6.20.2007

Israeli Prime Minister Meets Congressional Leaders



19 June 2007

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Following his meeting with President Bush, Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert went to Capitol Hill for talk s with congressional leaders. VOA's Dan Robinson reports, these came as U.S. lawmakers joined the Bush administration and Israel in supporting the newly-formed government in the West Bank of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

From left: Israel's PM Ehud Olmert, Sen. Harry Reid, Rep. Nancy Pelosi
Prime Minister Olmert, with House and Senate Democratic and Republican leaders, stopped briefly before cameras before going into their talks late Tuesday.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid re-stated bipartisan support for Israel:

PELOSI: With the Republican and Democratic leaders gathered here you see how strong the bipartisanship is for a great U.S.-Israel relationship. We are honored by the prime minister's visit and we look forward to hearing from him about the situation in the Middle East.

REID: With no equivocation or exception, we have no friend in the world like the state of Israel.

"Let me just express to you Mr. Prime Minister what I think you already know, the strong bipartisan support here in Congress for the U.S.-Israeli relationship. When it comes to Israel and our bilateral relationship there really are no differences here in the Congress, we welcome you back in the Capitol," said Senate Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Prime Minister Olmert thanked the lawmakers for the bipartisan show of support. "This is a great source of strength and encouragement for the people of Israel to know that we can rely on this friendship, in good times and bad times, we always have the support of the U.S. Congress," he said.

This was Olmert's second visit to the Capitol as Prime Minister, having addressed a joint meeting of Congress just over a year ago.

But it came as the U.S., European allies, and Israel seek to bolster the Fatah-based government of Palestinian president Abbas, who formed an emergency government in the West Bank after the anti-Israel Hamas took over power in Gaza following fierce street battles with Fatah.

Appearing with President Bush at the White House (Tuesday) Prime Minister Olmert told reporters Israel wants to strengthen Palestinian moderates.

On Capitol Hill this week, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Democrat Tom Lantos, welcomed the Bush administration decision to resume aid for Palestinians, as long as U.S. funds do not fall into the hands of Hamas.

Congress has also demonstrated support for Israel in various pieces of legislation, including a resolution urging the U.N. Security Council to charge Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad with violating the international convention against genocide because of his calls for the destruction of Israel.

Democratic Congresswomen Diane Watson was joined on the House floor this week by Republican Ileana Ros-Lehtinen:

WATSON: His pledge to wipe Israel off the map, and his denial of the Holocaust have shocked the civilized world.

LEHTINEN: While most people desire to live in a world of freedom, liberty, prosperity and peace, Iran's rulers actively seek a world of oppression, destruction, of war, a world without Israel and without a United States of America.

The question of potential threats to Israel from Iran's nuclear program was also a topic during the Israeli prime minister's appearance at the White House with President Bush. "I fully understand the concerns of any Israeli when they hear the voice of the man in Iran saying on the one hand we want to acquire the technologies and know-how to enrich uranium which can then be converted into a nuclear weapon, and on the other hand we want to destroy Israel, if I were a Israeli citizen I would view that as a serious threat to my security," he said.

President Bush Tuesday repeated his hope for a diplomatic solution to the Iranian nuclear issue, but repeated his long-standing position that all options are on the table.

Legislation to increase financial pressure on Tehran, through sanctions on its energy sector as well as other steps, is moving through Congress.

West African Street Kids Face Bleak Future



19 June 2007

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Kids who live in the streets are a growing problem in West African cities. Troubled youths, orphans, and children with family problems often run away from their homes in small villages and wind up in cities surviving off what they can beg and steal. As Naomi Schwarz reports from the Senegalese city of Thies even the volunteers who try to help these children are suffering from a lack of resources.

In a compact square, near the center of Thies, a small Senegalese city 60 kilometers east of the capital, a group of boys hang out on benches, on a windy day.

Idrissa Diop is one of them.

He does not work, he says, and he does not go to school. Both his parents have passed away.

It was a long time ago, he says, when he was eight-years-old.

Now Diop, 18, says he lives with his grandmother in a nearby village, but it has been a long time since he was there.

"I do not sleep there," he says. "I sleep here," he continues, gesturing to the small square where he and the others have been sitting around.

Nearby, another man, Modou Barry, who hangs around with the kids, spits out a rag he has been sucking on.

The rag was infused with a drug, says Jean Badiane Seck, a volunteer with the Association for the Protection and Promotion of Youths (ASPJ).

Ignace Thomas, another volunteer, says drug and alcohol habits are some of the reasons these youths ended up on the streets to begin with.

Their families would punish and yell at them for drinking too much, he says, and the boys did not want to be told what to do, so they would leave.

In other cases, he says, there are family problems that lead the youth to leave. It is difficult to come by accurate statistics about the number of children living on the streets of West Africa, but there are many examples, and few opportunities for help.

