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The Slanderer from Oslo......Terje Larsen
Maariv .... Isreali newspaper | Friday, 19 April, 2002 | Amnon Dankner

Posted on 04/21/2002 6:14:01 AM PDT by dennisw

 

 

The Slanderer from Oslo

by Amnon Dankner, Maariv, 19.4.2002
Free Translation by Trudy Gefen of article in Hebrew daily, Maariv, 
by Leftwing journalist, and former Oslo supporter, Amnon Dankner, 
Friday, 19 April, 2002
            

 

THE SLANDERER FROM OSLO       A tragedy occurred in the Jenin refugee camp. Innocent men, women and children were killed or wounded. Buildings were destroyed and there may even still be people alive under the ruins. This is terrible and every heart fills with pity for these miserable people.  But this tragedy is not the fault of Israel nor the IDF.  It is entirely the fault of Yasser Arafat, the Tanzim, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and those preachers in mosques whose incitement and glorification of death over life provoke and inspire murderous terrorist attacks.  Israel had no option other than to hunt down the terrorists, to seek them out in their hiding places, to flush them out and to attack them.  

The terrorists hid, as is their wont, armed with weapons and bombs, amongst the civilian population.  We had no alternative but to attack them where we found them.  Nevertheless, we acted with restraint and with care; we did not level the camps with missiles, nor did we blow up the houses with cannons, we fought carefully from house to house, from alley to alley.  In this type of battle, we lost many soldiers, simply because we were moral and humane and tried not to harm the innocent.  We fought because there was no other way to try and free ourselves from the violence which has filled our streets with blood and horror.

   

 

Alas, our self-control and all our justifications did not stop the outbreak of an outrageous propaganda campaign against us, based on ignorance and malice and accompanied by the most diabolical hostility and hollow, baseless criticism.  Yesterday, a man who should have had the decency to remain silent, joined this sinister campaign. After all, Terje Larsen, the personal envoy of the UN's Secretary General to the region, was one of the main architects of the Oslo agreement, which has brought one tragedy after the other upon us and the palestinians.  Larsen, personal friend and an enthusiastic supporter of Yasser Arafat, yesterday toured the Jenin camp and immediately started to deliver serious accusations against Israel. True, the sights, the sounds and also the odors emanating from the camp were hard to bear, but even so it was wrong of him to make such serious charges without first checking up on the facts. However, this is not the first time Larsen has made unfounded allegations, for which he later had to apologize.  Last year, during a meeting at the Defence Ministry,  Larsen got into a shouting match with General Gabi Ashkenasi, of the Northern Command, who claimed that the UN had in its possession several tapes taken of the Hizbullah's abduction of three IDF soldiers [on the border between Israel and Lebanon]. Larsen raised his voice, vehemently denying that the UN was hiding from Israel the fact that it had these tapes in  its possession. Had he checked first, perhaps he would not have reacted so precipitately. Only after this heated exchange did he go and check the facts (in his own words), discovering that he had been misled (again, in his own words) by the Secretary General.  

 

Now he is behaving in exactly the same manner. To accuse the IDF of behaving inhumanely during the Jenin campaign without first checking the facts behind the reasons for the ban on free movement in the area, even for humanitarian and medical supplies, is disgraceful. The IDF lost too many soldiers over there and did not want to take the chance of even more casualties because of uncontrolled traffic.  The War on Terror never was and never will be a genteel Tea Party in an Oslo lounge.  It will always be a tough, ruthless fight where even innocent people can, inadvertently, also be hurt.  Naturally, one can express sorrow and pain, but without being hypocritical and immoral by placing all the blame on the defending side, on the side which does not seek out bloodshed, which does not glorify death, which does not celebrate as it sacrifices its children to Moloch.       

