News Focus
News Focus
icon url

F6

04/27/05 2:01 PM

#28160 RE: F6 #28159

(COMTEX) B: Polish priest at Vatican was informer for communist secret police,
official says ( AP WorldStream )

WARSAW, Poland, Apr 27, 2005 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- A Polish priest at
the Vatican was accused Wednesday of collaborating with the communist-era secret
police during the 1980s even as Pope John Paul II inspired his countrymen to
resist the Soviet-backed regime.

The Rev. Konrad Stanislaw Hejmo, a member of the Dominican religious order, "was
a secret collaborator of the Polish secret services under the names Hejnal and
Dominik," Leon Kieres, head of the National Remembrance Institute, said at a
news conference. The institute guards communist-era police files.

Kieres did not provide details or documentary proof to reporters, saying they
will be published in May.

He said more documents about spying on church figures are to be published later
this year in a book by a historian given special access to documents at the
institute.

Hejmo, 69, said in a phone interview broadcast by Polish state television that
"there could have been some recordings tied, glued together. ... It is hard for
me to say now, I am not really aware now what this is." It wasn't clear what
recordings he might have referred to.

Hejmo's Dominican superior, the Rev. Maciej Zieba, told reporters at the news
conference he had seen the files, which he called "convincing and shocking."

Andrzej Paczkowski, a historian at the institute, said the files contain some
700 pages and cover the 1980s and earlier years. He said Hejmo was not "some
very important person."

Hejmo was an ever-present figure at John Paul's public events in his white
robes, leading Polish pilgrims around and taking selected groups up to see the
pope.

He was close to the pope's entourage, but not a member of the inner circle.
During the pope's recent hospitalization, for instance, he escorted the bishop
of Zakopane, a town in southern Poland, to the Gemelli Polyclinic but did not go
up to see the pope himself.

He had extensive contacts with Poles who visited Rome, and had arranged housing
and other assistance for Polish refugees who had fled the communist regime,
according to Poland's Catholic Information Agency news service.

Observers and church officials warned against passing a hasty judgment.

"We are still not sure of the type of the cooperation, whether he was simply
talking about the Holy Father with the secret services or was actually providing
secret information on him," Bishop Tadeusz Pieronek told The Associated Press.
"If he was providing information, than this would be a very sad truth."

Hejmo had been widely quoted about the pope's condition in the news media in the
days leading up to John Paul's death April 2. He has served at the Vatican since
1979.

Polish-born John Paul, elected pope in 1978, would have been of great interest
to the secret police because of his role in inspiring the Solidarity trade union
opposition to the communist regime, which collapsed in 1989.

The release of communist-era information has created turmoil in Poland recently
with the leak of an index to files in the custody of the remembrance institute.

The so-called Wildstein list, named after the journalist who obtained it, caused
controversy and confusion because it lists both people who informed and people
who were spied on without distinguishing between them.

In another prominent case, the spokeswoman for the first post-communist
government, Malgorzata Niezabitowska, has gone to court seeking a ruling that
she was not a collaborator. A colleague at a communist-era underground newspaper
has alleged she denounced other journalists.

Accusations of collaboration are a serious matter in Poland, many see
cooperation with the Soviet-backed government as shameful.

Earlier this month, Kieres said he had recognized the taped voice of a clergyman
who was secretly telling agents of Poland's communist secret services about Pope
John Paul II. He said the news would have been "painful" to the pope.

By MONIKA SCISLOWSKA
Associated Press Writer

Copyright 2005 Associated Press, All rights reserved

-0-

*** end of story ***
icon url

F6

04/27/05 2:42 PM

#28165 RE: F6 #28159

(COMTEX) B: HIV/Aids Cases Shoot Up in Asante-Akim North

Konongo, Apr 27, 2005 (Ghanaian Chronicle/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX)
-- The Deputy Co-ordinating Director for Asante Akim North, Mr. Saaka Dramani,
who is also the district's focal person on HIV/AIDS, has stated that the
HIV/AIDS pandemic is increasing in the District.

He pointed out that 205 cases were recorded at the Konongo-Odumasi Government
Hospital last year, yet still more people are believed to have been infected.

He said this during the inauguration of the Odumase "Evangelist of AIDS Victim
association" at Odumase in the Asante Akim North District, last week.

The theme for the occasion was, "Beware, AIDS is real." Mr. Dramani noted with
regret that, out of 21 Districts in the Ashanti Region, the Asante Akim North
District took the 7th position as far as the HI/AIDS pandemic is concerned.

He said the disease had negative effects on the socio-economic development of
the society, hence the need to educate the public on its dangers.

He further advised various communities to form virgin clubs and teach the youth
in details about the disease and its negative effect on human beings and the
economy as a whole.

Mr. Francis Appiadu, Urban Council chairman, who chaired the function, urged the
participants at the inauguration to dress decently to avoid immoral and illicit
sexual practices.

He said during the HIV/AIDS camping, focal persons normally share out condoms to
the participants, which practice he said is not good because to him, it means
they are promoting HIV/AIDS in the country.

"Abstinence is the best way to combat HIV/AIDS," he stated and advised the young
ladies to refrain from casual sex because, according to medical report, 63% of
those affected by HIV/AIDS are women.

The chairman of the "Evangelist of Aids Victim," Mr. Baffour Awuah, appealed to
the Ghana AIDS Commission to give them the necessary logistics to enable them
work effectively.

by Dominic Kumi

Copyright Ghanaian Chronicle. Distributed by All Africa Global
Media(AllAfrica.com)

-0-

*** end of story ***
icon url

teapeebubbles

06/21/05 4:08 PM

#29437 RE: F6 #28159

Practice Safe Fax



Q. Do I have to be married to have safe fax?
A. Although married people fax often, there are many single people who fax complete strangers
every day.

Q. How do I go about faxing a complete stranger?
A. Just ask them if they want to fax. If they do, they will give you their phone number.

Q. My parents say they never had fax when they were young, and were only allowed to write
memo's to each other until they were 21. How old do you think someone should be before they
can fax?
A. Faxing can be performed at any age once you learn the correct procedure.

Q. If I fax something to myself will I go blind?
A. Certainly not. As far as we can see.

Q. There is a place on our street where you can go and pay to fax. Is this legal?
A. Yes, many people have no other outlet for their fax drives and must pay a "professional" when
their needs become too great.

Q. Should a cover always be used for faxing?
A. Unless you are really sure of the one you are faxing, a cover should always be used.

Q. What happens if I do the procedure incorrectly and fax prematurely?
A. Don't panic. Many people fax prematurely when they haven't faxed in a long time. Just start
over, most people won't mind if you try again.

Q. I have a personal and a business fax. Can transmissions become mixed up?
A. Being bi-faxual can be confusing, but so long as you use a cover with each one you won't
transmit anything you're not supposed to.

Q. Is getting faxed by one person the same as with another?
A. No. Even though many people (especially lawyers) would like you to believe that the longer
they are faxing you the better you will like it. In reality the best fax is short, of high quality, and very
graphic.

Q. There is a man I'd very much like to fax (I've tried several times) but he can't seem to keep his
equipment up long enough. Is there any thing I can do to help him?
A. You could suggest that he contact a good fax therapist, such as Canon or Mitsubishi. If he
refuses to take the suggestion, it would be best if you just wrote him off