7.29.2007

ASEAN Ministerial Meeting Tackles Thorny Issues With Draft Charter



29 July 2007

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The 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations are struggling with a number of controversial issues in the drafting of a new charter. The ASEAN foreign ministers are gathering for an informal meeting in Manila before opening their annual meeting Monday. VOA's Nancy-Amelia Collins is in the Philippine capital Manila where the meeting is being held.

The foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, hope to spend Monday finalizing the draft of a charter. The document is considered a milestone for the group because it will create a rules-based community similar to the European Union.

But finishing the document may not be easy. One of the most controversial issues is Burma's objection to a proposal to create a regional human rights body.

Enshrining human rights in the charter has been a thorny issue: several ASEAN nations have authoritarian or one-party governments and Burma's human rights record is considered dismal.

The United States and the European Union have long called on ASEAN to pressure Burma's military government to make good on its pledges to bring democracy to the country and release opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest.

Burma's Foreign Minister Nyan Win (r) is welcomed by Philippine Foreign Secretary Alberto Romulo prior to the 14th ASEAN Regional Forum in Manila, 29 Jul 2007
Philippine Foreign Secretary Alberto Romulo says ASEAN still hopes Burma will eventually follow its so-called road map to democracy.

"We continue to hope that in spite of the fact that, you know, after 10 years, we're still in the road map to democracy, but we continue to hope that since they are, they now have a national convention, that eventually that road map to democracy will be complete," said Romulo.

Human rights groups complain that ASEAN's principle of non-interference in member's domestic affairs has fostered undemocratic governments in the region.

The foreign ministers also must settle such charter details as to how to handle votes and how to punish nations that break the charter rules. Currently, ASEAN members act only after achieving a consensus and violations of decisions are not punished.

After some revisions the charter is expected to be adopted and ratified at a leader's summit in November and ratified by member states by the end of 2008.

The ASEAN charter is not the only issue up for discussion at Monday's meeting. Other issues include fighting terrorism, creating a regional body to respond quickly to disasters, and setting up a safety watchdog to make sure nuclear plants in the region are not used to produce weapons.

The foreign ministers also will hold bilateral meetings with a number of neighboring nations and key partners, including the United States. On Thursday, the ASEAN Regional Forum meets, with senior officials from the European Union, China, Japan, the U.S. and other nations.

Indian Government Faces Allegation of Gender Bias



29 July 2007

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When India's first woman president took office this week, it was described as a boost for millions of women. But soon after, a senior woman police officer was denied a top appointment, stirring a fiery debate in the country on whether gender bias persists in the government. Anjana Pasricha has a report from New Delhi.

Pratiba Pratil looks on as she walks out of central Parliament house after her swearing-in ceremony, 25 Jul 2007
For many people, 72-year-old Pratibha Patil's recent election as India's president was a symbol of empowerment for women in a country where they still face widespread discrimination.

But the same day that Mrs. Patil was sworn in, the government passed over a female police officer, Kiran Bedi, who was next in line to take over as Delhi's police chief, in favor of a junior colleague. The government said only that it was an "administrative decision."

The move has stirred a controversy - it was the third instance in recent months that women were pushed aside to allow men to take top positions in the government. Two bureaucrats, Veena Sikri, and Reva Nayyar in line to take the jobs as Foreign Secretary and Cabinet Secretary were similarly passed over.

Women's groups have cried foul, saying competent officers are being overlooked in the government due to gender bias.

Ranjana Kumari, director of the Center for Social Research, says the gains made by selecting a woman president have been undone.

"We believe that the appointment of president was not by choice, it was just a compulsion of politics," said Kumari. "I don't think people sitting in power are thinking about really empowering women in India. It is not a hidden glass ceiling, it is an iron ceiling actually. That is what we are now thinking, the system is still not willing to provide spaces."

Kiran Bedi was the country's first woman police officer. She has won widespread praise for being tough and independent, and made a mark in several assignments. She has protested the government's move in denying her the top job.

"The current situation is a very, very sad message, and we are up against mountains," said Bedi. "The system has won because the system is very closed."

Women's groups point to the low female representation in the government - eight percent of parliament members, 15 percent of the bureaucracy and three percent of the judiciary - as evidence that India continues to be male dominated.