   

Only one spectre hovers over the reek of death in Jenin camp, over the dead bodies, the ruined houses. That spectre is Yasser Arafat's, the man who chose terror, lies and death for his career, for his mission in life. Only Arafat's image wafts over Jenin and Netanya, Jerusalem and Shechem, Afula and Bethlehem, sowing pain and sorrow, fraud and incitement, despair and destruction.  From where he stood amongst the ruins of Jenin, Terje Larsen could easily see that loathsome image wherever he turned.  He could easily have identified it as the principal guilty party. But Terje Larsen preferred to point the finger of blame in a different direction because he, like certain other Oslo architects including, sadly, a number of Israelis, cannot make the distinction between good and evil at their most basic levels because, like the others, he is ASHAMED to admit that he also fell into the trap laid by that phoney known as Arafat.



TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: larsen
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1 posted on 04/21/2002 6:14:01 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: monkeyshine, ipaq2000, Lent, veronica, Sabramerican, beowolf, Nachum, BenF, angelo, boston_libert
PINGING!   ) ) ) )  

If you want on or off me Israel/MidEast/Islamic Jihad ping list please let me know.  Via Freepmail is best way.............

alt

2 posted on 04/21/2002 6:14:49 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
BTTT, and bookmarked. :)
3 posted on 04/21/2002 6:22:31 AM PDT by veronica
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To: dennisw; veronica
BTTT, and bookmarked. :)

B A:.

4 posted on 04/21/2002 6:33:35 AM PDT by Brian Allen
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To: dennisw
Ah, Mr. Larsen. This is Mr. Larsen:

Norwaves: quality information about Norway in many languages

ISSN 0804-709X
www.norwaves.com



THE ROYAL MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, Oslo
Press Division

NORWAY DAILY   No. 43-47/97   OeW/kj

DATE:   3 March 1997

LABOUR AND CENTRE CLOSE ON HOMEOWNER TAX (Aftenposten)
Labour and the Centre Party have spent the weekend working out
the basics of the assessment system for the new homeowner tax,
and all the details are expected  to be in place by 4 pm
tomorrow afternoon. The Centre Party has been working on a
modified proposal that Labour will take a stand on today. New
factors that are likely to decide the final outcome concern
the establishment of a "normal" lot size. At this point in the
discussions, there are indications that an additional tax may
be levied on lots over 1.3 decare, or approximately 1/3 acre.

TAPS TO CLOSE AT 3 AM (Arbeiderbladet)
The Government's proposal to prohibit the all serving of
alcoholic beverages after 3 am is expected to pass the
Storting. "We are on the same wavelength as the Government,"
says Ola D. Gloetvold (Centre), sponsor for the new alcohol
bill. The Centre Party also supports a proposal to open 50 new
retail outlets around Norway for the state-owned wine and
spirits monopoly.

POOR SHOWING PREDICTED FOR LABOUR AND CENTRE (Aftenposten)
Labour and the Centre Party seem to be headed for a rough ride
in the upcoming general election to be held this fall. An
analysis performed by IBM based on six polls held in February
indicates that Labour will lose nine of the 67 seats it now
holds in the Storting. The Centre can expect to lose 10 of its
32 seats, while the Socialist Left loses 3 seats, ending up
with 10 seats in the Storting. The analysis forecasts that the
Christian Democrats will keep their 13 seats, that the
Conservatives will gain 5 seats for a total of 33 seats, and
that the Liberals will go up from one to 9 seats.

STOLTENBERG FORCED TO CRACK DOWN (Dagbladet-Saturday edition)
The Norwegian Federation of Trade Unions (LO) and a Storting
majority have been putting pressure on the Government to deal
with the tendency of professionals in the finance industry to
line their own pockets, and the Government has now responded.
Finance Minister Jens Stoltenberg yesterday issued new
regulations regulating the private trading activities of
employees in all types of finance institutions.

CLOSER WATCH ON RELIGIOUS DENOMINATIONS (Aftenposten-Sunday
edition)
The Directorate for Public Management proposes that religious
denominations receiving state funding should be required to
submit approved accounts containing full lists of their
members, including personal ID numbers. Religious
denominations and humanistic organizations, representing
around 300,000 registered members, receive approximately NOK
50 million in public funding, but these organizations have few
reporting requirements.

