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Recession Hits Germany 

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Officials in largest European economy blame shrinking exports for contraction; 
analysts say world's developed nations face prolonged downturn 
Stock brokers go about their business at the stock exchange in the central 
German city of Frankfurt, 10 Nov 2008Evidence is mounting that the global 
economy is in steep decline, with more bad financial news from Europe and 
Asia.A report by the German government says the nation is officially in 
recession, for the first time in five years. The report says the economy shrank 
by one-half of one percent in the third quarter of 2008 - the second straight 
quarter of decline.  Shrinking exports are blamed for the decline in the 
world's third-biggest economy.A separate report from the Organization for 
Economic Cooperation and Development predicts that economic activity will 
shrink by half a percent in countries using the euro and nine-tenths of a 
percent in the United States next year.Washington has been trying to boost the 
battered U.S. economy with a $700 billion rescue plan for the financial 
industry.  Wednesday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said he is working 
to develop ways to assist financial institutions that offer consumers credit 
for consumer loans for things such as college costs or automobile 
purchases.That is a new focus for the plan which was first intended buy up 
troubled investments.The financial crisis tops the agenda Saturday when leaders 
from the world's 20 biggest industrialized and emerging nations gather in 
Washington. Global stock markets are mixed Thursday.  Key markets in Tokyo and 
Hong Kong plunged more than five percent.  European share prices were mixed in 
midday trading, while U.S. stock indexes posted gains as markets opened in New 
York. 

 

Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.


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Washington Finance Summit Seeks Ways to Combat Economic Slowdown 

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Summit is first-ever gathering of leaders from 20 industrialized and developing 
nations 
Amid a dramatic global economic slowdown, leaders of 20 developing and 
industrialized economies are holding an emergency summit in Washington  
Saturday, November 15. VOA economics correspondent Barry Wood reports on what 
may result from a meeting whose formal discussions will last only five 
hours.Traders on the Tokyo Stock Exchange gaze at digital indicator as Japan's 
key stock index nose-dives on a rising yen and growing recession fears in Tokyo 
(File Photo)When world leaders convene in Washington, they will focus on a 
slowdown that has affected virtually every country. In just months, $25 
trillion have been erased from global stock markets. Millions of jobs have been 
lost, and consumers are holding on to whatever cash they have, sparking further 
declines.Former US Treasury official Ted Truman helped plan financial meetings 
of industrialized countries. He believes this broader gathering --not of seven 
but of 20 -- is significant."I hope it will focus on the big problem we face, 
which is global recession," he said.   To maintain consumer purchasing power 
and avoid calamity, leaders must commit to coordinated measures, says Wing Thye 
Woo of Washington's Brookings Institution.

 "Boosting government expenditure, lowering interest rates, and countries 
should not engage in export promotion policies at this point," he explained.  
World Leaders Some countries, especially China, have already announced 
emergency spending programs.  Experts say China is signaling a desire to play a 
bigger role in the global economy."They are now important players and will 
become even more important in the future," Woo said. "We need the Chinese to 
continue growing fast." The need for better regulation of financial 
institutions will also be discussed, as will the need for developing economies 
-- like China and India -- to have a bigger say in the International Monetary 
Fund.Ted Truman Ted Truman says the financial summit could mark the beginning 
of regular consultations between developed and developing countries. 

"I think the most significant thing about this meeting is that it probably 
marks the beginning of the end of the G-7 as a summit organization," he said. 
Annual G-7 summits of  the United States, Canada, Japan and western European 
nations have taken place for over 30 years. The broader group accounts for 75 
percent of global output. 


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Obama Taps Bipartisan Team for Washington Summit 

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Officials say former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, a Democrat, and 
former Republican Congressman Jim Leach will represent president-elect at 
gathering 
U.S. President-elect Barack Obama has named a bipartisan duo of Washington 
veterans to meet with foreign delegations at a global financial summit 
beginning Saturday in the U.S. capital.Former US Secretary of State Madeleine 
Albright (file photo)Officials say former Secretary of State Madeleine 
Albright, a Democrat, and former Republican Congressman Jim Leach will 
represent Mr. Obama at the gathering of delegations from 20 countries.  
President-elect Obama is not attending the summit and will not meet with 
foreign dignitaries as he has not yet been inaugurated.  His aides have said 
that there is one president at a time in the United States.  President George 
Bush called the summit of the world's richest nations and biggest emerging 
economies to seek ways to prevent future financial crises.Mr. Obama, however, 
has been in touch with many foreign leaders who called to congratulate him on 
his election last week.  They included the leaders of Australia, Britain, 
Canada, France, Germany, Israel, Japan, Mexico and South Korea.  The 
president-elect has also spoken with Mwai Kibaki, the president of his late 
father's country, Kenya, as well as with Pope Benedict XVI. 

