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Earlier Articles posted for IntelAs
- Subject: Earlier Articles posted for IntelAs
- From: moe@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sun, 09 Mar 1997 03:18:00
Subject: Earlier Articles posted for IntelAsia
1.Trade sanctions: US business hit, Congress is told Financial Times 7/3
2.Thailand to let in all unarmed Karen refugees Reuter 7/3
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Trade sanctions: US business hit, Congress FT 7/3
is told
WEDNESDAY MARCH 5 1997
By Nancy Dunne in Washington
The US has enacted 61 laws and executive actions over the
past four
years in an attempt to punish, isolate, or change the
behaviour of 35
countries. These actions have cost US companies up to
$790bn in
potential exports, according to a report issued yesterday
by the National
Association of Manufacturers.
Sanctions range from bans on the sale of military goods,
levied against
Nigeria in 1993, to the prohibition of economic
assistance, to outright
embargoes on trade and investment. NAM says they rarely
achieve their
ends.
"They have yet to topple a targeted government," the
report says. "They
provide an external scapegoat for well-entrenched regimes
to compensate
for domestic failings. Once launched, they are extremely
difficult to
terminate."
The report is part of a stepped-up effort by the US
business community to
convince the current Congress of the lessons learned by
its predecessors -
that unless sanctions have broad multilateral support
they are largely
ineffective.
As the US has increasingly resorted to unilateral
sanctions, it has drawn fire
from its allies. Particularly abhorred is the use of
"secondary boycott
measures," extended against companies which do business
in the countries
targeted for sanctions.
These measures, such as those enacted last year against
Cuba, Libya and
Iran, "clearly violate numerous international agreements
to which the US is
a party," the report says. US business has paid a steep
price for its
sanctions policies, according to NAM. "Foreign companies and
governments are understandably reluctant to enter into
any long-term
commercial relationship with US companies if the threat
of sanctions
looms," says the report.
Sanctions and export controls have cost US companies
engine orders from
Airbus, infrastructure energy projects in China and the
rice market in Iran.
A decision by the US Export-Import Bank not to help
finance the Three
Gorges Dam project for environmental reasons cost 240
jobs over five
years at Voith Hydro of Pennsylvania. Instead, the 12
hydro-electric
turbines will be made at Voith's parent company in Germany.
Between 1993-96 the US adopted 22 measures to promote
human rights
and democracy. Thirteen countries were targeted: Angola,
Bosnia, Burma,
Burundi, China, Croatia, Cuba, Gambia, Guatemala, Haiti,
Nicaragua,
Nigeria and Yugoslavia.
Fourteen laws or executive actions, imposed to combat
terrorism, were
targeted towards Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Nicaragua,
North Korea, Sudan
and Syria.
NAM recommends proposed sanctions should be subject to
specific
criteria relating to effectiveness. They should also
lapse, unless reauthorised
by Congress, or be waived, if the president determines it
is in the national
interest to do so.
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Thailand to let in all unarmed Karen refugees Reuter 7/3
BANGKOK -- Thai army chief General Chetta Thanajaro has said that all
unarmed
Karen refugees crossing into the country at its north-western border
with Myanmar
would be accepted.
He told reporters on Wednesday that unarmed Karen National Union (KNU)
guerillas
who wanted to seek refuge in the country could also enter but should
not use Thailand
as a base to fight the Myanmar government.
Thailand was accused recently by the US and human-rights and refugee
groups of
repatriating forcibly Karen refugees who fled last month's fighting
between rebel KNU
guerillas and Myanmar troops.
Bangkok denied the charges but said that it would not allow those
suspected of being
Karen guerillas to enter the country.
The KNU is fighting for greater autonomy for the eastern Myanmar Karen
state from
the Yangon government.
Myanmar troops overran KNU mobile jungle bases inside Myanmar in the latest
attacks on the KNU, sparking a refugee exodus.
Gen Chetta said: "Unarmed people, young or strong men, we regard them
as the
displaced persons fleeing from fighting and allow them to seek refuge
in our country.
"I reassure you that we will continue to receive them.
"Once they enter the country, we must put them under special
surveillance. They should
not be allowed to return if they mean to go back to fight." he added.
Since the Myanmar government offensive against the KNU last month,
about 10,000
Karen refugees have crossed the border into Thailand, joining about
8,000 refugees
already there.
Myanmar troops have overrun most of the KNU camps and taken over most
of their
territory.
A Karen refugee official based in western Kanchanaburi in Thailand said
that the
authorities had relocated some of the refugees deeper into Thailand.
A senior Thai army official said that the thousands of Karen refugees,
living in sprawling
refugee camps near the border with Myanmar, would be separated from
guerillas.
He said: "The camp is not the rest-and-recreation place for the
guerillas any more."
According to a Bangkok Post report on Wednesday, there have been
several instances
when Myanmar troops moved into Thai territory in pursuit of Karen
rebels but moved
back into Myanmar when confronted by Thai soldiers. -- Reuter.
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