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part when the terrifying power that had silenced ethnic desires and rivalrie
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ll apart when the terrifying power that had silenced ethnic desires and rivalrie s for so many years lost its grip . Its first leader after independence , Zviad Gamsakhurdia , was ousted in a coup in January 1992 after behaving erratically . He fled the country , but he returned to launch an offensive against the govern ment last fall . At the same time , separatists from the Abkhazia region along t he Black Sea took up arms in earnest . Shevardnadze flew to the regional capital of Sukhumi to rally his troops and vowed to defend the city to the end . But hi s troops were routed , and he barely escaped with his life . About 250,000 Georg ians were driven out of their homes by the minority Abkhaz ethnic group , and ma ny now are living a bleak existence in Tbilisi hotels . Another ethnic battle is being waged in South Ossetia . Between the two regions , Georgia has lost contr ol over about one-fifth of its territory . `` Georgia is in the worst trouble ec onomically of all the former republics , '' Shevardnadze said , speaking quietly , almost sadly in his large , spartan office after having spent the day arguing with his fractious Parliament . War and political uncertainty have very nearly destroyed the economy . The average wage in the country is 50 cents a month , do wn from $ 1 a month last fall . Georgia issued its own currency , called the cou pon , a year ago because it couldn't get enough rubles from Russia . The coupon , which was introduced at parity to the ruble , now sells for a million to the d ollar , while the ruble trades for about 1,800 to the dollar . ( Begin optional trim ) The demise of the currency has nearly destroyed the older generation . Th e pension of Tsiala Mchedlishvili , 64 , is now worth 9 cents a month . `` I wor ked all my life in construction , '' she said as she walked along Leselidze stre et . `` I had to haul cement and drag blocks . `` Now , '' she said , throwing h er arms out , `` nothing . '' `` My whole month 's pension will only buy half a cup of yogurt , '' she said . Like other Georgians , Mchedlishvili spent the win ter with intermittent electricity and without heat or hot water . Georgia can no longer afford to buy much fuel from Russia , another consequence of the breakup of the Soviet Union and one that prevents most factories from operating . While people suffer , the politicians hurl accusations at each other . Shevardnadze ' s nationalist critics accuse him of humiliating Georgia by crawling to Russia fo r help . Many Georgians loathe Russia , certain that it intends to rebuild its e mpire . Russians are accused of fighting on the Abkhazian side an assertion dipl omats here support to weaken Georgia so it would seek Russian protection and to sabotage Shevardnadze , who , paradoxically , is blamed by Russians , especially in the military , for destroying the Soviet Union . In fact , as soon as Shevar dnadze agreed to join the Commonwealth of Independent States and promised milita ry bases to Russia , Russia intervened and put a stop to the fighting in Abkhazi a . A cease-fire was signed in Moscow May 14 , but clashes still have been repor ted . ( End optional trim ) Georgia is deeply important to Russia , said George Tarkhan-Mouravi , a member of the board of the institute , even though it should n't be . `` Rationally , Georgia would only weaken the ruble zone , '' he said . `` Mostly , Russians feel a sense of loss , that they lost something that belon ged to them . '' Nodar Natadze , a member of Parliament and head of the national ist Popular Front party , said Russia wants nothing less than the restoration of its empire . `` Oh yes , oh yes , oh yes , '' said Natadze , `` they want the e mpire . The average Russian has no hope of prospering personally . He knows he ' ll never win in a peaceful competition with Germany or America . The only satisf action he can feel as a man is to know Russia as a superpower and to know his co untry as all powerful . `` And if he can only achieve that by sacrificing democr acy and his personal welfare , he will do it . The only way to lure the average Russian to democracy is to make him lose any hope of restoring the empire . '' V ladimir V. Zemsky , Russia 's ambassador to Georgia , denied that Russia has any wish to rebuild the empire . `` We want a strong , healthy Georgia , '' he said . `` Russia wants peace on its southern border . '' Natadze , 65 , a courtly li nguistics professor , praised Shevardnadze for bringing Georgia out of internati onal isolation . But he said he is too steeped in the past to save Georgia . She vardnadze counters that some criticize him for being too pro-Russian and others for not being pro-Russian enough . `` I 'm a realist , '' he said . `` At this s tage , only Russia can help . We have nothing . We don't even have guns for our police . There is no other way . '' ( Optional add end ) Georgia , a small natio n of 5 million people , must find peace and stability to attract investment . So far , there are only two signs of Western investment here : Coca Cola , which h as lots of flashy advertisements but a market of paupers , and a lovely , four-s tar Austrian-built hotel a $ 175-a-day island of luxury . Back in the late 1970s it was Shevardnadze who persuaded his friend Mikhail S. Gorbachev that the Sovi et system was rotten and needed rebuilding . The glory days of perestroika ensue d . Now