 



Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.


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Gates Criticizes Latest Russian Missile Threats 

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US defense secretary calls Russia's threats to deploy missiles in Kaliningrad 
'provocative and misguided' 
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Russian threats to place tactical 
missiles near Poland's borders, in response to U.S. missile defense plans, are 
"hardly the welcome" a new U.S. president deserves.U.S. Defense Sec. Robert 
Gates at a press conference during informal NATO- Ukraine consultations,  
Tallinn, 13 Nov 2008Gates spoke Thursday in Estonia, after an informal meeting 
of NATO defense ministers with their Ukrainian counterpart.  He noted that 
Russian President Dmitri Medvedev's threat last week to place missiles in its 
Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad came hours after the U.S. presidential election 
had concluded.  He called the threat provocative and misguided.Gates attended 
the NATO meeting to highlight U.S. support for eastern European allies 
currently under fire from Moscow for efforts to build closer ties with the 
West.The United States wants to deploy 10 missile interceptors in Poland and 
guidance radar in the Czech Republic, to protect U.S. allies from possible 
attacks by Iran.  Moscow says the missile system will destabilize Europe and 
lead to a new arms race.On arrival in Tallinn Wednesday, Gates said Russia 
should not seek to prevent former Soviet allies from fully integrating with the 
West.  He also said he wanted to reaffirm Washington's commitment to Baltic 
countries Ukraine and Georgia. Gates said NATO is working on defense plans for 
Estonia and other alliance members.  He also promised funding to boost Estonian 
cyber security.  Some NATO allies are reluctant to move too fast in admitting 
the former Soviet allies, so as to avoid angering Moscow.

 

Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.  


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Iranian Diplomat Kidnapped in Northwestern Pakistan 

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Officials say attack happened in Peshawar, Iranian consul's guard was killed in 
attack 
Unidentified gunmen in Pakistan have abducted an Iranian diplomat after killing 
his security guard in Peshawar.  Ayaz Gul reports from Islamabad the kidnapping 
occurred a day after an American aid worker and his local driver were shot dead 
in the troubled northwestern city. A senior police officer, Jawad Qamar, told 
VOA by telephone from Peshawar that the Iranian diplomat, Hashmatullah 
Attarzadeh, was ambushed as he drove to the consulate in the city. "He left his 
home for the consulate.  He had a police guard with him.  A white car in which 
there were allegedly three to four armed criminals, they intercepted his car, 
they fired upon the police guard, killed him and kidnapped the Iranian consul," 
said Qamar.Pakistani police officer looks at bullet hole in windshield of 
Iranian diplomat's car after attack in Peshawar, 13 Nov 2008The ambush took 
place a day after unknown gunmen killed an American aid worker and his local 
driver in Peshawar.  The victims were employees of a U.S-based aid organization 
working on a development project in the region.  Thursday's kidnapping happened 
in the same area where Afghanistan's ambassador-designate was abducted in 
September.  He is still missing. Peshawar is the last city on the road to the 
Khyber Pass, the main land route to Afghanistan.  It is also the capital city 
of Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province, where militants linked to al-Qaida 
and the Taliban have carried out frequent high-profile kidnappings, suicide 
bombings and deadly attacks on security forces in recent months. These 
insurgents are also believed to be using the Pakistani border region for 
cross-border raids on NATO and Afghan forces.Early this week, pro-Taliban 
militants seized 13 trucks carrying supplies to foreign forces in Afghanistan 
as they drove through the Khyber Pass.Taliban militants are believed to be 
behind the kidnappings of two Chinese engineers and a Polish surveyor.  The men 
were abducted from two different districts in the northwest of the country. 
Speaking at a news conference in Islamabad, foreign ministry spokesman Mohammad 
Sadiq, condemned the kidnappings, saying Pakistan has assured their respective 
countries it is making all possible efforts to secure their safe release.  But 
he dismissed the incidents will undermine Pakistan's relations with its 
friendly countries."The government has reaffirmed its commitment that all the 
kidnapped diplomats or foreigners will be recovered as soon as possible.  These 
are very sad incidents, but we hope that they will not affect the relationships 
as such because we [Pakistan] are passing through a difficult phase, difficult 
period," said Sadiq.Pakistani security forces are said to have killed up to 
2,000 militants since early August during anti-insurgent military operations in 
the Swat district and the Bajaur tribal region on the Afghan border. U.S.-led 
coalition forces based in Afghanistan also have stepped up missile strikes in 
Pakistan's mountainous Waziristan border region targeting al-Qaida bases and 
training facilities.  These attacks have killed scores of people, mostly 
militants, but Pakistani leaders condemn the U.S. move as a violation of their 
country's sovereignty, saying the strikes are fueling anti-America sentiment 
and hurting the government's anti-terror efforts. 


