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vernment will legitimize the growth of extreme right movements across the contin ent . He has mapped out a vision for a free-market revolution in one of Western Europe 's most socialistic states that surpasses in scope anything attempted by his conservative role models , former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher a nd former president Ronald Reagan . And he has declared that , at least for the time being , he will govern the country while maintaining a vast business empire with holdings in real estate , insurance , press and television raising the spe cter of conflicting personal interests with almost every legislative measure he tries to push through Parliament . Berlusconi 's opponents accused him of using his three television networks , which control about 45 percent of the national a udience , to `` brainwash '' voters and secure his victory in the general electi ons . He , in turn , believes they are jealous of his success in finding a succe ssful formula that rallied the vast majority of young Italian voters behind the free-enterprise banner waved by his Forza Italia party . `` I know the young gen eration well . They grew up seeing America through the television shows that I b rought to Europe . They have come to believe in the meritocratic philosophy that will help us develop a more liberal and free-market society without losing our cultural roots or traditions . `` Young people everywhere now share the same pol itical values . The French may be very jealous about their identity , but Italia ns have no complexes , no feelings of inferiority or superiority . We are more e cumenical . '' Nonetheless , the unprecedented sight of seeing a media tycoon ac hieve a sudden leap to the pinnacle of political power has alarmed some of Italy 's neighbors . `` This is an approach to democracy we are not used to and that appears fearsome to me , '' said French President Francois Mitterrand , pointing to the demagogic risks of seeing the boss of a $ 6 billion media conglomerate t ake the reins of a major European government . `` This is an example that others will try to imitate . There is a serious risk of perverting democracy . The mom ent has come to say : Stop ! Danger ! '' Berlusconi brushes off Mitterrand 's wa rning as the kind of partisan carping he must endure from Italy 's former commun ists and their leftist allies throughout Europe . `` I have no operational role anymore in any of my companies . I am completely removed from their activities , '' he said . `` There is one difficulty and that is how to sell my group . If y ou know somebody who is interested , please tell me . '' Berlusconi said he was forced to enter the political arena when centrist reformers such as Mario Segni , a maverick Christian Democrat , failed to organize an effective coalition that could block the path to power by the leftist alliance led by former communists . `` I had a very interesting and entertaining life , and I had no desire to cha nge it . But I found my country facing a future without liberty or democracy . I was obliged to go into politics against the advice of my family , my friends an d , above all , against my own interests . But I realized my life as an entrepre neur would have become impossible under the communists , whose program would hav e led my country into a terrible state without any hope of return . '' Indeed , Berlusconi 's empire , now close to $ 3 billion in debt , probably would have co llapsed if the leftist slate had been elected . Achille Occhetto , the leader of the former communists , had vowed to strip Berlusconi of his lucrative televisi on stations . But Berlusconi insists he was motivated by more than the fate of h is own business interests . `` I went into politics to keep my country from fall ing into the hands of the communists , '' he said . `` That 's what I mean by wa ging war for my country . Their program would have led the country into a terrib le state , with no hope of return . In their spirit , their mentality , their cu lture , it 's a vision of the world that has not changed . '' NAIROBI , Kenya With the world community horrified by the bloodshed in Rwanda b ut paralyzed by confusion , indecision or fear , many aid officials , human righ ts advocates and Africa watchers now are hoping for a victory by rebel forces to end the tumult . Such a scenario now seems likely , with the Rwandan Patriotic Front ( RPF ) rebels improving their positions in neighborhoods around the capit al , Kigali , while advancing on the town of Gitarama , headquarters of the Rwan da 's rump government . Reports said the rebels were moving this weekend on Gita rama from two fronts , while government soldiers and allied militiamen were flee ing westward toward Kibuya , on Lake Kivu . With the rebels occupying large part s of Kigali , including the international airport , the fall of Gitarama would m ake a complete victory for the rebels all but certain , leaving them in control of most of the country except the west and southwest . That would allow the rebe ls to dictate the terms of a cease-fire and would leave them in a position to tr y to form a government . Many who have been watching Rwanda 's horror say a rebe l victory would relieve foreign governments of witnessing mass slaughter while f ailing to muster the political will to try to stop it . `` There is some thinkin g that if the rebels win , maybe that would take care of the problem for now , ' ' said Pauline Baker , a