6.17.2007

International AIDS Meeting Opens in Rwanda



16 June 2007

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An international AIDS conference started in Rwanda's capital Saturday, with officials vowing to work together to stop the spread of the scourge. Cathy Majtenyi reports for VOA from Kigali.

A baby sleeps in her mother's arms next to the anti-AIDS drug nevirapine
Speakers opening the HIV/AIDS Implementers' Meeting lauded what they said were great strides being made worldwide in the treatment and prevention of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Michel Sidibe, the deputy director of programs at UNAIDS, as the joint U.N. project on AIDS is called, told the gathering that more and more people in developing countries are getting access to AIDS drugs, and that in some cases infection rates are going down.

Michel Sidibe
"Well over 2 million people in the middle and low income countries are now on treatment. In several populations in East Africa, the Caribbean and Asia, HIV infection levels are falling - finally," said Sidibe.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame said that in 2001 his country had 15 voluntary counseling and testing centers. Now there are 256 centers, which have tested 2 million Rwandans.

He said that there are also 138 centers where people can get access to antiretroviral drug treatment, up from just four centers in 2001. Some 40,000 Rwandans are currently receiving antiretroviral treatment. President Kagame shared the credit for these advances.

Paul Kagame at VOA
"These results illustrate what can be achieved by well-coordinated partnerships," he said.

The conference is being sponsored by the World Bank, three U.N. agencies, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and the United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

Following the conference theme, "Scaling Up Through Partnerships," more than 1,000 participants from around the globe are looking to find ways governments, business, the health care sector and others can collaborate.

U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator Mark Dybul told the gathering that those involved in the fight against HIV/AIDS within specific countries and internationally are forming what he calls new partnerships in dealing with the AIDS crisis.

"We are rejecting the old and flawed donor-recipient approach and replacing it with partnership," he said. "Partnership is rooted in hope for, and faith in, people. Partnership means honest relationships between peoples based in mutual respect, understanding, and trust, with obligations and responsibilities for each partner."

He said these new relationships in part have resulted in enabling 2 million people in developing countries to receive antiretroviral drugs, which represents a 20-fold increase in 4 years.

The United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief is a five-year, $15 billion initiative to help countries treat and prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS.

Bush Says He Will Veto 'Excessive Spending'



16 June 2007

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President Bush says opposition legislators want to raise taxes on Americans, undermining what he says is his pro-growth economic policy. Democrats say they want to help boost economic growth by lowering energy costs. VOA White House Correspondent Scott Stearns has the story.

President Bush speaks to the Associated Builders and Contractors meeting in Washington, 14 Jun 2007
President Bush says his record tax cuts have produced record tax revenues by putting more Americans to work and thereby reducing the nation's budget deficit. But in his weekly radio address, the president warned that proposed spending by opposition Democrats threatens his plans to balance the budget by 2012.

"The Democrats in Congress are trying to take us in a different direction," said Mr. Bush. "They've passed a budget that would mean higher taxes for American families and job creators, ignore the need for entitlement reform, and pile on hundreds of billions of dollars in new government spending over the next five years. This tax-and-spend approach puts our economic growth and deficit reduction at risk."

The president said he will veto excessive spending. The opposition-led House of Representatives Friday passed a $37 billion budget for the Department of Homeland Security, exceeding the president's request by more than $2 billion.

If President Bush carries out his threat to veto the measure, it is unlikely the Democrats would be able to get the two-thirds majority needed to override the veto, because enough Republicans voted against it to sustain the veto.

But Mr. Bush is not vetoing all spending that is above his budget. He accepted $17 billion more in the Iraq war funding bill than he requested. Democrats have added $4 billion to his request for veterans programs, and Republicans are not likely to support challenging that spending at a time of war.

In the Democratic radio address, Senator Maria Cantwell called on President Bush to lobby members of his own party to back an energy bill aimed at reducing America's dependence on foreign oil and lowering gas prices.

"By improving energy efficiency, our bill can save Americans billions of dollars every year," she said. "Democrats also plan to eliminate billions of dollars in tax breaks to big oil interests and invest them instead in clean, renewable energy. Combined with our goal to produce at least 15 percent of our energy from alternative sources, we can make huge strides in reducing our dependence on fossil fuel."

President Bush backs greater investments in alternative fuels and says he wants to cut U.S. petroleum use 20 percent in the next 10 years. America currently imports about 60 percent of its oil.

IOM Seeks $85 Million to Aid Iraq's Displaced



16 June 2007

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The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is appealing for $85 million to assist hundreds of thousands of internally displaced Iraqis. It warns large numbers of people will be forced to flee Iraq's borders, unless the international community provides the cash needed to care for Iraq's desperate homeless. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from IOM headquarters in Geneva.

Iraqi children drink water from taps at a refugee camp for internally displaced people outside Najaf, Iraq, 16 June 2007
The International Organization for Migration says the suffering of more than 2 million internally displaced people is increasing every day. It says another 4 million Iraqis who have not yet fled their homes are experiencing desperate food shortages and also need urgent help.