SCHENGEN PROCESS KEPT UNDER WRAPS (Dagens Naeringsliv)
The Government signed an agreement in December bringing Norway
into the Schengen Convention, which involves extensive police
cooperation and coordination of refugee procedures. For two
months, however, Dagens Naeringsliv has been trying to obtain
information about the efforts taking place in the Ministry of
Justice as it deals with Schengen issues. Dagens Naeringsliv
has applied to examine 104 documents since 2 January and
received 81 refusals. "This is entirely unacceptable. We must
ask what the Government is hiding," says Centre Party chairman
Anne Enger Lahnstein, who indicates that her party intends to
pursue the matter in the Storting.

WORTH NOTING
- A 19-year old youth from Karmoey confessed on Saturday to
the rape and murder of his cousin in May 1995. (Vaart Land)
- Nearly 10 per cent of the population suffers from social
anxiety. A nationwide study will be conducted to determine the
causes. (Aftenposten)
- Norway is taking steps to reduce and modify its foreign aid
to Zambia. State Secretary Frode Forfang of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs states that Norwegian development assistance
programmes will place greater emphasis on human rights,
democracy and the development of civilian social conditions
and institutions. (Dagens Naeringsliv)
- Finance Minister Jens Stoltenberg will be hosting a meeting
of Nordic, Baltic and German finance ministers today. The main
topic of discussion is likely to be how the Baltic countries
and Poland may accomplish what Norway has declined to do,
namely, to join the EU. (Dagens Naeringsliv)
- 62 vessels were added to Norway's international merchant
fleet in 1996, bringing the total number to 1,447. Two out of
three of these ships sail under Norwegian flags. (Aftenposten)
- "We have organized the best Nordic World Ski Championships
ever. Trondheim should now consider applying to host the
Winter Olympics," says Trondheim's mayor, Marvin Wiseth.
(Dagbladet)

TODAY'S COMMENT
Things have gone too far. The Government had no choice but to
crack down on stock brokers and funds managers trading in
securities on the side. This is a textbook case showing how
the conduct of business professionals makes it necessary for
the government set up further controls. Stock brokers have
abused the confidence shown them by the political authorities.
Less than a year ago, Labour Government legislation supported
by the Conservatives and the Progress Party provided a more
liberal framework for trade in securities. Unfortunately, it
is difficult to formulate legislation in such a way that it
successfully prevents abuse in an area so full of potential
for manipulation and evasive action, but this is no reason not
to try. It is obvious that the Government is making an effort
to let trade in securities and the stock market play a major
role in the Norwegian economy. Even more important, then, that
steps are taken to ensure that trading activities can bear the
light of day. By their own deeds, the stock brokers have asked
for tougher measures. We think they should get them.
(Nationen)

DATE:   4 March 1997

A DISASTER FOR NORWAY (Arbeiderbladet)
A binding international agreement to reduce CO2 emissions
would have a dramatic impact on Norway if it does not
incorporate Norway's principles and preconditions. As an oil-
producing nation, if we are not allowed higher domestic CO2
emissions in return for the Norwegian contribution towards
reductions in emissions in other parts of the world, our oil
boom will no longer be of much value. Gas-fired power plants
will have to shut down, cars will be immobilized, and our
output of North Sea oil will have to be curtailed.

DECISION ON ROED-LARSEN MUST COME TODAY (Aftenposten)
The National Authority for Investigation and Prosecution of
Economic and Environmental Crime (Oekokrim) is working under
enormous pressure to complete the tax case against Terje Roed-
Larsen. No matter which way things go, the further course of
the matter will be settled by the end of the day. Tomorrow -
the 5th of March - the statutory period of limitation will
expire. In order to prosecute, Chief Public Prosecutor Hans
Petter Jahre must file formal charges today.

