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"We are stronger than one criminal and his thugs," he added, referring to Gen. Raoul Cedras, who forced Aristide out of power on Sept. 30. He urged wider adoption of the trade embargo against Haiti imposed by the United States and the Organization of American States. Other countries, including the 12 nations of the European Community, have declined to support the embargo. "If we could stop the ships going to Haiti with oil, the coup would have been over long ago," Mr. Aristide said. "Once they make the em- bargo a real one, it will be a matter of days" until it ends. Mr. Aristide, a Roman Catholic priest known to adhere to the political- religious philosophy known as "liberation theology," spoke to the representatives of the Jewish organizations in both English and Hebrew. The ousted president studied theology at the Pon- tifical Biblical Institute in Jerusalem for three years, beginning in 1979, and is able to express himself in fluent Hebrew. Though the exiled leader said that his countrymen are "fleeing political repres- sion," he stopped short of criticizing President Bush's position that Haitians are simply running from econ- omic distress. Nor did Mr. Aristide at- tack the Bush policy of forc- ibly returning Haitian refu- gees back on the high seas each day, rather than allow- ing them to apply for polit- ical asylum from the safety of the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Jewish groups have been highly critical of the policy shift, which was announced May 24. But Mr. Aristide - saw the matter differently. Mr. Bush "wants to stop refugees from fleeing Haiti, and of course, I want that' too," he said. "We say let's stop the flow of refugees by'—\ promoting democracy in Haiti today." When asked about a report that U.S. Navy commandos (, had rescued a small group his followers from Halt_ about two months ago, Mr.' Aristide demurred. "I heard about the Navy Seals rumor, but I don't know anything more than what I heard," he said. Haitian, Pentagon and State Department official: r--) have refused to comment 07 the report. More than 2,000 peop have been killed since th( coup, according to Mr. Aristide, "even children. It'F-; not a war, it's a massacre, he said. "The very few pe ple who have weapons ar money are killing mar.' with nothing." In Hebrew, he said to Jewish leaders, "Alone can't do it. But with yo. always together, we have excellent chance. "I read in the Tanach ble), 'Love your neighbor - like yourself' Please speak with all our friends so that we can again be in a dem- ocratic Haiti," he pleaded. (LI Austrian Leader Ends Isolation Vienna (JTA) — Austria's president-elect, Thomas Klestil, said his first order of business after he is sworn will be to end the diplomatic isolation brought on his coun- try when it elected Kurt l,1 Waldheim president in 1986 despite disclosure of his Nazi past. Mr. Klestil, a 59-year-ol—,:-/ career diplomat and former ambassador to the United States who was the can- didate of the conservative Austrian People's Party, won a resounding victory in -) the runoff election against the Social Democratic can- didate, Transport Minister Rudolph Streicher. Mr. Klestil said his im- mediate plans call for visiting the European Com- munity countries and Austria's close neighbors —something Mr. Waldheim was unable to do.