9.02.2007

Democrats Challenge Bush on Iraq



01 September 2007

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President Bush reports to Congress this month on the results from his decision to send more troops to Iraq. VOA White House Correspondent Scott Stearns reports, opposition Democrats say his strategy is not working and it is time to start bringing U.S. troops home.

An Iraqi man is searched by US Army troops in Baghdad, Iraq, 4 Aug. 2007
President Bush says his September 15 report to Congress will assess what is going well in Iraq, what can be improved, and what adjustments might be made. Mr. Bush says legislators should withhold judgment until they have heard it.

But opposition Democrats, and some within the president's own Republican Party, are not withholding judgment.

In the Democratic Party's Saturday radio address, Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky says the troop reinforcements have failed to achieve their goal of reducing violence so progress can be made on political reconciliation.

Democrat Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky of Illinois and Republican Congressman Chris Shays of Connecticut (file photo)

"The president's surge has failed, and there is no end in sight for the war in Iraq," she said.

Schakowsky visited Iraq last month and says top commander General David Petraeus told her U.S. troops could be in Iraq another nine or 10 years. She says that is not the timetable most Americans have in mind, and she urged Republican members of Congress to support a draw down of troops. .

"The best way to protect our troops is to end this war in Iraq," she added. "With the president stubbornly continuing to stay the course in Iraq, I urge my Republican colleagues to join with Democrats and the vast majority of Americans who are demanding a new direction in Iraq and refocusing America's efforts on fighting the real threats of terrorism around the world."

In August, John Warner, a former Navy secretary and a Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said President Bush should bring some U.S. troops home by the end of the year.

White House officials say the president will make no decisions about the way forward in Iraq until hearing from General Petraeus and U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker.

President Bush, left, waves as he leaves the Pentagon, with Defense Secretary Robert Gates, and outgoing Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Peter Pace, 31 Aug 2007
But in remarks meant to rebuild public support for the war, Mr. Bush has made clear that he believes withdrawing troops now would embolden the enemy and make America more vulnerable to terrorist attack.

In his weekly radio address, the president focused on economic proposals meant to ease U.S. mortgage defaults, which have disrupted worldwide financial markets.

His plan would make it easier for borrowers holding adjustable rate mortgages to refinance those loans through the government housing authority.

Thousands of American homeowners have fallen behind on their mortgage payments because their adjustable rate mortgages have reset at higher interest rates.

As the mortgage industry goes through a period of adjustment, Mr. Bush says the federal government will help troubled homeowners but not lenders who made unwise loans or consumers who purchased homes beyond their means.

President Bush
"The Federal government will not bail out lenders because that would only make a recurrence of the problem more likely," he said. "And it is not the government's job to bail out speculators, or those who made the decision to buy a home they knew they could never afford. But I support action at the Federal level that will help more American families keep their homes."

Economists estimate the monthly payments on some two million adjustable rate mortgages will rise in the next two years.

US Reaps Golden Harvest at World Athletics



01 September 2007

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The United States has won the gold medals in the men's and women's relay while an American took the pole vault title at the World Athletics Championships in Osaka, Japan. VOA's David Byrd was trackside and has this report on the action.

United States' Tyson Gay displays his gold medal during the medal ceremony for the Men's 200m at the World Athletics Championships, 31 Aug. 2007
Tyson Gay of the United States won his third world championship gold medal this week. Gay, who won the men's 100-meter and 200-meters titles, was the third runner in the U.S. 4x100 men's relay.

Along with teammates Wallace Spearmon, Darvis Patton and Leroy Dixon, Gay won gold in a world-leading time of 37.78 seconds. Gay said after the race that he did not come to Osaka to win three medals, but he is glad to have them.

"I think this was the most fun medal I got since I got to get this medal with these teammates of mine," he said. "A lot of people were saying they think I need to be on anchor. I thought that after the prelims, but when the coaching staff said that, if I ran the third leg and gave them the lead, then we would have no problem. And that's what really meant a lot to me because they believed in us."

Jamaica's team won the silver medal (37.89) and Britain won the bronze (37.90).

Allyson Felix of the US celebrates after winning the gold medal in the Women's 200m during the World Athletics Championships, 31 Aug. 2007
Also Saturday, the U.S. women's team of Lauryn Williams, Allyson Felix, Miki Barber and Torri Edwards won the 4x100 meters gold in 41.98 seconds. Williams said after the race that the U.S. women jelled at just the right time.

"We had great chemistry out there tonight, great chemistry overall in relay camp," she said. "I did not see any reason we should come out here and not get a gold medal because we worked really hard and we had good chemistry."

