7.26.2007

US Vows to Work With Pakistan on Counterterrorism



26 July 2007

Download

A U.S. State Department official says the United States wants to work with Pakistan on counterterrorism and not infringe on Pakistani sovereignty. The comments come just days after a White House official refused to rule out U.S. military action against al-Qaida in remote Pakistani regions, prompting an angry response from Islamabad. VOA's Deborah Tate reports from Capitol Hill.

Nicholas Burns (file photo)
U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns sought to ease Islamabad's concerns during testimony Wednesday before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "We understand that Pakistan is sovereign in its own country. We understand that Pakistani forces are in the battle, and it is always the preference to work with Pakistan on the issue of counterterrorism," he said.

At the same time, Burns said the United States would keep the option of targeting Osama bin Laden's network in the Pakistani-Afghan border regions in some circumstances. "Given the primacy of the fight against al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden, if we have in the future a certainty of knowledge, then of course the United States would always have the option of taking action on its own, but we prefer to work with the Pakistani forces, and in most situations, in nearly every situation, do work with them."

On Sunday, White House Homeland Security Adviser Fran Townsend told a television interviewer the United States would consider military action against al-Qaida elements in remote Pakistani regions near the Afghan border, prompting an angry response from Pakistan's Foreign Ministry, which said any such action would be unacceptable.

Undersecretary Burns was on Capitol Hill to ask Congress for $750 million over five years to spend on education, health and economic projects in the tribal areas of Pakistan in support of a Pakistani government program to integrate the remote region into the national economy. "I know the Pakistani government recognizes that it cannot defeat terrorism in the northwest frontier province by military means alone. There does have to be a political dialogue in the tribal areas with the people who are influential in those areas. There must be an effort to rebuild the tribal areas to provide the kind of infrastructure that is lacking, access to education," he said.

The proposed aid is part of a larger package of economic and military assistance to Pakistan that could reach one billion dollars over the next several years.

Burns' testimony follows the Pakistani government's use of force earlier this month to end the militant occupation of Islamabad's Red Mosque compound, and new pledges to drive al-Qaida and other foreign forces from tribal areas.

Arab Foreign Ministers Visit Israel



25 July 2007

Download

The foreign ministers of Egypt and Jordan held talks in Jerusalem with Israeli leaders on Wednesday. It was the first-ever visit to Israel by leaders representing the Arab League. VOA's Jim Teeple reports from Jerusalem that Israel's relations with the Palestinians were at the top of the agenda of the talks.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert (L) shakes hands with Jordanian Foreign Minister Abdel Ilah al-Khatib (R) as Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit (C) looks on before their meeting at Olmert's offices in Jerusalem, 25 July 2007
The Jordanian and Egyptian foreign ministers came to Jerusalem to discuss the Arab League Peace Plan, first proposed in 2002 by Saudi Arabia. Under the plan, if Israel withdraws to its 1967 borders, the 22-members of the Arab League will extend full diplomatic recognition to Israel.

Israel says it will consider aspects of the plan, but has so far ruled out a full withdrawal from the West Bank and East Jerusalem, territories it captured in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. Israel has also rejected an addendum to the plan that calls for right of return of all Palestinian refugees to their former homes.

Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni says the Arab League can help move the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians forward.

"I believe that this point in time is a crucial point in time and there is an opportunity here. I believe the Arab Peace Initiative and a dialogue with the Arab working group is an historic opportunity for Israeli-Arab relations but no less important, the Israeli Palestinian process," she said. "I believe there is a need to promote a process between Israel and the Palestinians and of the importance of the Arab League in helping to support Israelis and Palestinians to take the right steps and in making this vision of a two-state solution more concrete."

Both Egypt and Jordan have full diplomatic relations with Israel and their envoys said Wednesday they were not in Israel to negotiate on behalf of Palestinians, but rather to encourage a process of dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians.

Egypt's foreign minister, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, says progress in relations between Israel and the rest of the Arab world will largely depend on progress between Israel and the Palestinians.

"A lot of the responses of the region will depend on the bilateral [Israeli-Palestinian] talks. That is the crux of the Arab position, and I think they understand today in Israel that we are coming forward and we are offering, but do what is necessary and what is needed with the Palestinians," he said. "This is the message."

The foreign ministers' visit to Israel comes as the Palestinian territories are now divided between Hamas militants, who control Gaza, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who controls the West Bank.

Jordan's foreign minister, Abdul Ilah Khatib, says it is important to remember that President Abbas enjoys the full support of the Arab League.

