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es , '' Perry said . Western defense officials have tried to reassure the Russia ns they will be accorded all of the importance warranted by their country and it s special place in Europe . But by insisting that all partners must play by the same rules , they are trying to relieve fears among East Europeans that they wil l again fall under Russian military domination . The Partnership for Peace is a kind of junior varsity team for NATO an arrangement that seeks to include East E uropean states in security discussions but does not give them full membership in the alliance . The concept emerged as an alternative to granting former Soviet satellites immediate membership in NATO . Some ranking U.S. officials said admit ting Poland , Hungary and other former Soviet satellites into the alliance would offend Russian sensibilities . After expressing some dismay for what they perce ived as second-class status , 18 states from Eastern Europe and parts of the for mer Soviet Union have signed up for the Partnership for Peace since NATO heads o f government launched the project at a summit here last January . NATO countries and their eastern partners are planning to conduct joint military exercises thi s fall in Poland and the Netherlands . Seeking to reassure Moscow that the partn ership was in no way targeted against them , Perry urged the Russians to climb a board what he called `` a fast-moving train '' that is rapidly gathering momentu m . He stressed that NATO is eager to take advantage of Russia 's military power through peacekeeping initiatives that he expects will become part of the Partne rship for Peace program . `` In terms of the number of troops they have , in ter ms of the quality of troops , training and equipment they have , it would be a r eal asset to the Partnership for Peace were they to join it , '' Perry said . WASHINGTON Most of the people working for the federal government , from Clinton appointees to long-time civil servants , are saving for a rainy day , house pur chase , college or retirement by putting tax-deferred dollars into their thrift savings plan . The rapid growth of the plan during its first seven years has mad e federal and postal workers some of the biggest players in the stock and bond m arkets . The thrift savings plan , Uncle Sam 's version of the 401 ( k ) plan av ailable to many private sector workers , could make many steady investors millio naires by the time they are ready to retire . Some high-income employees who joined at the beginning and made maximum contrib utions to the higher risk stock and bond funds now have accounts worth more than $ 100,000 . Higher-income workers who made the maximum contributions to the hig her risk stock or bond funds now have accounts worth well over $ 100,000 . Sligh ty more than 1.5 million of 2.6 million eligible employees have invested in the stock , bond or Treasury funds . Workers in the new Federal Employees Retirement System can contribute up to 10 percent of pay ( to the $ 9,240 limit ) and get a matching 5 percent goverment contribution . Those in the old Civil Service Ret irement System , mostly people hired before 1983 , can contribute 5 percent of s alary . The savings plan has three funds : The G-fund , made up of short-term ri sk-free U.S. Treasury securities not available to the general public , returned 6.06 percent over the 12 month period ending in April . In 1993 it paid 6.14 per cent . In 1992 , 7.23 percent ; 1991 , 8.15 percent ; 1990 , 8.90 percent and in 1989 it was 8.81 percent . The C-fund ( invested in a stock index fund that tra cks all of the stocks in the S&P 500 Index ) paid 5.33 percent over the past 12 months ; 10.13 percent last year , 7.70 percent in 1992 ; 30.77 percent in 1991 ; lost 3.15 percent in 1990 and paid 31.03 percent in 1989 . The F-fund paid .74 percent over the most recent 12 month period ; 9.52 percent last year ; 7.20 pe rcent in 1992 ; 15.75 percent in 1991 ; 8.00 percent in 1990 and 13.89 percent i n 1989 . Workers can contibute a percentage of pay or a dollar amount . In the n ew book `` Your Thrift Savings Plan , '' author James Sullivan says , `` If you designate a percentage of pay deduction the dollar amount you contribute to the TSP each pay period will automatically increase when your pay increases . For ex ample if you are currently earning $ 1,000 per pay period and designate 5 percen t .. . your deductions will be $ 50 per pay period . If your pay increases to $ 1,060 per pay period your TSP deduction will automatically adjust to $ 53 every pay period . Similarly , if you change job locations and fall under a different locality pay schedule , your TSP contributions automatically increase or decreas e to reflect your new pay . '' Designating a dollar amount , however , means a w orker whose pay increases regularly will still be making contributions to the th rift savings plan as if he or she had never received a raise . Sullivan 's how-t o-invest book costs $ 14.95 plus $ 2 shipping and handling and can be obtained c /o Federal Employees News Digest , P.O. . Box 98123 , Washington , D.C. 20090-81 23 . Or phone orders at ( 703 ) 648-9551 . JERUSALEM Israel sealed off the West Bank town of Jericho Tuesday to give Palestinian police more time to organize th emselves after two armed Jewish settlers were mistakenly detained by police who also temporarily confiscated their weapons . Arafat 's move was seen here as an attempt to unilaterally cancel the body of regulations