VALLA WOULD LIKE TO BE VICE-PRESIDENT OF LABOUR FEDERATION
(Arbeiderbladet)
Minister of Justice Gerd-Liv Valla aspires to the office of
vice-president of the Norwegian Federation of Trade Unions
(LO), despite the fact that she has recently been appointed
Minister of Justice. Within the unions and within the
Federation, opinions on Ms. Valla's candidacy  are divided.
Some say she is a controversial figure, politically speaking,
and that she would not have a unifying effect on the
Federation. The view is also widely held that she did her
candidacy no good by accepting a ministerial appointment.
There is nothing wrong with taking a leave of absence from the
Federation vice-presidency to serve as Minister of Justice,
however.

NEW ANTI-EU NETWORK (Nationen/Aftenposten)
EU opponents from all over Europe formed a new cooperative
organization yesterday called The European Anti-Maastricht
Movement (TEAM). The objective of the new organization is
chiefly to gather all types of information on the EU and make
it available on the Internet. TEAM will probably open offices
in Copenhagen as well as in Brussels. Kristen Nygaard, head of
"No to the EU" in Norway, will not carry on as international
standard-bearer against the EU, having resigned as coordinator
for this European alliance at its inaugural meeting.

NORWAY EXAMINING EUROPEAN CURRENCY (Aftenposten)
"We will find out what significance the euro will have for us.
This does not mean we will tie the krone to the euro, but
there is a broad political consensus to maintain a stable
exchange rate. What happens in the EU has an impact on
Norway," said Finance Minister Jens Stoltenberg at the opening
of the meeting of Nordic and Baltic finance ministers in
Bergen yesterday. He also said that the revised national
budget will include a thorough analysis and assessment of
Norway's relationship to the European Monetary Union, which is
scheduled to go into effect on 1 January 1999.

POLICE DO NOT APOLOGIZE (Dagbladet)
Just a few days after Birgitte Teng was found murdered in May
1995, the investigation management team discussed whether her
cousin should be checked more closely. One year and ten months
went by before he was charged, however. "I do not feel we had
sufficient grounds to arrest him before the 8th of February,"
says inspector Gro Rossehaug.

WORTH NOTING
- CO2 emissions from the Norwegian gas and petroleum industry
will increase to nearly 11.5 million tons in 1999 - 20 per
cent more than previous Government estimates. (Dagens
Naeringsliv)
- The operation to clean up the site of the Russian air crash
on Svalbard last August will get started in April. Most of the
wreckage is still up on the mountain, but it must be cleared
away by the end of summer. (Aftenposten)
- Doctors won last year's wage settlement. Since then,
however, the Norwegian Medical Association has left the
Federation of Norwegian Professional Associations, thereby
forfeiting its right to take part in this year's negotiations.
(Aftenposten)
- The Norwegian Applied Technology (NAT) affair has claimed
another victim. Karl Erik Staubo, President of Sundal Collier
& Co., resigned immediately after it was discovered that he
and two close colleagues had bought 58,000 NAT shares in a
private transaction - shares to which 40 clients were
entitled. (Dagens Naeringsliv)

TODAY'S COMMENT
Ever since Norway's first EEA negotiations at the end of the
1980s, public access to Norway's EU affairs has been a
problem. When the accession negotiations with the EU got under
way in 1992, the Norwegian delegation to Brussels did not even
have correspondence records available for public inspection,
and the Government's basic stance was that the Norwegian
negotiation demands were not public information. And all
along, the Government was boasting of its openness. After the
negotiations came an interim period during which Norway held a
provisional membership of the EU until the referendum was
held. In this interval, the Government's policy of secrecy on
EU affairs was stepped up dramatically. 60 per cent of all of
the Norwegian EU delegation's correspondence at the time was
exempt from public disclosure. The Government promised to mend
its ways, though, and former Minister of Justice Grete Faremo
pledged that the Schengen negotiations would be held out in
the open. But what have we got? 78 per cent of this
newspaper's requests for access to Schengen documents have
been turned down. What has become of your openness now,
Thorbjoern Jagland? (Dagens Naeringsliv)

