VOA标准英语10月-EU Warns Mauritania of Measures if Law is Not Res(在线收听

The European Union has given the West African country of Mauritania a month to restore constitutional order or face unspecified "measures." Lisa Bryant has more from Paris where members of the Mauritanian junta met with E.U. officials on Monday.

An E.U. statement issued after the meeting between members of Mauritania's military government and European officials said that if there were not so-called "new elements" within a month regarding Mauritania, talks will end and appropriate measures will be proposed. The statement did not say what kind of measures they would be.
 
Supporters of ousted president Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi during an anti-coup demonstration in Nouakchott, 7 Oct, 2008

But the European Union sharply criticized the August coup in Mauritania that toppled the country's democratically elected president. The talks in Paris were aimed at restoring constitutional order. But so far, the military shows no signs of doing so.

Mauritanian opposition politicians have urged the European Union to take a tough line against the junta, and this is apparently what they did Monday.

The European Union is hardly the only critic of the military coup. The African Union suspended Mauritania shortly after the coup, as did the Paris-based international francophonie organization.

The francophonie organization's president, Abdou Diouf - the former president of Senegal - described Mauritania's suspension as an extreme measure. He said it would only be lifted once conditions for democracy were fulfilled.

Mauritania's military leaders announced Sunday that some civilians could meet deposed Mauritanian president Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, in what some reportedly interpret as a gesture toward eventually freeing him.

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2008/10/64317.html