Jamaica won the silver (42.01) and Belgium won the bronze (42.75).

American Brad Walker won his country's first pole vault world championship by clearing 5.86 meters on his first attempt.

Romain Mesnil of France won the silver (5.86 meters in two attempts). Danny Ecker of Germany won the bronze, (5.81 meters).

World record holder Roman Seberle of the Czech Republic won the decathlon with a total of 8,676 points. Jamaica's Maurice Smith won the silver (8,644) and Dmitriy Karpov of Kazakhstan won the bronze (8,586).

In the women's 5,000-meters race, world record holder Meseret Defar of Ethiopia won her first world first championship in 14 minutes, 57.91 seconds.

After the race, Defar told VOA Sports that her victory is something she has waited for and worked for.

"I participated two times in Paris and in Helsinki," she said. "In Paris, I was disqualified and in Helsinki I am number two. In Osaka, I am champion and I am very happy."

Kenya's Vivian Cheruiyot won the silver medal, .59 of one second back. Her compatriot Priscah Jepleting Cherono won the bronze medal (14:59.21).

In the men's 50-kilometer race walk, Australia's Nathan Deakes won his first world championship. Deakes, the world record holder, finished in a season's best time of three hours, 43 minutes, 53 seconds.

Former Pakistani Leader Bhutto Vows Return From Exile Soon



01 September 2007

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Former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto says that despite stalled power-sharing talks, she will be heading back to her country soon. She made the announcement Saturday in London. For VOA, Tom Rivers has details.

Benazir Bhutto, chairperson of the opposition Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and former prime minister of Pakistan, 20 July 2007

Following a meeting in London of colleagues from her Pakistan People's Party, former Prime Minister Bhutto says she will be returning from exile soon to run in parliamentary elections in the coming months.

"The Pakistan People's Party has decided to form a committee, and we will be holding press conferences in every provincial capital of Pakistan on September 14, and we will be giving the date of my arrival, the venue of my arrival, and I will be going back to Pakistan very soon," she said.

Her planned return will come despite a failure to strike a power-sharing deal with a group representing Pakistan's President General Pervez Musharraf.

Pakistan's President Gen. Pervez Musharraf delivers a speech at a joint peace meeting in Kabul, Afghanistan, 12 Aug 2007

Ms. Bhutto says envoys from both sides could not reach an agreement and that representatives from the president's delegation have returned to Pakistan for consultations.

"We have been engaged in contacts with the present regime for the restoration of democracy so that there can be a viable political system," she added. "We understand that there is severe reaction within the present ruling party to any understanding with the Pakistan People's Party, and due to that reaction, no understanding has been arrived at, and we are making our own plans to return to the country."

Ms. Bhutto blames hardliners in Mr. Musharraf's ruling party for trying to scuttle the talks, but she says it is still possible to find common ground. She has said the president must agree to step down as military chief.

President Musharraf is seeking re-election from the current parliament. He hopes to secure a five-year term, but Pakistan's Supreme Court has agreed to hear a challenge to the legality of his re-election by the country's existing legislature.

Parliamentary elections are due in early January. Ms. Bhutto says the country needs a new course and she says she can deliver change.

"I feel that Pakistan can turn the corner if it returns to its roots of moderation, of democracy and of insuring governmental authority through the length and breadth of the country," she said.

In addition to Ms. Bhutto, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, overthrown by Mr. Musharraf in 1999, also plans to return. He says he will return home September 10 to challenge President Musharraf's re-election bid.

Mr. Sharif was exiled in 2000 and could face arrest when he returns.

Ms. Bhutto meanwhile has been charged with corruption, and there is a possibility she could be detained upon arrival.

Public support for President Musharraf has plummeted as insurgent violence has mounted in the tribal areas near Afghanistan and after the government battled Islamic extremists at a mosque in Islamabad.

The embattled president has been seeking Ms. Bhutto's support.

Israeli Archaeologists Say Muslims Damaged Relics at Jerusalem Holy Site



01 September 2007

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Ancient artifacts are at the heart of a fresh dispute between Jews and Arabs at a hotly contested holy place in Jerusalem. As Robert Berger reports from VOA's Jerusalem bureau, the dispute points to the simmering religious tensions behind the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

A Muslim girl walks by the Golden Dome of the Rock mosque in the al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem, 29 Aug. 2007
Israeli archaeologists accuse Islamic authorities of damaging artifacts from Biblical times at the al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. The mosque sits on a plaza, which Jews call the Temple Mount and Muslims call the Noble Sanctuary. The al-Aqsa Mosque is the third holiest site for Muslims. As the site of the two Biblical temples, the Temple Mount is the holiest place in Judaism. The area is a focal point of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Trouble began when the Wakf, the Islamic Trust that administers the site, brought in a tractor to dig a trench. The Wakf said it was replacing a 40-year-old electrical cable, but Israeli archaeologists were furious.

