NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 20, 1997 - 7A I Mc ie, AP PHOTO Samtuel Sheinbeln, 17, waits for his hearing at a court in Petah Tlkvah, a suburb of Tel Aviv, Friday. Facing growing U.S. pres- sure, Israel's attorney general said that Sheinbein can be extradited. Israel denies citizenship to youth accused of killing Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - Yesterday, Israel's 4gtorney general rejected the citizenship im of an American teen-ager wanted murder in Maryland and said the 17-year-old fugitive can be returned to the United States to stand trial. U.S.-Israeli relations have been strained over the extradition case of Samuel Sheinbein, a high school senior from Silver Spring, Md., who fled to Israel last month to avoid pros- ecution. Sheinbein and another youth are *used of killing Alfredo Tello Jr., 19, whose charred and dismembered body was found in the Washington suburb Sept. 18. Although Sheinbein has never lived in Israel, he claimed to be a citizen on the basis of his father's citizenship. Under Israeli law, a citizen cannot be extradited for prosecution of a crime committed in another country. Secretary of State Madeleine :Wright and American Jewish leaders had urged the Israeli government to return Sheinbein. As Israel investigated the claim, angry members of the U.S. Congress delayed the release of mil- lions of dollars in U.S. aid to Israel. Israeli officials had declared they would not be pressured into handing over Sheinbein but had made it clear that they were searching for a legal way to extradite the youth. The case also has raised racial tensions between Jews and Hispanics in the United States, and caused consternation among Israelis who do not want their country used as a refuge for Jewish criminals. Israeli Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein issued a statement Sunday saying, "After a careful examination of the matter of citizenship, the position of the Ministry of Justice is that (Sheinbein) is not an Israeli citizen." Therefore, the statement said, "there is a basis to assume that the suspect can be extradited under the extradition law." The attorney general's statement did not explain on what grounds the ministry had determined that Sheinbein is not a citizen. Justice Ministry spokesperson Etty Eshed said the arguments will be presented Monday at a hearing in Jerusalem to request the youth's "arrest for extradition" Until now, he has been held "for investigation." The United States provided Israel with hundreds of documents in the case, including depositions stating that Sheinbein's family sought citizenship in the United States and other countries after leaving Israel in the 1950s. The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that the government has interpreted this to mean the Sheinbeins had no intention of returning to Israel and that the fact they had retained Israeli citizenship over the years was only a formality. Sheinbein's lawyer, former Justice Minister David Libai, disagreed with the attorney general's ruling, which he called "a clear attempt to bypass Israeli law," and said he will challenge it in court. Sheinbein's extradition must still be approved by an Israeli court. An appeal, even if it is denied, could hold up extra- dition for months. Bosnia's ethnic division spils into the classroom, hurts spint A CAREER OF CHOICE. McKinsey & Company is one of the world's leading consulting firms. A career with us offers many opportunities: the opportunity to help senior managers solve the complex problems facing their organizations; the opportunity to grow professionally in a stimulating and supportive environment; the opportunity to take risks and be challenged; the opportunity to shape your own career; and finally, the opportunity to be part of a unique institution. A CAREER FOR OUTSTANDING PEOPLE. We seek bright, creative, intellectually curious men and women with exceptional records of academic achievement, strong analytic andquantitative skills, proven leadership and teamwork abilities, and excellent communication skills. A CAREER WORTH INVESTIGATING. For further information, please attend one of out Fall presentations for undergraduates. We will host LS&A and Engineering students on Thursday, October 16, at the Michigan League, Henderson Room, at 7:00 p.m. Our Business School presentation will be held on Thursday, October 23, at 4:30 p.m., in Room B1276 at the Business School Feel free to call Kelly Roddy at 1-800-545-0482 for additional information. You may also like to visit our website at http://www.mckinsey.com. War-ravaged country's ethical split reaches into its schools as classes are segregated Los Angeles Times SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - When classes opened in the Muslim-Croat half of Bosnia this fall, many teachers began enacting a new set of rules: segregating stu- dents based on their ethnicity. Children and their parents have been told to fill out question- res asking their religion. In some schools, students were told ise their hands to signal whether they are Muslims or Croats. Parallel curricula are being taught - Muslim children take one set of courses, Roman Catholic Croatian children anoth- er. Minority children in some cases have been removed to separate classrooms. Education Ministry officials who ordered the ethnic polling defend the program as "separate but equal." Human rights officials, and many parents and teachers, are outraged, calling it a dangerous attempt to cre- ate ethnically pure classrooms and cement Bosnia's partition. The division of children and the use of parallel curricula reported to be the products of a deal struck between the two hard-line ruling parties in the Muslim-Croat Federation, as this half of Bosnia-Herzegovina is known. "Instead of building joint educational foundations for all Bosnia and Herzegovina ... we are witnessing (an attempt) by nationalistic leaders to take one step further toward splitting Bosnia and Herzegovina along its ethnic boundaries," Srdjan Dizdarevic, president of the Bosnian branch of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights, wrote in a protest letter. International officials say the plan violates the spirit, and perhaps the letter, of December 1995 U.S.-brokered peace accords that ended Bosnia's 3 1/2-year war - a conflict in which religion was used as a pretext for fighting and the "eth- nic cleansing" that purged regions of hundreds of thousands of people. One of the goals of the accords is to reunite Bosnia's fractured and once-multiethnic society, but national- ists on all sides continue to fight against reconciliation. Education Ministry officials insist that the plan provides for "separate but equal" schooling that allows the region's two principal ethnic groups to preserve their cultural identi- ties. No provisions are made for Serbs or other minorities. "It is their constitutional right to find out everything there is to know about their culture, tradition and history," Abdulah Jabucar, assistant education minister, said in an interview. Jabucar allowed, however, that polling students' religions and forcing their separation was a clumsy way to go about it. Parallel education systems, Jabucar said, are actually a holdover from the war, when the Muslim-led Sarajevo govern- ment used one curriculum, while Croats were using a system set up by their self-proclaimed ministate of Herceg-Bosnia. amsterdam atlanta bangkok barcelona beijing berlin bogota boston brussels budapest buenos aires caracas charlotte chicago cleveland cologne copenhagen dallas delhi detroit dublin dusseldorf frankfurt geneva gothenburg hamburg helsinki hong kong houston istanbul jakarta johannesburg uala lumpur lisbon london los angelies madrid melbourne mexico miami milan minneapolis monterrey montreal moscow mumbai munich new jersey new york orange county osaka oslo pacific northwest paris perth Pittsburgh prague rome san francisco santiago sao paulo seoul shanghai silicon valley stamford stockholm stuttgart sydney taipei i STUDENTS Purchase your tickets with Con- tinental vouchers & Amex card. Regency Travel 209 S. State St. 665-6122. SUN, SURF, SAND, SUDS, and S... 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