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To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (53)11/14/1998 7:38:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 178
 
Welcome to APEC . . .

By Peter Hartcher

When the prisoner with the black eye, Anwar Ibrahim,
was still Malaysia's deputy prime minister and the region
was still thriving, he wrote a provocative book which
argued that Asia's economic triumphs "must not blind us
to the parallel rise of corruption: bribery, nepotism, and
the abuse of power". And in the foreword he included
this tribute to his mentor, the Prime Minister: "I am
indebted in a very special way to Dr Mahathir Mohamad
. . . For his tolerance and for his giving me the latitude to
articulate my thoughts, I am indeed grateful."

Mahathir, a generation older than Anwar, seemed to
smile in an indulgent, paternal sort of way on the implied
criticism in his cheeky protege's work.

Indeed, it was Mahathir who described their relationship
as that of father and son.

But two years later, when Anwar again warned against
corruption and challenged Mahathir on policy to deal
with the economic crisis, the father turned on his son. He
cut off the electricity to Anwar's official residence at 5.30
pm on September 2, sacked his deputy and had him
arrested for the same offence -- corruption.Anwar also
stands charged with homosexuality, which Mahathir has
long claimed to be a symptom of Western decadence.
The subliminal message? That Anwar, who championed a
more market-friendly Western-style economic policy, has
been soiled by Malaysia's would-be neo-colonialists from
the West -- the currency traders and their handmaidens
in Western governments.

The black eye is also symbolic of the political struggle,
but painfully literal; Anwar says he was beaten by police
in his cell, a touch that has shocked Malaysians.

So now, when Anwar writes of Mahathir from Sg Buloh
Prison, he describes him as "an old wounded lion who is
desperate to keep his hold on power. The man has lost
all his scruples and, indeed, his very sanity . . . a senile,
power-drunk tyrant". And he predicts that after the Prime
Minister has finished waving goodbye to the leaders after
next week's summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic
Co-operation group (APEC) in Kuala Lumpur, Mahathir
will declare a state of emergency.

It is perverse that a grouping which has no formal rules
but depends entirely on co-operation should be hosted
this year by one of the most divisive leaders in the world.

Since the advent of Asia's crisis, Mahathir has managed
to pit Malaysian against Malaysian, Malaysia against
Asia, Asians against Asians, Muslims against Jews, and
East against West. Not bad for a 72-year-old man with
heart trouble who heads an economy smaller than
NSW's.If the international economic upheaval's
post-crisis trauma is an earthquake, just about all the fault
lines that have gaped open seem to run through Kuala
Lumpur.

First, Mahathir's decision to purge Anwar has galvanised
Malaysians into staging their biggest anti- government
protests in 30 years. The move is opposed by 70 per
cent of Malays, according to surveys by the ruling
political party, Mahathir's UMNO, reported in the Far
Eastern Economic Review.

Second, the treatment of Anwar has fractured the
30-year-old Association of South-East Asian Nations
(ASEAN). The leaders of both the Philippines and
Indonesia have broken the ASEAN code of conduct to
publicly criticise Mahathir over the affair, and the Filipino
President, Joseph Estrada, is refusing to meet his host at
next week's conclave in Kuala Lumpur.

Third, Mahathir has angered a range of regional countries
with his decision -- on the same day that he told Anwar
"to resign or be sacked with grave consequences" -- to
isolate Malaysia from the free flow of capital.Malaysia's
capital controls are a scar on an ASEAN agreement to
deal with the crisis in a market-friendly way, and Thailand
is complaining that they have damaged its trade. All
regional countries fret that Malaysia has damaged their
credibility with foreign investors.

Fourth, Mahathir's Government seems to be threatening
APEC's core programs of market-opening. The Trade
Minister, Ms Rafidah Aziz, says that unless APEC can
solve the problems of the crisis countries, they "may hold
back on commitments to opening up their markets". And
in dividing East and West, Mahathir has outdone himself.
In one of his best pieces of demagoguery, he said:
"Today tens of millions of workers have lost their jobs,
thousands of companies have been bankrupted, banks
and finance companies have closed down taking with
them the deposits of their clients.

