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The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 29 Sep 1999 21:14:57 EDT
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Ndey,

In a speech l heard broadcast on National Public Radio today, President
Clinton stated that the U.S will forgive the debt owed to them by any of
these countries, if the monies will be used towards the  fight against
poverty and improvement of  education, or something to that effect. However,
he said the particular country has to be able to prove it.

Jabou Joh


In a message dated 9/29/99 5:30:06 PM Central Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:

<< On May 16, 1998, representatives of the eight wealthiest nations in the
 >world -- known as the Group of 8, or G8 -- held their annual summit
 >meeting in Birmingham, England. An astounding throng of 70,000 people from
 >all over the United Kingdom was assembled there by the Jubilee 2000
 >Campaign, to create a human chain seven miles long around the conference
 >center and to raise the chant of "Break the chains of debt," calling for
 >cancellation of the crushing debt of impoverished countries by the year
 >2000.
 >
 >It was the first audible cry of a roar for justice that is beginning to be
 >heard in every corner of the world, and that calls for echoing action in
 >the churches of the United States.
 >
 >The Jubilee 2000 -- or J2K -- Campaign is a coalition of unprecedented
 >international breadth and vitality that has grown dramatically around the
 >world in the past two years. The campaign has its roots in communities of
 >faith, but it includes secular groups of every political stripe, all
 >sharing a moral commitment to a debt-free fresh start for the world's
 >poorest nations.
 >
 >It draws inspiration from the Year of Jubilee every 50 years described in
 >Leviticus 25. But you don't have to be a believing Jew or Christian to
 >rise to the vision of liberation projected in this remarkable movement.
 >
 >An English political economist at the University of Keele named Martin
 >Dent first had the idea of linking the debt crisis to the concept of
 >Jubilee and the millennium. In 1990,

 ----

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