12 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 18, 1996 Bosnia's current president takes lead in election results, The Washington Post SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Bosnia's president, Alija Izetbegovic, took a commanding lead in the race for the top vote-getter in Bosnia's three-man presidency last night, leading Western diplomats to predict Izetbegovic will chair Bosnia's presidency for two more years. Izetbegovic, a candidate from the increasingly .Muslim-nationalist Party of Democratic Action, was followed by an ultranationalist Serb candi- date, Momcilo Krajisnik, who won the Serb part of the race. Kresimir Zubak, who represented a nationalist Croat party, was poised to win the Croat section of the vote. In announcing the result, Robert Frowick, the chief of mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which supervised the vote, said Izetbegovic's lead "looks increas- ing compelling." The domination of Bosnia's election by nationalist candidates representing political par- ties that brought war to Bosnia was a strong indi- cation that the country is moving toward a de facto partition into three ethnically homoge- neous states. All three candidates won about 80 percent of the votes cast by their respective eth- nic groups. Within a month, the three presidents are supposed to meet and begin creating joint institutions that are supposed to bind Bosnia together after 3 1/2 years of war. An ethnical- ly balanced national parliament; two local par- liaments, one of Serbs and the other of Muslims and Croats; a president for the Serb part of Bosnia and local governments in the Muslim-Croat federation were also elected in Saturday's election. The results from those races have yet to be released. Izetbegovic's victory appears to have let the United States off the hook, Western European officials said. The American architects of the Dayton peace accord that ended fighting here last year envisaged that Izetbegovic would win the chairmanship of the presidency. The peace agree- ment was written so the top post in the presiden- cy would not be passed on to another member until the end of the first two-year term. This will give lzetbegovic two years to rule a country that he has fought almost four years to protect. Monday night. OSCE officials had reported that the race between Izetbegovic and Krajisnik was close. Izetbegovic's political party had threatened to reject the results of the elections if he garnered fewer votes than Krajisnik. Frowick said that with 85 percent of counting stations reporting in Bosnia's Muslim-Croat fed- eration, Izetbegovic had 629,439 votes. His clos- est Muslim challenger was Haris Silajdzic, Bosnia's former prime minister, who won 110,845 votes. Krajisnik won 508,026 votes with 79 percent of the counting stations reporting on the Serb side of Bosnia's divide. Zubak garnered 245,047 votes among the Croats with 85 percent of the stations reporting. Netanyahu: Syria pressing Israel with troop build-up Former official talks of apartheid era Analysts say moves mean negotiations or war Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - Syria is redeploy- ing troops toward Israeli-controlled ter- ritory as a form of "psychological pres- sure" to force Israel back to the bar- gaining table with concessions, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said yes- terday. Netanyahu has been reassuring Israelis for days that they have nothing to fear from the movement of several thousand Syrian troops from Beirut to the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon and along the Syrian side of Mount Hermon, a peak on the Golan Heights territory that Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast .. .: War. Many Israeli military analysts agree that the large Syrian rede- Netanyahu ployment - the first since Mideast peace talks began in 1991 - is muscle-flexing to warn the right-wing Netanyahu government that the alternative to serious negotiations is war. U.S. officials have appealed to both Syria and Israel to use restraint and pre- vent the situation from escalating, while U.S. and Israeli intelligeice ser- vices jointly monitor the Syrian troop movements. "The IDF (Israeli Defense Forces) is taking all the necessary steps in view of the Syrian moves," Netanyahu said after briefing the Knesset (parlia- ment) Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. "Bat it seems that the Syrian intention is to put psychologi- cal pressure on the Israeli people and government so that they meet the excessive promises the previous gov- ernment made." Netanyahu has asserted that, before he was assassinated last year, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin made a secret, "hypothetical" promise to Assad that he would return the entire Golan Heights if all of Israel's conditions for peace were met. Netanyahu, however, opposes Rabin's policy of trading occupied land for peace with Israel's Arab neighbors and wants to keep the captured Golan Heights. Assad demands a total Israeli withdrawal and return of all the cap- tured territory. Former Prime Minister Shimon