A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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n Elizabeth Taylor , trundled out to play Fred 's insulting mother-in-law , fall s disappointingly short of imperious . She isn't exactly helped by the mediocre
bones the screenplay tosses her way . While the movie officially scripted by Ste ven E. de Souza , Tom Parker and Jim Jennewein labors through its primeval ooze , it churns out incessant , dull visual gags , including a Stonehenge-meets-'50s -America and the `` pigasaurus '' creature under the sink that serves as a garba ge disposal . It also heaves out unfunny Hollywood `` inside '' jokes : The movi e opens with a `` Steven Spielrock Presents '' credit ; Halle Berry 's character is named Rosetta Stone ; George Lucas ' `` Tar Wars '' is playing at the local theater . When , inevitably , Fred locked out of the house by his pet saber-toot hed tiger thumps the door and yells `` Wilma ! '' , it doesn't bring `` The Flin tstones '' to a triumphant close . It just sets the audience free . `` The Flint stones '' is rated PG . SARAJEVO , Bosnia-Herzegovina On days when Bosnian Serb rebels have allowed U.N . troops to patrol the mountainous terrain around Sarajevo , the peacekeepers ha ve counted at least 20 heavy artillery pieces and seven tanks in violation of a NATO-proclaimed no-weapons zone . Despite a threat made more than three months a go to punish such violations with air strikes , the U.N. . Protection Force is s till trying to win withdrawal of the offending Serbian armor through negotiation . In the eastern enclave of Gorazde , the U.N. mission has set aside another NA TO ultimatum . Serbian gunmen who invaded the purported U.N. `` safe haven '' in April have refused to heed a U.N. order to retreat . But instead of ordering ai r strikes , the mission has asked the Bosnian government to make a `` goodwill g esture '' to encourage its attackers to pull back . The U.N. commander for Bosni a , British Lt. Gen. Michael Rose , has asked the Muslim-led government to withd raw its lightly armed defense forces from the center of Gorazde an act of capitu lation requested neither by NATO nor by the U.N. . Security Council . Rose insis ts that the threat of air strikes against those defying the international commun ity 's efforts for peace is still credible . But with mounting evidence that the mission has neither the will nor the political backing to use force against tra nsgressors , cease-fires have broken down , fighting has escalated , and U.N. of ficials have adopted a damage-control strategy that oscillates between understat ement and outright denial . U.N. mission spokesman Maj. Rob Annink has begun eac h daily briefing for the past week by describing the situation in Bosnia-Herzego vina as `` stable , '' while subsequently reporting the following incidents : Se rbs fired at least 500 artillery shells into the mostly Muslim enclave of Bihac , another U.N.-protected area , in the 24 hours before Thursday morning . Govern ment forces have been on the offensive against Serbs in the central Bosnian town of Tesanj , as well as in Olovo and along 100 miles of front line that arcs bet ween the two flash points . Bosnian Croats and government troops have massed on either side of the narrow Serb-held corridor linking conquered areas of eastern Bosnia with Serbian spoils farther west . The Croats and Muslims , newly reconci led allies , appear to be coordinating artillery attacks on the town of Brcko , along the vital supply route . Two Serbian tanks entered the weapons exclusion z one around Sarajevo Monday to attack government forces in the town of Breza . An other Serbian assault Wednesday against the government town of Pazaric was also suspected to have been launched from the zone , which is supposed to be demilita rized . Tuesday , snipers killed a Bosnian woman riding a bus under U.N. escort through Serb-held territory west of Sarajevo . Bosnian government officials said she was at least the 40th civilian fatality since NATO proclaimed a cease-fire in the area three months ago . Sarajevo has not been under intense bombardment s ince the February ultimatum , but sniping remains a daily danger and there have been increasing instances of `` detonations '' which the U.N. spokesman refuses to call shelling . Foreign diplomats in Sarajevo express concern that Rose 's no t-to-worry approach to collapsing cease-fires and fraying agreements is giving t he outside world the erroneous impression that the conflict in Bosnia is on the mend . `` On the one hand he is putting pressure on the parties to settle this t hing diplomatically , by refusing to publicly acknowledge what is going on , '' one European envoy said . `` On the other hand , he 's taking a tremendous risk of it all blowing up in his face , as it did in Gorazde . '' Rose repeatedly cha racterized a recent Serbian offensive against that safe area as a `` limited , t actical maneuver '' to improve the rebels ' bargaining position in stalled peace talks . But nearly half the city fell to Serbian gunmen , tens of thousands of Muslims were uprooted , and 700 people , mostly Muslim civilians , were killed i n the sustained artillery attack . Another Western diplomat characterized the U. N. mission 's attempt to play down the spreading crisis as a consequence of the world 's major powers having given the peacekeepers no real option for containin g it . `` There 's this assumption that Bosnia is already dead and it just needs a