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									Archive through June 4, 1999 - Kosovo War				            </title>
            <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/</link>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/3/#post-4331</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 12:16:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[-U.N. Estimates on Kosovo Refugees=20  By The Associated Press Tuesday, June 1, 1999; 4:02 p.m. EDT  The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees estimates that more than 850,000 people, the vast...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[-U.N. Estimates on Kosovo Refugees=20 <BR> <BR>By The Associated Press <BR>Tuesday, June 1, 1999; 4:02 p.m. EDT <BR> <BR>The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees estimates that more than <BR>850,000 people, the vast majority of them ethnic Albanians, have left <BR>Kosovo since NATO began its air assault March 24. <BR> <BR>Many of Kosovo&#039;s 1.8 million ethnic Albanians were already displaced <BR>before the current exodus. This includes 100,000 who sought asylum in <BR>European countries before the airstrikes on Yugoslavia.=20 <BR> <BR>-- The whereabouts and numbers of the refugees, according to UNHCR: <BR> <BR>Albania -- 442,400 <BR> <BR>Macedonia -- 249,300 <BR> <BR>Montenegro -- 67,600 <BR> <BR>Bosnia Herzegovina -- 21,700 <BR> <BR>-- Refugees who have been evacuated from Macedonia, according to <BR>UNHCR:=20 <BR> <BR>Germany -- 13,250 <BR> <BR>Turkey -- 7,475 <BR> <BR>Norway -- 5,951 <BR> <BR>Italy -- 5,829 <BR> <BR>Canada -- 5,154 <BR> <BR>United States -- 4,984 <BR> <BR>France -- 4,543 <BR> <BR>Austria -- 4,383 <BR> <BR>Netherlands -- 3,568 <BR> <BR>Sweden -- 2,606 <BR> <BR>Britain -- 2,094 <BR> <BR>Australia -- 2,054 <BR> <BR>Denmark -- 1,997 <BR> <BR>Belgium -- 1,223 <BR> <BR>Switzerland -- 1,184 <BR> <BR>Spain -- 1,124 <BR> <BR>Poland -- 1,049 <BR> <BR>Finland -- 958 <BR> <BR>Portugal -- 952 <BR> <BR>Czech Republic -- 824 <BR> <BR>Ireland -- 603 <BR> <BR>Slovenia -- 483 <BR> <BR>Israel -- 206 <BR> <BR>Croatia -- 188 <BR> <BR>Malta -- 105 <BR> <BR>Slovakia -- 90 <BR> <BR>Iceland -- 70 <BR> <BR>Romania -- 41 <BR> <BR>-- Countries that have offered to take in refugees on a temporary basis, <BR>according to governments:= <BR> <BR>Turkey -- 20,000 <BR> <BR>United States -- 20,000 <BR> <BR>Germany -- 15,000 <BR> <BR>Finland -- 10,000= <BR> <BR>Italy -- 10,000 <BR> <BR>Norway -- 6,000 <BR> <BR>Sweden -- 5,000 <BR> <BR>Austria -- 5,000 <BR> <BR>Canada -- 5,000 <BR> <BR>Croatia -- 5,000 <BR> <BR>Australia -- 4,000 <BR> <BR>Britain -- up to 1,000 per week <BR> <BR>Switzerland -- 2,500 <BR> <BR>Netherlands -- 2,000 <BR> <BR>Denmark -- 1,500 <BR> <BR>Romania -- 1,500 <BR> <BR>Poland -- 1,000 <BR> <BR>Portugal -- 500 <BR> <BR>Iceland -- 100 <BR> <BR>Malta -- 100 <BR> <BR>          <BR> <BR>Copyright 1999 The Associated Press]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/3/#post-4330</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 11:25:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Corporations That Own Our Media   By Ben Bagdikian   Experimenters have discovered that you can turn a cat into an alcoholic.  The normal cat doesn&#039;t expect it, but keep adding vodka to...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Corporations That Own Our Media <BR> <BR> By Ben Bagdikian <BR> <BR> Experimenters have discovered that you can turn a cat into an alcoholic. <BR> The normal cat doesn&#039;t expect it, but keep adding vodka to the <BR> dish and the cat will soon demand spiked milk as an absolute necessity. <BR> <BR> The fat cats of the American mass media have lost their taste for the <BR> mother&#039;s milk of normal free enterprise: real competition for a <BR> reasonable profit. Thanks to addictive doses of sympathetic governmental <BR> policies and two decades of a drive for power, a shrinking <BR> number of large media corporations now regard monopoly, oligopoly and <BR> historic levels of profit as not only normal, but as their earned <BR> right. <BR> <BR> In the process, the usual democratic expectation for the media -- <BR> diversity of ownership and ideas -- has disappeared as the goal of <BR> official policy and, worse, as a daily experience of a generation of <BR> American readers and viewers. <BR> <BR> In 1982, when I completed research for my book, The Media Monopoly, 50 <BR> corporations controlled half or more of the media business. <BR> By December 1986, when I finished a revision for a second edition, the 50 <BR> had shrunk to 29. The last time I counted, it was down to 26. <BR>  A number of serious Wall <BR> Street media analysts are predicting that by the 1990s, a half-dozen giant <BR> firms will control most of our media. <BR> <BR> Of the 1,700 daily papers, 98 percent are local monopolies and fewer than <BR> 15 corporations control most of the country&#039;s daily <BR> circulation. A handful of firms have most of the magazine business, with <BR> Time, Inc. alone accounting for about 40 percent of that <BR> industry&#039;s revenues. <BR> <BR> The three networks, Capital Cities/ABC, CBS and GE/NBC, still have <BR> majority access to the television audience, and most of the book <BR> business is controlled by fewer than a dozen companies, with major <BR> categories like paperback and trade books dominated by still fewer <BR> firms. <BR> <BR> The safest way to ensure diversity of opinion is diverse ownership. But <BR> this ideal has been sacrificed by government devotion