| 'Sex Slaves' Rescued in Raids.  [
England]
    Nineteen women from Eastern Europe who are thought to have been tricked into becoming sex slaves
    were rescued during raids.  A special task
    force of female officers from West Midlands Police were sent to a massage parlor in Birmingham to free the
    women.  "They had their passports taken.  "They were locked into the venue during the
    evening to work and taken away during day and locked in a house." | 
  
    | Marriage, Kids, Career Hits Female Sex Drive: Survey.  [England The sex drive of women plummets sharply as they juggle the
    increasing demands of partners, children and careers, researchers said.  One in 10 women questioned for a survey admitted
    losing interest in sex for at least six months in the past year.  Married women were shown to be much more likely than
    single men or women to have sexual problems.  Fifty-four
    percent of women and 35 percent of men have problems but fewer than 11 percent of men and
    21 percent of women seek help, according to the survey published in the journal Sexually
    Transmitted Infections. | 
  
    | German
    Conservatives Hail Merkel.  [Germany] Germany's conservatives have launched the
    main phase of their election campaign, confirming Angela Merkel as their candidate to
    unseat leftist Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder in the September 18 poll.  Recent opinion polls have given the CDU a steady
    lead of between 12 to 16 points over the Social Democrats (SPD), meaning Merkel, a
    pastor's daughter and former physicist, looks a near certainty to become chancellor.  The only question appears to be whether she will
    lead a coalition with the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) or whether the combined strength of
    the other parties, boosted by strong support in Eastern Germany for a new leftist alliance, will
    force her into a "grand coalition" with the SPD. | 
  
    | Merkel Was Ignored By
    Her Own People.  [Germany] .
As an outsider
    twice over - a woman and an East German - she was supposed to be a double sign of hope
    appealing to two constituencies; instead, she proved to be a double riddle.  Merkel, 51, an academic from the northern part of
    the former East
Germany, was credited on the one hand with a pronounced instinct for
    power, but faulted on the other as uncharismatic.  Would
    she be able to bring together a country that was reunited but still divided in people's
    minds and in its economic performance?  Would
    she, a childless physicist, be able to challenge tradition and provide a role model for
    German women, who still choose children over careers in numbers shocking by European
    standards?  For her part, Angela Merkel always
    chose to evade these questions.  Contrary to
    her party's strategists, she believed that her popularity was due in large part to her
    refusal to position herself as a woman or as an East German.
      She never gave prominent play to the economic problems of the East.  To this unmistakable absence, East Germans gave an
    unmistakable answer: The Christian Democrats garnered a significantly lower percentage of
    votes in the East than in the West. Merkel was ignored by her own people.  The same thing happened with women.  In an election featuring the first woman candidate
    for chancellor, female turnout remained largely unchanged.
      Even someone who argues under the feminist dialectic that equal rights will
    be achieved when women and men are viewed as interchangeable would have a hard time
    considering this a positive sign. |