IOM Spokesman Jean-Philippe Chauzy says money from the appeal will target the most vulnerable people. They include female-headed single households, the elderly, the young and the sick. He says these people are stuck inside Iraq. They have nowhere to go and have few means to survive.

"The situation inside Iraq is critical, because until now the displaced have been able to go to the governorates," he said. "They have been able to get some assistance, obviously, from some of the relatives in various parts of the country. But this displacement has reached such a level now that many governorates are closing their doors to the displaced."

Chauzy says those who have had to flee sectarian violence find themselves very isolated. He says they have little prospect of either returning home or going to neighboring countries.

About 2 million Iraqis have fled the country. Most of the refugees are in Syria and Jordan, both of whom are finding it difficult to cope with the overwhelming numbers.

The International Organization for Migration and its partners have been providing humanitarian assistance to internally displaced people in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, despite extremely difficult security conditions. The agency has assisted nearly 5 million people with food and non-food emergency provisions.

IOM Spokesman Chauzy says the $85 million appeal will cover a two-year period. He says money initially will be used to create, what is called, quick-impact community assistance programs in all parts of the country. He says these projects would include rehabilitation and construction of water supply, sanitation, health, and school facilities.

"It is also important to bear in mind, that unemployment in Iraq is rampant. Up to 60 percent. Competition for jobs is very, very high and those quick impact programs would hopefully create some form of employment inside Iraq and therefore alleviate some of the hardships that are linked to this displacement," he said. "The money would also be used critically to rebuild some of the shattered infrastructures."

Chauzy says shelter is a priority need. So the money would help rehabilitate public buildings, provide construction materials to the homeless to build or rehabilitate houses.

North Korea Invites UN Nuclear Inspectors



16 June 2007

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With a protracted international banking dispute nearly resolved, North Korea is inviting international nuclear inspectors to visit the country. The move is widely viewed as a practical step toward implementing Pyongyang's promise to start dismantling its nuclear weapons programs. VOA's Kurt Achin reports from Seoul.

North Korea's Central News Agency reported Saturday that Pyongyang has sent a formal letter to the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency, inviting nuclear inspectors to make a visit to the country.

According to North Korean media, senior North Korean official Lee Je-sun wrote to the IAEA saying a working-level delegation of nuclear inspectors should visit, now that a banking dispute involving Macau's Banco Delta Asia is confirmed to have been resolved.

North Korea promised in February to shut down its main nuclear production facility by mid-April as a preliminary step toward full abandonment of nuclear weapons. Pyongyang missed that deadline, and said it would take no action until the Banco Delta Asia money had been transferred to its custody. A U.S. investigation had earlier led to the funds being frozen, and nearly all international banks have refused to handle transactions involving the funds.

Christopher Hill talking to reporters in Beijing, 30 May 2007
The senior U.S. delegate to North Korean nuclear negotiations, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, says about $20 million in North Korean funds has been transferred out of BDA to a bank in Russia. He says with the issue resolved, Washington now expects Pyongyang to honor its part of the February agreement. "We've worked very hard with some of our six-party partners, including the Russian Federation," said Hill. "So our hope is we can see some progress very, very, soon."

During a visit to Mongolia Saturday, Hill said six-party nuclear negotiations - which also include China, Japan, South Korea and Russia - could resume as early as July. Hill is expected to visit Beijing, Seoul, and Tokyo over the next week for talks aimed at getting the February agreement back on track.

South Korea's envoy to the nuclear talks, Chun Yung-woo, agrees it is time to move forward on ending the North's weapons programs. He says solving the BDA problem has removed the first obstacle to the February agreement. Now, he says, it is time to focus on fully implementing it.

Shutting down North Korea's main nuclear facility is only the first phase of the February agreement. The deal also provides for North Korea to make a full declaration of its nuclear capabilities, and work toward eventual diplomatic normalization with both the United States and Japan. North Korea is also due to receive huge amounts of energy and food aid, which its decrepit economy is unable to provide.

In a separate development, four North Koreans who arrived in Japan by boat on June 2 are now in South Korea, as they requested. The three men and one woman say they spent nearly a week at sea before arriving at a Japanese port.

More than 10,000 North Korean defectors live in South Korea, having fled economic shortage and political repression at home. Tens of thousands of others are believed to be in China, seeking an opportunity to travel to South Korea via a third country.

6.16.2007

Russian Rights Activists Decry Disappearances of Dagestan Youth



15 June 2007

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Russian human rights activists say about 20 young people have disappeared since April in Dagestan, a troubled region of the Caucasus in southern Russia. VOA correspondent Peter Fedynsky reports from Moscow that mothers who have lost sons are facing an uphill battle trying to learn their fate.

Gulnara Rustamova

Speaking at a joint news conference in Moscow Friday, the mothers of two apparent kidnap victims say they do not know who took their sons or why. However, they claim young people are being ransomed and the price depends on whether they are dead or alive.

