 high school students and Catholic priests and nuns, members of Peace Action Milwaukee, were detained at Milwaukee's airport on April 19, 2002, after some of their names turned up on a "No Fly Watch List" issued by the federal government. According to one member of the group, a sheriff's deputy told her, "You're probably being stopped because you are a peace group and you're protesting against your country." Many of the travelers missed their flights and had to fly the following day. Yet Sgt. Chuck Coughlin of the Milwaukee sheriff's department insisted, "Although it was time-consuming, and although they were flight-delayed, the system actually worked."
The TSA's no-fly lists are often poor sources of information. Many travelers are repeatedly stopped erroneously and taken aside for intensive questioning, regardless of how many times they have previously proved that they are not a threat to national security. As David Sobel, general counsel of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, told the Financial Times, "Nobody wants to accept responsibility for the maintenance of the [no-fly] list, and nobody wants to claim the authority to remove a name." Now the TSA, at Congress's behest, is creating the Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System (CAPPS II), which will assign a "threat level" to every person who flies within the United States. The TSA has provided almost no information on how the system will operate, although the government has indicated that it could sweep up a vast amount of personal information on each traveler -- including credit history, financial and transaction records, Internet usage, and legal records (including speeding and parking tickets).
In January 2003 the TSA revealed a new regulation allowing it to suspend pilot licenses based on unproven suspicions that the pilot might pose a security risk. Those who lose their livelihoods as a result of such edicts will not necessarily be permitted to see the evidence against them. The TSA did not seek comments from the public before announcing its new rule, which fails even to define "security risk." Phil Boyer, president of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, protested that the TSA was being "the cop, prosecutor, judge, jury and appeals court....Clearly, this is a violation of basic constitutional rights." But agency spokesman Brian Turmail dismissed the concerns: "The bottom line is: If you're not a terrorist, you don't need to worry about this."
Crazy Cops
The TSA has proven inept in the air as well as on the ground. It was determined to expand the number of air marshals quickly from a few hundred to more than 6,000. When most of the applicants failed the marksmanship test, the agency solved that problem by dropping the marksmanship test for new applicants. (The ability to shoot accurately in a plane cabin is widely considered a crucial part of a marshal's job.) Some would-be marshals were hired even after they repeatedly shot flight attendants in mock hijack response exercises.
USA Today's Blake Morrison noted a report that "one marshal was suspended after he left his gun in a lavatory aboard a United Airlines flight from Washington to Las Vegas in December. A passenger discovered the weapon." Another air marshal left his pistol on a Northwest flight from Detroit to Indianapolis; a cleaning crew discovered the weapon. Morrison noted: "At least 250 federal air marshals have left the top-secret program, and documents obtained by USA Today suggest officials are struggling to handle what two managers call a flood of resignations."
The Transportation Department responded to the USA Today expos? by sending Secretary Norman Mineta to an air marshal training facility, where he witnessed a training exercise in which marshals shot a would-be hijacker. Afterward Mineta commented, "I not only saw a remarkable demonstration of skill and marksmanship, but a degree of professionalism we are instilling throughout our aviation security system."
Eight days later, on August 31, 2002, Delta Flight 442 was proceeding from Atlanta to Philadelphia with 183 people on board when a disheveled passenger began rummaging in the overhead bin. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that the trouble began when the man "made inappropriate comments to a female passenger a few rows behind him." Two plainclothes air marshals jumped up and tackled the guy, shoving him first to the back of the plane and then dragging him to the first class area.
Then the trip got interesting. One of the marshals returned to the front of the coach section, drew his Glock semiautomatic pistol, and started screaming and pointing his gun at passengers. Philadelphia Judge James Lineberger, a passenger on the flight, later told the Associated Press, "I assumed at that moment that there was going to be some sort of gun battle....There were individuals looking to see what they were pointing at, and [the air marshals] were yelling, `Get down, get out -- get your head out of the aisle.'" In a formal complaint to the TSA, Lineberger declared that "there was no apparent reason for holding all the passengers of the plane at gunpoint, and no explanation was given."
Lineberger was sitting diagonally across from the initial target of the marshals, yet did not notice any problem on the flight until the marshals went ballistic. Susan Johnson, a social worker from Mobile, Alabama, was also unaware of any disturbance until the air marshals seized the man. "It never made sense," she told the Inquirer. "This guy was not any physical threat that we could see. Maybe he said some things to them that made them concerned. He just appeared to us unstable, emotionally." According to Becky Johnson, a reporter who wrote a column about the episode for her Waynesville, North Carolina, newspaper, "They never, ever said who they were, that they were air marshals or whoever."
After the flight landed, the marshals nailed another terrorist suspect: a physician and retired U.S. Army major named Robert Rajcoomar. He was handcuffed and taken into custody because, as TSA spokesman David Steigman later explained it, he "had been observing too closely."
Rajcoomar had been sitting in first class quietly reading and drinking a beer until the marshals dumped the allegedly unruly passenger from coach class into the adjacent seat. Rajcoomar told the Inquirer: "One [marshal] sat on
the guy....he was groaning, and the more he groaned, the more they twisted the handcuffs." Rajcoomar asked the stewardess for permission to move to another seat in first class; she told him to take one of the seats the marshals
had vacated.
When the plane landed, Rajcoomar recalled, "One of these marshals came down to me and said, `Head down, hands over your head!' They pushed my head down, told me to bend down." Rajcoomar said one of the marshals told him, "We didn't like the way you looked" and "We didn't like the way you looked at us." He was locked up in a filthy cell for three hours before being released without charges. His wife was left to roam the Philadelphia airport, not knowing what had happened to her husband.
And the person who initially set off the marshals? He was questioned after the plane landed, but a U.S. attorney decided not to file charges.
The air marshal who brandished his weapon had twice applied to be a cop in Philadelphia but failed the police department's psychological tests. He had also been rejected in an attempt to become a prison guard. When he threatened scores of coach passengers, he had received only two weeks of training.
What escalates this episode beyond a mere bizarre anecdote is the fact that the TSA hailed these marshals as models. Several days after the incident, Thomas Quinn,
the national director of the air marshal program, asserted, "The federal air marshals did a very good job. They did exactly as they're trained to do." And TSA spokesman Robert Johnson, speaking to the Associated Press, blamed the passengers for being held at gunpoint: "If people would have stayed in their seats and heeded those warnings, that would not have happened. It's our opinion that it was done by the book."
Not Just Birth Pangs
Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport is home to 1,800 TSA screeners. At 1:50 p.m. on January 9, 2003, one of them swabbed the outside of a passenger's laptop bag to check for explosives. The screener returned the bag to the pas-senger, who proceeded to his plane. Three minutes later, the screener noticed that the explosive trace detection machine indicated a positive alert for Semtex, a plastic explosive, from the laptop. The screeners then spent three more minutes checking the machine to confirm the accuracy of the positive alert before they informed a TSA supervisor of the problem. The supervisor and screeners then left the checkpoint to walk around and see if they could find the man suspected of having plastic explosives in his laptop. (The explosive detection test is notorious for false positives.)
The group searched four airport departure gates and, after they could not find the man, returned to the checkpoint to retest the machine. More than half an hour after the positive alert for plastic explosives occurred, the TSA notified an airport policeman standing 15 feet from the checkpoint of the problem. Orders were quickly given to empty the terminal. Almost an hour after the laptop owner passed through the checkpoint, his description was circulated through the airport.
Three terminals at the nation's third-largest airport were closed for almost two hours. Thousands of people were evacuated from the airport and at least 200 flights delayed. Hundreds of passengers already on planes waiting for takeoff were obliged to deplane. Forty other airports were affected.
Because the Dallas-Fort Worth airport was not blown up that afternoon, the TSA declared victory. Agency spokesman Ed Martelle told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: "We caught him, but we lost him. But what he couldn't do was harm anyone. The system worked." The TSA refused to name either the manufacturer of the machine that gave the alert or the screener; as spokesman Brian Doyle explained, "There are privacy issues involved here." After prying into tens of millions of Americans' bags, the agency suddenly developed respect for privacy -- for itself and its corporate suppliers.
Although the TSA promised to issue a full report on the incident, it reneged, announcing a few weeks later that national security concerns prevented it from releasing any more details of the debacle. The TSA also declared that "details about future breaches also would be kept secret because of national security," The Dallas Morning News reported. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram added: "Too much information was made public about the breach, local TSA officials have been told. Further disclosures by airport officials or anyone else privy to the final report could result in fines and/or jail time."
While some people may retain hope that the preceding fiascoes are merely birth pangs, contrary evidence continues to cascade in:
* On February 6, 2003, according to Airport Security Report, San Francisco International Airport was disrupted after a Taiwanese woman with two carry-on bags "sprinted through an unmanned security checkpoint at 10:46 a.m. It wasn't until 1 p.m. that TSA officials evacuated the terminal." TSA agents looked for the woman, concluded she was "lost in the crowd," and then spent time reviewing the videotape of the security checkpoint before ordering an evacuation and rescreening.
* On March 8, 2003, a terminal at the Hartford, Connecticut, airport was evacuated after a screener was caught taking a late afternoon nap by an X-ray machine.
* On March 11, 2003, according to Airport Security Report, TSA officials shut down the Birmingham, Alabama, international airport after "four people were discovered lurking on the airport tarmac. They fled on foot when officers questioned them about their badges identifying them as airport security workers." Dozens of flights were delayed and hundreds of people were evacuated before it was learned that the four suspicious individuals were TSA officials testing airport security.
* On March 21, 2003, Cleveland Hopkins International Airport was placed under a 40-minute lockdown, prohibiting all passenger entries or exits and all plane departures. TSA agents hit the alarm when they spotted a little toy gun on a child's belt buckle in a carry-on bag.
The TSA confiscated the child's belt buckle. Spokesman
Rick DeChant announced, "Had Mom or Dad helped this kid pack, this [airport lockdown] could have been avoided."
* On April 3, 2003, a passenger at Baltimore-Washington International airport refused to be rescreened after the metal detector signaled an alarm from her first pass. Instead, she walked on to her flight. Although two concourses were closed for an hour, the woman was never apprehended.
* In May 2003 Americans learned that the TSA had fired scores of screeners who had been on the job for several months in Los Angeles and New York after finding that they had criminal records. The Los Angeles Times reported that the agency "lost background questionnaires, failed to run some employee fingerprints through a national crime database and was unable to complete background checks." The Times noted that congressmen began investigating the TSA's "background check process after reports that a screener at Kennedy airport was arrested earlier this year for allegedly stealing $6,000 from a passenger." At Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C., the agency failed to complete background checks on more than a third of the 600 screeners. One employee complained: "It defeats the purpose of what you are here for. It's a 200-plus [person] security breach." Nationwide, more than 20,000 TSA screeners were on the job even though the government had not completed background checks on them.
One reason for the federal takeover of airport security, you may recall, is that private companies had hired screeners of dubious character and poor trustworthiness.
On March 10, 2003, a TSA press release proudly announced, "The Transportation Security Administration has intercepted more than 4.8 million prohibited items at passenger security checkpoints in its first year, contributing to the security of the traveling public and the nation's 429 commercial airports." Agency chief James Loy bragged that "those statistics are strong testimony to the professionalism and attention to detail of our highly trained security screeners." A few weeks later, he upped the ante, informing the House Appropriations Committee: "We have identified, intercepted, and therefore kept off aircraft more than 4.8 million dangerous items."
And so all the fingernail clippers and cigar cutters seized since 9/11 transmogrified into proof that the federal government is protecting people better than ever. The press release did not mention that the checkpoint seizures included frying pans, dumbbell sets, horseshoes, toy robots, and an unknown but huge number of small pointy objects.
Security as Theater
Here's a more sobering measure of the agency's effectiveness: The New York Daily News celebrated the first anniversary of 9/11 by sending two reporters around the country, taking 14 flights on six airlines, and passing through 11 major airports during Labor Day weekend 2002. The reporters carried box cutters, razors, knives, and pepper spray in their luggage. They took their contraband through the checkpoints at all four of the airports used by the hijackers on 9/11. "Not a single airport security checkpoint spotted or confiscated any of the dangerous items, all of which have been banned from airports and planes by federal authorities," the paper revealed. The reporters were selected for hand searches several times, but even then nothing was found. There were more security personnel and searches than a year before, "but it amounted to nothing more than a big show."
The TSA blamed the failures on its prehistory, commenting that the Daily News' findings "underscore the failures of an aviation security system inherited by the federal government last fall." A spokesman for Department of Transportation Secretary Mineta, Leonard Alcivar, greeted the findings with a spurt of positive thinking: "The reality is Americans have never had a higher level of security in the history of aviation."
There was less room for positive thinking a year later, when college student Nathaniel Heatwole pulled a similar stunt, planting box cutters and fake bombs on six different planes to probe the gaps in security. In September 2003 he sent the TSA an e-mail message explaining what he had done, in the hope of sparking improvements in the system. Instead he was brought up on charges and now faces up to 10 years in jail.
There is no series of tricks or reforms that will guarantee safe air travel. But a first step toward better security is to recognize the facades the feds have created. The TSA should no longer be permitted to burden travelers or taxpayers. The armies of federal agents occupying American airports should be disbanded. In the meantime, airports and airlines must not be shielded from liability if their negligence results in carnage. The specter of devastating liability lawsuits could produce more innovations and sounder security policies than the incentives produced by Washington political circuses.
Federal intelligence agencies should do a better job of notifying airports and airlines of specific current threats. Resources should be focused on determining actual threats, rather than treating every grandmother and toddler as a potential hijacker. And it would be helpful to amend U.S. foreign policy to reduce the number of foreigners willing to kill themselves to slaughter Americans.
In the wake of 9/11, the federal mentality toward air travelers is best summarized by the motto posted at the headquarters of the TSA air marshal training center: "Dominate. Intimidate. Control." But it takes more than browbeating average Americans to make air travel safe.
James Bovard is the author of Terrorism and Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the World of Evil (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003), from which this article is adapted.
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washingtonpost.com
Airline Surveillance Office Director Resigns
TSA Says Bell's Departure Will Not Affect Rollout of Proposed Passenger Screening System
By Robert O'Harrow Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, February 10, 2004; Page A08
The director of a program to develop an electronic screening system for airline passengers plans to resign April 3, according to his resignation letter.
Ben H. Bell III, director of the new Office of National Risk Assessment in the Transportation Security Administration, said he would retire after almost 35 years of service in the federal government.
His decision comes at a delicate time for the data-surveillance system known as CAPPS II, which has been delayed for almost two years by technical issues and questions about its impact on privacy.
The U.S. General Accounting Office is scheduled to issue a report in coming days about the proposed system's effectiveness and potential impact on civil liberties. Congress ordered that the report be completed before allowing CAPPS II to move forward. An unfavorable outcome could further delay implementation.
Testing of the system is scheduled to begin in late spring. If successful, officials expect to start phasing in CAPPS II this summer.
TSA spokesman Mark Hatfield said Bell's departure would have no impact on the rollout. "His legacy will be the addition of one of the most important layers of security in aviation," he said.
In his resignation letter, Bell praised the "risk assessment platform," saying it will serve as a model for use by government intelligence and private information services to enhance U.S. security.
"Fully implemented and supported, it will be among the first fruits of a new kind of partnership between the government and the private sector -- where the best technology used in commerce is leveraged to protect our freedom, and where privacy and security are not competing interests, but complementary goals," Bell wrote.
The CAPPS II system is designed to use giant reservoirs of personal information stored by Acxiom Corp., LexisNexis Group and other companies to authenticate every passenger's identity. Government computers, based in suburban Washington and Colorado, will then match those names against intelligence and lists of known or suspected terrorists.
Under current plans, passengers will be assigned one of three designations: regular screening, extra screening or apprehend.
Few homeland security initiatives have spurred as much controversy as CAPPS II. JetBlue and Northwest airlines have been harshly criticized for sharing passenger information with the government -- including some agencies not directly involved in CAPPS II -- and now they and others have expressed reluctance to participate.
Major U.S. carriers are scrambling now to create disclosure policies that tell customers how personal information is being used, in anticipation that the government may force the airlines to turn over records for the system.
Democratic presidential candidate Wesley K. Clark also came under fire from rivals for working as a lobbyist for Arkansas-based Acxiom in its bid to secure a role in CAPPS II and other security initiatives.
Though some privacy advocates acknowledge the need for an aviation screening system, they complain that development of CAPPS II has been overly secretive. Some advocates have expressed concern that the screening will turn airports into all-purpose checkpoints.
Bell and other government officials have insisted in congressional testimony and interviews that that will not happen. Last summer, the government declared its intentions to use CAPPS II to apprehend wanted violent criminals, an apparent expansion of its original aim.
David Sobel, general counsel of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in the District, said Bell's departure raises new questions about how the system is coming along. "There are still lots of questions to be answered," Sobel said.
James X. Dempsey, executive director of the Center for Democracy and Technology in the District, said Bell "honestly was trying to protect privacy." But he predicted Bell's resignation would not impede the program's implementation.
"We need some kind of passenger screening system," Dempsey said. "It's not a task, it seems to me, that we can walk away from."
Bell, a retired Marine officer, was asked to build CAPPS II in late 2002 because he mixed computer savvy with foreign, domestic and law enforcement intelligence experience. He has also served as deputy assistant commissioner for intelligence at the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Part of Bell's appeal, officials said, was that he was committed to building an effective system that would use passenger records narrowly only to stop terrorists.
? 2004 The Washington Post Company

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Microsoft offers cut-rate Windows
By Matthew Broersma, CNET News.com
Tuesday, February 10 2004 9:34 AM
Microsoft has provided a modified version of Windows XP with reduced features for use in the Thai government's low-cost PC program, and may make this software available to other governments, the company said.
The "entry-level" version of Windows was created to allow Microsoft to participate in the Thailand ICT Ministry's program without adjusting its policy of charging the same price for Windows and Office no matter where in the world they are sold, Microsoft said Monday. The software was provided at a cost of 1,500 baht, or about US$40, compared with the usual price of several hundred dollars.
"The Microsoft software provided for the ICT program in June 2003 is a Thai-language specific, customized, entry-level version based on Windows XP Home and Office XP Standard," said a Microsoft spokeswoman.
Last year, market research firm Gartner said the Thai deal was the beginning of the end for the one-price policy, predicting Microsoft would be compelled to halve its prices in poorer countries by the middle of 2004. Now Microsoft says it is looking to collaborate with more governments on low-cost PC initiatives, using customized software with reduced functionality, as in Thailand.
Andrew McBean, Microsoft Thailand's managing director, said in an interview with The Bangkok Post last week that the company was developing an entry-level version of Windows for sale in poorer countries.
Microsoft has come under increasing competitive pressure from open-source software such as Linux in developing countries, where the single-price policy makes Microsoft software too expensive for most. The Thai ICT PCs were originally available only with Linux. Linux PCs are seen as a threat to Windows partly because buyers are considered likely to replace the operating system with pirated copies of Windows.
Several Asian governments have recently embraced open-source software in an attempt to fix problems such as high software costs and wide-scale software piracy. The price of Microsoft software is often cited as the root of the problem.
Authorities in Asia have bemoaned the company's lack of flexibility, arguing that market price should be tied to local economic conditions. Being forced to use English-language versions because of the lack of local-language options is also a sore point.
Countries like Malaysia, Vietnam, China, Japan and Korea have said they are wary of giving monopolistic control of crucial software to a foreign-based corporation, free to charge any price without regard for national interests.
Microsoft has repeatedly denied it will adjust its one-price policy. Speaking at the Singapore launch of the Office System 2003 productivity suite last November, Oliver Roll, Microsoft general manager for Asia-Pacific and Greater China, said that while the single-price policy won't change, the company was willing to give discounts if it would help certain IT-disadvantaged groups.
Today, a copy of the Microsoft Windows operating system or Office productivity suite costs roughly the same in every country. For example, Windows XP Home is US$199 and Office XP, US$399. Given that the average income of a Thai worker is US$7,000 a year, it would be the equivalent of charging US$3,000 for the bundle in the United States, according to Gartner Hong Kong.
Matthew Broersma of ZDNet UK reported from London. John Lui of CNETAsia contributed to this report.
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IBM switches Korean head after bribery scandal
By Winston Chai, CNETAsia
Friday, February 6 2004 6:13 PM
IBM has replaced the head honcho for its South Korean operations, following a high-profile bribery fiasco last month.
In January, Korean authorities indicted 48 government officials and executives, mostly from IBM and affiliated companies such as LG IBM PC--a joint venture between IBM and Korean firm LG Electronics-- for rigging public-sector computer contracts.
According to the Seoul District Prosecutor's Office, IBM Korea allegedly amassed a slush fund worth almost 3 billion won (US$2.5 million) which was used to pay off government officials. Big Blue has since denied the existence of this fund and said it has fired the employees in question.
An IBM Asia-Pacific spokesperson told CNETAsia it has named Tony Romero, a 23-year veteran with the company, as the new head for Korea.
Romero was previously the general manager of IBM ASEAN and South Asia. He also served as president for IBM Argentina between 1997 and 1999, a period when the business unit faced a similar bribery probe pertaining to a rigged deal with Argentinean bank Banco Nacion.
Romero takes over from former IBM Korea head, Chae-Chol Shin, who was appointed as the country's general manager in 1996. IBM said Shin made a "personal decision to retire" after 31 years with the company.
ZDNET Korea's Yong-Young Kim contributed to the story.
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China gears up for RFID
By ZDNet China, Special to CNETAsia
Monday, February 9 2004 9:43 AM
The Standardization Administration of China has created a working group that will establish a national standard for radio frequency identification tags.
Called "electronic tags" in China, these small transmitters--essentially high-tech bar codes that can be scanned from a distance and even through the walls of boxes--are seen by many as the key to a far more efficient supply chain than is achievable today.
There is no single standard for RFID. The SAC said that it will try to draft its standard so that it will be compatible with similar technologies.
RFID companies are likely to closely monitor how the standardization process moves forward. Recently, the Chinese government demanded that the Wi-Fi chips sold in the country contain an encryption standard controlled by 11 local companies. To sell Wi-Fi parts in the large and rapidly growing market in China, foreign companies necessarily have to partner with Chinese companies or license the technology from them.
With manufacturers and distributors scrambling to meet those retail and military mandates, research firm IDC said it expects RFID spending for the U.S. retail supply chain to grow from US$91.5 million last year to nearly US$1.3 billion in 2008.
Privacy advocates, however, assert that the radio-tag technology could allow companies to track individuals. Although many in the industry have said this is more difficult than it sounds (RFID tags can be disabled by a trip through a microwave), some companies have backed away from trials.
Another controversy with RFID is finding companies to make the tags. Intel, IBM and others are very interested in the technology, but because it will allow them to sell more servers and software for managing networks of tags. The RFID tags themselves will only sell for a few cents when volume production begins.
ZDNet China is based in Beijing. CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos contributed to this story
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Posted by maximpost at 1:24 AM EST
Permalink