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Afghanistan Suicide Bombing Targets US Military Convoy 

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10 civilians, one US soldier killed in Nangarhar province attack 
U.S. officials and local police in eastern Afghanistan say a suicide bomber has 
killed at least 11 people and wounded 74 others in an attack aimed at a U.S. 
military convoy.  VOA's Barry Newhouse reports from Kabul.U.S. soldiers walk by 
a vehicle damaged in a suicide attack in Batti Kot district of Nangarhar 
province, Afghanistan, 13 Nov 2008Local police in the Bati Kot District of 
Nangarhar province said the blast occurred after dawn when a bomber driving a 
small passenger car targeted a nearby coalition convoy. Interior Ministry 
spokesman Zamary Bashary said many people had gathered in the area for a weekly 
livestock market. "Prior to reaching the convoy he detonated himself and since 
there was a bazaar there, children were going to school - so unfortunately 
children were included in those injured," Bashary said. Awal Jan was unloading 
cows from his truck when the bomb detonated.  He said many people ran, but 
there were scores of others on the ground.  He said most of those who were 
wounded or killed were the people who came to buy the animals.  He said they 
were hit by the shrapnel.The military said one soldier was among those killed.  
Local doctors said the wounded have been transported to two nearby hospitals.  
They said some of the wounded people are in critical condition.The attack 
occurred about 25 kilometers from Jalalabad, a major city where U.S. bases 
provide support for missions in eastern Afghanistan.  The region has 
experienced a surge in violence in 2008, contributing to the highest annual 
death toll for U.S. forces since the 2001 invasion.  The suicide blast is the 
second in as many days.  On Wednesday, a suicide bomber driving a truck packed 
with explosives attacked a provincial government compound in Kandahar 
province.  The blast flattened several nearby buildings, killing six people and 
wounding more than 40.

 

 


------------------------------------------------------






South Korea Seeks Talks as North Takes Dramatic Self-Isolation Steps 

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Seoul says US will contact North soon to discuss latest snag in efforts to get 
rid of nuclear weapons 
South Korea says it wants dialogue with North Korea as soon as possible.  The 
North has taken several dramatic steps to isolate itself from South Korea, and 
possibly from the United States and even China.  VOA's Kurt Achin has more from 
Seoul.South Korea says the United States will contact North Korea soon to 
discuss the latest snag in efforts to get rid of the North's nuclear 
weapons.Pyongyang says inspections to verify the accuracy of a nuclear 
declaration it made earlier this year will be limited only to field visits, and 
that no samples of nuclear material will be allowed to leave the country.South 
Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan speaks during National Press Club forum 
in Seoul, 13 Nov 2008South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan says the North 
is not living up to the nuclear verification deal it agreed to recently with 
the United States. He says the North Korean announcement is a direct 
contradiction of what South Korea and the United States have understood up to 
now.  He expresses South Korea's regret about that.The North's nuclear move 
comes alongside several other apparent steps to isolate itself.  Officials in 
Beijing were unable to confirm a media report Thursday citing travel agents 
that North Korea is restricting travel by visitors across its border with 
China. Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Qin Gang says he has not heard of any 
abnormal situation on the North Korean border, but will investigate.North 
Korean media has informed its citizens about a border warning it issued to 
South Korea this week.A North Korean newsreader says as of December 1, the 
country will prohibit crossings of the military demarcation line which 
separates the two Koreas.South Korean Unification Ministry Spokesman Kim 
Ho-nyoun says Pyongyang has suspended crucial telephone lines that help the two 
Koreas carry out basic communication.He says North Korea has blocked telephone 
landlines between authorities and the International Red Cross at the 
North-South border village of Panmunjeom.  Now, he says, the North will not 
even accept test calls.The two Koreas are technically at war.  Only a temporary 
1953 armistice halted fighting three years after the North invaded the South. 
North Korea has repeatedly warned the South in recent weeks to prevent civic 
groups from launching  balloon-borne leaflets  into the North's territory.  The 
leaflets are severely critical of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, and contain 
highly sensitive information about his prolonged public absence and possible 
recovery from a stroke he may have suffered earlier this year.South Korea's 
Defense Ministry says it managed to fax a message to the North saying it is 
trying to stop the leaflet launches.  Lee Sang-cheol is the Ministry's director 
of North Korea policy.He says he hopes talks can be arranged with North Korea 
soon. 