"Today millions of people are without food and medicine.
Today governments are unable to function . . . Today
shops are looted, people are raped and killed.

"And all these things and more are happening because
our governments have to be disciplined, to be forced to
become transparent, to remove obstruction to the free
flow of capital, to the purchase and control by foreigners
of national banks and businesses . . .

"While the market forces were disciplining us, they were
making billions of dollars for themselves. Apparently, the
market forces have to be well paid for disciplining
governments . . ."Who are the market forces? Certainly
they are not the locals. These market forces are foreign,
located in some countries where they cannot be seen."

More specifically, he has said that they were a Jewish
conspiracy, that they were hedge funds, that they were
the Jewish American hedge fund figurehead George
Soros -- Soros hasn't actually managed a fund in over a
dozen years -- and that they were currency dealers. But
they were always in the West. Read, New York and
London.

And Mahathir has been angry that these forces, whom he
has labelled "the attackers", have been unrestrained by
their host governments and have been aided and abetted
by the IMF.

What happened to Mahathir? He was always
opinionated, he always liked to demonise the West for
the domestic audience, but he was also canny. He never
went so far as to scare off foreign investors. He was
careful to avoid fights with his neighbours.

BankBoston's head of regional research in Singapore, Bill
Overholt, says that Mahathir got himself into the
economic equivalent of an arms race; when regional
markets started to fall, Mahathir was so stridently critical
of the markets that they feared capital controls and fled
Malaysia with greater alacrity, making Mahathir even
angrier until he finally reached for the capital controls.

"Each side's fears lead to behaviour which brings on the
very thing that is most feared," says Overholt.

And as for the move on Anwar, perhaps the best
explanation comes from Mahathir himself. He said at a
party meeting in June that "foreign forces" would use the
financial markets to destabilise the leadership; that the
leader and his challenger would fall on each other; that
the financial markets would not relent until a compliant
leader was triumphant.

So Mahathir closed Malaysia to the financial markets and
jailed his challenger.The awful irony is that many of
Mahathir's criticisms of the financial markets have now
become orthodoxy in the West and even the US is now
seeking controls on hedge funds, for instance.

But Mahathir's strident divisiveness guarantees that no
Western leader will give him any credit. The US and
Canadian leaders have refused even to meet him in his
own capital city because of his treatment of Anwar.

"Malaysia has chosen to become a heretic, a pariah,"
Mahathir writes in a new book called Currency
Turmoil. "We may fail of course, but we are going to do
our damnedest to succeed even if all the forces of the rich
and powerful are aligned against us."
afr.com.au



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (53)11/15/1998 8:26:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 178
 
Arafat Hints at Armed Conflict

Sunday, 15 November 1998
J E R U S A L E M (AP)

PALESTINIAN LEADER Yasser Arafat on Sunday hinted at armed conflict
with Israel, warning darkly that "our rifle is ready," and repeating that he
will declare statehood next year.

A senior adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
Arafat's comments were a "declaration of war on the peace process."
David Bar-Illan told The Associated Press that Netanyahu "views such
statements with the utmost severity," and would bring them up when his
Cabinet meets later this week.

The escalation of rhetoric came as U.S. envoy Dennis Ross sought to
jump-start the latest Mideast peace accord.

An Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that Israel has
asked the United States, which mediated the recent peace agreement, to
condemn Arafat's comments.

And in comments certain to heighten tension, Foreign Minister Ariel
Sharon called on Jewish settlers Sunday to grab West Bank hilltops before
the sides reach a permanent territorial agreement.

"Everyone there should move, should run, should grab more hills, expand
the territory. Everything that's grabbed, will be in our hands, everything that
we don't grab, will be in their hands," Sharon said at a meeting with
members of the right-wing Tsomet party, a coalition partner in Netanyahu's
government. His comments were broadcast on Israel radio.

The United States has called on Israel to refrain from building in
settlements or changing the current status of the West Bank and the latest
peace accord says both sides will not carry out unilateral actions.

Bar-Illan said Sharon's comments didn't conflict with the accord because
Sharon was referring to hilltops which neighbor Jewish settlements that
Israel already considers part of existing settlements.