Saddam's Global Payroll
It's time to take a serious look at the U.N.'s oil-for-food program.
BY THERSE RAPHAEL
Monday, February 9, 2004 8:00 a.m. EST
On Dec. 5, during a trip to Baghdad, Claude Hankes-Drielsma faxed an urgent letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Mr. Drielsma, the U.K. Chairman of Roland Berger Strategy Consultants, had recently been appointed to advise the Iraqi Governing Council. What he saw in Baghdad left him shocked. "As a result of my findings here, combined with earlier information," he wrote, "I most strongly urge the U.N. to consider appointing an independent commission to review and investigate the 'Oil for Food Programme.' Failure to do so might bring into question the U.N.'s credibility and the public's perception of it. . . . My belief is that serious transgressions have taken place and may still be taking place."
Just how serious these transgressions were became clear late last month, when the Iraqi daily Al Mada published a partial list of names, compiled by Iraq's oil ministry, of those whom Saddam Hussein rewarded with allocations of Iraqi oil. Mr. Hankes-Drielsma, who says he was among the first to see the list in early December, says it is based on numerous contracts and other detailed documents and was compiled at the request of the Iraqi Governing Council.
The list, a copy of which has been seen by the Journal's editorial page, is in spreadsheet format and details (in Arabic) individuals, companies and organizations, grouped by country, who oil ministry and Governing Council officials believe received vouchers from the Iraqi regime for the purchase of oil under the oil-for-food program. Mr. Hankes-Drielsma said the recipients would have been given allocations at below-market prices and then been able to pocket the difference when a middleman sold the oil on to a refinery; 13 time periods are designated and with indications of how much crude, in millions of barrels, each recipient allegedly received.
The list reads like an official registry of Friends of Saddam across some 50 countries. It's clear where his best, best friends were. There are 11 entries under France (totaling 150.8 million barrels of crude), 14 names under Syria (totaling 116.9 million barrels) and four pages detailing Russian recipients, with voucher allocations of over one billion barrels. Many of the names, transliterated phonetically from Arabic, are not well-known or are difficult to identify from the information given. Others stand out. There's George Galloway, the Saddam-supporting British MP recently expelled from the Labour Party, who has always denied receiving any form of payment from Saddam. Other notables include Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri (also listed separately as the "daughter of President Sukarno"), the PLO, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Russian Orthodox Church, the "director of the Russian President's office" and former French Interior Minister Charles Pasqua. Some--including Mr. Pasqua, the Russian Church and Ms. Megawati--have denied receiving anything from Saddam. Patrick Maugein, a close friend of Jacques Chirac and head of Soco International oil company, says his dealings were all within "the framework of the oil-for-food program and there was nothing illegal about it."
The list's breadth, and the difficulty in reading and interpreting it, has slowed its exposure. There's also the question of authentication. Mr. Hankes-Drielsma (who is not an Arabic speaker) is convinced it is authentic and will be followed by more detailed evidence as the Iraqi oil ministry and Governing Council conduct further investigations. "I've seen the documents that have satisfied me beyond any doubt that we're dealing with a genuine situation," he told me.
One of the most eye-catching names on the list is easy to miss as it's the sole entry under a country one would not normally associate with Iraq--Panama. The entry says: "Mr. Sevan." That's the same name as that of the U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Benon V. Sevan, a Cyprus-born, New York-educated career U.N. officer who was tapped by Kofi Annan in October 1997 to run the oil-for-food program.
When I tried Mr. Sevan for comment, a U.N. spokesman wouldn't put me through to him directly but offered to pass on e-mailed questions. In an e-mail reply to questions about Mr. Sevan's apparent inclusion on the list and interest in the Panama-based business that allegedly received the discounted oil, the spokesman quoted Kofi Annan's statement Friday: "As far as I know, nobody in the Secretariat has committed any wrongdoing. If there is evidence, we would investigate it very seriously, and I want those who are making the charges to give the material they have to me so that we can follow up to determine if there has been any wrongdoing and I would take necessary action. So far statements are being made but we need to get facts." The pro forma U.N. response certainly seems inadequate. Mr. Sevan should take the opportunity to defend himself against the inference that the presence of his name on this list could help explain how Saddam was able to get by with so much influence-buying around the world with little apparent objection from the U.N.
In the seven years that Oil-for-Food was operational, (it was shut down in November and its obligations are being wound up) Saddam was able to skim off funds for his personal use, while at the same time doing favors for those who supported the lifting of sanctions, supplied him with his vast arsenal of weapons, and opposed military action in Iraq. Indeed, it was clear from the outset that Saddam would be able to use the program to benefit his friends. The 1995 U.N. resolution setting out the program--Resolution 986--bends over backwards to reassure Iraq that Oil-for-Food would not "infringe the sovereignty or territorial integrity" of Iraq. And to that end it gave Saddam power to decide on trading partners. "A contract for the purchase of petroleum and petroleum products will only be considered for approval if it has been endorsed by the Government of Iraq," states the program's procedures. Predictably, Saddam exploited the program for influence-buying and kickbacks, and filled his coffers by smuggling oil through Syria and elsewhere. With Oil-for-Food and smuggling, he was able to sustain his domestic power base and maintain a lavish lifestyle for his inner circle.
The system was ripe for abuse, in part because a divided Security Council gave Saddam far too much flexibility within the program. Oil-for-Food not only gave Iraq the power to decide with whom to deal, but also freedom to determine the official price of Iraqi oil, revenues from which went legally into the U.N.'s Oil-for-Food account. U.N. rules did not allow it to order Iraq to deal directly with end-users and bypass all those lucky middlemen who got deals from Saddam. Nor was the U.N. allowed to view contracts other than those between the oil ministry and the first purchaser, so it had no way of verifying that surcharges were being imposed by the middlemen on end-users. That enabled him to add surcharges to finance his own schemes while still making the final price competitive.
U.N. rules were ostensibly devised to prevent pricing abuses, but in one of the many indications of administrative failure, those safeguards appear not to have been enforced. In response, the U.S. and Britain tried often from 2001 to impose stricter financial standards, but Russia blocked changes. Then the U.S. and Britain instituted a system of retroactive pricing--delaying approval of the Iraqi selling price so that they could take account of the market price when giving their approval. This too met with grumbling from Friends of Saddam and while it reduced oil exports, it didn't end the corruption.
Throughout most of the program's life, Mr. Sevan's office seemed to see no evil. When overwhelming evidence finally surfaced that Oil-for-Food had become a gravy-train for the Iraqi regime, U.N. officials acknowledged some of the abuses but refused any of the blame. Criticism is routinely portrayed as politically motivated. "The [program] has existed in a highly politicized environment from day one," explains the U.N. Web site. "The scale of these operations has also made it a rather large target." Its last line of defense was to punt to the Security Council, whose sanctions committee (authorized by the 1990 sanctions resolution and composed of Council members) was meant to oversee the program, receive reports and review audits.
The record of systemic abuse of the program lends credence to claims that the oil-ministry list is genuine and should be investigated. The Iraqi Governing Council says it's considering legal action against anyone found to have profited illegally from Oil-for-Food. The U.S. Treasury's Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement is investigating possible violations of U.S. law. But the U.N. has resisted calls for an independent investigation into abuses. Says Mr. Hankes-Drielsma: "I would urge the U.N. to take the high moral ground and instigate a truly independent investigation."
To this end, he wrote a second letter to the U.N. secretariat on Feb. 1, this time addressed to Hans Correll, Under Secretary for Legal Affairs and Legal Counsel of the U.N., with a copy to British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw. He catalogs questions on areas "which need urgent investigation," e.g. "Why did the U.N. approve oil contracts to non-end users?" His letter alleges that "not less than 10% was added to the value of all invoices to provide cash to Saddam . . . why was this not identified and prevented?" The letter also asks "What controls were in place to monitor BNP [the French bank] who handled the bulk of the LCs, the total value of which may have [been] in the region of $47 billion?"
In a June 2000 statement on Oil-for-Food, Mr. Sevan said, "As [Mr. Annan] put it recently, we, as international civil servants, take our marching orders from the Security Council." It might have been more accurate to acknowledge the U.N. took its marching orders from Saddam.

Ms. Raphael is editorial page editor of The Wall Street Journal Europe.
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Bush: Hussein Eluded Containment Efforts
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, February 9, 2004; Page A08
In defending his decision to go to war in Iraq, President Bush suggested yesterday a belief that U.N. inspections and sanctions were of limited utility in preventing Saddam Hussein from acquiring weapons of mass destruction.
"Containment doesn't work with a man who is a madman," Bush said during his interview on NBC's "Meet the Press," even as he acknowledged banned weapons have yet to be found.
Bush's assessment of the U.N. efforts, however, does not appear to be shared by his own former chief weapons inspector, David Kay. In testimony Jan. 28 before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Kay lauded the effectiveness of past U.N. efforts. "In holding the [Iraq arms] program down and keeping it from break out [building numbers of weapons], I think the [U.N.] record is better than we would have anticipated," Kay said.
Kay also said Iraqi scientists had told him recently that they were surprised the U.N. inspectors were so tough and reported some programs were ended in the mid-1990s because of the inspections, but without specific evidence the U.N. inspectors did not believe the Iraqis because they had lied before.
NBC's Tim Russert asked Bush about statements he had made during fall 2002 when the administration was building support for a congressional authorization for war. These included Bush saying, "The Iraqi regime is a threat of unique urgency," and "Saddam Hussein is a threat that we must deal with as quickly as possible." Bush did not acknowledge having made those statements and said, "In my language, I called it a 'grave and gathering threat,' " a phrase he used in a speech before the United Nations on Sept. 12, 2002.
White House aides have insisted, since no weapons have been found, that Bush never used the word "imminent" in describing the Iraq threat. Yesterday, Bush said, "I don't want to get into a word contest."
In describing the threat posed by Hussein, Bush said twice that the former Iraqi leader was a threat to the United States because he "was paying for suicide bombers" that went into Israel, implying that the Iraqi money generated the attacks. After suicide bombings, Hussein in recent years said that, as Saudi Arabia and several Gulf states had been doing for years, he would give $25,000 to support each of the perpetrators' families. But many experts agree those funds, no matter where their origin, were not the motivation for the attackers.
Bush also said Hussein was a threat because "he was funding terrorist groups." Iraq had granted asylum to terrorists such as Abu Nidal and supplied money and training to Palestinian groups that fought Israel. Authorities say there is no evidence that Hussein gave direct financial support to Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network either before or after the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, although some al Qaeda operatives and associates passed through Baghdad.
? 2004 The Washington Post Company

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U.S. Criticized for Dimissing Iraqi Companies in Reconstruction
By Jackie Spinner
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, February 9, 2004; 11:00 AM
The Iraqi Governing Council's top diplomat in Washington today criticized the U.S. occupation authority for passing over Iraqi companies in favor of giving reconstruction contracts to foreign firms.
Rend Rahim Francke, the council's ambassador-designate to the United States, said she was "appalled" that U.S. companies initially imported laborers from Asia during the first critical months of reconstruction.
"Ultimately, American companies can come and build bridges and power plants. But these companies will be gone," she said during speech at a conference today in Washington on reconstruction in Iraq. "We need to build capacity in Iraq" for Iraqi firms, she said.
Francke said in an interview afterward that the Coalition Provisional Authority, the occupation administration headed by L. Paul Bremer, is "opaque to Iraqis. It's still not transparent."
Joe Benkert, the authority's chief of operations in Washington, said U.S. officials were committed to involving Iraqis in the rebuilding of their country. "It's very clear to us this is a job for the Iraqi people and the Iraqi people are up to the task," he told about 150 people attending the conference, which is sponsored by Equity International, a private firm.
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Republican Rot
Is Congress's GOP majority becoming as corrupt as the Democrats were?
Monday, February 9, 2004 12:01 a.m. EST
One way you can tell that Republicans have become the dominant political party in Washington is to watch them cash in.
Rep. Billy Tauzin of Louisiana has announced that next Monday he will step down as chairman of the powerful House Energy and Commerce Committee. Observers expect he will soon leave Congress to become the chief lobbyist for the pharmaceutical industry at an annual salary that's rumored to approach $2.5 million, a record for a trade association head. Mr. Tauzin isn't doing anything illegal, but what's good for him isn't good for the country or for the Republican Party. Their voters are already showing signs of concern that congressional Republicans are taking on the bad habits of the Democrats they ousted from power in 1994.
House Democrats finished their annual three-day retreat at the Homstead Resort in Virginia on Saturday. Among the topics they discussed was how to exploit the perception that Mr. Tauzin was being paid off for steering the Medicare prescription drug bill through Congress only two months ago, legislation Democrats say will be a big boon to drug companies. "If you want to know the price of selling seniors down the river," Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi told reporters, "it's approximately $2 million a year, if you want to hire the manager of the bill on the floor of the House." It doesn't help that Mr. Tauzin already has a wheeler-dealer image or that some House Democrats are still bitter with him for abandoning their caucus after more than 15 years to become a Republican in 1995.
Mr. Tauzin's office insists he is stepping down mainly for health reasons; he is 60 years old and was recently hospitalized for a bleeding ulcer. But his sudden interest in the top job at the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, known as Pharma, looks unseemly when the ink is barely dry on the massive prescription drug law. Only last month, he turned down an offer of more than $1 million a year from the Motion Picture Association of America, the film industry's lobbying arm. That would have been a much less controversial soft landing.
Some Republicans fear that Mr. Tauzin has sped up Washington's infamous "revolving door" between Congress and the K Street lobbying shops to a point that could hurt the public perception of Congress. Rep. Deborah Pryce of Ohio, head of the House Republican Conference, admitted to reporters last month that she is worried the Tauzin job offer will make it easier for Democrats to bash the GOP as a tool of pharmaceutical companies. While Mr. Tauzin would be barred from lobbying members of Congress for a year after he leaves office, nothing prevents him from sitting down with executive branch officials with suggestions on how they might draft the drug bill's regulations.
Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana, who was one of only 25 GOP House members to vote against the Medicare bill, says Democratic colleagues have told him that the two major reasons they lost control of the House to the GOP in 1994 were the reckless liberalism of the Clinton administration during its first two years and "the Jim Wright and House Bank scandals that convinced people that Democrats were looking out for themselves first. For our own good, I hope we don't fall into that trap."
He and other members say Mr. Tauzin's jackpot couldn't have come at a worse time. Last week, the House Ethics Committee revealed that for the past two months it has been investigating an allegation by Rep. Nick Smith, a Michigan Republican, that party leaders offered him a bribe in exchange for his vote on the Medicare bill. Mr. Smith voted against the bill and later said unnamed members of his party had said they'd contribute $100,000 to his son's congressional campaign if he had voted in favor. If not, Mr. Smith said, they told him they'd see that the younger Mr. Smith lost his race. Mr. Smith later recanted, saying his claim of bribery was "technically inaccurate" and has since refused to discuss the matter further.
But other GOP members stood by their stories of strong-arm tactics. South Carolina's Rep. Jim DeMint said contributors threatened to withhold donations for his upcoming Senate race unless he voted for the Medicare bill, while Rep. Todd Akin of Missouri said a state legislator threatened to run against him. Rep. Tom Feeney of Florida was told his path towards a party leadership position would be blocked if he voted against the bill.
Republicans should view such tactics and the bidding war for Mr. Tauzin on K Street as warning signs of ideological dry rot. No matter how well gerrymandered their districts, the GOP majority could be in jeopardy if it develops the same reputation for ruthlessness and selfishness that burdened the Democrats in the early 1990s.
If Republicans consolidate their control over Washington while failing to reduce the size of government, they will inevitably be caught up in the care and feeding of the state. Industries that want favors or protection from government will seek out and hire powerful people to move the levers of power. F.A. Hayek warned decades ago against the dangers of a creeping corporate welfare state: "As the coercive power of the state will alone decide who is to have what, the only power worth having will be a share in the exercise of the directing power."
K Street is beginning to fill up with Republican lobbyists as companies realize the near-monopoly that Democrats had on lobbying jobs no longer makes sense. Lobbying is becoming a family affair. At least 17 current senators and 11 House members have had close relatives working in lobbying or government relations.
Some Republican lobbyists pride themselves on advocating free markets and deregulation, but too often they also take on questionable projects. Before he became chairman of the Republican National Committee last year, Ed Gillespie ran a lobbying practice with former Clinton White House counsel Jack Quinn. They successfully pushed for tariff protections for American steel makers, an economic and foreign-policy disaster President Bush had to pull the plug on last year. Former Rep. Vin Weber has successfully held up the deregulation agenda of FCC Chairman Michael Powell. GOP lobbyists respond that they are only following in the footsteps of Democrats such as Reps. John Dingell and Tony Coelho who in the 1980s perfected the cozy connections between Capitol Hill and K Street.
Naturally, liberal newspapers and ethics watchdog groups propose to deal with the Tauzin problem with new restrictions on lobbying. One sensible idea is to extend to departing members of Congress the yearlong ban on lobbying executive branch officials that already applies to congressional staffers. Other proposed rules are probably unworkable. The Los Angeles Times suggests that lawmakers be banned from direct lobbying for three years and also not be allowed to negotiate a new job while they're still in office. Bob Livingston, the former Appropriations Committee chairman who now operates one of Washington's most popular lobbying shops, says such rules are impractical and would prevent qualified people from seeking seats in Congress "because they won't be able to provide financial security for their families after leaving office."
The problem is that voters have never felt that Congress should be a stepping stone for lucrative postretirement careers. Every few years someone conspicuously crosses an unseen line and rubs the face of the American people in the seamy side of Washington influence peddling. In the 1980s, an infamous Time cover photo of former Reagan White House aide Mike Deaver making lobbying calls from his car led to public outrage and Mr. Deaver's indictment on charges that he lied to a grand jury, He was fined $100,000 and required to complete 1,500 hours of community service. In 2001, President Clinton's midnight pardons of disgraced financier Marc Rich and others confirmed the worst suspicions of many about his character.
Mr. Tauzin's transgression isn't in that league, but blogger Mickey Kaus nonetheless writes that it "provides a Washington scandal that virtually everyone in the press can feel righteous about playing up. Meanwhile, what pol is going to risk his or her neck to defend a once-powerful Congressman who has given up his power."
There is a strong chance that the Tauzin scandal--coupled with the Nick Smith bribery controversy--will only build in coming days. The fear of that may be why Pharma is taking a wait and see attitude towards formally signing up Mr. Tauzin. Rumors have it that internal memos from the pharmaceutical industry that refer to Mr. Tauzin as someone who will always do the industry's bidding may be leaked to the media by his jealous colleagues.
But this political firestorm may die out if Pharma executives realize that Mr. Tauzin is already damaged and thus would be less effective as a lobbyist. Mr. Tauzin ought to be in pictures; the MPAA's offer was quite generous. If he insists on pursuing the drug industry's even more lucrative deal he will only create headaches and embarrassment for all concerned.
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North Korea balks, then agrees to talk. Why now?
By Tom Tobback
BEIJING - "Time is not on the American side," said North Korea's vice foreign minister, Kim Gye-gwan, to Jack Pritchard, the former United States negotiator with North Korea, when he visited the Yongbyon nuclear facilities in North Korea last month. And, Kim added: "As time passes, our nuclear deterrent continues to grow in quantity and quality."
Indeed, time is not on the US side in this nuclear standoff. However, the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea's (DPRK's) recent and rather surprising announcement that it has agreed to resume the six-party talks in Beijing on February 25 indicates that time is not entirely on North Korea's side either.
North Korea's leader Kim Jong-il agreed in principle to participate in a second round of six-party talks when China's Number 2 leader, chairman of the standing committee of the National People's Congress Wu Bangguo, visited him in Pyongyang last October. The DPRK had described the first round of talks that took place in Beijing last August as a waste of time.
So to ensure progress in the second round of talks, which involve North and South Korea, China, Japan, Russia and the US, Pyongyang demanded - and has been demanding - agreement on a joint statement before the talks. This proviso was supported by China after US President George W Bush stated he was willing to discuss a written multilateral security guarantee. However, in December Pyongyang announced additional conditions for its proposed first step, a re-freeze of the Yongbyon nuclear facilities that had been under inspection from 1994 to 2002 by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The US accused North Korea of setting preconditions for the talks, and the six-party process seemed to have hit a deadlock. Then suddenly last week the official (North) Korea Central News Agency announced, "The DPRK and the US, the major parties concerned to the six-way talks, and China, the host country, agreed to resume the next round of the six-way talks from February 25 after having a series of discussion."
Officials in Seoul said that the DPRK had not bothered to notify the US or South Korea before announcing this decision.
Pyongyang drops precondition, scope limited
Pyongyang has obviously dropped its demand for a pre-talks joint statement. At the talks, North Korea will expectedly elaborate on its known proposal for "simultaneous actions" and the other parties will then respond. Thus the scope is minimal, and that is probably why the duration of the talks has not yet been announced. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Losyukov warned not to expect any breakthrough, given the disagreement over the proposed joint pre-talks statement.
North Korea has done its best to convince the US of its nuclear deterrent by showing the recent private US delegation reprocessed plutonium at Yongbyon, and DPRK officials reportedly were disappointed when US nuclear scientist Siegfried Hecker told them he had seen nothing that convinced him Pyongyang possesses a nuclear deterrent.
On the other hand, Pyongyang assured the delegation it does not have the uranium enrichment program US intelligence claims to know about. Possibly North Korea wants to capitalize on doubts about the Bush administration's use of intelligence. Last week KCNA stated: "Now the Bush administration finds itself in a tight corner as it provoked a war against Iraq after deceiving Americans and the world."
Other recent events might have also have convinced Pyongyang that a continuing crisis does not serve its interests. The US-led international consortium KEDO (Korea Energy Development Organization) responsible for building the two light-water reactors in exchange for the freeze of Yongbyon in 1994, halted work on the project on December 1.
After Libya vowed to dismantle its secret nuclear program on December 22, evidence is emerging of a nuclear black market run by the Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, who admitted last week to having passed nuclear secrets to various countries - including the DPRK.
Japan threatens economic sanctions
Other incentives to North Korea are the desperate state of the country's population and its economy. The Japanese parliament's decision last week to allow the government to impose economic sanctions and halt trade between the two neighboring countries could hurt the DPRK's economy severely.
According to the deputy director of the DPRK Finance Ministry, Yang Chang-yoon, Pyongyang does need outside assistance and loans to resuscitate its economy, despite the issuance of state bonds last year. One of North Korea's first demands is to be removed from the US list of terrorism-sponsoring nations and to be allowed to join international financial institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Today the UN World Food Program (WFP) in Beijing warned that its cereal stocks in North Korea are all but depleted, with little donations in the pipeline. "We are scraping the bottom of the barrel," Masood Hyder, the WFP's representative in Pyongyang, told a news conference here. "Over four million core beneficiaries - the most vulnerable children, women and elderly people - are now deprived of very vital rations. It's the middle of the harsh Korean winter and they need more food, not less."
Some observers argue that Pyongyang's decision to resume the six-party talks is the result of external political and economic pressure. On the other hand, having the talks take place during the current uproar over the uses of US intelligence about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction might enable Pyongyang to keep its alleged uranium-based nuclear program off the table - at least in this round. However, if Pyongyang is not prepared to make further major concessions at the talks, the six-party process is likely to derail.
After his latest visit to the DPRK's Yongbyon nuclear facilities, US negotiator Jack Pritchard brought up a scenario in which this could exactly be Pyongyang's intention, or at least a realistic option. Pritchard is concerned that the talks will fail and that Pyongyang will withdraw from the diplomatic process. If it then declares it has produced all the nuclear weapons it needs and does not intend to make more, China, South Korea, and Russia might accept this as a status quo, arguing the threat is minimal. This would dissolve the six-party process, and would leave the region a lot less secure.
Tom Tobback is the creator and editor of Pyongyang Square, a website dedicated to providing independent information on North Korea. He is based in Beijing.
(Copyright 2004 Asia Times Online Co, Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact content@atimes.com for information on our sales and syndication policies.)
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Nordkorea: UNO ruft humanit?ren Notstand aus
Weltern?hrungs?programm hat keine Vorr?te mehr: "Wir kratzen Reste aus den Tonnen zusammen" - ?sterreich will helfen
Johnny Erling aus Peking
Link
Das Weltern?hrungsprogramm im Netz
Nordkoreas Regierung steht zwei Wochen vor dem Beginn der Pekinger Sechs-L?nder- Verhandlungen zur Beilegung ihres Atomstreits mit den USA vor einer neuen humanit?ren Katastrophe an der heimischen Front. Das UN-Weltern?hrungsprogramm WFP (World Food Programme) rief am Montag auf einer Pressekonferenz in Peking den Notstand f?r die Versorgung des Landes aus. Die Organisation hat ihre Vorr?te an Nahrungsmitteln aufgebraucht.
Sie hatte bereits im Vorjahr vor so einer Krise gewarnt, nachdem die internationale Spendenbereitschaft auf den tiefsten Stand seit Beginn der Hungerwinter 1995 gesunken war. Das WFP muss f?r mindestens zwei Monate mehr als sechs Millionen hungernde Nordkoreaner, vor allem Alte, Frauen und Kinder, in ihrer Notlage alleine lassen.
"Totale Einstellung"
"Das ist keine Einschr?nkung der Versorgungshilfe mehr. Wir reden von der totalen Einstellung", sagte der UNO-Gesandte f?r Nordkorea, Masood Hyder. "Wir kratzen buchst?blich Reste aus den Tonnen zusammen." Hyder appellierte an alle Nationen, "so schnell wie m?glich weitere Hilfe zu leisten".
Seit Anfang Februar sind die Rationen auf 250 Gramm Nahrungsmittel pro Tag und Person zusammengeschmolzen. Sie k?nnen nur noch an 83.000 Menschen, die sich in allergr??ter Not befinden, ausgegeben werden, darunter an 75.000 schwangere Frauen und 8000 Babys und Kleinkinder in Waisenheimen.
Nordkoreaner erhalten ?ber das staatliche Verteilungssystem nur noch 300 Gramm Reis und Mais pro Person und Tag. Rund 40 Prozent ihrer Kinder sind laut Untersuchungen des WFP bereits chronisch unterern?hrt.
Emp?rung ?ber das Regime von Kim Jong-il, das sich durch den angedrohten Einsatz von Atomwaffen mit atomarer Erpressung am Leben erh?lt, die in vielen Gebieten nicht m?gliche ?berwachung der Verteilung von Lebensmitteln und die seit 1995 ununterbrochen notwendige humanit?re Hilfe f?r Nordkorea sind einige der Gr?nde f?r den internationalen Spendenr?ckgang.
Das WFP h?lt dennoch unbeirrt an seiner Aufgabe fest: "Wir k?nnen Kinder, Kranke und Alte nicht Opfer einer Lage werden lassen, die sie nicht verschuldet haben."
Ferrero-Waldner k?ndigt Hilfe an
?sterreich hat inzwischen Hilfe f?r die Hunger leidende Bev?lkerung in Nordkorea angek?ndigt. "Wir k?nnen dem Hunger in Nordkorea nicht tatenlos zusehen", erkl?rte Au?enministerin Benita Ferrero-Waldner (V) in einer Presseerkl?rung vom Montag. ?sterreich werde 1.000 Tonnen Nahrungsmittelhilfe f?r Nordkorea in Form von Baby- und Kindernahrung ?ber das Weltern?hrungsprogramm (WFP) abwickeln. (red/APA/DER STANDARD, Printausgabe, 10.2.2004)