proper burial , '' the diplomat said . `` The problem with that assumption is that Bosnia is not dead , and it 's going to continue fighting . '' Rose warned the Bosnian army Tuesday that it should not pursue a military solution to the c onflict . While shepherding a NATO delegation around some of central Bosnia 's m ore peaceful venues , Rose told a senior army commander that it would take years for the government to get its troops armed and trained for a successful campaig n to recover lost territory . Government officials say they resent the attitude that they should accept defeat by a force repeatedly castigated by the U.N. . Se curity Council as the war 's instigator . `` The problem is that the basic aim o f the mission from the beginning has been to see us capitulate , '' said Bosnian Information Minister Ivo Knezevic . `` All their calculations have been based o n this assumption . We 've blown all their plans because we do not accept this . This is why we have become such an irritation to the powerbrokers of the world . ''
LOS ANGELES The 67 men of the Los Angeles Police Department 's Special Weapons and Tactics unit are members of the department 's most exclusive club . Handpick ed for the duty after passing rigorous entrance requirements , they train using live ammunition and confront armed and barricaded suspects at the rate of more t han one a week . For a quarter-century , SWAT has occupied a unique place in the Police Department and the public imagination a group of virtual soldiers embedd ed in a police agency , their missions among the most demanding in law enforceme nt . The original SWAT team was pioneered by the LAPD , and it has grown up ther e , evolving from a ragtag group of eager volunteers into a tightly disciplined group of professionals whose officers train side-by-side with Navy SEALS and Arm y Green Berets . Insular and intensely proud , SWAT was battered and shaped by e arly criticism and a pair of nationally renowned shootouts , one of which occurr ed 20 years ago this month . It battled a reputation for militarism , redoubled its emphasis on negotiation and emerged as one of the nation 's most widely emul ated hostage-rescue organizations . Most recently , when a highly regarded femal e officer was denied entry into the unit , it raised the question of when , if e ver , SWAT will open its doors to women ; her case is in court and its outcome c ould again reshape SWAT as it continues to define its place within the LAPD . As SWAT has changed , so has the Police Department , which is trying to adopt a mo re community-oriented style that bears little resemblance to the work SWAT offic ers perform . But the paramilitary arm of the Police Department remains fully st affed and in robust health despite the vogue for a kinder , gentler force , desp ite money problems in municipal government , despite the departure of its godfat her and founder , former Chief Daryl F. Gates . His successor , Willie L. Willia ms a police chief better known for his devotion to community policing than his b elief in special weapons and tactics has expressed his confidence in the unit . More important , he has kept it at full strength despite cutbacks in other areas of the Police Department and pressure to put more officers on patrol . This sum mer , SWAT will stand guard against terrorism during the World Cup games , the s ame function it performed a decade ago during the Summer Olympics . The 1965 Wat ts riots made a deep impression on the city and its police and no one reacted mo re strongly than a young commander named Daryl Gates . Convinced that the riots proved the need for the LAPD to better counteract sniper fire , Gates pioneered SWAT , making the LAPD the nation 's first police department to develop such an organization . In the early years , SWAT was informal . Officers continued to wo rk their regular jobs , they got no bonus pay , and they kept a decidedly low pr ofile . The officers who staffed SWAT in the early years veterans now refer to t he team during that period as `` Old SWAT '' were dedicated to the mission but s ometimes ill-equipped to carry it out . And on Dec. 8 , 1969 , Old SWAT came fac e-to-face with the Black Panthers . When the officers arrived at a Central Avenu e stronghold to serve arrest and search warrants , they were greeted with shotgu n blasts and submachine-gun fire . Over the next five hours , more than 200 Los Angeles police officers and a handful of Black Panthers exchanged thousands of r ounds of gunfire . When it was over , three officers and six Black Panthers were hurt . Although no one died , the Black Panther shootout raised deep concerns . To do its job correctly , LAPD leaders decided , SWAT needed to be a formal uni t whose officers trained and worked together full time . In 1971 , Old SWAT beca me New SWAT , a full-fledged unit under the wing of the department 's Metropolit an Division . Then , on May 17 , 1974 , the LAPD engaged in the most notorious g unfight in the history of the organization . That afternoon , three SWAT squads , hundreds of other police officers and FBI agents descended on a 54th Street ho me where they expected to find members of the Symbionese Liberation Army , the g roup that had kidnapped heiress Patricia Hearst a few months before . For about two hours , police and suspects traded shots while news crews broadcast the shoo tout nationwide . Eventually , the house burned to the ground . Six SLA members died , three from gunshots , three from the fire . As