8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 27, 1999 Brothers survive 5 days in Taiwan quake rubble Walking for a -cause Pinochet's health. fails as extradition begins in London. TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Two broth- ers were pulled to freedom yesterday after 5 and a half days buried alive in the wreckage of Taiwan's killer quake, saying they survived by eating a few apples and playing cards in the small space where they were trapped. Amid the devastation and shattered 'hopes, Taiwanese were cheered by the improbable survival of Sun Chi-kwang, 20, and Sun Chi-feng, who turned 26 Wednesday, one day into their 130-hour ordeal in the wreckage of a collapsed Taipei building. The brothers were rescued even as powerful aftershocks continue to jolt Taiwan. A particularly strong one hit early yesterday, killing at least three people on top of the more than 2,000 who have already died. Onlookers applauded as the younger Sun, stripped to the waist but staying upright, was lifted to safety by a crane. His brother was rushed away on a stretcher. Their mother, Liu Luan, heaved with sobs of joy as her sons came out alive, speaking so fast she was almost incoher- ent. "I kept thinking, 'This is not possi- ble, this is not possible,"' Liu told reporters at the scene. "I kept praying for them all the time'" The brothers were hospitalized in stable condition. Doctors were check- ing them for possible internal injuries or dehydration. "They are both very clear and con- scious of what happened," said Su Chong-jen, chief of surgery at the hos- pital where they were taken. "What they need now is rest" The Sun brothers had been playing bridge when the 7.6-magnitude quake struck in the wee hours Tuesday. The 12-story building they were in crum- pled, flattening parts of the hotel, offices and apartments it contained. The brothers' parents and sister were not home at the time. The two kept up their spirits by contin- uing their card game while they waited in the small space, their doctor said by tele- "Nobody here dares to stay home at night." - Lee Wen Taiwanese university student phone. When their water ran out, they were forced to drink their own urine. From his hospital bed, Sun Chi- kwang said he even managed to give his sibling a birthday gift. "My older brother told me that never in my life did I celebrate his birthday with him, so I said today I would cele- brate with you and I gave him my neck- lace," he said. He told TVBS television that while trapped he had "a very strange dream" in which "there was someone beside me saying that behind the fridge there was a hole from where I could get out" "I thought that was really strange and I told my older brother. He asked me what it meant and said fate could not have been talking to me, so I went back to sleep," Sun said. "A little later I saw a hole, and indeed it turned out to be a big hole," he said, referring to the hole rescuers carved into the rubble to reach them. Emergency crews worked into the night through a light drizzle in hopes of saving more lives in the Taipei building, though they were not certain whether anyone else was still alive. The building was one of the hardest-hit structures in Taipei, the capital. Sunday's aftershock - a sizable earthquake in its own right - brought down some buildings in central Taiwan, the hardest-hit region, and cracked walls as far away as Taipei, 90 miles to the north. Its magnitude was estimated at 6.5 or 6.8 by different sources. The aftershock killed three people, injured at least 58 and buried another 20 in the rubble. Although there have been thousands of aftershocks, yesterday's was big enough to send frightened people scurrying out of their homes to safe, open spaces. Others donned motorcycle helmets. "Nobody here dares to stay home at night. They all stay in tents," said uni- versity student Lee Wen in the town of Puli, where water, electricity and tele- phone service have yet to be restored. Deaths from the new tremor, and more bodies unearthed on Sunday, brought the confirmed toll from the quakes to 2,056. The Washington Post LONDON - The formal extradition hearing against former Chilean President Augusto Pinochet finally gets under way in magistrate's court here tomorrow, but Pinochet's future may depend more on a hospital examination than the courtroom proceeding. Eleven turbulent months have passed since Pinochet was arrested in London on a request for extradition by a prose- cutor in Spain. Spanish authorities have charged the retired general with thou- sands of human rights violations during his 17 years as Chile's ruler, and they want him extradited to Madrid for trial on charges of torture and conspiracy. With financial and legal support from conservative politicians here, Pinochet has fought extradition with the same vigor he brought to the long battle against his political adversaries in Chile. He has appealed every ruling against him. The key decision by Britain's high- est court -holding that a former head of state charged with abuse of human rights can be brought to trial almost anywhere - is considered a crucial new precedent in the emerging field of human rights law. Pinochet, who is living under house arrest in a London suburb, held unchal- lenged sway in Chile from 1973 to 1990. The legal grounds for extradimon rul- ings here are fairly clear, and it's gener- ally assumed that Britain would grant Spain's request - if the decision were strictly a legal matter. In recent week. though. the Pinochet camp has been hinting that it may invoke his health as an issue that transcends the legal ques- tions. Friends say Pinochet. 