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North Korean Group Calls for Japan to Be Excluded From Talks
Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- A North Korean state agency called for Japan to be excluded from six-nation talks scheduled for the end of the month after Japan moved to impose economic sanctions on the communist nation.
The North Korea-Japan Friendship Association asked the government ``not to have any bilateral contact with Japan nor allow Japan to participate in the six-way talks'' after Japan's lower house passed a bill that would allow it to impose economic sanctions on other countries, the official Korea Central News Agency reported.
North Korea ``has explicitly stated more than once that it would consider any sanctions or blockade against it as a declaration of a war and take legitimate self-defense measures,'' the report cited the association as saying.
North Korea agreed to take part in the talks in Beijing, which will also include South Korea, the U.S., China and Russia, to try to resolve a 16-month impasse over its nuclear program.
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda said last month Japan would take ``appropriate'' steps in dealing with North Korea, including using the sanctions law.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Heejin Koo in Seoul at hjkoo@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor of this story:
Paul Tighe in Sydney at ptighe@bloomberg.net.
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M. Perben pr?pare le terrain judiciaire de M. Jupp?
LE MONDE | 09.02.04 | 13h11 * MIS A JOUR LE 09.02.04 | 14h00
Le ministre de la justice, Dominique Perben, "d?ment formellement", dans un communiqu? publi? lundi en milieu de journ?e, les affirmations selon lesquelles une ?tude serait en cours ? la chancellerie sur le remboursement des sommes dues ? la Ville de Paris.
Dominique Perben a indiqu? au Monde, dimanche 8 f?vrier, en marge du congr?s de l'UMP, que la chancellerie analyse le jugement prononc? par le tribunal de Nanterre contre d'Alain Jupp? pour v?rifier si le remboursement des sommes dues ? la ville de Paris peut modifier la situation judiciaire du pr?sident de l'UMP. "Une ?tude est en cours", a affirm? le garde des sceaux, "pour voir quelles seraient les cons?quences judiciaires de ce remboursement". M. Perben a pr?cis? que l'arr?t de la cour d'appel de Versailles n'interviendra sans doute pas avant le d?but de l'ann?e prochaine.
La pol?mique sur les suites de cette affaire continue. M. Perben s'en est pris ? Roger-G?rard Schwartzenberg, d?put? (app. PS) du Val-de-Marne, l'accusant de "m?langer" justice et politique. Samedi 7 f?vrier, M. Schwartzenberg s'?tait adress? au ministre de la justice, lui demandant s'il comptait "ou non engager des poursuites devant les juridictions ordinaires contre les ministres qui ont enfreint l'article 434-25 du code p?nal" apr?s les propos tenus par certains d'entre eux au lendemain de la d?cision des juges de Nanterre. "Avant de faire des d?clarations, M. Schwartzenberg aurait d? relire la loi, car il aurait d?couvert tr?s clairement qu'aucune d?claration de ministre n'a jet? le discr?dit sur la justice", a r?pliqu? M. Perben.
Par ailleurs, le garde des sceaux a d?plor? "l'emballement incroyable" qu'a suscit? la mise en place de la mission d'enqu?te administrative, ? la demande du pr?sident de la R?publique. "Je trouve d?solante la contestation de la m?thode qui est la seule m?thode s?rieuse si on veut aller jusqu'au bout" de l'enqu?te, a indiqu? M. Perben.
AUTOMATICIT? DES PEINES
Justifiant la mise ? l'?cart du Conseil sup?rieur de la magistrature (CSM) dans le d?clenchement de cette proc?dure exceptionnelle, M. Perben a rappell? que "le CSM ne pouvait pas" ?tre saisi de cette enqu?te car "il n'est pas comp?tent pour contr?ler les services techniques comme les t?l?communications ou l'interception des ?coutes".
Jacques Barrot, pr?sident du groupe UMP de l'Assembl?e nationale, a comment? le jugement de Nanterre, dimanche, sur Europe 1 en estimant que "ses attendus sont tr?s durement r?dig?s", qualifiant ?galement de "contestable" l'automaticit? des peines.
Yves Bordenave

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M. Delors contre "le berlusconisme"
Interrog?, dimanche 8 f?vrier, par Radio J, sur la condamnation d'Alain Jupp?, Jacques Delors a critiqu? "le ch?ur des d?put?s UMP, -qui- ont des propos qui mettent en cause la justice et qui exercent une pression sur le tribunal d'appel". L'ancien pr?sident de la Commission europ?enne a souhait? que "la France ne fasse pas du berlusconisme sans le savoir", allusion au conflit ouvert entre le pr?sident du conseil italien et la justice.
La d?claration de M. Delors r?pond ?galement aux propos tenus, jeudi 5 f?vrier, par Silvio Berlusconi, en marge du congr?s organis? ? Bruxelles par le Parti populaire europ?en (PPE). Apr?s avoir adress? un "message de solidarit?" ? M. Jupp?, le pr?sident du conseil italien avait d?nonc? "une forme de communisme -consistant ?- ?liminer l'adversaire en faisant un usage politique de la justice".
* ARTICLE PARU DANS L'EDITION DU 10.02.04
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Perben, avocat de luxe pour Alain Jupp??
Le garde des Sceaux a d?menti les informations parues dans ?Le Monde? selon lesquelles ses services ?tudieraient les b?n?fices d'un changement de d?fense d'Alain Jupp? en vue de son proc?s en appel * Un incident ?scandaleux? pour les syndicats de magistrats *
Par Lib?ration.fr
lundi 09 f?vrier 2004 (Liberation.fr - 17:19)
Parole de ministre contre parole de journaliste. Selon ?Le Monde? dat? de mardi, le garde des Sceaux, Dominique Perben, aurait confi? ce week-end, en marge du congr?s de l'UMP, que la Chancellerie examinait quelles pourraient ?tre les cons?quences d'un remboursement des sommes dues ? la ville de Paris sur la situation judiciaire d'Alain Jupp?. ?Une ?tude est en cours pour voir quelles seraient les cons?quences judiciaires de ce remboursement?, aurait l?ch? le ministre de la Justice. Apr?s la publication lundi matin de cette information, Dominique Perben a d?menti cat?goriquement ces ?affirmations?.
Contact? par Reuters, le journaliste du ?Monde?, Yves Bordenave, a maintenu que le garde des Sceaux avait bien fait ces d?clarations en salle de presse du congr?s de l'UMP, lors d'un apart? avec plusieurs journalistes. ?Le Monde? a d'ailleurs indiqu? qu'il maintiendrait sa version des faits dans son ?dition dat?e de mercredi.
L'affaire des emplois fictifs ? la Mairie de Paris, qui a valu au patron de l'UMP une condamnation ? 18 mois de prison avec sursis et 10 ans d'in?ligibilit?, aurait caus?, selon l'actuel maire socialiste, Bertrand Delano?, un pr?judice de 1,2 million d'euros ? la ville. D?s l'annonce de la condamnation de Jupp?, Delano? avait souhait? que ?les sommes d?tourn?es du patrimoine municipal soient restitu?es ? la ville de Paris?.
Poursuivi ? la fois comme ancien secr?taire g?n?ral du RPR et adjoint aux Finances ? la mairie de Paris, Jupp?, qui a d?cid? de faire appel et de conserver ses fonctions et mandats, s'est vu reprocher d'avoir couvert la r?mun?ration par la Ville de sept personnes qui travaillaient en r?alit? pour son parti. S'il remboursait entre les deux proc?s, la cour d'appel de Versailles semblerait n?anmoins toujours tenue de le condamner, puisque le paiement serait une forme d'aveu.
R?agissant aux informations du ?Monde?, les Verts ont d?nonc? une ?grave confusion entre l'Etat? et un parti politique. Dans un communiqu?, Alain Riou, pr?sident du groupe ?cologiste au conseil de Paris, assure qu'en d?cidant la mise en place d'une ?tude sur un possible remboursement des sommes dues ? la municipalit?, Perben ?se livre ? une grave confusion, en mettant les services de l'Etat ? la disposition d'un justiciable, voire d'un parti politique?. ?Il ne s'agit pas d'emplois fictifs, mais d'emplois d?tourn?s?, ajoute-t-il.
Pour les magistrats, d?j? remont?s par ?l'affaire dans l'affaire?, qui a vu une mise ? l'?cart du Conseil sup?rieur de la magistrature (CSM) dans le d?clenchement de la mission d'enqu?te administrative charg?e de faire le point sur les pressions pr?sum?es dont les juges ont ?t? victimes, il s'agit d'un nouveau coup bas. L'Union syndicale des magistrats (USM, majoritaire et mod?r?e) a d?clar? lundi qu'il n'appartenait pas ? la Chancellerie ?de r?fl?chir ? la d?fense d'un pr?venu quel qu'il soit. Ce r?le appartient ? l'avocat de la d?fense?. Le Syndicat de la magistrature (SM, gauche et minoritaire) rench?rit: ?Si, effectivement, le garde des Sceaux a demand? ? ses services de diligenter une ?tude, c'est scandaleux?. Un ?nouvel incident? qui illustre, selon le syndicat, ?de mani?re plus g?n?rale la volont? du Garde des sceaux de s'ing?rer dans les affaires judiciaires et d'utiliser la justice ? des fins politiques?.
Les syndicats de magistrats craignent ?galement des man?uvres qui viseraient ? pr?parer un proc?s en appel plus favorable ? Alain Jupp? d'ici un an ? Versailles. Ils s'inqui?tent notamment de voir circuler le nom de Jean-Claude Marin, actuel directeur des affaires criminelles et proche collaborateur de Dominique Perben au minist?re, comme candidat au poste de procureur g?n?ral de la cour d'appel de Versailles en remplacement de Henri Desclaux, qui doit partir en retraite dans les prochains mois. Le poste est strat?gique puisque c'est le procureur g?n?ral qui sera charg? de fixer l'attitude de l'accusation lors des audiences ? venir.
? Lib?ration
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JUSTICE
Affaire Jupp? : pol?mique
autour de l'?tude de Perben
Selon le Monde, une ?tude est en cours ? la Chancellerie pour examiner les cons?quences judiciaires pour Alain Jupp? d'un remboursement des sommes dues ? la ville de Paris. Dominique Perben d?ment.
Dominique Perben (AP)
Alors que le quotidien Le Monde indique dans ses colonnes que le ministre de la Justice a lanc? une ?tude sur les cons?quences judiciaires de la condamnation d'Alain Jupp?, Dominique Perben d?ment formellment cette affrimation. Dominique Perben a d?clar? qu'une ?tude ?tait en cours ? la Chancellerie pour examiner les cons?quences judiciaires pour Alain Jupp? d'un remboursement des sommes dues ? la ville de Paris dans l'affaire des emplois fictifs du RPR, avance Le Monde dans son ?dition dat?e de mardi. Dominique Perben, "d?ment formellement" dans un communiqu? publi?e lundi les affirmations parues dans le journal.
Pour sa part, le Syndicat de la magistrature (SM, gauche et minoritaire) a jug? "scandaleux" l'?tude que m?nerait la Chancellerie. "Si, effectivement, le Garde des Sceaux a demand? ? ses services de diligenter une ?tude, c'est scandaleux", a d?clar? la pr?sidente du SM, A?da Chouk.
Ing?rence
Interrog? sur la r?alit? de ces propos, la Chancellerie n'avait pas r?agi en d?but d'apr?s-midi.
"La Chancellerie n'a pas ? ?tre le conseiller juridique de personnes qui ont ?t? condamn?es en premi?re instance par un tribunal", a soulign? A?da Chouk.
"Ce nouvel incident illustre de mani?re plus g?n?rale la volont? du Garde des sceaux de s'ing?rer dans les affaires judiciaires et d'utiliser la justice ? des fins politiques", a conclu la responsable syndicale.
Confusion
Dans un communiqu?, Alain Riou, pr?sident du groupe Vert au Conseil de Paris assure qu'avec ces propos sur les cons?quences du remboursement, "le Garde des Sceaux affirme une conviction : celle qu'Alain Jupp? est coupable et n'a aucune chance de ne pas ?tre condamn? en deuxi?me instance".
"Au moins, contrairement ? ses coll?gues, il n'attaque pas les juges", ajoute l'?lu parisien. "Mais il se livre ? une grave confusion, en mettant les services de l'Etat ? la disposition d'un justiciable, voire m?me d'un parti politique. Il ne s'agit pas d'emplois fictifs, mais d'emplois d?tourn?s", ajoute Alain Riou.
Le maire PS de Paris Bertrand Delano? avait ?voqu? plusieurs millions d'euros de pr?judice, mais il s'agit, pr?cise-t-on ? la mairie, de millions de francs, soit, pr?cis?ment, 1,2 million d'euros.