the Panther battle had in 1969 , this major shootout forced the LAPD once again to review the way its SWAT officers went about their work . `` When I took over Metro ( a few months after the SLA incident ) , there was a lot of sensitivity about SWAT , '' said Jesse Brewer , who went on to become an assistant chief and then president of Police C ommission . `` There was a feeling that we were using military tactics against c itizens . '' Brewer tightened SWAT 's admission standards , clamped down on disc ipline , insisted that SWAT officers treat members of the community with respect . Under him , the unit replaced its old tear-gas canisters , which were implica ted in starting the fire that destroyed the SLA headquarters . ( Begin optional trim ) All of that helped calm the waters , but the evolution of SWAT reflects a constant balancing between the unit 's use of military tactics and the departme nt 's desire to project a friendly public image . In the mid-1980s , that tensio n flared up again when SWAT began using a pair of battering ram-equipped small t anks , known as V-100s , in some confrontations . `` That sent a terrible signal , '' said Johnnie L. Cochran Jr. , a prominent Los Angeles attorney and frequen t police critic . `` It reinforced that whole argument about the LAPD as an occu pying army . '' Without ever admitting a mistake , the LAPD scaled back the use of the tanks . Today they sit mostly idle , and criticism of the unit is mostly muted . Cochran and Stephen Yagman , two of the city 's most prominent civil rig hts lawyers , say they haven't handled any SWAT cases in years . Cochran says hi s impression is that the unit has improved from its rougher origins . In large m easure , that is because negotiations or other , less subtle , forms of persuasi on resolve almost all SWAT situations without gunshots . Still , there are times when SWAT officers make the hardest of all decisions in police work : When its officers believe they have exhausted all other remedies and feel lives are in da nger , SWAT will shoot to kill . ( End optional trim ) If SWAT was born in the a ftermath of the Watts riots , it came of age in the buildup for the 1984 Summer Olympics . Confident as ever , Gates announced that SWAT would handle any outbre ak of terrorism inside the city limits . He sent three of his most trusted offic ers Lt. Jeff Rogers , who headed the unit at the time , Sgt. Al Preciado and Cap t. John Higgins to Europe , where they studied counterterrorism units in Israel , Italy , France , West Germany , West Berlin and England . `` We came back with a whole head full of ideas and a shopping list of what we needed , '' Rogers sa id . They got it . Some new equipment was purchased by the Olympic Organizing Co mmittee . Other pieces special poles with mirrors that allow officers to look ar ound corners without being seen , flashlights that attach to the barrels of rifl es were invented by officers in the Metro armory . SWAT also revolutionized its training . Before the 1984 Olympics , SWAT trained with blanks . Today , SWAT , unlike any other unit in the LAPD , uses live ammunition in hostage-rescue train ing . SWAT officers spend 240 hours a year shooting , climbing , rappelling and practicing other tactics . They fire out of helicopters , rappel off the sides o f some buildings and scale the walls of others . They drop from helicopters onto rooftops . It 's grueling , dangerous work , but it underscores a message : Thi ngs sometimes go wrong ; SWAT needs to be ready when they do . `` You perform li ke you practice , '' one SWAT cop said . `` For real . '' SARAJEVO , Bosnia-Herzegovina Black nylon stockings and patent-leather shoes pe eking out from beneath Ajla Nuhbegovic 's tunic clash flirtatiously with her hea d scarf and neck-to-ankle garb . Ajla has every intention of wearing lipstick , eye makeup and jewelry when she 's old enough , the enshrouded 12-year-old expla ins between licks of a dripping ice-cream cone . She shrugs off what some might see as an incongruous melding of religious modesty and a young girl 's natural i nterest in being attractive to boys . `` We have drifted too far from our religi on . I think girls should dress in this manner , at least until they are 18 , '' Ajla insists , contradicting her father 's aside that she can more often be fou nd in form-fitting leggings and sweat shirts . Her fleeting earnestness provokes a look of amused tolerance from her father , Hajrudin , a wry smile that sugges ts he thinks she is just going through a phase . Ajla may be unevenly absorbing the religious instruction offered at the Muslim parochial school she has been at tending for two years . But amid the hardships of war and the Christian world 's growing indifference to the plight of Bosnian Muslims , the desire to express a faith that was repressed here for most of this century is becoming more common . The Slavs whose ancestors embraced Islam during Ottoman Turkey 's 500-year rul e are increasingly searching for solace where they can find it , as they continu e to be targeted by a deadly Serb nationalist campaign of `` ethnic cleansing . '' And as Western nations turn their backs on Bosnia because its conflict seems too complex to resolve , moderates warn they have no choice but to grasp the han d of Islam , as long as it remains the only one offered to them . Bosnia 's stre ets , even in cosmopolitan Sarajevo , are traversed by growing numbers of women who dress with at least partial deference to Islamic