DATE:   5 March 1997

OEKOKRIM: DELIBERATE TAX EVASION BY ROED-LARSEN (Arbeiderbladet)
The National Authority for Investigation and Prosecution of Economic and
Environmental Crime (Oekokrim) levied a NOK 50,000 fine against Terje Roed-
Larsen yesterday for having withheld information from the tax authorities.
Due to the fact that the offence took place ten years ago and the
limitation period expired yesterday, the reaction against Mr. Roed-Larsen
was lighter than the gravity of the case otherwise called for. Taxation of
the NOK 600,000 return on his Fideco investment as a capital gain saved Mr.
Roed-Larsen NOK 386,000 in taxes. "If this took place last year, we would
have prosecuted and asked the court for a jail sentence," says Chief Public
Prosecutor Hans Petter Jahre. The maximum sentence for this type of offence
is two years.


ROED-LARSEN WRITING BOOK AND FIELDING OFFERS (Dagbladet)
Terje Roed-Larsen is by no means a beaten man. At the moment, he is writing
a book about the peace negotiations, the Oslo Agreement and the Middle
East, and has accepted a number of assignments and board appointments at
home and abroad. He declined to reveal who has engaged him or in which
capacity. "I am both relieved and disappointed - relieved that Oekokrim has
decided not to prosecute, but disappointed that they have given me a fine,"
says the former Minister of National Planning.

ROED-LARSEN'S PROFIT A DILEMMA (Aftenposten)
Carl I. Hagen (Progress) reacts to the fact that even taking the fine into
account, Terje Roed-Larsen has still made a clear profit on his tax evasion
manoeuvre. Johan J. Jakobsen (Centre) characterizes Oekokrim's conclusion
as serious. Kjell Magne Bondevik (Car. Dem.) says he sees no reason to
pursue the matter in the political arena now that Mr. Roed-Larsen is out of
Norwegian politics. Jan Petersen (Cons.) takes the view that since Mr.
Roed-Larsen resigned from the Cabinet, the tax case is a private matter.


VALLE: "I AM NOT A CANDIDATE" (Arbeiderbladet)
"I am Minister of Justice, and I have not been appointed for a trial
period. I am not interested in running for Vice-President of the Norwegian
Federation of Trade Unions (LO) now," says Minister of Justice Gerd-Liv
Valla. She says she appreciates declarations of support from union leaders
and others who would like her to be the next Federation Vice-President, but
she makes it clear that her candidacy is out of the question. She declined
to speculate as to the feasibility of holding both offices at the same
time.

NOK 3 BILLION ROAD BUDGET OVERRUN (Aftenposten)
33 major road, tunnel and bridge projects will now end up costing NOK 3
billion more than the budgets that were approved four years ago. In many
cases, objections, protests and adjustments have led to substantial cost
increases. The Government will be submitting a revised national road and
traffic plan in a few days.

KRONE RETURNING TO NORMAL (Dagens Naeringsliv)
The Norwegian krone has dropped substantially. After having remained 4 to 5
per cent above its former mean value for several months, the exchange rate
was almost down to normal yesterday morning. Declining oil prices are
viewed as the explanation for the loss of interest in the krone.

