Dec 31, 2008

American History Series: New President Deals with Old Problems

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Welcome to the MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English.

Last week in our series, we talked about the election of Martin Van Buren in eighteen thirty-six as the eighth president of the United States.

Martin Van Buren
Martin Van Buren
Van Buren had been very close to the outgoing president, Andrew Jackson. Van Buren had been successful in forming a strong political alliance that helped put Jackson in the White House in the election of eighteen twenty-eight. Jackson was grateful for Van Buren's help, and asked him to come to Washington to serve as secretary of state.

Van Buren had just been elected governor of the state of New York, but decided to accept Jackson's offer.

This week, Steve Ember and Gwen Outen talk about Martin Van Buren and the start of his presidency.

VOICE ONE:

Van Buren quickly became the most powerful man in Jackson's cabinet. He was able to help Jackson in negotiations with Britain and France. But his greatest help was in building a strong political party for Jackson. It was this party that gave Jackson wide support for his policies.

Van Buren built up the national Democratic Party with the same methods he used to build his political organization in New York state. He removed from government jobs people who had not supported Jackson. These jobs were then given to those who had supported the president.

Van Buren served as secretary of state for two years. He resigned because he saw his resignation as the only way of solving a serious problem Jackson faced.

VOICE TWO:

The problem was Vice President John C. Calhoun. Calhoun had presidential hopes. He did not think Jackson would serve more than one term. And he planned to be a candidate in the next election.

Three of the five men in Jackson's cabinet supported Calhoun. Jackson could not trust them.

And he wanted to get them out of the cabinet ... but without a political fight.

Then, later, he named Van Buren minister to Britain. But Calhoun's supporters in the Senate defeated Van Buren's nomination.

By this time, Jackson had decided that Van Buren would be the best man to follow him as president. He offered to resign after the eighteen thirty-two elections and give Van Buren the job of president.

Van Buren rejected the offer. He said he wanted to be elected by the people. But he did agree to be Jackson's vice president in eighteen thirty-two.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Andrew Jackson
Andrew Jackson
Four years later, at Jackson's request, the Democrats chose Van Buren to be their presidential candidate. He was opposed by several candidates of the newly formed Whig Party. The opposition was divided. And Van Buren won the election with little difficulty.

Andrew Jackson stood beside Martin Van Buren as the new president was sworn-in. Physically, the two men were very different.

Jackson was tall, with long white hair that flowed back over his head. Jackson's health had been poor during the last few months he spent in the White House. He seemed tired. There was almost no color in his face.

Van Buren was much shorter and had much less hair. His eyes were brighter than those of the old man next to him.

VOICE TWO:

In his inaugural speech, Van Buren noted that he was the first American born after the revolution to become president. He said he felt he belonged to a later age. He called for more unity among Democrats of the North and South. He said better times were ahead for the country.

Van Buren had a strange way with words. He could talk with excitement about something, but say very little about his own feelings on the subject.

Once, he spoke in New York about the tax on imports. Two men who heard the speech discussed it later. "It was a very able speech," said one man, a wool buyer. "Yes, very able," answered his friend. There was silence for a moment. Then the first man spoke again. "Was Mister Van Buren for or against the import tax?"

VOICE ONE:

Martin Van Buren's wife, Hannah
Martin Van Buren's wife, Hannah
The new president was a warm and friendly man. He tried to keep his political life and his social life separate. It was not unusual to see him exchange handshakes, smiles and jokes with men who were his political enemies.

Van Buren had a poor education as a boy. He went to school only for a few years. His father was a farmer and hotel keeper at a little town in New York state. Van Buren had a quick mind and was a good judge of men. But he always felt he could have done more had he received a college education.

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VOICE TWO:

Van Buren had been president for just a few days when an economic crisis and a political storm struck the country. The storm had been building for many months. It really began with the death of the Bank of the United States more than a year before.

Andrew Jackson had opposed the powerful bank in which the government's money was kept. He vetoed a bill that would have continued it.

The bank was so strong that it was able to control the economy throughout most of the country. It did so through its loans to businessmen. By making many loans, the bank could increase economic activity. By reducing the number of loans, the economy could be tightened.

VOICE ONE:

The Bank of the United States also helped to control the smaller state banks. It refused to accept the notes, or paper money, of these banks, unless the state banks were ready to exchange the paper for gold or silver money.

After the end of the Bank of the United States, there was little control of any kind over the state banks. Many new state banks opened. All of them produced large amounts of paper money -- many times the amount they could exchange for gold or silver. Much of this paper money was used by business speculators to buy land from the government.

These men bought the land, held it for a while, then sold it for more than they paid. The government soon found itself with millions of dollars of paper money.

VOICE TWO:

To stop this, President Jackson ordered gold or silver payments only for government land. This made it necessary for speculators to exchange their paper notes for gold. Many banks could not do this. They did not have enough gold.

There was another problem. Congress passed a law on what was to be done with federal money not needed by the national government. This extra money, or surplus, was to be given to the states.

Since the closing of the Bank of the United States, the government had kept its money in a number of state banks. Now these banks had to surrender the government surplus to the state governments. This left even less gold and silver to exchange for the huge amounts of paper money the banks had issued.

VOICE ONE:

There was still another demand for what gold the banks had.

Eighteen thirty-five and eighteen thirty-seven were bad years for American agriculture. Many crops failed. Instead of the United States exporting farm products to Europe, the opposite happened. American traders had to import these things from Europe. And they had to pay for them in gold or silver.

As more and more paper money was put into use, the value of the money fell. Prices rose higher and higher. Poor people found it almost impossible to buy food and other necessities.

In eighteen thirty-five, a barrel of flour cost six dollars. Two years later, the price had jumped to more than twelve dollars. The same was true with meat and other foods. Even coal, the fuel people used to heat their homes, cost twice as much.

VOICE TWO:

Poor people protested. But businessmen were satisfied. They wished to continue the flood of paper money. Violence finally broke out at a protest meeting in New York City.

A crowd of angry people heard speakers criticize the use of paper money. Some in the crowd began demanding action against the rich traders. A crowd of about one-thousand marched to a nearby store, broke into it, and destroyed large amounts of flour and grain.

In the spring of eighteen thirty-seven, the demand on banks for gold and silver grew too heavy. The banks stopped honoring their promises to exchange their paper money for gold. They said this was just temporary. That it was necessary to stop -- for a while -- all payments in gold or silver. The crisis got worse.

That will be our story in the next program of THE MAKING OF A NATION.

(MUSIC)

ANNOUNCER:

Our program was written by Frank Beardsley. The narrators were Steve Ember and Gwen Outen. Transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our programs are online, along with historical images, at voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION - an American history series in VOA Special English.

(MUSIC)


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The New Year Begins With Some Resolutions

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Now, a VOA Special English holiday program.

January first. The beginning of a new year. As far back in history as we can tell, people have celebrated the start of a new year. Today, most people celebrate New Year's Day on January first. People observe the New Year's holiday in many different ways. The idea of admitting mistakes and finishing the business of the old year is found in many cultures. So is the idea of making New Year's resolutions. A resolution is a promise to change or do something different in the coming year.

From right, Ashley Preston and Charlotte Cicero and friends in Washington D.C.
From right, Ashley Preston and Charlotte Cicero and friends in Washington D.C.
Making New Year's resolutions is a common tradition. We talked to some people in Washington, D.C. and Miami, Florida about their resolutions, hopes and wishes for two thousand nine.

ASHLEY: "I'm Ashley Preston. I'm from Canfield, Ohio and I'm twenty-four years old. This year I hope to graduate with my Master's and be healthy and happy."

Ashley's friend, Charlotte Cicero from Rochester, New York, is also to graduate this year. Her resolution went a step farther.

CHARLOTTE: "I hope to graduate and find a job teaching somewhere."

Other people mix wishes small and large. Like Ryan Krysiak, a student at the College of William and Mary, in Williamsburg, Viriginia.

RYAN: "For the New Year, I want the Eagles to go to the Superbowl and world peace."

Some resolutions are about helping others.

