8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 5, 1996 NATION /WORLD Algerians suspected in Paris bomb PARIS (AP) -- Clue by clue, a shadowy network of Algerian militants emerged yesterday as the prime suspect in a deadly Paris subway bombing. A gas canister. Black powder. Nails to cut flesh. All were hallmarks of a wave of bombings last year claimed by Algeria's Arned Islamic Group. All were present at the scene of Tuesday's attack, which killed two people and seriously wounded 35. The black powder mix was the same. So was the timing and the target: evening rush hour on a train line shuttling thousands of suburbanites to and from Paris. And, investigators note, despite dozens of arrests and 14 months of peace, an Algerian thought to be a ringleader of the 1995 bombing wave remains at large. There has been no claim of responsibility for the bombing at the Port Royal station. But the evidence in hand forced investigators to focus on the theory that a network of Algerian radicals, thought to be all but dec- imated, had been reborn. The bombing shares "great similarities" with those of the summer of 1995, when eight people were killed and 160 were wounded, Premier Alain Juppe told law- makers. Killed in Tuesday's attack were Lucien Devambez, a 41-year-old Frenchman, and an unidentified Canadian woman, French radio reported. Rabah Kebir of the Islamic Salvation Front - Algeria's banned opposition movement - con- demned the bombing last night, saying it "doesn't serve the Algerian cause." But judicial sources said the black powder that filled a gas canister contained the same explosive mix as that used in the 1995 attacks. The canister, hidden in a bag packed with nails, was tucked under a seat in the fourth car of the train. It exploded as the doors shut before departure. The Port Royal station is just two stops up the line from the site of the July 1995 bombing at St. Michel, the first and most deadly in the wave of attacks that put France on edge for months. "We're scared because we know there's danger, here or in the Metro (the subway)," said Dominique Chapuis. "I take the Metro every day and who knows what can happen." Juppe tried to allay fears. "All means," the premier told lawmakers, will be used to capture the criminals and protect the popula- tion from "the blackmail of fear and violence. Hundreds of police and soldiers armed with assault rifles were deployed in airports, train stations, sub- ways and high-risk areas from Paris to Marseille. France closed some border crossings with Belgium, Germany and Luxembourg, and said it was temporar- ily suspending its participation in the accords that opened borders across much of Europe. Investigators, who kept the Port Royal station sealed yesterday, were examining all hypotheses, including Basque, Corsican and Moroccan connections. More than 30 Moroccans are to go on trial Monday for trying to destabilize the North African monarchy. But Algerian Islamic militants, who claimed responsibility for the 1995 bombings as well as the deadly Christmas 1994 hijacking of an Air France flight, quickly surfaced as the prime suspects. "Numerous alerts were brought to the attention of specialized services in the past few months," the daily Le Monde quoted an unidentified official as saying. In an internal memo, France's counterespionage agency signaled that an Algerian Islamist living in Afghanistan was preparing in September to leave that country to "commit an attack against French inter- ests," Le Monde reported, quoting the memo. AP PHOTO A security guard checks the bags of customers at a Paris department store yes- terday, one day after a bomb exploded in the Paris subway killing two people. U.S. faces dilemma in relations with Serbian pres. Los Angeles Times BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - It only took a couple of hours for the besieged government of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic to use the visit of a U.S. official to its advantage. Even as thousands of demonstrators rallied in Belgrade, the Serbian and Yugoslav capital, in protests well into their third week, a U.S. commercial officer met with a senior official of Milosevic's regime in view of state tele- vision cameras. As anyone could have predicted, the night's news broadcasts on the only tele- vision Yugoslavs can watch portrayed a visit of support, a new effort by the Clinton administration to "improve eco- nomic relations" between the United States and Serb-dominated Yugoslavia. The meeting Tuesday underscored the dilemma that growing opposition to Milosevic poses for Washington. Milosevic has been the man relied on by a series of U.S. mediators, espe- cially star negotiator Richard Holbrooke, to draft the Bosnia- Herzegovina peace accord, keep the Bosnian Serbs more or less in line and ensure regional stability. Despite his reputation as a ruthless, power-hungry manipulator, Milosevic's affability and his penchant for fine food, whiskey and off-color humor made him one of Holbrooke's favorites throughout the arduous peace negotia- tions. And in the year since the peace accord negotiated in Dayton, Ohio, was signed, Holbrooke's successor, Assistant Secretary of State John Kornblum, has repeatedly flown to Belgrade to seek Milosevic out when it came to exacting Bosnian Serb cooper- ation. But now support for Milosevic means condoning blatant electoral fraud, the gagging of free press and the trampling of basic democratic rights - something Washington wants no part of. U.S. officials have condemned spe- cific steps Milosevic is taking but with words that were only slowly gaining force. The reality is that the Clinton admin- istration, with little leverage against Milosevic, is reluctant to push too hard, lest the precariously balanced Balkan house of cards begin to tumble, analysts say. "Actually, I didn't expect as much support (for the opposition forces) as we are seeing" from Washington, said Milan Protic, director of the Institute for Balkan Studies, a think tank in Belgrade. "They have so much at stake, so much invested in Milosevic. U.S. diplomacy since 1994 has been a tremendous effort based on dealing with Milosevic no matter how rough it got. "It is not sufficient pressure2 Protj added, "but it 1 more than a lot of us expected." News Meanwhile, there were no Analysis signs of letup in protests triggered by Milosevic's decision to annul Nov.17 municipal elections in which many oppositil candidates apparently won. Yesterday, crowds that diplomats and journalists said were the largest so far rallied out- side the federal parliament building and marched to the door of Milosevic's offices. And in the first sign of an anticipated purge of Milosevic's Socialist Party, Mile Ilic - the Socialist leader of Serbia's second-largest city, Nis - was fired. Ilic, whose reputation for corru tion was only exceeded by his ego, w a lightning rod for opposition attacks and is said to have botched his party's electoral efforts in Nis, where some of the most egregious fraud took place. NUMesMMMO w ...; KNuff a-x is j '.-a A v3 _......,...... ? a 3 a si4a