Settlers have begun placing trailer homes on several hilltops adjacent to
settlements to stake their claims, but Sharon's comments were the first
indication those actions have government approval.

In the West Bank, a Jewish settler was slightly injured in a drive-by
shooting close to Palestinian-held territory. Shlomo Dror, a spokesman for
Israel's liaison unit to the Palestinians, blamed the shooting on Palestinian
militants bent on derailing the peace process.

"There are some Palestinians there who want to stop this process," Dror
told The Associated Press.

Soldiers also clashed with a group of Palestinians who tried to prevent a
bulldozer from beginning work on a bypass road for Jewish settlers. The
road will require the confiscation of 40 acres of Arab land in al-Khader,
near Bethlehem.

About 30 soldiers beat back 20 protesters, who responded with a hail of
stones. Soldiers shot rubber bullets and tear gas canisters into the crowd.
Two Palestinians were treated for tear gas inhalation, including Palestinian
lawmaker Salah Tamari, and one Israeli soldier was injured.

Ross met with Israeli officials and with negotiators from both sides.
Palestinian officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the
three-way meeting produced a loose timetable for implementation this
week.

Committees dealing with economics, a Palestinian safe passage route and
seaport are to begin meeting Monday and Tuesday. On Wednesday, the
sides open critical final status talks. Thursday, the Palestinians will be
shown Israel's withdrawal maps and by the end of Friday, Israel will have
pulled its troops from an initial 2 percent of land.

Earlier, Ross urged moving Sunday's public debate off the airwaves and to
the negotiating table.

"One thing that is key: It is always better for the two sides to talk to each
other instead of at each other," Ross told reporters after meeting with
Sharon.

The deal calls for Israel to withdraw from an additional 13 percent of the
West Bank in exchange for stepped-up Palestinian security measures.

Sharon said Arafat's comments made it "difficult to conduct negotiations"
and reiterated that Israel would annex the areas of the West Bank it holds
if Arafat declares a Palestinian state.

Palestinian officials indicated Arafat's strong language came in response to
Israeli annexation threats and as a result of the delay in implementing the
withdrawal agreement. The first pullback had been slated for Monday, but
Israel said it would be delayed for several days.

Speaking to members of his Fatah faction in the West Bank town of
Ramallah, Arafat said: "Our rifle is ready, and we are ready to use it if they
try to delay us from praying at al-Aqsa," the holiest mosque in Jerusalem.

Defying Israel and the United States, which have urged him to drop the
demand, Arafat said, "We will declare our state on the 4th of May next
year. This is our right."

Netanyahu countered that Arafat's comments cast a "very dark shadow"
over the peace process.

Speaking in a radio address broadcast Sunday, Arafat sought to allay
Israeli fears of an independent Palestinian state, saying it will be the "bridge
of love and peace."

In a 30-minute broadcast on the official Voice of Palestine, Arafat coupled
his appeal with a warning to Islamic militants and their supporters in the
Arab world that he would not tolerate interference.

"We are not going to allow anyone to attack our dream and to destroy our
Palestinian national project," he said, adding that terror attacks would only
provide Israel with an excuse to back out of the agreement to hand over
land.

Following attacks attributed to Islamic militants on an Israeli school bus
and a Jerusalem market, Netanyahu delayed the time table for
implementing the land-for-security accord.

Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of Commerce William Daley met on Sunday
with counterparts from Israel and Jordan and with the Palestinians and
encouraged the three to increase trade between their areas.

In a statement, Sharon called on Jordan to implement a planned free-trade
zone between the two countries and urged Jordanian business leaders to
visit Israel.

Daley, who is on a two-day visit to Israel, also met with Netanyahu on
Sunday and with Israel's trade minister. He meets with Arafat on Monday
and will tour an Israeli-Palestinian industrial park in the Gaza Strip.



