home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
080194
/
0801991.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-02-26
|
15KB
|
321 lines
<text id=94TT1008>
<title>
Aug. 01, 1994: Chronicles:The Week--July 17-23
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 01, 1994 This is the beginning...:Rwanda/Zaire
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CHRONICLES, Page 11
The Week: July 17-23
</hdr>
<body>
<p>NATION
</p>
<p> Health-Care Maneuvers
</p>
<p> Following an address to the National Governors' Association
in Boston in which President Clinton appeared to waffle on the
question of universal coverage, the political arm wrestling
over health-care reform intensified in Washington. Democratic
leaders of both houses met with Clinton late in the week to
tell him they would work to craft a different but still universal
program that could win a majority in both chambers. In effect,
it was an abandonment of the Clinton plan. No details were released,
but majority leader George Mitchell announced that "our plans
will be less bureaucratic, more voluntary, and will be phased
in over a longer period of time."
</p>
<p> The Simpson Case
</p>
<p> Once again entering a plea of not guilty, O.J. Simpson was arraigned
on charges that he stabbed to death his ex-wife Nicole Brown
Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman last month. The trial
was assigned to superior court Judge Lance Ito. Before the arraignment,
Simpson offered a $500,000 reward for information leading to
the arrest and conviction of the "real killer or killers," and
set up a toll-free number to take tips from the public.
</p>
<p> Another Whitewater Ripple
</p>
<p> Comptroller of the Currency Eugene Ludwig, the nation's top
bank regulator, wrote in a memo that surfaced last week that
President Clinton had approached him for "advice and counsel"
regarding the "legal-regulatory issues relative to the Whitewater
matter." Ludwig says he responded that it would be "impermissible"
for him to give such advice. The White House retorted that the
only information Clinton sought from Ludwig, an old college
pal, was the names of real estate experts who could write sympathetic
articles about Whitewater issues.
</p>
<p> Sailing Rough Seas
</p>
<p> Secretary of the Navy John Dalton has found himself in hot water.
When he was being considered for his Navy post, the White House
and the Senate Armed Services Committee chose to brush aside
his past legal problems as head of a failed Texas S&L, according
to the New York Times. Dalton insists he was "completely straightforward"
with the Administration and the committee about the matter.
</p>
<p> Breaking the CIA's Frat Code
</p>
<p> CIA Director R. James Woolsey denounced CIA mole Aldrich Ames
as a "malignant betrayer of his country" whose selling of secrets
because he wanted a "bigger house and a Jaguar" cost U.S. agents
their lives. Woolsey acknowledged, however, that the agency's
"fraternity" culture of secrecy, protectiveness and loyalty
helped shield Ames from being unmasked earlier.
</p>
<p> Judge to Citadel: About-Face
</p>
<p> A federal judge ordered the Citadel, the state-supported military
college in South Carolina, to admit Shannon Faulkner to its
all-male corps of cadets next month and to develop plans to
admit other women soon. The school said it would appeal.
</p>
<p> Troubling Demographics
</p>
<p> The Census Bureau released a report showing that out-of-wedlock
births are skyrocketing. In 1993 about 6.3 million children
in the U.S., or more than a quarter of those under 18, lived
with a single parent who had never married--in contrast to
3.4 million in 1983 and 243,000 in 1960.
</p>
<p>WORLD
</p>
<p> Rwandan Refugees' Nightmare
</p>
<p> As victorious rebels declared a cease-fire in Rwanda, more than
2 million refugees poured across the border into Zaire, where
starvation and cholera ravaged what has become the largest refugee
encampment in the world. Said an aid worker: "There's someone
dying here every minute." The Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front
formed a government that promised safety for all Rwandans, but
Hutu fearing retribution for the country's ethnic slaughter
continued their mass exodus.
</p>
<p> Serbs Nix Bosnian Pax
</p>
<p> Western allies debated possible reprisals against the Bosnian
Serbs, who rejected a plan for peace in Bosnia laid down by
the U.S., Russia and three European nations. In response to
the Serb rejection, Bosnian officials warned that their own
unconditional acceptance of the plan would be withdrawn unless
stern action is taken against the Serbs.
</p>
<p> Dead Sea Strolls
</p>
<p> Foreshadowing possible progress toward peace at the historic
meeting between Israel's Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan's
King Hussein at the White House this week, Cabinet ministers
from the two countries met on the Jordanian shore of the Dead
Sea. Jordan's Prime Minister, Abdel Salam Majali, said, "These
are indeed vital and critical moments, which historians shall
cherish and poets shall relish." But while the King declared
that peace will come "as soon as possible," he added, "We've
still got a long way to go."