most of the world has forgotten those euphoric days of watching as an em pire slowly freed itself of a repressive past . No one 's thanking Shevardnadze any more , though Maria Barlett , a former music teacher in St. Mary 's County , Maryland , who answers his English correspondence , says former U.S. Secretary of State James A . Baker III still writes . But in Georgia , Shevardnadze looks a tragic figure indeed . He seems very alone in his large office , tired and dis pirited , though pink-cheeked and charming as ever . He answers slowly and thoug htfully questions that he has been asked many times before , as if for the first and most important time . `` Personally , I 'd be happier if I could be in Gorb achev 's situation , '' he said . `` But my personal happiness would be incompat ible with my country 's . I must be here if my country needs me . '' And , while no one is thanking him here , no one can come up with a better alternative , ei ther . `` Georgia must be saved , '' said Shevardnadze . `` By whose hand it 's saved is not important . '' MEXICO CITY Bracing for a long throw , the young man in the print shirt drew hi s arm back and let fly an egg . The crowd behind him cheered as yolk splattered across the district offices of the Institutional Revolutionary Party that has ru led Mexico for 65 years . No party faithful rushed out to stop the vandalism ; t he egg-thrower and his cheering section are party faithful . They were sullying their own headquarters to protest the selection of labor boss Carlos Aceves as c andidate for federal deputy in their district . They supported a different local leader . Across Mexico , grass-roots activists have blocked streets and roads , occupied party offices and resigned from the PRI , as the governing party is kn own , in protest over the congressional candidate roster for the Aug. 21 federal elections . Officially , party leaders pass off the protests as signs of health y competition . But privately , some PRI members worry that disappointed rank-an d-file activists may stay away from the polls in protest or even vote for the op position . `` Face it , '' one longtime party member said . `` They picked some really bad candidates this time . '' In too many districts , he said , candidate s have influence inside the PRI because of their ties to labor unions , farm gro ups and party leaders but little popular recognition , much less support . Getti ng them elected will be tough . Beyond the quality of the candidates , the prote sts reflect conflicts over the selection process and the PRI 's identity as a pa rty . Traditionally , the PRI is made up of three groups : labor unions , peasan t farmers and a nebulous `` popular sector . '' The party also has a parallel re gional structure of municipal- and state-level activists . Candidate selection i s a power struggle among those groups . The popular sector and regional groups p ress for a more openly democratic selection process that favors local leaders wh o will represent each district 's interests . Unions and farmers press for their quotas of congressional seats to look after their interests . Those seats are u sually assigned by the party leadership , often ignoring the wishes of grass-roo ts activists . This month , dozens of those activists refused to be ignored . Br eaking party discipline , those `` natural leaders , '' as they called themselve s , registered their candidacies at party headquarters , even though they had no t received the nod from higher-ups . That forced a vote at their local conventio ns instead of the usual selection by unanimous acclaim . ( End optional trim ) G etting union and farm candidates approved by local convention delegates in the f ace of competition required fancy footwork in some cases . A lexicon of dirty tr icks that has grown up around election fraud came into play . There is `` the cr azy mouse , '' changing the location of a convention at the last minute without advising delegates ; `` madruguete , '' changing the time ; and `` acarreo , '' bringing in outsiders to vote as delegates . Mexican newspapers published accusa tions of and in some cases documented the use of each of those tricks during loc al party conventions this month . Some grass-roots activists tried pre-emptive s trikes , such as taking over party offices . After the egg-throwing did not conv ince party leaders that they were serious , members of the Independent Popular O rganization invaded district headquarters to prevent the local convention . ( En d optional trim ) As pressure grew , some labor candidates such as Juana Maria G onzalez in the mining state of San Luis Potosi who resigned for health reasons s tepped down in favor of local candidates . Party leaders tried to calm protests by offering disappointed candidates congressional seats as party representatives offices that are distributed after the election based on the percentage of vote s each party receives . But for many , consolation prizes were not enough . Emil io Serrano , president of the Neighbors Committee of Iztacalco , a working-class borough of Mexico City , resigned from the PRI after losing the party nominatio n for city assemblyman . `` Other parties have offered me a candidacy , particul arly the PRD , '' he explained , referring to the Democratic Revolutionary Party , whose leadership includes former PRI activists . However , Serrano may be dis appointed with that party as well . `` None of us can be completely happy with t he way our candidates were chosen , '' PRD Chairman Porfirio Munoz Ledo acknowle dged