-WAR IN Kosovo The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 15, 1999 - 9A enrmany calls for 1 day halt of BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - In a diplomatic drive to bring peace to Kosovo, Germany unveiled a plan yes- terday calling for a one-day suspension of airstrikes if Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic begins withdraw- ing troops from the province. NATO called the German plan a "food-for-thought paper," but did not immediately endorse it. Spokesperson mie Shea said it was a "very useful and necessary contribution" to the debate on how to get Milosevic to back down. German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, current president of the 15- nation European Union, convened a spe- cial EU summit yesterday evening to dis- cuss the peace plan and to meet with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Annan is scheduled to speak at the University of Michigan commencement on May I. Alliance officials feel the air cam- paign has begun to stagger Milosevic and are hesitant to ease up and give him a chance to recuperate. In Washington, State Department spokesperson James Rubin called the German proposals constructive and said they were in line with the condi- tions that NATO has laid down. He described them as a beginning of a dis- ussion of how the conditions would be nplemented. Under the German plan, presented in Bonn, NATO would suspend its airstrikes on Yugoslavia for 24 hours to give Milosevic time to begin moving his troops out of the province, and per- manently suspend the attacks once the pullout is complete. The proposals call for a U.N. military force to move in as Yugoslav army and ecial police forces withdraw. That would be followed by a return of the hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanian refugees who have fled to Albania and Macedonia and an interim U.N. administration of Kosovo. "We need to allow for the return of refugees, to allow for the deployment of international troops to protect the refugees and the population of Kosovo," said Schroeder. Annan met with NATO Secretary- general Javier Solana before going to the EU. No details of their discussions Panelists discuss aid for refugees fleeing Kosovo REFUGEES Continued from Page 1A should start by writing letters. "Tell your congressman, sena- tor, president, what you think" he said. Those who want to take a more active role should do a needs assessment of their own, Heisler said, adding that con- tributing to groups helping refugees should also be exam- ined. "It is better to send a check to an organization and tell them what you want it to do rather than a stack blankets. Sending a bulk of items will create extra transportation costs" Heisler said. Stein stressed the fact that individuals should not be concerned with immediate action, saying reading about the situation and gaining knowledge are equally as impor- tant. "Don't necessarily feel that you have to do anything right now. Heightening awareness for the future may be the most useful thing you can do," Stein said. Websites of relief funds recommended by the panelists: * Interaction: http://w ww.interaction.org/kosovo/index.htmi An umbrella organization that provides information on the activities of non-governmental organizations. * ReliefWeb: http://www.notes.reliefweb.int/ A project of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 5 UNHCR Refugees Daily: http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/daily.htm A digest of the latest refugee news reported by the world's media, N U.S. Committee for Refugees: http://www.refugees.org A non-profit organization devoted to advocacy on behalf of uprooted people regardless of their nationality, race, religion, ideology or social group. German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder addresses a special meeting of the European Union yesterday in Brussells, Belgium. BALKANS Continued from Page 1A "It was a plane and I saw it' said Qazim Tata. "I don't know whether the plane was Serb or NATO, but probably it was Serb because NATO would not attack us." Yugoslav Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nebosja Vujovic reported that 75 people were killed and 25 injured in the incidents. Uncertainty over what happened was compounded by erroneous and confus- ing reports issued by Pentagon and NATO authorities during the day. Gen. Wesley Clark, NATO's top commander, first suggested that the attacks on the refugees may have been perpetrated as a retaliatory action by Yugoslav forces, who were part of a convoy of refugees and whose trucks had been targeted by NATO warplanes. But by early evening, Clark had retracted that theory. He said he could not yet account for the civilian casualties. "There were aircraft working the area all day," the general said in a telephone interview. "We're talking to the pilots, looking at the video, listening to the cockpit recordings, going through every single weapon that was dropped in that area to determine what happened." Clark said the pilots reported hitting only military trucks and believed the trucks had come from Djakovica earlier in the day, where Yugoslav forces were seen burning houses and jumping into the vehicles. He said the trucks were trav- eling in a long convoy, spaced about 100 yards apart, and each one was targeted separately. were released, but Shea said Solana told Annan that the allies "are united and determined to push this through to its logical conclusion." The U.N. chief called on diplomats to intensify efforts to find a political solu- tion, but acknowledged after a meeting with British Prime Minister Tony Blair that "it's not going to be easy." Annan denied reports he plans to travel to Belgrade to discuss the German plan. In a gesture to Russia, the German plan does not insist on a NATO peace- keeping force, rather it suggests a "robust" contingent of international troops under a single commander. Russia was part of the six-nation Contact Group - along with the United States, France, Britain, Germany and Italy - that negotiated a peace agreement for Kosovo in Rambouillet, France, in February. That agreement was signed by the Kosovo Albanians, but rejected by the Serbs. Russia, nonetheless, has strongly opposed the NATO air operation and has severed its relations with the alliance. "We welcome the Russian effort in the current crisis to try to bring a positive influence to bear on the gov- ernment in Belgrade," Schroeder said. "I am firmly convinced that Russia will act as a stabilizing factor in Europe." Schroeder told the EU Parliament in Strasbourg, France, earlier yesterday that "the terrible developments in Kosovo are not solely a domestic policy issue for Yugoslavia." "Europe's voice has to remain res- olute" and help create a situation in Kosovo where refugees can safely return to their homes, he said. Eleven of the EU's 15 members are also part of NATO. Martin Erdmann, a spokesperson for German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said the proposal was "coordi- nated" with Germany's allies in intense diplomacy in recent days. The main points of the plan include: Setting a timetable for the with- drawal of Serb military, police and paramilitary forces from Kosovo, with a clear threat that airstrikes would resume if Milosevic stalls. A cease-fire by ethnic Albanian rebels, who would later be disarmed by the international force. - The return of refugees and dis- placed people once Yugoslav forces have pulled out. Sic_ aeyz tart p .4-IP __ __ --Jots hirng. e-Go to WWW.flC.COT ink 01 0 irk i.1 0 'U Needed: Bri ht, enerlgetc.... network C++ HTML/XML Hackers! ng send email to jobs@nc.com