NINE OTHERS CHARGED: Gandhi arrested for 'political corruption' NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Seven months after her iron grip on India was broken in a stunning election defeat, Indira Gandhi was arrested yesterday and charged with abusing her position as prime minister. She promptly charged the arrest was political. Authorities said nine other per- sons, including four former cabinet ministers and Gandhi's-personal sec- retary, were also arrested. Gandhi was charged in two cases under India's Prevention of Corrup- tion Act, officials reported. THEY SAID she was accused in one case of "illegally conniving" with others and pressuring two companies to obtain 104 jeeps for election work in several election districts including her own. The second charge alleged Gandhi mis- used her position by awarding a $13.4 million government oil drilling con- tract to a French firm, despite a lower bid by a competitor. The names of the companies were not immediately released, and de- tails of the other charges were not made public. HER 11-YEAR administration was capped by 21-months of emergency rule in which an estimated 100,000 political opponents were jailed. Among them were many leaders of the Janata party government that succeeded Gandhi's regime after parliamentary elections last March. Gandhi's former petroleum minis- ter, K. D. Malaviya, and Ma'aviya's secretary were arrested and charged in connection with the oil drilling case, officials said. Former Chemicals Minister P. O. Sethi and his secretary were arrested in the jeep case, along with Gandhi's secretary. TWO OTHER former Gandhi gov- ernment ministers, H. R. Gokhale and D. P. Chattopadhyaya, were accused of conspiracy and abuse of power along with Malaviya and Sethi in a case in which businesses allegedly were pressured to pay high prices for low-value "souvenirs" turned out by Gandhi's Congress party. Two businessmen were also named in this case, R. P. Goenka, of Duncan Brothers Private, Ltd., and M. V. Arunchalam, a former president of the Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry. S. M. Agarwal, a former secretary in the Ministry of Communications, was charged in another case alleging manipulation in the awarding of a telephone equipment contract to an unnamed Japanese firm. THE ARREST came as Gandhi appeared to be setting the stage for a comeback with a series of political appearances in rural areas and several statements critical of Prime Minister Morarji Desai's govern- ment. Desai was among those de- tained by Gandhi under emergency rules that suspended civil liberties and censored the Indian press for the first time since the nation gained independence in 1947. Gandhi was snared in a web of political corruption charges being woven by government investigators probing the inner circle of her government. Her son, Sanjay, 30, has been implicated in a half dozen legal cases and two of her former cabinet ministers have been arrested on charges of official corruption. SCORES OF agents from India's Central Burea of Investigation - CBI - accompanied by policewomen, arrested Gandhi, 59, at her New Delhi home while more than 1,000 of her followers crowded around the house chanting support for her. Gandhi was held in her home for more than an hour after the plain- clothesmen arrived. While investigators were inside the home, Gandhi issued a statement charging that the "arrest is a political one. It is to prevent me from going before the people. It is an attempt to discredit me in their eyes and the eyes of the world." r Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi gestures to supporters who watched as she was arrested at her home yester- 'he 59-year-old Gandhi and nine of her former associates were charged with having abused their power during s 11-year administration. Japanese hijackers free hostages the flight, Thomas Phelan, a 29-year- old State Department employe from San Francisco, was "well, but tired, with digestive problems resulting from irregular meals." Algerian authorities refused to say what would become of the ultra- leftist Japanese Red Army terror- ists who took over the Japan Air Lines DC8 on Wednesday over India, or their six "comrades." The com- rades, including two women, were freed from Japanese jails to meet the hijackers' demands. AUTHORITIES also were silent about a $6 million ransom handed over to the hijackers along with the freed prisoners by Japanese officials in Dacca, Bangladesh, Sunday.. It was believed the terrorists, armed with automatic weapons, grenades and plastic explosives, ordered the jetliner to. Algeria in hopes of obtaining refuge from this country's leftist government. In past hijackings the Algerian government has confiscated and returned ransom payments and granted asylum to the hijackers. THE TERRORISTS and their freed companions left the airliner at the end of a runway at Algiers' Maisons Blanche airport about two hours after the plane landed, the official Algerian news agency reported. "They came out with, their hands up," said an airline spokeswoman. They were immediately driven away in official vehicles, witnesses said. Phelan was quoted by the Algerian news agency as saying relations between the hostages and the terror- ists were "correct." Other freed passengers included 10 Japanese and an Indonesian. Flight engineer Matsui Katsova said he was satisfied with the way the hijacking had ended - w'th no deaths. "For us Japanese, human life is the most sacred thing on this earth," he was quoted as saying. Justice Dept. may indict ex-CIA director Helms WASHINGTON (UPI) - Calling it the "most active thing in my office," Attorney General Griffin Bell said yesterday he will decide soon wheth- er to seek a federal indictment against former CIA director Richard Helms on charges of lying to Con- gress. Bell conceded he has had plenty of advice from senators and other government officials on Helms and the CIA involvement in Chile - most of it to simply drop the controversy because a Helms public trial might damage national security. "I'LL MAKE a decision at an early date on the Helms matter," he said. "It's about the most active thing in my office, I suppose, because I've got to make a decision. I'm considering foreign intelligence that would be involved on the one hand - and on the other hand the gravity of the allegations. We've got to come down somewhere between the two ex- tremes." HELMS, WHO served as director of the CIA from 1966 to 1973, has been accused of lying to a congressional committee in denying close CIA. infiltration and involvement in Chile before and during the administration of leftist President Salvador Allende. The attorney general was inter- viewed on the CBS Morning News about reports he is under extreme pressure not to indict Helms, who recently retired as ambassador to Iran. "Well, I'm under a good deal of - I don't consider it to be pressure, inci- dentally - but I know how people feel and it ranges from senators to former high government officials to people in the government now," said Bell. Average family gains 3 per cent increase in income over inflation WASHINGTON (AP) - The aver- age American family gained three per cent on inflation last year but was still not doing as well as in 1973, the aouCensus Bureau said yesterday. S LD SIn 1976, the median income of all U.S. families was $14,960, an increase of nine per cent over 1975. HOWEVER, prices during the year rose six per cent. After inflation is DefiG1OU/ considered, the average family's SAN WICHES income rose by about $450, or three per cent, the bureau said. 611 Church (off S University) 995-5955 The $14,960 income was still $480 below the record $15,437 in real income set in 1973. The Census Bureau describes a family as any unit of two or more related individuals. Among unrelat- ed individuals, the average real income rose from $5,164 to $5,375. BROKEN DOWN by size, the average family of two earned $12,091; a family of three $15,085, and a family of four $17,315. The report, based on a nationwide survey of 65,000 households during last March, also included the follow- ing findings: " The 1976 population living in poverty declined from 25.9 million in 1975 to 25 million, a drop of 3.5 per cent. The poverty level for a non- farm family of four in 1976 was $5,815. 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