1、 January 18, 2010 011810.01 Yushchenko Apparently Loses Ukrainian Presidency Peter Fedynsky, Kyiv An exit poll conducted by Kyiv's Razumkov Center shows Viktor Yanukovych, who was accused of rigging the 2004 election, has garnered more than 31 percent of the vote. Yu
2、lia Tymoshenko, the current head of government, has more than 27 percent, a bit higher than expected. Incumbent President Viktor Yushchenko is running behind businessman Serhiy Tihipko and newcomer Arseniy Yatseniuk with six percent. After casting his ballot, President Yushchenko, whose pre-
3、election support numbered in the single digits, pronounced the election a success. Mr. Yushchenko says he has no doubt this election will once again demonstrate Billboards for presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko are seen as people wait at a bus stop in Kiev, 13 Jan 2010 Ukraine
4、is a democratic European country; a free nation with free people and where free elections are ensured. Elections officials say about a million people, roughly three percent of the electorate, cast their votes at home because they could not come to polls for health reasons. Early reports
5、do not indicate systemic vote fraud. There are however, numerous accounts of minor infractions in some polling stations - food handed out as bribes, campaign material displayed after Friday's midnight deadline to remove it, ballot shortages, electric blackouts, cell phone pictures taken of ballo
6、ts or residents of an entire building being 1 left off of a voter list. The Central Election Commission authorized about 3,000 international observers from North America, Europe and former Soviet republics. The Commission made no decision about 2,000 Georgians a
7、ccused by Viktor Yanukovych of seeking to disrupt the vote in his eastern Ukrainian stronghold on behalf of rival Yulia Tymoshenko. Tbilisi says its citizens came as neutral observers. The legitimacy of the Election Commission itself could face a challenge after one of its members reached the
8、 mandatory retirement age of 65. This tips the 15-member group's political balance and could be a factor in case of any post-election disputes. The election included Ukrainian citizens abroad, with those in Australia and the Russian Far East being the first to cast ballots. The last, Ukrainia
9、ns in California who are 10 times zones west of Ukraine. Official results are not expected until January 27. But if exit polls hold up, Viktor Yanukovych will face Yulia Tymoshenko in a runoff February 7. Analysts are predicting both candidates will mount more intense campaigns than they ran i
10、n the first round. 011810.02 US Announces $100 Million Aid Package for Haiti Meredith Buel, Washington Speaking at the White House, President Obama says the emergency relief effort is one of the largest in recent history and represents a moment that calls out for American leadership.
11、 Mr. Obama told key members of his national security team that Haiti must be a top priority for the U.S. government. The president says the $100 million in additional aid will mean more life-saving equipment, food, water and medicine will be sent to the devastated nation. 2 VOA N
12、ews While Mr. Obama sought to reassure the Haitian people that a huge humanitarian effort is on the way, he conceded it will take time to get all of the assets in place. "Even as we move as quickly as possible, it will take hours - and in many cases President Barack Obama
13、makes a statement about the earthquake in Haiti, 14 Jan 2010 days - to get all of our people and resources on the ground," said President Obama. "Right now in Haiti roads are impassable, the main port is badly damaged, communications are just beginning to come online, and aftershocks conti
14、nue." The United States is sending 3,500 soldiers and hundreds of medical personnel to help with the disaster relief and security. The Pentagon is also sending an aircraft carrier and amphibious ships, including one that can carry 2,000 Marines. The Navy is also sending the floating hospita
15、l ship Comfort, which is manned by hundreds of doctors, nurses and medical technicians. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, speaking on NBC's Today show, says the Obama administration is committed to providing assistance to Haiti now and in the future. "This is going to be a long-term
16、effort," she said. "We have the immediate crisis of trying to save those lives that can be saved, to deal with the injured and the dead, to try to provide food, water, medical supplies, some semblance of shelter, and then to work with our Haitian partners, the Government of Haiti, NGOs, others t
17、o begin the rebuilding process." The U.S. emergency response is being coordinated by the administrator for the Agency for International Development, Rajiv Shah. He says opening the airport in Port-au-Prince will rapidly accelerate the delivery of aid. 3 ""