Gulnara Rustanova has been searching in vain for her kidnapped son. Rustamova says the dead body of a kidnap victim costs $20,000.

She says Russian authorities refer to the victims as "rebel fighters." If you're lucky, she says, ransom for a live individual costs $150,000. The photo of a dead body runs 10,000 rubles, or about $400.

Isa Isayeva
Another mother, Svetlana Isayeva, also said authorities have kidnapped young men under the pretext of being radicals, either rebels or Wahhabi Muslims.

She says her son, Isa, was neither, but rather an invalid and an ordinary Muslim, though she herself is an atheist. The dilemma Svetlana Isayeva and other mothers face is that the authorities that they are forced to turn to may be behind the kidnappings.

Lyudmilla Alexeyeva
Veteran Russian human rights activist Lyudmilla Alexeyeva, a member of the Moscow Helsinki Group, acknowledges the dilemma.

Alexeyeva says people know how difficult it is to get any information from authorities, let alone punishing those responsible if you're dealing with law enforcement officials. As Alexeyeva puts it, these things take years.

The recent disappearances come amid claims of increased Islamic activity in Dagestan. Last year, local police accused Islamic insurgents of killing a prosecutor and ambushing the region's interior minister.

Fareed Babayev
On Friday, Fareed Babayev, the head of the Dagestan branch of Russia's independent Yabloko Party, said the interior minister could be behind the recent violence as a way of making himself useful, by creating a problem, then offering to solve it.

Russian officials were not immediately available to comment on the allegations.

What is certain is that young people are disappearing and dying in Dagestan and their mothers want to know why.

US Defense Secretary Presses Iraqis on Reconciliation During Baghdad Visit



15 June 2007

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U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates is in Baghdad, where he says he will press Iraqi leaders to move toward reconciliation and prove they can lay the foundation for a peaceful society. He is the third senior U.S. official to carry that message to Baghdad in a week. VOA's Al Pessin is traveling with the secretary and filed this report from Baghdad.

Robert Gates (file photo)

Speaking to reporters on the U.S. military transport plane that brought him here for the fourth time in his six months in office, Secretary Gates acknowledged that his message is not new, and he said the U.S. government is not satisfied with the Iraqi response so far.

"It'll be the same message I've been delivering since December, since my first trip out here, and that is that our troops are buying them time to pursue reconciliation, that frankly we're disappointed in the progress so far and hope that this most recent bombing by al-Qaida won't further disrupt or delay the process," he said.

Secretary Gates noted that the last of the extra troops President Bush ordered to Iraq in January have only begun operations during the past few days. Secretary Gates indicated now is the time for Iraqi leaders to move forward with a series of laws designed to promote reconciliation, even though violence is continuing, with high death tolls among U.S. troops and Iraqi security forces and civilians.

That is the same message carried to Baghdad during the past week by former U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, and by the commander of all U.S. troops in the Middle East, Admiral William Fallon.

Secretary Gates said there is a reason for the high-level visits with Iraqi leaders.

"There's enormous interest in their ability to make progress in demonstrating to the Iraqi people that they are prepared to lay the foundations for a future Iraqi state in which all of the different elements can live in peace with one another. I think that opportunity is still open," he said.

He he did not say how long that opportunity will last, and he acknowledged his staff is looking at other options for U.S. policy in case the current effort fails. He did not say what those options are, but officials in Washington have spoken about a partial withdrawal of U.S. troops combined with a change in their duties to focus more on protecting Iraq's borders and training its troops, and less on day-to-day security operations.

Secretary Gates will have a long meeting Saturday with the U.S. commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, who is to make a progress report in September that will play a large role in deciding the future of U.S. policy toward Iraq. Some military officers have said September is too soon to fully assess the impact of the troop surge and the new counterinsurgency strategy General Petraeus is pursuing. But Secretary Gates says the September report will still be important.

"Well, I think we should have a sense of direction in September. I mean, it may still be, there still will be a lot of uncertainty, but I think we'll have some sense of direction and trends on where things are headed," he said.

Secretary Gates also defended General Petraeus from critics in Congress who say he has been too optimistic about progress since he took command in Iraq earlier this year. The secretary says the general has reported publicly on both progress and problems, and he expects him to do the same in the September report.

Iraqi Homeless Setting Up Ad Hoc Displacement Camps



15 June 2007

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U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) officials say camps for internally displaced people are beginning to sprout up across Iraq. This is happening, officials say, because communities in the country are closing their doors to the displaced. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from UNHCR headquarters in Geneva.

Iraqis move between tents erected for displaced residents of the violent Diyala province, northeast of Baghdad, 15 May 2007
The U.N. refugee agency says Iraq was extremely fragile before the war broke out in 2003. But it says what has happened since is catastrophic: about 2 million people have fled the country, mainly to Syria and Jordan. And another 2 million have become internally displaced.

The coordinator for the UNHCR's Iraq support unit, Andrew Harper, says he fears the recent bombing of the minarets on the Samarra shrine might trigger another wave of displacement within the country.

