The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 26, 1992- Page 7 U.S. stops airliffing relief to Somalia MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - An American plane delivering food to the starving in the central town of Baidoa was struck by a bullet yes- terday, and the United States consequently suspended its airlift. Relief agencies are caring for an estimated 80,000 people in Baidoa, which is among the towns hardest hit by Somalia's famine. However, re- Jief officials say the situation has 'improved with increased deliveries of food, and the daily death toll has dropped from a high of about 350 to 70. Drought and war have killed more than 100,000 people in Somalia this year, and another 2 mil- lion are on the verge of starvation. Clan warfare and banditry have periodically forced the suspension of international food airlifts, underscor- , ng the difficulties relief workers face. As much as half of the nearly 200,000 tons of relief supplies deliv- ered to Somalia this year have been looted. It was the second time a U.S. plane was hit by gunfire since the Americans began their emergency airlift of food Aug. 21. Another C- 130 was hit by a stray bullet Sept. 18 in the western town of Belet Huen, causing a two-week suspension of U.S. flights to that town. During last week, a German relief plane was hit by a bullet at .Mogadishu's airport, and Saturday two planes for the International Committee of the Red Cross were fired upon. "One bullet hit the aircraft," said Sam Donnelly, a relief offical. "We don't know how many shots were fired or where the bullet was fired from." He said the bullet hit the right ex- ternal fuel tank and it was only dis- covered when a crew member looked out a window and saw fuel leaking. No one was hurt, and the plane returned to Mombasa. Donnelly said there was no ap- parent increase in tensions in Baidoa, which has been a center of relief work since international efforts stepped up three months ago. "But one thing that characterizes all of the places we fly into is volatility," he said. "One minute it can be calm, and 15 minutes later there can be a fire-fight." Since starting its airlift, the United States has delivered close to 11,000 tons of food. In addition to the United States, other nations running airlifts to the hungry are Canada, Germany, France and Belgium. Meanwhile, the United Nations has begun helping some Somalis leave refugee-9logged towns in Kenya and resume farming in their nearly deserted villages, an official said. About 800 Somalis have returned in the past week, and 5,000 more have indicated an interest in going, Panos Moumtzis, spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said in Nairobi, Kenya. Survey says reported crime has decreased WASHINGTON (AP) - The amount of crime reported to police declined 2 percent in the first half of 1992 compared to the same period the previous year, the FBI said yester- day. Some criminal justice experts expressed surprise at the drop, particularly a dip in the number of murders. By contrast the number of reported forcible rapes increased in the FBI survey. Some ex- perts suggested that women, in the wake of the Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas sex harassment case, may be more willing to report rapes. Violent crime reported to law enforcement agencies increased 3 percent compared with the same period last year, while property crime dropped 3 percent, the FBI said. Since the volume of property crimes is far greater than the number of violent crimes, the overall crime rate was down. About 16,000 law enforcement agencies nationwide contribute information to the FBI crime index. The agency did not provide a state-by-state breakdown. All figures in the re- port compared the first six months of 1992 to the first half of 1991. FBI officials noted that the timing of the report is routine and coincidentally was re- leased about a week before the presidential election. A similar report - showing an increase in crime - was released by the FBI at this time last year. Some regard the FBI figures as less reliable than a report due out soon from the Justice Department based on a household survey that is not limited to crime reported to police. It is believed that less than 40 percent of major crimes are reported to police. The FBI report showed a 3 percent drop in the number of reported murders, a 1 percent decrease in robberies, a 4 percent rise in forcible rapes and a 6 percent jump in aggra- vated assaults. Alfred Blumstein, dean of the school of ur- ban and public affairs at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said he is surprised by the decline in the number of murders. He said he has heard reports that murders committed by people who were strangers to their victims may be increasing, while the number of murders among acquaintances is declining. "But I don't have a good explanation," he said. "I must say, it surprises me." By contrast, Blumstein said a reported dip in property crimes is easier to understand. There are fewer people nationally in the 15 to 19 year-old age group that accounts for most of the crimes. The FBI - which does not break down statistics by age group - said burglary dropped 4 percent, larceny-theft 3 percent and car theft 2 percent. Arson increased 6 percent, the only rise among property crimes. University of Massachusetts professor Jeff Sedgwick said, "Some of the figures are the exact opposite of what I would have expected." Particularly surprising is the drop in mur- ders, he said, since usually more murders are committed by older felons, and the change in demographics does not easily account for the dip. "We need to be focusing on explanations other than demographics," Sedgwick said. But he did not offer any immediate theories. Middle East talks Homecoming A U-M alumnus cheerleader sings "The Victors" during Saturday's homecoming victory against Minnesota. Abandoned children remain clasuaties of Yugoslav war SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - From a dingy crib in the pediatrics ward of Kosevo Hospital, Darko Plecic casts brown eyes on a stranger and whimpers a wordless plea to be picked up. Although Darko is basically healthy, his en- tire world for seven months has been the inside of this frequently shelled hospital, filled with the maimed and dying, often lit only by candle- light due to electricity shortages. Darko's parents sent him to the capital last March 17 from his.hime in Visegrad, 