WORTH NOTING
- Prime Minister Thorbjoern Jagland declines to comment on the fact that
his hand-picked "superminister" must now pay a NOK 50,000 fine. (Dagbladet)
- Terje Roed-Larsen has not yet decided whether he will accept Oekokrim's
decision. He is considering taking the matter to court. (Arbeiderbladet)

- The Centre Party calls for a 20 per cent raise in the minimum old-age
pension within the next four years, and proposes to pay for it by raising
surtaxes on high income groups. (Aftenposten)
- According to the new assessment system proposal that Labour and the
Centre Party are expected to submit today, only those with very large
houses and properties will have to pay homeowner taxes. (Aftenposten)
- A majority on the capital commission favours merging Baerum, Oppegaard
and seven other suburban municipalities into the City of Oslo. The enlarged
city limits would give Norway's capital a population of over one million.
(Nationen)
- Christian Democratic party chairman Valgerd Svarstad Haugland recognizes
that she will not succeed in gathering a sufficient majority to prohibit
alcoholic beverages on domestic flights. Switching tactics, she now aims to
permit wine on domestic flights. (Arbeiderbladet)
- Norwegian corporations invested over NOK 30 billion abroad in 1996, twice
the volume of investments in 1995. (Arbeiderbladet)

TODAY'S COMMENT
When Terje Roed-Larsen resigned as Minister of National Planning, he
belaboured the point that Norwegian journalists should learn to examine
their sources more critically. With the National Authority for
Investigation and Prosecution of Economic and Environmental Crime
(Oekokrim) now fining him NOK 50,000 for having deliberately submitted
false information on his 1986 tax return, there is good reason to conclude
that the news media were on reasonably safe ground. One may also conclude
that Prime Minister Thorbjoern Jagland's assessment of the situation was
correct when he chose to let Mr. Roed-Larsen go. Humanly speaking, Mr.
Roed-Larsen's resentment as well as his statement that he did not deserve
the treatment he had received, are understandable. Nonetheless, now that
Oekokrim has determined that he reduced his taxes by NOK 386,000 by
submitting false information, one may call his own faculty for self-
assessment into question. Nor is Mr. Roed-Larsen's position improved by the
fact that in 1988, he filed serious accusations with the Directorate of
Taxes against his former business associates in Bird Technology with no
regard for his own misdeeds. (Aftenposten)


DATE: 7 March 1997

PROPERTY TAX DROPPED FOR NORMAL-SIZED HOMES?
(Arbeiderbladet)
"We have at last managed to put right the current unfair and
arbitrary assessment system," said Bjoernar Olsen (Labour),
chairman of the Standing Committee on Finance, when the
agreement between the Labour Party and the Centre Party was
presented yesterday afternoon. The reform will hit wealthy
people who place their money in luxury homes to avoid high
wealth and property taxes. Per Olaf Lundteigen, the Centre
Party spokesman, was particularly pleased that town and
country would now be treated alike.

STOLTENBERG DEMANDS COMPENSATION FOR PROPERTY TAX CUTS
(Aftenposten)
"The massive cuts in property tax must be compensated for,
either by means of budget reductions or by increasing other
taxes and levies," said Minister of Finance, Jens Stoltenberg
after the Labour Party and the Centre Party finally reached a
compromise on the assessment system. The extent of state and
municipal tax losses brought about by the new system is not
yet clear.

TAX PROFESSOR WARNS ABOUT CONSEQUENCES OF ROED-LARSEN DECISION
(Dagbladet)
"Anyone whose tax is reassessed will now be able to use the
Roed-Larsen case as an argument against the decision," said
Professor Ole Gjems-Onstad, a specialist on tax law. The
former minister will avoid a large bill for unpaid tax, which
would have amounted to almost half a million kroner, including
ten years' interest. This has finally been made clear after
the local tax officer, Ingrid Tvedt, established yesterday
that the assessment case would not be re-opened.


JAGLAND'S FIRST MAJOR TEST
(Arbeiderbladet)
The Government's long-term programme will be presented today
by the Prime Minister, Thorbjoern Jagland. The programme,
which will decide the course to be steered by the Government
during the next four years, can in many ways be regarded as
Mr. Jagland's first major political test. During the coming
months, the Labour Party will have to gear its election
campaign to Jagland's test piece. It is the voters who will
grade the test - in the election this autumn.