83, is deepl depressed about his arrest and the poli' cal controversy it has spawned. La week, he went to a London hospital fora diagnostic brain scan. Newspapers have since carried reports that he is sutfering from dizzi- ness and a heart problem. As a legal matter, poor health would not necessarily bar extradition. But if Pinochet is widely perceived to be too frail to defend himself against the Spanish charges, there would increased political pressure in London to let him go home. Home Secretarv Jack Straw, the Cabinet officer respon- sible for legal matters, has broad discre- tion to stop the extradition proceeding. Earlier this month, the Home Office decided not to bring charges against a London woman newly revealed to ha'\ e been a Russian spy. The reasoning wIs that the ex-spy is 87 and her alleged crimes were committed decades age. As conservative politicians quicl noted, that sounds a lot like Pinochet. AP PHOTO Participants in AIDS Walk Michigan carry signs, yesterday, while walking down Jefferson Avenue in downtown Detroit. Russians claim Bin Laden behind bombings Los Angeles Times MOSCOW - With the spate of recent terrorist bombings in Moscow and southern Russia, the nation learned a name already familiar, and frightening, to Americans: Osama bin Laden. After the apartment bombings that killed more than 300 Russians and terrified the nation this past month, the Saudi millionaire's name was suddenly all over the Russian media, and the threat of international terror- ism was on every politician's lips. Russians digested the news that their newfound enemy may be the same as America's -- the man said to be behind the bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa a year ago. Russia's old foes have suddenly become more sinis- ter, amid speculation that bin Laden is supporting them. The No. I threat to the country is no longer just separatist bandits such as Shamil Basayev and Khattab, but international terrorists such as Shamil Basayev and Khattab. With Russian intelligence blaming the two guerril- la leaders for the bombings - and linking bin Laden to the pair - the attacks raised the specter that Russia now faces a strong, highly organized and fanatical enemy capable of taking the Islamic fundamentalist fight for control of the Caucusus right to the heart of Russia. Since last month, Basayev and Khattab - who goes by only one name - have been leading a guer- rilla campaign to split Dagestan, which neighbors separatist Chechnya. But is bin Laden the hidden enemy funneling vast amounts of money and fight- ers into Chechnya, as the Russians claim? Or are the enemies just some of the same rebels Russia fought - and lost to - earlier this decade, but with higher ambitions ? Russian officials are invoking the name of bin Laden to sharpen the popular appetite for a new wave of punitive military action against Chechnya - inten- sive air attacks against its villages (or, as Russia tends to call them during military operations, rebel bases). Basayev and Khattab are now a threat to be whipped up, not downplayed the way they were as key Chechen commanders who helped defeat Russia in the 1994-96 war over Chechnva's bid for indepen- dence. In those days, Russian generals dismissed the enemy as "bandit formations" and the war as "mop- ping-up operations." According to an account by intelligence sources published in the Russian daily Sevodnya after the bomb attacks, bin Laden is funding Chechen rebel forces, organizing terrorist training camps in Chechnya and even plans to set up key bases of his own there. The FSB, a KGB successor agency, claiO he is investing 10 percent of his funds in the Chechen- Dagestani effort. The Interior Ministry claims that bin Laden has ordered the collection of S30 million for the cause. "If we had as much money as is being claimed, if we had such possibilities, we would hardly be in such a difficult situation. What we have is gathered penny by penny, and today there is nobody who would provide any significant help to us," Basayev said, denying the link to bin Laden in an interview before the big Moscow bombings, publis. September 9. by the Czech newspaper Lido e Noviny. "Had there been someone who would coop- crate with us on specific terms, Russia would have ceased to exist long ago." Yossef Bodansky, author of "Bin Laden: The Man Who Declared War on America" and director of the U.S. Congress Task force on terrorism, believes that bin Laden has a long relationship with Basayev, going back to early 1994, several months before the war over Chechen independence began. The Easiest You'll Ever Exam Have ono books' ono notes *no prerequisites call Dr. Juan F. Johnson at 213-0700 for a free dental exam and consultation thru 10/28/99 Fireworks storage site blows up in Mexico MEXICO CITY - A series of explosions and a fire. destroyed a section of downtown Celaya in cen- tral Mexico yesterday, killing at least 50 people and injuring 76 oth- ers, state officials said. Media reports said the tragedy apparently began when a fireworks storehouse across the street from the city bus station exploded about 10:30 a.m., starting a fire that caused cooking gas tanks at nearby restaurants to explode a few minutes later. The second explosion apparently trapped some rescuers who had responded to the first blast. "It's a very big tragedy," Mayor Ricardo Suarez said in an interview with the national Azteca TV work. Francisco Aguilar, spokesperson for Guanajuato state, told reporters that 76 people were injured in addi- tion to the 50 known dead. His com- ments were reported by the govern- ment's Notimex news agency and local radio stations. Among those reported dead were a police officer, two Red Cross workers, two fire fighters, a k i reporter and four children. . Martin J. Powers Professor of History ofArt and Sally Michelson Davidson Professor of Chinese Arts and Cultures ,;_' 5 ;. _ . t'' , _", We didn't become Fortune magazine's World's Most Admired Company* by accepting the status quo. We got there by hiring and training graduates with the confidence and courage to think in innovative and Please Join GE at the Engineering School Career Fair Rep resenting THE I I