Deutsche Welle
   English Service News
   October, 06th, 2002, 16:00 UTC
 
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   Today's highlight on DW-WORLD:

   Bush Praises German-American Relations

   US President Bush took the occaision of German-American Day on
October 6
   to laud German-American relations, while people in both countries
   celebrated German-American cultural ties which have a 300 year
history.

   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_650122_1_A,00.html
 
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   Oil tanker ablaze off Yemen

   A large French tanker is on fire and leaking crude oil off eastern
   Yemen's port of Mina al-Thabah after what French embassy officials
   said was an attack by a small boat laden with explosives. The Yemini
   owner also said that his tanker was rammed. Except for one missing
   crew member, all 24 others were reported safe. The attack is similar
   to that two years ago, when suicide bombers rammed the U.S.
   destroyer Cole in Port Aden. The scene this time is 700 kilometres
   east of Aden. The tanker, the Limburg was approaching a terminal to
   load Yemeni oil. Already on board was oil from Iran.


   Europe still split over U.S. stance on Iraq

   EU defence ministers meeting on Crete have failed to agree on a
   joint position on Iraq as EU member Britain, like the USA, presses
   for a tough new U.N. resolution. This has been rejected so far by
   Russia and France. German Defence Minister Peter Struck said Germany
   continued to reject the USA's hard stance. The EU ministers did,
   however, decide that the European Union's own rapid- reaction force
   should be operational by next year. It will comprise about 60,000
   troops.


   Bush signals thaw in U.S.-German tensions

   This Sunday has been declared by U.S. President George W. Bush to be
   German-American Day in an apparent thaw in strains over Chancellor
   Gerhard Schroeder's anti-war stance on Iraq. Mr.Bush spoke of
   friendship forged after World War Two and centuries of
   German-American immigration. Last month, the White House rebuked Mr.
   Schroeder's campaign for re-election, saying ties were poisoned. For
   months,President Bush and Chancellor Schroeder have not met.


   Red Cross planning for possibility of war in Iraq

   The International Committee of the Red Cross has begun contingency
   planning to meet additional humanitarian needs in case of war
   against Iraq, its president said in an interview published Sunday in
   Switzerland. US President George Bush cranked up pressure on Iraq
   over the weekend, warning in his weekly radio address on Saturday
   that war may be unavoidable. The main tasks of the ICRC in such a
   conflict would be providing relief to the victims of conflict and
   ensuring respect for international humanitarian rights. The
   organization has been active in Iraq for many years, with the
   repatriation of prisoners of war from the Iraq-Iran war in the 1980s
   one of their main efforts.


   Turkey to consider military response if Iraqi Kurds seek independence

   Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit warned on Sunday that his
   country could consider a military operation against a possible
   independence bid by Kurds in neighboring northern Iraq. Turkey has
   acknowledged that it already has a certain number of soldiers in
   northern Iraq. The Iraqi Kurds have been running northern Iraq
   outside Baghdad's authority and under the protection of a
   US-enforced no-fly zone since the 1991 Gulf War.Turkey is alarmed
   that they could move towards independence, if the United States
   topples Saddam Hussein, setting an example for its own Kurds in
   adjoining southeastern Turkey. Turkey's fears over a possible
   Kurdish state in the region lies at the core of its opposition to US
   plans to change the regime in Baghdad and has accused Washington of
   encouraging the Iraqi Kurds to move towards independence.


   Huge crowds as Pope makes saint of Opus Dei founder

   Pope John Paul made a saint on Sunday of Josemaria Escriva de
   Balaguer, the controversial founder of the conservative Roman
   Catholic group Opus Dei, before one of the biggest crowds ever to
   flood the Vatican. About 300,000 pilgrims from 80 countries filled
   St. Peter's Square and spilled into surrounding piazzas for the
   ceremony . Saint Escriva is the 468th saint proclaimed by Pope John
   Paul, who has declared more saints than all of his predecessors in
   the last four centuries combined.Saint Escriva founded Opus Dei,
   which means "God's Work", in Spain in 1928. It now has 1,800 Opus
   Dei priests and 84,000 members worldwide, many of them
   professionals. Opus Dei has frequently been accused of having a
   dangerous, secret and fundamentalist agenda.


   Beer lovers gulp last litres as Oktoberfest ends

   Revellers at Munich's Oktoberfest, the world's biggest beer
   festival, geared up for massive hangovers on Sunday as the annual
   drinking event came to a close. Beer enthusiasts quaffed almost 6
   million litres of strong Bavarian beer during the 16-day festival,
   which is 18 percent more than last year, when the atmosphere was
   subdued in reaction to the September 11 attacks on the United States.
   More than 6 million visitors thronged the 14 tents, some as large as
   football fields for the festival, a rise of seven percent from last
   year. The Oktoberfest was first held to celebrate the wedding in 1810
   of Bavarian Crown Prince Ludwig and Princes Therese of
   Saxony-Hildburghausen.


   Embattled German politician taken to hospital

   The former deputy head of Germany's pro-business Free Democrats,
   whose repeated criticism of Israel was blamed for his party's poor
   result in last month's election, was taken to hospital with heart
   problems on Sunday. Juergen Moellemann was forced to quit as deputy
   leader of the Free Democrats last month amid accusations of
   anti-Semitism over his criticisms of Israel and a leader of
   Germany's Jewish community. Mr. Moellemann was taken to a clinic in
   Muenster when an irregular heartbeat was detected, a spokesman said.
   The controversial politician is a colourful figure on the German
   political scene, often arriving at campaign rallies by parachute.


   Beer lovers gulp last litres as Oktoberfest ends

   Revellers at Munich's Oktoberfest, the world's biggest beer
   festival, geared up for massive hangovers on Sunday as the annual
   drinking event came to a close. Beer enthusiasts quaffed almost 6
   million litres of strong Bavarian beer during the 16-day festival,
   which is 18 percent more than last year, when the atmosphere was
   subdued in reaction to the September 11 attacks on the United States.
   More than 6 million visitors thronged the 14 tents, some as large as
   football fields for the festival, a rise of seven percent from last
   year. The Oktoberfest was first held to celebrate the wedding in 1810
   of Bavarian Crown Prince Ludwig and Princes Therese of
   Saxony-Hildburghausen.


 
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