scholar on Africa with the Washington office of the Asp en Institute . Baker said some African policy makers were harking back to the `` Ethiopian scenario '' of May 1991 , when the Bush administration virtually invi ted an advancing guerrilla army to enter the Ethiopian capital , Addis Ababa , a s a way of ending that country 's long civil war while providing for an orderly transition after the fall of dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam . Another Rwanda sch olar , interviewed in Brussels , said a rebel victory `` is what everybody is ho ping for . '' But this scholar , who asked not to be quoted by name , said that policy may in the long term prove `` very unwise , '' since it was unclear how t he rebels , representing Rwanda 's long-oppressed Tutsi minority , would be able to form a broadly representative government . `` The RPF looks like the angel i n this thing , '' she said . `` But to let the RPF win creates another Burundi , where you have a tiny minority in charge . '' The populations of both Rwanda an d Burundi are about 85 percent Hutu and 15 percent Tutsi . In Rwanda , the Hutus have held political power since they overthrew the Tutsi monarchy and achieved independence from Belgium three decades ago . In Burundi , the minority Tutsis d ominated the country after independence through their control of the armed force s , and only last year surrendered power in democratic elections to a Hutu-led g overnment . Seven weeks ago , both countries were thrown into chaos when their t wo presidents died in a suspicious plane crash while returning from a regional p eace meeting . Rwanda erupted in killings of Tutsis-mostly by armed Hutu civilia n militias , supported by the army and encouraged by a Hutu-controlled radio sta tion . U.N. spokesmen have estimated that at least 200,000 people have been kill ed , mostly Tutsis but also Hutus opposed to the slain president or suspected of being disloyal to his dominant political machine . The bodies of the dead have been stacked up in churches and along the roadside , buried in mass graves or si mply dropped into the Kagera River . Thousands of corpses have floated to Lake V ictoria , raising fears of widespread pollution at the source of the Nile River . After the outbreak of the massacres , which most aid officials and U.N. diplom ats have termed genocide , the rebels launched their drive on the capital to end the bloodshed and bring to justice those responsible for the killings . When th e Security Council earlier this month agreed to the dispatch of 5,500 U.N. troop s to Rwanda , the rebels initially balked , saying the foreigners might interfer e with victory by the front . They have since said the troops could come if they limited their activities to protecting humanitarian relief . But the arrival of the foreign troops looks further off than ever , with U.N. Secretary General Bo utros Boutros-Ghali admitting that he had failed to persuade more than a handful of countries to contribute soldiers . Only Ghana , Ethiopia and Senegal have ma de firm offers , and Italy said it would be willing to join in a U.N. peacekeepi ng operation . But most countries , including the United States and Africa 's tr aditional West European patrons , have shown reluctance to get involved . Follow ing last year 's disastrous experience with international peacemaking in Somalia , many governments including the Clinton administration fear being drawn into w hat is essentially an African civil war , in which the foreign troops , like tho se in Somalia , may shift from being neutral peacekeepers to combatants . `` I t hink there 's a sense of moral outrage , but at the same time , a kind of paraly sis , '' said Alison Des Forges , a consultant with Human Rights Watch/Africa . `` Everybody is looking to the United States for leadership , but the United Sta tes is not providing leadership . '' Somalia , she said , `` has been a formativ e experience in the early days of this administration . '' After the humiliation in Somalia , in which U.S. troops engaged in a futile and bloody manhunt for a Somali factional leader through the streets of Mogadishu , President Clinton rev ersed his earlier enthusiasm for involving American troops in U.N. military oper ations and issued a directive laying out strict conditions for future U.S. parti cipation . Rwanda , according to Baker of Aspen Institute , has become `` the fi rst test case '' of the Clinton directive . `` There 's no one exerting any lead ership to bring about a consensus '' on how to intervene effectively in Rwanda , Baker said . `` The major issue is a lack of will to search for ideas collectiv ely . Any solution is going to have great risks attached to it . And that 's the key : No one wants to take those risks . '' PORT ELIZABETH , South Africa It has taken nine years , but finally Nyameke Gon iwe received formal acknowledgment Saturday that the state ordered the brutal mu rder of her husband . In a wood-paneled courtroom here , a Supreme Court judge e nded years of official denials and cover-up by declaring that South Africa 's se curity forces , in defense of white rule , assassinated anti-apartheid activist Matthew Goniwe and three of his colleagues on a deserted stretch of highway in J une 1985 . The killers , said the judge , meant to defeat the mass uprising of t he 1980s by eliminating one of its most important leaders , who had turned the e astern Cape region into a hotbed of resistance . `` It has , in my opinion , bee n established prima facie