"In the last week, the Islamic Wakf authorities on the Temple Mount have carried out a barbaric act of excavating illicitly," said archaeologist Gabi Barkai.

He told a news conference that the digging of the 400-meter long channel has harmed relics from the time of the Temples.

"This channel destroyed several layers of ancient remains upon the Temple Mount," he added. "The trench encountered also a built wall which could have belonged to the outer courtyards of the Temple itself."

Muslim authorities have denied the allegations, describing them as "sheer propaganda." They say they respect antiquities, and the infrastructure work did not cause any damage.

Palestinian worshipper Ismael Ramadan told VOA that Israel has no right to interfere in what happens at a Muslim holy place.

"I grew up and I see [with] my eyes and I see this is [a] mosque. I don't see [a] temple," he said.

Like many Palestinians, he believes the temples never existed.

"It's not true," he said. "No Temple."

For years, Israeli archaeologists have accused Islamic authorities of systematically destroying Temple artifacts in an attempt to erase any Jewish connection with the holy place.

But the accusations go both ways. Earlier this year, an Israeli archeological dig next to the plaza sparked protests by Muslims who feared the al-Aqsa mosque would be damaged.

Israeli authorities said they were salvaging artifacts before construction work on a walkway leading to the plaza.

US, North Korea Meet on Nuclear Issue, Normalizing Ties



01 September 2007

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The United States and North Korea are holding bilateral talks in an ongoing process aimed at disabling North Korea's nuclear facilities. This is the latest in a series of working group sessions preparing the ground work for all-important six-party talks that will take place later this month. The members include the two Koreas, China, Russia, the United States and Japan. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from Geneva where the bilateral talks are taking place.

Vehicles enter the U.S. mission in Geneva, Switzerland, prior to the bilateral talks between the U.S. and North Korea, 1 Sept 2007
The talks are going on behind closed doors at the U.S. mission here in Geneva. Before they began, both parties expressed good will and their hopes for a productive outcome.

Upon his arrival in Geneva, the chief North Korean negotiator said he hopes the meeting will be positive. His American counterpart told journalists he is hopeful progress will be made toward scrapping North Korea's nuclear arsenal.

Chief U.S. negotiator, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, said the two delegations will be working on implementing the February 13 agreement.

That deal, reached by the six parties, obliges Pyongyang to disable its nuclear facilities and declare all of its nuclear program. In exchange, North Korea would receive 950,000 tons of heavy fuel oil or equivalent aid and other economic and political benefits.

In July, North Korea closed its main nuclear facility. Hill said he is optimistic the weekend talks with North Korean officials will help the two sides agree on how to begin declaring and disabling North Korea's nuclear programs.

Christopher Hill speaks during a press briefing about a bilateral meeting with North Korean envoys in Geneva, Switzerland, 31 Aug. 2007
Hill says the six-party process is important because North Korea's nuclear ambitions are not just a problem for the United States. He says the talks hold out hope for relations between North Korea, called the DPRK, and other countries in the region.

"That involves building relations not only between the DPRK but also between the DPRK and other countries and between some of those other countries. So that is why we are trying to address some of the underlying causes of tension in the region," he said.

One issue concerns the abduction decades ago of Japanese citizens by North Korea. Hill says the resolution of that problem is on the bilateral agenda.

He says the six parties have created a mechanism to lessen such tensions and to build confidence among the nations. He says Russia has been working hard to ensure the process will be a success when the six parties meet.

"I hope that at the end we will not only have dealt with the terrible problem of nuclear weapons, but also the problem of making sure that this neighborhood produces not only some of the world's finest products but also Northeast Asia can produce also peace and security," he said.

Hill said he hopes North Korea will declare and disable all of its facilities by the end of the year, and then begin a final phase in 2008, destroying all of its nuclear weapons.

Hill says a successful outcome of the next six-party talks could eventually lead to a peace conference on the Korean peninsula that would result in a genuine peace agreement. This would replace the armistice that ended the Korean War in 1953.

He says other benefits could be a resumption of bilateral diplomatic relations and the removal of North Korea from the U.S. State Department's list of states that sponsor terrorism.

VOASE0831_In the News

31 August 2007
Turkey Gets a New President; Pakistan Waits and Wonders How Its Political Crisis Will End

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This is IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English.