Jean Seck is surrounded by runaway teens he has helped
Seck recounts the story of a young man who left home when his mother remarried. He did not get along with his stepfather. Like other runaways, he slept in the streets and survived by begging, taking small jobs, and stealing. When he became sick with tuberculosis, he wanted to go back home.

We called his mother, Seck says, but she refused to accept him back.

ASPJ organized medical treatment for him, but by the time they tried to bring him to the hospital he had disappeared.

The group has been working to with runaways in Thies for more than 10 years. Founded by a sociologist from a nearby village, the association used to have a shelter that offered programs in the arts and skills for street kids. They also offered start-up money and advice to help some youths find legitimate employment.

Center for runaways in Thies closed due to lack of funds
But the lack of funds forced them to close the center a few years ago. Now, equipped only with a pharmacy in a duffel bag, Seck and Thomas and other volunteers go out on the streets to find the runaways.

Mame Couna Thioye, an activist with a Senegalese-based human rights non-governmental organization, says the number of kids on the streets is growing.

She says the problem is that people are not enforcing laws designed to protect children.

She says, legally, all children under the age of 15 should be in school, but many are not.

Families, driven by poverty, see children as an extra helping hand and send them to work.

And, Thioye says, when troubled kids rebel or run away from a problem situation at home, there is no state mechanism to help them.

VOASE0619_Health Report

19 June 2007
Experts List Warning Signs of Ovarian Cancer

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This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

Ovarian cancer is known as a "silent killer" because it is usually discovered too late to save a woman's life. But three cancer groups in the United States have now agreed on a list of possible early signs of the disease.

The 2007 Revlon Run/Walk for Women was held in May in New York to raise money to fight breast and ovarian cancer
The statement is the first of its kind to recognize what ovarian cancer survivors have long believed: that there are common symptoms. Researchers have found that these symptoms are more likely to happen in women with ovarian cancer than women in general.

One symptom is bloating, or expansion of the abdomen area. Pain in the abdomen or the pelvis can be another symptom. Also, researchers say women with early-stage ovarian cancer may urinate more often or with greater urgency. And the statement says another common symptom is difficulty eating or feeling full quickly.

Women who have these symptoms almost daily for more than a few weeks are advised to see a gynecologist or other doctor.

The cancer can affect one or both ovaries, the organs that produce eggs. Doctors say the main ways to find the disease early are recognizing the symptoms and getting a combination pelvic and rectal examination.

Ovarian cancer kills more than one hundred thousand women around the world each year. In the United States, ovarian cancer is the fifth leading cause of cancer deaths in women. Cancer experts predict that at least fifteen thousand women will die of it this year. And more than twenty-two thousand new cases will be found.

The Gynecologic Cancer Foundation led the effort for the agreement on common symptoms. The American Cancer Society and the Society of Gynecologic Oncologists also were involved. And a number of other cancer groups have expressed support for the statement.

Doctor Barbara Goff at the University of Washington in Seattle was a lead investigator of several studies that gave support to the new list. She says most of the time a woman with these symptoms will not have ovarian cancer. But the disease can spread quickly to nearby organs.

A few months can mean life or death. Doctor Goff notes that the disease is ninety percent curable when found in its earliest form.

And that's the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Caty Weaver. For a link to the full statement, and for more news about health and science, go to voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Barbara Klein.

VOASE0619_Explorations

19 June 2007
Record Number of Climbers Reach Top of World's Highest Mountain

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VOICE ONE:

I'm Barbara Klein.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Steve Ember with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. Today, we tell

Mount Everest
about efforts to climb Mount Everest. Last month, an eighteen-year-old American became one of the youngest people to climb the tallest mountain on Earth. And, a seventy-one-year old Japanese man became the oldest.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Mount Everest is at the border of Nepal and Tibet. It was named for Sir George Everest, who recorded the mountain’s position in eighteen forty-one. Since nineteen fifty-three, more than ten thousand people have attempted to climb to the top of the world's highest mountain. The summit of Mount Everest is eight thousand eight hundred forty-eight meters high.

Climbers have reached the summit more than three thousand times. However, more than two hundred people died while attempting to get there.

They all battled low temperatures. Wind speeds of up to one hundred sixty kilometers an hour. Dangerous mountain paths. And they all risked developing a serious health disorder caused by lack of oxygen. All for the chance to reach the top of the world.

VOICE TWO:

The first and most famous of the climbers to disappear on Mount Everest was George

George Mallory
Mallory. The British schoolteacher was a member of the first three trips by foreigners to the mountain. In nineteen twenty-one, Mallory was part of the team sent by the British Royal Geographical Society and the British Alpine Club. The team was to create the first map of the area and find a possible path to the top of the great mountain.

Mallory also was a member of the first Everest climbing attempt in nineteen twenty-two. But the attempt was canceled after a storm caused a giant mass of snow to slide down the mountain, killing seven ethnic Sherpa guides.

VOICE ONE:

Mallory was invited back to Everest as lead climber of another expedition team in nineteen twenty-four. On June fourth, Mallory and team member Andrew Irvine left their base camp for the team's final attempt to reach the summit. The climbing team had great hopes of success for the two men. A few days earlier, expedition leader Edward Norton had reached a record height of eight thousand five hundred seventy-three meters before he turned back.