"The Arab peace initiative enjoys the consensus of all Arab member states of the Arab League, including the Palestinian Authority," he said. "This is why we need to express our full support to the Palestinian Authority and its leader Mahmoud Abbas and his government as the legitimate and qualified and willing partner to engage in serious negotiations with Israel in order to achieve a final status agreement between Israel and the Palestinians establishing an independent Palestinian state and offering Israel the security it needs."

President Abbas said Wednesday he is moving closer to calling new legislative elections - a move rejected by Hamas. Mr. Abbas' Fatah movement lost legislative elections to Hamas in early 2006, precipitating the current Palestinian crisis. Mr. Abbas also disclosed that outside negotiators have offered to try to mediate the dispute between Fatah and Hamas, but he will not speak with Hamas leaders unless they agree to share power with Fatah in Gaza where Hamas seized control last month.

Ethiopia Orders Red Cross to Leave Ogaden Region



25 July 2007

Download

The International Committee of the Red Cross says it is still trying to confirm media reports that the Ethiopian government has issued an order for the Red Cross to leave the restive Ogaden region in eastern Ethiopia within one week. VOA Correspondent Alisha Ryu reports from our East Africa Bureau in Nairobi that tensions between the Ethiopian government and international humanitarian groups that allege the Ethiopian military is blocking food aid to rebel-held areas in the Ogaden and committing war crimes there.

Ogaden National Liberation Front rebels (file photo)

The spokeswoman for the ICRC in London, Leila Blacking, tells VOA that the organization is in talks with Ethiopian officials to determine who issued the eviction order.

On Tuesday, the Associated Press said the vice president of the Ogaden region, Jama Ahmed, told the news agency that the government has ordered the Red Cross to leave the region within seven days because its workers were siding politically with local rebels.

The ICRC says it is unclear if the vice president was referring to an order issued by the regional government or the central government in Addis Ababa, which recently launched a military campaign in the country's volatile east to wipe out rebels belonging to the Ogaden National Liberation Front.

"We are still in discussion with the central authorities. So, until those discussions are over, we will not know what is happening," Blacking said.

Blacking says accusations that Red Cross workers in the Ogaden are collaborating with rebels are unfounded. She strongly defended the work that they have been performing in the region for more than a decade.

"Our activities in that part of Ethiopia, in the Somali region, are water activities and some advice for veterinary," Blacking said. "Because of the area we work in, sometimes that necessitates that we have contact with all different sides to the conflict. When we are working in these remote, rural areas, you can come across anybody and you obviously have to deal with them to make sure that you get the access to where you need to go. But certainly, that is always with complete neutrality and we work in full transparency."

Ethiopia's Ogaden region is a vast, oil-rich, but impoverished area, which shares a long and porous border with Somalia. Most of the people in the Ogaden are ethnic Somalis, who support the rebels' 20-year-long fight for independence from Addis Ababa.

Addis Ababa says the ONLF rebels are terrorists funded by Ethiopia's arch rival in the Horn, Eritrea. In April, the ONLF killed more than 70 people, mostly Ethiopian guards, during a raid on a Chinese-run oil field in the Ogaden.

In recent weeks, western diplomats and humanitarian organizations have severely criticized Ethiopia's nearly two-month-long crackdown against the Ogaden rebels - a campaign which they say has included blockading critical food shipments to hundreds of thousands of people.

The U.N.'s World Food Program spokesman in Nairobi, Kenya, Peter Smerdon, says Ethiopia is allowing WFP to distribute food in three zones. But he says restrictions on trade and movement are hampering food deliveries.

On Monday, the ONLF asked the United Nations to launch an investigation into reports that the Ethiopian military and its proxy militias are committing human right abuses against civilians in the Ogaden.

French President Meets With Libya's Gadhafi



25 July 2007

Download

French President Nicolas Sarkozy arrived in Libya Wednesday to meet with Libyan leader Muammar Gadhafi in Tripoli. Mr. Sarkozy agreed to the visit as part of a deal made Tuesday to free six medical workers convicted of infecting hundreds of children in a Libyan hospital with AIDS. For VOA, Anita Elash reports from Paris.

The Bulgarian nurses and medic pose in front of the French presidential plane after their arrival at the Sofia airport, 24 July 2007
French President Nicolas Sarkozy is meeting Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi in Tripoli to improve relations following the release of six medical workers on Tuesday.

The six were flown from Tripoli to Sofia early on Tuesday at the end of a trip to Libya by Mr. Sarkozy's wife Cecilia and the EU's External Affairs Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner.

Reports say that Mr. Gadhafi invited Mr. Sarkozy to Libya several times during negotiations to free the medical workers. However, the French president said he would only come once they were released.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said the EU could now begin to normalize trade and political ties with Libya.

Mr. Sarkozy describes the trip as a political visit, made possible by the agreement.