? Le Nouvel Observateur 1999/2000
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Perben et l'affaire Jupp?
Le ministre de la Justice "d?ment formellement" des d?clarations au "Monde"
"Une ?tude est en cours" pour "voir quelles seraient les cons?quences judiciaires" pour Alain Jupp? d'un remboursement des sommes dues ? la ville de Paris d?tourn?es pour r?mun?rer des permanents du RPR, aurait d?clar? au journal Dominique Perben.
"Le Monde" date de mardi affirme avoir interrog? le ministre ce week-end en marge du congr?s de l'UMP
?Le communiqu? du garde des Sceaux
"Dominique Perben, garde des Sceaux, ministre de la Justice d?ment formellement les affirmations selon lesquelles une ?tude serait en cours ? la Chancellerie concernant un remboursement des sommes dans le cadre de l'affaire ayant abouti ? la condamnation r?cente de Monsieur Alain Jupp?", a affirm? le ministre de la Justice dans un communiqu?.
Le pr?sident de l'UMP et d?put?-maire de Bordeaux, Alain Jupp?, a ?t? condamn? ? 18 mois de prison avec sursis et 10 ans d'in?ligibilit? dans le proc?s des emplois fictifs de la mairie de Paris au profit du RPR. Il a fait appel, ce qui lui permet de garder ses mandats jusqu'? un autre proc?s en appel.
Le maire de Paris Bertrand Delano? estime ? "plusieurs millions d'euros" le pr?judice subi par la ville dans l'affaire des emplois fictifs du RPR.
Les d?clarations de Dominique Perben "sont surprenantes", a d?clar? l'Union syndicale des magistrats, principal syndicat de magistrats. "Ce n'est pas le r?le de la direction des affaires criminelles et des gr?ces du minist?re de la Justice de r?fl?chir ? la d?fense d'un pr?venu quel qu'il soit. Ce r?le appartient ? l'avocat de la d?fense", ajoute l'USM.
"D'un point de vue juridique, il revient aux seuls magistrats d'appel d'appr?cier les efforts effectu?s par la personne condamn?e en premi?re instance pour indemniser la victime", rappelle le syndicat.
Au Syndicat de la magistrature (gauche), les propos du ministre ont ?galement suscit? l'?tonnement. "Il ne me semble pas normal que la chancellerie ?tudie la situation de justiciables. Le garde des Sceaux peut donner des instructions aux parquets mais pas des conseils aux justiciables. Cela souligne la dangerosit? d'un pouvoir d'action minist?riel sur la justice", a d?clar? ? A?da Chouk, pr?sidente du Syndicat de la magistrature.
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A Saudi Home
Al Qaeda in the kingdom.
By Evan Kohlmann
These days, there appears to be serious internal controversy in Saudi Arabia over the degree to which al Qaeda has managed to infiltrate the kingdom. In mid-January, an unnamed Saudi official admitted to the Associated Press that his country had discovered "a number" of al Qaeda terrorist training camps hidden in the desert of the Arabian Peninsula. This assertion was quickly downplayed by Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayif, who countered that "there are no training or terror camps in the kingdom, not yesterday, not today... He who says the kingdom harbors terrorism should reconsider his words." Prince Nayif's denial is in inexplicable contrast to his own previous admission last July that at least a "small number" of al Qaeda militants active in the region had indeed been recently "trained on farms and the like" on Saudi soil. In fact, the interior minister has contradicted not only himself, but also compelling visual evidence distributed on the Internet confirming the presence of al Qaeda safehouses and training camps inside Saudi Arabia.
Until approximately November 2001, the vast majority of hardcore al Qaeda recruits were schooled in the arts of sabotage and terrorism at Osama bin Laden's main operational bases in southern and eastern Afghanistan -- including such notorious camps as Al-Sadda, Al-Farooq, Khalden, Jihad Wal, and Derunta. Video recordings of training at the Afghan camps depict an education in everything from basic physical fitness to the operation of advanced shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles (such as the one that narrowly missed an Israeli civilian airliner in Kenya over a year ago). Ahmed Ressam, an al Qaeda-trained terrorist who sought to blow up Los Angeles International Airport on the eve of the Millennium, testified in federal court how he was taught advanced urban-warfare skills at these centers, varying from "how to blow up the infrastructure of a country... Electric plants, gas plants, airports, railroads, large corporations" to "how to mix poisons with other substances... designed to be used against intelligence officers and other VIPs."
Within only weeks of the 9/11 tragedy, U.S. military forces and their Northern Alliance partners were able to put the notorious Afghan jihad camps permanently out of operation. As the hardened mountain fortresses of bin Laden and his acolytes fell to coalition troops, the membership of al Qaeda fled across the Hindu Kush into Pakistan, seeking a safe haven among conservative local tribesmen and sympathetic Taliban-style fundamentalist groups located just across the border. Some of bin Laden's scattered cadres decided to remain in the relative safety of Pakistan -- yet others, particularly those from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and other regions of the Arabian Peninsula, were able to quietly return to their homelands.
Rather than assimilating back into Gulf society, these arriving extremists were quickly reorganized into new terrorist cells by a highly intricate and developed network of al Qaeda henchmen headquartered in the Arabian Peninsula. Before his death this past summer, Shaykh Yousef Al-Ayyiri (a.k.a. "the Cutting Edge") sat near the top of this network. Al-Ayyiri was a well-known and well-liked figure in al Qaeda who had reportedly first joined the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan at the youthful age of 18. Impressed by his enthusiasm and skills as a combatant, al Qaeda gave Al-Ayyiri a position of high importance within the organization as the commander of a training camp in Afghanistan, and also as a personal bodyguard to Osama bin Laden. Knowledgeable sources say that Al-Ayyiri was handpicked in 1993 to travel to Somalia with al Qaeda's most senior military commander -- Abu Hafs Al-Masri -- in order to help instruct radical Islamic militias on how to shoot down U.S. helicopters with rocket-propelled grenades.
Al-Ayyiri returned to his home in Saudi Arabia, only to be allegedly imprisoned by Saudi authorities in connection with the 1995 bombing of a joint Saudi-U.S. military office in Riyadh. The bombing (which left five U.S. citizens dead) was later blamed on fanatic supporters of Osama bin Laden. Nevertheless, despite his close, personal connections to bin Laden, Al-Ayyiri was eventually freed by Saudi authorities. A harsh stint in prison apparently did nothing to temper Al-Ayyiri's gusto for violence and bloodshed. He remained in the Kingdom, raising money for the emerging Taliban movement in Afghanistan and offering strategic advice to various al Qaeda-linked military leaders around the world.
According to the reputed al Qaeda publication Sawt Al-Jihad (Voice of Jihad), Al-Ayyiri "was so joyous he nearly floated on air" when he learned of the "happy events" of September 11, 2001. As a firm proponent of the international jihad against America, he refocused his efforts primarily on two main causes: using the Internet as a vehicle to recruit and propagandize on behalf of al Qaeda, and setting up covert training camps for terror recruits inside Saudi Arabia, similar to the remote base that Ayyiri had once presided over in Afghanistan.
An authentic al Qaeda video released on the Internet in early December featured scenes of black-clad, hooded men carrying out indoor urban-warfare training exercises at a camp inside Saudi Arabia known as Al-Istirahat Al-Amana (the Guesthouse of Goodness). The footage was allegedly filmed during mid-2003, and at least one of the featured trainees was later killed during a confrontation with Saudi security forces. No matter how one chooses to characterize the Al-Istirahat facility, there can be no doubt as to the intentions of those who received terrorist "refresher" courses there. Following their recorded training exercises, the men gathered closely together, brandishing their automatic weapons and singing jihadist tunes. One of the men -- Abdallah Al-Utaibi -- goes on in the video to read a martyrdom will while sitting in the Al-Istirahat camp, begging God to "destroy" the United States.
The presence of these camps -- and Yousef Al-Ayyiri's key role in creating them -- was confirmed in an electronic communiqu? issued in late December by a group calling itself "al Qaeda's Military Committee in the Arabian Peninsula." The "Cutting Edge" manual was given its name "for the great efforts of Sheikh Yousef Al-Ayyiri... One of his last blessed deeds was to establish several training camps in [Saudi Arabia] which several of the hero mujahadeen have come from." The communiqu? contained articles from, among others, al Qaeda's reputed senior military commander Saif Al-Adel, lecturing to faithful supporters that "these are times of jihad and preparation for jihad." Finally, the manual suggests that those who are unable "travel to other lands" in order to "join the great camps" can instead covertly mimic their unique and demanding training regimen at home. The loyal soldiers of the late Al-Ayyiri continue to eagerly spread his message and teachings via the Internet, promising terrible revenge against the "crusaders" and the Saudi elite.
Undoubtedly, al Qaeda's assembly-line production of terrorist recruits has found a new headquarters in the heart of Arabia. Inside the Saudi capital, terrorist cells are regularly discovered plotting the assassinations of royal officials and the suicide bombings of foreign embassies and compounds. Others have targeted Western military and civilian aircraft in the Kingdom with mobile, surface-to-air missile launchers. Even the holiest city in Islam -- Mecca -- has come into the crosshairs of these merciless fanatics. Thus, it is highly discomforting that senior Saudi officials continue to deny the very existence of underground training camps like "The Guesthouse of Goodness." Al Qaeda has proven time and time again that it intends to overthrow the Saudi kingdom by means of violence and install a fundamentalist Islamic government in the Arabian Peninsula. The regime in Riyadh can pretend to ignore this potent threat only to our own shared peril.
-- Evan Kohlmann is a senior terrorism consultant for the Washington, D.C.-based Investigative Project and author of the upcoming book, Al Qaida's Jihad in Europe: the Afghan-Bosnian Network, to be released by Berg Publishers in June 2004.
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Report: Saudis, Yemen May Erect a Fence
Feb 9, 3:00 PM (ET)
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - In a bid to stop arms smuggling and terror attacks, Saudi and Yemeni officials will meet soon to review plans to build a fence along their frontier, a pan-Arab newspaper reported Monday.
Lt. Gen. Talal Anqawi, head of the Saudi border police, told the London-based al-Sharq al-Awsat that the concrete fence would be effective in preventing smuggling and infiltration, especially by car.
The newspaper said the meeting was being held to avoid an escalation of Yemeni objections to the fence.
Anqawi refused to call it a barrier, and said the fence was well within Saudi territory and should not be viewed as encroaching on common border areas.
The paper added that there was a similar fence on some parts of the Saudi-Kuwaiti border.
Both Saudi Arabia and Yemen are U.S. allies in the war against terror and have been hit by terrorist attacks at home.
After suicide bombings in Riyadh, the Saudi capital, in May and November, the Saudis stepped up security along their southern border with Yemen, a traditional route for drug and arms smuggling. In June, both states signed an agreement to upgrade border surveillance.
Saudi officials believe most of the weapons used in militant operations in Saudi Arabia - including the May suicide attacks - are smuggled in from Yemen, an impoverished country at the southern tip of the Arabian peninsula that has long been awash in small arms - an estimated 60 million, or three for each of its 20 million people, authorities say.
In December, Saudi authorities announced they had arrested 4,047 people and seized large quantities of weapons and drugs in the south along the border with Yemen.
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Israeli Court Pledges Quick Ruling on Wall
Feb 9, 6:39 PM (ET)
By STEVE WEIZMAN
(AP) Israeli border police stand guard as workers put concrete pieces into place during the construction...
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JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel's Supreme Court promised a speedy ruling on a petition to halt construction of Israel's separation barrier in the West Bank, a landmark case seen as a dress rehearsal for a world court hearing over the contentious project.
The court heard arguments in the case Monday, a day after the government said it would change the route to minimize hardship for Palestinians and gain Washington's support against the legal challenges.
The rights group behind the petition said the partially built network of walls, razor wire and trenches infringes on human rights and violates international law. The Center for the Defense of the Individual said that if Israel wants a barrier, it should be built on territory it held before seizing the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war.
State attorney Michael Blass told the court the 440-mile barrier is necessary to keep out Palestinian suicide bombers, who have killed hundreds in three years of violence.
(AP) Palestinians carry the body of Shadi Jaradat, an Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades member, during his...
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"It is not we who unleashed the demon of terror," Blass said.
The planned route cuts deep into the West Bank in several places and encircles Palestinian towns and villages, cutting off tens of thousands of people. Palestinians say it is a land grab aimed at preventing them from creating a state.
Chief Justice Aharon Barak said the three-judge panel would rule "as soon as possible."
Barak didn't say whether the decision would come before the International Court of Justice in the Netherlands takes up the question of the barrier's legality. Those hearings are set to begin Feb. 23 at The Hague.
Any Israeli court decision could affect Israel's case before the world court, which is to issue an advisory ruling at the request of the U.N. General Assembly.
Israel challenges the world court's right to rule on the barrier, arguing that the issue is being manipulated by its opponents for political ends.
"We don't think the Hague court needs to debate this," Blass told the court. "We think the issue should be resolved between the sides."
The barrier plan is one of several unilateral steps being considered by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. On Monday, senior Palestinian official Yasser Abed Rabbo said the Palestinians are considering a unilateral step of their own - declaration of an independent state that would include the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem.
Several other groups also filed objections about aspects of the barrier project. Human rights lawyer Avigdor Feldman, representing one of the petitioners, said the world court case should be an incentive for the Israeli court to make an exhaustive examination of the facts.
"The Hague hearing is in the background," he told Barak.
Other lawyers said that a full-scale Israeli judicial review, generating responses by expert witnesses and written legal opinions, could provide useful ammunition to Israeli advocates at the Hague, while demonstrating the Israeli court's own competence.
Joining the case on the government side, a pro-barrier group called "Fence for Life" said it would save not only Israelis from attacks; but it would also spare Palestinians the almost automatic Israeli military retaliation.
"If we have the fence as fast as possible, casualties on both sides will cease," group chairman Ilan Tzion told reporters outside the courtroom.
On Sunday, Sharon adviser Zalman Shoval said Israel will change the route the barrier to cause less hardship for the Palestinians and foster U.S. support. Washington agrees with Israel that the international court is not the proper venue for the case but objects to the route of the barrier because of the disruption it causes Palestinians.
Israel wants to "make things as easy as possible for Palestinians who need to get to their fields (and) to have fewer checkpoints," Shoval said.
In another development, Palestinian officials said Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia and Sharon would hold their first meeting on Feb. 21 or 22. Aides to the two premiers have met on and off for weeks to set up the summit, which is seen as a key for restarting stalled peace talks.
Qureia was in Dublin, Ireland, where he met with Prime Minister Bertie Ahern on Monday and said Israel must not build on "one single inch" of the West Bank. Ireland holds the rotating presidency of the 15-nation European Union, a major financial sponsor of the Palestinian Authority.
Meanwhile, a new poll found that Palestinian support for violence and suicide bombings against Israel has dropped sharply in more than three years of fighting.
Only 35 percent of respondents support continuing the violence, down from 43 percent in November and 73 percent in November 2000. The poll by the Palestinian Center for Public Opinion surveyed 500 Palestinian adults and had a margin of error of 4 percentage points.
But violence continued Monday, with two Palestinians killed in Gaza and another killed in the West Bank, Palestinians said.
One of the Palestinians killed in Gaza was identified as a member of Hamas, but Israel's army said it had no part in the man's death. The second was a 17-year-old youth, the Palestinians said. The military had no comment.
In the West Bank, a member of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades was killed in a shootout with Israeli soldiers near the town of Jenin. The military said he was shooting at construction workers near an Israeli settlement, wounding a soldier, and was hit by soldiers' return fire.
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Kuwait seeks probe of Halliburton fuel contract
KUWAIT CITY (APOnline) -- Kuwait's energy minister has asked the nation's top prosecutor to investigate allegations of profiteering in an Iraq fuel contract between the state-owned Kuwait Petroleum Corp. and the Kuwaiti supplier of a Halliburton (HAL) subsidiary.
"Press reports and talk on the street, some of which have cast suspicion on the honesty and integrity of others, have pushed me to refer this contract to the prosecutor-general for investigation," the minister, Sheik Ahmed Fahd Al Ahmed Al Sabah, told the official Kuwait News Agency.
He said the measure would give the judiciary the chance to "have the last word in the matter" because Kuwait wants to deal with the allegations "with full transparency" and put an end to rumors.
U.S. Department of Defense auditors have found that Kellogg Brown & Root, a Halliburton subsidiary, may have overcharged by $61 million for deliveries of gasoline from Kuwait to Iraq from May through September. Their investigation is in progress.
KBR's Kuwaiti supplier, Altanmia Marketing Co., was found to have charged more than twice what suppliers in Turkey did.
Both Halliburton, Vice President Dick Cheney's former company, and the Army Corp of Engineers, which oversaw the fuel contract, said the higher price was justified by the danger faced by fuel convoys in Iraq and the need to head off Iraqi anger over gasoline shortages.
Kuwait, a major U.S. ally in the Gulf, was the main staging ground for the war that ousted former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in April.
Houston-based Halliburton has complained repeatedly that criticism of its work in Iraq is politically motivated, in part because of its past ties with the vice president, who was the company's chairman from 1995 to 2000.
Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Nigeria to Probe Halliburton Allegations
Feb 6, 5:14 PM (ET)
By GILBERT DA COSTA
(AP) U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney during a speech to American troops at Aviano Air Base in Italy...
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ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) - Nigeria ordered an investigation Friday into allegations that a Halliburton Co. subsidiary paid $180 million in bribes to land a natural gas project contract in this West African nation. Vice President Dick Cheney was head of Halliburton at the time.
The allegations already are under scrutiny in the United States and France. A French magistrate has been investigating the payments for months. Probes by the U.S. Justice Department and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission were disclosed this week.
President Olusegun Obasanjo has ordered a "high-level investigation" into the allegations, presidential spokeswoman Remi Oyo said in Abuja, the capital.
Oyo said the investigation is being led by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, a body Obasanjo set up to fight rampant breaches of financial law.
The $4 billion Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Plant was built in the 1990s by a consortium that included Kellogg, Brown & Root, a unit of Houston-based Halliburton.
Cathy Gist, a Halliburton spokeswoman, said the Nigerian government had not notified the company of the probe and Halliburton didn't have reason to assume any of its employees or those employed by the joint venture had violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The act bars U.S. businesses and individuals from bribing foreign officials.
Gist said the company would cooperate with the U.S. officials' probe.
Justice Department officials disclosed Wednesday that the department was reviewing documents voluntarily provided by Halliburton to determine whether to launch a full investigation.
Halliburton, already under fire for its alleged overcharges in contracts related to the war in Iraq, revealed the Justice Department request in a Jan. 21 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
"Management made the decision to include these statements because of the politically charged environment in which we now operate," Gist said. "We are trying to keep the investment community informed of the accurate facts about the company's business."
According to Halliburton's filing, the illegal payment allegations involve a joint venture of which KBR was a 25 percent owner. The other partners were Technip SA of France, ENI SpA of Italy and Japan Gasoline Corp.
The filing says the Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission are reviewing the allegations. The payments for the gas plant contract were allegedly made to Nigerian officials.
The French magistrate looking into the accusations, Renaud Van Ruymbeke, has reportedly said in a memo that embezzlement charges could be filed against Cheney in Paris.
Cheney was Halliburton's chairman for five of the seven years in which the secret payments were allegedly made.
Cheney spokesman Kevin Kellems said Thursday that the vice president's office had no information about the matter. "We have not been contacted about it by anyone," Kellems said.
Nigeria is regularly rated by Berlin-based Transparency International as one of the world's two most corrupt nations; the other is Bangladesh. Payoffs are a frequent part of doing business here, from landing lucrative deals to having phones installed or electricity restored.
On the Net:
Halliburton: http://www.halliburton.com
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Libya Hands Over Chemical Weapons Summary
Feb 5, 4:11 PM (ET)
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - Libyan officials handed over an initial summary of the country's chemicals weapons stockpiles and programs to a team of international inspectors Thursday, the world's chemical weapons watchdog said.
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons gave no details on what Libya reported in a round of initial meetings Thursday, the day Libya officially joined the treaty banning the weapons.
After months of secret talks with the United States and Britain, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi announced in December his country would give up its weapons of mass destruction programs, including chemical weapons.
The OPCW oversees the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention, which prohibits the production, storage and use of chemical weapons.
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Pakistan May Prosecute Scientist If New Charges Emerge, AP Says
Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan's government said it may prosecute its top nuclear scientist in the event he is found to have failed to provide full details about his involvement in selling atomic secrets, the Associated Press reported.
President Pervez Musharraf pardoned Abdul Qadeer Khan last week after he confessed to selling nuclear secrets to Iran, Libya and North Korea. The pardon was ``conditional'' on his admissions so far and the investigation into Khan and his associates continues, Foreign Ministry spokesman Masood Khan said at a news conference yesterday in Islamabad.
``The pardon is specific to the charges made so far, and about which Dr. A.Q. Khan has made a confessional statement,'' AP cited Masood Khan as saying. ``This is not a blanket pardon.''
Pakistani investigators questioned about a dozen scientists in the past two months after the International Atomic Energy Agency provided information about technology given to other nations. Khan acknowledged he transferred the technology and sought forgiveness from Musharraf, who maintained the government and the army weren't involved in the transfer at any level. Musharraf rejected international inspections of Pakistan's nuclear program while agreeing to share information from the investigation with the IAEA.
(Associated Press 2-10)
To contact the reporter on this story:
Nick Wells in Sydney
or nwells3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor of this story:
Paul Tighe at
or ptighe@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: February 9, 2004 18:12 EST