</p>
<p> Kim Buried, North Moves On
</p>
<p> Two days after North Korea buried its late Great Leader, Kim
Il Sung, amid hysterical public grief, negotiators from Pyongyang
met with U.S. officials in New York City to resume discussions
on the country's controversial nuclear program. High-level talks
between the two countries will restart in Geneva on Aug. 5.
However, hopes for a speedy summit between North and South Korea,
agreed to before Kim's death, were dimmed by Seoul's release
of Russian documents blaming Pyongyang for the Korean War.
</p>
<p> Mixed Signals on Haiti
</p>
<p> The U.S. asked the U.N. to authorize an American-led multinational
force to invade Haiti. But the junta headed by Lieut. General
Raoul Cedras was confident the White House would not take military
action soon, owing in part to mixed U.S. signals. After meeting
with Cedras, House Democratic deputy whip Bill Richardson said
Cedras "is not as intransigent as everyone pictures him to be.
I think there's a little flexibility there."
</p>
<p> Berlusconi Backtracks
</p>
<p> Responding to public outrage, Italian Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi withdrew a decree by his government that freed some
200 bribery and corruption suspects jailed without a trial.
The edict would have eliminated a powerful tool used by prosecutors
seeking to unravel the web of corruption among Italy's ruling
class. Instead, proposed new legislation will provide for preventive
detention of corruption suspects.
</p>
<p> Buenos Aires Blast Kills 49
</p>
<p> An explosion in the Argentine capital destroyed a building housing
the offices of two Jewish groups, killing 49 people and injuring
157. President Carlos Saul Menem said the attack was planned
by "beasts and savages." A radical Islamic group from Lebanon
has claimed responsibility. The group also claims to be behind
the next day bombing of a plane over Panama. Most of the 21
victims were Jewish.
</p>
<p> Labour Party Picks Chief
</p>
<p> Oxford-educated lawyer Tony Blair was elected leader of Britain's
opposition Labour Party, to succeed John Smith, who died of
a heart attack in May. Although a national election is not required
in Britain until 1996, Blair, a moderate, immediately began
his campaign to unseat the unpopular government of Conservative
Prime Minister John Major.
</p>
<p> U.S. Fugitive Nabbed in Jordan
</p>
<p> After a manhunt ordered by King Hussein, Jordanian police arrested
a man wanted in New Jersey for murder. Mohammed Ismail Abequa,
who is suspected of strangling his wife Nihal on July 3, arrived
in Jordan with the couple's two children three days later. On
Saturday, a Jordanian official said Abequa had confessed to
the killing.
</p>
<p>SCIENCE
</p>
<p> Dying Comet Batters Jupiter
</p>
<p> Traveling at speeds of 130,000 m.p.h., mountain-size fragments
of the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 tore huge holes in Jupiter's atmosphere
throughout the week, giving astronomers a glimpse of the titanic
forces released when celestial objects collide. The 24 explosions
roughly equaled 40 million megatons of tnt--500 times the
energy contained in the nuclear arsenals of the U.S. and the
Soviet Union at the height of the arms race.
</p>
<p> Sick Ship Heads for Port
</p>
<p> Celebrity Cruises took its luxury ocean liner Horizon out of
service after traces of the Legionnaires' disease bacterium
showed up in the ship's water system. The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention traced six cases of the rare form of
pneumonia to earlier cruises and reported 24 more suspected
infections. Legionnaires' can be transmitted by air conditioning
or through water supplies and kills 5% to 15% of its victims.
The cruise line offered full refunds to Horizon's 1,243 passengers.
</p>
<p>By Leslie Dickstein, Christopher John Farley, Eugene Linden,
Michael Quinn, Jeffery Rubin, Alain Sanders, Sidney Urquhart
and Sarah Van Boven
</p>
<p> Scene Stealer of the Week: Welcome to BOB DOLE'S Punch-and-Judy
show: watch him pounce on everything from Haiti to health care
to the President
</p>
<p>INSIDE LAGOS
</p>
<p> Jesse's Trip to Troubled Nigeria
</p>
<p> JESSE JACKSON plans to go to Lagos, Nigeria, this week as a
quasi-official U.S. envoy, but some Nigerians, including Nobel-prizewinning
author Wole Soyinka, say Jackson's ties compromise his position.
Moshood Abiola, the apparent winner of last year's presidential
election, once donated $250,000 to a Jackson-backed campaign
to build business links between Africans and black Americans.
