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   Deutsche Welle
   English Service News
   September 22nd 2002, 16:00 UTC
 
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   Today's highlight on DW-WORLD:

   Exit Poll Shows Conservative Lead in German Election

   The first exit poll of voters taken in Germany on Sunday showed the
   conservative Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union
   leading Chancellor Gerhard Schr�der's Social Democrats by 2
percentage
   points.

   To read this article on the DW-WORLD website, just click on the
   internet address below:

   http://dw-world.de/english/0,3367,6591_A_641614_1_A,00.html
 
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   Centre-left coalition ahead in first German election projections.

   Just after the polls closed in Germany's federal election, the first
   projections indicate the governing coalition of Social Democrats and
   Greens may be back in for another 4 years. According to projections
   by the German public television station ARD, the Social Democrats
   took 38 percent of the vote, compared to 39 percent for the
   opposition Christian Democrats. But the Greens, the junior partner
   in the coalition got 9.5 percent, with the liberal Free Democrats
   taking 7 percent. The other national public television station, ZDF,
   has both the Social Democrats and Christian Democrats at 38 percent.
   But it also has the Greens stronger than the Free Democrats, with 9,
   compared to 7.5 percent. According to both projections, the Social
   Democrats and Greens would have enough seats to form a government.
   The former communist Party of Democratic Socialism appears to have
   been missed the 5 percent hurdle, with just over 4 percent.
   Meanwhile, voters in the eastern-German state of Mecklenburg-Western
   Pommerania are also going to the polls to elect a new state
   government. The first results from that vote aren't expected for a
   couple of hours.


   Justice minster denies report that she will step town

   Justice Minister Herta Daeubler-Gmelin has denied a newspaper report
   that she would resign shortly after the polls close in Germany's
   federal election Sunday evening. The Sunday edition of the
   mass-circulation "Bild" newspaper had reported that the Social
   Democrat would step down over a comparison she allegedly made
   between U.S. President George W. Bush's approach to the Iraq problem
   and the methods of Adolf Hitler. Daeubler-Gmelin has denied making
   the remark, and Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has sent a written
   apology to the U.S. president. However relations between the two
   allies remain strained.


   Arafat weiter unter starkem Druck

   Israeli forces are continuing their siege of Palestinian President
   Yasser Arafat's headquarters in Ramallah. Israeli bulldozers have
   torn down most of the headquarters compound, except for the building
   in which Arafat and as many as 300 supporters are trapped.
   Electricity and water supplies to Arafat's building have been cut
   off. Israel has said that its sole aim is to force the surrender of
   20 Palestinians believed to be in the building, who are alleged to
   have been involved in attacks against Israelis, and it has no
   intention of harming Arafat. Israeli troops reportedly shot dead
   four Palestinian protesters on Sunday as thousands of people took to
   the streets in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to demonstrate against
   the siege. German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer has called on
   both parties to the conflict to exercise restraint.


   Centre-right coalition set to retain power in Slovakia

   Voters have also gone to the polls in Slovakia this weekend, and
   there, it appears that there will be no change in government. Early
   official results indicate that nationalist former Premier Vladimir
   Meciar's HZDS was the strongest single party, with 19.5 percent of
   the popular vote. However the four parties that have comprised Prime
   Minister Mikulas Dzurinda's centre-right coalition for the past four
   years won more than 42 percent. That makes the coalition, known as
   the New Citizens' Alliance, the strongest grouping, with 78 seats in
   the the 150-seat parliament. Its victory is seen as a positive step
   in Slovakia's aspirations to join the European Union and NATO.


   Ivory Coast rebels call for talks with government

   Rebels in Ivory Coast's second city of Bouak� said on Sunday they
   wanted talks brokered by France to avoid a bloodbath as loyalist
   troops headed toward the city. The country's worst violence since
   gaining independence from France in 1960 began when rebel soldiers
   launched a pre-dawn coup attempt last Thursday. At least 270 people
   have died and hundreds of others have been wounded. The rebellion
   was quashed in the capital Abijan, but rebels still control Bouak�
   and Korhogo. President Gbagbo has threatened the rebels with all-out
   war and blamed former junta leader Robert Guei, who was shot dead by
   loyalist forces last Thursday, for fomenting the revolt.


   Bomb kills at least 15 in northern India

   At least 15 people were killed when a bomb exploded on Sunday inside
   a small passenger-carrying truck in India's northern Uttar Pradesh
   state. A police official said it was unclear who might be responsible
   for the blast, which occurred near a railway crossing about 120
   kilometers from the state capital Lucknow. The official said 13 of
   the dead were travelling in the truck, the two other victims were
   bystanders.


   Ten illegal immigrants drown trying to reach Italy

   At least 10 illegal immigrants died on Sunday as they attempted to
   swim ashore in rough seas to the Italian island of Sicily. Police
   said the 10 bodies were found on a beach in the southeast of Sicily,
   after some 50 immigrants were unloaded from a ship off the island's
   coast. A policd official said local residents reported having seen a
   ship anchor off the coast. He said police were searching for
   migrants beleived to have made it safely to the shore.


   Many still missing after Russian mudslide

   Authorities in Russia's Caucasus region now say at least 100 people
   have likely been killed after massive chunks of glacier ice up to
   100 meters thick roared down a mountainside, crushing several
   villages in their path. They said the effort to recover the dead
   would likely continue for a number of weeks. So far, 24 bodies have
   been recovered in the area around Karmadon in North Ossetia.


   40 killed in fighting in Nepal

   At least 40 people are reported to have been killed in Nepal in
   fighting between government troops and Maoist rebels. The defence
   ministry in Kathmandu said in a statement that 17 Maoist rebels had
   been killed in a battle in Rolpa, about 300 kilometres west of the
   capital. The rebels are seeking to impose a communist system of
   government on the Himalayan kingdom.


   Demonstrators march in London to protest against Fox hunt

   At least 200 thousand people gathered in London on Sunday to protest
   against a possible ban on hunting with dogs in Britain. The
   demonstrators were also protesting against what they say is the
   systematic discrimination of rural areas under the government of
   Prime Minister Tony Blair. Each year about a million people in
   Britain take part in fox hunting using dogs, which the Labour
   government argues amounts to cruelty toward animals.


 
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