------------------------------------------------------






Israeli Blockade Creates Food Shortages in Gaza 

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Move is response to Palestinian rocket attacks; UN official condemns attacks 
but says cutting off food supplies is collective punishment 
A crippling Israeli blockade on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip is creating food 
shortages.  Robert Berger reports from the VOA bureau in Jerusalem.Palestinian 
refugees wait to receive their monthly supplies of flour at a United Nations 
food aid distribution center, in Shati refugee camp in Gaza City, Wednesday, 12 
Nov. 2008.A U.N. flour warehouse in Gaza is empty a week after Israel halted 
shipments in response to Palestinian rocket attacks.  A warehouse containing 
canned meat is also about to run out of supplies, affecting hundreds of 
thousands of Palestinians. U.N. spokesman Chris Gunness condemned the rocket 
attacks. "They are an abomination and they have to stop," Gunness said. But he 
said cutting off food supplies is collective punishment. "We would love to see 
the borders open because you know, we have supplies going to blind children in 
Gaza; they are not firing rockets and they should not be punished," Gunness 
said. A wave of clashes during the past week is testing a five-month-old 
ceasefire between Israel and the Islamic militant group Hamas that rules Gaza.  

 Fighting erupted when Israel launched a cross-border raid to destroy a tunnel 
the army said was going to be used to kidnap Israeli soldiers.  Seven 
Palestinian gunmen were killed in the raid.  Hamas has retaliated with rocket 
and mortar fire. Israeli military spokesman Peter Lerner says the flow of 
supplies into Gaza depends on Hamas halting the attacks. "At the end of the 
day, the Gazan authority, namely the Hamas terrorist organization, they have to 
control what is going in and around Gaza," Lerner said.   "Otherwise the 
crossings will remain closed." Israel has also barred journalists from entering 
Gaza, prompting this protest from Foreign Press Association Chairman Steven 
Gutnik. "This is a serious violation of freedom of the press," Gutnik said.  
"It is essential that journalists be allowed to enter the Gaza Strip since it 
is the foreign media that serves as the world's window into Gaza." Israel says 
it will not be business as usual in Gaza as long as rockets are being fired 
across the border.  

 

 

 


------------------------------------------------------






Jailed Ex-Taiwanese President on Hunger Strike 

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Attorney Cheng Wen-long says former president staging his hunger strike to call 
attention to 'death' of justice in Taiwan 
The lawyer for ex-Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian says his client has begun a 
hunger strike to protest his arrest on several counts of official 
corruption.Former Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian raises handcuffs as he is 
led away from prosecutor's office in Taipei, 11 Nov 2008Mr. Chen was detained 
Wednesday over allegations of graft, bribery, illegal possession of state 
assets, and other offenses that he says are politically motivated.  He was 
jailed after several hours of questioning.  Attorney Cheng Wen-long says the 
former president is staging his hunger strike to call attention to the "death" 
of justice in Taiwan, and the regression of democracy on the self-ruled 
island.The pro-independence Mr. Chen has accused his successor, Ma Ying-jeou, 
of bringing the charges to appease China.  Mr. Ma succeeded Mr. Chen in May on 
a platform of improving relations with Beijing.  President Ma has denied his 
predecessor's charges.  A spokeswoman for China's Taiwan Affairs Office has 
rejected Mr. Chen's allegation that China was involved in the arrest.Mr. Chen's 
wife, Wu Shu-chen, is under investigation in the same case.  His wife is also 
accused of embezzling more than $400,000 from a special presidential fund in a 
case dating back two years.Some information for this report was provided by 
AFP, AP and Reuters. 

  


------------------------------------------------------






Bush Receives Humanitarian Award for Africa Aid Efforts 

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US President is latest recipient of the Bishop John T. Walker Distinguished 
Humanitarian Award 
 President Bush has received a major humanitarian award for his work in Africa. 
VOA White House correspondent Paula Wolfson has details.