He says these people will have a difficult time finding a safe haven as more and more communities are no longer accepting newcomers. The internally displaced are so desperate, Harper says, that they are creating their own camps.

"This is something which we knew would eventually come, but, we had tried to assist those communities, host communities absorb these people without the establishment of camps because camps are probably one of the worst things you can have," he noted.

Harper says these ad hoc camps are like slums and do not have proper provisions for sewage, shelter or security. He describes one such camp in the city of Najaf, about 160 kilometers south of Baghdad.

"Women going to the toilet in their tent or their huts, because they cannot go out…they cannot leave their huts. They are not registered for food. There certainly is no electricity. It is 50 degrees heat. The children are not going to go to school. Security is okay at the moment. There obviously is no employment possibilities there. And the most we can provide is some tents and some buckets and some non-food items," he explained.

U.N. coordinator Harper says so far there are only about 10 of these camps, but he expects to see many more springing up in the future.

VOASE0616_People In America

16 June 2007
Edith Wharton, 1862-1937: She Wrote Novels About the Young and Innocent in a Dishonest World

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VOICE ONE:

I'm Phoebe Zimmermann.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Doug Johnson with the VOA Special English program, People in America. Every week we tell about a person who was important in the history of the United States. Today, we tell about writer Edith Wharton.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Edith Wharton
A critic once described American writer Edith Wharton as a "self-made man." She liked the comment and repeated it. Others said she was a product of New York City. But the New York she wrote about was different from the New York of those who came after her.

Edith Wharton was born in New York City in eighteen sixty-two. New York then was several different cities. One New York was made up of people who worked for a living. The other was much smaller. It was made up of families who were so rich they did not need to work.

Edith was born into the wealthy New York. But there was a "right" wealthy New York and a "wrong" wealthy New York. Among the rich there were those who had been given money by parents or grandparents. Then there were those who earned their own money, the newly rich.

Edith's family was from the "right" New Yorkers, people who had "old" money. It was a group that did not want its way of living changed. It also was a group without many ideas of its own. It was from this group that Edith Wharton created herself.

VOICE TWO:

Like many girls her age, Edith wrote stories. In one of her childhood stories, a woman apologizes for not having a completely clean house when another woman makes an unexpected visit. Edith's mother read the story. Her only comment was that one's house was always clean and ready for visitors. Edith's house always was.

Edith spent much of her childhood in Europe. She was educated by special teachers and not at schools.

If Edith's family feared anything, it was sharp social, cultural, and economic change. Yet these were the things Edith would see in her lifetime.

The end of the Civil War in eighteen sixty-five marked the beginning of great changes in the United States. The country that had been mostly agricultural was becoming industrial. Businessmen and workers increasingly were gaining political and economic power.

Edith Wharton saw these changes sooner than most people. And she rejected them. To her, the old America was a victim of the new. She did not like the new values of money replacing the old values of family.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

In eighteen eighty-five, she married Edward Wharton. He was her social equal. They lived together for twenty-eight years. But it was a marriage without much love.

In nineteen thirteen, she sought to end the marriage. That she waited so long to do so, one critic said, was a sign of her ties to the idea of family and to tradition.

Some critics think that Edith Wharton began to write because she found the people of her social group so uninteresting. Others say she began when her husband became sick and she needed something to do.

The fact is that Wharton thought of herself as a writer from the time she was a child. Writing gave her a sense of freedom from the restrictions of her social class.

VOICE TWO:

Writing was just one of a series of things she did. And she did all of them well. She was interested in designing and caring for gardens. She designed her own house. She had an international social life and left a large collection of letters.

In her lifetime she published about fifty books on a number of subjects.

Many critics believe Edith Wharton should have written the story of her social group. To do this, however, she would have had to remove herself from the group to see it clearly. She could not do this, even intellectually. Her education and her traditions made it impossible.

The subject of Edith Wharton's writing became the story of the young and innocent in a dishonest world. She did not make a connection between her work and her own life. What she had was the ability to speak plainly about emotions that, until then, had been hidden.

She also was among the first American women writers to gain a sense of the world as an evil place. "Life is the saddest thing," she wrote, "next to death."

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

To show that she could do more than just write stories, she wrote a book with Ogden

Edith Wharton at her home
Codman, “The Decoration of Houses.” It was very successful. About the same time, her poems and stories also began to be published in Scribner's Magazine.

In eighteen ninety-nine her collection of stories, “The Greater Inclination,” appeared. It was an immediate success. When she was in London, she visited a bookstore. The store owner, who did not know who she was, handed her the book. He said to her, "This is what everyone in London is talking about now.

VOICE TWO:

Three years later her first novel, “The Valley of Decision,” was published. Three years after that she published her first great popular success, the novel “The House of Mirth.”