ELNIE: "I'm Elnie Goodman and I live in Washington, D.C. But I was born in Haiti. In the summer of two thousand nine I would like to lead a humanitarian trip to Haiti."

In Miami, Florida, one man hopes a resolution from last year will go better in two thousand nine:

GLEN: "My name's Glenn Mitchell. I live in Miami. And personally I have a resolution to do more artwork. And I had the same resolution last year and I wasn't able to."

This next woman wishes a little brain power for everybody.

PEGGY: "Hi, I'm Peggy. I'm from Grafton, Wisconsin. I'm forty-eight years old. In the New Year, I hope things start to get right again. Everybody's happy, healthy and a little bit smarter, so that things go well."

Many people agreed with Miz Rice. Ian McMann of Miami said the election process in the United States in two thousand eight brought a return to hope. Ellen Wade is a forty-two year old businesswoman and student in Waynesboro, Virginia. She expressed similar feelings about the political change. She said she hoped that the new president could help lead the way to better relations among the nations of the world.

But many people we spoke to kept their resolutions very simple, like this boy.

NOAH: "My name is Noah Goodwin. I live in Arlington, Virginia. I'm twelve years old and I resolve to get a girlfriend this year."

Our resolution is to wish all of our listeners a happy, healthy and productive New Year! I'm Mario Ritter for VOA Special English.

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UN Official: Gaza Facing 'Life or Death' Situation



Palestinian nurses treat a man wounded in an Israeli air strike at a hospital in Gaza City, 31 Dec 2008
Palestinian nurses treat a man wounded in an Israeli air strike at a hospital in Gaza City, 31 Dec 2008
A senior United Nations official says many families in Gaza are facing a life-or-death situation as Israel continues its military offensive against Hamas.

U.N. humanitarian coordinator Maxwell Gaylord released a statement Wednesday calling on Israel to allow more humanitarian aid to flow into Gaza, which has been under a blockade.

Israel has said it will allow 2,000 tons more of food and medical supplies into Gaza, and will allow some wounded Gazans to seek medical treatment in Israel.

But Gaylord says it is crucial for the Karni border crossing to be opened to allow in wheat grain for the 750,000 people who rely upon U.N. relief. He also says electricity needs to be fully restored to Gaza's hospitals, which are overwhelmed with patients.

Many other world powers and human rights groups have expressed concern about the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

The Palestine Red Crescent Society issued an emergency appeal for nearly $7 million on Wednesday to support its humanitarian efforts in Gaza. The aid organization is part of the International Red Cross.

Britain on Wednesday pledged $10 million in emergency aid for the Gaza Strip, calling the human cost of Israel's assault on the Palestinian territory "unacceptable."

Britain's aid minister, Douglas Alexander, expressed concern about dwindling medical supplies, food stocks and power cuts, which are affecting hospitals and other essential services in the Gaza Strip.

Greece's foreign ministry said it will send two planes with 30 tons of medical aid to Tel Aviv, which will then be transported to Gaza.

On Tuesday, Israel allowed about 100 aid trucks and five ambulances into Gaza.

Nearly 400 Palestinians have died in five days of Israeli air strikes, and hundreds more have been wounded.

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US Continues Diplomatic Push for Gaza Cease-Fire

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The United States is continuing diplomatic contacts for a Gaza cease-fire despite Israel's rejection of a French-proposed 48-hour truce. President Bush spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who is said to have given an assurance Israel is trying to minimize civilian casualties in its air campaign against Hamas.

Officials here say the U.S. push for a durable and sustained Gaza cease-fire is continuing undaunted, despite the failure of the French bid to arrange a 48-hour truce for humanitarian relief efforts in the coastal strip.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is taking the lead role in U.S. telephone diplomacy.

A spokesman said she had spoken three times in the last 24 hours with both Jordanian Foreign Minister Salah al-Bashir and Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah Bin Zayed al-Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates, a Gulf state having close contacts with Iran - a key sponsor of Hamas.

Meanwhile President Bush, spending the year-end holidays in Texas, telephoned Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to, among other things, voice concern about humanitarian conditions in Gaza. White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said Mr. Olmert gave a renewed assurance Israel is targeting only Hamas and those affiliated with it.

White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe (file photo)
White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe (file photo)
"Prime Minister Olmert assured President Bush that Israel is taking appropriate steps to avoid civilian casualties," said Johndroe. "That was something the president asked for an update on, and President Bush got an assurance from Prime Minister Olmert that Israel is, as they have said they are doing, only targeting Hamas and that terrorist organization and people involved with Hamas, and that they are working to minimize any civilian casualties."

Johndroe said U.S. efforts are aimed at durable and lasting cease-fire in Gaza that is respected by Hamas - unlike the previous six-month truce that lapsed earlier this month and which he said the militant Islamic group had regularly violated with rocket fire into Israel.

He all those concerned want an end to the violence as soon as possible, but that the United States does not want to see it start up again in days and weeks with renewed rocket attacks.

The United States had avoided calling for an immediate cease-fire until Tuesday when it joined Russia, the European Union and the United Nations - its partners in the international Quartet on the Middle East - in a statement backing an immediate truce that is "fully respected" by both sides.

In a talk with reporters here, State Department Acting Spokesman Gordon Duguid said the Quartet's wording is critical.

"That formulation is what the Quartet has agreed upon," said Duguid. "You can't take and divide that sentence. They call for an immediate cease-fire that would be fully respected. We believe both sides should reach a cease-fire as quickly as possible but that cease-fire can't be one that is called immediate and then is immediately violated with rocket attacks by Hamas."

The State Department Wednesday renewed a call on U.S. citizens to avoid all travel to the Gaza strip and urged those already there to depart immediately.

U.S. diplomats and officials working in Israel have been told to avoid travel within a 30-kilometer radius of Gaza. Private Americans are being advised to keep even farther away from the conflict area, given the firing in recent days of longer-range rockets from Gaza.

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Russia Accuses Ukraine of Blackmail on Gas Transit

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Russia and Ukraine have ended 2008 with an escalating dispute over gas deliveries through a key pipeline that supplies much of Western Europe. Each side is blaming the other for the dispute.

A spokesman for the Russian gas giant, Gazprom, held up a letter at a Moscow new conference on New Year's Eve that he says was signed by the head of Ukraine's gas company. He says the letter threatened to cut off supplies flowing through a pipeline that supplies Western Europe with 25 percent of its gas.

Gazprom Deputy Chairman Alexander Medvedev speaks in Moscow, 31 Dec. 2008
Gazprom Deputy Chairman Alexander Medvedev speaks in Moscow, 31 Dec. 2008
Gazprom's deputy chief, Alexander Medvedev referred to the Ukrainian letter as blackmail and unprecedented in the history of the international energy business. He added that Ukraine would be violating a contract it signed to continue deliveries to Western Europe through the end of 2010.

Medvedev says Ukrainians did not respond when asked directly why they do not want to honor the contract. He says Ukrainians insist there is no contract, even after they are shown signatures and laws, simply because they do not want an agreement.

A spokesman for Naftohaz, the Ukranian gas company, told VOA that its obligation extends only to a contractual framework for gas transit valid through 2013. However, Valentyn Zemliansky says agreement on specific issues is reached on an annual basis.

Zemliansky says additional agreements cover the volume and quality of gas, as well as transit costs, and he notes that an agreement on these items for 2009 has not been signed.

Senior Gazprom officials have made conflicting statements about the status of Ukrainian payment of its $2 billion debt to Gazprom. Gazprom chairman, Alexei Miller, says the funds have yet to appear in company accounts. That statement came a day after Ukraine announced it had paid its obligations for November and December deliveries. However, a deputy to the Gazprom chairman, Alexander Medvedev, says payment has in fact been received.

Gazprom Chairman Alexei Miller has said there must be an agreement for Russia to have a legal basis to continue gas deliveries to Ukraine after January 1.

Gazprom has been seeking to increase Ukraine's price for gas in the New Year to $418 per 1,000 cubic meters, more than double the current rate.

