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To: PHarris who wrote (385)9/19/1998 9:06:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
The Telegraph - London - 09/19/98

By Alan Philps, Middle East Correspondent

TENS of thousands of Iranians chanting "vengeance, vengeance" marched through the streets of Teheran yesterday as the stand-off between Iran and Afghanistan reached a critical phase.

Iran is expected to begin huge military exercises along the border over the weekend in a show of force designed to intimidate the ruling militia, the Taliban, whose men killed nine Iranians last month.

Carrying black flags and beating their chests in sign of mourning, men and women converged on the capital's university campus for the Friday prayer meeting. Some carried banners demanding that the Islamic Republic arm the estimated one million Afghan refugees on Iranian soil for a punitive assault on the Taliban. Funerals for seven of the dead Iranians - two remain unidentified - were expected to take place later.

After a hurried visit to Teheran, Pakistan's Foreign Minister, Sartaj Aziz, announced that the Taliban would release five Iranian prisoners today as a goodwill gesture.

The minister conveyed a message to the Iranian leadership denying their claims that Pakistan was masterminding the successful assault of the Taliban, who now control about 90 per cent of the country. The
Taliban leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, who uses the ancient Islamic title of Commander of the Faithful, has called a meeting on Monday of Islamic scholars, a forum which could endorse a call for the mobilisation of Taliban forces to withstand the expected Iranian onslaught. Taliban radio stepped up the war of words with Teheran, accusing the ayatollahs of murdering 56 Afghan refugees, including eight said to have been beheaded.

The Iranians are believed to be mobilising up to 200,000 men on the border, including tanks, artillery and aircraft. The Taliban are outnumbered and outgunned, but they have a fearsome reputation as fighters. The Iranians will take their accusations of Taliban "genocide" against Afghan Shi'ite Muslims to New York next week.

The Foreign Minister, Kamal Kharrazi, will have a rare meeting with the American Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright, as part of an eight-nation conference on how to end the crisis. Diplomats believe a war between Iran and the Taliban would have a devastating effect on an area stretching from Pakistan to the Muslim republics of the former Soviet Union.

Afghanistan has been plagued by war for two decades. But a conflict between the Taliban - who are imposing an ultra-strict form of Sunni Islam - and the Iranians, who espouse the Shia doctrine, could inflame passions over the region.

Pakistan is held responsible by the Iranians for the successful onslaught of the Taliban. The Taliban - which means "students of Islam" - were originally recruited among ethnic Pushtuns in Islamic theological colleges.



To: PHarris who wrote (385)9/19/1998 9:08:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
Russian army daily says forces close to collapse

By Martin Nesirky

MOSCOW, Sept 18 (Reuters) - Russia's austere armed forces newspaper lashed out with uncharacteristic venom against the government on Friday, saying the military was now so hard up it could soon lose its ability to defend the country. ''What fascist troops failed to do 50 or so years ago, a little group of modest accountants has managed quite easily,'' said Krasnaya Zvezda, or ''Red Star.'' ''The 'undefeatable and legendary' (armed forces) are months or maybe even weeks away from utter collapse.'' Krasnaya Zvezda left no doubt the hard-hitting remarks were sanctioned on high by making the article by commentator Yuri Gladkevich the main front-page story in the defence ministry's official daily. Even more surprising, the commentary followed a pledge from President Boris Yeltsin on Thursday to clear half of the government's wage arrears to soldiers this month. Gladkevich painted a grim picture. Some serving personnel and those made redundant had committed suicide. Professional officers were giving blood or working at night as taxi drivers or car park attendants to raise cash to feed their families. Western and Russian defence specialists have long pointed to underfunding as a source of low morale, although they tend to caution against alarmism. But they agree military stability in the world's second nuclear power is a prime reason for the West to help Russia avoid total economic meltdown. The article said the armed forces -- more than one million men serving from the Baltic to the Pacific -- had received only a third of the 65.8 billion roubles it had been allotted in this year's budget. That is $4.5 billion at Friday's official exchange rate but was worth more than $10 billion before the rouble crashed
last month. Armed forces personnel are owed 16 billion roubles in wage arrears and officers are receiving food parcels, including bread handouts, instead of cash food allowances. ''It is possible the Russian armed forces will soon cease to exist as a combat-capable organism,'' Gladkevich wrote, saying this was more important
than talk of whether the armed forces would remain loyal or not. ''The financial policy of previous governments and above all of the finance ministry is leading with increased pace to the point at which the army and navy will completely lose their ability to fulfil their destiny of being a guarantor of the state's external security.'' The article said underfunding meant thousands of tanks were out of action, hundreds of aircraft entombed in hangars and navy vessels in bad shape. Krasnaya Zvezda's commentary appeared to be the latest round in a funding feud between the defence and finance ministries. The finance ministry issued a statement earlier in the week saying it was not grossly behind with its payments. That followed comments from the defence ministry's press office that money to pay food suppliers had been cut off. With Defence Minister Igor Sergeyev reconfirmed in office in Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov's embryonic government, security experts say there is a clear pitch to try to secure a sympathetic finance minister in the team and to ensure the state coughs up overdue funds soon. ^REUTERS@



