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Was It Witchcraft? The Mystery of Flight 990
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Despite the initial lack of any evidence of foul play in the crash of EgyptAir
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Flight 990 off the coast of Massachusetts, European newspapers clung hopefully
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to that possibility Monday. The Italian newspapers were particularly interested
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in the mystery of "Luciano Porcari," which, according to the Federal Aviation
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Administration, is the signature on a letter it received in September, warning
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that a bomb might be placed aboard an airliner departing from either New York
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or Los Angeles. The FAA noted that a man named Luciano Porcari hijacked a
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Spanish plane in 1977 and was sent briefly to prison for it. But, according to
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Corriere della
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Sera of Milan, the FAA "seems not to know" that the same Porcari, now
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aged 50, is currently in prison in Naples for a different crime. He was
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arrested in 1994 for stabbing his girlfriend to death in the central Italian
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city of Orvieto. "But if it's not Porcari, who is hiding behind his identity?"
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the paper asked. "It is a mystery within a mystery."
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Another common urge was to associate the crash with Halloween. The Washington
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correspondent of La
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Repubblica of Rome began an overblown front-page article as follows:
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"On the night of American witches--Halloween--right in the nest of American
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witches--Massachusetts--the spell that swallowed up four aircraft in four years
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in the same stretch of sky and sea seems to have been beating its wings and to
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have consumed another 217 lives flying on an Egyptian Boeing." He said the
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world's media now regard that stretch of sky and sea as "cursed"--"another
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Bermuda Triangle ready for the new millennium"--but he went on to explain
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prosaically that the flight paths up the East Coast of the United States are in
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fact neither "bewitched nor cursed, but simply the busiest in the world."
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As
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President Clinton began talks with the Israeli and Palestinian leaders in Oslo,
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Norway, Monday, Ha'aretz said Israel still has no united policy on a Middle
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East peace settlement. In a front-page report,
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the paper said Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak will offer statehood to the
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Palestinians in the "framework agreement" they are due to sign next February
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and in exchange will demand that the Palestinians recognize West Jerusalem as
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the Israeli capital; but the paper said in an editorial
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that "the parties have yet to deal with the heart of the conflict."
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International confidence in Israel was restored following Barak's defeat of
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Benjamin Netanyahu in the general election, but "[c]onfidence-building measures
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can no longer suffice at this stage," it said. "The Oslo summit, therefore, is
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an important reminder of decisions yet to be made, without which the summit
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will remain only a ceremony, without any of the requisite diplomatic content to
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advance the process."
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The
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Jakarta
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Post marked the departure of the last Indonesian troops from East Timor
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by describing Indonesia's 24-year war to keep control of the territory as "an
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historic error." But in an editorial Monday, the paper was optimistic about the
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future. "With the kind of wise and democratic leadership that now exists in
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Jakarta--and hopefully in the near future also in Dili--there is every reason
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to believe that a rapprochement is possible." The Jakarta Post also
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quoted East Timorese Nobel Peace Prize laureate Jose Ramos-Horta as ridiculing
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claims that East Timor would not be viable as a country on its own: "One does
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not have to be an Einstein to do slightly better than those incompetent, lazy,
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corrupt bastards who managed our country for 23 years. Sometimes I find it
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laughable that the Indonesian [authorities] keep telling us that East Timor
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cannot manage without Indonesia."
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The
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Sydney Morning
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Herald , which reported the Indonesian evacuation under the headline
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"East Timor's Tormentors Slink Away," ran a long editorial Monday extolling Australia's peacekeeping role and
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expressing the hope that it might eventually lead to the Association of South
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East Asian Nations adopting a collective security role in the region. The
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SMH , which has been campaigning for a republican victory in this
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Saturday's referendum to rid Australia of the British monarchy, published a
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pro-monarchy article Monday by Peter Slezak, a lecturer at the
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University of New South Wales. Slezak's argument is that without the queen,
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Australia "would be a nation of jingoistic, sentimental flag-wavers. ... [I]t
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may be the very irrelevance of royalty which has helped protect us from
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excesses of patriotic fervor," he wrote--comparing Australians favorably with
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Americans, who "have a cloying sentimentality about their history, their flag,
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their president and their system." An opinion poll published Monday in the Guardian of London
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found, surprisingly, that a large proportion of Britons think Australia should
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ditch the monarchy: Forty percent said it should become a republic and 34
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percent that it should keep the queen as its head of state. The Guardian
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said its poll "could provide a much-needed boost" to Australia's republican
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campaigners, who have been running slightly behind the monarchists in the
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latest polls.
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The
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cyclone disaster in Orissa on the east coast of India prompted a breast-beating
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editorial in the Times of India . "Just what is it about us that we feel
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so helpless before a natural disaster?" it asked. "Our achievements are
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obviously world class in many spheres, science and technology and computers
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being among them. We have the almighty nuclear bomb and, yet, we despair when
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it comes to floods, droughts, cyclones and communicable diseases, many of them
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entirely avoidable man-made disasters. ... It used to be said of the former
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Soviet Union that while it excelled in such complicated endeavours as space
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exploration, the smallest things would fox it--the tap would leak and the flush
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would not work. Perhaps because we modelled ourselves after that country, we
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seem to be affected by the same disregard for the smaller details, which, for
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all their apparent insignificance, matter the most in the end."
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The French press recovered
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from its gloom over the European ruling against France in its Mad Cow War with
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the British and found something to celebrate in France's astounding semifinal
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victory over the New Zealand "All Blacks" Sunday in the Rugby World Cup
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tournament in Britain. "The Blues flatten the Blacks" was the four-column
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front-page headline in Le
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Figaro of Paris. Even the British press was generous. "All Blacks
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humbled by a French tour de force" said the Daily Telegraph , calling it
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"the biggest upset in the history of the Rugby World Cup." The Independent called it
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"a blaze of gloire " and added: "In a year of remarkable sporting
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finishes, here was the most unexpected of victories for the most enchanting of
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underdogs over the most intimidating of favorites. And what, now, will they do
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for an encore?" The French meet the Australians in the final of the cup in
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Cardiff next Saturday.
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