2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 5, 2000 NATION WORLD Yemini foreign minister: U.S.I blame for U.S.S. Cole attack SAN'A, Yemen (AP) - The U.S. itself bears some responsibility for the attack on the USS Cole because it helped create the terrorists who now con- sider America their worst enemy, Yemen's foreign minister said yesterday. Speaking in an interview with The Associated Press, Foreign Minister Abdulkader Bajammal also said Yemen wants to work closely with the U.S. to combat terrorism. "The operation was not Yemeni, not pure Yemeni," Bajammal said. "It is a network involving so many countries. Terrorism has no nation." No one has yet been charged in the Oct. 12 bombing of the USS Cole, which killed 17 sailors and wounded 39. Asked if any indictments were forthcoming, Bajammal said he had no information, noting it was not his area of responsibility. Bajammal said that if any Yemenis are found to have been involved, they may have simply been cor- rupt bureaucrats who provided logistical help in exchange for "a little baksheesh," - or payoffs - not out of ideology. "We are a victim of terrorism, not a source of ter- rorism," Bajammal added. The attack on the Cole followed anti-U.S. and anti-Israeli protests in Yemen and across an Arab Gunbattics erupt in] B ethe hem JERUSALEM (AP) - Heavy Israeli-Palestinian gunbat raged early yesterday near a holy shrine in biblical Bethleh In the Gaza Strip, Yasser Arafat carried a weapon in public the first time since 1994 and complained that Israel viola an agreement to "cool down the situation." The Israeli army said Palestinian gunmen attacked the B lehem shrine, revered by Jews as Rachel's Tomb, the burial of the biblical matriarch, from three sides and apparently trice take it over. Palestinians said the fighting broke out after sold and Jewish settlers attacked Muslim worshippers. The confrontation lasted hours and at one point, Isr helicopters aiming at Palestinian gunmen fired two rock at the Aida refugee camp near Bethlehem in the West B; the army said. Fourteen Palestinians were injured in Bethlehem area fi ing Sunday and early yesterday, including two who were serious condition with gunshot wounds, Palestinian hospi said. The shooting also caused damage in several Bethlel neighborhoods. Iman Al Azza surveyed the blacker rooms of his home's second floor. The rooms caught during the spray of Israeli helicopter gunfire. Al Az2 home is near an eight-story building overlooking RacI Tomb that is often used by Palestinian gunmen. Residents displayed bedsheets riddled with bullet he and showed visitors the holes in their roof tops. Arafat said the Israeli shelling "was a shock because had agreed to cool down the situation." For the first ti since his return from exile in 1994, Arafat displayc weapon in public. As he reviewed an honor guard out: his Gaza City office, the Palestinian leader carried a ( man-made machine pistol. Arafat had just returned from a visit to Qatar ; world enraged by violence in Palestinian areas. Nearly 300 people have been killed in Israeli-Pales- tinian clashes since September. The roots of anti-American terrorism are older and deeper, running back to the 1980s when one of the last-gasp Cold War battles was waged in the rugged mountains and valleys of Afghanistan. Bajammal said that because the investigation was continuing, he could not comment on the possibility that Yemeni or other Arab veterans of the Afghan war were involved in the Cole attack. He said "Terrorism did not appear by accident. It is a historical phenomenon. Just as the Soviet Union created a man like (the international terrorist) Carlos, the other side created the Afghan Arabs. We have inherited the remnants of the Cold War." In Washington, a senior U.S. official said the Clin- ton administration rejects any suggestion that the U.S. is somehow responsible for the Cole attack. He spoke on condition of anonymity. Yemen, whose central government is struggling to expand authority over tribal areas, has long been a haven for Muslim extremists, including groups linked to Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden, a veteran of the Afghan war who today is America's No. I ter- rorist suspect. "It is a network invo so many countries. Terrorism has no nati - Abdulkader Yemeni foreig Bin Laden was one of the thousands from across the Arab world who went to/ after the 1979 Soviet incursion to figh Afghan guerrillas, whose chief financiala backers included the U.S. After the Soviets withdrew in 1989 called Afghan Arabs turned their anger U.S., which they see as a threat to Islam independence. Bin Laden continues Afghanistan, where he periodically issue violence against the U.S. Yemeni leaders, embarrassed to have attacked in their waters just as they we expand relations with Washington, at f the idea that Yemenis could have had an with the Cole attack. U.S., E4 to AC RO S S E ATI 0N( tot Clinton calls for action in Congress WASHINGTON - As the lame duck Congress filtered back to town, Presi dent Clinton called House and Senate leaders to the White House yesterday to try resolving their long-running battle over school spending, immigration and other issues. ' Both sides flashed signs of being willing to finally end the disputes that hane IvDEg left four must-pass spending bills overdue by two months and paralyzed effo to cut taxes, boost Medicare payments to health care providers and raise the fe - eral minimum wage. ion is White House officials were expected to offer potential compromises on the major outstanding issues, said administration officials and Democratic congres- Bajammal sional aides speaking on condition of anonymity. gn minister One official said the White House would offer "a road map to how we can wrap this up quickly." And Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) said he believed it was in the of fighters "best interests" of Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush for Co - Afghanistan gress to finish the budget battle before Bush's possible move into the White it alongside House "provided it's done right." Lott spoke two days after he and House Speaker and military Dennis Hastert (R-1Il.) journeyed to Bush's Texas ranch to discuss the agenda the new Congress, which convenes on Jan. 3. Lott said Bush did not advise the , many so- on how to handle the remaining fights on this year's SI1.8 trillion federal budget. against the and to Arab to live in Aes calls for a U.S. ship re trying to irst rejected ything to do * U Ayed Al Qelsi and his wife Ralda clean up the sidewa gunbattles between Israelis and