issued since 1967 by Isra el 's military occupation authorities , and Israel said his announcement violate d the Gaza-Jericho self-rule accord . The closing of Jericho , for one day , was another sign of the uncertainty and confusion surrounding the deployment over t he last two weeks of 3,244 Palestinian fighters from Egypt , Iraq , Sudan and Jo rdan as police in the newly autonomous zones of the Gaza Strip and Jericho . The new police , most of whom do not speak English or Hebrew , have had difficulty communicating at tense moments of confrontation with Israeli Jews who do not spe ak Arabic , and there has been confusion over terms of the agreement under which they are operating . In a visit to the Gaza Strip Tuesday , Prime Minister Yitz hak Rabin expressed sympathy for the early start-up problems , saying most of th e police had not been in the West Bank or Gaza for 27 years and need more time t o get familiar with the area under their control . Israel and the Palestinian po lice have been at odds over whether Jewish settlers should be allowed to carry w eapons in the Jericho self-rule zone . The settlers and the Israeli army say the settlers fall under Israel 's jurisdiction and may continue to carry guns . But the Palestinian police , who are armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles , have r epeatedly insisted that the settlers not carry guns when moving about the Jerich o self-rule zone , away from the Jewish settlements . Except for those working w ith the Israeli security service , Palestinians are not permitted to carry weapo ns in the rest of the West Bank , which is still under Israeli military occupati on , or in Israel . In the latest Jericho incident , two Jews from the nearby se ttlement of Naama were in a money-changer 's shop in Jericho when they were appr oached by a Palestinian policeman . One of the settlers , Yair Yosef , told repo rters the policeman cocked his rifle when the two refused to hand over their sid earms , so they acceded . The two were taken into custody and later released , a nd were permitted to recover their weapons at a joint Israeli-Palestinian securi ty office . The Palestinian police commander later said the incident was a misun derstanding . The army announced that the town was being sealed off for 24 hours barring entry to all outsiders to give the Palestinians more time to explain th e rules to the rank and file . Arafat , in his announcement , appeared to be see king to assert his authority in Gaza and Jericho . He issued the notice , dated May 20 , from Tunis and signed it as head of the Palestinian Authority and the P LO 's executive committee . The notice announced reinstatement of `` all the reg ulations , laws and orders '' that were in effect before the June 1967 war in wh ich Israel captured the West Bank and Gaza Strip . Arafat said the prewar laws w ould remain in effect until differing West Bank and Gaza legal systems could be merged . Before the Israeli occupation , Jordanian law was applied in the West B ank and Egyptian law in Gaza . Both also have remnants of British mandate law fr om the post-World War I era and earlier Turkish law from the period of Ottoman r ule . Arafat ordered Palestinian civil and religious courts to continue working , as well as judges and prosecutors . Palestinians say most of their civil court s in Gaza have been moribund since the the intifada , the Arab uprising against Israeli occupation , began 6 years ago , because they had no authority to enforc e decisions . Judges and prosecutors remained , however , and the courts were pa id for by Israel . Arafat 's order appeared aimed at canceling the 1,300 Israeli military orders issued during 27 years of occupation , although it did not dire ctly mention them . The Israeli orders , enforced through a separate system of m ilitary courts , have long been a hated symbol of the occupation , governing eve ry aspect of Palestinian life , from auto registration to a web of security rest rictions . WASHINGTON The Department of Energy is warning hundreds of current and former w orkers at the Rocky Flats nuclear-weapons complex in Colorado that they were exp osed to higher levels of neutron radiation from 1953 to 1967 than they previousl y had been told , officials said Tuesday . Medical examinations are being offere d to the workers and `` dose reconstruction '' research has begun to determine a ccurate levels of exposure for workers who were either improperly monitored or n ot monitored at all . Preliminary findings already have shown that neutron-sensi tive film used in the employees ' radiation-monitoring badges had been read inco rrectly , resulting in underestimations of exposure , officials said . DOE offic ials said they are notifying about 140 current Rocky Flats employees and soon wi ll begin contacting `` a few hundred '' former employees , out of a total of as many as 3,000 workers exposed to radiation from 1953 , when the plant became ope rational , until 1967 , when monitoring procedures were tightened . Mark N . Sil verman , manager of DOE 's Rocky Flats field office , said the margins of error found so far have been modest . In the worst case , he said , a worker 's radiat ion dose was raised by 1 rem about 20 percent of the annual allowable rate of oc cupational exposure to ionizing radiation . `` So far , the results are encourag ing , although that doesn't make the employees feel any better . Understandably , some of them are asking , ` How can we trust you at all ? ' ' ' Silverman said . He said that although some Rocky Flats workers in the past have blamed their cancers and other illnesses on radiation exposure at the plant , none of the wor kers involved in the current study has reported any symptoms . Officials said th e survey was prompted by concerns raised by researchers conducting a routine rev iew of Rocky Flats radiation-dose records for DOE 's office of environment , saf ety and health . The department said surveys of monitoring practices will be con ducted at other DOE nuclear sites and made public as part of Energy Secretary Ha zel R. O' Leary 's campaign of openness about radiation experiments and accident s from the mid-1940s through the 1970s . Although officials said no illness or o ther adverse effects have been linked yet to the underestimations of radiation e xposure at Rocky Flats , current employees are being given the option of being m oved away from exposure areas until their cumulative doses can be re-evaluated . `` We 're not going to be able to change ( a worker 's previous exposure ) . Th e difference is that he at least will know , '' said Mark Spears , manager of he alth and safety for the DOE plant 's operating contractor , EG&G Rocky Flats Cor p. . During the period under review , the facility was operated for the Atomic E nergy Commission by Dow Chemical Corp. Spears said the dose-reconstruction proce ss involves interviews with current and former workers , physical examinations a nd the taking of bio-assay samples to determine neutron-radiation counts in vari ous parts of the body . In addition , he said , all available records from a wor ker 's production department during his period of employment are being studied t o estimate approximate levels of exposure to neutron radiation , which can penet rate some kinds of shielding normally used to protect workers from other forms o f radiation . Officials said much of the exposure at Rocky Flats occurred in one building used for the chemical processing of plutonium into weapons-grade mater ial . The plant is no longer producing nuclear weapons . Spears said that a key part of the dose-reconstruction procedure has been the retrieval of neutron-sens itive film strips from a federal records center in Denver , where over 95,000 pi eces of film used in monitoring radiation are stored . He said a sample of 400 s trips had been re-evaluated , leading to the discovery last February that monito ring badges worn by Rocky Flats workers from 1953 to 1967 had been incorrectly ` ` read '' in manual inspections by safety technicians . The film strip badges we re replaced in 1970 with thermoluminescent dosimeters , which are crystal chips that can be read by computers and , consequently , are more accurate . David Rus h , a member of the task force on health risks of nuclear-weapons production of the Physicians for Social Responsibility , said that despite the DOE 's openness campaign , studies of radiation dosages of plant workers remain `` fragmentary '' and outdated . `` Some of the dirtiest plants are the least monitored . There are enormous gaps in research , '' said Rush , an epidemiologist at Tufts Unive rsity . He is the coauthor of a recent book , `` Dead Reckoning , '' that estima ted that DOE had radiation-dosage data on only 140,000 of the estimated 600,000 people who have been employed at nuclear-weapons plants . JERICHO , West Bank Yasser Arafat , chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organi zation and head of the Palestinians ' interim government , Tuesday canceled most of the military orders issued by Israel over its 27-year occupation of the Gaza Strip and this West Bank town . In a move that asserted Palestinian authority i n the two regions and promised to affect everything from retail sales to taxatio n and from traffic regulations to street crime , Arafat restored all the laws in force prior to the 1967 Middle East War and Israel 's capture of Gaza and the W est Bank . Although Israeli officials questioned Arafat 's authority in issuing so sweeping an order and asserted that he needs their approval for all legislati ve actions , Palestinians hailed the move as another step in their liberation . `` Establishing our own laws is an essential part of our emancipation , '' said Saeb Erekat , a political scientist nominated to serve on the interim Palestinia n Authority . `` Legally , most of the 2,500 military orders issued by the Israe lis became null and void with their withdrawal last week , and so Arafat re-esta blished the legal framework for everyday life . '' The Palestinian Authority , w hich will administer the Gaza Strip and eventually most of the West Bank under t he autonomy agreement with Israel , will soon be faced with the task of adopting a basic law and then extensive civil and criminal codes after elections planned for October . Some of the military regulations that have governed life here wer e preserved as part of the agreements establishing Palestinian self-government a nd the economic relations between Israel and the Palestinians . But Arafat resto red 1967 Jordanian law in Jericho and Egyptian in Gaza , both to provide a famil iar legal framework for the start of Palestinian autonomy and to `` give people the sense of being masters in their own home , '' Erekat said . `` It 's better to have some legislative gaps than to have Israeli military orders plugging them . '' Freij abu Midan , a Gaza lawyer and another member of the Palestinian Auth ority , described the move as `` the first step toward consolidating