that the murderers .. . were members of the security f orces , '' Judge Neville Zietsman said at the end of a 14-month inquest . The ki llings , once officially attributed to unknown persons , were revisited after a disgruntled officer two years ago leaked what appeared to have been the assassin ation order : a state security memo recommending that Goniwe and the others be ` ` permanently removed from society , as a matter of urgency . '' Listening to Zi etsman 's finding , Nyameke Goniwe sat very still , as she had sat through every session of the inquest . Then she walked quickly out of the courtroom , emotion s held tightly in check . `` The critical thing is for us to know who did what , and the judge just confirmed for us what we believed all along , '' she said . `` You must understand that our lives have revolved around this case for nine ye ars . '' Cases like the Goniwe murder present a delicate problem to the fledglin g democracy led by President Nelson Mandela , who must balance deeply felt calls for restitution with the theme of national reconciliation that he has sounded r epeatedly since his election three weeks ago as South Africa 's first black lead er . Saturday 's verdict seems to be only the start of a long , traumatic proces s of exhuming the buried skeletons of this country 's apartheid past , as offici al files are opened and secret documents thought to have been shredded surface . Estimates of officially mandated killings of opponents of the state as well as the wanton massacres of civilians by operatives in the state security system run into the thousands . Mandela , worried about possible sabotage of his fragile n ew black-led government by the white-dominated security forces , pledged Friday a blanket amnesty for political crimes committed in the defense of apartheid . ` ` There will be .. . no vengeance , no witch-hunts , no revenge and no humiliati on , '' said his new justice minister , Dullah Omar . Amnesty seekers must , how ever , disclose their crimes in full , he said , and government will provide uns pecified compensation to victims . The sensational murder of Matthew Goniwe unde rlined the desperate `` total onslaught '' strategy employed in the 1980s by the P.W. Botha government , which sought to save rapidly disintegrating apartheid s tructures by creating an elaborate state security system with virtually unlimite d powers . ( Begin optional trim ) The charismatic Goniwe , a bespectacled 37-ye ar-old schoolteacher , was targeted because he pioneered a community organizing system based on a network of street committees . As chief rural organizer for th e United Democratic Front the internal , legal arm of the banned African Nationa l Congress he created an organizational web so dense that an entire township cou ld be mobilized in minutes for a rally , a strike or a rent boycott . Goniwe 's telephone was tapped and security agents followed his every move , court papers show . `` He was .. . referred to as an enemy of the state whose activities had to be curtailed or terminated , '' Zietsman said Saturday . By 1985 the entire c ountry was in turmoil . On June 7 of that year , according to the leaked militar y document , Gen. Stoffel van der Westhuizen , who would remain as director of m ilitary intelligence until several weeks ago , sent the message suggesting the ` ` permanent '' removal of Goniwe , his brother , Mbulelo , and his friend Fort C alata . But Goniwe 's brother was not with him 20 days later , when he headed ho me to Cradock from this coastal city after another UDF meeting . Riding in the c ar with him were Calata and two others , Sparrow Mkonto and Sicelo Mhlauli . ( E nd optional trim ) According to the inquest , security forces no specific indivi duals have yet been identified stopped Goniwe and his colleagues . They shot and stabbed Sparrow Mkonto , and stabbed the othersthrough the heart and about thei r bodies . Security police , anxious to conceal the crime , burned the bodies an d the car . The charred remains were found scattered over a wide area in the fol lowing days . `` For years I didn't want to pass that spot where it happened , ' ' Nyameke Goniwe said . `` You could still see the marks on the ground today ; g rass has not even grown there . '' Charges of government involvement in the kill ings were quickly dismissed ; an inquest by a local magistrate returned a verdic t of murder by persons unknown . But as the reopened inquest drew to a close , v an der Westhuizen , at less than 50 years of age , suddenly announced several we eks ago that he was retiring as chief of military intelligence . He cited ill he alth . Others implicated have mostly retired with large pensions from the govern ment of President Frederik W. de Klerk , who now serves as one of Mandela 's two deputies . The state prosecutor , Michael Hodgen said that all the victims ' fa milies could do now was file civil lawsuits against the government for damages , although the proposed amnesty may make that impossible . ( Optional add end ) N yameke Goniwe said presidential calls for forgiveness and reconciliation were al l well and good , `` but the killers have not even admitted they did anything wr ong . '' `` The families have lost everything , and the perpetrators are gaining from it , '' she said . `` We want to celebrate with everybody the new beginnin g of a new country , but this has been holding us back . '' WASHINGTON President Clinton 's foreign policy difficulties may be igniting wid espread criticism of his national