Nicholas Sarkozy talks to reporters in Paris, 24 July 2007
He told reporters that, now that the medial workers are free, he wants to look to the future. Mr. Sarkozy says he hopes to sign several accords with the Libyan leader, but did not say in which areas.

News reports say that Mr. Sarkozy could sign agreements on security, immigration, energy and scientific research. And, he wants more support in to stem the flow of illegal immigrants crossing into southern Europe from North Africa.

France hopes to convince Libya to become part of a Mediterranean Union that would unite all countries that border the Mediterranean. Libya also holds huge economic potential, especially because of its oil reserves. Reports from Brussels say that, as part of the EU's incentive package, France offered to build a highway from Libya and Tunisia and pledged to sell arms to Tripoli.

VOASE0725_Education Report

25 July 2007
Specialty Summer Camps Offer Kids More Choices of Fun

Download
Download

This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

(MUSIC)

Students learn to paint at the Museum of East Texas Summer Art Camp
Millions of children in the United States go to summer camp. Some go to play outdoors at traditional camps in the woods, in the mountains or on a lake.

But families now have many choices of specialty camps. These can be in the middle of nature or a big city. Specialty camps offer young people the chance to learn about different subjects. Anything from space exploration to business to medicine.

In technology camps, one subject that children can learn about is video game design. They learn how to use computer programs to create games of their own.

One program that teaches video game design is called Cybercamps, located at the University of Maryland. Children can learn how to design their own virtual worlds to set their video game in. Then, they program their own rules and objects into the game.

Cybercamps also offers courses in robot building and Web design. A recent story in the Washington Post described how one child made a robot that could sing a song. Another made a robot that could follow a black line drawn on a piece of cardboard. Also, children can learn how to make Web sites. One child made a site for Pokemon, one of his favorite cartoon shows.

Kids-N-Technology is a day camp offered in several American cities. Boys and girls age eight to eighteen get the chance to build their own desktop or laptop computer or game machine. They take it home after the camp is over.

In the past twenty years, the number of day camps in the United States has grown by almost ninety percent. Still, more than half of all camps are overnight camps. But the American Camp Association says, over all, the most popular length of time for kids to attend a summer camp is one week or less.

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Erin Braswell, with music from the best of Allan Sherman. To learn about American education, and for transcripts and archives of our reports, go to voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Bob Doughty.

VOASE0725_The Making of a Nation

25 July 2007
US History Series: A 'Man From Hope' Is Elected to the White House in 1992

Download
Download

VOICE ONE:

This is Mary Tillotson.

VOICE TWO:

Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton in 1992
And this is Steve Ember with THE MAKING OF A NATION -- a VOA Special English program about the history of the United States. Today, we begin telling about Bill Clinton, America's forty-second president. He led the United States for eight years. He acted on many important issues that affected the United States and other countries. President Clinton also had to defend himself against accusations of dishonesty and sexual wrongdoing.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

In nineteen ninety-one, many Americans felt happier and more secure than they had in years. Worries about nuclear war had eased. The United States had led a coalition of allies to victory in the Persian Gulf War. In a little more than four days, the coalition freed Kuwait from invaders from Iraq and deeply damaged the Iraqi military.

Republican President George Bush had won huge popularity after successfully leading the war effort. Most political experts believed President Bush would easily be re-elected in nineteen ninety-two.

VOICE TWO:

President Bush’s popularity fell, however, as many people lost their jobs. Unemployment climbed to its highest rate since nineteen eighty-four. Economic growth slowed to recession levels. The federal government was deeply in debt after years of borrowing to pay for its programs.

The opposition Democratic Party correctly believed it had a good chance to elect a president in nineteen ninety-two. It placed its hopes for winning the White House on Arkansas Governor William Jefferson Clinton.

VOICE ONE:

The future president was born William Jefferson Blythe on August nineteenth, nineteen forty-six, in Hope, Arkansas. His parents were William Jefferson Blythe and Virginia Blythe. Bill’s father was a traveling salesman. His father had died in a car accident three months before Bill was born. At age two, Bill was sent to live with his grandparents while his mother studied to become a nurse.

Bill’s mother married Roger Clinton when Bill was four years old. The family moved to Hot Springs, Arkansas, in nineteen fifty-three. Bill officially changed his name to William Jefferson Clinton at age fifteen.

VOICE TWO:

Bill Clinton’s new father, Roger Clinton, drank too much alcohol. Bill’s life at home was unpleasant at times. However, he did well in school and liked it very much. He also developed a strong early interest in politics. He competed for many offices while in high school.