In 2006, Western European consumers noticed a drop in gas pipeline pressure after Russia cut supplies to Ukraine in a similar mid-winter payment dispute.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has warned that Ukrainian relations with Russia and the European Union will suffer serious consequences if Kyiv disrupts supplies to Western Europe.

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Asia Welcomes New Year, Bids Farewell to Rocky 2008

At least 1.5 million people crammed into Sydney Harbor in Australia as most residents across the Asian region joined worldwide celebrations to mark New Year's Day 2009.

In Sydney, crowds watched as a massive multi-million dollar display of fireworks lit up the sky at the stroke of midnight above the city's iconic Harbor Bridge.

Fireworks were also let off from New Zealand to Seoul and Hong Kong as television presenters counted down to welcome in the new year. In Japan, temple bells rang out as worshippers threw coins as offerings and prayed.

Many people around the world are eager to say goodbye to 2008, which has been tarnished by the global economic meltdown. Celebrations in come cities were much more subdued.

The Associated Press reports Malaysia's government, mindful of its shaky economy, opted not to sponsor any celebrations at all.

Authorities in Mumbai have thrown a heavy security blanket over India's financial capital, which is still reeling from last month's terrorist attacks that left more than 170 people dead.

Philippine President Gloria Arroyo called on the global community to work together to weather its storms.

Later in the day, revelers will bring in the New Year at Times Square in New York, where they will watch the annual dropping of the ball at midnight .

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Global Markets Finish 2008 on Positive Note

After a year of gut-wrenching losses, stock markets around the world recorded a positive day amid light trading to close out 2008.

" alt="A trader talks on the phone at the Shanghai stock market on New Year's Eve in Shanghai, China, 31 Dec 2008
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A trader talks on the phone at the Shanghai stock market on New Year's Eve in Shanghai, China, 31 Dec 2008
Modest gains on the last day of 2008 cannot erase the massive losses of the last 12 months. Wall Street's Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 35 percent of its value, while Germany and Japan's stock markets finished the year down roughly 40 percent. Many emerging markets from Latin America to Asia fared even worse, making 2008 the most painful year in decades for investors and countless publicly traded companies across the globe.

The year decimated America's corporate financial landscape, with many of the nation's best-known investment firms, banks, mortgage insurers and insurance companies bankrupt, sold, taken over by the federal government, or continuing to exist thanks to the biggest taxpayer bailout in U.S. history.

"Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, Lehman [Brothers], major companies that were the cornerstone of our financial services business are no longer with us. That is just a big shock," said Hugh Johnson, who heads the New York-based financial firm Johnson Illington Advisors.

Job seekers check employment offers in Miami
Job seekers check employment offers in Miami
Over the last 12 months, U.S. unemployment has jumped by more than a percentage point as the nation weathered a deepening recession that has spread around the world. Many economists are predicting even higher rates of unemployment in 2009.

Wednesday, the U.S. Labor Department provided a glimmer of unexpected good news. New claims for unemployment benefits fell by more than 90,000 at the end of last week compared to the previous week. Overall, however, the number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits remains at the highest level seen since 1982.

Having been battered by a year of sour economic news, U.S. markets were little-impressed by the latest unemployment figure, according to Art Cashin of UBS Financial Services.

"To see a number down 92,000, particularly given the economic environment that we have, made the number look a bit suspicious [to investors]," said Cashin.

Oil prices traded just below $40 a barrel Wednesday, capping a wild year for energy prices that saw oil spike to a record-high of nearly $150 a barrel in July. Oil prices have been on an almost-uninterrupted slide downward ever since, pushed lower by a global recession that has weakened demand for fuel.

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Israel Says No to Cease-fire, Vows to Press Offensive

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Israel has rejected international pressure for an immediate, even if temporary, cease-fire five days into its offensive against Hamas militants and infrastructure in the Gaza Strip. Despite massive damage and a toll of nearly 400 Palestinians killed, Hamas also remains defiant, continuing to fire rockets ever deeper into Israel.

A Palestinian nurse treats Ismail Hamdan, 10 who was wounded in a recent Israeli air strike, and later died of his wounds, at al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, Wednesday, 31 Dec. 2008
A Palestinian nurse treats Ismail Hamdan, 10 who was wounded in a recent Israeli air strike, and later died of his wounds, at al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, Wednesday, 31 Dec. 2008
Israeli war planes struck targets in Gaza Wednesday morning - hitting Hamas government offices in Gaza City and underground tunnels on the Gaza-Egypt border.

At the same time, Israel continues to amass ground troops around Gaza in preparation for a possible ground offensive.

And in parts of Israel the sound of sirens has become a daily occurrence - the warning sounds of incoming Hamas rockets, striking ever deeper into Israel, including Bersheba in the Negev southeast of Gaza.

Home Front Forces commander, Abraham Ben David spoke to reporters in Beersheba about the widening circle of attacks.

Ben David said rockets are now hitting targets in the range of 40 to 50 kilometers. He said people should stay indoors, go to bunkers and secure rooms and avoid crowds.

It's the fifth day of a military offensive that Israel says is designed to hit Hamas targets and infrastructure in Gaza and halt militant rocket attacks against Israel.

So far Israel remains cool to a French proposal for a possible 48-hour cease-fire to allow humanitarian aid to reach Gaza.

Speaking during a visit to the city of Ashkelon, Israeli President Shimon Peres said the French proposal for a cease-fire is not concrete enough. He said the Israeli military is geared up and prepared - it's not a war we initiated, Mr. Peres said, nor a war we wanted.

Despite international pressure for a cease-fire, Israeli officials say they will press their offensive and they insist any cease-fire must ensure that militant rocket attacks against Israel stop.

Despite massive damage to its manpower and infrastructure in Gaza and rising casualty figures, Hamas also remains defiant. Hamas officials say they are not begging for a truce.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said what's needed immediately is for the Arab and Islamic countries to unite and stop this aggression, lift the siege, open the crossings and rebuild Gaza.

Hamas says the onus is on Israel.

Militants have kept up their rocket attacks, hitting ever deeper into Israel. Rockets have hit not only nearby towns such as Sderot and Ashkelon, but also Ashdod to the north of Gaza and Beersheba some 40 kilometers to the southeast.

As the violence continues, so do diplomatic efforts to stop it. Arab League foreign ministers were meeting in Cairo to discuss the crisis. Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called on the Arab League to do more than talk - saying action is now needed. Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan holds talks in Syria and Jordan Wednesday and is also due to visit Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is expected to hold talks in Paris Thursday and French President Nicolas Sarkozy may visit Israel early next week.

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Arab Foreign Ministers Meet to Discuss Gaza Truce

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Arab foreign ministers met in Cairo on Wednesday to seek a common position in response to Israeli attacks which have killed more than 370 people in Gaza. Pressure has been mounting on Arab leaders to act decisively to stop Israel's five-day old military operation in Gaza.


The Arab world is deeply divided in its attitude towards the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, which controls Gaza and is the main target of the Israeli assault.

Saudi Arabian FM Saud Al-Faisal (R), and Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa at an emergency meeting in Cairo,31 Dec  2008
Saudi Arabian FM Saud Al-Faisal (R), and Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa at an emergency meeting in Cairo, 31 Dec 2008
Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal presided over the meeting, calling on feuding, rival Palestinian factions to reconcile their differences as a prelude to any possible diplomatic activity to end Israel's military operation in Gaza.

He urged Palestinian factions to hold reconciliation talks, immediately, arguing that Arab foreign ministers are powerless to help them if they don't unite. Divisions among Palestinians, he warned, will just permit Israel to vanquish them.

The normally even-tempered Saud al-Faisal condemned Israel's military blitz on Gaza, calling it a crime.

Smoke rises following an Israeli missile strike in northern Gaza, 30 Dec 2008
Smoke rises following an Israeli missile strike in northern Gaza, 30 Dec 2008
He said that what is happening in Gaza can only be described as a massacre and a crime against humanity, and it will only foster more violence and more extremism, pushing everyone further and further from the announced goal of peace and security, which the Israelis say they're trying to achieve. He asked rhetorically, "What kind of peace can be achieved with a campaign using military means that merely create death and destruction?"


Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa put the blame squarely on Israel for the Gaza conflict and condemned its conduct in the small enclave, insisting that the Israeli military was targeting ordinary citizens going about their daily business in extremely close quarters.

Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, 19 Dec 2008
Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, 19 Dec 2008
He said that the problem is the Israeli occupation and the Israeli blockade of Gaza and everything else springs from these two problems. He also said Israel's "aggression" against the people of Gaza is hurting the entire population and he noted U.N. refugee agency reported that women, children and old people are suffering.


Moussa said Arabs should take the matter of the Israeli attacks to the U.N. Security Council, even at a risk that a resolution would face a veto from one of the five permanent members of the council.

Paul Salem, who heads the Beirut-based Carnegie Center for International Peace, thinks that Arab foreign ministers are meeting at a time when a brief window of opportunity to stop the fighting continues to narrow.

"My read is that we're in a small interim situation where there is a lot of behind-the-scenes diplomatic activity, trying to see if any beginnings of a deal can be made out; is Hamas beginning to think differently, will it climb down, will it have different positions, are the Israelis open for something? I know the Turks, you know… Erdogan is in Damascus. The Egyptians are very active. The French are very active. Livni is going to France, tomorrow. So, there certainly seems to be a lot of political activity, a lot of political smoke… which indicates that there seems to be some talk taking place while the drums of war continue to beat," he said.

Salem also said that he doubts Lebanon's Hezbollah wants to get involved in the fray, because its leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah told supporters that any rockets fired on Israel would merely encourage it to attack Lebanon.


Syria, he concluded, also doesn't appear eager to get involved in a conflict, either, and President Bashar al Assad has been meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is a moderate and has ties with Israel, to try and find a diplomatic solution to the current conflict.

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Israel Turns Down Truce Proposals, Continues Assault on Hamas Targets

Israel has rejected international pressure for an immediate, even if temporary, cease-fire five days into its offensive against Hamas militants and infrastructure in the Gaza Strip. Despite massive damage and a toll of nearly 400 Palestinians killed, Hamas also remains defiant, continuing to fire rockets ever deeper into Israel.


" alt="Smoke rises from explosion on house hit by Israeli missile in the Rafah refugee camp, southern Gaza Strip, 31 Dec 2008

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Smoke rises from explosion on house hit by Israeli missile in the Rafah refugee camp, southern Gaza Strip, 31 Dec 2008

Israeli war planes struck targets in Gaza Wednesday morning - hitting Hamas government offices in Gaza City and underground tunnels on the Gaza-Egypt border.

At the same time, Israel continues to amass ground troops around Gaza in preparation for a possible ground offensive.

And in parts of Israel the sound of sirens has become a daily occurrence - the warning sounds of incoming Hamas rockets, striking ever deeper into Israel, including Bersheba in the Negev southeast of Gaza.

Home Front Forces commander, Abraham Ben David spoke to reporters in Beersheba about the widening circle of attacks.

Ben David said rockets are now hitting targets in the range of 40 to 50 kilometers. He said people should stay indoors, go to bunkers and secure rooms and avoid crowds.

It's the fifth day of a military offensive that Israel says is designed to hit Hamas targets and infrastructure in Gaza and halt militant rocket attacks against Israel.

So far Israel remains cool to a French proposal for a possible 48-hour cease-fire to allow humanitarian aid to reach Gaza.

Speaking during a visit to the city of Ashkelon, Israeli President Shimon Peres said the French proposal for a cease-fire is not concrete enough. He said the Israeli military is geared up and prepared - it's not a war we initiated, Mr. Peres said, nor a war we wanted.

Despite international pressure for a cease-fire, Israeli officials say they will press their offensive and they insist any cease-fire must ensure that militant rocket attacks against Israel stop.

Despite massive damage to its manpower and infrastructure in Gaza and rising casualty figures, Hamas also remains defiant. Hamas officials say they are not begging for a truce.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said what's needed immediately is for the Arab and Islamic countries to unite and stop this aggression, lift the siege, open the crossings and rebuild Gaza.

Hamas says the onus is on Israel.

Militants have kept up their rocket attacks, hitting ever deeper into Israel. Rockets have hit not only nearby towns such as Sderot and Ashkelon, but also Ashdod to the north of Gaza and Beersheba some 40 kilometers to the southeast.

As the violence continues, so do diplomatic efforts to stop it. Arab League foreign ministers were meeting in Cairo to discuss the crisis. Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called on the Arab League to do more than talk - saying action is now needed. Turkey's Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan holds talks in Syria and Jordan Wednesday and is also due to visit Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is expected to hold talks in Paris Thursday and French President Nicolas Sarkozy may visit Israel early next week.

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Car Bomb Kills 4 Northern Iraq

Iraqi police say a car bomb went off in a crowded market in northern Iraq, killing four people and wounded 45 more.

Officials say the bomb Wednesday ripped through one of the busiest markets in the town of Sinjar, just west of Mosul.

The mayor of Sinjar, Doctor Dakhil Aqsim, told VOA he expects the death toll to rise.

In nearby Mosul, police say two bomb blasts, one following the other, killed two people and wounded several others.

Although bombings, roadside explosions and assassinations still occur frequently, a report released last week noted a sharp drop in civilian deaths this year.

According to the report, there were more than 8,000 Iraqi civilian deaths this year, while in 2006 and 2007, more than 48,000 were killed.

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Human Rights Lawyers Fight to Get Imprisoned Zimbabwean Activists Released

Several court actions are in process in Harare to try and free 17 previously abducted activists still in prison, despite a High Court order to release them. Human rights lawyers believe more activists, mostly from the Movement for Democratic Change party, who have been missing for weeks are being detained at unknown locations.

Zimbabwe's small community of human rights lawyers are extremely busy petitioning the High Court to secure the release of their clients who were abducted by state security agents in the last few weeks.

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights director Irene Petras said Wednesday that there are 17 activists who have been charged by the police with a range of allegations in connection with plots to overthrow President Robert Mugabe.

None have yet been charged in a court of law. On Christmas Eve, the Harare High Court ordered that nine be taken to hospital, and the other eight be released.

All 17, including a two-year old child whose parents are among those in detention, are being held in Zimbabwe's maximum security prison, although none have yet been charged in court.

Petras said her organization has a list of a further 13 activists' names, whom she said were reportedly abducted and are still missing. Petras said the lawyers' group believes they also are somewhere in detention in Harare.

Zimbabwean human rights activist Jestina Mukoko arrives at magistrate's court in Harare, 24 Dec 2008
Zimbabwean human rights activist Jestina Mukoko (file)
Lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa has filed an urgent application with the Harare High court to prevent terrorism charges proceedings against human rights activist Jestina Mukoko.

The application also asks the court to investigate and charge those who kidnapped Mukoko from her home on December 3.

Human rights lawyers are also filing with the High Court a charge of contempt of court against the police for defying a court order on Christmas Eve for the release of the 17 being detained. In additions, another group of lawyers have filed an application for charges against the 17 to be dropped.

All 17 have told their lawyers that they have been assaulted or mistreated since they were abducted by security agents since October.

Human Rights director Petras said some of those in detention have been allowed visits from family members and some are receiving food sent to them.

Meanwhile, the situation in Zimbabwe continues to deteriorate.

The Red Cross said Wednesday that it has deployed seven emergency teams normally reserved for major global disasters to fight Zimbabwe's worsening cholera epidemic.
They aim to help 1.5 million people in Zimbabwe, where more than 16-hundred people have died of cholera since August and nearly 30,000 have been infected, the Red Cross said.

The World Health Organization says the cholera epidemic was spread by disintegrating water and sewage systems and poor sanitation in urban centers. All ten Zimbabwe provinces now have cholera.

Besides the epidemic, Zimbabweans are also struggling against hyper-inflation, severe food shortages and chronic political instability.

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Former Dairy Boss Pleads Guilty in Chinese Milk Scandal Trial

The former head of the Chinese company at the center of China's deadly tainted milk scandal has pleaded guilty to the charges of producing and selling substandard products.