“The House of Mirth” is the story of a young woman who lacks the money to continue her high social position. As in so many stories by Edith Wharton, the main character does not control what happens to her. She is a victim who is defeated by forces she does not fight to overcome. This idea is central to much of Edith Wharton's best writing. The old families of New York are in conflict with the newly rich families. The major people in the stories are trapped in a hopeless struggle with social forces more powerful than they. And they struggle against people whose beliefs and actions are not as moral as theirs.

VOICE ONE:

This is the situation in one of Wharton's most popular books, “Ethan Frome,” published in nineteen eleven. Unlike her other novels, it is set on a farm in the northeastern state of Massachusetts. It is the story of a man and woman whose lives are controlled, and finally destroyed, by custom. They are the victims of society. They die honorably instead of fighting back. If they were to reject custom, however, they would not be the people they are. And they would not mean as much to each other.

In nineteen thirteen, Wharton's marriage ended. It was the same year that she published another novel that was highly praised, “The Custom of the Country.” In it she discusses the effects of new wealth in the late nineteenth century on a beautiful young woman.

VOICE TWO:

Most critics agree that most of Edith Wharton's writing after nineteen thirteen is not as good as before that time. It was as if she needed the difficulties of her marriage to write well. Much of her best work seems to have been written under the pressure of great personal crisis. After her marriage ended, her work was not as sharp as her earlier writing.

In nineteen twenty, however, she produced “The Age of Innocence.” Many critics think this is her best novel. In it she deals with the lack of honesty that lies behind the apparent innocence of the New York social world. A man and woman see their lives ruined because they have duties they cannot escape.

Edith Wharton received America's top writing award, the Pulitzer Prize, for “The Age of Innocence.” In nineteen ninety-three, the movie of “The Age of Innocence” created new interest in her work.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

In the later years of her life, Wharton gave more and more of her time to an important group of diplomats, artists, and thinkers. Among her friends was the American writer Henry James. She liked James as a man and as a writer. She often used her car and driver to take him on short trips.

At one time, Henry James was hoping that his publisher would print a collection of his many novels and stories. Wharton knew of this wish. And she knew that the publisher thought he would lose money if he published such a collection. She wrote to the publisher. She agreed to secretly pay the publisher to print the collection of her friend's writings.

VOICE TWO:

In nineteen thirty, the American National Institute of Arts and Letters gave Wharton a gold medal. She was the first woman to be so honored. Four years later she wrote the story of her life, “A Backward Glance.” Edith Wharton died in nineteen thirty-seven at one of the two homes she owned in France.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This Special English program was written by Richard Thorman. It was produced by Lawan Davis. I'm Phoebe Zimmermann.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Doug Johnson. Join us again next week for another People in America program on the Voice of America.

VOASE0615_In the News

15 June 2007
WHO Says Environmental Improvements Could Save 13 Million Lives Each Year

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This is IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English.

This week, the World Health Organization released its first country-by-country look at

Smoke from wood fires creates pollution in the home
environmental health risks. These include pollution, dangers in the workplace and ultraviolet radiation from the sun. They also include risks like noise, unsafe agricultural methods, climate change and people's behavior. The report says making environmental conditions healthier could prevent thirteen million deaths each year.

Research on close to two hundred countries found that the worst affected include Angola, Burkina Faso, Mali and Afghanistan.

The study found that two major environmental risks cause more than ten percent of the deaths in twenty-three countries. These risks are unsafe water and indoor air pollution from burning wood, coal or animal waste for fuel.

Poor countries suffer the most from environmental health risks. They lose about twenty times more healthy years of life per person per year than wealthy countries, the W.H.O. says. But it says even countries with better environmental conditions could still reduce disease rates by almost one-sixth.

In some poor countries, environmental improvements could cut disease rates by more than a third.

The main victims of environmentally related diseases are children under age five. For example, the report says they represent three-fourths of the deaths from diarrhea and lung infections.

W.H.O. official Susanne Weber-Mosdorf says the study is a first step toward helping national decision-makers to set goals for preventive action. But the findings show there is a lot individuals could do to reduce death rates.

Among suggestions given are using cleaner fuels like gas or electricity as well as using better cooking devices. Improving air flow and keeping children away from smoke could also prevent many lung infections. And lives could be saved with household water treatment and safe storage.

The Country Profiles of Environmental Burden of Disease can be found online at who.int. Or click on the direct click at our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com.

Before we go, we want to update you on our report two weeks ago, when we talked about the definition of genocide. We discussed the violence in Darfur, in western Sudan, and the efforts to deploy a large peacekeeping force.

This week Sudan accepted the joint proposals of the African Union and the United Nations for a so-called hybrid operation. The African Union announced the news at a meeting in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. A.U. officials said the force would be made up of around eighteen thousand troops and an additional three thousand seven hundred police officers.

But in Washington, a State Department spokesman said it was not yet clear if Sudan will accept non-African troops. If Sudan does not, it would mean rejection of the plan, he said, since African nations will likely not be able to provide the full number of troops.

Seven thousand African Union peacekeepers are already in Darfur.