our nationa l authority on the ground in Gaza and Jericho . '' But abu Midan added that `` e very day will bring scores of new questions , especially to the police , for whi ch the law will have no immediate answer . We are feeling our way legally as wel l as politically . '' ( Optional add end ) In other developments , the Israeli m ilitary commander in the West Bank closed Jericho for 24 hours to all but its 15 ,000 residents in cooperation with the new Palestinian police commander , who re portedly asked for a `` breather '' in order to get a firmer grip on the town an d to brief his men on regulations governing Israelis traveling through it . Isra el contends that its agreement with the PLO enables Jewish settlers to carry wea pons in Palestinian-governed areas of Jericho and the Gaza Strip . Palestinians assert that Israelis coming into the autonomous areas may not carry weapons , an d Palestinian police in Jericho briefly detained five armed settlers Tuesday bef ore releasing them , reportedly with apologies . Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin , visiting the new Israeli positions along the border with Gaza , at once praised the cooperation between Palestinian police and his forces in the transfer of the region and again warned Arafat that Israel will not turn over administration of more of the West Bank until it sees how self-government works in Gaza and Jeric ho .
CAPE TOWN , South Africa President Nelson Mandela set forth a moderate domestic policy agenda in his first major address to parliament Tuesday , pledging to ad dress the material wants left by apartheid without resorting to deficit spending or permanent tax increases . The address , which amounted to a state-of-the-nat ion speech , seemed tailored more for corporate boardrooms than the townships wh ere many of South Africa 's poor blacks live . In many ways , it represented the culmination of a shift in Mandela 's African National Congress away from social ism and to a version of market economics more in tune with South Africa 's prese nt system . Mandela thus struck a theme of fiscal discipline even as he outlined his vision of a `` people-centered society '' where all South Africans will be free from hunger , deprivation , ignorance , suppression and fear . He proposed reallocating about $ 700 million or roughly 3 percent of the 1994-95 national bu dget to programs for upgrading housing , electricity , water and sewage systems , education and health services for the nation 's mostly black poor . That figur e is to rise steadily until it reaches more than $ 2.8 billion in the fifth year of the new government 's Reconstruction and Development Program . Mandela said the money would come from across-the-board cuts in other government departments . Even with the increased social spending , he said he expected to reduce the go vernment 's annual deficit spending , now running at 6.8 percent , and to avoid permanent tax hikes . In a briefing for reporters , Finance Minister Derek Keys a holdover from the old National Party government acknowledged that some tempora ry tax increases might be needed . But he said it should be possible to finance the domestic agenda through civil service attrition , streamlining of redundant apartheid bureaucracies and spending cuts in certain areas , such as defense . W hen the white minority government lifted the ban on liberation organizations in 1990 , most of the black leaders who came out of jail or returned from exile wer e still wedded to a socialist vision of wide-scale wealth redistribution . Over the ensuing years , ANC officials won most of the constitutional debates about S outh Africa 's new political order , but Keys and the white business establishme nt made them converts to market economics . The ANC 's economic ministers in the new coalition government , such as former union leader Jay Naidoo , now say tha t if they overspend on social programs , they will frighten investors and trigge r inflation-hobbling their best hope of using an expanding economy to lift the l ot of the poor . `` I always said we were a bloody conservative organization , ' ' ANC spokesman Carl Niehaus quipped , only partly in jest , as he walked out of parliament after the speech . The real test , as he and others acknowledge , wi ll come some years down the road . If the standard of living of the poor has not risen , but the political temperature has , can the ANC still remain faithful t o fiscal discipline ? Mandela 's first major policy speech held no decisive clue s , but it was notable for some of the things it left out . It made no mention o f the ANC 's campaign promises to build 1 million new houses and redistribute up to 30 percent of all arable land over the next five years . Those two goals con stituted the symbolic heart of the ANC 's plan to provide `` a better life for a ll . '' However , experts in both fields say it will be difficult to meet the ta rgets . The country lacks the resources to build 200,000 housing units a year , and the land redistribution program will be slowed by a parallel promise that al l current landowners must be compensated . Mandela did make specific promises Tu esday to provide free medical care to all needy children under age 6 and pregnan t mothers , and free education up to age 16 for needy students . He also said th at he expects to be able to bring electricity to 350,000 new homes this year , a Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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