18、We have more than 250 American relief workers actively engaged that have been just a part of the recent deployment," he said. "That number is increasing significantly as we speak as planes land at the airport that has now been operationalized as a 24/7 airlift operation." Shah says there are m
19、ore than eight search and rescue teams actively working to find people buried in the rubble. He says officials are now activating a network of medical providers to offer trauma care and services to the Haitian population. Shah says critically needed commodities such as food, water and tarps f
20、or shelter will soon arrive in Port-au-Prince. Officials estimate as many as three million people, about a third of Haiti's population, may have been affected by the quake. 011810.03 UN Chief Arrives in Haiti Margaret Besheer, Port-au-Prince, Haiti Mr. Ban said he is going to Haiti w
21、ith a "very heavy heart." "The damage, the destruction, the loss of life, are just overwhelming. Therefore, we need unprecedented international support to Haitian people," he said. The U.N. chief spoke to reporters aboard his flight from New York. The plane carried several of his senior advi
22、sors as well as U.N. staff and aid supplies. Mr. Ban says the United Nations has three priorities now in Haiti. A UN soldier patrols where earthquake survivors line up for food distributed by the UN near Cite Soleil in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, 16 Jan 2010 4 "First, to save li
23、ves - as many lives as possible. We are running against time. This is already it the 4th day, but there is hope that we can and we may save some VOA News more lives," he said. The organization also hopes to provide urgently needed humanitarian assistance, including tents,
24、water, medical supplies and other services. Mr. Ban said food distribution is improving and the U.N. is now feeding at least 40,000 people a day. The other U.N. priority is to coordinate the large outpouring of international assistance. "We should not waste even a single item, a single doll
25、ar," he added. The Red Cross and the United Nations estimate more than 40,000 people have died as a result of the earthquake. Among them, more than 40 U.N. peacekeeping and civilian staff members. Mr. Ban said for the United Nations this is the "gravest and greatest single loss" to the organi
26、zation. He said the organization has lost many "dear colleagues" including the head of the Haiti mission, Hedi Annabi, a nearly 30-year veteran of the United Nations and his deputy, Luis Carlos da Costa. "There are many more, I fear, colleagues whose fates, we have to prepare for the worst.
27、 But the United Nations will carry on," he said. Mr. Ban plans to meet with President Rene Preval, U.N. staff and local earthquake victims. He said he wants to assess first hand the extent of the damage and humanitarian need. 011810.04 Red Cross Appeals For $100 Million For Haiti Lisa
28、Schlein, Geneva The International Red Cross Federation says its most immediate concern is to get lifesaving emergency aid to hundreds of thousands of survivors of Haiti's catastrophic earthquake. 5 But Red Cross spokesman, Matthew Cochrane, tells VOA, the needs
29、 of people go beyond the immediate emergency response and that is what its $100 million appeal is meant to address. "Lives have been absolutely destroyed. Earthquake survivors carry buckets of water from a water distribution truck in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, 15 Jan 2010 Houses have be
30、en destroyed. Community infrastructure has been absolutely destroyed and we are very much committed to being involved in the rebuilding of Haiti once the relief operation winds down in six to nine months," he said. Cochrane says the Red Cross is making progress in getting together all the
31、 elements needed to scale up its humanitarian operation. In the past couple of days, he says two planes carrying 22 tons of aid landed in the Haitian capital, Port au Prince. He says a convoy of aid supplies, including a 50-bed field hospital, and disaster experts arrived overland from the Dom
32、inican Republic. He says the earthquake victims are in desperate need of food, water, medical assistance and shelter. In the coming weeks, he says the Red Cross will concentrate much of its effort on providing clean water. He says this is crucial to reduce the risk of waterborne and water-rela
33、ted diseases. "Dysentery, diarrheal diseases. These were threats that were probably with the Haitians even before the earthquake," he said. "Now that this damage, that last bit of infrastructure, that last bit of social support, there are huge concerns that we will see outbreaks of entirely t