to the <BR> mythical doctrine of free market economics. The myth rests on the bizarre <BR> assumption that the modern American corporate scene is <BR> actually like Adam Smith&#039;s rural country market, in which all the farmers <BR> came to town to compete for the business of sharp-eyed <BR> customers. <BR> <BR> If there&#039;s any truly free market in modern corporate affairs, there is <BR> none in through-the-air broadcasting. According to the Federal <BR> Communications Act, the airwaves belong to the public (something the <BR> Reaganites have ignored). The airwaves are a limited resource, <BR> and there are a small number of available channels. The Federal <BR> Communications Commission, by law, is supposed to resist monopoly <BR> and concentrated ownership, and to grant licenses on the basis of "public <BR> interest, convenience and necessity." <BR> <BR> During the 1980s, the FCC, under Mark Fowler, has used the country&#039;s <BR> broadcasting system as an experiment in so-called free market <BR> economics. The FCC has expanded the number of stations one corporation may <BR> own and suspended the demand that stations do any <BR> public service, like news and community issues programming. It has let big <BR> operators (Murdoch, Capital Cities, Cox, etc.) buy <BR> competitors. And it has made it almost impossible to challenge a license <BR> if the public doesn&#039;t like what it sees. <BR> <BR> The FCC is not bailing out a sick industry. The three networks, even with <BR> their takeover debts, are still making money. Affiliated <BR> television stations are earning annual pre-tax profits of 40 percent or <BR> more. As a result, stations that used to sell for tens of millions now <BR> sell for prices in the half-billion-dollar range. Where else can you get a <BR> business based on a license issued and protected by the U.S. <BR> government, make 40 percent profit or more a year, and not be expected to <BR> be held to some standard of public service? <BR> <BR> The printed media are not licensed, since anyone who has the cash can buy <BR> paper, ink and press time. But newspapers are mainly local <BR> monopolies. And the government has permitted a dozen outfits to dominate <BR> the business by letting them buy an unlimited number of <BR> papers. (At last count Gannett had 92, Thomson 99.) <BR> <BR> Whole magazine "divisions" of corporations are now bought and sold, as are <BR> book companies, by the same giant firms that dominate <BR> other media. Rupert Murdoch, already a major owner in newspapers, <BR> magazines, broadcasting and movie production, recently became a <BR> big player in books by purchasing the last of the large independent <BR> publishers, Harper &amp; Row. (Like some other dominant owners in the <BR> U.S. media -- Thomson, a Canadian, and Bertelsmann, a German -- Murdoch is <BR> also a major owner in other countries, such as Australia <BR> and England.) <BR> <BR> All of this has proceeded without serious question by government; under <BR> the Reagan administration, the Justice Department&#039;s antitrust <BR> division has been under heavy sedation. <BR> <BR> By now, the corporations that dominate our media, like the alcoholic cats, <BR> treat this situation as theirs by right. For them, economic <BR> competition means dividing the major markets among the giants, while <BR> pretending that the field is still a fair one because the <BR> one-book-a-year publisher is free to battle it out with Gulf &amp; Western <BR> (owner of Simon &amp; Schuster and Paramount Pictures). Their <BR> concept of a diversity of views is the full range of politics and social <BR> values from center to far right. The American audience, having been <BR> exposed to a narrowing range of ideas over the decades, often assumes that <BR> what it sees and hears in the major media is all there is. <BR> <BR> It is no way to maintain a lively marketplace of ideas, which is to say <BR> that it is no way to maintain a democracy.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>ddc</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/3/#post-4329</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 06:53:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Legality of Use of Force (Yugoslavia v. Belgium) (Yugoslavia v. Canada) (Yugoslavia v. France)(Yugoslavia v. Germany) (Yugoslavia v. Italy) (Yugoslavia v. Netherlands) (Yugoslavia v. Portuga...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Legality of Use of Force <BR>(Yugoslavia v. Belgium) (Yugoslavia v. Canada) (Yugoslavia v. France)(Yugoslavia v. Germany) (Yugoslavia v. Italy) (Yugoslavia v. Netherlands) (Yugoslavia v. Portugal) (Yugoslavia v. Spain) (Yugoslavia v. United Kingdom)(Yugoslavia v. United States of America) <BR> <BR> The Court rejects the requests for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Yugoslavia  <BR> <BR>THE HAGUE, 2 June 1999. Today, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) gave its decisions on the requests for the indication of provisional measures submitted by the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) in the above-mentioned cases. <BR> <BR>In its requests, Yugoslavia had asked the Court to order the States involved to "cease immediately  acts of use of force" and to "refrain from any act of threat or use of force" against the FRY. <BR> <BR>In two of the ten cases (Yugoslavia v. Spain and Yugoslavia v. United States of America), the Court held that it manifestly lacked jurisdiction and ordered that the cases be removed from its List. <BR> <BR>In eight