They point out that efforts to pass a bill to reserve one third of the seats in parliament for women have repeatedly been blocked by lawmakers, although both leading political parties say they support the move.

It is not as if women have not held top offices in India - Indira Gandhi was prime minister for nearly 14 years, (1966-77 and 1980-84) and her daughter-in-law Sonia Gandhi, heads the governing? Congress Party coalition. But critics say their rise to power was fueled by the fact that they belong to a powerful political dynasty.

Bush Urges Congress to Modernize Law to Monitor Suspected Terrorists



28 July 2007

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President Bush is urging Congress to quickly amend a law on foreign surveillance that he says is "badly out of date." Mr. Bush says that at a time of heightened alert to prevent terrorist attacks on U.S. soil, intelligence professionals need a more modern law to help them effectively assess those threats. VOA's William Ide has more from Washington.

President Bush speaks at the American Legislative Exchange Council, 26 July 2007

In his weekly radio address, Mr. Bush appealed to Congress to modernize the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). The president says he wants Congress to make the changes before it breaks for summer recess next month.

He says the key problem is that FISA was written into law nearly three decades ago and notes that it needs to be revamped to better address modern technologies used by terrorists.

"Our intelligence community warns that under the current statute, we are missing a significant amount of foreign intelligence that we should be collecting to protect our country," said Mr. Bush. "Congress needs to act immediately to pass this bill, so that our national security professionals can close intelligence gaps and provide critical warning time for our country."

Mr. Bush says the legislation his administration is proposing is the product of months of discussions with members of both parties in the House and the Senate. It includes proposals that would allow U.S. telecommunications companies to cooperate more fully with the government in gathering information.

"Today we face sophisticated terrorists who use disposable cell phones and the Internet to communicate with each other, recruit operatives, and plan attacks on our country," added Mr. Bush. "Technologies like these were not available when FISA was passed nearly 30 years ago, and FISA has not kept up with new technological developments."

The proposed legislation also includes changes to allow the government to collect intelligence about foreign targets in foreign locations without obtaining court orders.

Mr. Bush's proposed changes come in the wake of a long and heated debate in the U.S. over his Administration's previous monitoring of terrorist suspects.

Shortly after the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001, Mr. Bush authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop, without court warrants, on calls between people in the U.S. and suspected terrorists abroad, even though the law requires such warrants.

The Bush Administration argued it had the authority to conduct warrantless surveillance, because of special powers granted by Congress in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

The administration said the wiretapping was necessary to help the U.S. act quickly to prevent terror attacks. Earlier this year, the president put the program back under the authority of FISA and its special secret courts.

Civil rights advocates have harshly criticized the previous warantless program, and are criticizing the president's new proposals, saying they will erode the rights of Americans.

Democratic leaders in Congress say they are moving to address inefficiencies in the system and will make changes as "necessary." But they also cite concerns about expanding the government's surveillance powers.

VOASE0728_People In America

28 July 2007
Ronald Reagan, 1911-2004: One of America's Most Popular Presidents

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ANNOUNCER:

Welcome to People in America in VOA Special English. Today Gwen Outen and Steve

Ronald Reagan
Ember tell about America's fortieth president, Ronald Reagan. Experts say Ronald Reagan re-defined the American presidency during his two terms in the nineteen eighties. He became president when he was sixty-nine years old. It was a far different place from that of his birth on February sixth, nineteen eleven.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Ronald Wilson Reagan was born in Tampico, Illinois. His mother Nelle, father Jack, and brother Neil lived above a bank in the town. Ronald Reagan’s family began calling the baby “Dutch.” The nickname remained for the rest of his life.

Jack Reagan worked at a general store. The family was poor. Yet, in a book about his life, Ronald Reagan wrote that he never felt poor. He was good at sports, especially football. During the summers, he was a lifeguard at a local swimming pool. He reportedly rescued many people from drowning.

Ronald Reagan said there was a feeling of security throughout his childhood. But it was not perfect. His father was dependent on alcohol.

VOICE TWO:

Ronald Reagan studied at Eureka College in Illinois. After seeing a play at college, he said: “More than anything in the world, I wanted to speak the actor’s words.”

