6.21.2007

First Afghan-Planned Operation Clears Area of Taleban



20 June 2007

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A senior Afghan military officer in the southeastern part of the country says his forces are implementing the first Afghan-planned and executed operation to clear Taleban fighters from his area and establish government authority. The officer spoke from Afghanistan to reporters at the Pentagon. VOA's Al Pessin reports.

Afghan National Army soldiers near Spin Boldak, Kandahar province
Afghan Major General Abdul Khaliq says more than 1,400 Afghan troops have been involved in the operation in parts of Ghazni Province for nearly three weeks.

"Within these 20 days of operation, we have opened the schools, clinics and the community centers which the Taleban claimed the ANA and the ANP would not be able to open," said Major General Abdul Khaliq.

"ANA" is the Afghan National Army and "ANP" is the Afghan National Police.

General Khaliq says his forces are supported by troops from the U.S.-led coalition, which continues to work with Afghan forces in some areas where Taleban insurgents are active, to supplement NATO security efforts. The general says the effort, called Operation Maiwand, is designed to "separate the people from the insurgents." To do that, he says his forces distributed 180 tons of humanitarian supplies and provided medical treatment to more than 1,800 people.

General Khaliq says small groups of Taleban fighters challenged his forces, but there were no major battles.

"The Taleban couldn't engage directly with the ANA and ANP because they know that they don't have such force and resistance to have direct engagement with the ANA," he said.

The general says the Taleban remains a threat because it receives training, weapons and money from al-Qaida sources outside Afghanistan. But he could not comment on claims by some U.S. officials that Iran is sending weapons to the Taleban.

The commander of coalition forces working in support of General Khaliq's troops is U.S. Army Colonel Martin Schweitzer. At the same news conference, he said the general's plan calls for leaving enough Afghan and foreign troops behind when the operation is over to prevent the Taleban from moving back into the area.

"General Khaliq has developed a plan, a stay-behind plan," said Colonel Schweitzer. "There's going to be about four times the amount of security forces from ANA, ANP and coalition that will remain here to further develop and enhance the security environment, allowing the government to get down here to start talking to the people, to start providing for them, particularly in some of these remote village areas."

Colonel Schweitzer says the key to the operation is to convince local people that the Afghan Army and government are a force for good. He says 60 of the 83 local councils in the area have voted to support the government, in spite of Taleban efforts to intimidate people and to use the media to exaggerate their power. Colonel Schweitzer says that is why Taleban fighters take over police stations, even though, he says, they can't hold them for very long.

"They come in for about an hour or two," he said. "They'll set a room on fire and then as soon as the ANP or ANA come back in force, or coalition with ANA come back in force the Taleban immediately pull out of the district center. Frankly, they control nothing in Afghanistan, not for anything more than an hour."

The VOA reporter in Kandahar province says a district headquarters taken by Taleban forces on Monday, was re-taken by government forces on Tuesday.

Colonel Schweitzer says the Afghan police stations are vulnerable to such attacks and temporary takeovers, at least for now. But he says the Afghan National Army has made great strides in the last two years and now has the lead in dealing with local people - a situation he says the people much prefer to having foreign troops routinely on their village streets.

Nigeria Grinds to a Halt as Strike Begins



20 June 2007

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Most parts of Nigeria are quiet as many schools and banks closed, following the start of a general strike to protest government price hikes on fuel. For VOA, Gilbert da Costa reports that the new administration is facing its first major crisis.

People walk past as they protest in the street against government price rises in Lagos, Nigeria, 20 Jun 2007
The head of the Nigeria Labor Congress, Abdulwahed Omar, one of Nigeria's two powerful unions, says he is satisfied with the first day of the strike.

"Very, very successful, and I want to assure you we are very grateful to Nigerians," he said. "And this clearly shows that Nigerians are really aggrieved. They are angry and it is not too much for Mr. President to salvage the situation."

Abuja, the capital, like other main cities in Nigeria, was very quiet with virtually all government offices as well schools, banks and non-essential services closed. Public transport was also shut down.