Abdullah Gul was sworn in this week as the eleventh president of Turkey. The fifty-six-year-old economist formerly served as foreign minister.

Abdullah Gul after his election
He easily won the election in parliament on Tuesday. But his victory came after four months of dispute over the idea of a president with an Islamic past. Mister Gul began his political life as part of an Islamist party that is now banned.

A political crisis followed his nomination earlier this year by the ruling Justice and Development Party, known as the AK party. Thousands of people went into the streets to protest his candidacy. The crisis resulted in early parliamentary elections in July which the AKP won.

The election of Mister Gul is widely seen as a vote of support for the economic gains that Turkey has made in recent years. The AK party was first elected in two thousand two.

But military leaders boycotted Mister Gul's swearing-in ceremony. The army considers itself the guardian of the separation of government and religion. The army has ousted four governments since nineteen sixty. Not since nineteen eighty, however, has this happened with force.

Turkey has had a constitutional separation of religion and government for more than eighty years. Mister Gul promises to honor it.

The new president is an observant Muslim. Those who want to keep religion out of government are uneasy about the idea that his wife, Hayrunisa, wears an Islamic headscarf. So do more than half of all Turkish women. But the hijab has been banned in public offices and schools for almost thirty years.

What concerns the secularists most, however, is that Mister Gul will be able to appoint officials like constitutional court judges and the head of the military. He will also have the power to veto legislation.

As Turks were getting a new president this week, Pakistanis were considering the future of their country's leadership.

Nawaz Sharif at a news conference Thursday in London
On Thursday, former prime minister Nawaz Sharif announced that he will return to Pakistan on September tenth. The Pakistani Supreme Court ruled last week that he can return from exile. He says he will fight the re-election plans of President Pervez Musharraf.

General Musharraf overthrew him eight years ago and sent him into exile in Saudi Arabia. Now Mister Sharif is demanding that the general step down as both president and army chief.

President Musharraf is expected to seek another five-year term in a vote in parliament in the coming weeks. But his public support has fallen.

The president has reportedly been seeking an alliance with Benazir Bhutto, another former prime minister. She lives in exile by choice but still heads Pakistan's largest opposition party. She said the president must leave the army before she would support his re-election.

In exchange, she wants the government to drop corruption charges against her and her family and let her serve a third term as prime minister.

And that's IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English, written by Brianna Blake. You can download transcripts and MP3 files of our reports at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.

VOASE0901_People In America

01 September 2007
Samuel Gompers, 1850-1924: 'The Grand Old Man of Labor'

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VOICE ONE:

I’m Phoebe Zimmerman.

VOICE TWO:

And I’m Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Program, People in America. Today we tell about one of the country’s greatest labor leaders, Samuel Gompers.

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VOICE ONE:

Samuel Gompers
Samuel Gompers was born in London, England in eighteen fifty. His parents were poor people who had moved to England from the Netherlands to seek a better life. Sam was a very good student. However, when he was ten years old, he was forced to quit school and go to work to help feed the family. He was the oldest of five sons. Like his father, Sam became a tobacco cigar maker. He liked the cigar-making industry because it had a group of members. During meetings, workers could talk about their problems. This is where young Sam began to develop an interest in labor issues.

VOICE TWO:

But life was difficult for the Gompers family in London, even with both Sam and his father working. They soon decided to move to the United States to again try to make a better life for themselves. In eighteen sixty-three, the Gompers family got on a ship and sailed across the Atlantic Ocean. Seven weeks later, the ship arrived in New York City. The Gompers settled in a poor part of New York where many immigrants lived.

VOICE ONE:

Sam soon learned that life in America was not easy. At that time, most people worked many hours each day for little money. They worked making goods in factories. Often these factories had poor working conditions. New York was known for these so-called “sweatshops.” Whole families, including young children, worked fourteen hours a day in sweatshops for just enough money to stay alive.

Sam hated the sweatshops and refused to work there. Instead, he and his father became cigar makers again. Soon Sam joined the Cigarmakers International Union. In those days, labor unions were not strong or permanent. They did little to help workers in their struggle for better working conditions and a better life. Sam believed this needed to change.

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VOICE TWO:

Sam Gompers was married at the age of seventeen. He became a father one year later. He earned a living making cigars in shops around New York City. Employers recognized him as a skilled and valuable worker. The men he worked with recognized him as an effective labor activist.

Sam also became a student of socialism. In eighteen seventy-three, he started working for an old German socialist, David Hirsch. Most of Mister Hirsch’s workers were also socialists from Germany. These men became Samuel Gompers’ teachers. They taught him much about trade unions.