To: PHarris who wrote (385)9/19/1998 9:26:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
The Egyptian Ambassador to Israel, Muhammad Bassyouni, warns of possible war between the two countries. Speaking at a gathering in honor of the 20th anniversary of the Camp David agreements last night, Bassyouni said that a clash between Israel and the Palestinians could lead to an armed conflict between Israel and Egypt. He did not relate to the Israel Government Press Office's report of yesterday detailing official Egyptian anti-Semitism in the Egyptian press. Israel's Ambassador in Egypt said that current relations between the two
countries are about "half" of what is usual between states with diplomatic relations.



To: PHarris who wrote (385)9/22/1998 9:10:00 AM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
Washington Post

Fund-Raiser Set Up Fake Firms for Chinese

By George Lardner Jr. Washington Post Staff Writer Monday, September 21, 1998; Page A02

Democratic fund-raiser Johnny Chung set up fake businesses in California with at least a half-dozen Chinese executives to make it easier for them to get U.S. visas, according to testimony and records compiled by House Republican investigators.

Chung brought most of the executives, who included the offspring of two retired Chinese generals, to fund-raisers for the Clinton-Gore 1996 reelection effort.

Irene Wu, Chung's top assistant from 1995 to 1997, said in a deposition to the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee that "all of these companies" were set up to facilitate travel to the United States by the Chinese business officials and eventually help them establish permanent residency here.

The companies engaged in no real business activity, Wu said in her July 28 deposition.

Immigration and Naturalization Service spokesman Russ Bergeron said setting up dummy companies to acquire visas is a "growing fraud," particularly in faraway countries such as China. He said it involves "all kinds of scams," including bogus business cards, letterheads for nonexistent companies, phony tax returns and fake photos of business locations.

Wu said Chung used "a lot of invitation letters" that the associates in China could use when requesting visas. The letters typically urged them to come to Los Angeles for business discussions about upcoming projects.

Two of the companies, Sino-American Economic Development Inc. and Yuangao International Inc., were established in 1995 by Chung and Chen Shizeng, the head of a Chinese beer company. The Taiwanese-born
Chung met Chen the year before on Chung's first trip to China.

Through Chen, "Johnny met a lot of other people," Wu said.

From 1994 to 1996, Chung visited the White House 49 times and attended numerous Democratic fund-raising events, sometimes escorting Chinese business officials who were photographed with President Clinton or first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. Chung gave $366,000 to the Democratic National Committee for the 1996 election, all of which has been returned.

Chung, a businessman from Torrance, Calif., began cooperating with federal prosecutors in March after pleading guilty to making illegal campaign contributions. He told Justice Department investigators that a
Chinese military officer who is an executive with a state-owned aerospace company gave him $300,000 in the summer of 1996 with the understanding that some of the money would be used for contributions to Democratic campaigns. China called the report a "sheer fabrication."

Wu said the officer, Liu Chaoying, daughter of an Army general who retired last year, made two visits to the United States -- in July 1996 when Chung accompanied her to two fund-raising events Clinton attended and in August 1996 when she came with plans to buy spare parts for aircraft. "She thought Johnny had connections"
with U.S. aerospace companies, Wu said. "To my knowledge, he didn't."

