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- (Beginning of Part 3)
-
- Soysal clashed with Prime Minister Çiller over
- the issue of amending the current anti-terrorism
- law and personally opposed her new privatization
- program. But Soysal's disruptive stances also
- affected his performance as foreign minister. His
- intense nationalism informed his official state-
- ments and exacerbated frictions with Greece over
- Athens' territorial claims in the Aegean, regarding
- Cyprus and with other European governments.
- Many in Ankara's Foreign Ministry thought him a
- serious impediment to Turkey's efforts to gain
- admittance to the European Union.
-
- The Green Machine
-
- Environmental audits are becoming the tool of
- convenience for national environmental managers
- seeking to enforce uniformity and transparency in
- developing or meeting national environmental
- strategies. For a long time, environmental audits
- were regarded as an additional element of the
- public relations or advertising budget - especially
- useful outside the United States. Since the
- mid-1970s, the European Union (EU) has passed
- more than 200 environmental laws binding on
- member countries as minimum environmental
- standards and requirements.
-
- It is likely that the environmental audit will
- become as common as the financial audit expected
- from each company annually. Companies soon
- may be required to submit correctly audited envi-
- ronmental accounts; and failure to meet require-
- ments and standards may have consequences for
- company executives. Those European executives
- who fall short on meeting minimum environmen-
- tal requirements will likely be faced with jail
- terms rather than corporate fines.
-
- As a result, environmental accounting is mov-
- ing away from the old concept of national envi-
- ronmental accounts that include environmental
- losses, expenditures and gains in the national
- product accounting cycle, to a straightforward and
- auditable annual environmental accounting system.
- Similar to tax requirements, environmental
- requirements will include auditable documentation
- to be presented annually, showing compliance and
- acceptable accountability.
-
- Fines imposed on corporations for environmen-
- tal misdemeanors rarely deterred industries from
- continuing to pollute perhaps at another location.
- Making executives liable personally with convic-
- tions probable and leading to servable prison time
- brings a new dimension to acceptable business
- practices. Recently, a Glasgow court sentenced an
- executive to six months in jail for storing hazar-
- dous materials at an unlicensed site. A correctly
- verified environmental audit would have been the
- only acceptable line of defense - but he lacked it.
-
- July 1994 was the deadline for national desig-
- nation of official bodies to accredit organizations
- capable of verifying environmental audits. These
- can include government entities, chartered
- accounting firms such as Coopers and Lybrand or
- Wollert-Elmendorff Deloitte International Tomi-
- hatsu (WEDIT), environmental companies and
- individuals best categorized as corporate all-
- rounders with some knowledge of industry and its
- impact on the environment, as well as a grounding
- in auditing procedures.
-
- Beginning in 1995, auditors must be qualified
- to conduct tri-annual external audits of European
- companies' production systems, with a particular
- focus on environmental compliance. In tandem
- with the increasingly essential ISO 9000 quality
- control system, the environmental audit will be
-
- based on overall management controls rather than
- on arbitrary standards. The EU is drafting an
- Eco-Management and Audit scheme to require
- companies to show they have sought to introduce
- a thorough environmental management system and
- that they are capable of effectively answering
- charges of negligence or of connivance.
-
- Environmental auditors must be certified by
- the EU. Eventually the audit information will be
- made accessible to investors, corporate clients,
- customers and environmental interest groups.
- This will likely lead to information data bases on
- releases of pollutants and other materials to the
- environment, as well as on general information
- regarding each company's environmental com-
- pliance. Now there is a fine line between preser-
- vation of sensitive corporate information - partic-
- ularly any client-sensitive data - and the trans-
- parency required by any open auditing system.
-
- The resulting explosion in available informa-
- tion also could make countries more accountable
- for their contribution to international pollution
- and better assign accountability nationally for
- ongoing pollution. Such data may give interna-
- tional environmental groups ammunition to cam-
- paign more stringent compliance. Yet, the
- requirements for relative transparency also could
- press multinationals to seek alternate venues for
- industrialization. Environmental compliance
- among the EU nations, not reciprocated in East-
- ern Europe or the former Soviet Union, could
- eventually lead to trade problems and acrimony.
-
- Finally, there is always the room to maneuver
- in any formalized audit situation - once the sys-
- tem is stratified and made routine. Interest
- groups may attack it if not applied even-handedly
- between industries. Within the EU, enforcement
- issues will arise. Some countries will be perceived
- as having more stringent requirements than others.
- This could skew trade and industrial development.
- However, by creating and emphasizing a uniform
- and standard approach to audits, conducted by
- licensed auditors, it should also be possible for the
- EU to further emphasize the concept of a fortress
- Europe, to reduce the ability of external firms to
- compete, and to avoid the legal bonanza exper-
- ienced through the U.S. approach to similar issues.
-
- However, a standardized environmental audit-
- ing industry could provide the mechanism for
- ensuring compliance and good environmental
- posture between and among companies nationally
- and internationally. If audits allow for trade
- secrecy and competition, the European Union may
- have found a way to marginalize green empower-
- ment and mainline environmental health while
- maximizing financial growth. If accountability
- via audit is for all activities - limited to within
- the EU, or on a transnational basis - a redefini-
- tion of competitive growth may be required.
