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- BEGINNING OF EW REPORT VOLUME 13, PART TWO
- Misconnects
-
- American ╥greens╙ are anemic. Money is tight.
- Environmental giving has dried up since the 1992
- Earth Summit in Rio. Europeans are likely to
- mainstream environmental responsibility in a
- manner similar to fiscal responsibility - external
- audits will ensure that laws are met and that
- proper and due care is taken with the use of
- environmental resources. In the United States,
- lawyers play a much larger role because of liabil-
- ity issues: a firm conducting a $20,000 audit can
- be held responsible, at least partially, for the
- outcome of subsequent decisions based on the
- audit results. Elsewhere, the firm at worst is
- liable for the cost of the audit.
-
- Environmental regulations can be an effective
- disguise for protectionism and increase tensions.
- Take, for example, the recent Christmas tree
- debacle between Mexico and its two northern
- trade partners, Canada and the United States.
- The tree growers hoped to sell them to Mexico.
- Obviously, gypsy moths and other pests from the
- North must be kept from Mexico; but Mexico
- kept changing the rules on how to show that trees
- sent south had a clean bill of health. Often, the
- decision was left in the hands of ill-informed
- border guards and customs officials with tremen-
- dous scope for delay. Not only were there
- demands for mordida [╥little bites╙ - bribes] to
- help speed the process, but the fragile and perish-
- able trees often would be unloaded, shaken down
- for bugs, left standing in the sun, then reloaded
- only to be unloaded again. A round of plant
- quarantine negotiations is scheduled.
-
- Recently, Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt
- directed the National Park Services to increase
- from 107 to 184 the number of visits by cruise
- ships to Glacier Bay National Park in southeastern
- Alaska. Environmentalists contend that by virtue
- of its climate and remoteness, the area is too
- fragile and home to too many threatened species
- to endure a 72 percent increase in ship visits.
- Babbitt╒s order is a victory for Alaska╒s Republi-
- can Senator Frank Murkowski, the new chairman
- of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
- Committee, as well as Alaska╒s Republican Con-
- gressman Don Young, chairman of the House
- Public Lands and Resources Committee. The Park
- Service fears that increasing the number of vessels
- from 107 to 184 during the 92-day season could
- disrupt wildlife, increase air pollution and degrade
- the wilderness experience for kayakers and other
- hardy users. The bay, accessible by air and sea
- only, is one of Alaska╒s finest locales.
-
- In the Pacific Northwest, the Clinton plan for
- forest management was upheld by a federal judge
- in Seattle who rejected legal challenges by envi-
- ronmentalists and the timber industry. The plan
- requires the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of
- Land Management to protect most, not all, of the
- remaining stands of old-growth timber in the
- Northwest, where only 10 percent of the original
- pristine forest remains. Under the plan, thE
- agencies would be able to sell one billion board
- feet of timber a year from these lands [about
- one-fourth the levels of the 1980s], but must
- protect wildlife habitat and corridors along
- streams. Assistant Agriculture Secretary James
- Lyons greeted the ruling saying, ╥We╒ve done what
- no previous administration has been able to do: put
- together a plan that protects natural resources,
- provides a sustainable timber harvest and is con-
- sistent with the law, and we╒re proud of it.╙ The
- battle will be rejoined in Congress by all sides.
-
- Babbitt, in the context of his ╥reform-is-the-
- art-of-the-possible╙ approach, has abandoned the
- grazing reform that was his main initial priority.
- He abandoned his plan to double fees paid by
- ranchers who graze cattle and sheep on 264 mil-
- lion acres of federal land from $1.98 to a com-
- mercial rate of $4.28 per cow per month and to
- impose stricter range-protection standards on
- ranchers. Now the government will focus on
- ensuring that ranchers abide by environmentally
- sound grazing practices. Implementation of this
- part of the grazing plan will be delayed six
- months to allow Congress time to review it.