Peres, ousted by Netanyahu in May elections, said he could shed little light on the Syrian actions. "It is pos- sible the Syrian military pressure comes to speed up negotiations or because they despair for negotiations. Nobody knows," Peres told Israeli television. Netanyahu said he had sent mes- sages to Assad through Egypt and the United States that Israel would like to resume peace talks but "as of this moment, we have yet to receive a clear answer from Syria about resuming talks." U.S. envoy Dennis Ross arrived in Cairo yesterday to meet with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in search of a formula for restarting the Israeli-Syrian negotiations. In Israel, Netanyahu insisted that Assad's psychological warfare "is not going to work." But Israeli journalists said the Syrian leader had succeeded in putting the country on edge. "Assad wants tension and he's got tension," said Zeev Schiff, military affairs analyst for the daily newspaper, Haaretz. There has been some speculation in the press that the Syrians could be rede- ploying to respond to any future Israeli offensive against the Hezbollah guerril- las fighting to oust Israel from occu- pied-Southern Lebanon with the aid of Iran and Syria. Netanyahu has said his Likud gov- ernment would react more harshly to Hezbollah attacks than the previous Labor government did. Israeli mili- tary officials say that Hezbollah attacks have dropped about 50 per- cent since Israel launched its "Operation Grapes of Wrath" in Lebanon last April, but some fear an upsurge after Lebanese elections end this week. The Washington Post PRETORIA, South Africa - His bluish-grey suit is of non-descript cut. His hair swoops to the side, as if to cover a spot of bald. His demeanor is awk- ward. His voice is flat. His thick glasses rest on a deadpan face. Eugene de Kock cuts a figure so unremarkable that he could be any pencil-pushing civil ser- vant in the old South Africa or the new - except that this week he is talking, and his words are drenched with blood. He talks of killing children, blowing up bodies, bombing church offices and being congratulated for his deadly endeavors by a racist government bent on ruling, as one general allegedly put it, for "a thousand years." Convicted last month on 89 counts stemming from his self-confessed occupation as an assassin during the apartheid era of white minority rule, de Kock promised to sing before he was sentenced. This week, in an extraordi- nary series of allegations about dirty tricks under white minority rule, de Kock told a sentencing hearing of his work as a leader of a covert assassina- tion squad that implicated former President Pieter Willem Botha as well as Cabinet members and a collection of generals from the 1980s. These officials, de Kock said, either ordered, knew about or congratulated the covert operations, which represent- ed some of the apartheid government's most brutal deeds aimed at stamping out the underground guerrilla struggle waged by the black majority. De Kock is the first high-level white security official to be convicted of apartheid-era crimes and to attempt to lay ultimate responsibility at the feet of high-level political and security offi- cials. In fingering higher level officials, he seemed to be trying to get a reduc- tion in what promises to be a heavy sen- tence. Yesterday, he described a 1987 order to bomb the Johannesburg headquarters of the then-new Congress of South Africa Trade Unions (COSATU), a black labor federation. Initially, he balked at the order, he recounted, then asked who authorized it. "From the highest," he said he was told. "From where, the state president?" he responded. The answer, he said, was- yes. Botha was president at the time; he served from 1984 until 1989. After the bombing, de Kock testified yesterday, the minister of law and order, Adriaan Vlok, congratulated him at a barbecue held for members of the covert unit. Botha, who is 80 years old, has kept a low profile since he lost the presidency ini 1989 and has refused to take part in the new South Africa's process of truth-telling. A truth commission, led by former Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, is attempting to ferret out the facts of apartheid-era human rights abuses by offering amnesty to perpetrators like de Kock and reparations to victims. But on a separate track, prosecutions like de Kock's are being heard in the courts. Voting your conscience Estrella Prison inmate Jared Brady waits for Bob Dole to arrive as he lays on his bunk, where he had hung a sign supporting the candidate: Brady said he would vote for Dole If he could, because Dole is tougher on crime. China tightens control over Internet use WEDNESDAY r, .BURGER DAY, $2.99 Cheeseburger & Fries 11:30 - 3:00 pm ANN AR! plus $1.00 Off Pints of English Beers 9 pm - close The Washington Post BEIJING - Two weeks ago, a Chinese student posted a message on one of the computer bulletin boards that link more than 200 Chinese universi- ties, and the reverberations have not stopped yet. The student called for a demonstra- tion today at the Japanese Embassy in Beijing