Customers look at milk in a supermarket in Beijing,  (Nov 2008 file photo)
Customers look at milk in a supermarket in Beijing (File)
The official Xinhua news agency says the trial of Sanlu Group's Tian Wenhua and three other executives began Wednesday in northern Hebei's capital, Shijiazhuang, where the company's headquarters is located.

Xinhua says Tian testified that her company first began investigating product quality issues in May, but did not notify authorities that its products were tainted the industrial chemical melamine until August of this year.

Prosecutors say the company first began receiving complaints about the quality of its product from consumers as early as December of 2007.

The scandal was not exposed until September of this year.

At least 17 other people have gone on trial over their involvement in the melamine-tainted milk scandal, which led to the deaths of six children and sickened nearly 300,000 others.

The courts have not yet announced any verdicts.

The chemical melamine is believed to have been used to make foods such as watered-down milk appear to be higher in protein.

If taken in excessive levels, melamine can cause kidney stones, and babies who drank tainted infant formula were the most widely affected.

Tian and her three colleagues were escorted into court today in handcuffs and flanked by police where they stood before a three judge panel. Xinhua says defendant Wang Yuliang had to be pushed into the courtroom in a wheelchair.

Xinhua says Wang lost use of his legs during a suicide attempt while he was being held under house arrest over the company's scandal.

Sanlu declared itself bankrupt last week.

The scandal not only tarnished company's reputation, but China's as well. It comes after a series of food and product safety scares and led to recalls of Chinese-made dairy products around the world.

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Dec 30, 2008

Mesa Verde National Park: Protecting the Culture of Ancient Native Americans


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VOICE ONE:

I'm Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Barbara Klein with Explorations in VOA Special English. Today we tell about a large National Park established to protect the culture of ancient Native Americans. It is called Mesa Verde.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Spruce Tree House
Spruce Tree House
It was cold that day in eighteen eighty-eight in southwestern Colorado. Richard Wetherill and his brother-in-law were trying to find some missing cattle. They were up on Mesa Verde. Spanish explorers had named the area. The high, flat mountaintop is covered with many green juniper and pinon pine trees. It looks like a huge green table, which is "mesa verde" in Spanish.

The two men came to the edge of a deep canyon. Through the falling snow, they saw what looked like a small city across the canyon. It was suspended in the middle of the rock wall. There were many connected rooms built into a natural opening in the rock.

They named the ruins Cliff Palace. In the next few days, they found two more large ruins. They named one Spruce Tree House. They named the other Square Tower House.

VOICE TWO:

A number of other people had seen and taken pictures of some of the cliff dwellings earlier. But the Wetherill family was the first group to study them. Soon after his discovery, Richard Wetherill returned to Mesa Verde, to the ruins that had remained silent and untouched for centuries.

Richard Wetherill collected many objects. It was an easy task. It looked as if the people who had lived there had just walked away, leaving everything they owned. Cooking pots by the fireplaces. Food bowls on the floors. Shoes in the corners. Sticks for digging by the doors.

The ruins in Colorado had been home to the ancestors of the present day members of the Pueblo tribes. They were named Anasazi, or ancient ones, by the Navajo Indians. They moved to Mesa Verde about one thousand five hundred years ago and left seven hundred years ago. They built the cliff dwellings in Mesa Verde toward the end of the eight hundred years they lived there.

VOICE ONE:

Richard Wetherill
Richard Wetherill
Richard Wetherill showed his collection of objects in nearby towns. People were not interested. Just some more old Indian things, they said. Finally, he sold his collection to the Colorado Historical Society. But the Wetherill family continued exploring Mesa Verde. Their finds became known in the eastern United States and in Europe. Hundreds of people went to Mesa Verde to see for themselves.

VOICE TWO:

One of the earliest visitors was a young man from Sweden, Gustaf Nordenskiold. Mister Nordenskiold spent months exploring the area. He traveled on foot and on horseback. He took pictures that were published in a book, "The Cliff Dwellers of the Mesa Verde."

Gustaf Nordenskiold collected hundreds of objects he found in the ruins. He loaded them on teams of mules and sent them to the nearby town of Durango, Colorado. Local officials tried to prevent him from removing so many objects. But there were no laws to stop him. Mister Nordenskiold shipped the objects to Sweden. Later, they were given to the national museum in Helsinki, Finland, where they remain today.

VOICE ONE:

Many people were shocked by the continuing removal of objects from the ruins at Mesa Verde. One was a woman named Virginia McClurg. She had visited the area and had explored a few small ruins. From eighteen eighty-seven to eighteen ninety-six, she campaigned throughout the country to get laws to save the cliff dwellings. She gave speeches describing the destruction of the dwellings by people seeking treasures. She worked for years with members of the United States Congress to get such laws passed.

Finally, on June twenty-ninth, nineteen-oh-six, President Theodore Roosevelt signed a bill creating Mesa Verde National Park. It was the first National Park designed to protect the works of humans. Then Congress approved the Federal Antiquities Act of nineteen-oh-six. The act helps protect ancient ruins on federal lands.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

Mesa Verde
Mesa Verde
Today, from a distance, Mesa Verde appears as it did centuries ago. It rises more than five hundred forty meters above the floor of the valley. Visitors can drive up to the top of Mesa Verde on a winding mountain road. When you reach the top, you are two thousand four hundred meters above sea level. In the distance are the flat lands and mountains of the Four Corners area. That is where the western states of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Arizona meet. This area has one of the largest numbers of archeological sites in the United States.

VOICE ONE:

Within the national park are more than five thousand ruins from the time of the Ancestral Puebloan people. Six hundred are cliff dwellings. Most of the ruins remain unexplored. Some have been uncovered and supported to make them safe to visit. These ruins are open to the public during most of the year. During the winter, activities are limited. The visitors' center at the park is open during the summer. The museum is open all year.

The visitors' center and the museum provide information about the history of the culture of the ancient Pueblo people and about present-day Indians. National Park Service guides lead visitors to the ruins. They give talks about the cultural history of the area. And they talk about the geology and wildlife.

VOICE TWO:

Some of the ruins in the Four Corners area are from the earliest people who lived there. They were hunters and gatherers, now known as Basket Makers. The Basket Makers lived in simple caves. Their civilization existed two thousand years ago. The first evidence that ancient people had moved to Mesa Verde is from about the year five hundred. Those people lived in pit houses. Pit houses were large holes in the ground with roofs of wood and mud.

In about the year seven hundred fifty, the early Pueblo people began building square structures of large connected rooms, or pueblos, above ground. Finally, in about eleven hundred, they climbed down the canyon walls and began building cliff dwellings. Today, visitors to Mesa Verde can see some of the remains of all four kinds of settlements.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

A kiva at Mesa Verde
A kiva at Mesa Verde
Cliff Palace is the largest cliff dwelling in Mesa Verde and also in North America. It has one hundred fifty rooms. It is difficult to get to it. Visitors must climb down into the canyon on a narrow path with many steps. They must also climb down several ladders. But the trip is well worth the effort. Visitors can examine a huge and beautiful structure made of stone and clay.

Spruce Tree House is the third largest cliff dwelling in Mesa Verde National Park. It has one hundred fourteen rooms. It also has eight underground rooms called kivas. The Indian men gathered in the kivas for special ceremonies. About one hundred people lived in this cliff dwelling during the thirteenth century.

Spruce Tree House is the easiest cliff dwelling to visit. The path curves down into the valley and then up to the ruin. Signs along the path point to trees and plants used by the Ancestral Puebloan people. Also along the path are the juniper and pinon pine trees that make Mesa Verde green.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

About five hundred thousand people visit Mesa Verde National Park each year. The park's archeologists have recovered many objects that the ancient Pueblo people used, including pots, tools and jewelry. Many of the objects are shown in the visitors' center. However, human remains or any object from a grave may not be touched or shown. This is to honor the wishes of the modern Puebloan people who live in the area today.

