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TIME EUROPE
September 18, 2000, Vol. 156 No. 12


Off the Hook
An E.U. report on Austria should end the sanctions
By ROMESH RATNESAR

From the start it was an unhappy solution, and for months Europe's leaders have searched for a way out. Last week the European Union was presented with the most inviting opportunity yet to lift the first set of diplomatic sanctions ever imposed against a member state. A panel of three statesmen appointed by the E.U. issued a report recommending that Europe end its seven-month isolation campaign against Austria, which began following the inclusion of the far-right Freedom Party (FPO) in the country's elected coalition. The report said that Austria's sound record on immigrant and minority rights and its commitment to "common European values" remained intact. On Friday the "wise men," as the three panel members were dubbed, gave their findings to the government of France — the current holder of the E.U. presidency and the most aggressive advocate of sanctions. The measures could be lifted within weeks.

News of the wise men's conclusions brought sighs of relief in many European capitals, not least in Vienna. If the sanctions are lifted, the Austrian government will no longer need to hold a planned referendum on them which could force the government of Chancellor Wolfgang Schüssel to use its vote to disrupt E.U. business. The sanctions have affected popular Austrian attitudes to the E.U. — a July poll found that barely one-third of Austrians now support membership.

The report could let other E.U. leaders off the hook too. The sanctions hardly dented business and tourism in Austria, but the tensions they created within the E.U. threatened to impede plans for enlargement. Pointedly, the wise men's report criticized the Freedom Party and indirectly its former chief, Jörg Haider, saying that some party statements "could be interpreted as xenophobic or even racist." But Haider seized on the report as proof that "...nobody has got anything on the FPO and its participation in government." He may even decide that it opens the way for him to resume leadership of his party, at which point Austria's most adroit politician will have completely confounded the not-so-wise men who imposed the sanctions in the first place. — Reported by Angela Leuker / Vienna

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More Stories

September 18, 2000

COVER STORY
The Energy Crunch
Soaring fuel prices set off protests and raise questions about Europe's sources of powe

Nuclear Power
It's cheap and clean, but what do you do with the leftovers?

Alternatives to Oil
The pros and cons of water, wind, sun and more traditional methods of power generation

EUROPE
Dirty Rotten Reactors
While the West phases out Nuclear Power, Russia refurbishes its old plants and builds new ones

Transmission Control
Putin makes a grab for the medium and the message

Decisive Danes
The rest of Europe will be watching with interest when Denmark votes on entrance to the euro club

Off the Hook
An E.U. report on Austria should end the sanctions

OLYMPICS
Soft Machine
After a decade of leading the sprint swimming pack, Alexander Popov is still refining his strategies and his stroke

Bicycle Belle
Despite her modesty, French sprint star Felicia Ballanger is far and away the gold-medal favorite

Magnetic Pole
Women's pole vaulting makes its Olympic debut in Sydney, and American Stacey Dragila is on track for the first gold

BUSINESS
Easy Does It
With a burgeoning business empire, Greek tycoon-in-training Stelios Haji-Ioannou makes success seem so simple

Trust Buster Hits Home
Giuseppe Tesauro wants Italy's cosseted firms to understand that fair competition is in their interest

THE ARTS
The Frank Gehry Experience
Will a groovy new Seattle museum and buildings worldwide make him the wave of the future?

Anti-Fascist Fiction
Based on a true incident in the U.S., 'The Wave' is now used in German schools as a teaching tool

Icelandic Exhibitionist
Sigurdur Hjartarson's unique museum offers visitors a chance to examine one of zoology's little secrets

DEPARTMENTS
On Your Own Time

World Watch

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