One teacher was Karl Laurrell, who had been the leader in Europe of the International Workingman’s Association. Mister Laurrell taught Sam Gompers what labor unity meant. He also taught him about “collective bargaining.” This is how representatives of labor groups meet with the people they work for and negotiate an agreement. For example, labor and management might negotiate for more money, fewer hours and cleaner working places for workers.

VOICE ONE:

In time, Samuel Gompers used his knowledge of labor issues to help cigar makers throughout New York form a single, representative union. It was called the Cigarmakers’ Local Number One Hundred Forty-Four. Each cigar shop in New York had its own small union that elected a representative to sit on the council of a larger union. In eighteen seventy-five, this council elected Mister Gompers as president of Cigarmakers’ Local Number One Hundred Forty-Four.

The union’s constitution was like the constitution of a democratic government. All people in the union had a representative voice. Experts say the organizing of Cigarmakers’ Local Number One Hundred Forty-Four was the beginning of the American labor movement.

VOICE TWO:

Sam Gompers believed that one day all working men and women could belong to organized trade unions. He believed workers should not be forced to sell their labor at too low a price. He also believed each person must have the power to improve his or her own life. A person can get this power by joining with others in a union. He believed a democratic trade union can speak and act for all its workers. This is the same way a democratic government speaks for the people because voters elect officials to represent them.

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VOICE ONE:

Labor organizations began to grow stronger in America during the late nineteenth century. At the same time, Sam Gompers started to speak of new ideas. He dreamed of bringing all trade unions together into one big, nation-wide organization that could speak with one voice for workers throughout the country.

In eighteen eighty-one, Mister Gompers was sent as the delegate of the cigar makers union to a conference of unions. The delegates agreed to organize an alliance called the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and Canada. The alliance held yearly meeting of national union and local labor councils. It was designed to educate the public on worker issues, prepare labor-related legislation, and pressure Congress to approve such bills. Sam Gompers was an officer in the alliance for five years.

VOICE TWO:

During that time, he worked for several measures to improve the lives of workers and children. These included proposals to reduce the work day to eight hours, limit child labor and require children to attend school. He soon learned, however, that the alliance of unions had neither the money nor the power to do much more than talk about these issues. So, in eighteen eighty-six, Sam Gompers helped organize a new union for all labor unions. It was called the American Federation of Labor.

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VOICE ONE:

Sam Gompers was elected president of the American Federation of Labor in eighteen eighty-six. He held that position, except for one year, for thirty-eight years until he died. In eighteen ninety, the A.F.L. represented two hundred fifty thousand workers. Two years later, the number had grown to more than one million workers. Under his leadership, the A.F.L. grew from a few struggling labor unions to become the major organization within the labor movement in the United States.

VOICE TWO:

As leader of the A.F.L. Mister Gompers had enemies both within and outside the labor movement. Some opponents believed Mister Gompers was more interested in personal power than in improving the rights of workers. They believed his ideas about strikes and collective bargaining could not stop big business. They believed the American Federation of Labor was a conservative organization designed to serve skilled workers only.

Other opponents considered Sam Gompers a foreign-born troublemaker who wanted to destroy property rights. At the same time, opponents in industry and business feared that the labor leader was demanding too much for workers. They said his talk violated the law, and that he excited workers and urged them to strike.

VOICE ONE:

Sam Gompers was not troubled by any of these attacks. He argued that because there was freedom of speech in America, he would not be afraid to speak freely. He said that no one hated strikes more than he did because workers suffered the most in a strike. However, he said that in a democracy, strikes were necessary. After a strike, he said, businessmen and workers understood each other better and this was good for the nation. He said: “I hope the day will never come when the workers surrender their right to strike.”

Sam Gompers also had an interest in international labor issues. At the end of World War One, he attended the Versailles Treaty negotiations. He was helpful in creating the International Labor Organization under the League of Nations. He also supported trade unionism in Mexico.

VOICE TWO:

Samuel Gompers died in nineteen twenty-four. He is remembered as “the grand old man of labor.” He worked during his whole life for one cause – improving the rights of workers. He led the fight for shorter working hours, higher pay, safe and clean working conditions and democracy in the workplace.

In nineteen fifty-five, the American Federation of Labor joined with the Congress of Industrial Organization to form the A.F.L.-C.I.O. This organization has become an influential part of American economic and political life. It has also helped improve the lives of millions of American workers.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This Special English Program was written by Jill Moss. It was produced by Cynthia Kirk. I’m Phoebe Zimmerman.

VOICE TWO:

And I’m Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another People In America Program on the VOICE OF AMERICA.