security team , but at least one top official is escaping most of the heat : Defense Secretary William J. Perry . In the past four months , the soft-spoken former mathematics professor has emerged as one of the administration 's few pleasant surprises in the foreign policy arena . Besi des getting a grip on the Pentagon 's sprawling bureaucracy and gaining the resp ect of the military Perry , 66 , has become a quiet but important player in the administration 's foreign policy apparatus , gradually winning plaudits from the administration and its critics alike . It was Perry , for example , who helped hone the administration 's proposal to launch air strikes in Bosnia limiting the enforcement to a small exclusion zone that NATO forces could handle easily . He was the administration 's point man in engineering a nuclear weapons disarmamen t treaty between Russia and Ukraine . And , more recently , he has become its ch ief spokesman in the stalemate with North Korea over nuclear weapons inspections . With few glitches along the way , Perry `` is dealing with the problems he 's got as well as anyone can be expected to , '' said Robert W. Gaskin , a former Pentagon military strategist who has been a frequent critic of the administratio n . Sharing that opinion is Harold Brown , who served as defense secretary durin g the Carter administration . `` Is he going to solve all of their problems ? I think the answer is no , '' Brown said . `` But he has done very well . '' Admit tedly , at least part of Perry 's overnight rise may have come by default . By s ome outside assessments , Secretary of State Warren Christopher has proved a cap able negotiator but not a strategic thinker , and national security adviser Anth ony Lake has been so low-key that he has failed to enunciate the administration 's policies clearly . Perry is known as a problem-solver , and he explains issue s articulately and directly . He also has benefited from the inevitable comparis ons to his predecessor , Les Aspin . Aspin 's plans to inject the Pentagon into formulating broad foreign policy brought him into conflict with the State Depart ment and the National Security Council . His frequent public ruminating about po licy options and his accompanying gaffes heightened the perception that the admi nistration was in disarray . And his manipulative style alienated many in Congre ss and the military . By contrast , Perry is demonstrating himself to be a no-no nsense pragmatist who is quick to make decisions and has an impressive command o f detail . Invariably straightforward , he has restored good relations with mili tary leaders and lawmakers . `` He has the complete confidence of the military h e 's frank , '' said Rep. John P. Murtha , D-Pa. , chairman of the House Appropr iations subcommittee on defense . `` I think he 's doing a commendable job . '' Others say he has quietly brought order out of the previous managerial chaos . ` ` Perry is nothing that Aspin was , and everything that Aspin wasn't , '' one Pe ntagon-watcher said . He also has confined himself to the defense secretary 's t raditional role of running the nation 's military establishment and finding ways to make it serve the president 's foreign policy objectives . Sometimes that me ans squelching a proposal that seems unrealistically ambitious . For instance , administration officials say he recently nipped a campaign to mount an invasion of Haiti by publicly questioning what the United States would do once its troops took over the island . ( Begin optional trim ) To be sure , Perry 's four month s as secretary have not been entirely error-free . In an appearance on NBC 's `` Meet the Press '' program in early April , he set off a major brouhaha by inadv ertently leaving the impression that the United States would sit by and let the Bosnian Serbs storm the Muslim city of Gorazde . And a few weeks ago , he provok ed a similar flurry over Haiti when he suggested there were preliminary indicati ons that the island 's military strongman , Gen. Raoul Cedras , was about to res ign . The political and diplomatic ripples from that incident caused some conste rnation in the State Department , but so far Perry seems to have recovered succe ssfully , vowing to become more careful in his statements to the news media . ( End optional trim ) A veteran of the Cuban missile crisis he was called in by th e Pentagon in 1962 to help analyze data on Soviet weapons emplacements on the is land Perry has a keen sense of the moment , especially about developments that h elp mark the end of the Cold War . A visit to a former Soviet ICBM center last s pring left him emotion-filled and eager to tell the world about his experience , as did a NATO meeting last week with former Soviet bloc states . With a long ca reer in the defense industry he is known as the godfather of the Stealth bomber and a background in U.S.-Soviet strategy , high-technology weapons and defense-i ndustry problems , Perry said he has already set a firm agenda for his current t erm as defense secretary : to keep the world from drifting back into a Cold War , to develop a new approach for using U.S. military power in the post-Cold War w orld and to manage the reduction in the size of the nation 's armed forces . `` I will measure myself '' by these `` when I leave the job , '' he said . ( Optio nal Add End ) Critics concede he has made a good start on the first of these , p Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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