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AP Enterprise: Rogue Hunt Goes Worldwide
Feb 5, 3:15 PM (ET)
By GEORGE JAHN
(AP) Abdul Qadeer Khan, founder of Pakistan's nuclear program, is seen in Islamabad in this July 2002...
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VIENNA, Austria (AP) - The hunt for middlemen who worked with the father of Pakistan's nuclear program to supply rogue regimes with weapons technology has widened to Japan and Africa, diplomats said Thursday.
Suspects in Germany and two other European countries are also being investigated in the growing probe of the clandestine black market apparently headed by Abdul Qadeer Khan of Pakistan, they said.
Also, Malaysia announced Thursday it would investigate a company controlled by the prime minister's son for its alleged role in supplying components to Libya's nuclear program. The company also has been linked to the international nuclear black market tied to Pakistan.
The chief U.N. nuclear inspector said Thursday that Khan was an "important part" of the clandestine supply chain, but he said long and painstaking investigations into who sold what and to whom lay ahead.
(AP) Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency arrives to an...
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"Dr. Khan was not working alone," said Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency. "There were items that were manufactured in other countries, items that were reassembled in different countries.
"Dr. Khan was the tip of an iceberg for us, but we still have a lot of work to do."
ElBaradei said middlemen in five countries supplied nuclear technology and expertise to Iran - which denies running a nuclear weapons program - and to Libya, which has owned up to having weapons of mass destruction or programs to make them. Pakistani officials have said Khan's network had supplied North Korea, too, but ElBaradei said he couldn't confirm that.
The five countries include Germany and Japan as well as two countries in Europe and one in Africa that the diplomats would not name.
In Washington, CIA Director George Tenet confirmed that Khan was at the center of the nuclear black market. He said U.S. and British intelligence had been tracking its movements for years.
"His network was shaving years off the nuclear weapons development timelines of several states, including Libya," Tenet said in a speech, adding that now "Khan and his network have been dealt a crushing blow."
Pakistan - and Khan - became the focus of international investigation on the basis of information Libya and Iran gave the IAEA about where they covertly bought nuclear technology that can be used to make weapons.
In Islamabad, President Pervez Musharraf said the IAEA was welcome to come and discuss the proliferation issue. "We are open and we will tell them everything," Musharraf said.
Still, Musharraf said Pakistan wouldn't submit to any U.N. supervision of its weapons program, and that no documents would be handed over to the IAEA. He also ruled out an independent investigation of the military's role in spreading nuclear technology.
Pakistan, which did not sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, is not obliged to submit its nuclear weapons activity to outside scrutiny.
Musharraf also pardoned Khan, heading off any trial that could have uncovered revelations about government and military involvement.
In the nuclear procurement chain headed by Khan, hundreds of millions of dollars are thought to have changed hands over the past 15 years.
Among items bought by Libya were engineer's drawings of a nuclear weapon, now under IAEA seal in the United States.
One of the diplomats said that drawing appeared to be of Chinese design but cautioned against assuming it came directly from China.
"There are no fingerprints on the drawings which lead you to any specific country," he said.
China is widely assumed to have been Pakistan's key supplier of much of the clandestine nuclear technology that Khan used to publicly establish Pakistan as a nuclear power in 1998.
The revelations that nuclear know-how, and turnkey level equipment needed to enrich uranium to weapons grade was traded over the past two decades have escalated fears of similar clandestine programs elsewhere.
ElBaradei said he was not aware of covert weapons development in countries other than Libya, Iran and North Korea. But one diplomat said the success of the network - as measured by the nuclear weapons blueprint and high-tech enrichment equipment sold to Libya - were cause for alarm.
"Libya for the most part tried to buy its way into the nuclear club," he said. "It was on its way," to getting everything, he added.
In Malaysia, the company under investigation said it didn't know that some centrifuge components it made were headed for Libya.
The company, Scomi Precision Engineering, or SCOPE, accepted a contract from a Dubai-based company after negotiating with a middleman, identified as a Sri Lankan, B.S.A. Tahir, police said.
SCOPE's parent company, the Scomi group, confirmed it made "14 semifinished components" for Gulf Technical Industries and shipped them in four consignments between December 2002 and August 2003, under a deal negotiated by Tahir and worth $3.4 million.
U.S. and British intelligence said the deal between SCOPE and Tahir involved components that could be used for uranium enrichment.
Kamaluddin Abdullah, 35, the only son of Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, is Scomi's largest shareholder, although he has no management role. He could not be reached for comment.
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"Did I expect George Bush to fuck it up as badly as he did?
Senator John Kerry attackiert Au?enpolitik des Pr?sidenten
Berlin - Dass US-Senator John Kerry bei seiner Kandidatur als Pr?sidentschaftsbewerber zun?chst Anlaufschwierigkeiten hatte, mag nicht zuletzt an seiner widerspr?chlichen Haltung zum Irak-Krieg gelegen haben: W?hrend der Demokrat im Oktober 2002 noch f?r die Kongressentschlie?ung stimmte, die der Regierung von Pr?sident George W. Bush gr?nes Licht f?r den Feldzug gab, ?bte er seither immer wieder massive Kritik an der Irak-Politik Washingtons.
Er habe damals geglaubt, die Entscheidung zum Krieg sei das Beste f?r sein Land, verteidigte Kerry sein Votum in einem Interview mit der US-Zeitschrift "Rolling Stone" im Dezember. Und dann wurde er drastisch: "Konnte ich damit rechnen, dass George Bush so eine Schei?e bauen w?rde, wie er es dann tat? Ich glaube, niemand hat das getan", sagte er in dem Gespr?ch. ("Did I expect George Bush to fuck it up as badly as he did? I don't think anybody did.") Das Wei?e Haus zeigte sich ?ber Kerrys ?u?erung schockiert und deutete an, dass daf?r eine Entschuldigung f?llig sei.
Diese blieb der Senator allerdings schuldig - vielmehr legte er noch einmal nach: Die Bush-Regierung betreibe "die r?cksichtsloseste, arroganteste, ungeschickteste und ideologischste Au?enpolitik in der modernen Geschichte", sagte er am Abend seines ersten Wahltriumphs im US-Bundesstaat Iowa. Bei anderen Gelegenheiten betonte Kerry mehrfach, Bush h?tte sich vor dem Krieg um eine breitere internationale Unterst?tzung bem?hen sollen. Er habe Bush gewarnt, dass sich nur mit einer breiten Koalition "der Frieden gewinnen" lasse. (APA)
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Palestinian Probe of U.S. Deaths Faulted
Feb 9, 5:46 PM (ET)
WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department dismissed as inadequate Monday a Palestinian military inquiry into the deaths of three U.S. security officials killed in a roadside explosion last October in Gaza.
A department spokeswoman suggested the inquiry would not be the serious investigation needed to find and punish those responsible for the deaths.
Last Saturday, a Palestinian military court charged four suspects with planting explosives along a main road in Gaza. A prosecutor said the defendants targeted Israeli tanks, but one of their bombs may also have ripped apart a U.S. diplomatic vehicle Oct. 15 and killed three American security guards.
Rhonda Shore, spokeswoman for the State Department's Department of Near East Affairs, said the Palestinian proceedings would not meet the standards of justice sought by the United States.
Prosecutor Jamal Shamiyye said the four defendants admitted planting explosives on the main road in Gaza where the U.S. convoy was bombed, but they were targeting Israeli tanks.
That seemed to imply a defense contention that the Americans were not targeted.
However, Palestinian and U.S. investigators have found evidence that indicated the bomb was detonated by someone who watched from a hiding place as the clearly marked convoy passed.
U.S. officials have warned that U.S. aid programs to Palestinians could be reduced or canceled if there was no progress in the investigation.
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FBI: al-Qaida Suspect Fought for Taliban
Feb 9, 11:02 PM (ET)
By CHRIS WILLIAMS
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A man accused of providing support to al-Qaida trained in martial arts and with weapons, taught English to al-Qaida members and joined the Taliban front lines, according to an FBI affidavit.
Terror suspect Mohammed Warsame, 30, twice saw combat with front line units of the Taliban while in Afghanistan and once sat next to Osama bin Laden at a meal, said the affidavit, which investigators said was based on interviews with Warsame.
"The defendant stated that bin Laden was very inspirational," according to the affidavit.
Prosecutors argued Monday that Warsame, a Somali with Canadian citizenship, is a flight risk and should remain in jail while his court case proceeds. U.S. Magistrate Judge Franklin Noel ordered him without bail pending trial.
Warsame pleaded innocent Monday to a single charge of providing support to a terrorist organization, but otherwise did not speak.
Investigators say he has acknowledged traveling to Pakistan and Afghanistan in 2000 and 2001. In early 2001, they say, Warsame asked al-Qaida for money to move his family to Afghanistan.
According to the affidavit, an al-Qaida leader instead paid for Warsame's airplane ticket back to North America, and gave him $1,700 in travel money. Warsame admitted he later wired money to people he had met in the training camps, investigators said.
Dan Scott, Warsame's public defender, argued that his client should be freed because he has strong ties to Minnesota through his wife and 5-year-old daughter and was not a risk to leave the country. Scott also rejected the idea that Warsame is an active al-Qaida member.
"At no point has he shown himself to be persistently active with a terrorist organization," Scott said.
Warsame has been living in Minnesota since 2002.

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Whistleblower Slams EPA Sludge Data
Feb 4, 7:57 PM (ET)
By ERICA WERNER
WASHINGTON (AP) - A former government scientist accused the Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday of knowingly using unreliable data when it denied a petition to halt the use of sewage sludge for fertilizer.
The microbiologist, David Lewis, testified at a House subcommittee hearing that the EPA used data about sludge quality at two Georgia dairy farms that had already been rejected by Georgia state officials as "completely unreliable, possibly even fraudulent."
He asked the House Resources Committee's subcommittee on energy and mineral resources to call on the EPA for an internal investigation of the moratorium and other matters.
Lewis, a former EPA employee who says he was fired in May after raising concerns about sludge standards, also said the panel should press the EPA for additional whistleblower protections.
"This whole process ... is nothing more than a scam," Lewis said in written testimony.
House Resources Committee spokeswoman Nicol Andrews said later that the committee's chairman, Rep. Richard Pombo, R-Calif., was open to Lewis' suggestions.
The EPA in December denied a petition from 73 labor, environment and farm groups for an immediate moratorium on land-based uses for sewage sludge. Such a moratorium would affect more than 3 million tons of sludge used each year as fertilizer.
In its decision, the EPA cited data showing levels of heavy metals in sludge at the dairy farms were within allowed limits.
In fact, Lewis said, studies by Georgia state agencies found the sludge was so corrosive that it dissolved fences and emitted toxic fumes that could sicken cows. Lewis said the faulty data was produced by local officials in Augusta, Ga., several years ago and knowingly used by the EPA in December, in spite of an audit by Georgia officials that found it unreliable.
"Mr. Lewis is entitled to his opinion. We stand by our December 2003 decision," said EPA spokeswoman Cynthia Bergman, noting the agency is in the process of revising its approach to sludge.
Lewis' departure from the EPA came after he worked 32 years there. It was protested by Republican Sens. Charles Grassley of Iowa and James Inhofe of Oklahoma. But the EPA said then that Lewis had signed an agreement specifying he was to step down.
Lewis is now an adjunct professor at the University of Georgia. His testimony came at a hearing on peer-review and "sound science" standards for writing federal regulations.
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El Jefe del Gobierno de la Ciudad de M?xico en Apuros
?No se r?a! Lleg? el "ch?fergate"
El chofer del alcalde del Distrito Federal gana unos 6 mil d?lares mensuales. El funcionario defiende a su empleado y dice que trabaja mucho. Argumentan que el empleado es, en realidad, su jefe de log?stica.
Roberto Cienfuegos
Tiempos del Mundo
Hace s?lo cuatro meses se declar? "pol?ticamente indestructible" y aunque la frase son? demasiado petulante a o?dos de muchos, todas las encuestas han se?alado al jefe del gobierno de la Ciudad de M?xico, Andr?s Manuel L?pez Obrador, como el presidenciable favorito para suceder a Vicente Fox en el 2006.
Pero eso podr?a entrar en un camino de curvas peligrosas gracias al "ch?fergate".
La dicha de estar en el candelero pol?tico mexicano le dur? poco a L?pez Obrador. La realidad, siempre m?s terca e implacable, acaba de asestar un duro golpe a este gobernante hasta ahora identificado con las causas populares y con el ejercicio honesto y sencillo del poder.
Con una imagen de pol?tico modesto, que habita un departamento de clase media al sur de la capital, L?pez Obrador viaja en un autom?vil viejo y austero. El alcalde comienza a trabajar a las cinco de la ma?ana, como la mayor parte de los capitalinos. L?pez Obrador se fragu? su propia popularidad hasta el punto de convertirse en el precandidato presidencial n?mero uno para las elecciones del 2006.
Pero "el ch?fergate", un esc?ndalo que reci?n estall? y que involucra a su chofer personal como beneficiario de ingresos considerados excesivamente altos y casi id?nticos al del propio jefe del gobierno de la ciudad, amenaza con consecuencias que por lo menos mellar?n su condici?n de figura "pol?ticamente indestructible".
A esto se a?adi? el reconocimiento de que otros dos parientes de Mollinedo Bastar, el chofer m?s famoso y mejor pagado de Am?rica Latina, tambi?n figuran en la n?mina capitalina con sueldos de dos mil a seis mil d?lares.
Mas el primer "pelo en la sopa" sobrevino al conocerse que el chofer de L?pez Obrador, identificado como Nicol?s Mollinedo Bastar, devenga un salario mensual de unos 63 mil pesos, unos 6 mil d?lares, un ingreso que contrasta agudamente con los cien d?lares que aproximadamente gana cada mes un obrero mexicano promedio y a?n con los mil d?lares que obtiene un m?dico al servicio del gobierno de la ciudad. De hecho, la renta del chofer de L?pez Obrador bastar?a para cubrir los sueldos de 18 enfermeras y los de 11 ingenieros en la Secretar?a de Obras. Esos emolumentos resultan cuatro veces m?s altos que los que cubren al jefe del Departamento de Bomberos.
Oriundo, al igual que L?pez Obrador, del sure?o estado mexicano de Tabasco y cuya familia es cercana al hoy jefe del gobierno capitalino, Mollinedo Bastar es considerado "la sombra" del alcalde, una sombra que amenaza con oscurecer la credibilidad popular al gobernante capitalino.
En un esfuerzo por contrarrestar el esc?ndalo y desencanto que gener? el caso Mollinedo Bastar, L?pez Obrador dijo que "le pago eso porque se levanta a las cuatro y se acuesta a las doce" de la noche. "No es cualquier funcionario", argument? y a?adi? que para ?l "no hay s?bados, no hay domingos, por eso se le tiene que pagar m?s". En auxilio de L?pez Obrador vino el secretario de Gobierno, Alejandro Encinas, quien explic? que Mollinedo Bastar es en realidad el coordinador de la Unidad de Apoyo Log?stico del gobierno de la ciudad y no meramente el chofer de L?pez Obrador, como ?ste mismo dijo antes. Encinas neg? que el gobierno protegiera a Mollinedo Bastar. "Estamos dando la informaci?n oficial sobre un hecho concreto. Aqu? estamos haciendo una correcci?n de un error administrativo", adujo, pero ratific? que se seguir? pagando el salario de unos 6 mil d?lares a Mollinedo Bastar.
Ahora s?lo resta saber el verdadero impacto del "ch?fergate" en su potencialidad presidencial.

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Gobierno Pide a Corte de La Haya que Rechace Objeciones Colombianas
Conflicto por territorio en el Mar Caribe
El Gobierno de Nicaragua espera que la Corte Internacional de Justicia de La Haya (CIJ) rechace las objeciones presentadas por Colombia a la demanda que present? el pa?s centroamericano sobre territorios mar?timos en el M ar Caribe.
Isidro L?pez
Tiempos del Mundo
MANAGUA. Nicaragua demand? en el 2001 a Colombia, despu?s de que este pa?s suramericano y Honduras ratificaran un tratado de delimitaci?n mar?tima que, seg?n los nicarag?enses, cercena unos 130 mil kil?metros cuadrados de su plataforma continental en el Mar Caribe. El juicio en La Haya entr? en una nueva etapa esta semana, despu?s de que Nicaragua respondiera a las objeciones preliminares presentadas en julio por Colombia. Colombia argumenta que La Haya no tiene jurisdicci?n para dictar una sentencia sobre la demanda nicarag?ense, cuyo objetivo central es la anulaci?n del tratado Ram?rez-L?pez, ratificado por los congresos colombiano y hondure?o en 1999.
En su demanda del 2001, Nicaragua solicit? al Tribunal Internacional declare su soberan?a y su derecho sobre la plataforma continental y zona econ?mica exclusiva que le corresponde en el Mar Caribe, as? como sobre el Archipi?lago San Andr?s y Providencia, adem?s de sobre los cayos Roncador, Quitasue?os, Serrana y otros. Los territorios que reclama Nicaragua est?n al Este del meridiano 82 en el Mar Caribe.
Los argumentos de Nicaragua para reclamar ese territorio en el Mar Caribe est?n sustentados en el an?lisis de documentos hist?ricos, en investigaciones y en la jurisprudencia acerca del tema, indic? el canciller Norman Caldera. Colombia ejerce posesi?n sobre el archipi?lago San Andr?s y Providencia, distante unas 200 millas de la costa caribe de Nicaragua, desde 1928, mediante un tratado firmado por los gobiernos de ambos pa?ses. Sin embargo, desde 1980 el Gobierno de Nicaragua declar? inv?lido el tratado B?rcenas-Meneses-Esguerra, alegando que al momento de su suscripci?n este pa?s estaba ocupado militarmente por los Estados Unidos.
Las autoridades nicarag?enses conf?an que La Haya se pronuncie sobre el caso y confirme su jurisdicci?n para conocer del diferendo lim?trofe. El experto Edmundo Castillo, que integra el equipo nicarag?ense para llevar el caso en La Haya, explic? que una vez quede resuelto el tema de la jurisprudencia, la Corte internacional deber? proceder al an?lisis de fondo de la causa.
Los nicarag?enses afirman tener los argumentos necesarios para demostrar en La Haya que el territorio en disputa pertenece a Nicaragua.
Castillo dijo que las excepciones procesales recurridas por Colombia buscan retrasar que la Corte internacional entre a la etapa del an?lisis de fondo de la demanda presentada por Nicaragua. Entretanto, el jurista Mauricio Herdocia record? que en 1937, Colombia acept? la jurisdicci?n de la Corte para mediar en los asuntos de l?mites. El territorio mar?timo en disputa y que reclama como suyo Nicaragua es considerado rico en yacimientos de petr?leo y como una reserva de mariscos muy importante en el Caribe centroamericano, principalmente de camar?n y langosta.

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Portillo Pone de Nuevo al Parlamento Centroamericano en el Ojo del Hurac?n
Parlacen: ?cueva de corruptos?
La sorpresiva juramentaci?n que el actual presidente del Parlamento Centroamericano, Parlacen, con sede en Guatemala, hiciera al ex presidente Alfonso Portillo y al ex vicepresidente Francisco Reyes L?pez, levanta ampollas.
Marco Julio Ochoa
Tiempos del Mundo
CIUDAD DE GUATEMALA. Portillo y Reyes, quienes recientemente entregaron la presidencia y vicepresidencia a sus sucesores Oscar Berger y Eduardo Stein, son se?alados de lavado de dinero y de poseer varias cuentas bancarias nutridas en el ejercicio del poder.
Aun cuando el otrora mandatario guatemalteco criticara duramente a la que ahora es su instituci?n guarida, su sonrisa ante las c?maras es evidente se?al de reto y de cinismo, visto del lado de los opositores y detractores del mandatario, principalmente de los econ?micamente poderosos.
"Voy a esperar el resultado de las investigaciones, las cuales giran en torno a acusaciones falsas. A m? me siguen criticando y atacando, pero de este gobierno los medios de comunicaci?n escritos oficialistas no dicen nada. No dicen que subi? abrumadoramente el pollo, las gasolinas, las medicinas. Todo eso no es malo para los medios, porque est?n con el gobierno," dijo el ahora diputado centroamericano Alfonso Portillo a los reporteros nacionales e internacionales que cubrieron su juramentaci?n.
Durante la accidentada juramentaci?n, la parlamentaria Tain? Jotr?, de Rep?blica Dominicana, vociferaba que no quer?a compartir el espacio con corruptos, y dijo sentirse ofendida por lo sucedido ese d?a, recordando el caso de Arnoldo Alem?n, ex presidente de Nicaragua, y ahora un simple reo que purga una condena producto del mal manejo de fondos que hubo durante su administraci?n.
Seg?n la parlamentaria, que m?s adelante mejor opt? por abandonar el hemiciclo, Alem?n busc? refugio en esa entidad, la misma que lo desafor? en aras de limpiar el prestigio tanto del parlamento como de los centroamericanos. A la postura abierta de Jotr? tambi?n se sum? la diputada Elsy Mackay, de Panam?.
El prestigio del Parlamento Centroamericano ha venido de mal en peor. Su presidente, el hondure?o Mario Facuse? Nadal, es se?alado de apropiaci?n ilegal de una gran cantidad de predios urbanos y rurales, por lo que el gobierno aboga por la suspensi?n de la inmunidad para procesarlo. Otros eslabones de la negra cadena que perjudic? tambi?n el prestigio parlac?nico fueron la captura del diputado hondure?o C?sar D?az en suelo nicarag?ense portando 7 kilos de hero?na. En diciembre, la polic?a hondure?a tambi?n captur? al funcionario del Parlacen Jorge Alberto C?ceres Gal?n acus?ndolo de tr?fico de coca?na.
Revocatoria del tratado
Aunque no fueron electos popularmente para formar parte del Parlacen, los ahora diputados Portillo y Reyes, se?alados de corrupci?n en Guatemala, gozar?n de los derechos que ese foro concede a todos sus miembros, incluyendo la anhelada inmunidad, que les otorga ventajas para eludir acusaciones judiciales.
La soluci?n, que los detractores de Portillo y Reyes L?pez consideran como un acto sucio y deleznable, es que los presidentes de los estados miembros (no as? de los estados amigos) firmen una modificaci?n al tratado constitutivo, lo cual es posible, a criterio del presidente guatemalteco Berger, dada la voluntad pol?tica que encuentra en el resto de sus hom?logos.
Seg?n el presidente guatemalteco, el punto ser? agregado a la agenda que tratar? con sus hom?logos centroamericanos en una reuni?n en febrero. Con esta reforma, el presidente Berger busca que los ex mandatarios no ingresen al parlamento como una forma de protecci?n por la mala forma de gobernar que ejercieron. Con ello, s?lo quedar?an representantes electos popularmente y no por designaci?n.
Para Francisco Flores, presidente de El Salvador, la coyuntura actual es propicia para realizar cambios en dicho foro, con el fin de que se redireccione y sea funcional para los estados que lo conforman. Al respecto, el presidente de Honduras, Ricardo Maduro, asegura que los pa?ses pobres deben recortar las operaciones de una instituci?n que no est? dando resultados positivos para los centroamericanos. Adem?s de los presidentes de El Salvador y Honduras, Mireya Moscoso de Panam? tambi?n asegura que el Parlacen es una p?rdida de tiempo, por lo que estar?a dispuesta a eliminarlo. "Por inoperante, ni siquiera deber?a de existir," exhorta.
Mientras, el presidente de Nicaragua, Enrique Bola?os, expresa que se debe trabajar sin precipitaci?n. Bola?os es m?s sigiloso en sus intenciones y asegura que todo el sistema de integraci?n centroamericana debe sufrir una revisi?n y si es posible, una sustancial reingenier?a.
Historia parlamentaria
El Parlamento Centroamericano, Parlacen, fue creado hace 17 a?os en el contexto de los acuerdos de Esquipulas II, en donde los presidentes del ?rea coincidieron en la necesidad de avanzar en la integraci?n pol?tica, econ?mica y cultural.
El 28 de octubre de 1991, el Parlacen inici? oficialmente sus labores, con ausencia de Costa Rica, cuyo gobierno no ha ratificado el tratado constitutivo y en repetidas ocasiones ha manifestado sentirse satisfecho de no estar inmiscuido en un ?rgano que, lejos de darle algo positivo al pa?s, simplemente lo desprestigiar?a.
Este foro regional ha sido criticado porque sus propuestas y resoluciones no son de cumplimiento legal ni tienen mayores incidencias en las sociedades representadas.
Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panam? y Rep?blica Dominicana est?n representados en el Parlacen, mientras que M?xico, Puerto Rico y Taiw?n participan como estados observadores.
Costa Rica sigue negando ser parte de este foro y se niega a enviar a sus veinte representantes.
Representantes del Parlamento Europeo, con sede en Bruselas, B?lgica, se han declarado en apoyo al Parlacen por considerarlo s?mbolo de la unidad de los pa?ses del ?rea centroamericana. M.J.O.