But Ronald Reagan did not have enough money to go to New York or Hollywood to become an actor. So, after college he found a job as a sports broadcaster for a radio station in Iowa. Later he moved to a bigger radio station in Chicago, Illinois. He announced the action of baseball games. This work took him on a trip to California. He took a screen test to become an actor. Warner Brothers Studios offered him a job.

Ronald Reagan as ''The Gipper.''
Ronald Reagan moved to Hollywood and became a movie star. He appeared in many movies. “Knute Rockne – All American,” is probably his most famous. It is where he got the nickname “The Gipper.”

Mister Reagan played George Gipp, one of the greatest college football players ever. In the movie, he speaks of the school’s football team as he is dying.

RONALD REAGAN:

“...Ask them to go in there with all they got, win just one for the Gipper.”

VOICE ONE:

Those words, “win one for the Gipper,” later became a political battle cry for Ronald Reagan. In nineteen forty, he married actress Jane Wyman. They had two children, Maureen and Michael. But the marriage ended in nineteen forty-nine.

Ronald Reagan became president of the main labor group for movie actors in nineteen forty-eight. He served six terms. He met actress Nancy Davis through the union. They married in nineteen fifty-two. They later had two children, Patti and Ron.

At this time, Ronald Reagan was a member of the Democratic Party who described himself as a liberal. But, he became increasingly conservative as his worries about communism grew. He opposed anyone in the movie industry who supported communism.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

In the early nineteen fifties, Ronald Reagan began to appear on television. He presented dramatic shows produced by the General Electric Company. He became a spokesman for the company. Mister Reagan learned a lot about public speaking. He began to campaign for Republican Party political candidates a few years later. Reagan developed the ability to reach people through his speeches. He later became known as “The Great Communicator.”

Nancy Reagan supported her husband’s political interests. Political experts say she was always his most important adviser.

In nineteen sixty-six, Ronald Reagan announced his own candidacy for governor of California. Democrats in the state did not think he was a serious candidate. However, Mister Reagan was elected governor by almost one million votes.

Ronald Reagan received mixed public opinion as governor of the nation’s most populated state. He was praised for lowering California’s debt, yet criticized for raising taxes. Voters re-elected him as governor in nineteen seventy.

VOICE ONE:

Ronald Reagan was unsuccessful in his first two attempts to win the Republican nomination for president. Then, in nineteen eighty, he became the Republican Party’s presidential candidate. His opponent was President Jimmy Carter.

Ronald Reagan debates Jimmy Carter in 1980
The two men debated on national television. Ronald Reagan spoke directly and simply to the American people and asked them some questions:

RONALD REAGAN:

“Are you better off than you were four years ago? Is it easier for you to go and buy things in the stores than it was four years ago? Is there more or less unemployment in the country than there was four years ago?”

VOICE TWO:

Ronald Reagan won the United States presidential election by a huge majority. He and his vice-president, George Herbert Walker Bush, were sworn into office in January, nineteen eighty-one. Many people called the change in political power “The Reagan Revolution.”

President Reagan immediately began to work to honor a major campaign promise. He called on Congress to lower taxes. But only two months later, tragedy struck. A mentally sick man shot the president and three other people outside a hotel in Washington. President Reagan and his press secretary, James Brady, were severely wounded.

Mister Reagan had a bullet in his left lung, close to his heart. But he showed his sense of humor at the hospital. As the president was taken into the operating room he said he hoped all the doctors were Republicans.

Ronald Reagan recovered from the shooting and returned to work within two weeks.

VOICE ONE:

The President now began work on his main goal to reduce the size of the federal government. He had campaigned on the idea that the government was too costly and interfered too much in the lives of Americans.

Mister Reagan and Congress reduced taxes and cut spending for social programs. The administration argued that these actions would create economic growth.

Extremely high inflation rates did begin to fall. But the United States’ debt rose sharply. This was partly from big increases in military spending.

The Reagan economic policy became known as “Reaganomics.” It had, and still has, supporters and opponents. Some people argued that the cuts in social programs greatly hurt poor people. Others said the policy improved the economy.

President Reagan sought re-election in nineteen eighty-four. His Democratic opponent was former Vice-President Walter Mondale. Again Mister Reagan won the election by a large amount.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

President Reagan dealt with many serious foreign issues while in office. He sent American Marines to Lebanon to stop the fighting among several opposing groups. But more than two hundred Marines were killed in an extremist bomb attack.The so-called “Reagan Doctrine” was the Administration’s most famous foreign policy. That policy was to support anti-communist forces anywhere in the world. Under the policy, American forces invaded the Caribbean island nation of Grenada. The policy also led to secret United States support for rebels in Nicaragua.