VOICE TWO:

Mallory and Irvine were using bottles of oxygen. Mallory believed that was the only way they would have the energy and speed to climb the last three hundred meters to the top and return safely. Team member Noel Odell saw Mallory and Irvine climbing high on the mountain the following day.

Odell said they had just climbed one of the most difficult rocks on the northeast path. He said they were moving toward the top when clouds hid them. He never saw them again. The disappearance of Mallory and Irvine on Mount Everest remains among the greatest exploration mysteries of the last century.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

During the next twenty-nine years, teams from Britain made seven more attempts to climb Everest. Until the early nineteen fifties, British teams were the only foreigners given permission to climb Mount Everest.

On May twenty-ninth, nineteen fifty-three, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first climbers known to reach the summit of Everest. The two were part of a British team lead by Jon Hunt. They had made a difficult climb from the southeast, through recently opened Nepalese territory.

Edmund Hillary was a beekeeper from New Zealand. It was his second trip to Everest. He had been on the first exploratory trip to the mountain that had mapped the way up from the southern side. Tenzing Norgay was a native Sherpa from Nepal. He was the first Sherpa to become interested in mountain climbing. His climb with Hillary was his seventh attempt to reach the top.

VOICE TWO:

Hillary said his first reaction on reaching the summit was a happy feeling that he had “no more steps to cut." The two men placed the flags of Britain, Nepal, India and the United Nations. Hillary took a picture of Norgay.

They looked out over the north side into Tibet for any signs that Mallory or Irvine had been there before them. Then they began the long and difficult trip back down. The success of Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay led to many new attempts on the mountain. Today, Everest has been climbed from all of its sides and from most of its possible paths.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Reinhold Messner of Italy and Peter Habeler of Austria made another historic Everest climb in nineteen seventy-eight. The two men were the first to reach the summit without using bottled oxygen. Messner said when he reached the top he felt like a single giant lung.

At the time, scientists believed that a person at the top of the mountain would only have enough oxygen to sleep. Scientists believed that Messner and Habeler would die without oxygen. Scientists now know that two conditions make climbing at heights over eight thousand meters extremely difficult. The first is the lack of oxygen in the extremely thin air. The second is the low barometric air pressure.

VOICE TWO:

Today, scientists say a person dropped on the top of the mountain would live no more than ten minutes. Climbers can survive above eight thousand meters because they spend months climbing on the mountain to get used to the conditions. Several things have made climbing Everest easier now than it was for the first climbers. These include modern equipment and clothing. They also include information gained from earlier climbs and scientific studies.

Nineteen ninety-three was the fortieth anniversary of the first successful climb of Mount Everest. One hundred twenty-nine people climbed to the summit that year. That was a record number. Hundreds of people have reached the summit each year during the past few years. Some expert climbers have begun leading guided trips up the mountain.

Some people have paid as much as sixty-five thousand dollars for the chance to climb Everest. However, many of these people have little climbing experience. This can lead to serious problems.

VOICE ONE:

In nineteen ninety-six, Everest had its greatest tragedy. Fifteen people died attempting to reach the top. This was the deadliest single year in Everest history. A record ten people died on the mountain in one day. Two of the world's best climbers were among those killed.


Several books by climbers have described the incident and the dangerous conditions. The best known is “Into Thin Air” by Jon Krakauer. The book sold many copies around the world and increased the interest in climbing Mount Everest.

VOICE TWO:

Last year, another tragedy on Mount Everest was in the news. Several climbers told news reporters that they had passed a British climber in trouble without stopping to rescue him. David Sharp had been climbing alone, without a guide or teammates. He was lying on a rock four hundred fifty meters below the summit. Reports say as many as forty climbers passed Sharp as he lay dying. The climbers who left him there said that rescue efforts would have been useless. He later froze to death.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This year has been reportedly the most successful ever for Mount Everest climbers. More than five hundred people have reached the top of the world's highest mountain.

Samantha Larson

Last month, eighteen-year old Samantha Larson of Long Beach, California became one of the youngest people to reach the top. She made the climb with a group that included her father. Larson is believed to be the youngest person in the world to have climbed all of the "seven summits," the highest mountains on each of the continents.

VOICE TWO:

Also last month, a retired teacher from Japan became the oldest person to reach the top of Mount Everest. Katsusuke Yanagisawa is seventy-one years old. He said climbing the mountain was more difficult than he expected. He said he was not attempting to set a record. Instead, he said he was just trying his hardest not to die.

Nepali guide Apa has reached the summit of Everest a record 17 times
Another record was set last month. Nepali mountain guide Apa reached the summit for the seventeenth time. That broke his old world record.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This program was written by Shelley Gollust. Mario Ritter was our producer. I'm Barbara Klein.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Steve Ember. You can see pictures of Special English listeners on our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week for EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English.