of the ten cases (Yugoslavia v. Belgium; Yugoslavia v. Canada; Yugoslavia v. France; Yugoslavia v. Germany; Yugoslavia v. Italy; Yugoslavia v. Netherlands; Yugoslavia v. Portugal; Yugoslavia v. United Kingdom), the Court found that it lacked prima facie jurisdiction, which is a prerequisite for the issue of provisional measures, and that it therefore could not <BR>indicate such measures. A fuller consideration of the question of jurisdiction will take place later. The Court accordingly remains seized of those cases and has reserved the subsequent procedure for further decision. <BR> <BR>In its reasoning, the Court expresses its deep concern "with the human tragedy, the loss of life, and the enormous suffering in Kosovo which form the background" of the dispute and "with the continuing loss of life and human suffering in all parts of Yugoslavia". It sets out its profound concern with the use of force in Yugoslavia, which "under the present circumstances . . . raises very serious issues of international law", and emphasizes that "all parties before it must act in conformity with their obligations under the United Nations Charter and other rules of international law, including humanitarian law". <BR> <BR>The Court explains that its jurisdiction depends upon consent, for there must be acceptance by a State of the Court&#039;s jurisdiction before the Court can determine whether particular acts are compatible with international law. "The latter question can only be reached when the Court deals with the merits having established its jurisdiction and having heard full legal arguments by both parties". The Court stresses however that, "whether or not States accept the jurisdiction of the Court, they remain in any event responsible for acts attributable to them that violate international law, including humanitarian law", and that "any disputes relating to the legality of such acts are required to be resolved by peaceful means, the choice of which, pursuant to Article 33 of the Charter, is left to the parties". In this context, "the parties should take care not to aggravate or extend the dispute". The Court reaffirms that "when such a dispute gives rise to a threat to the peace, breach of the peace or act of aggression, the Security Council has special responsibilities under Chapter VII of the Charter".]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>Anonymous</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/3/#post-4328</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 06:29:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Nick,    NATO is not bombing Yugoslavia, it&#039;s all in your head, it&#039;s not real, this message board is not real either.]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Nick,  <BR> <BR> NATO is not bombing Yugoslavia, it&#039;s all in your head, it&#039;s not real, this message board is not real either.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>ds</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/3/#post-4327</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 05:59:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Please forgive me for judging people. I know you would never do that.]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Please forgive me for judging people. I know you would never do that.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>guidomor</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/2/#post-4326</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 05:56:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[I&#039;m sorry Pete, you are right. I never said I was a sinless Christian like you apparently are.]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[I&#039;m sorry Pete, you are right. I never said I was a sinless Christian like you apparently are.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>guidomor</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/2/#post-4325</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 05:07:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[To Zoja:  Concerning pork:  Yes you are right.  In Christianity there are no legal stipulations about what you can or cannot eat.  Of course, common sense needs to rule in a situation like t...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[To Zoja: <BR> <BR>Concerning pork:  Yes you are right.  In Christianity there are no legal stipulations about what you can or cannot eat.  Of course, common sense needs to rule in a situation like this, you would not eat something you knew to be harmful or poisonous (unless you were just plain stupid or wanted to die).  Your comment on pork spoiling quickly in hot countries is enlightening. Here all meat is refrigerated (or frozen) from the time it is slaughtered until it is put in the pan to cook, so this kind of spoilage usually is not a problem.  In the days when the injuction against eating pork was originally written there was no such thing as refrigeration, God knew that pork spoiled quickly, and so that was why He put that prohibition in His law. <BR> <BR>As to religious prejudice, I think this has been a curse on mankind all through the ages.  In the dark ages it was the Roman Catholic church and the crusades, pillaging and burning at the stake anyone who didn&#039;t adhere to their doctrines and dogmas.  They even burned evangelical Christians at the stake, because they would not acknowledge the RC church as the one "true" way to God.  