at a swearing-in ceremony for those candidates . He proposed `` re-founding '' the party to better ensure respect for democratic ideals . CHICAGO On the sun-swept streets of Kostkaville , on sandlot ball fields and in the pews of cavernous limestone churches , there is no confusing the plight of the neighborhood congressman with the fate of the nation . Named after a Polish saint , this grid of row houses is the heart of Rep. Dan Rostenkowski 's home ba se , a place where the embattled House Ways and Means chairman matters more for the little things he does than for his legendary Washington clout . It is the li ttle things toasters and appliances for the sisters of St. Stanislaus Kostka , p ark fees for fast-pitch softball teams , a lucrative fund-raiser for the Polish Museum of America that many of Rostenkowski 's constituents fear they will miss most if he is convicted in the 17 federal criminal charges leveled against him T uesday . `` This is a guy who 's always giving back to the community , '' said K elly Torres , a city supervisor at Pulaski Park , a square-block field across th e street from Rostenkowski 's home . `` He helps people around here in a thousan d different ways . Nobody wants to see him go . '' His prominence atop the commi ttee overseeing the nation 's tax laws has helped Rostenkowski become Congress ' leading earner of honorariums , fees that legislators earn for making personal appearances before lobbyists and special interest groups . Last year , Rostenkow ski made $ 80,500 in honorariums . Under federal law , the fees must go to chari ty , providing Rostenkowski with ample amounts to donate to pet causes ranging f rom orphanages to hot dog lunches for neighborhood children . Those who rely on the chairman 's speaking engagements and on excess funds from his campaign coffe rs are , predictably , among his most ardent loyalists . They talk protectively of his generous nature a side of Rostenkowski they insist the outside world rare ly sees . And they worry that any successor might sorely lack his human touch . `` People realize that if we lose him , we lose something special , '' said the Rev. Joseph Glab , a priest at St. Stanislaus Kostka , Rostenkowski 's home chur ch . `` He has a real connection with people in this neighborhood . A city is on ly as important as its neighborhoods and he 's part of ours . '' ( Begin optiona l trim ) It was Rostenkowski who quietly wrote a check to the church 's nuns aft er he learned in a conversation with Glab that the appliances in their convent h ad fallen into disrepair . And it was Rostenkowski who made the largest donation six years ago to a $ 140,000 renovation campaign to repair the church 's bell t ower , electric system and scarred interior . Rostenkowski has chipped in for tr ophies and park fees for neighborhood Little League teams and bought uniforms fo r the Deadmen , an amateur football club . A contribution from his campaign fund s paid for a Polish Constitution Day performance by the Li ' l Richard Polka Ban d which replied in kind by playing `` The Danny Rostenkowski Polka . '' There ar e times when goodness has little to do with altruism and much to do with the uns poken quid pro quos of politics . Joanna Janowski , the curator of the Polish Mu seum of America , is grateful for Rostenkowski 's occasional contributions . But she appreciates even more the donations that have come in his honor . When Rost enkowski was awarded the Polish Spirit Award at the museum 's annual Summer Ball in June 1992 , his presence brought the museum $ 85,000 in donations more than four times what it normally brings in for the event , Janowski said . Among the contributors were lobbying and commercial giants like the Philip Morris Co. ( $ 5,000 ) , the Sara Lee Corp. ( $ 5,000 ) and the National Food Processors Associ ation ( $ 2,000 ) . ( End optional trim ) But others in his district concede tha t Rostenkowski calls in on old favors from those he has helped with his charity . In the furious final days of last March 's Democratic primary , Rostenkowski ' s aides boasted that his extensive network of prominent friends helped dispel th e stigma of corruption that hampered his re-election bid against two Democratic Party challengers . Rostenkowski was praised in letters written on behalf of his campaign by Rev. James Close , director of the the Mercy Home for Boys and Girl s , a well-known local orphanage , and by Rev. John Smyth , head of the Maryvill e City of Youth , a Catholic academy . After President Clinton determined last month to extend normal trading arrangem ents with China , the Beijing regime responded that `` the current situation off ers a historic opportunity for the enhancement '' of bilateral relations . With North Korea pushing ahead with its nuclear weapons program , that `` historic op portunity '' is already at hand . China holds the key to effective international sanctions against Pyongyang . If it turns that key , it would not be due to U.S . pressure ; it would reflect China 's assessment of its own national interests . Having de-linked trade and human rights issues , the United States should not try to link China 's nuclear non-proliferation policies with any other significa nt feature in the relationship . If we are to have mature ties with Beijing , th ey must be based on respect , not threat . This will be the best way to deal wit h the Hong Kong and Taiwan questions as well as the immediate crisis posed by No rth Korea . The pressure is on Beijing as the Security Council nears considerati on of