- Europe could find a cleaner environment and a
- new competitive industrial growth market.
-
- Tehran's Long Arm
-
- Even before last month's Casablanca Economic
- Conference for the Middle East and North Africa,
- an event hosted by the government of Morocco,
- attended by more than 1,500 businessmen and 900
- political officials from most of the region's gov-
- ernments, Iran was denouncing in harsh terms the
- Mideast peace process. Iran especially condemns
- all regional Muslim countries participating in the
- peace process. Information developed from Arab
- sources indicates Iran may be in process of pre-
- paring some violent object lesson through which
- to make evident its determination to oppose a
- peace settlement.
-
- The Casablanca meeting, which was keynoted
- by Morocco's King Hassan II, served to establish
- economic parameters for the ongoing Mideast
- peace process.
-
- As the various governments of the Mideast and
- North Africa proceed towards bilateral peace
- treaties and trade with Israel, it becomes of
- extreme importance to demonstrate to their citi-
- zens that peace will bring concrete economic
- improvements in their lives. As Crown Prince
- Hassan of Jordan noted, the region has a com-
- bined population of 250 million people and a
- gross domestic product of $580 billion. Many
- Mideastern economies are under heavy state con-
- trol and military expenditures are disproportion-
- ately high. Prince Hassan expressed firm support
- for privatization, trade and profit, noting that "It
- is from profit of companies that society can rea-
- sonably levy taxes to finance its wider needs."
- Yasir Arafat emphasized the precarious economy
- of the Palestinian autonomous area, where unem-
- ployment is above 50 percent.
-
- During the Casablanca conference, Qatari
- Foreign Minister Sheikh Hamad Bin-Jasim Bin-
- Jabr al-Thani met with his Israeli counterpart,
- Shimon Peres, to discuss Israeli imports of Qatari
- natural gas and details official recognition, said to
- be imminent. Oman too was reported ready to
- recognize Israel. Bahrain and the United Arab
- Emirates used the conference to establish open
- contacts with Israel.
-
- Muslim regional sources subsequently have
- maintained that Iran has mobilized terrorist assets
- intending to assert its interests by "sending a
- message" to the countries involved in the peace
- process that there will be no peace unless Tehran
- is mollified. The message, according to these
- sources, will be delivered first to Morocco and
-
-
-
- Qatar in a spectacular fashion, with bombing
- attacks on a telecommunications facility and on an
- oil pipeline.
-
- The sources of the report regarding the
- planned new round of attacks firmly believe that
- Iran has called on its terrorist assets among the
- Afghan mujaheddin fighting against the Soviet
- Union to attack the leaders and the infrastructure
- of Morocco and Qatar. According to this report a
- small group of potential terrorists have been
- selected and have received updated training in the
- Sudan for operations against specific targets.
-
- It is possible that Iran may be making credible
- threats in a subtle manner using indirect means in
- order to disrupt the economic and diplomatic
- aspects of the peace process without attracting the
- concerted opposition that an open threat would
- provoke. Within this context it must be consid-
- ered that the English-language Tehran Times
- specifically warned Jordan's King Hussein to
- "beware the fate" of assassinated Egyptian Presi-
- dent Anwar Sadat and that the King of Morocco,
- whose family traces its descent to the Prophet
- Mohammed, is anathema to the region's extremists
- for his successful - and lucrative - peacemaking
- effort. However, while the most recent threats
- involve Qatar and Morocco, it cannot be ruled out
- that other regional governments in the Gulf or
- North Africa may become priority targets or tar-
- gets of opportunity.
-
- There is no mistaking that Tehran's revolution-
- aries see the Mideast's secular Muslim govern-
- ments as impediments. Iranian-controlled groups
- have a track record of deadly attacks on the key
- infrastructure and leaders of targeted states.
- During the 1980s, an Iranian-controlled motley
- organization of Shi'ite terrorists including
- Kuwait's Islamic Jihad, the Iraqi Dawa [Call]
- party, and Lebanon's Hezbollah [Party of God]
- carried out car bombings targeting Kuwait's royal
- family, key infrastructure and the French and
- U.S. embassies. Kuwait was targeted because, at
- the insistence of Baghdad, it opened its foreign
- exchange holdings to Iraq and purchased arms and
- ammunition for the war with Iran. In May 1985,
- for example, the Emir of Kuwait was injured and
- six people were killed when a Dawa car-bomb
- exploded near his motorcade. Iran additionally has
- sponsored coup plots in Bahrain and other Gulf
- states. Now Iranian agents are said to be checking
- out airport security in Europe to see if unaccom-
- panied bags on connecting flights get through.
-
- Published by TMI Print.
- P.O. Box 1651, Washington, DC 20013. (410) 366-2531.
- Fax: (410) 366-6107.
- Editor: John Rees. Managing Editor: Martha Powers.
- Foreign Editor: Karen Damha. Senior Editor: Robert
- Vollmer.
- Staff Writer: David Rhodes. Researcher: Erna
- Wollert. Editorial Assistant: Bonnie Ebling.
- ISSN 1049-9784 Copyright 1994.
-
- (End)
-