English 版 (精华区)
发信人: Porod (扬之水◎Love in One Day), 信区: English
标 题: The coming news
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (Tue Apr 3 10:23:19 2007), 转信
Apr 1st 2007
From Economist.com
What may be making headlines
Reuters/AFP
? THE row between the West and Iran seems to be brewing into a bigger story by the day. The kidnapping in mid-March of 15 British sailors, and the parading of them on Iranian television, was first played down by the British government, in an effort to encourage Iran to set them free without losing face. Now the situation is beginning to look more like the American-hostage incident in 1979, when over 60 Americans were held in their diplomatic mission in Tehran, Iran’s capital, by Islamic extremists. Most of them were kept for more than a year and Western relations with Iran, already soured by the revolution in that country, reached rock bottom. Today, in the context of a long-running international row about Iran’s emergent nuclear programme, and disputes over Iran’s role in troubled Iraq, the potential for a hostage crisis to blow up into something more dangerous is worryingly real.
? ZIMBABWE's Robert Mugabe is defying domestic and international pressure by refusing to budge from the presidency. Some had hoped that an emergency meeting of southern African leaders at the end of March, coinciding with a meeting of Zimbabwe’s ruling party, would be the occasion for the old dictator to prepare for his exit. No such luck, it seems. Now the question is how the domestic opposition—which still suffers harassment, arbitrary detention and beatings—will respond. There is talk of more attempts to hold street protests. The rivals to Mr Mugabe in the ruling party, too, must decide how to pile the pressure on the old man. A candidate must be chosen for the party for next year’s presidential election. For now it seems that Mr Mugabe is holding on.
? OH KOSOVO. One day the troubled province of Serbia, with its 2m-odd population of (mostly) Albanians, will finally declare independence. The question is whether it does so unilaterally, garnering recognition only from some outsiders, or with the approval of the United Nations Security Council. Martti Ahtisaari, a Finnish ex-president, was asked by the UN to come up with a solution. He says independence is inevitable, even if the Serbs grumble. But Russia—an ally of Serbia—threatens to veto any UN approval. Mr Ahtisaari is set to brief the UN Security Council on his proposals on the future status of Kosovo this week.
? LOOK out for a verdict in a British terror trial that may prove particularly instructive about the state of al-Qaeda today. Seven men who were arrested in London in March 2004, after a half-tonne of chemical fertiliser was found by police, are accused of planning a series of big bomb-attacks across the British capital, including at a nightclub and a shopping centre. The defence argues that the men were duped and had no plans to set off any bombs, but the prosecution believes this was an unusually sophisticated plot. If the latter is true, it may be that al-Qaeda’s leaders in Afghanistan and Pakistan are providing more detailed instruction to agents elsewhere in the world than was previously believed by intelligence services.
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