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To: i-node who wrote (196303)7/30/2004 10:54:35 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572507
 
Uzbek Blasts Hit U.S. and Israeli Embassies

By Shamil Baigin

TASHKENT (Reuters) - Simultaneous explosions struck the U.S. and Israeli embassies in Uzbekistan as well as the state prosecutor's office in the capital Tashkent Friday, killing at least two people and wounding five.

Reuters Photo



The three blasts at about 5 p.m. (8 a.m. EDT) in Uzbekistan, a U.S. ally in the war on terror, appeared to have been triggered by suicide bombers, almost certainly on foot.

The action appeared clearly coordinated, as the trial proceeded in Tashkent of 15 people on charges of trying to overthrow the ex-Soviet state in connection with attacks in March that killed nearly 50 people.

The three buildings are spread across the modern city of two million people located in the heart of arid Central Asia. Uzbek President Islam Karimov, visiting Ukraine's Crimea peninsula, was due to return home overnight, local officials said.

Israeli ambassador Zvi Cohen said two people had died outside the Jewish state's embassy.

"A bomb exploded at the entrance to the embassy," he told Israel Radio. "It is not clear yet whether it was a suicide bomber or an explosive device. Two local workers were killed."

Cohen said he and three other Israeli officials were in the building at the time along with two local security guards. Security had been stepped up since the earlier bombings.

SUICIDE BOMBER MOST LIKELY

An Israeli security source said officials suspected a suicide bombing by Islamic militants, though it was too early to say for certain. The source said one of those killed in the security screening area was an Uzbek security guard and the other may have been an Uzbek worker.

Party of a body lay outside the embassy and windows were shattered in single-story houses opposite.

The U.S. embassy, reached by telephone from Moscow, said there were no known injuries in the blast outside the building's compound.

Russia's Interfax news agency quoted an embassy official as saying it had been caused by a suicide bomber with explosives attached to his waist.

Uzbek Interior Minister Zakirdzhon Almatov said five people were injured at the prosecutor's office, where a man blew himself up in the lobby.

Police sealed off the building and fire trucks and ambulances were lined up outside, flanked by police carrying automatic weapons.

The defendants in the mass trial were said to have been followers of the extreme Islamist al Qaeda organization.

Uzbekistan was a staging post for the U.S. operation that ousted the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan (news - web sites) and has allowed Washington the use of an air base.

The administration of President Karimov, who unabashedly uses tough methods to root out Islamic extremism, stands accused by rights groups of widespread human rights violations.



(additional reporting by Jerusalem bureau)



To: i-node who wrote (196303)7/31/2004 9:45:34 AM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1572507
 
Triumph of the Trivial
By Paul Krugman
The New York Times
Friday 30 July 2004

Under the headline "Voters Want Specifics From Kerry," The Washington Post recently quoted a voter demanding that John Kerry and John Edwards talk about "what they plan on doing about health care for middle-income or lower-income people. I have to face the fact that I will never be able to have health insurance, the way things are now. And these millionaires don't seem to address that."

Mr. Kerry proposes spending $650 billion extending health insurance to lower - and middle-income families. Whether you approve or not, you can't say he hasn't addressed the issue. Why hasn't this voter heard about it?

Well, I've been reading 60 days' worth of transcripts from the places four out of five Americans cite as where they usually get their news: the major cable and broadcast TV networks. Never mind the details - I couldn't even find a clear statement that Mr. Kerry wants to roll back recent high-income tax cuts and use the money to cover most of the uninsured. When reports mentioned the Kerry plan at all, it was usually horse race analysis - how it's playing, not what's in it.

On the other hand, everyone knows that Teresa Heinz Kerry told someone to "shove it," though even there, the context was missing. Except for a brief reference on MSNBC, none of the transcripts I've read mention that the target of her ire works for Richard Mellon Scaife, a billionaire who financed smear campaigns against the Clintons - including accusations of murder. (CNN did mention Mr. Scaife on its Web site, but described him only as a donor to "conservative causes.") And viewers learned nothing about Mr. Scaife's long vendetta against Mrs. Heinz Kerry herself.

There are two issues here, trivialization and bias, but they're related.

Somewhere along the line, TV news stopped reporting on candidates' policies, and turned instead to trivia that supposedly reveal their personalities. We hear about Mr. Kerry's haircuts, not his health care proposals. We hear about George Bush's brush-cutting, not his environmental policies.

Even on its own terms, such reporting often gets it wrong, because journalists aren't especially good at judging character. ("He is, above all, a moralist," wrote George Will about Jack Ryan, the Illinois Senate candidate who dropped out after embarrassing sex-club questions.) And the character issues that dominate today's reporting have historically had no bearing on leadership qualities. While planning D-Day, Dwight Eisenhower had a close, though possibly platonic, relationship with his female driver. Should that have barred him from the White House?

And since campaign coverage as celebrity profiling has no rules, it offers ample scope for biased reporting.

Notice the voter's reference to "these millionaires." A Columbia Journalism Review Web site called campaigndesk.org, says its analysis "reveals a press prone to needlessly introduce Senators Kerry and Edwards and Kerry's wife, Teresa Heinz Kerry, as millionaires or billionaires, without similar labels for President Bush or Vice President Cheney."

As the site points out, the Bush campaign has been "hammering away with talking points casting Kerry as out of the mainstream because of his wealth, hoping to influence press coverage." The campaign isn't claiming that Mr. Kerry's policies favor the rich - they manifestly don't, while Mr. Bush's manifestly do. Instead, we're supposed to dislike Mr. Kerry simply because he's wealthy (and not notice that his opponent is, too). Republicans, of all people, are practicing the politics of envy, and the media obediently go along.

In short, the triumph of the trivial is not a trivial matter. The failure of TV news to inform the public about the policy proposals of this year's presidential candidates is, in its own way, as serious a journalistic betrayal as the failure to raise questions about the rush to invade Iraq.

P.S.: Another story you may not see on TV: Jeb Bush insists that electronic voting machines are perfectly reliable, but The St. Petersburg Times says the Republican Party of Florida has sent out a flier urging supporters to use absentee ballots because the machines lack a paper trail and cannot "verify your vote."

P.P.S.: Three weeks ago, The New Republic reported that the Bush administration was pressuring Pakistan to announce a major terrorist capture during the Democratic convention. Hours before Mr. Kerry's acceptance speech, Pakistan announced, several days after the fact, that it had apprehended an important Al Qaeda operative.

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