Deutsche Welle
   English Service News
   27th September 2002, 16:00 UTC
 
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   Today's highlight on DW-WORLD:

   Germany to Join UN Security Council

   Germany is expected to be among countries up for election as a
   non-permanent member to the UN Security Council. Diplomats hope this
   role may help improve transatlantic relations.

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

   http://dw-world.de/english/0,3367,1430_A_644920_1_A,00.html
 
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   US and UK send out envoys to win support for UN resolution on Iraq

   The United States and the UK have launched a diplomatic drive to try
   to persuade key UN Security Council members to back a tough new
   draft UN resolution on Iraq. Senior US and UK envoys are in Paris,
   and will later go on to Moscow. President Jacques Chirac of France
   Russia, France and China are among the five permanent members of the
   Security Council who have veto powers - alongside the US and
   Britain. Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov expressed further
   doubt over US policy on Iraq. He said there was as yet "no clear
   proof" that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass
   destruction. But he added that it would be an "unforgivable error"
   to delay the return of UN weapons inspectors. The draft resolution -
   sponsored by the US and Britain - is believed to contain clauses
   that could provide the legal backing for possible military action
   against Baghdad.


   Germany welcomes US willingness to resolve differences

   Germany has welcomed signals from Washington that their bilateral
   dispute over a possible war in Iraq could be resolved soon. A German
   Government spokesman said that recent comments from the US
   administration showed willingness to build on the strong relations
   between the two countries adding that Berlin would work to bring
   relations back to normal. A White House spokesman said earlier that
   the United States would continue to work well with Germany. US
   Secretary of State Colin Powell said that the damage done to
   US-German relations by the perceived anti-American election campaign
   of Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder was considerable but not permanent.


   Germany to be voted on to UN Security Council

   Germany, Spain, Pakistan, Chile and Angola are currently being
   elected to the U.N. Security Council, none of them facing opposition
   in their respective geographical regions. Although election for the
   five is assured, diplomats are speculating that Germany's vote will
   be a high one in the 190-member U.N. General Assembly because of its
   criticism of Washington's potential war against Iraq. German
   Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder won re-election last week by
   campaigning against an Iraqi war, saying his country would not join
   a conflict, thereby angering Washington. Germany, Spain, Pakistan,
   Chile and Angola will be taking their seats in January, replacing
   Ireland, Norway, Colombia, Singapore and Mauritius.


   East Timor wins UN seat

   The small new Southeast Asian nation of East Timor, the first
   country to be born in the 21st century, has won a seat at the United
   Nations, swelling the world body's membership to 191. East Timor,
   which gained independence on May 20 after breaking away from
   Indonesia following a bloody conflict, was approved as a new member
   by the U.N. General Assembly by acclamation. It joins the United
   Nations just weeks after Switzerland, which was approved on Sept. 10
   after the Swiss people voted to seek membership in a March
   referendum.


   Hamas commander alive despite Israeli helicopter attack

   Israel has said a Palestinian militant at the top of its most-wanted
   list survived a helicopter attack on his car, a strike that wounded
   civilians and drew international condemnation. A member of Israel's
   security cabinet, confirmed Palestinian reports that Hamas military
   commander Mohammed Deif was injured but alive after missiles blew up
   the car on a crowded street in Gaza City on Thursday. Two other
   members of Hamas, a radical Islamic group that has carried out
   dozens of suicide bombings in Israel, were killed in the attack.
   Palestinian hospital officials said 27 people were hurt. Some 12,000
   people marched in funeral processions for the two men through the
   streets of Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip. Hamas vowed more bombings,
   raising the spectre of a sharp rise in violence at a time when
   Washington wants to keep a lid on Israeli-Palestinian tensions ahead
   of a possible U.S. military assault on Iraq.


   Foreigners continue to flee Bouake

   People continue to try to flee a rebel-held city in Ivory Coast as
   French troops kept open an escape route and the government prepared
   for an onslaught on renegade soldiers. West Africa's main powers
   assured President Laurent Gbagbo they would stand with him. The
   week-old conflict, in which hundreds have died, has raised fears
   over cocoa supplies from a country producing 40 percent of the
   world's crop. Soldiers from former colonial power France deployed on
   Thursday in Bouake, the biggest city after Abidjan, to open a
   corridor down which foreigners continue to flee to the capital
   Yamoussoukro.


   Milosevic says Srebrenica massacre work of Bosnians and French

   Former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic has said that the massacre
   at Srebrenica of more than 8,000 Muslim men and boys in 1995 was a
   plot hatched to make the world hate Serbs. Milosevic accused French
   spies and the Bosnian Muslim Government of the time of engineering
   the killings. Involvement at Srebrenica is one of a list of 61
   charges the former Yugoslav president faces in the second stage of
   his war crimes trial which opened on Thursday, dealing with the
   1992-1995 wars in Bosnia and Croatia. Milosevic alleged that the
   Bosnian Muslim Government and the French Secret Service conceived
   the plan surrounding Srebrenica in July 1995. Just days later the
   town, which had been a designated UN safe haven, was abandoned by
   Dutch troops and over-run by Bosnian Serb forces. Milosevic denied
   the involvement of Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic and
   his general, Ratko Mladic, both of whom are indicted alongside him
   over Srebrenica.


   Boat capsizes off Senegal, at least 41 dead

   Hundreds of people are feared drowned after a Senegalese passenger
   ferry capsized off the coast of Gambia in a violent storm. At least
   41 people bodies have already been recovered and more than 30
   survivors are said to have been pulled from the water. It is
   unclear how many passengers were on the ferry, but officials say the
   figure could be close to 800.

 
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