- Environmentalists feel that the Republicans will
- remove any teeth from the plan, and charge that
- Babbitt ╥sanctions taxpayer-funded destruction of
- the public lands.╙ They claim Babbitt ╥is scraping
- the bottom of the barrel in an effort to make
- friends with those who will always be his enemies,
- and now he╒s making enemies out of those who
- used to be his friends.╙
-
- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a
- notice in the December 15 Federal Register that it
- is ending its listing of the Alabama River stur-
- geon as an endangered species. The reason: dur-
- ing searches for the rare fish, none were found.
- If a sturgeon is found and listed as endangered, it
- is unlikely to stop ongoing habitat-destroying
- dredging by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to
- keep the Alabama and Tombigbee rivers open for
- commercial barge and other traffic.
-
- During the years the Republicans controlled
- the executive, the Democrats controlled Congress
- and checked the Republican environmental line.
- During the past two years when the Democrats
- controlled the White House as well as Congress,
- they failed to enact the expected sweeping toug-
- hening of environmental regulations. Now, with
- the Republicans controlling Congress while a
- Democrat is in the White House, some fear that
- the Rush Limbaugh view of environmentalists as
- ╥wacko╙ will prevail though 83 percent of voters
- told opinion pollers they are ╥environmentalists.╙
- Meanwhile, the real issues have shifted from
- broad environmental clean-up and global environ-
- mental concerns to basic questions: water and how
- to assure enough potable water for the growing
- world population; food and how to ensure ade-
- quate and safe supply, and infrastructure suffi-
- cient to make settlements viable and habitable for
- diverse population needs.
-
- Yeltsin and the Security Services
-
- In September 1993, aides to President Boris Niko-
- layevich Yeltsin publicly acknowledged that he
- was suffering from radiculitis. The diagnosis had
- been made earlier that year by Spanish doctors,
- who travel to Moscow every three years to moni-
- tor Yeltsin. They examined him in connection
- with trauma to the spine that he sustained as a
- result of a 1990 forced landing his plane made in
- Spain. According to Russian doctors, Yeltsin╒s
- medical case history records ╥contusions received
- from being thrown in the river,╙ a reference to a
- serious political dispute during the days of Mik-
- hail Gorbachev, and a contusion to the head sus-
- tained when the presidential limousine collided
- with a compact car on the streets of Moscow.
-
- It should be noted that radiculitis - inflamma-
- tion of the nerve endings - is known in Moscow
- as the illness of presidents. Gorbachev was
- described as a sufferer of the condition during the
- attempted coup of 1991.
-
- German and American physicians, who have
- watched Yeltsin for the past three years believe he
- suffers from the after-effects of complications
- from an acute inflammation of the middle ear,
- cirrhosis of the liver and renal insufficiency, and
- that recently Yeltsin has shown signs of rapidly
- progressing stenocardia. On January 10, at an
- unrelated press conference, Andrey Karaulov, host
- of the television program ╥Moment of Truth,╙
- reported that President Yeltsin has ╥sclerosis of
- the blood vessels of the brain, and he passes out in
- the middle of the work day, forgets words, and is
- in no condition to take independent decisions.╙
-
- Government decisions are being made by
- Yeltsin╒s National Security Council, whose most
- powerful members are First Assistant Viktor
- Ilyushin; Major General Aleksandr Korzhakov,
- chief of the Presidential Security Service (SBP);
- Vice Premier Oleg Soskovets; Security Council
- Secretary Oleg Lobov and the head of the presi-
- dent╒s administration, Sergey Filatov, probably
- soon to be displaced by Yeltsin╒s old friend from
- his Sverdlovsk period, Yuriy Petrov.
-
- The Security Council has the advantage of
- protection by the Presidential Security Service. In
- December, the SBP staged an ostentatious show of
- force in a raid on the MOST bank in the center
- of Moscow. The SBP roughed up the bank╒s
- head, the opulent and very showy Vladimir
- Gusinskiy, as a general warning against supporting
- any rival to Boris Yeltsin - a warning that was
- sufficient for Gusinskiy to send his wife and son
- urgently to Germany.