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

6.15.2007

Somalis Skeptical of Peace 'Under Occupation'



14 June 2007

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One day after Somalia's interim government postponed a national reconciliation conference for the third time in three months, some residents of Mogadishu are expressing doubt the conference can be held while Ethiopian troops are in the country. VOA Correspondent Alisha Ryu in Mogadishu reports that a late-night gun battle Wednesday between Ethiopian troops and insurgents in south Mogadishu has caused more people to flee their homes.

Just hours after Somalia's national reconciliation committee announced a month-long delay in peace talks, insurgents in the capital demonstrated why bringing Somalis together is proving to be a struggle for the interim government.

Ethiopian troops patrol the streets of Mogadishu, Somalia, 4 June 2007
An unknown number of insurgents simultaneously attacked at least three Ethiopian positions in south Mogadishu with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. The Ethiopians returned fire, sparking an intense half-hour battle in the streets.

Some homes around the area appeared to have been abandoned overnight. Residents tell VOA that some people, who returned to their homes in recent weeks, have fled the city again, fearing the start of another round of fighting.

An Ethiopia-led security sweep of the city in March and April killed more than 1,500 people and displaced nearly a fifth of Mogadishu's two million residents.

Ali Mohamed Hussein, 42, works as a private security guard in south Mogadishu. He says most insurgents, including Islamist fighters, are Somalis who belong to the locally-dominant Hawiye clan.

Hussein says many clan members oppose the government because it is being protected by Ethiopian troops and is forcing Somalis to live under an occupying force. He says the government has also shown little willingness to reconcile with its perceived enemies.

Hole left by an Ethiopian tank shell in a Mogadishu building (May 2007)
Hussein says Wednesday's violence shows there is still no peace or stability in the city. He says he does not believe the government can hold a reconciliation conference while some Hawiyes, such as the Islamists, are excluded from the talks and Ethiopians are still in the country.

In another part of the city, truck driver Hassan Abdi Farah, 20, predicts the conference will be postponed indefinitely.

Farah says he is certain the peace talks will not take place in the near future because even the Hawiye clan is divided and unable to agree on anything. He says he believes the only way to bring peace to the country is for the elders of the sub-clans to unite and for Ethiopians to leave Somalia immediately.

Ugandan peacekeepers on patrol in Mogadishu (May 2007)
Ethiopia says it does not want its troops to stay in Somalia, but that it cannot leave before a full force of African Union peacekeepers replaces its soldiers.

The African Union has committed to sending 8,000 troops, but so far it has only 1,400 troops from Uganda on the ground in the Somali capital.

Macau Bank Transfers North Korean Funds



14 June 2007

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A Chinese official in Macau confirms North Korean funds have been transferred out of a bank there, en route to Pyongyang. The transfer removes a major obstacle in getting Pyongyang to fulfill its promise to begin dismantling its nuclear programs. As VOA's Kurt Achin reports from Seoul, the banking breakthrough coincides with a South Korean announcement of emergency food assistance for the North.

A man talks on a mobile phone in front of the headquarters of Banco Delta Asia in Macau, March 2007 file photo
Macau Secretary of Finance and Economy, Francis Tam, says that most of the North Korean money at the heart of a protracted banking dispute had been transferred out of a bank in the former Portuguese colony.

Tam says Macau's Banco Delta Asia remitted more than $20 million according to the instructions of a North Korean client.

Tam did not reveal the precise path of the funds. South Korean and Japanese media report the funds would be processed through the U.S. Federal Reserve and the central bank of Russia to a North Korean account in a Russian bank.

About $25 million in North Korean funds were frozen at Macau's Banco Delta Asia, after the United States Treasury said in 2005 the bank was involved in illegal activities, such as money laundering. Although the United States removed its objection to returning the money to the North, no bank had been willing to handle the transfer for fear of jeopardizing relations with the U.S. banking system.

North Korea has blamed the transfer delay for its refusal to meet a deadline for shutting down its main nuclear-production facility. The mid-April deadline was the first phase in a multi-national agreement made with North Korea in February in Beijing aimed at ending the North's nuclear weapons capabilities.

South Korean Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung speaks to media in Seoul, 14 June 2007
In Seoul, Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung announced South Korea would send more than 30,000 tons of emergency corn, wheat, and beans to North Korea via the U.N. World Food Program.

Lee says the action is appropriate given North Korea's situation, and the South's role as a responsible member of international society.

World Food Program officials say the economically isolated North faces some of its most severe food shortages since the mid-1990s, when it suffered widespread famine.

South Korea said it has delayed delivery a much larger shipment of rice until Pyongyang lives up to its February agreement promises.

Christopher Hill (file photo)
More details about the state of that agreement may emerge Friday, when the chief U.S. nuclear negotiator, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, arrives in Mongolia. Hill is also due to make stops in Beijing, Seoul, and Tokyo.

It remains to be seen whether resolving the bank issue will be enough to persuade North Korea to take action on its nuclear program. Experts say that will depend on whether Pyongyang feels it has the full access to the international banking system, which it feels it deserves.