Mesa Verde National Park occupies twenty-one thousand hectares of land. However, only about ten percent of the area has been explored.

VOICE ONE:

Mesa Verde is recognized as a special place. The United Nations named it one of the first World Heritage sites in nineteen seventy-eight. Special events were held at Mesa Verde during its one hundredth anniversary in two thousand six. They included tours of areas never before open to the public.

Today's Pueblo Indians whose ancestors lived in Mesa Verde consider it a sacred place. And for visitors from around the world, it remains a place of mystery and beauty.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

This program was written by Marilyn Christiano and Shelley Gollust. It was produced by Mario Ritter. I'm Barbara Klein.

VOICE ONE:

And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for Explorations in VOA Special English.

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In Treating Hypothermia, Slow and Gentle Are Best

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This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

We talked last week about ways to avoid hypothermia and other cold-weather injuries. Today we are going to talk about emergency treatment.

Hypothermia can be mild, moderate or severe. Mild hypothermia is something that most people who live in cold climates have experienced. You feel so cold that your body starts to shake, not very much but uncontrollably.

The treatment for mild hypothermia starts with getting out of the cold, and changing into dry clothes if necessary. Drinking warm, non-alcoholic liquids and eating something sugary can stop the shivering. Taking a warm bath or sitting by a fire or doing some exercise can also help the body warm up. These are all common sense treatments.

But the treatment changes when people enter the moderate or severe stages of hypothermia. Their body temperature drops below thirty-five degrees Celsius. They lose the ability to think clearly. Their muscles become stiff. They might bump into things or fall over objects.

Adrienne Freeman is a park ranger at Yosemite National Park in California. She is part of the Yosemite Search and Rescue team. She says rescuers will first try to prevent additional heat loss by placing extra covering around a victim's chest, head and neck.

She says it is important to work fast to get people out of the cold and to medical help as soon as possible. But she says it is equally important to move the victim slowly and gently.

Ranger Freeman says any rough or sudden movement can force cold blood from the arms, legs and hands deep into the warmer middle of the body. The sudden flow of cold blood can create shock, a serious condition. It can also cause a dangerously abnormal heartbeat.

Adrienne Freeman says the process of "rewarming" a person needs to be done slowly, in a hospital setting. She says something else to keep in mind is that a hypothermia victim may seem dead but still be alive.

An extremely low body temperature can cause the heart to beat so slowly that a pulse may be difficult to find. Ranger Freeman says members of search and rescue teams have a saying that victims are not dead until they are warm and dead.

And that's the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Caty Weaver. If you missed last week's advice about how to avoid cold-weather injuries, it can be found at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.

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Israel Considers 48-Hour Truce on Gaza Strikes

Israeli officials say they are considering a 48-hour halt to their offensive in the Gaza Strip - after four days of air strikes against the Palestinian militant group Hamas. The strikes have killed more than 370 people, mostly Hamas militants. Hamas has fired rockets into Israel, killing at least four people. Countries around the world, including the United States, are calling for a cease-fire.

The Israeli military carried out more air strikes on Tuesday, killing several people and destroying Hamas government buildings, including one at an Islamic university. Israeli troops are massing along the Israel-Gaza border, possibly preparing a ground offensive.

Palestinian militants fired a rocket deeper into Israel for the first time, striking the city of Beersheba.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak says Israel will do whatever it takes to put an end to what he calls Hamas's campaign of terror.

In Washington, Israel's U.S. Ambassador, Sallai Meridor, blamed Hamas for breaking a six month cease-fire and said his country wants peace. He blamed Iran for supporting Hamas.

Israel's Ambassador to the U.S.  Sallai Meridor (undated photo)
Israel's Ambassador to the U.S. Sallai Meridor (undated photo)
"It's guided by Iran," said Sallai Meridor. "It's funded largely by Iran. It's trained by Iran."

Israeli leaders say they are considering a short-term truce to allow aid into Gaza.
Ambassador Meridor says Israel has already brought in trucks of food.

"We are letting in a lot of humanitarian aid under these terrible circumstances, under fire, and go through the passage and get into Gaza," he said.

But a boat carrying international peace activists and medical aid was denied entry into Gaza on Tuesday. The boat was turned away by an Israeli naval vessel.

Anger at the Israeli offensive has triggered protests across the Middle East. Pro-Palestinians in the U.S. also held protests in Washington and New York. Activist Riham Barghouti.

"We want to raise awareness among the Americans here so they can understand what is going on, and also to call for an end to U.S. support, because it is U.S. planes that are bombing Gaza," said Riham Barghouti.

The United States is calling for a durable and sustainable cease-fire by both Israel and Hamas. European Union foreign ministers also are calling for both sides to stop the fighting.

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Moderates in Middle East May Suffer if Israeli-Hamas Conflict Continues Unabated

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Israeli warplanes continue to hit suspected Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip. At the same time, Palestinian militants are keeping up their rocket and mortar attacks on Israeli border communities.


The violence erupted after a six-month Hamas-Israeli ceasefire expired on December 19. The Palestinian militant group stepped up its shelling of Israeli communities, prompting the massive Israeli response.

Many analysts say this is the biggest military offensive against Gaza since Israel occupied the West Bank and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 Six-Day War. Israel's Defense Minister, Ehud Barak, said the country is currently engaged in an all-out conflict against Hamas.

David Aaron, Director of the RAND Center for Middle East Public Policy, said that rhetoric is all too familiar.

"They [the Israelis] made a basic strategic decision to sort of end it once and for all. Well, unfortunately, we've heard that story before in their invasion of Lebanon [in 2006], which did not eradicate Hezbollah. But it has stopped Hezbollah from carrying out attacks against northern Israel," he said.

The militant group Hamas has been in control of the Gaza Strip since June 2007, after it defeated forces loyal to the moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The United States considers Hamas to be a terrorist group and has accused it of starting this latest round of violence.

Fawaz Gerges is a Middle East expert at Sarah Lawrence College in New York. Speaking from Tripoli, Lebanon, he said the strong Israeli response has radicalized Arab public opinion in the region.

Jordanian demonstrators hold a Palestinian flag during a protest near the Israeli embassy in Amman, 30 Dec 2008
Jordanian demonstrators hold a Palestinian flag during a protest near the Israeli embassy in Amman, 30 Dec 2008
"And it seems to me that the longer the crisis continues, the more radicalized Arab public opinion will likely become. There is no military solution for an essentially political crisis. Regardless of what one thinks of Hamas, the way that Israel has acted in the last few days is playing into Hamas' hands. The military escalation and the extent and the horrendous casualties on the Palestinian side are playing directly into Hamas' hands. They are weakening the moderate forces in the Arab world, particularly America's allies - Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia - and basically supplying ammunition to the so-called resistance front, particularly Iran and Syria and Hamas in Palestine and Hezbollah in Lebanon," argued Gerges.

David Aaron from RAND agreed, saying the crisis puts U.S. allies in the region in a difficult situation.

"It puts them more on the spot because we have given them no coverage. If we had decided to simply call for a ceasefire and stoppage of violence and all the rest, that would have given them some cover. But we didn't. We said, 'This is the fault of Hamas.' Even if that's true, it certainly is not perceived that way in those countries. And so their governments are going to be the target of increased criticism on the part of their people for collaborating with us," he said.

Aaron also said the United States and its allies should be concerned about what may happen on the West Bank. Will there be another intifada, an armed Palestinian uprising against Israeli rule?

Many experts, including Aaron, said the latest conflict was in part due to the Bush administration's Middle East policy.

Israel's PM Ehud Olmert (l) and Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas  before a meeting in Jerusalem, 05 May 2008
Israel's PM Ehud Olmert (l) and Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas in Jerusalem, (file photo)
"I think it was a complete failure. It didn't do anything, frankly. We did finally get some conversation between [Mahmoud] Abbas and [Israeli Prime Minister Ehud] Olmert. But then nobody knows where that was going and we see this conflict arising now. And it's hard for me to believe that that's going to strengthen the hand of those who want a dialogue with the Palestinians," he said.