international sanctions against Pyongyang . Will China vote yes , abstain ( most likely ) or cast a veto ? As the major supplier of food , oil and coal to North Korea , it is loath to weaken a fellow Communist regime right on its bord er . Yet it also has reason to fear the instability that would be created by a n uclear North Korea threatening war against South Korea and stimulating Japan to develop its own nuclear capability . Obviously these considerations must loom la rge in Chinese calculations . Beijing should seize the moment to demonstrate tha t it is ready to play a vigorous role in stopping the spread of nuclear weapons . North Korea has rebuffed International Atomic Energy Agency inspection of its Yongbyon nuclear reactor . As a result , the IAEA has lost any chance of determi ning if fuel has been diverted for bomb-making purposes . This being the case , a tough new question arises : How should North Korea be punished for its past vi olations without jeopardizing any chance for bringing future North Korean nuclea r operations under control ? Unlike Somalia or Bosnia or Haiti , North Korea wou ld challenge vital U.S. security interests if it succeeds in setting a precedent that nations can violate the Non-Proliferation Treaty with impunity . Therefore , global economic sanctions are needed . There are , however , ways to steer th is situation to a solution short of a second Korean war . The sanctions could be gradual and tailored to China 's wishes . Russia 's proposal for an internation al conference could give North Korea the chance for a climb-down without loss of face . Japan could move to curb more than $ 1 billion a year in remittances fro m expatriate North Koreans to their homeland . And the United States could expli citly raise the prospect of full diplomatic relations with North Korea if it sto ps defying international rules of conduct and becomes a law-abiding nation . Chi na , however , is the decisive factor . Clearly , the situation cries out for Si no-American cooperation at a level never achieved before . WASHINGTON Helen Briggs Ramsey spent two years in Europe during World War II he lping injured soldiers of the Army 's 101st Airborne Division as one of the Red Cross 's `` Donut Dollies . '' By all accounts a gutsy woman , she once tried in vain to persuade the paratroopers to take her on a jump . For the rest of her l ife , `` Briggsy '' had a special place in her heart for the airborne soldiers w ho landed in Normandy on June 6 , 1944 . She attended many of their reunions and even considered going to France with the veterans for the 50th anniversary cele brations taking place during the next few days . A friend who visited her in her Capitol Hill home on Memorial Day found her videotaping shows about the D-Day i nvasion . Early Tuesday , a burglar broke into her house while she was outside s ummoning her cat , Canteen . He bound and gagged her , beat her up and stole som e small objects , police said . Ramsey , 78 , died of her injuries Thursday . Ac ross the area last week , Ramsey 's friends remembered her dedication to the mil itary and the hundreds of photographs , plaques and other memorabilia she kept i n her home . They remembered how her eyes lit up when she talked about `` my guy s '' and the enthusiasm with which she was anticipating the D-Day anniversary on Monday . Steve Baka , president of the District of Columbia chapter of the 101s t Airborne Division Association , a veterans group , met Ramsey at the commemora tion of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial a decade ago . He said many of her friends are in France for the anniversary and aren't aware that she had been slain . `` Everyone is going to be devastated , '' he said . On Sunday , he said , she was with a group of veterans who laid wreaths at the Wall and at the 101st Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery in honor of members of the division who died in battle . `` She was something else , '' said D.C. police Capt. Glenn Hoppert , a longtime friend of Ramsey . `` She probably knows more generals than any woman I know . She was well liked among the members of the 101st . '' D.C. police have made no arrests in the slaying of Ramsey , who had lived alone in a two-story r ow house on Capitol Hill since she was widowed 20 years ago . Military officials , many of whom got to know Ramsey during her volunteer work organizing reunions for the 101st , were shaken by the news of her death . Gen. J.H. Binford Peay I II , Army vice chief of staff and commander of the 101st Airborne Division durin g Operation Desert Storm , said through a spokesman that he was not aware of Ram sey 's death until a reporter called his office . He had spoken with her recentl y and knew her well . `` Not only will I and other members of the 101st Airborne Division Association miss Briggsy , but also the members of the United States A rmy , '' he said . `` She selflessly contributed her time and talent to the men and women in the Army from World War II to the present , and for that we are gra teful . '' Ramsey worked for the Red Cross as a civilian for two years during Wo rld War II , and at one point operated a hotel for transient Red Cross volunteer s in Europe . She also ran a night club for the soldiers . Though Ramsey never g ot to make her parachute jump during World War II , she fulfilled that dream las t year when she parachuted in tandem with a member of the Golden Eagles jump tea Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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