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Irish Times
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"INTERNATIONAL PAPERS" BY E-MAIL!
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morning delivery of this column, plus "Today's Papers" (daily) and "Pundit
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Central" (Monday morning), click here.
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George Mitchell and George
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Michael vied for stardom in the British press Thursday. On what is a
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make-or-break day for the Ulster peace talks, all the British broadsheets led
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with stories of British government optimism for a last minute settlement,
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despite the Ulster Unionists' firm rejection of the draft agreement submitted
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by Mitchell, the former U.S. senator who is mediating the talks. The British
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tabloids, however, gave top priority to the arrest of pop singer George Michael
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for "engaging in a lewd act" in a public restroom in the Will Rogers Memorial
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Park in Beverly Hills. Rupert Murdoch's Sun , Britain's best-selling
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newspaper, dedicated its first seven pages to Michael's misfortune, with a
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front page headline that read, "Zip Me Up Before You Go Go."
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In its main editorial, the
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Sun (which, on Murdoch's instructions, supports Tony Blair) praised the
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British prime minister's peace efforts but condemned Mitchell's draft as "an
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appeasement of IRA terrorism" that would "sign away the sovereignty of a part
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of the United Kingdom to Dublin. It is like letting Argentina help run the
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Falklands, or Spain share control of Gibraltar." But the Sun was at odds
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with most newspapers on both sides of the Irish sea. Although Northern
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Ireland's Protestant Belfast Telegraph declared in an editorial that the
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creation of cross-border, north-south bodies was "asking too much" of the
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Ulster Unionists, the Republican Irish News in Belfast urged the Unionists to accept them as "a
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logical development." Its front page headline on the talks was "So Near and Yet
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So Far."
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Dublin's
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Irish Independent,
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reporting optimism in Dublin as well as London, said in an editorial
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that "the prize is within the negotiators' grasp": "If they fail to seize it,
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they will surrender to the sinister men lurking in the wings. At the moment of
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truth, they must not flinch." The Irish Times carried no editorial on the talks Thursday, but its
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columnist Mary Holland wrote on the op-ed page that Blair
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had "failed, dramatically, to convince the unionist leader [David Trimble] of
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the need for radical change." She added, "Perhaps, even at this 11 th
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hour, Mr. Blair will be able to convince the unionists that embracing change is
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the best way to safeguard the Union. But the damage that has been done in the
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past few days is enormous."
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An op-ed comment by Simon Beck in Hong Kong's South China Morning Post Thursday
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expressed alarm that recent World Trade Organization rulings against the United
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States could encourage U.S. protectionism and lead to a loss of U.S. confidence
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in the organization. One of the rulings mentioned condemned a U.S. ban on
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imports of shrimp caught in Asian nets that could also kill rare turtles;
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another rejected a U.S. complaint that Japan was obstructing imports of
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American Kodak film. "A few more headlines proclaiming that the WTO is letting
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innocent turtles die at the hands of ruthless Asian fishermen, or allowing
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Japan to cheat U.S. workers out of jobs, will not create the climate for a
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clear-headed debate on the future of world trade," the article concluded.
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China's
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accession to the WTO was one of the issues on which Chinese President Jiang
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Zemin hopes to make "substantial progress" when President Clinton visits
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Beijing in June, the SCMP reported, quoting diplomatic sources. Others
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were Taiwan and the resumption of high-tech U.S. exports to China. Chinese
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presidential aides had indicated they hope Clinton will promise to put pressure
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on Taipei to enter negotiations with China. The Chinese president also hopes
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Clinton's visit will bolster his own prestige as a statesman, "upstaged" by new
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Prime Minister Zhu Rongji's successful European tour.
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The father of Dodi Fayed, who died with
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Princess Diana in a car crash in Paris last summer, told London's Daily
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Mail that he is sick of the British royal family. Mohammed al Fayed, who
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owns the former Duke and Duchess of Windsor's house in Paris (which he had
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hoped to make Dodi and Diana's home), recently sold its contents at an auction
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in New York. Now he says he plans to redecorate it. "I want to get rid of all
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the royal spirits," he told the Daily
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Mail . "They haven't done me
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any good. To hell with the Windsors and the royal family. The house does not
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deserve to be preserved historically." Meanwhile, the Daily Telegraph reported fury
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among British POWs once held by the Japanese that the queen is to invest the
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emperor of Japan with the Order of the Garter, Britain's highest order of
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chivalry, when he visits London next month.
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Tammy Wynette, the subject
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of many large obituaries in the European press, was remembered on Le Monde's op-ed page Thursday
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for her advice to "rester près de son homme, quoiqu'il arrive, car, après tout,
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ce n'est qu'un homme." And George Mitchell, profiled in Milan's Corriere della
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Sera, was described as "a great listener," who, "first as a federal judge,
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and then as a senator, has spent his career trying to understand the point of
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view of his adversaries."
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