-
- Despite this eruption of activity and a stream
- of position papers, analyses and public statements
- on economic and social conditions and the war in
- Chechnya distributed from the SBP╒s own press
- office, headed by Andrey Oligov, the SBP remains
- a most mysterious special service.
-
- It is significant that the function of the SBP╒s
- press office is not to give out information, but to
- deal firmly with the press, investigate publications
- writing about the security services and ╥work on╙
- excessively curious authors. In addition to this,
- officials from the SBP╒s press office this year,
- have been circulating compromising material on
- certain Kremlin bureaucrats, members of the
- Duma [parliament] and Moscow businessmen.
-
- There is no record in the Kremlin╒s list of acts
- of the head of state showing how, or when the
- SBP was formed and placed under the command
- of Major General Korzhakov, [reported to have
- had accelerated promotion from the rank of major
- in October 1993, when he distinguished himself in
- the attack on the White House]. Moscow observ-
- ers believe that it was separated out of the Main
- Security Directorate (GUO) in January or Febru-
- ary 1994.
-
- The GUO was formed by an edict of the pres-
- ident in the spring of 1992 from the Kremlin
- Commandant╒s Office and the former Ninth
- Directorate of the former KGB. Kremlin Com-
- mandant Mikhail Barsukov became the head of
- the GUO. Both the GUO and the SBP conduct
- joint measures and share a number of support
- services.
-
- The GUO and the SBP provide security teams
- to guard Russia╒s leaders, their offices, cars,
- apartments, dachas, institutions, ministries and
- departments, plus a whole range of secret ╥objects
- of state importance,╙ such as sanatoriums and
- vacation homes received by the president as gifts
- from the Central Committee of the Communist
- Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) before it was
- outlawed by Boris Yeltsin.
-
- According, again to Moscow sources, both the
- GUO and SBP are involved in surveillance oper-
- ations, videotaping with hidden cameras and
- monitoring telephone conversations. There also
- are reports of unconventional methods, such as a
- person named Rogozin who specializes in ╥reading
- and transmitting thoughts long-distance,╙ and a
- lady named Dzhuna who terms herself a ╥chan-
- neler of bio-energy╙ and is said to influence Boris
- Yeltsin by way of astrology. The GUO and SBP
- have their own analytical subdivision, whose work
- extends to the political and economic situation in
- the country.
-
- The prime analysis center is located outside the
- Kremlin at 5 Varvarka Street, which houses a
- staff of some 60 people, it is under the supervi-
- sion of Georgiy Rogozin, deputy chief of the SBP,
- who previously had worked for the KGB╒s Fifth
- Directorate. Rogozin╒s work was initially con-
- cerned with operations against dissidents, but later
- was said to involve matters such as extrasensory
- perception and telepathy in order to divert the
- attention of people from politics.
-
- The GUO has some 25,000 employees of whom
- some 5,000 are assigned to the SBP. The pay of
- the lower ranks is about one and half times higher
- than that of their colleagues from the other spe-
- cial services; and that of security officers is three
- times higher than that of officers of equal rank in
- the Federal Counterintelligence Service and the
- Ministry of Internal Affairs. The GUO budget
- for 1995 is reported to be 600 billion rubles,
- approximately the same amount as allocated to the
- entire Russian procuracy that employs more than
- 40,000 people.
-
- Comparatively, the former Ninth Directorate of
- the Soviet KGB╒s ╥order of battle╙ showed some
- 8,700 personnel; and the entire KGB had some
- 35,000 personnel. The ╥Niners╙ provided guards
- to both people and facilities across the entire
- Soviet Union, with between ten and twenty
- guards being assigned to the entire Moscow
- nomenklatura dacha settlement; now every dacha
- is guarded by up to 20 GUO officers with the
- numbers of dachas increasing as state bureaucrats
- proliferate.