tradition . Mosques that we re mostly tourist attractions in the Communist era are crowded with the faithful ; Muslim feasts and celebrations are now official holidays . Most obviously , a nd most worrisome for the non-Muslim majority of Bosnia , is the strengthening b ond between this secular country in the heart of Europe and fundamentalist Islam ic nations that have come to its aid out of sympathy for a people endangered bec ause of their faith . Iran has smuggled weaponry to the Bosnian government defyi ng a U.N. embargo that most Western countries concede tied the hands of this nat ion 's defense forces throughout 26 months of assault by heavily armed Serbs . L ibya has supplied oil when there was no money for imports . Saudi Arabia has ban krolled pilgrimages to Mecca for 350 invalids and war casualties . And Islamic w arriors from Afghanistan to Algeria have flocked to Bosnia 's battle zones to fi ght for Allah , perverting an already beleaguered defense effort into a holy war no one in Bosnia wanted . `` We have been waiting for two years for the West to help us defeat fascism , for its own interest if not for our benefit , '' says Osman Brka , a leader of the Muslim-dominated Party for Democratic Action . `` W e still hope against hope that America will see it must help us defend the democ ratic values we share . But we will look to anyone willing to help us , and no o ne in the West will have the right to blame us if they turned away . '' ( Begin optional trim ) Until the Serb rebellion that began in April 1992 threw this for mer Yugoslav republic into social and economic chaos , Bosnian ties to Islam wer e tenuous at best . Today 's 2 million Bosnian Muslims are descended from Serbs , Croats and a schismatic Christian sect known as the Bogomils who were represse d by both Catholic and Orthodox Slavs . Their forebears acquiesced to the Turkis h conquerors ' religion and mores , creating a culture through half a millennium distinct from that of the Serbs and Croats . The Muslims , or Bosnjaks , as mos t preferred to be called , identifying themselves with the territory rather than religion , were ruled by the Turks until the Serbs threw off the Ottoman yoke l ate in the 19th century . While Serbia retained its independence , Bosnia was sw allowed by the Austro-Hungarian Empire , providing the friction that led to Worl d War I and the eventual creation of Yugoslavia . The years between the two worl d wars subjected the Muslims to crude assimilation attempts by both Serbs and Cr oats , until Communist partisan leader Marshal Tito led the country to victory o ver Nazi Germany . During his 35-year rule arguably Eastern Europe 's most benev olent dictatorship Tito imposed peace among the fractious Balkan ethnic groups t hrough a delicate balance of force and personality . In recognition of their div ergent lifestyle , Tito conferred the status of a nationality on Bosnian Muslims in 1970 . ( End optional trim ) In the twisted rationale of propagandized Serb nationalists , the Muslims have `` stolen '' Serb land by taking on a separate i dentity . The current war in Bosnia is , in the eyes of the rebels , a campaign to recover territory lost when Serbian and other Slavic owners converted from Ch ristianity . To justify their rebellion to the outside world , Bosnian Serb rebe l leader Radovan Karadzic has repeatedly warned that the presence of Muslims her e poses a risk of fundamentalist Islam establishing a foothold in Europe . The M uslim-led government that gained power after 1990 elections has always rejected that claim as a cynical scare tactic aimed at defusing Western concern over the civilian slaughter and expulsion of Muslims by Serbs as they take territory for a Greater Serbia . Serb accusations that other Balkan ethnic groups threaten the m have been a cornerstone of the expansion plan drafted and executed by strongma n Slobodan Milosevic . Exaggerated claims that Serb lives were at risk if Croati a seceded became fact after Milosevic sent the Yugoslav Peoples Army to seize la nd coveted by the Serbs and to expel Croats , creating a climate of hostility an d a desire for revenge against the Serbs . Serbian propaganda has for seven year s accused the Albanian majority in Kosovo province of plotting secession and ann exation to neighboring Albania . The claim was ludicrous when Albania endured th e most brutal Stalinist regime in Europe . But two years of democratic reform in Albania has coincided with ever-intensifying repression of Kosovo Albanians by Serb security forces , making union with Albania genuinely attractive for the Ko sovo majority . Bosnian government and social leaders insist theirs could never become an officially Islamic state . But some concede the stronger ties to Islam ic countries emerging as a consequence of abandonment by the West play into the hands of propagandists in Belgrade . `` We Muslims have never sought to live sep arately and we still believe the best solution for Bosnia is a country that unit es all three nations , '' said Husajn Smajic , the mufti of Sarajevo . Smajic de scribes Bosnia 's Islamic community as unique and more heavily influenced by Eur ope than other countries with which it shares the faith . War horrors and disapp ointment in Western indifference to the human rights violations committed agains t them has driven more Muslims to turn to their religion in this time of crisis Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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