Le Monde diplomatique on Thu, 15 Jun 2000 11:38:30 +0200 (CEST)


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[Nettime-bold] June 2000



   Le Monde diplomatique 
   -----------------------------------------------------
   
   
                                 June 2000
                                      
     
LEADER

Glimmer of hope for the Middle East *

by IGNACIO RAMONET

           <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/06/01leader>
     
                                        Translated by Wendy Kristianasen
     
     
UN PEACEKEEPS FOR RIVAL GANGSTERS

Sierra Leone's diamond wars

by ANDRÉS PEREZ

     It was a short-lived peace: signed last July between the Freetown
     government and the RUF, it broke down in early May when 300 blue
     berets were taken captive by the rebels. The arrest of the RUF's
     leader Foday Sankoh by British troops on 10 May did not bring a
     halt to the fighting. The background to the civil war is a
     no-holds-barred fight between the international mining companies
     for control of Sierra Leone's diamonds.
     
                                        Translated by Derry Cook-Radmore
     
     
SHIPOWNERS WANT A UN NAVY ON PATROL

Pirates of the South China Seas

by SOLOMON KANE and LAURENT PASSICOUSSET

     The spectacular seizure of 21 hostages on the island of Jolo
     (Philippines) by the Islamist Abu Sayyaf group is the most visible
     sign of the instability affecting South East Asia. In the confusion
     left behind by the reduction (or withdrawal) of the superpowers'
     naval forces, there is now piracy, alongside separatist claims,
     conflicts of sovereignty and, of course, economic crisis. This
     maritime crime is flourishing, sometimes with the active complicity
     of local authorities.
     
                                         Translated by Malcolm Greenwood
     
     
ABANDONED, ABUSED AND UNTAUGHT IN EASTERN EUROPE

Nobody's children

by our special correspondent PHILIPPE DEMENET

     Throughout eastern Europe, children are suffering most from the
     brutal transition to a market economy. Families have been
     disrupted, state schools increasingly rely on sponsorship, social
     welfare is being privatised, and even orphanages are riddled with
     corruption. The extent of the damage can be seen in three key
     countries, all candidates for EU membership: Poland, Romania and
     Ukraine.
     
                                              Translated by Barry Smerin
     
     
REMEMBERING A FORGOTTEN HISTORY

Amnesia in Algeria

by GHANIA MOUFFOK

     During his first official visit to France from 13 to 16 June, the
     Algerian president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, will be trying to
     convince his hosts that the war is over and it is time to restore
     normal relations with his country. However the Algerian people have
     not yet recovered from the bloodbath of the 1990s. And the history
     of the war of independence (1954-62) is still closely guarded. A
     timid debate has now begun, but will it be enough for the country
     to recover its memory and come to terms with its recent past?
     
                                             Translated by Harry Forster
     
     
FORGETTING A REMEMBERED HISTORY

Greece's earthquake diplomacy *

by NIELS KADRITZKE

     Costa Simitis's victory in the Greek parliamentary elections on 9
     April and Ahmet Necdet Sezer's election to the Turkish presidency
     on 5 May are likely to encourage détente between the two countries.
     That is what the people want. The solidarity that emerged during
     last year's earthquakes is still strong. But the way ahead is full
     of difficulties. There is the knotty problem of Cyprus. And Turkey,
     now an official candidate for EU membership, still has to meet the
     accession criteria, including recognition of individual freedoms
     and minority rights.
     
           <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/06/06greece>
     
                                            Translated by Barbara Wilson
     
     
WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN THE 21ST CENTURY

Far from equal

by AGNÈS CALLAMARD

     In October women marching against poverty and violence from all
     over the world will converge on New York. A delegation will meet
     Kofi Annan, the UN secretary general. Hundreds of thousands of
     women are mobilising to demand genuine political equality, denounce
     an unbridled global economy of which they are the first victims,
     and condemn brutality (in particular rape), genital mutilation and
     domestic violence. They are also determined to play an equal part
     in political parties and unions. Five years after the Beijing
     conference many bastions of inequality and male chauvinism have yet
     to be breached.
     
                                             Translated by Harry Forster
     
One hundred years of struggle *

by BRIGITTE PÄTZOLD

           <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/06/09history>
     
                                              Translated by Julie Stoker
     
     
VILLAGE WOMEN CAMPAIGN AGAINST MUTILATION

Breaking the taboo in Senegal

by ROLAND-PIERRE PARINGAUX

                                         Translated by Malcolm Greenwood
     
     
POSTCARDS FROM US LYNCH MOBS

Evidence in black and white

by ANNE CHAON

     In February the Roth-Horowitz gallery in New York put on an
     exhibition entitled Without Sanctuary. It will be showing at the
     New York Historical Society till 9 July. The exhibition features
     photographs and postcards of lynchings, confronting the United
     States with one of the darker sides of its history. Unfortunately,
     other equally hateful events have followed: from January 1977 to
     the end of March 2000, 625 people were sentenced to death and
     executed, 98 of them last year alone.
     
                                             Translated by Harry Forster
     
     
HOME COUNTRIES OR HOST COUNTRIES IN CONTROL

Who speaks for Europe's Muslims?

by TARIQ RAMADAN

     Muslim life in Europe is entering a new era. There is a general
     move to national representation, as shown by France's recent
     exercise in consultation. A meeting of leading Muslims was held
     this January with the aim of encouraging the integration of Islam
     into French society and helping Muslims organise their
     representation. But if this is to be a true democratic expression
     of grassroots opinion, free from foreign influence, we must take
     note of the conflicting forces at work inside Europe's Muslim
     communities.
     
                                        Translated by Derry Cook-Radmore
     
First for Islam in Belgium

by LIONEL PANAFIT

                                              Translated by Julie Stoker
     
     
GLOBAL PUBLIC GOODS: A NEW WAY TO BALANCE THE WORLD'S BOOKS

The fairness revolution *

by INGE KAUL

     A report published by the CIA in early May broke new ground in
     identifying the world AIDS epidemic as a threat to the United
     States' national security. As a result, President Clinton has
     devoted $254 million to international aid designed to fight it.
     This could be seen as cynicism, or alternatively as enlightened
     self-interest - an example of economic logic that could encourage
     the world's statesmen to cooperate for the greater good of
     humanity.
     
           <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/06/14publicgood>
     
                                                Original text in English
     
What is a public good? *

I.K.

           <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/06/15publicgood>
     
                                                Original text in English
     
     
BACK PAGE

www.buythis.com *

by PHILIPPE RIVIÈRE

           <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/06/16riviere>
     
                                                  Translated by Ed Emery
     
   
   
   
          English language editorial director: Wendy Kristianasen
     _________________________________________________________________

     (*) Star-marked articles are available to every reader. Other
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