The Bush administration says it has been consistently engaged in trying to find a solution to the Palestinian-Israeli crisis.

Fawaz Gerges said one way to come closer to a political solution is to include Hamas in the process. But that, he said, will come about only if there is a different mindset.

"A mindset that says Hamas is not a monolith, that yes, Hamas engages in terrorism, Hamas carries out certain terrorist actions, but Hamas is not just a huge monolith. There are multiple points of view and narratives within Hamas. And political engagement, I would argue, will likely strengthen the moderate elements not only within the region, but also within the Palestinian territories. In fact, I would argue, that a year from now, Hamas will likely remain as strong if not stronger - particularly if Israel and the United States insist on exclusion and on basically pursuing the military option, which basically will not really produce a breakthrough for this essentially political crisis in the region," he said.

Fawaz Gerges and David Aaron said a lot may change between now and January 20 when Barack Obama is officially sworn in as the new U.S. President. But they said one thing is clear - the current conflict proves that finding a political solution to the Middle East crisis should be the first item on President Obama's foreign policy agenda.

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US Joins International Call for Immediate Gaza Cease-fire

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The United States has joined other powers in the international Middle East Quartet in urging an immediate Gaza Strip cease-fire. The Quartet - the United States, Russia, the European Union and United Nations - discussed the crisis on Tuesday in a ministerial-level telephone conference call.

The Bush administration had resisted joining calls for an immediate cease-fire, with officials saying they did not want a hasty agreement that would bring about a repeat of the previous truce that Hamas frequently violated and which fell apart earlier this month.

But officials here say U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice joined her Quartet partners in the immediate cease-fire appeal because the four powers also stipulated that it be "fully respected" by both Hamas and Israel.

The telephone conference involving Rice, U.N. Secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, European Union chief diplomat Javier Solana, Quartet envoy Tony Blair, and others, highlighted a day of intense diplomacy aimed at restoring peace to Gaza.

A State Department spokesman said the Quartet members called on all parties to address the serious humanitarian and economic needs in Gaza, and take necessary measures to insure the continuous provision of humanitarian supplies.

They also agreed on the urgent need for Israelis and Palestinians to continue on the road to peace and agreed to remain in close touch, though the spokesman said there were no immediate plans for a face-to-face Quartet meeting.

White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe (file photo)
White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe (file photo)
Earlier in Crawford, Texas, White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said a ceasefire in name only - that breaks down in hours or days - serves no one's interest.

"We have got to get a commitment from Hamas that they would respect any crease-fire and make it lasting and durable," said Johndroe. "And so, until we can get that assurance - not the United States, but until Israel can get that assurance from Hamas - then we're not going to have a cease-fire that is worth the paper it's written on."

Johndroe said President Bush, who is spending the holidays at home in Texas, got a video briefing on the Gaza situation from his national security team Tuesday and spoke by telephone with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and the two top leaders of the Palestinian Authority - President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad.

Prime Minister Fayyad thanked Mr. Bush for an $85 million commitment of new U.S. humanitarian aid to Palestinians announced earlier in the day.

Although it rejects dealings with Hamas, which is listed by the State Department as a terrorist group, the United States has continued providing food, medicine and other supplies to Gaza Palestinians through the United Nations and other third parties.

Johndroe said Mr. Bush expressed appreciation to President Mubarak for Egypt's leadership and positive role in the current crisis. Egypt has contacts with both Hamas and Israel, and helped broker the previous six-month truce which expired earlier this month and which Hamas refused to renew.

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Residents on Israel-Gaza Border Face Constant Rocket Fire

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aerial attacks and bombardments of the Gaza Strip continued Tuesday for the fourth day in a row. At least 350 Palestinians have been killed in the military offensive thus far, including at least 60 civilians. Three Israelis have been killed in rocket attacks by Palestinian militants.

Another day of air strikes, bombing runs and rocket attacks for Gaza and nearby areas of Israel.

Loudspeaker warnings, people rushing to take cover and then... an explosion. These have become familiar sounds here in Sderot.

Uri Reznik, a spokesman for the Israeli foreign ministry says dozens of Hamas-fired rockets and mortars have hit Sderot in the past several days in what has become a grim reality.

"You will see people going about their lives. But, if you will notice every few meters in this town there are cement blocks, which are designated as secure points. Whenever there is an alarm of an imminent rocket attack, people urgently have 15 seconds to get to one of these shelters."

Some residents have left the town to stay with relatives to escape the rockets. Others remain going about their daily routine, all the while listening for the next alert.

The rockets are fired by Palestinian militants from inside Gaza, just kilometers away are inaccurate, but some still hit their targets.

A house in the southern Israeli town of Sderot that took a direct hit from a Palestinian rocket, 30 Dec 2008
A house in the southern Israeli town of Sderot that took a direct hit from a Palestinian rocket, 30 Dec 2008
Several houses on nearby Sinai Street can attest to that. People there pointed out one house they said took a direct hit on Tuesday. There were no reports of casualties from that attack.

Leaving Sderot and driving closer to Gaza can be difficult as most of the areas along the border have been declared a "closed military zone" by the Israelis.

Not far in the distance lies Gaza city, its skyline clearly visible. The occasional Israeli warplane swoops overhead, and here and there are plumes of smoke.

Troops, tanks and armored personnel carriers have been positioned around Gaza, lending credence to promises of further military action to come, including a possible ground assault.

Israeli officials vow there'll be no let-up to the offensive until the militants' ability to fire rockets into Israel has been dealt with.

Those words were echoed in Sderot by Transport Minister and former Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz.

"We are not going to discuss with the media what kind of military activity we should take," he said. "I believe that all options are on the table and we have to achieve our goal."

Israeli warplanes carried out air strikes over Gaza again on Tuesday for the fourth day in a row. Israel says it is targeting the infrastructure of Hamas, the militant Islamic group that controls the Gaza Strip. But Gaza is a very densely populated strip of land and while Israel may be targeting the militants, its attacks have also killed dozens of Palestinian civilians.

And despite relentless air attacks and rising casualty figures, the rocket attacks from inside Gaza continued.

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Ukraine Threatened Again by Mid-Winter Russian Gas Cutoff

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Russia's Gazprom energy monopoly is preparing to cut gas supplies to Ukraine if Kyiv does not repay a $2 billion debt by December 31. But Ukrainians dispute the Russian figure, and say they have enough supplies to last through the cold winter months.

Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller told Russia's Vesti 24 television the company has created an operations center to begin technical preparations for cutting gas supplies to Ukraine.

Russia's state-owned natural gas company spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov speaks at a news conference in Moscow, 30 Dec 2008
Sergei Kupriyanov speaks at a news conference in Moscow, 30 Dec 2008
In a colorful turn of phrase, Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov told a Moscow news conference Tuesday that Miller was in talks wielding a club in hopes of reaching a last-minute agreement with the Ukrainian side.

Kupriyanov says Gazprom has been seeking alternatives that would offer their Ukrainian colleagues another way of settling the debt, including advance payment by Gazprom to the Ukrainian gas company, Naftogaz of Ukraine, for gas pipeline transit rights through that country.

However, Oleksiy Hudyma, energy advisor to Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, told VOA that Ukraine's current debt is less than $1 billion, because the second billion represents payment for December gas that does not come due until January 25.

He says the recent sharp devaluation of Ukraine's currency, the hryvna, has made it difficult for the country to pay the debt in U.S. dollars, adding that Russia is not so much interested in getting its money, but using energy to play politics.

Hudyma says Moscow is trying to influence Europe by suggesting Ukraine can interrupt its energy supplies and to make Europeans better appreciate the importance of Russia. He says Russia is also seeking control over Ukraine's gas transport system, adding that Gazprom's proposal to settle the Ukrainian debt by allowing the company to pay in advance for transit rights will leave Ukraine with no profit in 2009.