34、reatable and preventable, but nevertheless, very deadly illnesses. And, so that has to be a focus," he said. Up to now, international aid operations have been centered on the capital, Port-au-Prince. But, little attention has been given to the outlying areas because of the difficulty of reach
35、ing them. 6 VOA News Cochrane says the Red Cross has some preliminary assessments of the severity of the damage caused by the earthquake in three places. He says aid workers report between 80-90 percent of the town of Leogane has been destroyed. In Gressier, up
36、to 50 percent of the town has been destroyed and in Carrefour, he says there are reports of people still being trapped in collapsed buildings. 011810.05 Pope's Planned Synagogue Visit Splits Jews Sabina Castelfranco, Rome Pope Benedict's planned visit to Rome's main Jewish synagogue on
37、 Sunday has sharply divided Jews. Some have been angered by his efforts to push World War II Pope Pius XII toward sainthood. Pope Benedict has visited Jewish synagogues before, but never the one in Rome. His predecessor, Pope John Paul II, became the first pontiff to set foot in a synagogue
38、when he visited the one in Rome in 1986. A number of Jewish leaders from around the world have traveled to the Italian capital for the German-born Pope's third visit to a Jewish Pope Benedict XVI delivers address to the faithful, during the weekly general audience in the Paul VI hall
39、at The Vatican (File) house of worship. He has already visited the Jewish synagogues in Cologne, Germany, and New York. But some Jewish rabbis and Holocaust survivors have decided to boycott this visit. They are upset that the pope recently praised the heroic virtues of wartime Pope Pius
40、 XII, moving him a step closer to sainthood. Many Jews believe Pope Pius turned a blind eye to the persecution of Jews during the second world war. 7 The Vatican maintains that Pope Pius worked quietly behind the scenes because direct interventions might have wor
41、sened the situation for both Jews and Catholics in Europe. Pope Benedict will pause in front of a plaque at the synagague honoring the more than one thousand Roman Jews deported by the Nazis to concentration camps. He will be greeted by the chief rabbi of Rome, Riccardo Di Segni. Some Holo
42、caust survivors and their families have asked the Rome Rabbi to convey to the Pope their displeasure for his efforts to elevate Pius to sainthood. However, some Roman citizens think Pope Benedict's visit to the synagogue is the right thing to do. One man says it is another sign that Pope Be
43、nedict is trying to foster unity with all the other religions. Some Jews are also upset at the Pope's decision last year to start the rehabilitation process of a traditionalist British bishop who denied the extent of the holocaust. But despite these setbacks, efforts at furthering dialogue be
44、tween the two religions are set to continue. 011810.06 Political Opponents in Guinea Nominate 2 for PM Scott Stearns, Dakar Guinea's opposition coalition of political parties, civil society groups, and trade unions nominated civil society spokesman Jean-Marie Dore and labor leader Hadj
45、a Rabiatou Sérah Diallo to be the new civilian prime minister. Dore says it was not an easy debate but coalition leaders eventually agreed on the two candidates by consensus, and it will now be up to acting leader General Sekouba Konate to choose who will be the prime 8 VOA News
46、 minister in a transitional government. Diallo says the next prime minister must ensure the neutrality of the vote to follow in six months time by not favoring any of Guinea's political parties. That, she says, will bring about real democracy. Everyone in the 101-member transitional
47、 authority and the current ruling military council will be barred from running in June elections to restore Guinea to constitutional rule 13 months after the military coup that brought Captain Moussa Dadis Camara to power. Captain Camara agreed to this transitional authority following talks w
48、ith General Konate and regional mediator Burkinabe President Blaise Compaore. As part of the plan, Captain Camara will, for the time being, remain in Burkina Faso where he is recovering from being shot in the head more than one month ago. Guinean junta chief Captain Camara signs pact o
49、n 15 Jan 2010 in Ouagadougou during a meeting with interim junta chief General Sekouba Konate and Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore He was shot by the former chief of the presidential guard who says Captain Camara was trying to blame him for the killing of more than 157 opposition protesters in September. A U.N. inquiry into that violence says there are sufficient grounds for presuming direct criminal responsibility by Captain Camara for that killing. The African Union says the deal for a transitional






