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060921coup3

Course: ECO 338, Fall 2008
School: Chester
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coup Military ousts Thai prime ministerWorld Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org WSWS : News & Analysis : Asia Military coup ousts Thai prime minister By John Roberts 21 September 2006 Back to screen version | Send this link by email | Email the author Late Tuesday night, the Thai military deployed troops backed by armoured vehicles to seize control of the capital Bangkok, surrounding the parliament building,...

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coup Military ousts Thai prime ministerWorld Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org WSWS : News & Analysis : Asia Military coup ousts Thai prime minister By John Roberts 21 September 2006 Back to screen version | Send this link by email | Email the author Late Tuesday night, the Thai military deployed troops backed by armoured vehicles to seize control of the capital Bangkok, surrounding the parliament building, the prime ministers office and taking over all television stations. The coup against Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra followed months of political intrigue fuelled by deep rifts in the ruling elites and a constitutional crisis that saw the April 2 national elections annulled by the courts. The army, with the tacit support of Thai king Bhumibol Adulyadej, moved to preempt the resumption of mass anti-Thaksin protests due to take place on Wednesday. In April and May, hundreds of thousands of protesters took to the streets of Bangkok, demanding that Thaksin resign over corruption allegations. Thaksin promised in April to step aside after fresh elections. However, as a protracted constitutional crisis dragged on, he appeared likely to remain in control. Thaksin was in New York at the time of the coup, planning to address the UN General Assembly. When he got wind of the putsch, the prime minister attempted to sack army chief General Sonthi Boonyaratkalin and impose a state of emergency. Thaksin phoned a message through to Bangkoks Channel 9 TV station which began to broadcast his decree at 10.20 p.m. According to the Bangkok Post, the announcement was cut off as troops entered the station. By 11 p.m. tanks were firmly planted at all strategic points in the city. According to the Nation, General Sonthi and other armed forces heads were granted an audience with the king at midnight, effectively signalling royal approval for the coup. Early yesterday morning, the military leaders constituted themselves as the Political Reform Council, imposed martial law, revoked the countrys 1997 constitution and dissolved Thaksins government, the Constitutional Court and the Senate. The Political Reform Council justified the coup by declaring that the Thaksin government had created social division like never before, insulted the king and politically meddled with state organisations. Laying the basis for legal action against the ousted prime minister, it noted there were widespread reports of corruption. General Sonthi, who has assumed the role of interim prime minister, appeared on television yesterday. He announced that a civilian prime minister would be installed within two weeks, but that elections, which were due next month, would be postponed for a year while a new constitution was drafted. He threatened legal proceedings against Thaksin. Significantly, the king issued a statement yesterday endorsing Sonthi as head of the Political Reform Council and calling on civil servants and the population to obey his orders. The monarchy has close connections to the military, which directly ruled Thailand for most of the twentieth century. The kings support for the coup indicates that the most conservative elements of the Thai ruling elites are backing the move. The military has been able to exploit widespread hostility to Thaksin, particularly in the capital. Soldiers and tanks were adorned with yellow ribbonsa sign of their support for the king, and also the colour adopted by anti-Thaksin protesters earlier in the year. No open opposition to the coup has yet emerged from elements of the security forces loyal to Thaksin or in rural areas where his Thai Rak Thai (TRT) party had support. Protracted crisis The coup is the culmination of more than a year of bitter political infighting in Thai ruling circles. Billionaire telecommunications tycoon Thaksin and his TRT party swept to power in the 2001 and 2005 elections by exploiting popular opposition to the IMF reform agenda imposed by the Democratic Party-led government following the Asian economic crisis of 1997-1998. Thaksin won considerable support, particularly in rural areas, for his populist promises of handouts to villages, cheap health care and protectionist measures to defend Thai businesses. Increasingly, however, Thaksin came under international pressure to resume the IMF restructuring program in order to compete for foreign investment and shore up the economy. He privatised state assets, including the national electricity