Now we have radical Muslims, orthodox Christians, Hindus, Buddists, and others making war on each other, because they each think they are the only true religion, and anyone who doesn&#039;t believe the way they do is an infidel.  Evangelical Christians believe there is only one way to God, Jesus, as he himself stated, "I am the way, the truth and the life.  No one comes to the Father  except through Me."  But we don&#039;t go around killing those who disagree with us. Jesus said, "Love your enemies, pray for them who persecute you, do good to those who despitefully use you."  And this is the rule we try to live by.  I find Guido a thorn in my side, claiming to be a Christian, then posting all the hateful rubbish I see him put on here.  I think religious intolerance is not only used as a weapon in war, I believe it is the cause of a great many wars. <BR> <BR>Pete]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>pete</dc:creator>
                        <guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/2/#post-4325</guid>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/2/#post-4324</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 04:41:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Thanks Daniela, It seems I have to come to Yugoslovia to find the story, blacked out of the Santa Cruz media. My home town is usually a peaceful place to protest. This is normal for America,...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Thanks Daniela, <BR>It seems I have to come to Yugoslovia to find the story, blacked out of the Santa Cruz media. <BR>My home town is usually a peaceful place to protest. This is normal for America, but not for Santa Cruz. But whats almost as bad as the people beaten and I heard 35 arrested. Is the media&#039;s lack of coverage. The cops regularly go after the freespeech pirate radio people. But this is gonna wake some locals up. We&#039;ve already had two community tv reports about it. The Resource Center for Non Violence has been getting more involved this last month. People are starting to gather daily and marches are set to continue. <BR>These Corporate Badges will pay, the citizens police review board is already filing papers and the ACLU is involved. Thanks again. I&#039;ve already sent this out over the netwaves. <BR>Peace not WoD <BR>FFFF <BR>DdC]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>ddc</dc:creator>
                        <guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/2/#post-4324</guid>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/2/#post-4323</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 04:07:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[To Zoja:  Concerning pork:  Yes you are right.  In Christianity there are no legal stipulations about what you can or cannot eat.  Of course, common sense needs to rule in a situation like t...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[To Zoja: <BR> <BR>Concerning pork:  Yes you are right.  In Christianity there are no legal stipulations about what you can or cannot eat.  Of course, common sense needs to rule in a situation like this, you would not eat something you knew to be harmful or poisonous (unless you were just plain stupid or wanted to die).  Your comment on pork spoiling quickly in hot countries is enlightening. Here all meat is refrigerated (or frozen) from the time it is slaughtered until it is put in the pan to cook, so this kind of spoilage usually is not a problem.  In the days when the injuction against eating pork was originally written there was no such thing as refrigeration, God knew that pork spoiled quickly, and so that was why He put that prohibition in His law. <BR> <BR>As to religious prejudice, I think this has been a curse on mankind all through the ages.  In the dark ages it was the Roman Catholic church and the crusades, pillaging and burning at the stake anyone who didn&#039;t adhere to their doctrines and dogmas.  They even burned evangelical Christians at the stake, because they would not acknowledge the RC church as the one "true" way to God.  Now we have radical Muslims, orthodox Christians, Hindus, Buddists, and others making war on each other, because they each think they are the only true religion, and anyone who doesn&#039;t believe the way they do is an infidel.  Evangelical Christians believe there is only one way to God, Jesus, as he himself stated, "I am the way, the truth and the life.  No one comes to the Father  except through Me."  But we don&#039;t go around killing those who disagree with us. Jesus said, "Love your enemies, pray for them who persecute you, do good to those who despitefully use you."  And this is the rule we try to live by.  I find Guido a thorn in my side, claiming to be a Christian, then posting all the hateful rubbish I see him put on here.  I think religious intolerance is not only used as a weapon in war, I believe it is the cause of a great many wars. <BR> <BR>Pete]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>pete</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-june-4-1999/paged/2/#post-4322</link>
                        <pubDate>Fri, 04 Jun 1999 03:53:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[To Dr. Kovacs, &quot;About the Balkan War:&quot;  Well spoken.  I couldn&#039;t have said it better myself.  Pete]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[To Dr. Kovacs, "About the Balkan War:" <BR> <BR>Well spoken.  I couldn&#039;t have said it better myself. <BR> <BR>Pete]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>pete</dc:creator>
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