Chung filed papers in California on Aug. 9, 1996, setting up Marswell Investment Inc. He listed Liu as president and himself as vice president and stated its purpose as "import/export of auto accessories."

Wu said Marswell did no business and now is dormant.

Six days after the company was established, one of Chung's three bank accounts received a $79,980 wire transfer from Hong Kong; an attorney familiar with the transaction told The Washington Post in May the money came from Liu.

Chung has told investigators that Liu told him the money came from Chinese military intelligence. Liu has denied Chung's account.

According to Wu, Chung also had dealings with Liu Bin, the son of another retired Chinese general, who was Chung's guest at a September 1995 Clinton-Gore fund-raiser in Century City, Calif.

Chung set up a company called C.L. International with Liu Bin (no relation to the aerospace executive) in July 1996, but Chung resigned from it a few months later. According to Wu, Chung quit after learning that Liu Bin, a hotel and nightclub executive, had written four bad checks for $220,000 on C.L. International's bank account from China.



To: PHarris who wrote (385)9/23/1998 3:25:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
Dallas Morning News - 09/23/98

By Gregg Jones

JAKARTA, Indonesia - The conversation is livelier these days around Rojak Tasikmalaya's ginseng stand in Jakarta's crowded
Tanah Abang market. All the subjects that ordinary Indonesians used to shun for fear of running afoul of the authorities - the
president's performance, military abuses, government corruption - are now fair game for anyone.

But that's about the only difference the 30-year-old market vendor has noticed in the four months since President B.J. Habibie took
power from Suharto, the strongman who was forced to resign amid riots and demonstrations last May.

"I don't feel any different since Suharto stepped down," said Mr. Tasikmalaya. "There's been no change in my life. I want prices to
fall, not the president."

Yusuf Riadi, 45, a market security guard, nodded solemnly. "The thing we worry about most is our stomachs," he said.

Such statements capture the grim mood in Indonesia these days, where initial euphoria over Mr. Habibie's restoration of political and
civil rights has been eclipsed by despair over soaring food prices and unemployment, plummeting wages and even hunger.

After three months of relative peace following the bloody May riots that toppled Suharto, the fears and frustrations gripping Indonesia
are being vented again in a growing wave of riots, looting, strikes and demonstrations across the main islands of Java and Sumatra.
In Jakarta last week, angry students tore down the gates of the parliament complex and demanded that Mr. Habibie lower the price
of basic goods or resign.

"I'm so afraid that we're coming to a social revolution," said Sofjan Wanandi, chief executive officer of the Gemala Group, an
Indonesian conglomerate. "I don't see any light at the end of the tunnel. I've become so pessimistic in the last few days."

Indeed, the news for Indonesia and its 210 million people is only getting worse.

Indonesia's economic output is on a pace to contract by 15 percent this year. Inflation is 80 percent and rising. An average of
15,000 workers are losing their jobs every day.

A report by the International Labor Organization projects that 75 million people, or about 36 percent of the population, have already
slipped below the poverty line; nearly half the population is expected to be in poverty by year-end, and the figure is projected to soar
to 140 million people by the end of 1999 - levels not seen here since the 1960s.

"We've gone from the zenith of economic achievement to the nadir in less than a year," said a veteran Western diplomat based in
Jakarta.

The social costs of the crisis are already strikingly evident:

Beggars, a rarity in Jakarta in recent years, now converge on cars at major intersections. The destitute compete with young men
and children who strum guitars and shake homemade tambourines for spare change;

School enrollment of eligible children has fallen to 54 percent from 78 percent last year as tens of thousands of children are forced
to work full time as street beggars and garbage dump scavengers, according to school officials and social workers;

Thousands of unemployed men are now trying to make a living in Jakarta by driving becaks, the bicycle taxis banned from the
capital's streets after Indonesia's economy began booming in the 1970s.

