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-- British perspective on World News. They also have a weekly newsletter like this - Business perspective. Check out their briefings by country. Unfortunately Afganistan not there, so I looking at Pankstan, Iran, neighbors. This culture is pretty alien compared to what it was in the Gulf War. MacWheel99@aol.com (Alister Wm Macintyre) (Al Mac) -- From: The_Economist-politics-admin@lists.economist.com To: MACWHEEL99@AOL.COM Subject: The world this week: Politics 8th - 14th September 2001 Date: Thu, 13 Sep 2001 16:35:35 EDT Reply-To: politics-reply@lists.economist.com Welcome to The world this week: Politics A summary of the world's main events from The Economist. Also available at http://www.economist.com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ADVERTISEMENT - Hyatt Find a little Financial Relief. Free Breakfast. Free Phone Calls. Hyatt has FREE BREAKFAST and an AT&T PHONE CARD, good for 15 minutes of reliable US domestic phone calls. Plus, waived phone access charges for all "800," local, and credit card calls. Just book the Hyatt Business Plan®. Valid through December 30, 2001. http://www.hyattbusinessedge.com/businessedge.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - IN THE ECONOMIST THIS WEEK - War on America–a special seven-page section devoted to the attacks on New York and Washington and the consequences for America * The new enemy * Who was running the country? * New York city fights back * The devastation in Washington * Who did it? * Understanding Afghanistan * Solidarity from Europe * The Middle East, divided * The holes in airport security You can read these articles, and many more, in the free area of Economist.com, at http://www.economist.com. Subscribers can also read 40 more new articles. Click here to subscribe: <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_15483_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5e">Subscriptions</a> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ATTACK ON AMERICA AMERICA suffered the worst terrorist attack ever. Suicide hijackers crashed two fuel-laden passenger jets into the towers of the World Trade Centre in New York, both of which caught fire and collapsed, killing office workers and rescue workers alike. The entire southern end of Manhattan was evacuated. - - - - - See article: The new enemy <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27424_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5c">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80351</a> Another hijacked aircraft was flown into the PENTAGON in Washington, DC, and a fourth plane crashed near Pittsburgh. The total death toll was estimated to run into thousands. - - - - - See article: A scarred capital <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27423_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5b">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80378</a> AIRPORTS, BORDERS AND STOCKMARKETS IN AMERICA were closed, and flights to, from and within America were grounded. Politicians around the world condemned the attacks and promised help in finding the terrorists. President George Bush promised to hunt down the perpetrators of what he called "an act of war" and put America's armed forces on high alert. - - - - - See article: Old friends, best friends <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27426_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5e">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80405</a> No terrorist groups claimed responsibility for the attacks but suspicion immediately fell on OSAMA BIN LADEN, a Saudi dissident and already the most wanted man in America, at present thought to be in Afghanistan. - - - - - See article: Who did it? <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27425_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5d">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80385</a> CLAMPDOWN Israeli tanks destroyed the security headquarters in the Palestinian-controlled city of Jenin. ISRAEL claimed that the city was a "terrorist nest" and launch-pad for several recent attacks by Palestinian suicide bombers. American and British aircraft attacked three surface-to-air missile sites in the southern "no-fly" zone of IRAQ. The attack was part of a plan to disable Saddam Hussein's air defences. SYRIA arrested five leading opposition members and human-rights activists as part of a month-long clampdown on dissidents. The arrests followed the detention of two opposition members of parliament and the leader of a banned faction of the Communist Party. - - - - - See article: Autumn in Damascus <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27428_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_60">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80546</a> Suspected Islamist rebels killed 11 civilians and wounded nine at a funeral in ALGERIA'S western province of Arzew. Nine people died in a recent similar attack in the resort area of Zeralda. Clashes continued between Christians and Muslims in the city of Jos in central NIGERIA. Some 500 people have been killed in a week-long bout of violence. - - - - - See article: The roots of violence <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27427_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5f">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80563</a> At Commonwealth talks in Nigeria, Robert Mugabe's government agreed to carry out land reform fairly and legally in ZIMBABWE in return for a pledge by Britain to find money to pay for the programme, but violent occupations continued. At a special southern African summit in Harare, governments of neighbouring countries extracted similar promises and blamed Zimbabwe for spreading disorder in the region. - - - - - See article: The pressure builds <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27431_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5a">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80536</a> EX-MARXISTS WIN Fretilin, formerly a Marxist party, won 55 of the 88 seats in EAST TIMOR'S constituent assembly and is expected to form the country's first government when it becomes independent next year. - - - - - See article: After the vote, the constitution <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27430_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_59">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80516</a> A government composed entirely of ethnic Fijians was formed in FIJI after a general election. Fijians of Indian descent complained that they had been unlawfully excluded. - - - - - See article: Still divided <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27429_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_61">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80489</a> AUSTRALIA'S Federal Court ruled that its government had acted illegally in refusing 434 refugees permission to apply for asylum in the country and that they must be allowed to land. They had been rescued by a Norwegian ship and brought to Australian territorial water. The government intends to appeal. Thousands of PHILIPPINE workers held a rally in front of the presidential palace in Manila, demanding a 50% increase in the minimum wage, at present the equivalent of $4.50 a day. NORTH KOREA barred Japanese officials from entering the country to monitor the use of food aid, complaining that Japan was developing a missile that could be used against it. Asia's first case of MAD-COW DISEASE was reported on a farm in Chiba, near Tokyo. NATO MAY STAY In MACEDONIA, NATO said its troops had collected half of the arms that ethnic-Albanian rebels are supposed to hand in by September 26th. Macedonia's parliament voted for reforms to raise the status of the Albanian language and bring more of the Albanian minority into the police. But many of the Slavic majority, top politicians included, sounded keen to bash the Albanians once NATO's force had left. EU foreign ministers proposed a new, smaller but long-term NATO force to keep the peace. - - - - - See article: No outside police? No peace <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27432_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5b">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80593</a> BELARUS'S president, Alexander Lukashenka, was re-elected with 76% of the vote. He rigged it, claimed the country's opposition. - - - - - See article: The nostalgic opposition <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27433_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5c">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80583</a> NORWAY'S Labour Party, in power for most of the past 70 years, won a general election with a much-reduced vote. Parties of the right may form a coalition government. - - - - - See article: Labour wins but loses <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27435_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5e">http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID×80603</a> Britain and France argued over the rush of ASYLUM-SEEKERS trying to sneak into Britain through the Channel Tunnel. Eurotunnel, a train operator, failed in its bid to have a French court order the closure of a Red Cross centre that houses them near the tunnel's French entrance. In FRANCE, Jean-Pierre Chevenement, a left-winger many times a minister, held his first campaign meeting for next year's presidential election, claiming to be above party and with repeated references to, yes, Charles de Gaulle. DEMOCRACY GUARANTEED? At a meeting in Peru attended by representatives of 34 countries, the Organisation of American States adopted an INTER-AMERICAN DEMOCRATIC CHARTER designed to deter not just coups but the subversion of constitutional rule by elected leaders. - - - - - See article: No coups, please <a hrefÒhttp://TheEconomist.s.maildart.net/link_27451_6363894_3_85732255_42954403_1_5c">See article: No coups, please</a> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The day the world changed - The day the world changed - a special report in this week's Economist covering how America will respond, the likely suspects, the mixed emotions in the Middle East and the reaction from Europe. 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