Angry Mourners Bury Slain Lebanese Lawmaker



14 June 2007

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Thousands of angry mourners have attended the funeral of Lebanese lawmaker Walid Eido, who was killed along with nine others in a car bombing Wednesday. VOA's Challiss McDonough has more from our Middle East bureau in Cairo.

Funeral procession of Walid Eido in Beirut, 14 Jun 2007
Several thousand mourners chanted anti-Syrian slogans as lawmaker Walid Eido's coffin was carried toward the cemetery.

A large car bomb Wednesday killed Eido, his son Khaled and eight other people. It was the sixth and largest bombing in or near the Lebanese capital in the last month.

Walid Eido was the seventh prominent anti-Syrian figure to be assassinated in Lebanon since the beginning of 2005, when former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and 22 others were killed by another massive car bomb.

Lebanese lawmaker Walid Eido (2006 photo)
Eido was chairman of the parliamentary defense committee and a member of the anti-Syrian March 14th movement led by Hariri's son, Saad.

At the funeral, Saad Hariri called the killers "criminals."

He says the killers will be dragged to prison, dragged to justice, God willing. He says then Lebanon will have justice, and Walid Eido and his son will be the nation's martyrs.

A new U.N. Security Council resolution went into effect three days ago establishing an international tribunal for suspects in the Hariri assassination. Syria and its allies in Lebanon oppose the court, and the issue has been at the center of a political deadlock that has all but shut down Lebanese politics since November.

Hundreds of mostly pro-Syrian opposition activists have been camped outside the prime minister's office in an open-ended protest. The opposition has been calling for a new government for more than six months, ever since six pro-Syrian cabinet ministers resigned, including all of the Shi'ites.

Opposition leaders deny their protests are related to the tribunal, but most analysts say the international court is the key issue behind both the cabinet walkout and the street demonstrations.

Scene of Beirut bomb attack that killed Walid Eido, 13 Jun 2007
Syria has condemned the attack that killed Walid Eido and has also denied responsibility for it. The foreign ministry called it a "criminal attack" aimed at damaging Lebanon's security and stability as well as discrediting Syria.

The anti-Syrian March 14 group currently holds a narrow majority in Lebanon's parliament. Several key members, including Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, say the most recent assassinations are an effort to cut down their parliamentary majority.

Lebanon's pro-Syrian President, Emile Lahoud, has refused to call a by-election to replace the last slain lawmaker, Industry Minister Pierre Gemayel, who was shot to death in November.

Lebanon has also been rocked over the last month by ongoing clashes between the army and heavily armed Sunni Muslim militants holed up in a Palestinian refugee camp in the north. The group, Fatah al-Islam, is inspired by al-Qaida and has threatened to take the battle outside the camp.

VOASE0614_Economics Report

14 June 2007
Climate Change and the Group of 8 ... and China

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This is the VOA Special English Economics Report.

Leaders at the Group of Eight meeting last week in Heiligendamm, Germany,

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the G8 Summit in Heiligendamm, Germany
discussed issues including climate change and aid to Africa. The eight nations represent almost two-thirds of the world economy. They are Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel failed to get them all to accept a goal to limit temperature increases this century to two degrees Celsius. But earlier, President Bush announced a policy change. He said the United States will support an effort to negotiate a new agreement on climate policy before two thousand nine. He proposed a conference of the major producers of greenhouse gases.

The current agreement, the Kyoto Protocol, ends in two thousand twelve. The United States rejected it for economic reasons. The treaty requires industrial countries, but not developing ones, to reduce greenhouse gases linked to climate change.

China, for example, is the second largest producer of heat-trapping gases. Experts say it could top the United States within two years.

Last week, China released its first plan to deal with climate change. China aims to reduce energy use. But the plan does not include targets for reducing greenhouse gases.

China says industrial nations were mostly responsible for the current problem as they burned unlimited amounts of oil, gas and coal. It says asking developing countries to lower their emissions too early will hurt their development.

The eight leaders agreed to "consider seriously" the decisions by the European Union, Canada and Japan to cut global emissions in half by two thousand fifty. Chancellor Merkel, the current G-Eight president, said she was "very, very satisfied" with the agreement. But she noted it was a compromise.

The G-Eight leaders also promised sixty billion dollars in "the coming years" to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis in Africa. The amount includes thirty billion dollars, over five years, that President Bush has asked Congress for. But some activists criticized the G-Eight offer as short on details and short of promises made two years ago to improve African health systems.

Also at this year's meeting, the G-Eight established a process for high-level economic talks with Brazil, China, India, Mexico and South Africa. The aim is to produce results within two years.

And that's the VOA Special English Economics Report, written by Mario Ritter. I'm Bob Doughty.

VOASE0614_American Mosaic

14 June 2007
No More 'Star Wars' Movies, but the Makers Try to Keep Force With Them

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HOST:

Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC, in VOA Special English.

(MUSIC)

I'm Doug Johnson. On our show this week:

We answer a question from a listener about a failed rebellion in American history …

Play music from an award winning Broadway play ...