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (53)11/16/1998 9:36:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 178
 
Israel Parliament Set For Wye Vote Amid Threats
06:26 p.m Nov 16, 1998 Eastern

By Daniel Sternoff

JERUSALEM, West Bank (Reuters) - Israel's parliament votes Tuesday to ratify a new Middle East peace deal amid Israeli threats to freeze the deal over Yasser Arafat's warning Palestinians could resort to violence if peace talks falter.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to win wide parliamentary backing for the accord he signed at the White House last month with the strong support of centrist and left-wing parties.

But the right-wing leader said Monday he would halt troop pullbacks from West Bank lands as mandated under the deal unless Palestinian President Arafat retracted remarks his people could renew an armed uprising if Israel stalled on peace.

Facing Netanyahu's threat, Arafat Monday said he would not stray from a strategic choice for peace.

The United States, which is trying to keep the accord it brokered at torturous summit talks last month on track, criticized Arafat's belligerent remarks but told Israel it was obliged to carry out the deal.

Washington also rebuked Israeli Foreign Minister Ariel Sharon for ratcheting up his rhetoric by calling on Jewish settlers to ''grab more hills'' in the West Bank to keep them out of Palestinian hands.

''We are not prepared to advance under the shadow of violence and the threat of violence,'' Netanyahu said at the start of parliamentary debate on the accord Monday.

''I don't intend to carry out any redeployment under these conditions, not even the first, until this is rectified publicly and unequivocally,'' he said.

In response, Arafat told reporters in Jericho: ''Peace to us is a strategic choice and we will not shift course.''

''As we ask the Israeli government to count on us on the full implementation of the Wye River memorandum, we hope that the Israeli government will do the same,'' he said.

Arafat said a remark to supporters Sunday that ''our guns are ready'' if anyone tried to hinder Palestinian rights in Jerusalem was ''just an example in response to one of the questions, no more no less.''

Netanyahu's spokesman David Bar-Illan said Arafat's remarks were ''neither a retraction nor a disavowal.'' The Israeli leader said he would convene his cabinet Wednesday to determine how to proceed.

Parliament resumes the second day of debate on the accord at 11:00 a.m. (0900 GMT), with a vote expected in the evening.

Israel was to begin this week the first phase of a three-stage pullback from 13 percent of the West Bank in return for Palestinian security guarantees and political moves.

The deal has been delayed over Israeli demands for Palestinian security clarifications and two bomb attacks by Muslim militants opposed to the accord.

U.S. Middle East envoy Dennis Ross is in the region to shepherd implementation of the accord.

In Washington, State Department spokesman James Rubin said there were no conditions attached to the Wye agreement.

''With respect to Prime Minister Netanyahu's remarks, let me say that the Wye memorandum was signed without conditions and it is our expectation that both sides will implement the agreement as signed,'' he said.

''There is no place...for statements which call for or suggest violent actions. These remarks were wrong and we will be raising them directly with Chairman Arafat,'' Rubin said.

''Statements such as the one made by Foreign Minister Sharon undermine the trust and confidence necessary for such an environment. And we will be raising this statement with the Foreign Ministry directly,'' he said.

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (53)11/17/1998 7:26:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 178
 
Report: Russia Used Dummy Missiles

Tuesday, 17 November 1998
M O S C O W (AP)

MANY OF the monstrous strategic missiles displayed in Red Square
parades during the Soviet era were only dummies, but they scared the
West into an expensive response, a Russian magazine reported Tuesday.

One such fake - GR-1, an acronym for Global Missile - showed during a
May 9, 1965, parade prompted the United States to build an anti-missile
defense system worth billions of dollars, said the weekly magazine Vlast
(Power).

In fact, the Soviets had abandoned the GR-1 project long before the
parade.

Another two mobile ballistic missiles shown on the same day were also
fakes, their test launches having been a complete failure, the magazine said.

"Foreign military attaches were scared to death, triggering panic in NATO
headquarters," it said. "A huge international uproar followed, and only
those who prepared this demonstration knew they were dummies."

One of the authors of the Vlast report worked as a Soviet missile engineer
and said he had personally worked on a support system for one of the fake
missiles to prevent it from bouncing on the stone-paved Red Square.

The magazine said Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev first bluffed the West
with the legend of powerful Russian missiles, saying the Soviet Union was
making them "like sausage."