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Aumenta Preocupaci?n con Ch?vez
Denuncian retraso de referendo revocatorio
Acusaci?n de irregularidades oficialistas provoca crisis en el Consejo Electoral. Exigen mayor supervisi?n internacional.
Carlos Coello
Tiempos del Mundo
CARACAS. La tormenta desatada por las acusaciones de irregularidades del Consejo Nacional Electoral (CNE) para retrasar el referendo de revocaci?n del mandato al presidente Hugo Ch?vez, amain? moment?neamente luego que el organismo acept? la participaci?n de observadores internacionales en todas las etapas del proceso. Con esta medida, Venezuela evitaba, adem?s, el riesgo de desembocar en la aplicaci?n de la Carta Interamericana Democr?tica. La indisimulada pugna entre el gobierno y la oposici?n para frenar o darle luz verde a la consulta plebiscitaria, se tranform? en esc?ndalo cuando Ezequiel Zamora, el ponderado vicepresidente del CNE, denunci? un "sabotaje" para favorecer al oficialismo. Zamora dijo que las maniobras est?n destinadas a impedir que los testigos de la oposici?n cumplan con sus funciones en el complejo proceso de verificaci?n de las firmas que solicitan el referendo.
Seg?n el matutino El Nacional, Zamora "puso el dedo en la llaga: el gobierno est? moviendo a sus partidarios para que, desde el interior del organismo comicial, procedan a sabotear la verificaci?n de las firmas que permitan autorizar la convocatoria del referendo revocatorio".
A fines del a?o pasado los adversarios de Ch?vez presentaron m?s de 3.4 millones de firmas solicitando la consulta, superando con creces los 2.4 millones de r?bricas que exige la ley. Representantes de los partidos de oposici?n han denunciado que el CNE, controlado por una mayor?a oficialista, ha retardado el proceso revocatorio en por lo menos tres meses e indicaron que los simpatizantes del gobierno controlan ?reas claves del ente comicial como inform?tica, transcripci?n y verificaci?n de firmas.
Seg?n los opositores, el gobierno busca impedir el revocatorio o retrasarlo de tal forma que no tendr?a sentido su realizaci?n. Se?alan que en el primer caso se persigue la anulaci?n de m?s del 40 por ciento de las firmas, con el argumento de que son "fraudulentas". Sin embargo, la Organizaci?n de Estados Americanos, el Centro Carter, la Uni?n Europea y el Grupo de Amigos de Venezuela (Brasil, Chile, Espa?a, Estados Unidos, M?xico y Portugal) han sostenido que la recolecci?n de firmas fue transparente.
El ex presidente Jimmy Carter reiter? que no hubo fraude con las r?bricas. La alternativa de retrasar el referendo consistir?a, seg?n los opositores, en que ?ste se efect?e despu?s del 19 de agosto, cuando ya no ser?a posible una elecci?n presidencial para sustituir a Ch?vez ya que, si es revocado, el resto del per?odo lo cumplir?a el vicepresidente y el revocado seguir?a gobernando tras bambalinas. Seg?n la ley, para que haya nuevas elecciones, el referendo debe efectuarse entre la mitad del per?odo (19 de agosto del 2002) y antes del cuarto a?o de mandato (18 de agosto pr?ximo). A pesar de que el presidente del CNE, Francisco Carrasquero, dijo que el proceso de verificaci?n de firmas concluir?a el 13 de febrero (y que 90 d?as despu?s se har?a el referendo) Carter estim? que ese anuncio se retrasar? "en unos d?as". Simult?neamente, la OEA y el Centro Carter presionaron por una participaci?n activa de sus observadores.
Oscar Battaglini, uno de los directores oficialistas del CNE, declar? que "los observadores internacionales tienen el derecho a participar, pero hay determinadas ?reas en las que, como poder aut?nomo y soberano, establecimos l?mites". El jefe parlamentario Nicol?s Maduro destac? que el poder electoral venezolano es soberano y no est? sometido a "tutelaje internacional". Sin embargo, al finalizar la visita de Carter, el CNE dio a conocer que los observadores de la OEA y el Centro Carter participar?n en todas las ?reas del proceso referendario.

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Ofensiva Contra la Evasi?n de Impuestos
Gobierno asume como `gran hermano'
A partir de junio, la Dian registrar? en una sola central de informaci?n todas las transacciones comerciales de los ciudadanos.
Alexandra Farf?n
Tiempos del Mundo
La propuesta fue recibida con asombro. No obstante, la mayor?a intent? ponerse en los zapatos del gobierno para entender qu? razones llevaron a la Direcci?n de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales (Dian) a invertir otra millonaria suma de dinero en una central de informaci?n que registrar? todas y cada una de las transacciones comerciales de 20 millones de colombianos: Compras, ventas, traspasos, exportaciones, aportes, pagos...
La Dian asegura que Muisca, nombre del sistema que empezar? a operar en junio, servir? para reducir la evasi?n de impuestos del 30 por ciento (nivel que ha tenido en los ?ltimos diez a?os) al 20 por ciento, pues en sus archivos quedar?n escritos todos los datos necesarios para saber cu?les de las personas all? registradas le deben a la Naci?n tributos por sus bienes y transacciones. La adquisici?n de finca ra?z, la venta de un autom?vil o el manejo de las tarjetas de cr?dito y d?bito estar?n a la mano de la entidad recaudadora en el Modelo ?nico de Ingresos, Servicio y Control Automatizado.
El director de la DIAN, Mario Aranguren, indic? que con este sistema se controlar?n los impuestos, las aduanas y los asuntos cambiarios que son competencia de su entidad. "Esto nos da mucha eficiencia y una garant?a de hacer exactamente todos los cruces sobre los consumos e ingresos que tienen las personas para ver su responsabilidad fiscal y adicionalmente, todas sus acciones y actuaciones en el comercio exterior, cuando sea una importaci?n, una exportaci?n", dijo el funcionario tras anunciar oficialmente la medida. Aranguren advirti? que con la nueva central de informaci?n todos los colombianos quedar?n bajo la lupa del gobierno. Aclar? adem?s que conocer toda la informaci?n comercial y financiera de los colombianos, "no implica que se est? violando la reserva bancaria, pues para efectos tributarios no existe tal reserva".
El Vicepresidente Francisco Santos Calder?n dijo que el gobierno garantizar? que la inversi?n hecha en el sistema tenga buenos resultados. "Hasta el a?o 2003 se hab?an pedido 700 mil millones de pesos en las distintas entidades del Estado para gastar en sistemas de informaci?n", dijo al explicar que es responsabilidad de la Comisi?n Intersectorial de Pol?ticas y Gesti?n de la Informaci?n vigilar que "no sigamos gastando plata en sistemas que no se hablan entre s?".
Muisca ya tiene sus primeros detractores. Algunos de ellos avizoran ya una avalancha de quejas como las que actualmente enfrentan las principales centrales financieras de riesgo, las cuales reportan, entre otras cosas, atrasos en los pagos de obligaciones contra?das por los usuarios de cr?ditos y otros productos bancarios.

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?C?mo Explicar el Potencial Nacional Minero Desaprovechado?
Con diamantes despierta fiebre mineral
A la espera de autorizaciones para hacer prospecciones que determinen el valor de los hallazgos mineros, buscadores de tesoros alientan la esperanza de encontrar fortuna.
Maria D?az de Vivar
Tiempos del Mundo
ASUNCI?N. "Los diamantes son para toda la vida," dice una frase popular. Lo que no se podr?a afirmar por estas latitudes es que la vida de los habitantes de las tierras supuestamente pre?adas de minerales valiosos sea igualmente preciada.
La tala indiscriminada de bosques sin una reforestaci?n adecuada sigue mermando las reservas vegetales. Sin embargo, las riquezas del suelo paraguayo han permanecido a salvo bajo el manto piadoso de la ignorancia o la falta de inter?s por explotarlas. A lo largo de la geograf?a de este pa?s mediterr?neo, ubicado en el coraz?n del Cono Sur, se han ido detectando canteras de yeso y piedra caliza, que bien podr?an suplir las importaciones de similares insumos que benefician s?lo a pa?ses vecinos que nos proveen. Hasta ahora es un misterio el hecho que a pocos kil?metros de las fronteras paraguayas con Bolivia y Argentina se hayan encontrado yacimientos rentables de gas natural y petr?leo, mientras que de Paraguay no sale ni una gota de hidrocarburos.
Hay quienes afirman que el m?rmol paraguayo es de una calidad superior, pero todos los intentos por desarrollar la industria han sido desalentados por las administraciones gubernamentales durante d?cadas. M?s grave a?n es que del recurso precioso, el Estado extrae apenas un producto a sabiendas de las diversas e interesante posibilidades que ofrece la materia prima contenida en los suelos norte?os.
"En Concepci?n hay yacimientos calc?reos para proveer cal agr?cola por los pr?ximos 500 a?os, aproximadamente, y es eso lo que nuestra econom?a, que es agr?cola y ganadera, necesita m?s. ?Por qu? nos vamos detr?s del oro o los diamantes en lugar de satisfacer necesidades actuales y reales?", cuestion? el doctor en Geolog?a, Fernando Wiens, al diario ?ltima Hora.
Actualmente se importa el total de la cal agr?cola utilizada en la Regi?n Oriental, por un valor total de 97 millones de d?lares. Tambi?n se?al? los casos del abundante yeso en Lagerenza y del gas natural en la regi?n denominada Chaco Paraguayo. Dijo que "son casos ya antiguos y 100% comprobados y nadie hace nada al respecto". Seg?n los datos, existe suficiente yeso para satisfacer la demanda interna e inclusive para exportar, pero actualmente la Industria Nacional del Cemento (INC) importa yeso de la Argentina por un valor anual de casi 3 millones de d?lares.
Expertos de todas las nacionalidades pululan desde hace meses por las zonas de inter?s investigando los recursos subterr?neos de Paraguay. Pero por ahora, la ?nica que cuenta con el permiso para la exploraci?n, prospecci?n y explotaci?n de minerales en la zona norte del pa?s es la Morrison Mining Company.
El Estado paraguayo garantiza la propiedad privada, si bien los recursos minerales son del fisco. De confirmarse un hallazgo, el que tiene la concesi?n para la explotaci?n debe negociar con el propietario, y si hay oposici?n debe solicitar una expropiaci?n al Congreso Nacional con fundadas razones.
El oro y los diamantes son los m?s llamativos hallazgos pero no los ?nicos minerales de gran valor encontrados en territorio paraguayo: plomo, hierro, n?quel y zinc podr?an hacer rentable la actividad minera a?n incipiente pero que ya ha atra?do la atenci?n de empresas multinacionales.
El viceministro de Minas y Energ?a, H?ctor Ru?z D?az, dijo a la prensa que hasta el momento no es oficial el hallazgo de diamantes en el norte, aunque confirm? la existencia de yacimientos de oro en el centro del pa?s.
Pero las expectativas levantadas entre ge?logos y medios de comunicaci?n tienen en vilo a los pobladores de un casi despoblado paraje de Concepci?n (a 580 kil?metros al norte de Asunci?n), una colonia denominada Sargento Jos? F?lix L?pez, que carece de los servicios m?s elementales, como la electricidad, el agua corriente, caminos, centros de salud o maestros de escuela.
Casi al borde del territorio brasile?o es donde se han hallado los m?s serios indicios de yacimientos de diamante, un recurso que puede transformar la actividad econ?mica de la zona, hasta ahora dedicada al cultivo de supervivencia y al desmonte indiscriminado.

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Centroam?rica Recuper? al `Hijo Pr?digo'
?Qu? es eso que llaman TLC?
La escasa informaci?n sobre los pormenores del tratado hace dudar a los costarricenses sobre los alcances de la iniciativa. Para unos se trata de un negocio de pocos y para otros representa una ocasi?n propicia para incorporarse al primer mundo.
Jos? Antonio Pastor
Tiempos del Mundo
SAN JOS?. Luis Jim?nez es un zapatero que se levanta de lunes a s?bados apenas sale el sol, pues tiene que cruzar toda la ciudad en autob?s para abrir un peque?o local que tiene en el oeste de esta desordenada y cada vez m?s abandonada capital costarricense.
Hace unos d?as, Luis se enter? de la aprobaci?n del Tratado de Libre Comercio, TLC, entre Costa Rica y los Estados Unidos. Lleg? a su negocio y encendi? una peque?a radio. "Algo estaban comentando, pero en verdad, a m? no me afecta eso de tratados y firmas. Los que se ver?n beneficiados ser?n los de siempre. Los pobres seguiremos siendo pobres".
Un par de horas m?s tarde, un empresario dedicado a la producci?n de hongos comestibles se frotaba las manos mientras hac?a n?meros sobre lo que puede costarle una m?quina deshidratadora. "Con esto del TLC hay que estar un paso adelante, porque se trata de una oportunidad ?nica y quienes se pongan vivos, llevar?n las de ganar. Por eso mismo, mientras mi esposa analiza los tipos de hongos que podemos sembrar, yo estoy viendo la posibilidad de deshidratarlos para exportarlos a los Estados Unidos".
Ya sea como negocio de unos cuantos o como una oportunidad de oro para muchos, el final de las negociaciones con los Estados Unidos tiene a este pa?s de poco m?s de cuatro millones de personas en la mayor de las incertidumbres. La escasa informaci?n gubernamental, as? como los rumores sobre los peligros que conlleva un tratado de este tipo, han despertado las dudas.
"Ni siquiera los que creemos estar bien informados sabemos qu? pasar?. El gobierno ha manejado las negociaciones con un secretismo preocupante," afirma el analista pol?tico Francisco Barahona. "S?lo sabemos lo que los negociadores han querido que sepamos porque ni siquiera los diputados que deben ratificarlo tienen copia de todos los documentos".
Despu?s de un a?o de arduas negociaciones que incluso estuvieron cerca de dejar a los ticos al margen del acuerdo que hace unos meses firmaron los representantes de Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador y Guatemala, los grupos negociadores de ambos pa?ses llegaron a un consenso en cinco temas que hab?an quedado pendientes en las rondas con los dem?s pa?ses centroamericanos.
"Lo que se conoce es muy general, lo que hace muy sospechosa la letra menuda. Es cierto que habr? grandes beneficios, pero ?por qu? no ponen las cartas sobre la mesa para ver qu? m?s hay? La gente de la calle tiene su posici?n, pero la verdad es que ?sta responde a los medios de comunicaci?n, que la informa o desinforma. Los negociadores hablan de que el balance ser? muy positivo, pero tambi?n uno podr?a decir que la l?gica hace pensar que un pa?s tan peque?o como el nuestro no est? en condiciones de competir", coment? Barahona. El analista record? que muchas de las empresas que en alg?n momento se instalaron en M?xico, hoy se han trasladado a China en procura de mano de obra m?s barata.
"El gobierno deber?a de estar orgulloso de los resultados y exponerlos en una fuerte campa?a publicitaria para que la gente tenga m?s informaci?n y pueda formarse un criterio m?s s?lido, pero hasta el momento no hay nada," a?adi?.
Consultado sobre las posibilidades que tiene el tratado de ser ratificado por el Congreso antes de un a?o, Barahona explic? que no existen razones para que su tramitaci?n en el plenario tenga problemas.
"Parece que existe el apoyo necesario, pero ?qu? pasar? si la ciudadan?a no se conforma con lo aprobado? Tenemos antecedentes de dos proyectos que, ya aprobados, tuvieron que ser echados atr?s porque la gente se lanz? a las calles a protestar. Espero que la Administraci?n Pacheco entienda que debe empezar una fuerte campa?a de informaci?n que haga transparente todo el proceso que se avecina," concluy? el analista.
Alrededor del 53 por ciento de las exportaciones que realiza Costa Rica tienen por destino el pa?s del norte. Esto significa que aproximadamente la cuarta parte del empleo est? ligado de manera directa o indirecta con ese mercado.
Seg?n ha manifestado la jefa negociadora de la delegaci?n tica, Anabel Gonz?lez, eventualmente el TLC facilitar? aumentar las exportaciones y las importaciones, incrementar la inversi?n productiva y, sobre todo, generar buenos empleos. Pero tambi?n existen motivaciones de tipo pol?tico, como la contribuci?n que tendr? en consolidar la democracia con procedimientos que fomenten la transparencia, la no discriminaci?n y la certidumbre.
Salto comercial tico
Costa Rica es una econom?a peque?a de cerca de 4,1 millones de habitantes con un territorio de 51.900 kil?metros cuadrados y un Producto Interno Bruto cercano a los 16.886 millones de d?lares. El comercio exterior ha constituido un factor fundamental para su crecimiento y generar nuevas y mejores oportunidades econ?micas. En la actualidad, mantiene acuerdos bilaterales con M?xico, Chile, Rep?blica Dominicana y Canad?, as? como con los pa?ses del Caribe. La pol?tica de comercio exterior ha dado como resultado un crecimiento sustancial de las exportaciones, las cuales han aumentado a un ritmo del 11 por ciento anual durante los ?ltimos doce a?os. Las exportaciones tambi?n se han diversificado, pasando de una circunstancia en la que dos productos representaban un 65 por ciento del total exportado en 1985 (caf? y banano), a otra en la que ning?n producto exportado representa m?s del 17 por ciento. El crecimiento exportador ha constituido, por dos d?cadas, el factor m?s din?mico de la producci?n y el empleo costarricenses.u
Fuente: Ministerio de Comercio Exterior de Costa Rica.
Par?metros del Acuerdo
En agricultura, Costa Rica alcanz? cuotas que mejorar?n el ingreso de az?car, etanol y carne al mercado estadounidense.
En textiles, tambi?n se facilitaron las condiciones para exportar y conseguir telas de lana en otros pa?ses.
En los campos m?s sensibles, se acord? la apertura de los mercados de telecomunicaciones y seguros, en la actualidad monopolios muy cuestionados por los usuarios.
Finalmente, se decidi? establecer un nuevo r?gimen en lo referente a la legislaci?n sobre representantes de casas extranjeras y sus distribuidores.JAP

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Ex Presidente Afirma ser V?ctima de Campa?a Difamatoria
Menem niega tener cuentas en Suiza
Especial para TDM
El ex presidente argentino Carlos Menem neg? tener cuentas bancarias fuera de su pa?s y anunci? que va a denunciar a los responsables de la "campa?a difamatoria" de la que dice ser v?ctima.
"No hay ninguna cuenta, no existe absolutamente nada y estoy esperando el informe de Suiza porque este culebr?n no puede continuar", dijo Menem.
El juez Norberto Oyarbide est? investigando el patrimonio de Menem en Suiza y le ha citado a declarar el 15 de marzo. El juez tambi?n ha enviado exhortos a otros pa?ses para pedir informaci?n sobre si el ex presidente posee activos all?. Menem, que reside en Santiago de Chile junto a su esposa Cecilia Bolocco y el hijo de ambos, M?ximo Sa?l, responsabiliz? al presidente N?stor Kirchner, al ex mandatario Eduardo Duhalde y al ministro de Justicia, Gustavo Beliz, de la "campa?a difamatoria" de la que dice ser v?ctima.
"Cuando yo regrese a Argentina voy a hacer una denuncia en contra de mis difamadores", se?al? a "La Naci?n" sin especificar cu?ndo tiene pensado viajar a su pa?s, que no ha pisado desde noviembre. El objetivo de la campa?a es "destruir la figura de uno de los presidentes que m?s hizo por la Rep?blica Argentina, al punto tal que este Gobierno (el de Kirchner) est? todav?a viviendo de lo que nosotros acumulamos durante diez a?os", agreg?.
El hombre que gobern? Argentina de 1989 a 1999 y que intent? volver a la presidencia en el 2003, se declara "un perseguido pol?tico" y cree que en la misma situaci?n est? el ex presidente Fernando de la R?a, quien se encuentra en la mira de la justicia por la represi?n de las manifestaciones que precedieron a su renuncia, a fines de 2001, y por un caso de soborno a senadores.
"Este gobierno, adem?s de ser autoritario, se ha dedicado a perseguir a muchos pol?ticos en Argentina. Por ejemplo, al ex presidente De la R?a", indic?. Adem?s de quejarse, Menem atac? a los actuales gobernantes y pidi? que se investiguen sus fondos y bienes, especialmente qu? fue del dinero de la provincia de Santa Cruz que Kirchner, entonces gobernador, llev? al extranjero para evitar que fuera afectado por las restricciones al movimiento de fondos conocidas como "corralito" y la conversi?n a pesos de los dep?sitos a comienzos de 2002. EFE

