NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 4, 1998 - 7 Grie f, mud flood entral America i-n Mitch's wake TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) Honduras, Guatemala and Nicarag - Grieving crowds jammed morgues prevented the arabica beans preferred1 and hospitals in search of missing loved American coffee-drinkers from reachi ones in the Honduran capital yesterday, port. while others throughout the country It was the second straight day t waited to be rescued from rooftops and coffee prices had surged. Analysts a islands surrounded with floodwaters left speculated that the rains spawnedl by Hurricane Mitch. Mitch damaged coffee trees and h Meanwhile, the one-time hurricane, wiped out several million 32-pound ba which killed more than 7,000 people, re- of beans. ormed as a tropical storm in the Gulf of Although deaths related to Hurrica Mexico yesterday, though its 45 mph Mitch were reported from Nicaragua winds were a shadow of the 180 mph southern Mexico, the greatest loss monster of last week. were in Honduras, where an estimal Weather forecasters said the storm, 5,000 people died. moving to the northeast, could strike the Honduran Communications Minis Yucatan Peninsula and then Florida later Tomas Lozano said yesterday that I mi in the week with heavy rains - but not lion had to flee their homes in this nati with anything approaching hurricane- of 6 million people. Countless m force winds. lacked clean water, food and medicine Here in the Honduran capital, the "But we are dealing with prelimin came out yesterday after a week of official figures,"he said. "And the nun torrential rains and churning winds but ber of victims will be greater when d authorities feared the scope of the disas- waters fall and the country returns1 ter caused by one of the worst Atlantic normal." tropical storms ever could widen. Most of the deaths in Nicarag In Honduras occurred when t alone, 11,000 people crater lake of t were still reported we Casitas Volcano co missing and feared L olapsed, sending dead. Amid reports wall of mud a of increasing hunger debris onto seven } ng the sur- villages below. W ors, officials va WIe, Mayor Felic' raced to deliver food b5 ' r when Zeledon of near and water to sur- waters fall Posoltega said 1,9 vivors. bodies had be Damage to vital recovered by yest coffee and banana day, thoup crops that sustain the - Tomas Lozano President Arnol Central American Honduran Aleman's offi economies also was Communications Minister reported 1,338 dea extensive. Chiquita Battered hum t rnds International Inc. said its region- bodies were found yesterday half-buri a banana farms and operations suffered in the mud and entangled in sugar ca an estimated $50 million in losses. stalks, rotting because villagers hadn Company officials in Cincinnati said gasoline to burn them. their biggest worry was the plight of U.S. and local helicopters flew em stricken employees. gency missions throughout the dayi "Our first priority is literally to save Nicaragua and Honduras to reach peop lives," said Chiquita President Steve trapped by the floods. Warshaw. "We have had several thou- In the Honduran capita sand people stranded on rooftops." Tegucigalpa, people tried to find mis In New York, coffee and sugar ing relatives at hospitals and morgues. s rose sharply yesterday as dam- Oscar Triminio, spokesperson for t droads and washed-out bridges in Tegucigalpa fire department, said mo Israel balks at land- for-security accord Wants Palestinians to round up ifigitives first gua by ing hat lso by had ags ane to ses ted ter nil- on ore ie. ary Im- he to AP PHOTO Nicaraguan President Arnoldo Aleman surveys the damage wrought by Hurricane Mitch in El Trapichon, Nicaragua. JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel said yesterday it will not carry out the land-for-security peace agree- ment until it gets assurances that the Palestinian Authority will arrest 30 Palestinian fugitives, raising ques- tions about whether the accord could be implemented. The Palestinians said the United States was satisfied with their anti- terror plan and accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of seizing a pretext to avoid handing over West Bank land. The peace accord, signed Oct. 23 in Maryland, was to have taken effect Monday but was delayed at the request of Netanyahu. Under the agreement, the first installment of an Israeli troop pullback from 13 percent of the West Bank is due on Nov. 16. U.S. envoy Dennis Ross was to arrive tomorrow to oversee imple- mentation of the program that is to be carried out over 12 weeks. Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said it was up to the Americans to break the latest impasse. "Netanyahu wants to break the time line," Erekat told The Associated Press. He said the United States "must interfere." The new recriminations made it clear that any good will generated by the new peace accord has already evaporated. With suspicions running high, the United States will likely have to step in as referee repeatedly in the coming weeks. The latest crisis began yesterday morning, three hours before the Israeli Cabinet was to start a two- day debate on the peace agreement. Ratification had been expected today. Netanyahu announced he would. not convene the ministers because the Palestinians have not submitted a complete blueprint for fighting terrorism to the Americans, as promised. Netanyahu would not say what information was missing, but Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai later said Israel was holding out for a list of 30 wanted Palestinians the Palestinian Authority has promised to arrest as part of the peace agreement. Israel also wants a timetable for the arrests, Mordechai said. Israel has said it cannot begin implementing the agreement until it has been approved by the Cabinet and by parliament, which is to vote on the accord Nov. 12. The Palestinians reacted angrily to the latest delay, and negotiator Hassan Asfour criticized Netanyahu. "Instead of playing these sorry political games, he should just stand up and say ... I won't imple- ment what I have signed," Asfour ua he he ,ol- a nd .ral ita by 50 en rer- gh do ce ad. an ed ne no er- in ple :al, ss- he re than 30 bodies had been pulled from the Choluteca River since Monday. Lozano said many people remain trapped on rooftops by floodwaters a week after Hurricane Mitch began pum- meling the Atlantic coast. The storm destroyed almost all of the highways, dozens of bridges and 70 percent of the national agriculture. That made it difficult to transport food and impossible to move gasoline to fuel relief efforts, said