"Such comparison sounded ambiguous for the Soviet people, because the
sausage was in deficit, but it duly impressed foreigners," it said.

At the time Khrushchev made the comment, the Soviets only had four
intercontinental ballistic missiles at the ready, while the United States had
60.

"The myth about the Soviet missile superiority was convenient for both the
Soviet leadership and the American military industrial complex, which was
getting huge contracts," the magazine said.

It wasn't until 1970 that the Soviet Union reached parity with the United
States in land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, and the overall
nuclear balance was attained only shortly before the 1991 Soviet collapse,
Vlast said.

"That was the end of the missile race," the report said. "The Soviet Union
broke its neck in the financial and technological competition and
collapsed."



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (53)11/20/1998 7:46:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 178
 
U.S. Busts Ring Smuggling Indians Via
Moscow, Cuba
06:05 p.m Nov 20, 1998 Eastern

By Anthony Boadle

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. immigration
agents broke up a ''flesh cartel'' that smuggled more
than 12,000 illegal immigrants into the United States
from Asia through Russia, Cuba and the Bahamas,
officials announced Friday.

The immigrants, mostly from India, but also from
Pakistan, Afghanistan and Syria, were smuggled into
the country at the request of businesses seeking
cheap labor.

The employers paid $20,000 per immigrant, fees that
were later deducted from wages, officials said.

The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
said it had arrested 21 smugglers and was
investigating the U.S. businesses that ''placed
orders'' for the illegal immigrants.

''This is the largest alien smuggling organization ever
dismantled in U.S. history,'' Attorney General Janet
Reno said at a news conference.

INS officials said the organization, based in India,
had smuggled as many as 300 immigrants a month
into the United States by air, land and sea over the
last three years, mostly from the Indian state of
Gujarat.

The immigrants were flown to Moscow and then to
Havana and the Bahamas, from where they were
usually taken by plane or boat to Florida. The trip
could take months, because they were held until the
fees were paid by employers.

INS agents raided a safe house in the Bahamas
Saturday and detained dozens of Indian citizens who
were waiting to make the last leg of the trip to the
United States.

An INS videotape showed piles of airline tickets
used by the Indians to fly to the Caribbean via
Moscow.

From the Bahamas, smugglers flew their human
cargoes to airfields in Florida, ferried them across in
launches to coastal marinas or dropped them near
beaches to swim ashore.

Other routes took the immigrants by commercial
flights to Ecuador and from there to Miami, or to
Mexico and up to the U.S. border by land, and
across the Texas border to Dallas.

The INS Friday announced three indictments in
Dallas, which charged 31 people with smuggling and
conspiracy to smuggle.

INS agents arrested the head of the ring, Nitin
Shettie, 30, also known as Nick Diaz, Saturday in
the Bahamas.

Twenty of his associates were arrested in Florida,
Texas, California and New Jersey.

One ringleader, Navtej Pall Singh Sandu, 40, was
arrested in Puerto Rico. A third, Niranjan Maan
Singh, 58, is being sought in India, the INS said.

INS agents used wiretapping powers authorized by a
tough immigration law passed in 1996 for the first
time in busting the smuggling ring.

INS Commissioner Doris Meissner said authorities in
India, the Bahamas, Ecuador, Canada and the
Dominican Republic helped dismantle the criminal
organization.

Meissner said the Russian government was not
involved in the investigation. She said she did not
know whether the Cuban authorities knew about the
smuggling route through Cuba.

The INS chief said her agents will seek out
''unscrupulous employers'' who used smuggled labor
to ''put them of business.''

INS agents visited 26 workplaces in the Eastern
United States Friday seeking employers who
benefited from the smuggling.

''These smugglings were ordered by unscrupulous
businesses that wanted cheap labor,'' said U.S.
Attorney Paul Coggins from Dallas. ''It is time for
those who traffic in flesh to pay their pound of flesh.''

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited.



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (53)11/21/1998 3:36:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 178
 
Kosovo Monitors Expect Explosion

Saturday, 21 November 1998
P R I S T I N A , Y U G O S L A V I A (AP)

NATO'S TOP commander in Europe believes Kosovo has only a two- to
four-month window of relative calm before another explosion. That
window is slowly sliding shut even as diplomats negotiate and technicians
struggle to organize a huge team of peace "verifiers."