to protest Japanese actions con- cerning five tiny East China Sea islands, the Diaoyu Islands, possession of which is disputed by China, Japan and Taiwan. Messages then spread by word of mouth with computer speed; demon- strations have taken place in Hong Kong, and hundreds of thousands of Chinese have signed a petition express- ing their outrage. Alarmed, the govern- ment banished a leader of the petition drive from Beijing to remote Qinghai Province last weekend, and it warned students that they need permission before they can hold a public demon- stration. Although permission might be need- ed to protest on Beijing's streets, rules of the road for expressing opinions on the information highway are still being worked out in China. "The government was shocked by the power of" domestic bulletin boards - many of which are accessible via the Internet -and by the outpouring of support for the Diaoyu protest, said one computer analyst here. While the Chinese government shares popular anger about Japan's nationalist attitude toward the Diaoyu Islands, China's leaders do not want ad hoc public demonstrations organized on-line. The incident spurred government efforts to tighten control of computer communication. Computer technicians have been ordered to monitor the Qinghua University computer bulletin board and delete offensive articles and messages. Anything outside "education and research" - politics, enter- tainment or humor -should be erased. More control i cian t the whole than a week ago, the Beijing University bul- letin board was shut down entire- ly. The new moves against computer bulletin - Tang Mingfeng President, International Network Platform w e e k s. Typically, 50 to 150 computers in China down- loaded between 400 and 1,000 items from the U.S. govern- ment-run web site every week, and those items would be other users once in as the Voice of America (VOA), The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and Cable News Network, among oth- ers. A popular discussion forum called China News Digest; run from North America, was also blocked. The effort to prevent certain for- eign material from reaching Chinese citizens has had a considerable effect. Chinese access to VOA's web site has dropped substantially in the past three Ministry of Post and Telecommunications' Chinanet, or the Ministry of Electronics' Golden Bridge, or the State Education Commission's university-based ser- vices. Those computer gateways, also called "routers," typically have soft ware that can check the source and destination of information by examin- ing its numerical "address." To block a particular web site, the person managing the router need only program the machine not to allow data to or from a specific address. That way, when people connected to the Internet via that computer try to call up the web site, they are told that the computer doesn't recognize the address. But computer analysts here not that while China can hinder the free flow of information, it cannot stop it completely. "They can't do it," said Tang Mingfeng, president of International Network Platform, a Beijing computer consulting firm. "They can control sev- eral sites that are not friendly or are pornographic.... But they can't control the whole thing." Kern, from VOA, notes that while the Chinese government has hindered access to the VOA web site; it hasn't stopped it altogether. Moreover, Kern said, many other institutions, including foreign universi- ties, copy the contents of the VOA web site and make it available on the Internet throug their own sites. boards come just retrieved by many after China's government started blocking access to dozens of foreign World Wide Web sites. Using soft- ware that blocks access to specifical- ly designated sites at China's limited number of computer gateways to the Internet, the government kept thou- sands of Chinese computer users in Beijing from reading web sites run by human rights groups, exiled political dissidents, pornographic magazines, the Taiwan government information office, as well as Western media such China. Two weeks ago, however, the numbers dropped to 22 computers downloading 218 items. Last week's numbers were in, the same range. "These figures ... convince me that something is definitely interfering with access from China," said Chris Kern, a computer expert at VOA. All companies seeking to market Internet access services in China must transmit all information through one of a handful of computer gateways in and out of the country, such as the U II JOIN THE PROFESSION MOST PROMISING OF THE 21ST CENTURY Your Term Paper Just Got Easier. Free. Congratulations. You're the first class to enjoy Policy.com - a free, cutting-edge research tool on the Web at www.policy.com. Policy.com is your complete solution for researching dozens of hot issues - such Photographers Prospective Teacher Education Meeting Wednesday, October 2, 1996 6:00 p.m. Whitney Auditorium Room 1309 School of Education Building Call 764-7563 for more information. The Daily is looking for you - portfolio reviews, 7 .m. 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