In nineteen sixty-three, Bill Clinton met President John F. Kennedy. Bill was visiting Washington, D.C. as a delegate for a citizenship training program. President Kennedy provided the young Bill Clinton with a strong example of leadership.

Bill continued his education at Georgetown University in Washington. He graduated in nineteen sixty-eight. Excellence in his studies won him a Rhodes Scholarship to attend Oxford University in Oxford, England. He spent two years there before entering Yale University Law School in New Haven, Connecticut.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

At Yale, Bill fell in love with another Yale law student. Hillary Rodham of Park Ridge, Illinois shared his deep interest in politics and public service. They were married in October of nineteen seventy-five. Their daughter Chelsea was born in nineteen-eighty.

Bill Clinton returned to Arkansas after completing law school. He soon entered politics as a Democrat, narrowly losing an election for Congress. Later, Arkansas citizens elected him attorney general -- the top law official for the state. In nineteen seventy-eight, he became the Democratic Party candidate for governor. He easily defeated his Republican opponent. He was the youngest man ever elected governor of Arkansas.

VOICE TWO:

While Bill Clinton was governor, the federal government operated a holding center for Cuban refugees in Arkansas. Rioting among these Cubans hurt his chances for re-election. Governor Clinton’s opponent said he should have done more to get the government to hold the Cubans someplace else. Mister Clinton also supported unpopular new taxes.

Bill Clinton was defeated in his effort to be re-elected governor of Arkansas in nineteen eighty. He deeply regretted this loss. He promised himself he would again be governor. Bill Clinton gained his goal in the election two years later. He continued to serve as governor of Arkansas until nineteen ninety-two.

VOICE ONE:

Education in Arkansas improved under the leadership of Governor Clinton. Many more students graduated from Arkansas high schools. The number of students entering college also rose. The state began requiring examinations for teachers. It also increased their pay. Mister Clinton started health centers in public schools. And he expanded Head Start programs to help prepare poor children to begin school.

While governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton also served in national organizations for governors and Democratic Party leaders. He became well known as a moderate Democrat.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

In nineteen ninety-one, William Jefferson Clinton announced he would compete for the Democratic nomination for president. Former Massachusetts Senator Paul Tsongas and former California Governor Edmund Brown, Junior were his main opponents for the nomination.

However, Paul Tsongas later suspended his campaign for lack of money. Mister Clinton won a big lead over Mister Brown in state nominating elections.

Democrats met for their national nominating convention in New York City in July, nineteen ninety-two. They named Bill Clinton as their candidate for president. He chose Senator Al Gore of Tennessee to be his vice president in the election.

VOICE ONE:

The Republican Party nominated President Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle for a second term. Texas businessman Ross Perot competed as an independent. His vice presidential candidate was a former top Navy officer, James Stockdale.

President Bush talked about his foreign policy successes during the campaign. He said he would cut taxes. He said Bill Clinton would raise taxes. Many Americans, however, remembered that President Bush had raised taxes after promising not to do this.

VOICE TWO:

Bill Clinton criticized President Bush mostly about important domestic issues in the United States. He said the president had failed to deal with the slow economy and high unemployment. President Bush answered that the Democrats controlled Congress. He said the Democrats defeated most of his domestic proposals. Ross Perot criticized both Republican President Bush and Democratic candidate Clinton. Mister Perot said neither man considered the importance of the huge federal debt.

VOICE ONE:

Bill Clinton and Al Gore won the nineteen ninety-two presidential election. They received about forty five-million votes. President Bush and Mister Quayle had about thirty-nine million votes. About eighteen million people voted for Mister Perot and Mister Stockdale.

VOICE TWO:

Bill Clinton became America’s forty-second president on January twentieth, nineteen ninety-three. At age forty-six, he was the third youngest person ever elected president.

At his swearing-in ceremony, the new president said there was no longer division between foreign and domestic issues. Listen to these words from President Bill Clinton’s swearing-in-speech:

BILL CLINTON: "The world economy, the world environment, the world AIDS crisis, the world’s arms race -- they affect us all. Today, as an old order passes, the new world is more free but less stable. Communism’s collapse has called forth old animosities and new dangers. Clearly America must continue to lead the world we did so much to make.”

VOICE ONE:

Even as President Clinton took office, critics were accusing him of wrongdoing. There were questions about sexual relationships outside his marriage. Other accusations involved an investment he and Missus Clinton had made years before. In nineteen seventy-eight they had bought land in Arkansas to sell for holiday homes.

President Clinton denied any dishonorable actions. But the criticism and suspicion of America’s forty-second president continued.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

This program of THE MAKING OF A NATION was written by Jerilyn Watson and produced by George Grow. This is Steve Ember

VOICE ONE:

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