-
- Each politician provided with protection has,
- on average, several dozen bodyguards, with the
- prime minister and Major General Korzhakov
- having more than a hundred each. The GUO and
- SBP are both provided with electronic communi-
- cations and have been issued with Val silent com-
- bat assault rifles.
-
- The GUO staff includes the Alpha antiterrorist
- storm troops, which, operationally is under the
- command of Korzhakov, as it was the last time
- that it was activated in the autumn of 1993.
-
- In Russia the term ╥in operative subordination╙
- indicates that a regiment, brigade or division are
- supported at the expense of the Defense Ministry
- budget and their personnel are shown on the
- Ministry╒s ╥order of battle,╙ not on that of any
- other agency, such as the GUO or SBP. Thus,
- since 1993 the 118th paratroop regiment, the 27th
- special-purpose motorized infantry brigade and an
- amphibious assault division - all regular military
- formations with armored personnel carriers,
- infantry combat vehicles, tanks and rocket
- launchers - are now available to Generals Barsu-
- kov and Korzhakov for security purposes, without
- reference to the Defense Minister and General of
- the Army Pavel Grachev.
-
- It is apparent to many Russians, including
- members of the Duma Security Committee that
- the GUO and SBP have, at this time, neither
- legislative nor judicial authority and operate
- under the executive authority of President Yeltsin.
- Viktor Ilyukhin, chairman of the Duma committee
- is proposing altering the Russian law to bring the
- GUO and SBP under the control of the Federal
- Counterintelligence Service (FSK); however Major
- General Korzhakov has suggested merging FSK
- with the GUO and SBP to become the very model
- of a modern KGB.
-
- The Final Frontier
-
- Despite the rapture last week in the Russian and
- American press over the link-up of cosmonauts
- and astronauts in space, plans to build the inter-
- national space station Alpha are seriously threat-
- ened by the allocation of Russian resources.
-
- Resources at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in
- Kazakhstan are controlled by the Defense Minis-
- try, the Russian Space Agency and the State
- Committee for the Defense Sectors of Industry -
- the three ╥masters of Russian space.╙ Each
- bureaucracy is engaged in a struggle for control
- over the distribution of state resources. All the
- ╥masters╙ see the only way out of the present
- situation as increasing budget financing.
-
- At Baikonur Cosmodrome, headquarters of the
- Russo-American space program, food and equip-
- ment are abysmal. At the hotel used by the
- Americans, drinking water must be boiled and
- visitors have to wash their hands in disinfectant
- because cholera is epidemic in nearby residential
- areas. There are many labor problems. During
- one recent flight, a labor union rally was joined
- by off-duty Mission Control Center engineers
- who denounced space agency officials who ╥use
- common funds for wild foreign travel,╙ while staff
- were working short weeks on reduced pay.
-
- In March, an American and two Russians will
- begin a three-month spell of living together in the
- Russian space station Mir [peace], which was to
- be fitted with a near ton of scientific equipment
- for the astronaut. The American space research
- equipment was to be sent to the Mir separately in
- an unmanned module called Spektr [ghost]. Now
- the Russians say that Spektr will not be launched
- before May, too late for the equipment to be put
- to meaningful use during this flight.
-
- The Russians claim that the American equip-
- ment arrived late; American sources say the deliv-
- eries were on time but held up by Russian and
- Kazakhstan customs bureaucracies. Americans
- have many complaints about the ╥take, take╙
- nature of the Russian cooperation and the poor
- quality of the equipment. They hope keeping
- Russian scientists busy on joint projects will keep
- Russian scientists home and not developing mis-
- siles for Third World states. The Duma╒s Space
- Committee, together with Deputy Defense Minis-
- ter Andrey Kokoshin and Space Agency Director
- Yuriy Koptev, plan hearings this month on the
- privatization of the Russian space program; but it
- is not expected to make any changes in the imme-
- diate future that could improve the Baikonur Mir
- mission.