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Desprestigio Preocupante del Estamento Militar
Ej?rcito sufre bumer?n de `mu?equeos' pol?ticos
En 10 a?os, las cifras de confianza institucional bajaron en forma ins?lita de 71 puntos a 20. Afect? la insubordinaci?n de los coroneles en el 2000 y actualmente las denuncias por tr?fico de armas y los costos en el Congreso por limpiar su imagen.
Christian Espinosa B.
Tiempos del Mundo
UITO. La Fuerzas Armadas (FF.AA.) en Ecuador est?n tan d?biles que sus esfuerzos por limpiar su imagen se han ido en su propia contra.
Una de las instituciones de mayor prestigio en el pa?s paga as? el precio de contaminarse pol?ticamente. En este terreno, se demostr? que la mejor defensa no es el ataque. La instituci?n militar, con el apoyo del Gobierno, enfil? vanamente sus armas contra el diputado de la oposici?n Guillermo Haro para tratar de levantar la inmunidad del legislador por sus denuncias de tr?fico de armas y la explosi?n de un polvor?n.
El supuesto remedio de que el legislador responda ante la justicia por atentar contra el honor de las FF.AA. fue peor que la enfermedad. La ciudadan?a ha visto con estupor c?mo la instituci?n se ha visto envuelta en pr?cticas completamente inusuales a su naturaleza por conseguir una mayor?a en el Congreso para desarmar a Haro.
"Las FF.AA., que antes eran relativamente aut?nomas, ahora se han visto afectadas por el desprestigio de las pr?cticas del clientelismo o prebendas t?picas de los pol?ticos civiles", explica el analista pol?tico, Adri?n Bonilla.
Es a partir del golpe a Abdal? Bucaram y luego de Jamil Mahuad que las FF.AA. se ven involucradas en temas pol?ticos. Parad?jicamente, en aquel entonces la instituci?n no tuvo ninguna intenci?n de entrometerse. Era la misma sociedad la que casi le rog? que fuera dirimente en la ca?da de Bucaram. As? de grande era la confianza de la ciudadan?a, sin imaginar el futuro desprestigio que se avecinaba. Poco a poco, la falta de claridad en la misi?n de las FF.AA. se hizo evidente.
"Tras el fin de los conflictos territoriales con Per?, las FF.AA. no han logrado redefinir bien esa misi?n", precisa Bonilla. "Una muestra de ello es c?mo la instituci?n est? superponiendo roles con la Polic?a", en la frontera Norte y por los efectos del Plan Colombia. La erosi?n de la institucionalidad militar se torn? inevitable. Eso sin contar los momentos graves de insubordinaci?n de los coroneles, entre ellos el hoy presidente Lucio Guti?rrez.
El resultado ha sido cierto grado de politizaci?n de los mandos, que comienza por arriba y tarde o temprano afecta a toda la instituci?n. Estos tejidos pol?ticos afectaron las capacidades de las FF.AA., que hoy ya no pueden procesar eficientemente su defensa. "Es un problema de debilidad pol?tica que se expresa en esta incapacidad para procesar el disenso", dice Bonilla. La incursi?n del Gobierno en el tema, ayudando en los cabildeos, dio m?s elementos para las dudas. ?Ser? que el presidente mira a las FF.AA. como su verdadero partido pol?tico, en la misma l?nea que lo hizo Alberto Fujimori?, se pregunta el editorialista del diario El Comercio, C?sar Mont?far.
Lo cierto, seg?n el general Jos? Gallardo, ex jefe del Comando Conjunto de las Fuerzas Armadas, es que cuando la instituci?n se aleja de sus deberes, entonces empieza la ola de desprestigios. "Lo fundamental es trabajar por la reconstrucci?n de los valores y principios ?ticos y morales", afirma. "Trabajar en cambios a la justicia militar para que se vuelva ?gil y completamente transparente en la investigaci?n", es otro de los retos. "Un mejor favor al honor institucional hubiera sido una pol?tica clara de transparencia e informaci?n en estos casos", confirma C?sar Mont?far.
"Reprofesionalizarse, replegarse a los cuarteles y dedicarse a sus tareas militares espec?ficas y aislarse del poder de los civiles y de las luchas cotidianas de la pol?tica", es la visi?n final del catedr?tico Adri?n Bonilla.

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El Oficialismo en Desventaja
Alem?n, candidato de Moscoso
El ex canciller Jos? Miguel Alem?n no renuncia a su car?cter de candidato oficialista y se propone continuar la obra llevada a cabo por la presidenta Mireya Moscoso, que en agosto pr?ximo concluye su mandato de cinco a?os.
Rafael Candanedo
Tiempos del Mundo
C IUDAD DE PANAM?. Alem?n, de 47 a?os y con un doctorado otorgado por la Universidad de Tulane, EE.UU., presidi? una concentraci?n multitudinaria en la c?ntrica Plaza Porras, de la ciudad de Panam?. Seg?n los seguidores del ex canciller, se reunieron 150 mil simpatizantes. Antes de esa concentraci?n, los miembros de la Convenci?n Nacional del Partido Arnulfista (PA) en el poder, hab?an oficializado la n?mina presidencial que encabeza Alem?n y que integran, adem?s, Guillermo Ford, ex ministro y ex embajador en Washington, y el abogado An?bal Galindo.
Endilg? a su contrincante Mart?n Torrijos el mote de "privatista" y le acus? de tener en mente arrebatar de las manos del Estado el Idaan, a cargo de los servicios de alcantarillados y agua potable, y de la Caja de Seguro Social (CSS). Todos los candidatos niegan cualquier inter?s en privatizar esas dos entidades estatales.
La respuesta de Mart?n, de 40 a?os y que estudi? dos licenciaturas en la Universidad de Texas, no se hizo esperar. El candidato oficialista "se escuda detr?s de la falda" de Moscoso.
La presidenta Moscoso no hace nada para tomar distancia de Alem?n, sino todo lo contrario. "Voy a hacer campa?a" en favor de Alem?n y de los candidatos oficialistas para otros cargos, asegur? la gobernante.
Torrijos lidera las encuestas de intenci?n de voto con casi el 50 por ciento, mientras que Alem?n ronda el 12 por ciento. El candidato y ex presidente Guillermo Endara, de 66 a?os, supera el 30 por ciento.
Los analistas calculan que el candidato electo --ya sea Alem?n o Endara-- deber? mantener un duelo con Torrijos en la etapa final de la campa?a para las elecciones del 2 de mayo pr?ximo. Y Alem?n, por ser oficialista, est? en desventaja, pues debe cargar con el desgaste gubernamental.
Endara y Alem?n est?n enfrascados en esa disputa, al reclamar para sus campa?as la figura del ex presidente Arnulfo Arias, cuya segunda esposa fue Moscoso. La presidenta se aperson? ante el Tribunal Electoral para demandar el retiro de la figura de Arias de unos anuncios propagand?sticos de Endara.
"Endara debe utilizar en su publicidad la foto de su esposa, Ana Mae, y no la del doctor Arias," exhort? Moscoso.
Endara sali? en defensa de Ana Mae, y aunque se?al? que por respeto no le responder?a a la mandataria, s? record? la admiraci?n que le tuvo a la primera esposa de Arias, Ana Matilde Linares.
Derechos Reservados ? Noticias Panam?rica

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Venezuela, en la hora de la verdad
El pr?ximo 13 de febrero, el Consejo Nacional Electoral de Venezuela dir? si la oposici?n alcanz? o no el n?mero de firmas exigidas constitucionalmente para convocar un referendo en que se pida la revocaci?n del mandato del presidente Hugo Ch?vez. Se juegan las ?ltimas cartas. La estrategia presidencial ha consistido en robustecer su apoyo al pueblo, ofreciendo el oro y el moro a trav?s de diversos programas de gasto p?blico. La de la oposici?n, en acrecentar la campa?a de desprestigio contra el gobierno argumentando el mayor caos social y deterioro econ?mico de su historia.
M?s que la oposici?n y el propio partido presidencial, juegan un papel determinante el Consejo Electoral y la comunidad internacional. Los rectores del Consejo deben estar conscientes de que el futuro pol?tico de Venezuela recae sobre sus hombros, y deben garantizar que no habr? trucos ni violaciones a la Constituci?n por parte de la oposici?n o del gobierno.
La comunidad internacional debe vigilar con lupa el desenlace de este proceso. El ex presidente estadounidense Jimmy Carter ha expresado su confianza en que Venezuela sortear? su crisis democr?ticamente, aunque alert? de divisiones entre los opositores al gobierno de Hugo Ch?vez en cuanto a una decisi?n electoral. La Organizaci?n de Estados Americanos, tras solicitar acceso al proceso de revisi?n de firmas, hizo un llamado a las dos partes para que se comprometan a aceptar lo acordado. A?n as?, el proceso no tiene la claridad que suger?a al comienzo. Crecen de nuevo los rumores sobre la permanencia en el poder de Ch?vez, aun cuando haya un resultado adverso en el referendo. Tambi?n se habla p?blicamente del temor de que algunos opositores desconozcan un fallo favorable a Ch?vez y llamen a una insurrecci?n, hecho que sumir?a al pa?s en una crisis de violencia y confusi?n mayor a la actual.
El ambiente se ha tornado tenso las ?ltimas semanas en que ambos bandos --seguidores y opositores del mandatario nacional-- se han lanzado de nuevo a las calles con arengas y mutuos insultos. Unos hablan de fraude; los otros de legitimidad. Lo cierto es que ha llegado la hora de la verdad y ambas partes deben respetar lo pactado. Esto es, acatar las determinaciones del Consejo Nacional Electoral y ajustarse a las normas vigentes de la constituci?n venezolana.

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Venezuela, in the hour of truth
On February 13, the National Electoral Council of Venezuela will determine whether or not the opposition has obtained the number of signatures required by the constitution to convoke a referendum for the recall of president Hugo Ch?vez. The last trump is played. The presidential strategy has sought to strengthen people's support by promising the moon and the stars through various public-expenditure programs. The opponents' strategy, meanwhile, has been to intensify its discrediting campaign against the government because of the ongoing social chaos and the worst economic deterioration in its history.
More than the opposition and the president's party itself, both the Electoral Council and the international community have a decisive role to play in this process. The Council officials should keep in mind that Venezuela's political future rests on their shoulders and therefore must guarantee against any trickery or constitutional violation by either the opposition or the government.
To that end, the international community must watch the outcome of this process through a magnifying glass. Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter has upheld his belief that Venezuela will sort out its crisis democratically, but has alerted to the split existing among Ch?vez' opponents over the electoral outcome. Besides requesting access to the signature-monitoring review, the Organization of American States has called upon the two sides to commit themselves to accepting the results.
Even so, the process is not as clear as it seemed in the beginning. Rumors are escalating about Ch?vez' remaining in power even if the referendum is adverse to him. There is also talk about the fear that some opponents might choose to ignore a decision favoring Ch?vez and trigger an insurrection, a recourse that would plunge the country into a crisis of violence and engender even greater confusion.
The atmosphere has become tense over the past few weeks as both sides --president's supporters and opponents alike-- have come out on the streets again hurl-ing harangues and insults at each other. Some talk of fraud; others of legitimacy. What is certain is that the hour of the truth has come and both parties should respect what they have agreed upon. That is: to abide by the National Electoral Council's determination and stick to the stipulations of the Venezuelan constitution in force.
Translated by: Mar?a Isabel Camacho

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Venezuela Devalues Bolivar, Fines BellSouth on Taxes (Update5)
Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez devalued the nation's currency 17 percent against the dollar and fined a BellSouth Corp. unit for failing to pay taxes, as he seeks to boost revenue to fund social spending.
The measures will assist Chavez in his bid to increase funds for farming, medicine and schools ahead of a recall vote that his opponents are demanding, said analysts such as George Grayson at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. Chavez's foes say the former lieutenant colonel should step down before his term expires in 2007 after driving the oil-exporting country into its deepest recession on record last year.
``It's political expediency and a demagogic act that is designed to get Chavez through a rough patch in his tenure,'' said Grayson, an adjunct fellow at the center.
The government set the bolivar's exchange rate at 1,918 against the dollar, a year after fixing it at 1,598 and limiting purchases of U.S. dollars to stem an outflow of foreign currency. By weakening the currency, the government will increase the amount of bolivars it raises from oil exports, which accounted for 48 percent of revenue last year. Venezuela is the world's fifth-largest supplier of crude.
In addition, the fine against TelCel CA, Venezuela's largest cellular telephone company, is a ``warning sign'' against other companies as Chavez pursues his so-called Zero Evasion Plan announced last year, said Irene Costa, an analyst at Banco Mercantil CA in Caracas.
Budget Gap
Chavez is trying to boost spending without swelling the budget deficit, which Costa expects will total 4.2 percent of gross domestic product this year after ending 2003 at 5.1 percent. That compares with a budgeted deficit in Mexico this year of 0.3 percent of GDP and 2.5 percent of GDP in neighboring Colombia.
A 25 percent surge in the international price of oil has also helped fund Chavez's spending. The 2004 budget calls for a 21 percent increase in spending to 49.9 trillion bolivars as Chavez seeks to quicken the recovery from recession.
The government announced the devaluation in the Official Gazette. Finance Minister Tobias Nobrega didn't return a phone call seeking comment on the decision.
The devaluation will enable the government to purchase more bolivars for every dollar. Street sellers are buying dollars at an even weaker exchange rate in Venezuela -- about 3,000 bolivars per dollar.
Faster Inflation
Venezuela's benchmark 9 1/4 percent bond due 2027 fell 0.85 cent on the dollar to 89.5, boosting the yield to 10.46 percent at 4:05 p.m. in New York, according to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.
The devaluation may quicken inflation -- which was 26.6 percent in the 12 months through January -- by driving up the cost of imported products, said Christian Stracke, head of emerging-market research at New York-based CreditSights Inc. The effect may be limited as many companies already pay street exchange rates because they don't have access to dollars at the official exchange rate, Stracke said.
AES Corp. Chief Financial Officer Barry Sharp said in an interview last week that AES's local unit, CA La Electricidad de Caracas, which is Venezuela's largest publicly-traded power company, has bought dollars in the street market.
The government is allowing companies to buy dollars only through approval from the nation's foreign exchange commission. The government said last week it sold less than half the dollars authorized by the foreign exchange commission last year.
Bond Sale
The government had indicated last year it planned to devalue the currency, saying it based its 2004 budget on an average exchange rate of 1,920 bolivars per dollar.
``This improves their capacity to pay their domestic debt because it reduces the overall value of that debt'' in dollar- terms, said Juan Pablo Chavez, an analyst with BBVA Securities in New York. ``This also improves the revenue side of their budget.''
BBVA's Chavez said he expects the government will sell a dollar-denominated bond to local investors to help meet demand for dollar-based assets and prevent the bolivar from weakening further in the street market. The government sold $2.5 billion of dollar-denominated bonds to local investors last year.
The government last year unveiled a plan to boost tax collection and reduce evasion. Venezuela's tax agency in November closed 324 companies for as long as 72 days.
30 Days
TelCel has 30 days to pay a fine of 38 billion bolivars for failing to pay 20 billion bolivars or appeal the ruling, Conatel said in a statement.
In a statement, TelCel denied it's evading its tax obligations and said its legal department is weighing its options.
``This is because of a difference in criteria and has nothing to do with evasion,'' TelCel Vice President Haydee Cisneros said in the statement.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Alex Kennedy in Caracas, akennedy@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor of this story:
Laura Zelenko at lzelenko@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: February 9, 2004 16:04 EST
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Plaza? Louvre? Boca Accord Never Had a Chance: Caroline Baum
Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) -- We'll always have Paris. New York is one helluva town. But Boca?
Memorable moments in the history of the Group of Seven industrialized nations occurred at the Plaza Hotel in 1985, when the participants decided the dollar was too strong, and in the great halls of the Louvre Museum in 1987, when they decided the dollar was weak enough.
Can you imagine, 20 years from now, economic historians referencing the outcome at Boca Raton -- a city whose name translates literally from the Spanish as ``mouth mouse'' -- with the same degree of gravitas?
Finance ministers and central bankers from the G-7 descended on the Boca Town Resort and Club last weekend with different agendas. The slow-growth Europeans, unhappy about the impact of the euro on their export-dependent economies, were hoping for some help from the U.S. in stalling the rise in the euro.
The euro is up 18 percent against the dollar in the past 12 months and 46 percent in the past two years.
The Bush administration, faced with tepid job growth more than two years after the recession ended and less than nine months before voters go to the polls, is happy for any help it can get from a weaker dollar, via increased demand for exports. Real exports rose 19 percent in the fourth quarter following a 9.9 percent third-quarter gain.
Coordinated Mush
While there's always much ado about the choice of words in the G-7 communique -- almost as much as the fuss over the Federal Reserve's use of ``considerable period'' versus ``patience'' -- it's hard to infer any action from the statement released on Saturday.
After reaffirming that ``exchange rates should reflect economic fundamentals,'' surely a statement of the obvious, the G-7 said ``excess volatility and disorderly movements in exchange rates are undesirable for economic growth.''
Aha! This was interpreted in some quarters as some kind of major breakthrough instead of a bone to keep the Europeans happy so they don't have to address high structural unemployment and dismal growth through real policy changes.
In terms of the reinsertion of a warning against ``excess volatility,'' which has been MIA in the G-7 communique since April 1999, few traders and investors would describe the dollar's almost uninterrupted slide over the past two years that way.
They might call it a one-way trade, a long-overdue correction or the beginning of a multiyear currency adjustment. They would not call it volatile.
Option Pricing
And as for a disorderly decline, there's not much evidence of it reflected in the price investors are willing to pay for insurance, according to Daniel Katzive, a foreign-exchange strategist at UBS Warburg.
The price of options on the euro-U.S. dollar exchange rate ``has climbed, but it's nowhere near the extremes of 2000, when the European Central Bank was intervening to support the euro,'' Katzive said. ``The level of daily changes implied by the price of insurance is not consistent with a disorderly market.''
There are other ways to measure volatility, such as the effect currency movements have on other asset markets, Katzive said. Looking at the performance of U.S. stock and bond markets, ``it's just not happening,'' he said.
In other words, the statement was much ado about words and little to do about action. The ECB may choose to intervene if the euro breaks through $1.30, Katzive said, but it will probably be acting without the U.S.
Babble
To avoid any confusion created by the communique, finance ministers were available for instant analysis, interpretation and disclaimers following the meeting.
U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow reaffirmed the U.S. strong- dollar policy. Japanese Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki said the call for more flexibility wasn't aimed at Japan. German Finance Minister Hans Eichel said currency traders should note the G-7's ``unanimity.''
Unanimity? ``The word `agree' does not appear even once in the entire communique,'' said Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics in Valhalla, New York. ``You cannot have an agreement unless everyone agrees.''
To make his point, Weinberg resuscitated the language from the 1985 Plaza Accord, where the participating finance ministers and central bankers agreed to something -- to implement policy actions so that exchange rates ``better reflect fundamental economic conditions'' -- and agreed to do something to foster it.
Real Language
Instead of talking in meaningless code, the participants determined that ``some further orderly appreciation of the main non-dollar currencies against the dollar is desirable.'' And they stood ready ``to cooperate more closely to encourage this.''
``Where were the big words this time?'' Weinberg wondered. ``Where was the statement that the U.S. current-account deficit is a problem, that the dollar needs to weaken, and rates need to fall in Europe in order to achieve it?''
I'm never sure why everyone makes such a big deal over these G-7 gatherings. Countries act in their own self-interest. Often those interests are mutual, which creates the impression of coordinated decision-making and action.
Right now they're not. Nothing changed at Boca. The dollar will continue to fall. The Japanese will continue to intervene. The Europeans will continue to worry. And the U.S. will continue to quietly condone the dollar's slide.
If the G-7 wanted a serious outcome, they should have picked a serious city.
To contact the writer on this column:
Caroline Baum in New York at cabaum@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor of this story:
Bill Ahearn at bahearn@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: February 9, 2004 11:50 EST
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Eggs, Cars, Paintings -- The Rich Smell Inflation: Matthew Lynn
Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) -- It doesn't matter how bedecked in jewels they might be. Nor how much history is contained within their shells. A hundred million dollars would be a lot to pay for some eggs.
Unless, that is, you happen to be a Russian billionaire.
Last week, Viktor Vekselberg, one of Russia's richest men, bought the world's largest private collection of Faberge Imperial Easter Eggs from the family of Malcolm S. Forbes. The nine eggs were scheduled for auction at Sotheby's Holdings Inc. and were expected to fetch $70 million to $100 million. The actual sale price wasn't disclosed, but there were more likely to be nine, not eight, digits on the check. Even for buying in bulk, the Forbes family probably didn't want to give Vekselberg a discount.
An isolated individual with an exaggerated sense of national pride? That would be one plausible explanation. But it's also possible to see that purchase as part of a global trend that has been gathering force over the past 12 months.
Right around the world, luxury alternative investments are going through a boom.
Eggs are just one example. The art business is going crazy. Vintage-car prices are rising. Diamonds are getting more expensive. Football clubs -- a rougher, but equally precious, item -- are turning into playthings for men whose egos are even bigger than their wallets.
There are some clues there to what the rich are up to with their money. And there are some lessons as well about the state of the global economy.
Art Auctions
Art and antiquities are leading the way. For the last year, auction records have been set and broken. In November, Sotheby's sold a Willem de Kooning abstract painting owned by billionaire Mitchell Rales for $11.2 million, and a Gustav Klimt piece sold for $29.1 million, during a record-setting sales period.
Overall, an index of the most expensive contemporary artists including Robert Rauschenberg and Damien Hirst climbed 54 percent during the past four years, according to Art Market Research, a London-based data firm.
Music is in demand as well. In December, a handwritten manuscript of one of Ludwig van Beethoven's last string quartets fetched 1.18 million pounds ($2.19 million) at an auction in London, while earlier last year a working version of his Ninth Symphony sold for 2.13 million pounds.
Vintage Cars
Prices of vintage cars are picking up as well. In February last year, Christie's International Plc secured a price of 1.68 million euros ($2.14 million) for a 1932 Bugatti T55 sports car. The latest Barrett-Jackson Classic Car Auction in the U.S. broke all records, surpassing the previous best year, 1990. The sales included a 1938 Lincoln Zephyr V-12 Coupe, which cost its new owner a tidy $432,000.
True, car prices have a long way to go. According to Christie's Web site, the highest price ever paid for a car was for a 1931 Bugatti Type 41 Royale by Kellner, which sold for 5.5 million pounds in November 1987. But the trend is up.
Meanwhile, in London, another Russian billionaire, Roman Abramovich, has been creating a stir with his lavish spending on football. He paid almost 60 million pounds to get control of Chelsea football club, and has spent about 111 million pounds to sign up 11 players for the club, Bloomberg data shows.
And diamond prices rose 10 percent last year, according to De Beers, the world's biggest diamond company, with prices still going up. ZAO Alrosa, which produces a fifth of the world's uncut diamonds, said sales surged 22 percent in 2003.
Luxury Investments
What the rich are doing with their cash is always interesting, and not just for voyeurs of conspicuous consumption. The rich, pretty obviously, are smarter with money than most of us. Where they're investing now, the rest of the world may well be investing soon.
The boom in luxury investments tells us two things.
The first is that there is a lot of spare cash floating around. Interest rates are low around the world, the global economy is recovering, and stock markets have been rallying. The rich are on a roll.
But they may also be nervous about traditional, mainstream investments.
No doubt, a lot of their money is still going into stocks, bonds, hedge funds and private-equity deals. But a significant chunk of it is clearly being diverted to investments that are more entertaining, and may be more profitable as well.
A trend of investing in luxury collectibles is a sign of nervous, not optimistic, times.
Inflation Fears
It suggests a fear that inflation may make a sudden return. If prices start surging globally, an oil painting may well be the best place to keep your cash parked.
And it suggests that investors are worried that the returns from productive companies may turn out to be dismal. Luxury, trophy assets have a scarcity factor that make them valuable. The world is awash with mass-produced goods -- and the rich may be signaling that there isn't much money to be made from such products.
A Faberge egg may not hold its value more than any other asset you buy. But at least it looks nice when you put it in a glass case, and you'll know that you took home a national treasure.
And if the world heads for a period of high inflation and low growth -- which is what this boom in luxury assets implies -- it might turn out to be a good investment as well.
To contact the writer of this column:
Matthew Lynn in London, or matthewlynn@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor of this column:
William Ahearn, or
at bahearn@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: February 9, 2004 03:35 EST
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Pensions Bill on Hold As Dems Demand Say
Feb 6, 2:33 PM (ET)
By JIM ABRAMS
(AP) The Senate, acting with rare election-year concord, passed a bill Wednesday, Jan. 28, to reduce by...
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Legislation that promises companies billions of dollars in pension relief has sailed through both the House and Senate but is now caught up in a separate dispute - what Democrats say is an assault on their congressional minority rights.
The Senate last week passed a bill that would reduce by $80 billion the money that employers have to pay into their defined benefit pension plans this year and next. The Senate bill also would provide $16 billion in relief over the two years to airlines and others required to make catch-up payments to underfunded plans.
Since the House passed a somewhat different version last fall, commonly the next step would be a House-Senate conference to work out a compromise that both chambers would then approve and send to the president. But Senate Democrats have blocked Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist from naming conferees, protesting what they say is a pattern of being shut out of the negotiating process.
"I have no desire to hold the pension bill," Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle said this week. "There is an urgency to this legislation, but we will not, on any legislation this year, tolerate the unacceptable experience we had on several occasions in the first session of this Congress."
Daschle was responding to GOP charges that he was obstructing legislation direly needed by companies facing financial ruin because of the high cost of pension plans.
"Senator Daschle's refusal to move forward on this bipartisan pension proposal raises serious concerns about his commitment to protecting the retirement security of American workers," said Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, chairman of the House Education and the Workforce Committee.
Democrats are particularly angered by two huge bills that House and Senate Republicans wrote last year with little or no input from Democrats.
Only two moderate Senate Democrats, and no House Democrats, took part in lengthy negotiations on the Medicare prescription drug bill that passed, and Democrats said they were completely locked out of talks on the energy bill that eventually failed in the Senate.
Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the House's second-ranked Democrat, has repeatedly pressed Republicans for what he says is the undermining of the democratic process. "I simply observe that that is shutting out the representatives of 130 million Americans on our side of the aisle to give their perspective."
But House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, in a floor exchange with Hoyer, said Republicans were equally frustrated when they were the minority. He said the process was open to those willing to work with the majority, but "you do not waste a lot of time with people that do not want a bill."
House-Senate conferences, a tradition since the 18th century, have often been a source of contention. During the New Deal, for example, liberal Democrats sought to exclude conservatives, including Democrats, from the list of conferees named by House and Senate leaders.
"It often backfires when either one side or the other perceives a conference as being held unfavorably to them," Senate historian Donald Ritchie said.
That happened last year when the House and Senate both passed an aviation bill that barred the privatization of air traffic controller jobs but Republican conferees, under pressure from the White House, rewrote it to include some shifts to the private sector.
Angry Democrats, joined by some Republicans, forced the bill back into conference and eventually the administration gave ground, agreeing to a one-year moratorium on privatization.
Daschle argued that the pensions bill could still go forward without a conference: The Senate could send its bill to the House, allowing it to either accept the Senate version or further amend it. Or there could be "pre-conferencing," informal talks among staff and members to iron out differences before a formal conference is held.
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How to Sink the Tech Comeback
By Lawrence B. Lindsey
Posted: Monday, February 9, 2004
ARTICLES
Wall Street Journal
Publication Date: February 9, 2004
Now that the Nasdaq has closed consistently back above 2000 it appears that much of the healing process from the collapse of the 1990s technology bubble is finally behind us. Sound macroeconomic policy prevented the resulting wealth destruction from producing a downward economic spiral like that of the '30s.
Going forward we must adhere to sound microeconomic policy as well if America is to retain its global leadership in technology. After the initial speculative frenzy and its collapse, the successful financing of new industries over the longer term requires a more stable environment. Clearly, competitive pressures are intense both within the existing market and from even newer technologies. But an equally important risk comes from public policy that is subject to a variety of political pressures to control the emerging market environment.
As a result, bad public-policy choices, especially in antitrust, can easily destabilize the new financial arrangements in the market. Today, there are four key factors that policy makers must take into consideration if we wish to preserve the newly found stability of our capital markets.
First, public policy should respect the underlying franchise value of the recently created firms and industries. Although the Nasdaq bubble would have burst in any event, the actual timing of its collapse coincided with two public policy events that cast doubt on these franchise values. First, the antitrust division of the Justice Department announced its Microsoft suit and suggested remedies that many felt threatened its business model. Although some of Microsoft's competitors would supposedly have benefited from the suit, they soon found that their stock values plummeted as well as the viability of the industry was questioned.
Several weeks later, President Clinton joined Prime Minister Blair in declaring the human genome to be the common heritage of mankind. The biotech sector soon saw its equity values collapse too. If the human genome belongs to all of mankind, what is the value of patents on products developed from human-genome research?
Today, regulators must show more forbearance regarding policies that would harm the market value of the technology industry. As the economy continues to strengthen, more mergers will take place as the natural process of creative destruction continues. We have seen consolidation occur in a number of technology fields, including computer hardware and media players, and there is more consolidation planned in fields like business application software. The prospect of buyouts, in fact, is part of the market value of all technology firms. But if this route for business development is closed, the market value of technology firms will drop.
Of course, regulators must vigorously enforce laws that prohibit anticompetitive conduct. But whether emerging market structures will allow anticompetitive conduct in the future based on established rules of market concentration is a purely hypothetical exercise. It is far more important to focus on the reality of performance than the theoretical possibilities of what might happen based on structure.
Second, market pricing is underpinned by the development of effective shareholder control. The regulatory environment should defer to shareholder decisions as much as possible regarding corporate control. The shareholders of an industry that has just seen its market value decimated are primarily focused on preserving what value is left and finding a way to rebuild. Both sustained economic growth and the long-term competitiveness of our high-tech industries requires that these shareholders succeed.
In the beginning, high-tech companies are owned chiefly by founders and a few key sponsors. As the market value rises, the shares are distributed more widely to a public that buys the shares because they like the concept the firm presents or the momentum of its stock price. These shareholders often back the founders in establishing poison pills that limit the possibility of a buyout because they believe they are betting on a winner and don't want to be part of some other organization.
After the market collapses and these shareholders liquidate, professional financial managers take over seeking value in stocks that have been knocked down too far. These value-oriented investors have no particular attachment to the original business model or its founders and are simply seeking to make a profit by acquiring undervalued assets and restructuring them in a way that will allow their resale to higher bidders. This process is key to rationalizing an industry and making it viable in the long term. Public-policy actions that inhibit this process--by blocking mergers and takeovers on allegedly competitive grounds or by overly protecting the poison pill arrangements of the initial founders--can do substantial damage to the long-term viability of the high-tech marketplace.
Third, public-policy must recognize that the competitive threats to the high-tech industry are numerous and by themselves sharply limit the scope for anticompetitive conduct. This is particularly true in our highly globalized market. A famous historical example from the late 1960s and early '70s was the antitrust position that General Motors could not exceed a 60 percent market share of U.S. auto production. This position was quickly made ridiculous by the invasion of Japanese cars. Similarly, the once dominant positions of IBM and Xerox quickly eroded. The reality is that the extreme amount of competition in the global market is the best check to anticompetitive business practices.
Finally, mergers can also be a way to increase competition. If two medium-size firms merge, they may end up better positioned to challenge the largest firm in the market. Leveraging new economies of scale is a way for smaller firms to reclaim market share lost to the largest firms.
It is somewhat ironic that, after all the high-tech equity market has been through, one of the greater threats to its overall valuation is not technological or even competitive, it is public policy. The months ahead will determine whether the recent rise in the Nasdaq reflects a new level of maturity for these emerging industries, or whether it will disappear because public-policy makers are unwilling to allow time for these industries to fully recover from the excesses of the '90s.