And report about the anniversary of the movie "Star Wars."

Star Wars

(MUSIC)


On May twenty-fifth, nineteen seventy-seven, a science fiction movie called "Star Wars" opened in thirty-two theaters in the United States. It was about the struggle between good and evil in a strange and different universe. By the end of that year "Star Wars" became the most successful film in American history.

Five more "Star Wars" films would be released. They would become one of the most successful movie series of all time. Faith Lapidus tells us about some of the continuing "Star Wars" anniversary celebrations.

FAITH LAPIDUS:

Many events took place on the anniversary of the release of the first "Star Wars" movie. Movie fans met at a special convention in Los Angeles, California. The United States Post Office released stamps showing fifteen different pictures from the movies. American television shows presented new information about the making of the "Star Wars" series. And newspapers wrote about the continuing popularity of "Star Wars" and its creator, George Lucas.

Millions of people all over the world love "Star Wars" and its characters -- Princess Leia, Han Solo, Yoda, Luke Skywalker -- even the evil Darth Vader. The Lucasfilm company is now making it possible for those fans to create new films about them. Fans with computers can go to the mash-ups area of the "Star Wars" Web site and change scenes from the movies. The Web site provides a simple editing program to do this. Then the editors can place their movies on Web sites like MySpace.

Lucasfilm officials say about two hundred fifty scenes are provided on the Web site. Each is no longer than sixty seconds, and similar ones are grouped together. For example, one group of scenes includes the character Jar Jar Binks. Fans can change him any way they want. But they will have to follow to some rules. And a team of experts will be watching the results to make sure they are not offensive in any way.

Lucasfilm officials say this is one way to keep the popularity of "Star Wars" alive since no more movies will be made. The studio has plans to continue such efforts in the future. In the next few years, it will produce a new video game and two television series based on the "Star Wars" stories and characters.

The Whiskey Rebellion

HOST:

Our VOA listener question this week comes from a student in Iran who asks about the Whiskey Rebellion in early American history.

George Washington reviews troops before marching to put down the Whiskey Rebellion
The Whiskey Rebellion was a major test of the power of the new United States government after the war of independence ended in seventeen eighty-three. The new government agreed to pay the war debts of the individual states.

In seventeen ninety-one, Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton proposed a way the federal government could raise money to pay this debt. He proposed placing a tax on all alcoholic drinks sold in the country. Congress approved the tax and President George Washington signed it into law.

Some farmers in several states immediately opposed this tax. They earned money by selling whiskey they made from the corn and rye they grew. By seventeen ninety-four, farmers in western Pennsylvania began openly protesting the tax. They threatened and sometimes attacked government workers sent to the area to collect the money. The civil protests became an armed rebellion. Local officials ordered the arrest of the leaders of the rebellion, but this just added to the violence.

President Washington considered this Whiskey Rebellion a threat to the power of the federal government. So he took a bold step. He personally led an army of more than twelve thousand troops into western Pennsylvania to stop the rebellion.

The farmers quickly retreated. Captured prisoners were later released and pardoned. The government ended the tax in eighteen–oh-two.

History experts say the Whiskey Rebellion was a small but important event in American history. It was the first time the federal government used military force to show its power over the nation's citizens. Its resolution demonstrated the full power of the federal government to American citizens and to the states.

Experts also say the Whiskey Rebellion was an early warning of a question that would continue to test the new nation. Which should be stronger-- the rights of individual states or the power of the federal government? That question would not be answered until the end of the American Civil War in the eighteen sixties.

Spring Awakening

HOST:

Broadway's top award ceremony was held Sunday in New York City. The show "Spring Awakening" won eight Tony awards, including Best Musical. Shirley Griffith has more on the show and its music.

SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:

Cast members perform a scene from ''Spring Awakening'' at the Tony Awards
"Spring Awakening," is based on a play written in eighteen ninety-one by German playwright Frank Wedekind. The play was banned from production for many years because people at the time considered it immoral.

The play deals with German teenagers who have no knowledge or understanding of sex. They start to experience feelings they do not understand. But the adults in the play are not willing to share information with them.

The teenagers also question what they learn in school. They want to learn things for themselves. They express their feelings through rock and roll music. This song is called "All That's Known."

(MUSIC)

Actor John Gallagher, Junior, won the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical. He plays Moritz in "Spring Awakening." Here he sings "Don't Do Sadness."

(MUSIC)

Steven Sater and Duncan Sheik shared the Tony Award for Best Original Score (Music or Lyrics) Written for the Theater. Mister Sheik accepted the award and thanked the producers of "Spring Awakening" for their support. And he said: "Musical theater rocks."

We leave you with the final song of "Spring Awakening" called "The Song of Purple Summer."

(MUSIC)

HOST:

I'm Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed our program today.

It was written by Nancy Steinbach and Caty Weaver, who also was our producer. To read the text of this program and download audio, go to our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com.

Join us again next week for AMERICAN MOSAIC, VOA’s radio magazine in Special English.