Pipes seen in a gas storage and transit point in Boyarka, just outside Kyiv, Ukraine (file photo)
Pipes seen in a gas storage and transit point in Boyarka, just outside Kyiv, Ukraine (file photo)
Hudyma and Gazprom both assure consumers in Western Europe that their gas supplies will not be cut, though for slightly different reasons. Gazprom spokesman Kupriyanov says Ukraine is obligated by contract not to reduce European supplies that transit through Ukraine, while energy advisor Hudyma says his country has enough reserves to supply itself and Europe at least through April.

Hudyma says there will be no harmful effects on Europe under any circumstances. If those circumstances become critical and Russia tries to limit supplies in a critical situation, he says Ukraine will get by on reserves that are stored underground.

Russia says it will charge Ukraine a market price of $418 per 1,000 cubic meters of gas. But Oleksiy Hudyma says that price is arbitrary, noting that the Czech republic pays only $350, though it is much farther downstream from Russia than Ukraine.

He adds that much of the gas Ukraine receives from Russia is mixed with cheaper supplies from Turkmenistan, for which he claims Russia does not yet have a contract.

Ukrainian and Russian representatives are all expressing hope for a last minute agreement.

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2008, a Year of Closed Doors for Africa's Migrants

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The International Organization for Migration said 2008 has been a disastrous year for Africans seeking to migrate to other countries in search of a better life. IOM said many Africans lost their lives, others ended up being exploited and abused.


Some 220 illegal immigrants arrive in the southernmost Italian island of Lampedusa after being intercepted by Italian coast guards, 19 Jul 2007
Some 220 illegal immigrants arrive in the southernmost Italian island of Lampedusa after being intercepted by Italian coast guards, (file photo)
In recent days, about 2,000 migrants from Africa have arrived on the southern Italian island of Lampedusa. The government said this brings the number of illegal immigrants arriving by sea to well over 24,000, almost double that of last year.

The migrants were not welcome on the southern Italian island. Theidwere put in an overcrowded detention cell while their cases were being processed.

Spokesman for the International Organization for Migration, Jean-Philippe Chauzy told VOA migrants are finding more and more doors closed to them as the global economic crisis gathers steam. He said the outlook for 2009 is not promising.

"I think the reality is that a lot of doors that were ajar for immigrants, especially at the time when the economy was more buoyant than it is now, the fear is that many of those doors will now be slammed shut… In times of recession, migrants are sometimes perceived as stealing jobs from nationals," he said.

Somali and other African migrants protest outside South Africa's Parliament against xenophobic attacks in Cape Town, 02 June 2008
Somali and other African migrants protest outside South Africa's Parliament against xenophobic attacks in Cape Town, 02 June 2008
And, that is what happened in May and June of this year in South Africa. Chauzy recalled the violence that erupted following a xenophobic flare-up against immigrants from southern Africa and other parts of the continent.


"More than 60 people were killed during the xenophobic violence and several hundred others were injured. And, obviously, tens of thousands were affected by the xenophobic resentment against immigrants in South Africa… The flare-up happened in May and June, but the consequences, I would say the impact of the xenophobic flare-up, I would say, still persists to this day," he said.

Chauzy said in some ways it is worse because more and more Zimbabweans are fleeing to South Africa to escape the poverty and cholera in their country.

He said 2008 also saw migration flows increase from the Horn of Africa across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen. He said migrants, mostly Somalis and Ethiopians, took enormous risks to escape war and poverty.

Yemeni NGO workers give newly arrived Somali migrants water on the beach of Hasn Beleid village, 230 kms east of the Red Sea port of Aden, 15 Oct., 2008
Yemeni NGO workers give newly arrived Somali migrants water on the beach of Hasn Beleid village, 230 kms east of the Red Sea port of Aden, 15 Oct., 2008
"More than 45,000 people actually crossed the Gulf of Aden on hundreds of boats. And, unfortunately, the estimates regarding the number of people drowned in the Gulf of Aden is probably in the region of 500 people. Obviously not all tragedies are reported. Many still go underreported or unreported," said Chauzy.


The International Organization for Migration is urging countries to avoid measures that would further contribute to the stigmatization of migrants. It argued the world's more than 200 million immigrants make positive contributions to society. So, governments, it said, should not enact policies that would encourage anti-immigrant feelings.

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India Denies Escalating Tensions With Pakistan

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India has denied escalating tensions with its neighbor as Pakistan called on New Delhi to resume a dialogue and pull back its troops along the border. Tensions have been deepening between the South Asian neighbors since last month's terror attacks in Mumbai which New Delhi says were mounted by Islamic extremists based in Pakistan.

Hours after Pakistani foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi asked India to deactivate its air bases and relocate its forces to peacetime positions, his Indian counterpart shrugged aside the comment.

Indian Minister of External Affairs Pranab Mukherjee, 02 Dec 2008
Pranab Mukherjee, 02 Dec 2008
Indian foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee says New Delhi has not taken any steps to escalate military tensions with its neighbor since the terror attacks in Mumbai.

"We have not done anything which can escalate the tension between India and Pakistan because from day one I am saying this is not an India-Pakistan issue," he said. "This is an attack perpetrated by elements emanating from the land of Pakistan, and Pakistan government should take action. We have not escalated the tensions, so where is the question of de-escalation."

India denies that it has moved its troops to the border with Pakistan, and says any military movements in recent weeks are part of "routine winter exercises." On the weekend, Pakistani officials said they had redeployed some troops from the Afghan border to the Indian border, sharply raising tensions between the neighbors.

Indian soldiers guard  the western sector of India-Pakistan border at Ranjitpura village, Rajasthan state, India, 25 Dec 2008
Indian soldiers guard the western sector of India-Pakistan border at Ranjitpura village, Rajasthan state, India, 25 Dec 2008
New Delhi says talk of a military build up along the border is an effort to divert attention from demands by India and other countries that Pakistan must clamp down on Islamic militant groups blamed for the terror strikes which killed more than 170 people in Mumbai.

Indian foreign minister Mukherjee reiterated demands that Islamabad act against Islamic extremist groups which carry out terror attacks in India. "Yes we will give you evidences as we have earlier given you, but please act on it," he said.

Pakistani foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi says Islamabad will cooperate with India if it is given evidence that gunmen who mounted the attacks in Mumbai came from Pakistan.

The Pakistani minister called for calm in the region. He says dialogue is in the interest of both countries and they should sit across the table to resolve their differences.

Relations between the two countries have deteriorated in the last month, and India has suspended a peace dialogue between the two countries.

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Record Drop for US Home Prices, Consumer Confidence

A struggling U.S. economy is not getting any help from the battered housing market.

Some neighborhoods have foreclosed homes on every block
Some neighborhoods have foreclosed homes on every block
A closely watched index Tuesday shows home prices in 20 major U.S. cities plunged a record 18 percent in October compared to the same time last year.

U.S. home prices have now fallen to levels not seen since March 2004.

Some economists say the troubled U.S. housing market is at the center of the country's economic woes, and warn the U.S. will not be able to pull out of a recession until the market recovers.

Meanwhile, discounted prices on everything from clothes to electronics are doing little to spark sales or boost consumer confidence.

An industry trade group, the International Council of Shopping Centers, says Tuesday sales for the week ending December 27 fell almost two percent compared to last year. The report issued with Goldman Sachs also notes a 1.5 percent drop from the week before.

A private research group, the Conference Board, says Tuesday its index of U.S. consumer confidence hit an all-time low in December.

The sales data supports the conclusions of a series of other reports that found U.S. sales plunged in the critical weeks leading up to the Christmas holiday (December 25). U.S. stores depend on sales during this period to make a profit for the year.

President-elect Barack Obama's economic team is considering a plan costing up to $775 billion to help spur the economy, and that plan is getting support from the International Monetary Fund.

IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard says the package is on the right track and that its size corresponds to "what we [the IMF] think is needed."

He also says the stimulus package should be aimed at consumers who want to spend money but who are having trouble getting credit. He says other consumers are more likely to save money, which will not help spur an economic recovery.

Also Tuesday, South Korea announced a 14 percent drop in industrial production in November from the same period last year, the biggest yearly decline on record. Officials blamed this on slowing demand for exports, including cars, computer chips and televisions.

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