In the 1980s, Jackson borrowed an airliner from former strongman
Ibrahim Babangida, the man who would not allow Abiola, now under
arrest, to take office.
</p>
<p>WINNERS & LOSERS
</p>
<p> Winners
</p>
<p> ANNA NICOLE SMITH--Pinup weds octogenarian oilman--and he's happy too
</p>
<p> AMERICAN MATH OLYMPIAD TEAM--Wins math world series with unprecedented perfect score
</p>
<p> TOM ARNOLD--Great True Lies reviews secure his post-Roseanne career
</p>
<p> Losers
</p>
<p> LINDA EVANGELISTA--Beauty acts beastly to Prince Charles at London movie premiere
</p>
<p> CELEBRITY CRUISE LINES--The sun, the sea breeze, the service, the deadly bacterium
</p>
<p> NAVY SECRETARY JOHN DALTON--His leading role in $100 million S&L failure is revealed
</p>
<p>CHEWING THE FAT
</p>
<p> After warning about the artery-clogging potential of Chinese
food, Italian food and movie-theater snacks, the Center for
Science in the Public Interest last week reported the dangers
of consuming Mexican fare. The U.S. government recommends limiting
fat intake to 30% of daily food consumption, or 65 g for a 2,000-calorie-a-day
diet.
</p>
<p>DISPATCHES
</p>
<p> Voodoo on the Hustings
</p>
<p>By Cathy Booth/in Passe Reine
</p>
<p> Toto Constant emerges from his two-story white villa in Port-au-Prince,
looking for all the world like a Sunday driver out for a spin
in his Nissan rental. But the illusion is soon broken by the
arsenal in his car: an M-1 carbine, an Uzi submachine gun and
two .45-cal. pistols. Life can be dangerous if you're Emmanuel
("Toto") Constant, founder of the Front for the Advancement
and Progress of Haiti, or FRAPH, successor to the murderous
Tontons Macoutes of the Duvalier era.
</p>
<p> This particular Sunday, however, Constant is a squeaky-clean
presidential candidate out looking for votes in some distant
election, dispensing pork-barrel promises, anti-U.S. rhetoric
and a little voodoo. His two-car convoy heads for the hamlet
of Montrouis, where he stops for cola drinks and conch while
shaking the hands of awed peasants. In the town of St. Marc
he promises an electrification project, then tucks into a helping
of fried goat. Later he rants to farmers about Haiti's exiled
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and promises that FRAPH will
poison the water supply of any U.S. invaders. "Down with Aristide!"
the farmers cheer. "FRAPH forever!"
</p>
<p> Candidate Constant is eager to create a new image for FRAPH,
which built a Macoutes-like reputation for murder and intimidation
in the pro-Aristide slums. Now Constant claims the group is
a "Salvation Army" helping the poor. Once a member of Haiti's
mission to the U.N., he makes much of his degrees from Canada
in physics, math and engineering. Of course, he still packs
a .357 Magnum in the city. "The weapon is for psychological
impact only", he says. "I have the power of voodoo with me."
</p>
<p> Constant understands the political power of Haiti's peasant
religion. He often treats journalists to late-night voodoo rituals
and trips to the sacred waterfall at Saut d'Eau as he calls
for help from his loa, the warrior god who represents St. George.
This Sunday, Constant is intent on communing with his loa at
a temple in the valley north of Gonaives. By the time he arrives
at the site--a concrete hovel--darkness has fallen. Inside
is an altar topped with white lace, a cross and a MERRY CHRISTMAS
sign. At its base are rum bottles and skulls.
</p>
<p> The ceremony begins. Constant offers up pictures of four loas,
including his own. A priest takes shavings from the bone of
one skull, sprinkles rum on the crowd, then swigs. He spreads
rum on the floor, drinks again. He begins to foam at the mouth,
spittle flying as he shakes his head. A bottle of rum is set
afire. Constant dances uncomfortably. A loa takes possession
of a girl, who writhes at Constant's feet: he looks embarrassed.
There is more dancing, more drinking. Then Constant too is lying
on the floor, in a fetal position. A girl dances around him
as fire licks at rum-soaked spots on the floor. The priest and
Constant embrace. Constant disappears. Five gunshots ring out.
Constant reappears, wearing an orange robe. Time passes in a
haze of booze and heat.
</p>
<p> Then, suddenly, it's over. Fried goat is served, and the crowd
chants in Creole, "Toto for President! Without Toto, Haiti can't
have a life!" As the last cheer fades, Constant heads off into
the night. It is the end of another day on the campaign trail.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>