The streets of the largest city, Lagos, were also deserted. Security personnel were patrolling public facilities across the country.

Unions called an indefinite strike in the world's eighth largest oil exporter after talks with the government ended in a deadlock.

Organized labor rejected government concessions on gasoline prices, insisting only a full price reversal could make it call off the strike.

Support appears very strong on the streets of Abuja.

"I support the strike," said a supporter. "I believe our government takes us for granted. Nigerians are already overburdened by their so-called policies. We need this strike; we need to tell these people enough is enough."

"I support the strike entirely; no reservations at all," said another one. "Because the strike is for a just cause. It is important to the people of Nigeria that the issues involved in the strike are resolved in favor of the masses of Nigerians who are suffering tremendously."

"We must begin to understand and behave like a nation in a democracy," said the other supporter. "We cannot be talking of building a democracy when at the same time, the principles and practices that are prescribed by a democratic environment are not respected by a government that is supposed to be leading the way."

International flights in and out of the country have also been disrupted as fuel deliveries have been halted.

Analysts say the strike threat is a major challenge to the newly inaugurated President Umaru Yar'Adua, who took office three weeks ago and has yet to name a cabinet.

Union officials say no talks with the government are scheduled.

South African Government Issues Final Strike Offer



20 June 2007

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The South African government has made what it says is a final offer to end a 20-day old strike by civil servants. Both sides agreed to disregard a Wednesday deadline, and postponed until Friday further talks aimed at ending the costly three-week strike. Correspondent Scott Bobb reports on the showdown from Johannesburg.

Public sector workers march with a mock coffin carrying a portrait of Frazer Moleketi, S. Africa's Minister for Public Service
Government negotiators made what they said was their final offer to South Africa's public servant unions in the early hours Wednesday.

The offer included a 7.5 percent increase in salaries, a 10 percent increase in the housing allowance and merging certain low salary grades with higher grades.

The government also offered to withdraw hundreds of letters of dismissal sent to workers in essential services, like hospitals, who went on strike despite a court order forbidding it.

Negotiators said if the unions did not accept the offer, the government would end the negotiations and revert to its previous, lower package and would proceed with the dismissals.

The chief negotiator for the unions, Tahir Mohammed, told national radio the offer was unfair to workers.

"Labor now is definitely negotiating with a barrel of a gun on its head and that is something that we're not taking kindly to," said Mohammed. "But like I said this is going now to be the decision of our members. They will have to take the [next] step forward."

The unions originally demanded a 12 percent salary increase but during the negotiations lowered this to nine percent.

Several hundrerd thousand workers in public schools, hospitals and government offices went on strike three weeks ago closing most schools and disrupting public health care services.

The strike was mostly orderly. But there was sporadic violence and many private schools closed saying they could not guarantee the safety of their students.

There was considerable public sympathy for the strikers but public support began to wane as sick people were turned away from public hospitals and some schools had to postpone mid-term exams.

Labor experts said some unions were inclined to accept the offer. But the deputy general-secretary of the Democratic Teachers Union, Don Pasquallie, indicated his group would reject the offer.

"We believe that the 7.25 percent [sic] does not address demands and needs of our members and we are saying that the employer needs to improve the offer," said Pasquallie. "If the employer is unwilling to improve the offer we will have further disruption of schools."

The strike has affected both sides. Workers have lost three weeks of pay. The cost of the new wage package is also expected to strain the government budget and aggravate inflation, currently at six percent per year. This could oblige the South African government to raise interest rates in subsequent months.

VOASE0620_The Making of a Nation

20 June 2007
US History: Election of 1980 Launches the 'Reagan Revolution'

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VOICE ONE:

This is Rich Kleinfeldt.

VOICE TWO:

And this is Doug Johnson with THE MAKING OF A NATION -- a VOA Special English program about the history of the United States.