President Reagan met with Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev several times in an effort to reduce nuclear weapons. He gave a famous speech at the Berlin Wall that divided Soviet-controlled East Germany from West Germany on June twelfth, nineteen eighty-seven.

RONALD REAGAN:

“General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet

President Reagan after his speech in front of the Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin, on June 12, 1987.
Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization: Come here to this gate! Mister Gorbachev, open this gate! Mister Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”

VOICE ONE:

Some historians say Ronald Reagan helped cause the fall of the Soviet Union. They say his military spending forced the Soviets to spend more, too. They say this led to the communist nation’s economic failure.

President Reagan enjoyed very high public approval ratings throughout his presidency. Many Americans considered him a friendly leader, a “man of the people,” filled with hope for America.

VOICE TWO:

Ronald and Nancy Reagan returned to California after his second term ended in nineteen eighty-nine. In nineteen ninety-four, Mister Reagan wrote an open letter to the American people. He informed them that he had the brain disease Alzheimer’s. The former president expressed his love for the country and thanked Americans for letting him serve. And, he wrote: “I know that for America there will always be a bright dawn ahead.”

Ronald Reagan died at his home in California on June fifth, two thousand four. He was ninety-three.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This program was written by Caty Weaver. Mario Ritter was the producer. I’m Gwen Outen.

VOICE TWO:

And I’m Steve Ember. Listen again next week for another People in America in VOA Special English.

VOASE0727_In the News

27 July 2007
In '08 Campaign, a Debate Brings Everyday Citizens Into the Process

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This is IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English.

Democratic candidates Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, Senator Barack Obama, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson and Senator Joseph Biden
Presidential hopefuls in the United States still travel the country, meeting people and shaking hands. But now they also have to reach out for money and support online, and not just through official campaign Web sites. They also use social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace and video sharing sites like YouTube.

This week, the eight Democratic candidates gathered for a debate that was the first of its kind. Anyone with Internet access could record a question on video and send it in through YouTube. The debate aired live on CNN, the Cable News Network.

Many of the questions involved foreign policy, especially the Iraq war. The mother of a soldier was concerned that her son is about to return to Iraq.

The mother of a soldier asks the candidates a question
QUESTION: "How many more soldiers must die while these political games continue in our government?"

Senator Barack Obama pointed out that he has always opposed the war.

BARACK OBAMA: "The time for us to ask how we were going to get out of Iraq was before we went in, and that is something that too many of us failed to do."

Senator Obama also said that if elected president, he would be willing to meet with leaders from Iran, North Korea and Venezuela.

But Senator Hillary Clinton, the Democratic front-runner, had a different position.

HILLARY CLINTON: "Because I think it is not that you promise a meeting at that high a level before you know what the intentions are. I do not want to be used for propaganda purposes."

Other questions dealt with racial and social issues, like same-sex marriage.

QUESTION: "Hi, my name is Mary. And my name is Jen. And we're from Brooklyn, New York. If you were elected president of the United States, would you allow us to be married … to each other?"

Most of the candidates who had a chance to deal with this issue said they would support civil unions, a step short of marriage.

This new form of debate was praised because it forced candidates away from the usual questions they expect.

Aid workers recorded a video with children at a refugee camp near Darfur. In another one, a melting animated snowman asked about global warming.

And a man from Michigan wanted to know if "our babies are safe." He meant guns, and he had a large rifle. He asked the candidates about their positions on gun control.

Still, some critics said the public should have been able to choose the questions, instead of CNN.

More than two and a half million people watched the debate on television. Viewing by younger people ages eighteen to thirty-four was said to be the highest ever for a debate in cable news history.

Still, it was the second most-watched debate of the campaign season so far. A CNN-YouTube debate for the Republican candidates is planned for September seventeenth. The election is in November of next year.

If you have a question about the process of electing the president, we might be able to answer it on the air. Write to special@voanews.com. Please include your name and where you are from.

And that's IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English, written by Brianna Blake. I’m Steve Ember.