-
- GLOBAL BRIEFS
-
- ALGERIA. Sources in Paris report that the
- Clinton administration is still attempting to play a
- crucial role in bringing about a common platform
- in Algeria that will call for an all-party national
- conference. According to the French, the Ameri-
- can policy of ╥pragmatism╙ toward the Islamic
- Salvation Front (FIS) and seven other opposition
- parties that participated in last month╒s Saint
- Egidio colloquium in Rome was following prac-
- tices established by France with the Palestinians,
- Iranians and Iraqis - the policy of self-interest.
-
- In association with the French company Spie
- Capag, the U.S. Bechtel Company is building the
- Algerian section of the Maghreb-Europe gas
- pipeline that will link the Hasi R╒Mel gas field in
- northern Algeria to Spain via Morocco and
- Gibraltar. In association with the Kellogg engi-
- neering company, Bechtel is also working on
- renovating a major gas liquefaction plant in
- Arziw.
-
- For historic reasons, France is the country most
- strongly involved with Algeria; but Mobil, Arco,
- Phillips Petroleum, Anadarko (United States);
- British Petroleum (United Kingdom); Petro
- Canada (Canada); Agip (Italy); Repsol (Spain) and
- other companies, attracted by the country╒s enor-
- mous energy reserves - in oil alone estimated at
- 45 billion barrels - all have made an entry into
- the Algerian oil economy over the past two years.
-
- FIJI. A new political furor has erupted in Fiji
- as members of the Fijian Christian Nationalist
- Party (FCNP) led by Sakeasi Butadroka marched
- through Suva outside the parliament to demand
- the resignation of Prime Minister Major General
- Sitiveni Rabuka. The FCNP is outraged by what
- they see as the double defection from the cause of
- ethnic purity and Christianity of Rabuka. In
- 1987 and 1988 when he headed Fiji╒s armed
- forces, Rabuka led two coups to depose the politi-
- cal party of the island╒s ethnic Indians, most of
- whom are Hindus, whose ancestors were brought
- there by the British as indentured servants to
- labor on the sugarcane plantations and multiplied
- to slightly outnumber the Christian [mainly Meth-
- odist] Melanesians, whose seafaring ancestors
- found the islands centuries ago.
-
- Butadroka and his followers are incensed by
- Rabuka╒s plan to permit Hong Kong Chinese
- businessmen to immigrate to Fiji in exchange for
- a substantial fee. He also has proposed lifting the
- long-standing Sunday observance laws that ban
- commercial activity. Worse, say the nationalists,
- Rabuka has proposed using the word ╥Fijian╙ to
- describe the nationality of all citizens of Fiji
- whether their ethnicity is European, overseas
- Chinese, Polynesian or Indian. The nationalists
- hope to introduce a parliamentary vote of confi-
- dence against Rabuka.
-
- JAPAN. Tokyo decided to reduce the size of
- government somewhat through administrative
- reorganization. Three of the 92 existing publicly
- financed corporations will be privatized including
- the Social Development Research Institute and the
- Teito Rapid Transit Authority. Another five will
- be reorganized, for example, the Livestock Indus-
- try Promotion Corporation. However, the Finance
- Ministry dug in its heels to save the Export-
- Import Bank of Japan, and other banks including
- Hokkaido-Tohoku Development, People╒s Finance,
- Environment Sanitation Business Financing and
- Japan Finance Corporation for Small Business.
-
- KOREAN AFFAIRS. This week the North
- Korean government reiterated its insistence that it
- will not accept South Korean-made light-water
- nuclear reactors even it that means scrapping the
- bilateral agreement reached in Geneva with the
- United States. The Republic of Korea (ROK)
- was to absorb a large share of the cost of building
- two reactors for Pyongyang. Under the Geneva
- agreement, once the two $4 billion reactors were
- completed, the Democratic People╒s Republic of
- Korea (DPRK) would begin dismantling the reac-
- tor at Yongbyon that is believed to be the center-
- piece of the DPRK╒s nuclear weapons program.