High rice prices

Stoking much of the latest unrest is the soaring price of rice, Indonesia's staple food, which has tripled over the past year and has
risen sharply again in recent days. As a result, an estimated 750,000 families are now eating only one meal a day while others are
being forced to eat grass and leaves, aid agencies said.

There are nearly daily reports of hungry mobs stealing rice from paddy fields, raiding rice warehouses and robbing trucks carrying
harvested rice. The Jakarta Post described the incidents as "acts of desperation" and warned that "more unrest could easily spread
to other parts of the country."

In a speech earlier this month, Mr. Habibie bluntly acknowledged the perils Indonesia faces.

"If our economic problems cannot be solved within a short time, their influence will be felt in other areas," he said. "Social unrest will
prevail. Crime will rise. In such a situation, the chance of human rights abuses taking place will surely be bigger."

Mr. Habibie, 62, has won praise from foreign diplomats and analysts for moving rapidly to liberalize Suharto's authoritarian political
system.

He has freed restrictions on political activity, which has led to the formation of more than 50 new parties. He has removed
constraints on the media. He has released some of the country's best known political prisoners. And he has encouraged an
examination of Suharto era corruption and human rights abuses.

"It's incredible how open this place is now, considering the way it was four months ago," said David Timberman, Indonesia program
director of the Washington-based National Democratic Institute for International Affairs. "It's just a profound shift in the whole
orientation of Indonesia."

Indonesian analysts are less charitable when it comes to grading Mr. Habibie.

"He's a nice man, tries to make everyone happy, but he forgets to govern," said political commentator Wimar Witoelar. "There is no
policy direction."

Lack of confidence

The business community, which has long been leery of Mr. Habibie because of his free-spending ways as Suharto's technology
minister, takes an equally dim view of his performance as president.

"There still isn't confidence in Habibie, especially among foreign investors, domestic investors and the Chinese community," said
Mr. Wanandi, a leading ethnic Chinese businessman in Jakarta. "I don't think he can stay until the general elections next May."

Economists contend that Mr. Habibie has sent mixed policy signals that have hurt efforts to restore investor confidence. He has
downplayed the seriousness of the crisis, and he has talked up pain-free, populist proposals such as redistributing assets and
strengthening subsidies rather than the austerity measures most economists advocate.

"He has shown weak leadership," said economist Mari Pangestu. "The economy is still spiraling downward, and it's going to get
worse before it gets better. We're going to have to bite the bullet."

Mr. Habibie's defenders say there is only so much he can do to slow the downward economic spiral, which was set in motion by
Suharto's corrupt, crony practices.

"No one who is president now will get much credit," said Dewi Fortuna Anwar, a top Habibie adviser. "In the economic sphere, the
best the government can do is try to develop the framework to try to stabilize the prices. It will take time for confidence."

Mr. Habibie has purposely focused on the issues of political transformation, "promoting greater transparency and accountability
within the framework of the existing constitution," said Ms. Anwar.

But many Indonesians remain deeply skeptical of Mr. Habibie's commitment to democratic reforms and clean government, given his
own role in the Suharto regime and the fact that many Suharto holdovers still serve Mr. Habibie.

His pledges to end Suharto-era nepotism were mocked recently after he awarded his wife and brother with state medals. And his
commitment to reform was questioned when he refused to overturn Suharto's ouster of the country's most popular politician,
Megawati Sukarnoputri, from her position as head of the Indonesian Democratic Party.

The most critical test of Mr. Habibie's commitment to political reform will occur in November, when a national assembly controlled
by the ruling party meets to approve new laws for next May's general elections, analysts said.

"If you didn't have an economy in such dire straits, you could lay out a scenario where they would come through all this," said a
senior Western diplomat. "But it's not clear people are going to be patient enough to let this all happen."

Vedi Hadiz, an Indonesian political scientist at Australia's Murdoch University, frets that Mr. Habibie and his political opponents are
frittering away a historic opportunity to peacefully cultivate democracy in the world's fourth largest country.

"Everybody's in a race against time because of the economy," said Mr. Hadiz. "The problem is both the political opposition and the
powers that be aren't responsive to this time urgency. And so we have a stalemate. Everyday I've become a little more pessimistic."