generating authority (EGAT), and began talks on a free trade deal with the US. These steps generated significant opposition, including among Thaksins former allies such as publishing magnate Sondhi Limthongul, who initiated a series of protest rallies last year. The demonstrations swelled to more than 100,000 in February amid widespread public outrage over the sale of Thaksins family share in the telecommunications giant Shin Corp for $US1.9 billion. Not only was there anger over the manner in which Thaksin had avoided paying tax, but over the sale of a major Thai company to a foreign corporationthe Singapore governments investment arm Temasek. The Peoples Alliance for Democracy (PAD), which organised the protests, became the focus for broader concerns among layers of the middle class and working class. EGAT workers facing the loss of jobs and conditions joined the rallies. Others voiced their opposition to Thaksins monopolisation of the media and abuse of democratic rights, including his brutal war on drugs in 2003, in which the police reportedly carried out thousands of extra-judicial killings of alleged drug dealers. Former senior Thai diplomats also spoke at the rallies, denouncing the governments brutal suppression of democratic rights in the Muslim south of the country that intensified a separatist uprising and damaged relations with Malaysia. The criticisms also reflected deep anger in the army hierarchy, which had been ordered to enforce a state of emergency in the south and increasingly found itself involved a in civil war. Thaksin attempted to defuse the political crisis by calling a snap national election for April 2. He calculated, correctly, that support for TRT and its populist pork-barreling policies in the rural northern areas would ensure his re-election. However, the opposition parties boycotted the poll, triggering a constitutional crisis. So intense was the hostility to Thaksin in Bangkok that a number of seats remained unfilled after the votes cast failed to reach the legal minimum of 20 percent. Under the constitution, parliament was not permitted to meet and form a new government until all seats were filled. The opposition parties appealed to the king to sack Thaksin. He refused to do so but exerted pressure behind the scenes to press Thaksin to retreat. On April 4, Thaksin promised to step aside once a new cabinet was formed, prompting PAD to call off the Bangkok rallies. However, by-elections on April 23 failed to fill the empty seats, so the constitutional deadlock continued. King Bhumibol finally intervened directly on April 25. Describing the situation as a mess, he again rejected opposition appeals for him to sack Thaksin and called on the courts to resolve the constitutional crisis. On May 8, the Constitutional Court annulled the election as the opposition parties had called for. Nevertheless, the political crisis continued unabated as Thaksin and his opponents engaged in a bitter struggle for control of the instruments of state. Concerned that TRT would win any new election, the opposition parties pressed for the replacement of the electoral commission and instituted legal actions against TRT aimed at declaring it illegal. For his part, Thaksin moved against his opponents and indicated that he would stay on as TRT leader after new elections. One of the immediate triggers for the coup appears to have been Thaksins moves against senior officers, including General Sonthi, who had been critical of the prime minister. The London Times reported that in July 100 middle-ranking officers loyal to Thaksin were removed from key posts in Bangkok. According to the Asia Times website, Thaksin was about to strike back by moving two of his supporters into key posts controlling security in the capital. Asia Times journalist Shawn Crispin wrote: The coup significantly comes against the backdrop of a hotly contested scheduled military reshuffle, in which Thaksin had controversially vied to elevate army officials loyal to him from his pre-Cadet Class 10 to the pivotal First Army Division. That reshuffle list reportedly brought Thaksin into conflict with senior members of the top brass and the [Kings advisory] Privy Council, and his refusal to back down from the proposed personnel changes appears to have been a major factor behind the coup. More fundamentally, however, Sonthi and his backers were deeply concerned that the unresolved political crisis was about to boil over again and involve masses of ordinary working people. Unable to resolve their deep divisions by constitutional means through elections, the ruling elites have imposed military rule above all to prevent the development of a political movement that threatened to move beyond the control of the existing political parties and institutions. Significantly the opposition Democratic Party has backed the coup. Former prime minister and party leader Chuan Leekpai told the media: As politicians, we do not support any kind of coup, but during the past five years the government of Thaksin created several conditions that forced the military to stage the coup. Th...

