Deutsche Welle
   English Service News
   10-01-2002, 16:00 UTC
 
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   Today's highlight on DW-WORLD:

   EU Climbs Down on International Criminal Court

   The European Union has agreed on guidelines for bilateral 
   agreements that exempt US troops from prosecution before 
   the International Criminal Court (ICC). Critics fear that the 
   new rules would water down the tribunal.

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

   http://dw-world.de/english/0,3367,1433_A_646978_1_A,00.html
 
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   USA wants inspectors to await resolution

   U.N. weapons inspectors negotiating with Iraqi officials in Vienna
   have rejected a U.S. demand that inspectors delay their return to
   Baghdad until passage of a tough new U.N. disarmament resolution.
   A spokeswoman for the International Atomic Energy Agency said the
   inspectors were bound only by existing U.N. Security Council
   resolutions. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell had said the U.N.
   needed to show muscle to deter Iraq from hampering its inspectors.
   Little detail has emerged from a second day of talks in Vienna, but
   earlier chief inspector Hans Blix had said logistic problems needed
   to be sorted out, and, he added, he was answerable only to the U.N.
   Sources in Vienna said a key issue was access to sites of the Iraqi
   interior and defence ministries and the palaces of Saddam Hussein.


   Blair defends hardline stance

   At a conference of the governing British Labour Party, Prime
   Minister Tony Blair has defended his alignment with the hardline
   policy on Iraq of U.S. President George W. Bush.
   In a reference to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, Blair said a
   readiness to use force was necessary in dealing with a dictator.
   Facing sceptics within his own party, Blair denied that Britain had
   slavishly become an outpost of the United States. A survey published
   by the leftist "Guardian" newspaper shows that public support within
   Britain for military action against Iraq has faded to 33 percent.


   Iraq warns Turkey to deny USA use of bases

   Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister Tarik Aziz has warned neighbouring
   Turkey not to allow its military bases to be used by the United
   States for an offensive against Iraq.
   If it did, Iraq would no longer regard Turkey as its friend, Aziz
   said while visiting Ankara for talks with Turkish premier Bulent
   Ecevit. On Monday, U.S. State Department diplomat, Elizabeth Jones,
   had visited Turkey and urged it to adopt a tough stance toward Iraq.


   Seven die during Kashmir vote

   Gunmen have killed seven people on a bus in Indian Kashmir and
   attacked several polling stations as voters shunned the third round
   of elections in the state's separatist heartland. India has billed
   the vote, which ends next week, as a test of Pakistan's pledge to
   curb the flow of militants across the border into the Moslem-
   majority state, but more 600 people have died since the poll was
   called in early August. Voting stations were open across four
   districts but many voters stayed away. Suspected rebels attacked
   several polling stations with grenades and automatic rifles,
   injuring almost a dozen paramilitary soldiers.


   Two Indian navy planes collide in mid-air

   Two Indian naval reconnaissance planes taking part in a ceremonial
   flypast have collided in mid-air over the western state of Goa,
   killing 15 people. Twelve of the dead were crew members aboard the
   planes, two Russian-made Ilyushins. Three other victims died on the
   ground as one of the planes crashed into a bungalow that was under
   construction.


   Mediation attempt in Ivory Coast

   Mediators from three west African ECOWAS nations planned today to
   visit rebels in Ivory Coast as France flew in 70 more soldiers to
   assist the Ivorian government, reportedly with "logistics".
   The mediators from Nigeria, Ghana and Togo had talks with Ivorian
   President Laurent Gbagbo on Monday night. On Sunday, a regional
   summit decided on mediation but warned, that if this failed, a west
   African intervention force would be sent. Today, witnesses quoted by
   the German news agency DPA spoke of hefty fighting around the
   central Ivorian town of Tiebissou. Ivorian television claimed that
   troops had recaptured it, the agency said. The rebels, who staged a
   putsch attempt two weeks ago, still hold the cities of Korhogo and
   Bouake. Last week French troops evacuated foreigners from Bouake.


   Mesic confronts Milosevic in court

   Croatia's President Stipe Mesic has testified at the trial of
   Slobodan Milosevic, accusing him of inciting ethnic violence that
   cost 20,000 lives in Croatia and resulted in Yugoslavia's break up.
   Mesic, who was Yugoslav federal president until 1991, said Milosevic
   "always" worked for the "war option" and made the Yugoslav army
   solely Serbian while pursuing his dream of a Greater Serbia. By
   initially encouraging ethnic Serbs in Croatia to seize land,
   Milosevic lit a "fuse", Mesic said, that spread war to multi-ethnic
   Bosnia. Milosevic, who is due to cross-examine Mesic on Wednesday,
   faces 61 charges, including genocide. Last month, prosecutors at the
   U.N. tribunal in The Hague wrapped up their case on Kosovo.


   Kidnap victim presumed murdered

   German police say Jakob von Metzler, the 11-year-old son of a
   prominent Frankfurt banking family, who was kidnapped last Friday,
   was probably murdered.
   This follows the discovery of a body at a small lake near Frankfurt.
   Police have sealed off the area as forensic investigations continue.
   On Monday, police arrested a 27-year-old man after he had allegedly
   picked up a one million euro ransom. A senior police officer said
   the case was unprecedented in Frankfurt's recent history.


   Coalition talks resume in Berlin

   Germany's re-elected Social Democrats and Greens have resumed
   negotiations to craft a new government programme after agreeing to
   stop budgetary holes with spending cuts rather than tax increases.
   With unemployment stuck around four million and the DAX index of
   Germany's leading shares at six-year lows, the parties are searching
   for ways to revive growth in Europe's largest economy after winning
   a second term in Germany's election a week ago.


 
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