(MUSIC)

Ronald Reagan
Today, we tell about the campaign for president in nineteen eighty and the election of President Ronald Reagan.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

The president of the United States in nineteen eighty was Jimmy Carter, a Democrat. The months before Election Day were difficult for him. Many Americans blamed Carter for high inflation, high unemployment, and the low value of the United States dollar. Many blamed him for not gaining the release of American hostages in Iran.

About a year earlier, Muslim extremists had taken the Americans prisoner after seizing the United States embassy in Tehran. President Carter asked all Americans to support his administration during the crisis.

As months went by, however, he made no progress in bringing the hostages home. The Iranians rejected negotiations for their release. Sometimes, they did not communicate with the Carter administration at all. The president appeared powerless.

VOICE TWO:

Carter's political weakness led another Democrat to compete for the party's presidential nomination. It was Edward Kennedy, brother of former President John Kennedy. He was a powerful senator from Massachusetts.

Carter was re-nominated. So was his vice president, Walter Mondale. Kennedy did not support them very strongly. So the Democratic Party was divided for the general election.

The Republican Party, however, was united behind a strong candidate. That was Ronald Reagan, a former actor and former governor of California. Reagan's vice presidential candidate was George Bush. Bush had served in Congress and as head of the Central Intelligence Agency. He had represented the United States in China and at the United Nations.

VOICE ONE:

The troubles of the Carter administration caused many Americans to feel that their country was no longer strong. Ronald Reagan promised to make it strong again.

Several weeks before the election, Carter and Reagan debated each other on television. Some observers said Carter seemed angry and defensive. They said Reagan seemed calm and thoughtful. On Election Day, voters gave Reagan a huge victory. He won by more than eight million popular votes. Republicans called it the "Reagan Revolution."

VOICE TWO:

On Inauguration Day, the new president spoke about the goals of his administration. A major goal was to reduce the size of the federal government. Reagan and other conservatives believed that the nation's economy was suffering because of high taxes and unnecessary laws. In this crisis, he said, government was not the solution to the problem, government was the problem.

He urged Americans to join him in what he called a "new beginning." And he expressed hope that the people would work with him.

REAGAN: "The economic ills we suffer have come upon us over several decades. They will not go away in days, weeks, or months. But they will go away. They will go away because we as Americans have the capacity now -- as we have had in the past -- to do whatever needs to be done to preserve this last and greatest bastion of freedom."

VOICE ONE:

Ronald Reagan was born in nineteen eleven, in the little town of Tampico, Illinois. He was a good student and a good athlete. During the summer, he worked as a lifeguard at a local swimming area. One summer, he saved the lives of twenty-seven people.

He studied economics and sociology at Eureka College, a small school in Illinois. At the college, he saw a theater production. When it was over, he said, "More than anything in the world, I wanted to speak the actor's words."

VOICE TWO:

Reagan did not have enough money to go to New York or Hollywood to be an actor. Instead, he tried to get a job as a sports announcer on radio. To show his abilities, he made a recording of an American football game in which he announced all the plays. There really was no game, however. He had invented all the action.

A radio station in the small city of Davenport, Iowa, was pleased with his creativity. He got the job.

VOICE ONE:

Later, he worked at a radio station in Des Moines, Iowa. And then he moved to the big city of Chicago, Illinois. There he announced the action of baseball games.

When the team went to California to play, Reagan went, too. This gave him a chance to take a screen test to become a movie actor. The Warner Brothers Motion Pictures company liked the friendly, handsome young man and offered him a job.

VOICE TWO:

Before long, Ronald Reagan was a Hollywood star. He appeared in many movies. These included "The Knute Rockne Story," "Bedtime for Bonzo," and "King's Row." They were not the very best motion pictures made in Hollywood, but they were popular. During one movie, he met actress Nancy Davis. They married after he was divorced from his first wife.

Reagan became deeply interested in politics during his years in Hollywood. He was a liberal, but became increasingly conservative. He served six times as president of a union of movie actors. He was noted for his opposition to anyone in the movie industry who supported communism.