NORWAY AS A MAJOR INVESTOR
(Aftenposten)
The Government will set up a state-owned enterprise that will
buy up shares in strategically important foreign companies.
The goal is to strengthen the competitiveness of Norwegian
companies, and ensure long-term ownership, reveals the
Government's long-term programme, which is to be presented
today. The Minister of Trade and Industry, Grete Knudsen,
knows of no other country with a similar policy for securing
development prospects within its own private sector. "Perhaps
the United Arab Emirates or other rich countries," she
suggested.

BRUNDTLAND MISSED BY BUSINESS SECTOR
(Nationen)
The business community's satisfaction with the Labour Party
has waned after the resignation of Gro Harlem Brundtland. "We
are more concerned with the establishment of real government
alternatives today than we were when Harlem Brundtland was
Prime Minister says Leif Frode Onarheim, president of the
Confederation of Norwegian Business and Industry. "Too much of
the Government's time has been taken up by the secret service
inquiry and all the disturbance caused by changes of Minister.
Mr. Jagland must now set about changing the focus to
concentrate on growth of the economy," said Onarheim.

WORTH NOTING:
- The agreement between the Labour Party and the Centre Party
has not resulted in any clarification concerning property tax,
in the view of the Conservative spokesman on economic policy,
Per Kristian Foss. (Nationen)
- Christian Democrat Kjell Magne Bondevik says that Norway
must be willing to put up with EU penalty measures to hold
onto the State Wine Monopoly and the current restrictions on
the sale of strong beer. (Vaart Land)
- It cost NOK 12 000 per head to let 25 persons have telephone
consultations with the Prime Minister, Thorbjoern Jagland last
Wednesday. Progress Party chairman Carl I. Hagen is now
demanding that the Labour Party foot this bill, and not the
taxpayers. (Arbeiderbladet)
- Large wage increases, low inflation and low interest rates
seem to be what the future holds in store for ordinary
Norwegians, who will still be able to put by considerable
capital reserves for future generations - according to fresh
forecasts by economists at Den norske Bank. (Dagens
Naeringsliv)
- A new opera house will be built - even though Prime Minister
Jagland has said that single rooms in old people's homes must
come first. According to the Government's long-term programme,
the new opera house should be completed by the year 2005.
(Verdens Gang)

TODAY'S COMMENT FROM ARBEIDERBLADET:
After a long tug of war and much uncertainty about the aims of
a new system for assessing property tax, the Labour Party and
the Centre Party have at last succeeded in reaching what looks
like a satisfactory compromise. The Labour Party has salvaged
major elements of the Government's proposal. In our view, the
most important factor in the compromise is that town and
country ill be treated alike. The Government's original
proposal had a character of being purely a tax on town
residences. Now that he factor of market value has been
removed, this is no longer the case. On paper, the new
assessment system appears fairer then the current system. It
has taken the politicians 22 years to work out a new system.
Let us hope that the effort has not been in vain.


 

5 posted on 04/21/2002 6:43:18 AM PDT by Cachelot
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To: dennisw
The "refugee" camp in Jenin is under UN control. The UN allowed its takeover by terrorists and allowed its use as a base to build bombs and send out homicidal bombers and the UN allowed the camp to be turned into a battleground by the terrorists.
6 posted on 04/21/2002 7:10:06 AM PDT by Kermit
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To: Cachelot
Cachelot....another admirer of this smooth talker from Norway. I never saw him on TV until he was interviewed by the Ms Amanpor on CNN. Two disgusting people. So Norwegian Larsen is assistant to Kofi the clown............who has the Norwegian wife.
7 posted on 04/21/2002 7:47:56 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
Have you seen the aerial photos of Jenin which show less than 10% of Jenin destroyed or heavily damaged? I saw them on another trhead but lost track.

The media keeps showing the same few blocks of Jenin, the same 100 houses from every angle, telling the world that all of Jenin has been flattened, which is an out and out lie. 10% was wrecked in heavy fighting, 70% is completely untouched and life is going on normally (for a war zone).