- At present, the Yongbyon reactor is off-line, its
- fuel rods removed and cooling in on-site water
- tanks. The DPRK refused to allow removal of
- the used fuel rods to a third country for repro-
- cessing in which their plutonium would be
- removed and stored outside North Korea. The
- U.S. government conceded to Pyongyang on this
- point. The DPRK did suspend construction on a
- second and larger reactor at Yongbyon as agreed
- in Geneva.
-
- Already having made significant concessions to
- the North Koreans, the United States is resisting
- further cave-in. The talks to arrange the opening
- of diplomatic liaison offices in Washington and
- Pyongyang are on hold. Assistant Secretary of
- State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Winston
- Lord reiterated last week, ╥The supply of ROK-
- style light-water reactors is a prerequisite to the
- implementation of the North Korea-U.S. agree-
- ment. In case North Korea should reject to the
- end ROK-style reactors, the Geneva agreement will
- have to be virtually abrogated.╙ Last Thursday,
- Defense Secretary William Perry told Congress
- that if the agreement is not implemented, the
- administration and Congress will consider reinfor-
- cing U.S. forces in South Korea.
-
- The Clinton administration in fact seems to be
- trying a form of ╥soft pressure╙ while continuing
- behind-the-scenes discussions with the DPRK╒s
- negotiators. ╥Flexible inflexibility╙ was how one
- administration source characterized the U.S. posi-
- tion. Formal talks are to resume next month.
- Obviously, Washington is trying not to box itself
- into a confrontational position regarding the
- Geneva agreement╒s April 21 deadline for con-
- cluding implementation arrangements. The State
- Department commented, The date 21 April is not
- the final deadline.╙
-
- LATIN AMERICAN AFFAIRS. As the border
- war between Peru and Ecuador moveed into its
- second month last week, a Russian Ilyushin-76
- bearing Aeroflot markings landed at the Atlantic
- port city Forteleza, and requested fuel to continue
- its 3,000-mile flight to Peru. Inspection of the
- cargo plane determined that it was indeed carry-
- ing turbines and repair parts for military helicop-
- ters. Aeroflot reportedly gave prior notification
- of the cargo to the Itamaraty - Brazil╒s Foreign
- Ministry.
-
- Brazil is a guarantor of the 1942 Rio Treaty
- demarcing the border between the two warring
- countries. The Itamaraty debated briefly, then
- ruled that the Russian plane could refuel, but
- would have to fly back across the Atlantic to
- Dakar, Senegal. The pilot agreed and filed the
- appropriate flight plan. However, as the Il-76
- was leaving Brazilian airspace, it radioed for
- permission to land in Georgetown, Guyana.
-
- The message was intercepted by the Brazilian
- Air Force traffic control office in Recife. The
- air traffic controllers contacted the Russians,
- reminded them the agreed flight plan required
- them to proceed to Dakar. After several minutes
- silence, the Russian pilot said he would head for
- Africa, but make one ╥technical stop╙ for refuel-
- ing in the Cape Verde Islands. Brazilian authori-
- ties believe the Aeroflot transport circled around
- and went to Peru anyway. Brazilian military
- attachés were checking with the governments of
- Cape Verde and Senegal. The Russian Foreign
- Ministry issued an official statement saying ╥the
- competent Russian authorities responsible for the
- weapons trade have nothing to do with the trans-
- portation of cargo by the plane in question.╙
-
- SIERRA LEONE. Organization of African
- Unity╒s (OAU) Deputy Secretary-General Abdul-
- lahi Sahid Osman called this week for a cease-
- fire in the ongoing civil war and urged rebel
- leaders to release the 17 foreigners and seven
- Sierra Leoneans held hostage. Osman, a Somali,
- also urged the United Nations and Commonwealth
- to try to mediate the conflict. Over the past four
- years, the war has claimed some 5,000 lives and
- created a 40,000-plus refugee problem in neigh-
- boring Guinea. During his five-day visit, Osman
- met with the president of the National Provisional
- Ruling Council, Captain Valentine Esegragbo
- Melvine Strasser, but was unable to make personal
- contact with the leader of the Revolutionary
- United Front, Corporal Foday Sankoh. The OAU
- mission coincided with a similar visit by U.N.