VOICE ONE:

By the early nineteen fifties, Reagan had stopped appearing in movies. Instead, he appeared on television. He made advertisements and also presented a series of dramatic shows.

By nineteen sixty, he was making speeches for conservative Republican candidates. In nineteen sixty-six, he became a candidate himself. He ran for governor of California. The Democrats did not think he was a serious candidate. They told jokes about some of his movies. They made a mistake. When the voting was over, Reagan had won by almost one million votes.

As governor, Reagan was praised for reducing the state's huge debt. However, he was criticized for raising taxes. He also was criticized for his severe policies for controlling unrest at the state's colleges. Yet, he won re-election in nineteen seventy.

VOICE TWO:

Reagan campaigned for the Republican nomination for president in nineteen seventy-six. He almost defeated President Gerald Ford for the nomination. One of the party's older senators spoke with Reagan after the convention. He said, "Son, you will be president some day. This just was not your year." Four years later, with President Jimmy Carter in trouble, Reagan's day had arrived.

VOICE ONE:

Ronald Reagan was sworn-in as America's fortieth president on January twentieth, nineteen eighty-one. For many Americans, the day turned out even happier than expected. Iran finally announced that it would free the hostages in Tehran.

One of President Reagan's earliest proposals made many Americans happy, too. He began to work to get Congress to reduce taxes. He also began a weekly series of radio broadcasts. In these programs, he commented on developments in American life and political policy. The broadcasts were similar to those made by President Franklin Roosevelt during the nineteen-thirties. Some people started to call Reagan "The Great Communicator."

VOICE TWO:

Outside the Washington Hilton Hotel after the assassination attempt on President Reagan
Two months after Reagan took office, something unexpected and terrible happened.

The president was leaving a meeting at a hotel in Washington. A gunman began to fire. A man guarding the president fell to the ground. So did the president's press assistant. Both were seriously wounded.

Other guards quickly helped Reagan into his car. At first, observers did not think the president had been hit. But he had. There was a bullet in his left lung, close to his heart. Doctors removed the bullet. Reagan fought courageously to get well...and he did.

We will continue the story of President Ronald Reagan next week.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This program of THE MAKING OF A NATION was written by Jeri Watson and produced by Paul Thompson. This is Rich Kleinfeldt.

VOICE TWO:

And this is Doug Johnson. Join us again next week for another VOA Special English program about the history of the United States.

VOASE0620_Education Report

20 June 2007
Foreign Student Series: A Look at Washington University in St. Louis

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This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

A student at Xinjiang Normal University in China has a question for our Foreign Student Series. Akbar Mamat wants to go overseas after graduation and would like some information about Washington University.

Brookings Hall on campus
Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri, is a medium-sized school in the Midwest. It has almost eleven thousand students. Twelve percent this last school year were international students, mostly graduate students.

The university has schools for law, medicine and social work. It also has a business school, a school of design and visual arts and a school of engineering and applied science. But more than seventy percent of courses are taught through the Arts and Sciences program.

The new school year that begins this fall will cost fifty-two thousand dollars for undergraduates. That includes twelve months of living expenses estimated at seventeen thousand dollars.

Graduate tuition differs by program. Tuition for the Master of Social Work program, for example, will cost twenty-seven thousand dollars in the coming year. The Master of Business Administration program will cost about thirty-eight thousand dollars.

The university offers financial assistance to international students, including first-year students, but says its resources are limited.

Scholarships are available. The university also offers a monthly payment plan to spread out the cost of tuition. And it offers loan programs.

International students in the United States generally cannot receive federal student loans. But they may be able to take out private loans, as many American students do. The student loan industry is in the news right now. Investigations are looking at questionable dealings between colleges and lenders.

Washington University in Saint Louis was named Eliot Seminary when it opened in eighteen fifty-three. Later the name was changed to honor the first American president, George Washington.

But other schools share the name Washington, including the University of Washington and George Washington University. So in nineteen seventy-six Washington University added the words "in Saint Louis" to its name.

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. Our Foreign Student Series on higher education in the United States is online at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.