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Turkish Delight
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Le Monde of Paris
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led its Sunday-Monday edition with a lament about "European impotence" in
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relation to the Russian onslaught on Chechnya. It said that the 15 leaders of
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the European Union, meeting in Helsinki this weekend, managed to achieve
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nothing more than "timid warnings" to Moscow that they would suspend certain
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cooperation agreements if it didn't stop bombing the Chechens. In response,
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Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said he understood the concerns about the
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humanitarian situation in the north Caucasus but rejected any change of
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"tactics" in achieving "the destruction of terrorism." Libération of Paris led
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Monday with a report that 40,000 people are trapped in Grozny, unable to
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escape the Russian noose.
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The
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paper also ran an interview with the powerful Russian media mogul Boris
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Berezovsky, in which he called the Chechnya conflict "a just war," claimed
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Chechen military leaders "have received funds from radical foreign extremist
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circles that I will not name," and said there should be no more talk of Chechen
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independence. "In that, the United States and Europe support us," he said. "The
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Russian Constitution must prevail in Chechnya." But Berezovsky also criticized
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the Russian government for failing to seize opportunities for negotiation. Even
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so, he said he would vote for the "politically inexperienced" Putin in the next
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Russian presidential election because he has two qualities that no other
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candidate offers: "He is a reformer and he is extremely determined."
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Le Monde 's
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editorial was devoted to the Helsinki agreement to establish a joint European
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rapid-deployment force to intervene in trouble spots such as the former
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Yugoslavia. It called this a "spectacular" affirmation of Europe's desire "to
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exist by itself, without the help of the United States," going far beyond
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present forms of military cooperation among European countries.
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The
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death of Franjo Tudjman, the first president of independent Croatia, was also a
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big story in Europe, with some commentators seeing it as a positive development
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for peace in the Balkans. The Daily Telegraph of London reported that, according to the
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Dutch news agency ANP, the War Crimes Tribunal in the Hague had been planning
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to indict Tudjman for atrocities in Bosnia. In its obituary of Tudjman, the
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Times of
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London said he had had a "shadowy relationship" with the United States. "In
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1994 and 1995 it was American military backing and training that helped Tudjman
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and his new army to expel around 300,000 Serbs from areas they had seized at
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the start of the Yugoslav disintegration in 1991," it said. (For
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Slate
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's take on Tudjman, see this ".")
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The
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Guardian
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of London fronted a report Monday that British Prime Minister Tony Blair has
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"categorically ruled" that the 2,500-year-old sculptures from the frieze of the
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Parthenon in Athens--known in Britain as the "Elgin Marbles"--should not be
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returned to Greece. The Greek government recently stepped up its long-running
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campaign to get them back and got the British Museum to admit that it bungled
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their restoration in 1938. Greece is poised to make a new request for the
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sculptures' return as part of a deal to coincide with the 2004 Olympic Games in
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Athens. Greece wants to house the marbles in a new museum to be built under the
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Acropolis. The sculptures were bought in 1803 from the then-Turkish authorities
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in Athens by the British aristocrat Lord Elgin, who subsequently donated them
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to the British Museum. The Guardian said Blair intends to proceed
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sensitively in order to avoid further antagonizing the Greeks. "The last thing
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Mr Blair wants is another row with a fellow European Union member when he is
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already at loggerheads with the French about beef and the Germans over the
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withholding tax," the paper said. But a row seems to be inevitable. The report
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surprised some observers who thought that the British government would agree to
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the return of the sculptures. A recent editorial in the National Post of
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Canada, a conservative daily, assumed that this was the case and said it "would
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elevate historic sentiment over legality, creating in the process a chaotic
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precedent for dispersing the world's great archaeological collections." The
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Post also accused British Hellenophiles of double standards by not
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supporting the return of stolen treasures to the "non-European" Turks. "To do
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so would be to admit that Turkey, like Greece, is legitimately part of Europe,"
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it said.
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But at
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the Helsinki summit, the European Union finally agreed to accept Turkey as a
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candidate for EU membership. Turkey's desire to join the European club has
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hitherto been thwarted by its historic enemy Greece (already a member) and by
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European concerns about its human rights record. La Repubblica of Rome led
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its front page Sunday with a report that, as part of its concessions to Europe,
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Turkey has agreed to abolish the death penalty, offering hope for the rebel
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Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan who has been sentenced to death for terrorism.
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The Turkish parliament must approve his execution before it can be carried out.
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According to the Turkish Daily News Sunday, President Bill Clinton was among
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world leaders who telephoned Ankara to urge acceptance of the EU's conditions.
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Turkish papers generally rejoiced at the agreement. They carried headlines such
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as "Turkey is in the EU family" ( Turkish Daily News ) and "The first
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Muslim candidate" ( Hurriyet ). Writing Monday in Hurriyet ,
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columnist Tufan Terenc said, "This has sealed Turkey's future and led it to the
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point of no return."
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As
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Israel prepares for peace talks with Syria in Washington this week, the
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Jerusalem Post gave
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an upbeat assessment of the prospects, leading its front page with a forecast by
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Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk Shara that a peace deal could be reached within
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"a few months." It also offered a foretaste of what was billed as an optimistic
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speech to the Knesset Monday by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak. According to
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the Post , he will say that peace is "within our reach" and anticipate an
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agreement that will "burst apart the sense of threat on both sides, do away
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with fear and suspicion, and burn out terror."
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Nearly
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all British newspapers carried front-page photographs Monday of Muhammad Ali
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receiving the BBC's "Sports Personality of the Century" award at a ceremony in
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London. "So Sad" was the tabloid Daily Mirror 's headline, referring to Ali's physical
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condition, but most papers ran eulogies of the former boxing hero. The
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Times ' sports commentator Simon Barnes called Ali "the most reckless
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spendthrift of himself that the world of sport has ever seen." Barnes wrote:
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"These days he comes to audiences not to milk their applause but to give
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audiences something worth applauding. It is he that is doing the giving, the
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audience that does the receiving." In an interview with the Daily Mail ,
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Ali's fourth wife, Lonnie, said: "I believe Muhammad's role is to unite people
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throughout the world in peace. He is one of those rare individuals like the
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late Princess Diana who can walk anywhere and be well received by millions,
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regardless of age, race or social background." All papers quoted Ali's remark
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on accepting the award, "I had a great time boxing. I enjoyed it and I may come
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back."
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