 George W. Bush  (file photo) The president is the latest recipient of the 
Bishop John T. Walker Distinguished Humanitarian Award - given each year to 
leaders who have made a significant commitment to Africa.

 President Bush was honored for his efforts throughout his administration to 
combat disease across the continent. At the same time, he has expanded U.S. 
development assistance through his Millennium Challenge initiative which links 
aid to political and economic reforms.

 He says America has an obligation to help the people of Africa. "It is in our 
national security interest that we defeat hopelessness. It is in our economic 
interest that we help economies grow. And it is in our moral interest that when 
we find hunger and suffering, the United States of America responds in a robust 
and effective way," he said.

 The award was presented by the group Africare - which focuses attention on the 
problems facing Africa, and coordinates programs in areas ranging from clean 
water, to refugee relief.

 Africare's annual dinner in Washington is one of the largest events held each 
year in the United States for Africa - bringing together more than thousand of 
international government and corporate leaders.

 Mr. Bush told his audience that seeing the results of U.S. efforts to fight 
disease and poverty in Africa first hand has been one of the most uplifting 
experiences of his life.

 He recalled a visit to a hospital in Tanzania that tests babies for malaria 
and helps mothers obtain bed nets to keep away disease-carrying mosquitoes 
while their children sleep. "I cannot tell you the expression of pride they had 
on their face when they held their babies up and said, 'my baby is healthy.' 
Nothing more hopeful than to see the joy on a mother's face, realizing that her 
baby has escaped the scourge of the deadly disease of malaria," he said.

 Mr. Bush said he is especially proud of his effort to provide treatment for 
one-point-seven million people battling AIDS through PEPFAR - the President's 
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. He told the story of a South African mother 
whose life was saved at a PEPFAR clinic. She later brought her son, Baron, to 
the White House to bear witness as President Bush signed an extension of the 
AIDS treatment program into law.

 "Baron is a reminder of the many lives that have been touched and saved by the 
compassion of the American people. And he represents the bright and promising 
future awaiting the folks in Africa," he said.

 The president also reflected on the past recipients of Africare's Walker Award 
and said he is in very good company. They include former South African 
President Nelson Mandela, former U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, 
and Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

 

 


------------------------------------------------------






Space Shuttle Endeavour Launch Remains on Track 

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Endeavour's seven astronauts will be bringing extra bedrooms, another bathroom 
and a kitchenette to increase the living space aboard the International Space 
Station 
All systems are go for Friday's scheduled launch of the space shuttle 
Endeavour's mission to the International Space Station. VOA's Jessica Berman 
reports the mission comes amid uncertainty at the US space agency NASA over the 
direction it will take under the incoming administration of President-elect 
Barack Obama.

       The crew of space shuttle Endeavour have spent hours studying the plan 
for a busy 15 days in spaceNASA officials have given the green light for launch 
Friday night of the space shuttle Endeavour barring any bad weather. 

 But for now, the head of the mission management team, LeRoy Cain says 
everything look good for lift off. "Everybody is 'go' to proceed on toward 
launch on Friday of STS 126. So, we're ready to go. The vehicle and crew and 
the ground teams have prepared very hard for this mission."

 Endeavour's seven astronauts will be bringing extra bedrooms, another bathroom 
and a kitchenette to increase the living space aboard the orbiting scientific 
outpost, which currently houses three permanent astronauts.

 The expansion is designed to make room for a total crew of six astronauts to 
live and work aboard the space station beginning in the middle of next year.

 The shuttle is also delivering a recycling system which will turn waste water 
and urine into drinkable water on the space station.

 During the 15-day mission, Endeavour's crew will perform four complicated 
space walks to repair and lubricate a massive solar array joint which is 
essential for the panels to track the sun. They will also perform preventive 
maintenance on the second solar joint.

 With an aging space shuttle fleet that's increasingly in need of repair and 
due to be retired in 2010, NASA officials are looking toward the incoming 
administration of President-elect Barack Obama for the future of the space 
agency.

 The space agency has planned between ten and twelve more shuttle flights, but 
Cain says it's possible the program could be extended. "However many more times 
we are directed to fly as a matter of policy, we will do it with flight safety 
being at the very top of the list in terms of things of importance," he said.

 Meanwhile, NASA officials say there's a forty percent chance that a cool front 
of rain and heavy clouds moving toward the launch pad in Florida could postpone 
Endeavour's Friday's lift-off until Saturday.


------------------------------------------------------








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