U.S. negotiator Richard Holbrooke struck a deal with Yugoslav President
Slobodan Milosevic on Oct. 12 to end the violence in Kosovo, the poor
southern province of Serbia. Part of the deal included sending 2,000
unarmed monitors to keep watch on the cease-fire between Serbs and
rebel ethnic Albanians.

An enormous amount of work has been done in the six weeks since then
by the 54-nation Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe,
which is in charge of the Kosovo Verification Mission. But so far not a
single OSCE verifier is patrolling in the province of 2 million people.

The only monitors on the road are from the Kosovo Diplomatic Observer
Mission, which began in July and now has more than 200 observers from
the United States, European Union, Russia and Britain. It eventually will be
absorbed by the OSCE operation.

For now, the OSCE's mission doesn't exist beyond a growing
headquarters operation.

"As soon as possible, as soon as we think we are robust enough, I will say
OK, it's now a totally OSCE show," said William Walker, the American
running the Kosovo Verification Mission.

The biggest monitoring job the OSCE has ever done until now was in
Croatia. That involved 250 people and took six months to get up to 75
percent strength, Walker said.

The OSCE doesn't know what the final number will be for the Kosovo
mission. Sometimes Walker mentions 1,500 monitors, sometimes 2,000.

"I would guess by the first of the year, mid-January, we will have a serious
percentage of those people in - as fast as humanly and bureaucratically
possible. And that 'bureaucratically' is the tricky part," he said.

By mid-January, however, the window's opening will be a lot smaller.

Christopher Hill, the American ambassador to neighboring Macedonia, is
Washington's point man on the diplomatic front, trying to work out a
settlement acceptable to both Serbs and ethnic Albanians. His latest draft
has drawn serious reservations from the Albanians and has been rejected
by the Serbs.

Gen. Wesley Clark, NATO's supreme allied commander in Europe,
whose readied force of planes and troops persuaded Milosevic to deal last
month, says everyone must move quickly to avert a resumption of fighting
in the spring.

"Despite all our best efforts ... we probably have only a two- to
four-month window of relative peace," Clark said. "We must use this
respite to achieve a just and durable political settlement.

"The Albanian Kosovars are strengthening their force, they're organizing,
they're achieving greater discipline, and they're preparing for what could
happen if the political solution doesn't appear. No doubt the other side, the
Serbs, are doing the same thing."

Sporadic shootings and killings continue in the countryside of Kosovo,
where ethnic Albanians make up 90 percent of the population. But for the
moment, both sides are generally adhering to the cease-fire.

The first task of the OSCE verifiers has been to take care of themselves. A
Norwegian military team provided $21 million and 70 experts to set up
headquarters in Pristina, the provincial capital, and in six regional centers.

The OSCE will open a training center Monday in the mountain village of Brezovica in southern Kosovo. Three-day courses will be used to make
sure a wide variety of monitors from 30 to 35 countries, ranging from
professional soldiers to human rights workers, all start on the same footing.

What they will face are Albanian rebels scattered around the province -
rearming, reorganizing, demanding independence from Serbia and ready to
go to war again if they don't get their way - and Serbian army and police
forces prepared to put down any uprising just as violently as they did
before.

As the number of verifiers increases and they begin staying overnight in
rural villages, the OSCE hopes confidence in the cease-fire will grow.

At worst, if the truce cracks, the verifiers will become human shields that
may deter the warring parties from careless shooting. An 1,800-soldier
NATO "extraction force" - expected to move into Macedonia as soon as
approved by its government - will be prepared to rescue verifiers if
necessary.

In the meantime, hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanian civilians remain
terrified of the Serbs. Many are unable to return to their damaged or
destroyed homes; others refuse to go home because they are convinced
the Serbs will kill them.

As the first snow fell across the province this past week, most refugees had
shelter, even if it was only a single, crowded room. Some rebuilding is
going on. But there is no real optimism that better times are coming anytime
soon.