50 miles east of Sarajevo, for treatment of an intestinal disorder. Then war came. Now no one at the hospital knows whether Darko's parents are alive. "We have no idea what is going on with his parents because we are surrounded by a fascist army, and so are they." said Dr. Lutvo Hodzic, the pediatrics director. Sarajevo and other Muslim-dominated Bosnian cities have been besieged by Serbian rebels in a six-month war that has killed over 14,000 people. Parents often beg the hospital to keep their children as long as possible. "Here they (the children) have three meals a day and it's prob- ably less dangerous," Raic said. However, most other parents eventually return to the hospital to see their children, 'We have no idea what is going on with his parents because we are surrounded by a fascist army,' -Dr. Lutvo Hodzic Hodzic said. He added that because he hasn't even heard from the family he wonders if they are alive. But Hodzic said shortages are starting to af- fect the hospital. "It's not only that Darko is hungry and thirsty to be touched," he said. "You should see him when I offer him a piece of bread. He is jumping in his bed for joy. He can't wait to get it in his mouth." Hodzic said hundreds of children like Darko could die if the international community doesn't start sending more food instead of "empty declarations." reach crit DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - The Arabs have a saying: "There can be no Middle East war without Egypt and no peace without Syria." That was never so apt as it is now, with the U.S.-sponsored Middle East peace process ap- proaching its second year. Increasingly, the negotiations between Israel and Syria, its most implacable foe for 44 years, are progressing in a way that no one would have thought possible a year ago. This has raised hopes that an end to one of the world's most intractable conflicts could be within reach - possibly less than what all the parties want, but workable and binding. Privately, Syrian officials say President Hafez Assad, whose harsh Baath Party regime has been built around the struggle against Israel and recovering the Golan Heights cap- tured in 1967, understands that he must adapt to the new world order. But not at any price and not by breaking Arab ranks as Egypt did when it signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979. "Syria wants a just, honorable and durable settlement - but the Golan is as Syrian as New Jersey is American and there can be no equivocation on that," said Mohammed Aziz Shukri, dean of Damascus University's law school and a respected expert in international law. London's International Institute for Strategic Studies has characterized the talks as "the most complex peace effort since Versailles" after World War I. To be sure, the peace process could take years. But the fact that the Syrians, as well as the Palestinians, Jordanians and Lebanese, have been sitting down face-to-face with long-re- ia icl stage viled foes for a year has irrevocably altered the fundamentals of the Arab-Israeli conflict. When the talks began in Madrid Oct. 30, 1991, the Syrians and Israelis hurled insults at each other. Now, with hard-line Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir out of office and succeeded by the pragmatic Yitzhak Rabin, both sides appear to be preparing for some hard-nosed horse- trading. The seventh round of talks began in Washington last Wednesday. The Syrians have dropped their insistence that nothing of substance can be discussed un- til Israel withdraws from the territories cap- tured in 1967. They now say an Israeli commitment to the principle of withdrawal will suffice to get ne- gotiations rolling. For their part, the Israelis now acknowledge Syria's security needs and say that compromise is possible for relinquishing the Golan, the strategic 3,200-foot-high volcanic plateau Israel annexed in 1981. Up front, the Syrians demand the complete return of the Golan. Privately, some officials and diplomats in Damascus say the Syrian position is more flexible - if Israel recognizes Syrian sovereignty over the Golan, a phased Israeli pullback might be acceptable. Both sides say that the process is inching forward. So much that the Palestinians, their talks with the Israelis bogged down, fear Damascus might be tempted to make a sepa- rate peace if the Israelis are prepared to cut a deal on the Golan. The Syrians insist they will only accept a comprehensive settlement. But what that means is open to interpretation. Bush signs bill increasing aid to former Soviet Union BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) - President Bush signed into law a bill providing the former Soviet Union with $410 million in U.S. assistance and underwriting billions of dollars more in international aid yesterday. The measure also provides assis- tance for the destruction of nuclear weapons in Russia and other former Soviet states, and also for the con- version of military facilities for peaceful uses. In a statement issued as he began a nine-day campaign trip, Bush said -the bill demonstrates the U.S. com- mitment to democracy and free mar- kets in the former Soviet Union. The bill had been stalled in Congress for before giving aid overseas. "Once again the American people have united to advance the causes of Once again the American people have united to advance the causes of freedom, to win the peace, to help transform former enemies into peaceful partners.' - President George Bush The bill authorizes $410 million in direct U.S. assistance for humani- tarian purposes, improvement of the food distribution system, health and human services programs, civilian nuclear reactor safety and environ- mental problems. It also endorses a $12 billion in- crease in the U.S. contribution to the International Monetary Fund. "The IMF quota increase will ensure that the IMF has adequate resources to promote free markets in the former Soviet Union and elsewhere throughout the world," Bush said. months amid arguments that the deficit-ridden United States should spend money on its own problems freedom, to win the peace, to help transform former enemies into peaceful partners," Bush said. STUDENT ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT CENTER .::::"*1.:1:.:::*i .":.iY ::.:*.*............ v '::ti * ^114 . ..": INJZRNIJIS aITE N. IPSv.1 A Unique opportunity to: " strengthen leadership skills * gain practical experience in organizational development I-_._ _ - _._ I