Col. Alfredo San Martin, Air Force chief of staff. "We now have fuel to operate, but in five or seven days, the supplies will run out," he said. U.S. military helicopters yesterday ferried Honduran officials on inspection tours of the refineries and transportation routes. "If we don't get fuel into the city, it will be utter chaos," said Lt. Col. Ricardo Aguilar of the U.S. Air Force. In Guatemala, struck by Mitch over the weekend, President Alvaro Arzu reported yesterday that 157 people had died, 100,000 homes were damaged and 30 highways were blocked. El Salvador's National Emergency Committee reported 222 deaths, 135 missing and 50,000 driven from their homes by the flooding. And Mexican authorities said rem- nants of Mitch killed at least five people in the southern state of Chiapas. At the United Nations, U.N. ambas- sadors from five nations appealed for international help yesterday to feed and clothe the survivors and bury the dead. Rebuilding the hardest-hit countries - Honduras and Nicaragua - will take many years and billions of dollars. But with victims still clinging to trees and rooftops, the ambassadors said the region's top priority is emergency assis- tance. Honduran Ambassador Hugo Noe- Pino - flanked by envoys from Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala and Costa Rica - said the killer storm had put the country's development efforts back by at least 30 years. In Washington, D.C., a Pentagon spokesperson said more than two dozen military aircraft have been sent into the region to assist with air surveillance and rescue missions. At least 500 U.S. military men and women have also been dispatched to provide help, spokesman Capt. Michael Doubleday said. said. The United side with thel Rubin, the spokesperson, "the necessaryx on time." Mohammed States appeared to Palestinians. James State Department said Monday that plans were provided Dahlan, the Palestinian security chief in the Gaza Strip, said he discussed the anti-terror plan with Israeli security officials who also considered it suf- ficient. Israeli commentator Emanuel Rosen said the arrest of the 30 fugi- tives is a fringe issue and that Netanyahu apparently used it to hold up the accord temporarily because he wanted to show Cabinet hard-liners he is standing tough against the Palestinians. Cabinet approval is not assured. At least six of 18 ministers are undecided and three are opposed to the plan. Schroeder has wasted little time The Washington Post -BERLIN - During his election campaign, Gerhard iroeder unabashedly stole a page from Bill nton's book and vowed he would focus like a laser beam on the economy. Even after he ousted Helmut Kohl in September's elections, the new German chan- cellor declared his government would stand or fall on its record in creating jobs. But since his election, Schroeder has wasted little time in embarking on an extensive series of foreign trips with the ostensible goal of reassuring his foreign counterparts that he plans no radical departures from the Kohl era. After visiting Paris and Washington within days of h election, Schroeder traveled this week to Britain to rt with Prime Minister Tony Blair on his first offi- cial trip as chancellor. Later this week, he will go to the Netherlands and Poland, to be followed by a work- ing visit to Moscow and an appearance at a Baltic regional conference. The hectic itinerary for a Social Democratic politi- cian with little background or interest in foreign affairs was conceived by Schroeder's advisers as a way to demonstrate his desire to sustain friendly ties with Germany's main allies and its nine immediate n hbors. Senior officials acknowledge the whirl- wind tour also was designed to quell any anxieties abroad about Schroeder after 16 years of a Kohl-led Germany. Schroeder's lack of previous involvement in world affairs, foreign diplomats say, is compounded by the inexperience of his foreign minister, Joschka Fischer, leader of the environmentalist Greens party, the Social Democrats' coalition partner. "The learning curve of these two fellows could be long and slow," a senior U.S. official said. "It will be very different than the days of Kohl, Schmidt and Brandt" He was referring to Kohl's predecessors as chancellor, Helmut Schmidt and Willy Brandt. Recognizing that Germany's allies may be worried by the Greens' pacifist and anti-nuclear roots, Fischer has decided to build up trust with his new peers. He plans to meet this week in Washington with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, then travel to New York to see U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan. Fischer passed his baptism of fire by managing to skirt a potential dispute with London and Paris over whether Germany will accord upgraded status to Britain that could rival its close partnership with France. "Whether you talk of an axis with France or a triangle with Britain, this smacks of 19th-Century nationalism that has no place in today's Europe," Fischer said. A former taxi driver and self-described street revo- lutionary, Fischer insists he will conduct foreign poli- cy based on German and European interests, not the .., this smacks of 19th- Century nationalism that has no place in today's Europe - Joschka Fischer German foreign minister political ideals of the Greens. He has retained Wolfgang Ischinger and Hans-Friedrich von Ploetz, two senior diplomats, as his top counselors and plans to appoint Karsten Voigt, a Social Democrat respect- ed for his expertise in security issues, as Germany's next ambassador to the United States. Schroeder and Fischer say they would prefer to see Germany channel its influence through multilateral institutions, such as NATO and the European Union. But after only a week in office, some new accents sug- gest that a government run by the Social Democrats and Greens is likely to make significant course cor- rections in key foreign and security policies. During a trip to London last week, Fischer empha- sized that he intends to make human rights more of a trademark in Germany's foreign policy. AP PHOTO Palestinians accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of using their delay in arresting fugitives as a pretext to hold onto West Bank lands. H AAA! SPRING BREAK TRAVEL was 1 of 6 small businesses in the US recognized by Better Businesses Bureaus for outstanding ethics in the marketplace! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386. r ..m....................mi ISI i e r I MjiwM No k*Bay a a 50|00*$399Nept Florida tomo9 ; S Acasib Dayona Beach I s Cann Panama City Call today! 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