8 posted on 04/21/2002 7:52:20 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: dennisw
The enemies of Israel will perish"
9 posted on 04/21/2002 7:52:45 AM PDT by jonatron
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To: dennisw
Terde Red-Larsen is no friend to peace.
10 posted on 04/21/2002 7:59:53 AM PDT by Truthfairy
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To: dennisw
So Norwegian Larsen is assistant to Kofi the clown

Yep. Left Norway "under a cloud" and is now under the Monkey Cloud, haha.

The lefty apparatus in Norway grew cancerous during the seventies. It has taken a severe beating politically, but as with the Clintonoids there are well-placed holdovers. One of them is a guy named Lars Gule, who was caught in Lebanon in 1977 with nearly two pounds of explosives in his rucksack. The material was intended for a PFLP action inside Israel. He got six months jailtime. Later he became associated with a think tank - Christian Michelsen's Institute - as a researcher with focus on the ME. He has also been involved with government research in this area in later years, and is probably somewhat important in the left's Palestine agenda. He is currently also the head of the main Norwegian Atheist organization.

11 posted on 04/21/2002 8:04:19 AM PDT by Cachelot
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To: dennisw
Leftist scum.
12 posted on 04/21/2002 8:16:43 AM PDT by Lent
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To: Travis McGee
 

Have you seen the aerial photos of Jenin which show less than 10% of Jenin destroyed or heavily damaged? I saw them on another trhead but lost track.

I saw them...They are IDF ariel photos...probably on IDF website

http://www.idf.il/english/news/jenin.stm

The media keeps showing the same few blocks of Jenin, the same 100 houses from every angle, telling the world that all of Jenin has been flattened, which is an out and out lie. 10% was wrecked in heavy fighting, 70% is completely untouched and life is going on normally (for a war zone).

Jenin refugee camp is just part of larger Jenin. And the most lawless part where Jihadists were spawned..

They used used bulldozers to widen narrow streets that are good for sniping. Bulldozers were also used to shovel up and detonate anti tank mines. I would like to here more about the IDF bulldozers taking out these mines

13 posted on 04/21/2002 8:23:41 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
That link has some great stuff, but I didn't find a link to the aerial photos.
14 posted on 04/21/2002 8:28:31 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: dennisw
Norway is going to pay a terrible price if it continues this slandering and abandonment of Israel. Of all the nations of Europe, they have the least excuse for descending into the Vichyssoise and drowning in Eurotrash anti-Semitism and neo-Naziism.

Quisling, you should be living at this hour! Come to think of it, it looks like you ARE! The spirit of Quisling marches again!

Meanwhile, God has his Tidal Wave lined up in reserve, and the patience of the angel holding it back is wearing thin.

15 posted on 04/21/2002 8:28:59 AM PDT by crystalk
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To: dennisw
Actually the wife is Swedish, according to files here.
16 posted on 04/21/2002 8:34:02 AM PDT by crystalk
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To: Travis McGee
The area so TOTALLY wrecked, is so because it was booby trapped to hell by the Pallies themselves. If they were planning to go back to their homes, why did they tie them all up with explosives primed to explode?

If Israelis had then NOT detonated these, the Pallies had instructions to say that the Israelis had left the homes boody trapped.

17 posted on 04/21/2002 8:36:38 AM PDT by crystalk
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To: dennisw
Great post!
18 posted on 04/21/2002 10:30:02 AM PDT by knighthawk
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To: dennisw
You mean even Norway has idiots with an agenda?
If they are employees of the UN, "idiots" is a redundancy.
The UN has become a collection of the malicious and the clueless from all countries.
A useless combination.

Beats having a real job, I guess.

19 posted on 04/21/2002 10:33:40 AM PDT by Publius6961
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To: crystalk
Kofis wife is Swedish as you say. And a relation of Raul Wallenberg.
20 posted on 04/21/2002 10:53:55 AM PDT by dennisw
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