Lawrence B. Lindsey served as assistant to the president for economic policy under President George W. Bush and is a visiting scholar at AEI.
AEI Print Index No. 16326
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Enabling Institutional Investors to Play a More Effective Role in Corporate Governance Print Mail

Posted: Monday, February 9, 2004

PAPERS AND STUDIES
Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee briefing (Washington)
Publication Date: February 9, 2004
Statement No. 204
For Information Contact:
Charles W. Calomiris
(202) 862-7151
Randall S. Kroszner
(202) 862-5878
The SEC's recent proposals on "Shareholder Access" have generated an unusually large number of comments. As detailed in Statement No. 199, the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee believes that the current SEC proposals would produce few, if any, benefits and have potential downside risks. Those proposals concern the ability of significant shareholders, under certain narrow circumstances, to include their candidates for directors in the proxy materials distributed to shareholders by a company. Rather than proposing a new set of complex regulations, the SEC, together with Congress and the Administration, should focus reform efforts on reducing barriers for the involvement of significant shareholders in the corporate governance of publicly traded firms.
The objective of any reforms of the corporate governance system should be to improve shareholder value. Re-examining the role that significant shareholders (institutional investors) can play in the governance process under current rules is important. In many cases, large institutional investors, such as index funds with large holdings in portfolio firms, do not have the option simply to "vote with their feet" by selling their holdings of firms that are underperforming. Particularly in these circumstances, it is valuable to investigate whether the current legal and regulatory system discourages useful involvement of institutional shareholders in monitoring and disciplining management.
When designing regulatory reforms to achieve meaningful and constructive engagement of institutional investors in the corporate governance of their portfolio firms, the SEC should begin by asking why institutions have not been more active in the past. If active involvement by blockholding institutions in corporate decision making is such a good idea, why haven't institutional investors pursued it more?
The Committee has identified several possible explanations, each of which points in a different direction for reformers seeking to increase institutional involvement in corporate governance.
First, it may be that regulatory limitations on the amount of stock in any one corporation that an institution is permitted to hold may reduce the incentive of an institutional investor to incur the costs of exercising a voice over corporate governance. These limitations apply to classes of institutional investors under various statutes, including state laws governing insurance companies, the Investment Company Act of 1940, banking laws, and financial holding company regulations.
Second, institutional investors may hesitate to play a role in corporate governance due to either regulatory limitations on their actions with respect to portfolio firms or legal risks that reduce their incentive to play an active role. Banks, for example, can face equitable subordination or lender liability when they are actively involved in corporate governance of debtor firms encountering distress. Also, any institution that places one of its own employees on the board of a company faces potential liability for insider trading or suits brought against that director. If these legal and regulatory impediments exert an important chilling effect on corporate governance by institutional investors, it might be appropriate to remove or reduce some of these limitations, or encourage market-oriented reductions of legal risks through mutual insurance of those risks by institutional investors.
Third, it may be that involvement by institutional investors in corporate governance has been hampered by difficulties in coordinating the behavior of several blockholding institutions holding shares in the same firm. A coordinated effort of many institutional investors, who together have a significant stake in a firm, might be much more effective as a means of exerting influence than the actions of one institution acting alone. Coordination, however, can be costly for two reasons: physical coordination costs and legal impediments or risks to coordination. It is possible that some beneficial coordination is avoided out of fear that this would result in potential legal problems for institutional investors (e.g., through antitrust laws or section 16(b) rules governing short swing trades).
Fourth, it may be that the Williams Act and anti-takeover devices have weakened the incentive for institutional investors to play an active role in corporate governance. After all, the primary roles of institutional investors in corporate governance are occasional interventions to support a hostile takeover or to replace a dysfunctional board of directors, rather than to play an ongoing role in supervising day-to-day management decisions. If anti-takeover devices insulate management from the threat of such discipline, then institutional investors may conclude that there is little point to taking an active role in corporate governance. Here, the policy solution would focus largely on changes in law and regulation that would facilitate market discipline through takeovers.
Finally, it is possible that the lack of involvement in corporate governance by institutional investors is the result of agency problems between ultimate stockholders and the institutional investors that manage their shares. If pension fund and mutual fund managers face weak incentives to maximize the value of the portfolios they manage, they may choose not to be as diligent as they should be in improving corporate governance in portfolio firms. To the extent that agency problems in money management are an important problem, policy makers should consider ways to improve money managers' incentives.
The Committee believes that rather than attempt to enhance shareholder democracy by tinkering with shareholder voting rules, policymakers should focus on enhancing the ability of institutional investors to affect corporate governance.
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Toward a Single Transatlantic Market in Financial Services
Posted: Monday, February 9, 2004
PAPERS AND STUDIES
Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee briefing (Washington)
Publication Date: February 9, 2004
Statement No. 203
For Information Contact:
Kenneth Dam
(773) 702-0216
Richard Herring
(215) 898-5613
Hal Scott
(617) 495-4590
For several years the U.S. government has carried on an Informal Financial Markets Dialogue with the European Commission in order to narrow the differences between the different financial regulatory systems. The Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee believes that the time has come to consider the issues in a broader context: what would be required for the development of a single Trans-Atlantic market in financial services. Further, it is time to consider whether the present regulatory approaches make sense in a 21st century economy.
On the U.S. side, the Treasury has taken the lead in cooperation with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Federal Reserve, even though some of the issues involve other regulators. On the European side, the Commission has carried on the Dialogue without participation by member country regulatory authorities. As the name implies, the Dialogue is informal, with public disclosure limited to occasional speeches and fact sheets. Similarly, consultation with and advice from the private financial sector have also been informal.
Although the individual issues are well known to the private firms directly involved, the public policy dialogue has necessarily been limited. The Committee believes that the issues being discussed in this Dialogue are of importance not just to the financial services industry, but also to the U.S. and European economies more broadly. Although the governmental institutions and individuals involved are well informed and well motivated, we believe that the visibility of the issues under discussion needs to be raised but also to the U.S. and European economies more broadly. Although the governmental institutions and individuals involved are well informed and well motivated, we believe that the visibility of the issues under discussion should be raised.
The present Dialogue takes the substance of the existing regulatory schemes as given without conducting any cost-benefit analysis to determine whether particular regulations, either on the U.S. or the EU side, make sense in a 21st century economy. We believe that higher goals and broader economic examination of the underlying issues would be desirable.
From the standpoint of goals, the vision of a single Trans-Atlantic market in financial services will help to raise our sights and thereby the quality of the results. The economic benefits of recent financial innovation and transformation have been limited by outmoded regulation. And the costs of complying with the divergences among jurisdictions have been borne by private firms with predictable consequences for economic efficiency. We believe that the goal of a single Trans-Atlantic market in financial services, as well as the adoption of principles to resolve differences, would provide a framework for faster progress and greater achievement.
What follows is a summary of some of the key regulatory issues that confront the Dialogue, as well as a consideration of some principles that might guide agreement, and questions of process.
Some Regulatory Issues
First is the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which extended new rules of governance to foreign firms whose securities trade in public markets in the United States. While SEC implementation of these rules has accommodated the principal concerns of European issuers, particularly in the area of the need for independent directors on the audit committee, certain issues remain. There is the question as to how the registration and inspection standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) will be applied to foreign auditing firms. In addition, Europeans are concerned with the "no exit" feature of U.S. regulation that requires all companies with more than $10 million in assets and more than 300 shareholders to comply with Sarbanes-Oxley even if they were to drop their exchange listings and discourage trading of their securities in the U.S.
Second is the scheduled adoption of International Accounting Standards (IAS) by the EU in 2005, which may prohibit U.S. companies from continuing to issue securities in the EU under U.S. GAAP. It is not even clear whether countries currently trading under U.S. GAAP in Europe will be grandfathered. There is particular concern that the EU may not accommodate U.S. GAAP in the EU if the SEC fails to allow foreign firms to use IAS in issuing securities in the United States. While the Convergence Project undertaken by the Financial Accounting Standards Board and the International Accounting Standards Board is seeking to bring about convergence in the two sets of rules, it is far from certain that this effort will be complete by 2005. Complicating this exercise are important issues concerning which rules are adopted when they differ substantially and the balance between rules and principles.
Third is the divergence of views on the implementation of the Basel II Accord in 2007. The U.S. has indicated that it will apply only these standards to "internationally active" banks. The EU, on the other hand, envisions applying all of the standards to all banks and securities firms in the EU.
Fourth is the question of the effect of the EU's proposed Financial Conglomerates Directive on U.S. securities firms that are currently unregulated at the holding company level. The EU Directive would subject these firms to EU conglomerate regulation unless these firms are subject to "equivalent" U.S. regulation. The SEC has proposed a new form of holding company regulation, which it hopes will satisfy the equivalence test, but this has yet to be decided by the EU.
In addition, there are other areas of concern: different standards for data protection and privacy, the inability of EU stock exchanges to set up trading screens in the United States without being fully subject to U.S. regulation, differences in approaches to electronic trading systems, particularly those involving internalization, and differences in takeover rules.
Principles
If, contrary to our suggestions above, the Dialogue proceeds along its current narrower path, it would be useful to reach agreement on general principles to guide negotiations. Traditionally, the United States has followed the national treatment approach under which foreign firms operating in the United States are fully subject to U.S. rules, such as the requirement that foreign firms file reports using U.S. GAAP and comply with the CEO/CFO financial statement certification requirement of Sarbanes-Oxley. There have also been attempts to harmonize rules in formal ways, Basel II serving as a major example. To a great extent, the EU has adopted still another approach, mutual recognition, within its internal financial market. Mutual recognition requires the host state to recognize the validity of the home state's rules, assuming some minimum level of harmonization. The United States has generally been unwilling to accept mutual recognition principles in dealing with the EU, although it has adopted a mutual recognition system (with some important exceptions) with respect to Canadian firms issuing securities in the United States and to U.S. firms issuing securities in Canada. In addition, the United States has generally accepted home country regulation, albeit as a necessity, with respect to the regulation of foreign banks operating in the U.S. through branches.
Two other principles have been put forward more recently. First, the EU Commission has advocated an equivalence approach, whereby it would accept U.S. regulation that was equivalent to its own, even though the details might be quite different. Indeed, the Financial Conglomerates Directive adopts an equivalence approach. The United States has used the test as well in some areas. For example, foreign mutual funds registering in the United States are exempted from certain features of the Investment Company Act of 1940 if they are subject to equivalent rules abroad. Second, the SEC has advocated a convergence approach, indicating its willingness to accept EU regulation that has converged with but may not be identical to the U.S. rules. How these principles would actually be applied to the issues now under discussion has yet to be determined.
Process
As noted above, the Treasury, the SEC and the Federal Reserve represent the United States, while the European Commission represents the EU, even though other regulators may be consulted. At some stage there will need to be additional, more structured governmental participation on both sides, that would include the CFTC and state insurance commissioners on the U.S. side and key national regulators on the EU side, as well as self-regulatory organizations on both sides of the Atlantic. It will also be necessary to take into account non-EU countries in Europe, principally Switzerland. Discussions among government officials and regulators can result in more regulation as a "compromise". But less regulation should also be an option in many areas and thus the views of private sector observers as well as the financial community should weigh heavily in the ultimate conclusions of the Dialogue.
Conclusion
The Shadow Committee applauds the efforts of the U.S.-EU Informal Financial Markets Dialogue to narrow the differences between the two financial regulatory systems. At the same time, however, we urge the participants in the Dialogue to raise their sights to achieve the more ambitious goal of developing a single Trans-Atlantic market in financial services. This approach should involve not simply an ad hoc resolution of current regulatory differences, but should involve a careful cost-benefit analysis of each aspect of regulation to ensure that we achieve a financial system that serves the real economy in the most efficient way.

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