Posted on 05/07/2002 5:45:36 AM PDT by TonyInOhio
Edited on 04/13/2004 1:39:34 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
WASHINGTON
(Excerpt) Read more at usatoday.com ...
Pretty sad when this is the best spin the move-on crowd can put on this. Hey, didn't you folks assure us that if we just ignored Clinton he'd fade into obscurity? Doesn't look like Bush is with the "program" on this ... does it? All I can say is the contents of those FBI files must have been pretty damaging to Republicans and Bush for them not only to ignore the crimes the democRATS committed but openly make amends to Clinton. And where are the rest of the move-on'ers? What happened? Did you guys draw straws and you got the short one?
Typical Clinton. He couldn't even wait for the White House to issue a press release -- he had to have his aides announce it FIRST.
Think of the poor reporters who love this guy and have to follow him their to cover this.
Clinton volunteers to go to the Middle East, to N. Korea, etc.
And where does Bush send him East Timor.
Hmmmm. Are there still headhunters and cannibals in that part of the world? 8^)
Pro 16:7 When a man's ways please the LORD, he maketh even his enemies to be at peace with him.
Occupying 24,000 square kilometers on the eastern half of an island in the Timor Sea between Indonesia and Australia, East Timor has a population of approximately 800,000 people. The country is currently administrated by UNTAET (United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor), which is, together with the East Timorese people, rebuilding the nation and putting in place a new, independent democracy.
The path to independence started when an overwhelming majority of the East Timorese on 30 August 1999 voted to separate from Indonesia, which had controlled the territory since 1975. In response, militia groups, backed by elements of the Indonesian armed forces, embarked on a campaign of arson, looting and violence that was brought to an end only when UN forces intervened. Most of East Timors infrastructure was destroyed, and the country is still rebuilding after the devastation.
On 30 August 2001, two years after the Popular Consultation, the people of East Timor went to the polls again; this time to elect a Constituent Assembly tasked with writing and adopting a new Constitution and establishing the framework for future elections and a transition to full independence.
The Constituent Assembly and a new East Timorese Government the Second Transitional Government and its Council of Ministers is currently governing East Timor during the remaining transitional period before its independence as a democratic and sovereign state, which is expected in the first half of 2002.
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