- Special Envoy Berhanu Dimka, an Ethiopian.
- The OAU mission will overlap with a Common-
- wealth delegation that is expected to arrive in
- Freetown momentarily.
-
- SOUTH AFRICA. Newspapers from the New
- Nation and Sowetan to Business Day are discuss-
- ing the financial controversies surrounding gov-
- ernment figures Winnie Mandela, Bantu Holomisa
- and Peter Mokaba. Allegedly, each misappropri-
- ated sums ranging from the thousands to the
- millions of dollars. All protest their innocence.
-
- To these controversies is added another scandal
- involving Dr. Allan Boesak. Some $300,000 in
- charitable funds went to pay for his third wed-
- ding, vacations, house and new wife╒s business
- debts. Boesak╒s actions have brought international
- headlines, such as one in the London, Indepen-
- dent, ╥Is corruption at the heart of the revolution?╙
-
- Observers in South Africa point out that all
- those under investigation - Winnie Mandela,
- Holomisa and Mokaba - are highly popular lead-
- ers of the radical populist wing of the African
- National Congress (ANC) and that the new inves-
- tigations may have been launched by reconcili-
- ation-oriented leaders such as Vice President
- Thabo Mbeki, Justice Minister Dullah Omar and
- Deputy Defense Minister Ronnie Kasrils, who
- believe themselves and the ╥New╙ South Africa are
- threatened by the radical populists as President
- Nelson Mandela is unable to exercise control.
-
- UZBEKISTAN. Soviet-style authoritarianism
- is in place in Tashkent where the trial of mem-
- bers of the outlawed opposition party, Erk, has
- resumed. The prosecution, whose case was pre-
- pared by Uzbekistan╒s National Security Service,
- formed from the local KGB after the breakup of
- the Soviet Union, charges Muhammad Solikh with
- plotting to overthrow President Islam Karimov,
- formerly the Communist Party first secretary, by
- publishing the Erk party╒s newspaper, outlawed by
- the Goskompechat [State Committee for the Press]
- and ╥inciting distrust and hostility among the
- people and toward the president and the govern-
- ment and calling for struggle against the repre-
- sentatives of legally constituted authority and for
- the support of anticonstitutional organizations.╙
- Also on trial are the Erk╒s editor, Dzhakhongir
- Mamatov, former director of Uzbek state televi-
- sion and a Supreme Soviet deputy, and Murad
- Dzhurayev, also a former Supreme Soviet deputy
- and mayor of Murabek. Only family members of
- the accused are permitted to attend the trial.
- Observers and correspondents, local or foreign,
- are barred.
-
- VIETNAM. ╥Saigon South╙ may shortly rise if
- not from ashes like the proverbial phoenix, at
- least from the farmlands just south of what now
- is officially Ho Chi Minh City. Taiwanese inves-
- tors [the developer is the Phy My Hung Corpora-
- tion] are planning a $60 billion investment that
- will include over the course of 15 years construc-
- tion of a business and financial center, commer-
- cial offices, warehousing, a science park, univer-
- sity and shops to service the complex to be built
- in the 10 square miles set aside. All that exists at
- this time is the 600-acre Tan Thuan Export Pro-
- cessing Zone (EPZ), launched with $89 million
- from Taiwan╒s Central Trading and Development
- (CT&D), the investment arm of Taiwan╒s ruling
- Kuomintang. Work on the Saigon South beltway
- road linking the site to Vietnam╒s main north-
- south road will begin next April and take seven
- years to complete. There are problems. The
- semi-official Vietnam Investment Review com-
- plains of the cost-raising slowness of the con-
- struction process.
- END OF EW REPORT VOLUME 13, PART TWO.