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Chester - ECO - 338
DIRELAND: THAILAND: LETTER FROM A VELVET COUP DIRELAND POLITICS AND MEDIA-ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY FROM VETERAN POLITICAL JOURNALIST DOUG IRELAND My BioRecent Posts Letter from Rome: ITALY'S BYZANTINE TELECOM ITALIA SCANDAL SHAKES THE REPUBLIC (Upda
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Military coup cements King's control of Thailand Breaking News Business Entertainment International Sports Technology RSS Feeds News Forum Home/ Saturday 23rd September, 2006 Military coup cements King's control of Thailand Shawn W Crispin - Asia Tim
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Tompaine.com - Print Page Coup Schmoo Alexandra Walker September 21, 2006 Two days ago, President Bush lectured the United Nations about freedom, saying "Freedom, by its nature, cannot be imposed. It must be chosen." That same day, a military coup to
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Independent Online Edition > Asia HomeNewsUKCrimeHealth MedicalLegalUK PoliticsThis BritainTransportUlsterEuropeWorldWorld PoliticsScience & TechnologyAfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaMiddle EastRobert FiskBusinessBusiness NewsBusiness Analysis & Feature
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Thai Junta Imposes Curbs on News Media - New York TimesSeptember 22, 2006 Thai Junta Imposes Curbs on News Media By THOMAS FULLER, International Herald Tribune BANGKOK, Sept. 21 The first signs of trouble for Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra emer
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The Korea Herald : The Nation's No.1 English Newspaper User ID. Password RegisterJoin our newsletterEditorial Home > News > Editorial/Op-Ed[EDITORIAL]Instability in BangkokDispatches from Bangkok report that the majority of people are in favo
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ZNet | Asia | THAILAND: LETTER FROM A VELVET COUPZNet | Asia THAILAND: LETTER FROM A VELVET COUP Coup de Ville by Alan Platt; DIRELAND; September 22, 2006 Bangkok, Thailand - Talk about a velvet revolution. The overnight coup d'etat which ousted the
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WSJ.com - Was Thai Coup Pre-Emptive? September 22, 2006DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints
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WSJ.com - Life During a Coup: Army Tanks and Open Bars September 23, 2006DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use t
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Thai Rulers Tap Central Banker To Run Panel - WSJ.com September 27, 2006DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use th
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From: gw@guardian.co.uk Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2006 3:43 AM To: Bove, Roger Even Subject: Majordomo file: list 'guardian-weekly' file 'gw-international/2006.10.1/4.1.txt' -Thai military plans to rule for a year after coup / John Aglionby in Ba
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FT.com / Asia-Pacific / Thailand's political crisis - New Thai rulers ignore economy at their perilSkip to main content, accesskey 's' Homepage, accesskey '1' Financial Times FT.comASIA-PACIFIC Thailand's political crisisCloseNew Thai rulers ignore e
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In Thailand, More Survive AIDS, Only to Face Rejection - New York TimesOctober 16, 2006 In Thailand, More Survive AIDS, Only to Face Rejection By SETH MYDANS International Herald Tribune LOP BURI, Thailand Thailands primary AIDS hospice at a Buddh
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FT.com / World / Asia-Pacific - Thailand vows to clarify foreign ownership lawsSkip to main content, accesskey 's' Homepage, accesskey '1' Financial Times FT.comWORLD Asia-PacificCloseThailand vows to clarify foreign ownership laws By Amy Kazmin in B
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Thailand Tightens Rules For Baht Transactions - WSJ.com November 8, 2006DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use th
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Consumers Appear Satisfied With Thai Political Stability - WSJ.com November 10, 2006DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or custo
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FT.com / Asia-Pacific / Thailand's political crisis - Thailand grapples with Thaksins legacySkip to main content, accesskey 's' Homepage, accesskey '1' Financial Times FT.comASIA-PACIFIC Thailand's political crisisCloseThailand grapples with Thaksins
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FT.com / Lex - Thai equitiesSkip to main content, accesskey 's' Homepage, accesskey '1' Financial Times FT.com LexSubscription pageCloseThai equities Published: December 5 2006 12:49 | Last updated: December 5 2006 12:49 Whos afraid of military coups
