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The Full Monica
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At the start of Monica
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Lewinsky's great week--the Andrew Morton book, the Barbara Walters interview,
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and an interview with British television's Channel 4 (for a reported
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$640,000)--the British press is full of her. "Britain will see more of Monica
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in March than any other country on the globe," the Independent of London
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boasted Monday, saying she would be touring bookshops, TV
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stations, and radio studios in a dozen British cities. "With all of us--or all
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of us who can still summon the interest--Monica will share the emotional
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journey she took when she fell in love with the leader of the free world and
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later fell into the cross-hairs of special prosecutor Starr," David Usborne
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wrote from New York.
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London's Sunday Mirror started
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the ball rolling with an "exclusive" interview with Andrew Golden, who described himself as the person
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who introduced Lewinsky to Morton and was "the first journalist ever to talk to
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America's most infamous woman--ahead of Barbara Walters, Jon Snow [her Channel
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4 interviewer] and even before special prosecutor Kenneth Starr gave her the
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go-ahead to tell her side of the story." Lewinsky is quoted as saying, "I'd
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like to think I would live on in a book. I like to be able to reach up on my
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book shelf for one of Shakespeare's plays and I would like to think that people
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will do that with this [Morton's] book." The Sunday Mirror interview was
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widely picked up across Europe Monday, with La Stampa of Turin,
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Italy--under the headline "Sexgate, the last secret: a green skirt"--focusing
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on Lewinsky's account of her first meeting with Clinton at which, according to
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her, he admired the skirt but said he would like to see what was underneath it.
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She obliged.
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The British celebrity
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magazine Hello! ran an interview last week with Monica's father, "the
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man who knows her best." Dr. Bernard Lewinsky said, "The entire family has been
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stressed to the limits, and Monica feels terrible about it." Asked if Monica
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carried a share of the blame for her relationship with President Clinton, he
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replied that it had been "a relationship between two adults," but that "it was
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totally irresponsible for the president to get involved with Monica to begin
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with." He added, "I respect him as a president, but I don't respect him as a
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man." Dr. Lewinsky said that Monica's stepmother Barbara had "taught Monica to
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knit, which was something that has been extremely helpful" and that he had
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never reproached her "or told her that what she did was right or wrong--I just
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told her I loved her."
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The Guardian of London reported Monday that Osama bin Laden,
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America's most wanted foreigner, has been spirited away from his pursuers with
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the connivance of Afghanistan's ruling Taliban militia. The Taliban "actively
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orchestrated" his disappearance, the paper said, and sent him with 10 armed
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guards to an abandoned mountain guerrilla base. He was traveling "with about 25
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men, including trusted lieutenants who are also wanted for the bombing of US
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embassies in Africa, and Amin al-Zahrawy, the leader of Egypt's Islamic Jihad,"
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the paper added. "The Taliban has deliberately stoked the confusion surrounding
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his disappearance earlier this month to protect him when he is at his most
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vulnerable." The Guardian said the Taliban has admitted that bin Laden
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might still be in Afghanistan.
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The British papers are by
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the controversy over allegations of institutionalized racism in the London
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police force, made by an independent judicial inquiry into a botched police
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investigation into the murder of a young black man. The conservative press is
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strongly critical of the proposed solutions to the problem. The Daily
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Telegraph said
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Saturday in an editorial that some of the report's conclusions "border on the
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insane," such as one recommending criminal prosecution of "offences involving
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racist language or behavior where such conduct can be proved to have taken
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place otherwise than in a public place." The editorial also attacked the
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government for adopting numerical targets for the recruitment of ethnic
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minorities by the police. "The American experience has shown that voluntary
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forms of affirmative action can be beneficial, but once quotas are mandated by
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law, they soon become counter-productive," it said.
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According to the Pan-Arabic weekly Al-Mushahid
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Assiyasi , prospects for ending the long-running Lockerbie dispute have been
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boosted by a complicated deal with Saudi Arabia under which Libya will buy $1.7
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billion worth of weapons from South Africa --weapons that the Saudis had been
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due to purchase but have now decided not to. In exchange, Saudi Arabia will
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work to lift the sanctions that have been in force against Libya since 1992.
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The sanctions are due to be "suspended" once the two Libyan citizens suspected
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of involvement in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing of a PanAm plane arrive in the
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Netherlands to stand trial before a Scottish court.
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According to a report in
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the Pan-Arabic al-Quds
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al-Arabi Friday, Saudi Arabia is not the only Gulf state to have
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shelved arms deals. Editor Abdelbari Atwan reported that all the Gulf states,
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hard hit by the collapse of oil prices and blaming Western countries for it,
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have taken an unpublicized decision to "freeze" arms purchases so that their
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Western suppliers will also feel the pinch.
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