page 10-Wednesday, August 1, 1979-The Michigan Daily Condened Bakhtiar blasts Khomeini's rule PARIS (AP) - Shahpour Bakhtiar, but might eventually return to Iran if the Iranian prime minister who drvpoed conditions change. Long a political foe from sight in the dying moments of the of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, old regime, surfaced yesterday for the Bakhtiar was named prime minister by first time in almost six months and the shah last Dec. 29, just before the sharply attacked the "republic of the monarch, under pressure from mullahs" that he said has destroyed Bakhtiar and a mass uprising, left on Iran. what at the time was called a "My worst fears were realized," "vacation." The shah is still in exile. Bakhtiar, a condemned man in his Bakhtiar disappeared Feb. 11 when homeland, told a news conference. the revolutionary forces of Moslem Iranians under the rule of Ayatollah religious leader Khomeini swept the Ruhollah Khomeini's mullahs - government out of power in three days Moslem priests - have "neither in- of violent protests that climaxed a year dependence nor liberty," he said. of demonstrations and riots. It was HE SAID HE has no plans to lead an believed at the time that the French- opposition movement against Khomeini educated Bakhtiar, 65, probably fled to France or Switzerland. Looking tanned and fit; he refused to say yesterday where he has been for the past five and one-half months or where he is staying in France. But he was voluble on events in Iran. "THERE IS NO planning in the government, there is no security in the cities," he told reporters. "The unfortunate thing is that the present Iranian government doesn't know what to do. What is sad, insuppor- table for all Iranians, is the disin- tegration of the country. Central authority is non-existent. . . No religious personality can put the coun- try back on its feet. We have neither in- dependence nor liberty." Secular groups in Iran complain in- creasingly of the religious discipline Khomeini is imposing on the country, and of the government's lack of authority when faced with the power of local revolutionary committees and militias and Khomeini's Revolutionary Council. "IRAN EXISTED before Islam," Bakhtiar said. "Mullahs, back to the mosques. Religion must not interfere with the state." A Bakhtiar spokesperson had said Monday that the exiled politician, an- swering appeals from non-religious parties in Iran, would head a secular movement that would run candidates in the Aug. 3 elections for a 73-member assembly in Iran. The assembly is to adopt a constitution making Iran an Islamic republic. But Bakhtiar denied this, telling reporters, "I don't believe in the Islamic republic, so why should I present candidates?" He said he had no plans to return to Iran now, nor to set up a government in exile, nor to form an opposition political party outside the country. He said he hoped to return "as soon as possible, but only when there is a minimum of security and a minimum of freedom." Khomeini has said he would seek the extradition of the "criminal Bakhtiar" to stand trial for alleged collaboration with the shah and crimes against the state. The president of the Islamic court in Tehran says Bakhtiar has been condemned to death. Schlesinger: Oil import cuts difficult to achieve WASHINGTON (AP) - Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said yesterday that President Carter will require a lot of help and a great deal of luck to keep his promise of freezing oil imports at 1977 levels. "It will be a tough go at best," the departing Schlesinger told the Senate Finance Committee. "It is an ambitious target that has been set - a very op- timistic goal." SCHLESINGER also said U.S. gasoline supplies have increased to the point that there probably will be no more long lines at service stations this year. But he said he suspects the lines will re-appear next summer. Meanwhile, the Senate speedily con- firmed Charles Duncan as President Carter's choice to become Secretary of Energy. . The Senate voted 95 to 1 to approve the former president of Coca-Cola Co. Rhodesia conf Commonweal LUSAKA, Zambia (AP)-Delegates to the Commonwealth summit maneuvered behind the scenes yester- day to head off a split in the British-led, 39-nation group over the fast-changing situation in Zimbabwe Rhodesia. Queen Elizabeth II, visiting here in conjunction with the Commonwealth conference, unexpectedly found herself in the middle of the region's racial disputes when Lusaka's mayor, Simon Mwewa, delivered a scathing attack on South African whites as she stood by his side. The Zambians later apologized for the unscheduled speech. AUSTRALIAN PRIME Minister Malcolm Fraser, emerging as a key figure in the conciliatory moves on Zimbabwe Rhodesia, declared that the war-torn country's new black majority government "cannot be ignored." But he said the "new situation" there was still not enough to warrant inter- national recognition of Bishop Abel Muzorewa's government. The principals in the dispute are British Prime Minister Margaret That- cher, who is leaning toward recognizing- - the Muzorewa -,regime, as Schlesinger's successor. DUNCAN, NOW deputy secretary of defense, could assume management of the nation's energy policies by Labor Day. Schlesinger told the Senate-panel production of domestic oil and an all- out commitment to produce alternative fuels is needed to meet the goal of limiting oil imports to no more than 8.5 million barrels a day. He conceded that holding to Carter's target in the absence of other energy sources would impose tremendous pressure on the economy, likely sen- ding it downward into a series of recessions. Schlesinger went before the commit- tee to plead for passage of the tax on oil producers and for earmarking the proceeds for development of alternate fuels, improving mass transit and helping the poor pay their energy bills. lict may split th summit and the black African Commonwealth member states, who support the black nationalist guerrillas fighting to topple Muzorewa. THE GUERRILLAS say the new bi- racial government in Zimbabwe Rhodesia is a front for perpetuating white-minority control. Thatcher met yesterday with Fraser and later, accompanied by British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington, with Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda, whose country is one of the key "front-line" states supporting the guerrillas. The biennial heads-of-government conference of the Commonwealath, an organization of Britain and its former colonies, begins today and lasts a week. British sources said the meeting would produce a debate on the Zimbabwe Rhodesia issue but no specific set of proposals. Fraser has discussed the Zimbabwe Rhodesian issue with the Nigerians, Australian officials said. Nigeria, a major oil producer, is the most populous and powerful nation in black Africa.- "" -"'