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IHT Article Print Page Copyright 2003 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com Thomas L. Friedman: Turkey, the EU and History NYT NYT Monday, January 12, 2004WASHINGTON While visiting Istanbul the other day, I took a long walk along the Bosp
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EMAIL THIS EmailFrom: pmbove@aol.com Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 6:46 PM To: Bove, Roger Even Subject: WSJ.com - Commentary: Still the Best of Friends Powered by * Please note, the sender's email address has not been verified.January 28, 2004
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WSJ.com - Turkey in the EU February 17, 2004 REVIEW & OUTLOOK Turkey in the EU No other western European country has such close and historic ties with Turkey as Germany. Today, about 2.5 million people of Turkish decent live in Germany, Turkey's most
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Aljazeera.Net - Turkish economy on the upswingAdvanced SearchHomepage News Economy Culture Sci-Tech Special Reports Weather Polls Your feedback Contact Us About Aljazeera Frequencies Aljazeera Mobile News Alerts E-marketing Arab World Global News
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seeurope.net : View Story Home | About Us | Ad Info | Contacts | Top 100 | Newsletter | NEWS TODAYSaturday, April 10, 2004NATO Review Investment Guide Country Ratings Investment Projects Calendar of Events SEE Countries SEE Holidays Useful Links Di
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seeurope.net : View Story Home | About Us | Ad Info | Contacts | Top 100 | Newsletter | NEWS TODAYFriday, April 23, 2004NATO Review Investment Guide Country Ratings Investment Projects Calendar of Events SEE Countries SEE Holidays Useful Links Disc
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FT.com /World/EuropeThursday Apr 22 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World US UK Europe Asia-Pacific Middle East & Africa Americas International economy Brussels briefing News headlines News in dep
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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FT.com / Turkey: Finance 2004Wednesday Sep 1 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & W
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As the celebrations over the expansion of the European Union die down, debates over the next big expansion proposal are sure to heat up. Talks on Turkey's entry into the European Union, however, won't be limited to a simple discussion of the economic
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The New York Times > International > Europe > Globalist: Erdogan May Know Best on Turkey's Path to EuropeMay 19, 2004 GLOBALIST Erdogan May Know Best on Turkey's Path to Europe By ROGER COHEN International Herald Tribune STANBUL The European Union
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Area: 779,452 sq km Language: Turkish Currency: Turkish lira (TL) Exchange rate: 2003 av $1 = TL1,510,037 Latest 2004 $1 = TL1,503,000 GREECEEdirne Zonguldak IstanbulPopulation: 67.8m (2000 census) Main cities and population (2000) Ankara (capital
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FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
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FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
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FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
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FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
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FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
Chester - ECO - 343
FT.com / Turkey 2004Monday Aug 30 2004. All times are London time.Roger Bove Edit Profile Take a tour Log outHome World Business Markets Markets & funds data Industries Lex Comment & analysis Technology Management Your money Arts & Weekend Spor
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WSJ.com - IMF Approves Loan Package Of $661 Million for Turkey July 30, 2004 5:12 p.m. EDT ECONOMYDOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, cl
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seeurope.net : View Story Home | About Us | Ad Info | Contacts | Top 100 | Newsletter | NEWS TODAYThursday, August 5, 2004The Event: SEEF 2004 NATO Review Investment Guide Country Ratings Investment Projects Calendar of Events SEE Countries SEE Hol
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Description of Selected News August 8, 2004 NEWS Politics Domestic International Social Sports Science Weather Economy Culture Religion Feature Other News VIEWS Opinion Perspectives Events SPECIAL Learning It's Worth Knowing Thought Prayer Today in H