Palestinians raged l Bethlehem yesterday. explained that he was holding the weapon because settlers blocked Gaza's main north-south thorough road he had to travel in order to reach Gaza City. "The most important thing is that right now th closing Salah Edin Road and that is wehy I amc this," lie told reporters. It appeared that Arafat was carrying the weapon in bolic gesture. He gave no indication that he would use Israel army radio said settlers tried to throw s Arafat's convoy. The army would say only that itr settlers from the roadside. More than two dozen were detained, the radio said. Tensions had risen in the Bethlehem area late when, according to the army, residents of the vi Hussan near Bethlehem threw firebombs at Israeli 1 driving along a nearby bypass road. An Israeli wor slightly injured. Later, Israeli soldiers and Jewish settlers entered and opened fire on Palestinians who were on theii the Hussan mosque for evening prayers, Palestin nesses said. The army said it shot and wounded aP ian who had tried to soize a soldier's weapon, bu attacking worshippers. WANT TO WR rapid, intense ram involving LATE. th other CALL fee. TheMM76-DAILY discuss gobal TORONTO (AP) - The European Union and the United States will resume talks on global warming this week in hopes of reaching a deal that eluded them last month in the Nether- AP PHOTO lands, Canadian officials said yester- ilk after day. n Two weeks of international talks at The Hague, Netherlands on how to e Jewish make cuts in emissions of greenhouse fare, the gases ended in failure Nov. 25 amid disputes primarily between the United ey were States and the EU. carrying The purpose of the new talks between officials from the EU, the n a sym- United States, Canada, Japan and e it. Australia is to see whether enough tones at common ground exists to hold a removed ministerial-level meeting, said settlers Velma McColl, spokeswoman for Canadian Environment Minister Sunday David Anderson. That meeting Ilage of could come as early as next week, notorists she said. man was The two-day meeting will begin tomorrow in Ottawa and will be held Hussan in private. r way to At The Hague, Americans accused tian wit- the Europeans of being unresponsive Palestin- to repeated U.S. concessions, while t denied Europe blamed the United States for holding to a position that would dam- age the environment. The key issue blocking agreement was whether and to what extent coun- tries should be allowed to count the car- ITE? bon dioxide absorbed by forests and farmlands toward their emissions reduc- tion targets. Greenhouse gas emissions mostly come from burning fossil fuels for factories, power plants and cars. Under the so-called Kyoto Protocol of 1997, the developed world commit- ted to collectively reduce the emission of greenhouse gases to 5.2 percent below 1990 levels. Conference chairman Jan Pronk decided not to close out the Hague 1 meeting. but instead suspended it, say- ing it would resume early next year. Clinton creates 84 million acre reserve WASHINGTON - President Clin-- ton established the largest protected area in the U.S., an 84 million-acre ecosystem reserve around the north- western Hawaiian Islands yesterday. Clinton issued an executive order creating the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Coral Reef Ecosystem Reserve. The area contains nearly 70 percent of the United States' coral reefs, as well as pristine remote islands, atolls and submerged lagoons. The president said his actions were designed to preserve the islands' nat- ural beauty "for a long time. I hope, forever" He said President Theodore Roo- sevelt "recognized the same impera- tive" almost a century ago when he established the Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge. "He knew then that our natural won- ders on land and sea form an integral part of who we are as a people, and that every generation of Americans must do its part to sustain and strengthen this legacy,' Clinton said. "Today we do just that, incorporating the refuge he created into a new, vast and wonderful Yellow- stone of the sea." Clinton said it is imperative to move swiftly to protect the reefs. He noted that 90 percent of the coral reek in the central Indian Ocean have die FAA uses lottery to ease airport delays WASHINGTON - Federal offi cials tried to provide teiporary relic for travelers who use New York's LaGuardia Airport, by conducting an unusual lottery of takeoff and landing times to ease what officials call q "intolerable situation" this year . delays and cancellations. LaGuardia has been among the most congested U.S. airports and accounted for almost a quarter of the nation's 43,000 airline delays in Octo- ber, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. The lottery by the FAA reduced by about half, to 159, the new flights that airlines planned-to add as of Jan. 1. ArtouND THE WORLD {y " ' -L j i .. ,, 1' r. . Japanese cabinet resigns at meeting TOKYO - Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori's Cabinet resigned en masse this morning, formally opening the way for Mori to announce a new Cabinet that will oversee a sweeping restruc- turing of Japan's bureaucracy. The resignations, a formality before the changes, were submitted at the regular morning Cabinet meeting, said Kazuhiko Koshikawa, one of Mori's spokesmen. Mori, one of Japan's most unpopular prime ministers in years, was expected to announce the new Cabinet as early as this evening. He hopes the change will breathe new life into his sagging adminis- tration. The reshuffle was not expected to be a major one, as Mori had said he will stress continuity in his selection of new ministers. 'Foreign Minister Yohei Kono and Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa - the two most prominent ministers - were both expected to retain their positions. Recent public opinion polls put sup- port for Mori, who assumed office in- April, at under 20 percent. I e j barely survived a rebellion within Ii own party to beat a no-confidence motion two weeks ago. Moi's new Cabinet was expected to face some difficult months ahead. Mad cow disease returns to Europe PARIS - After rattling Britaini the mid-1990s, mad cow is making a dramatic comeback in Europe. In fact, it probably never left. Beef sales have plummeted and oov- ernments are scrambling to put preven- tive measures in place against the disease known formally in its animal form as bovine spongi form encephalopathy. Countries previously untouched -- Spain and Germany - have detected cases in their herds. - Compiledfi olDail) ,ire rej)orts. [GROU! 1432 Washtenaw Ave. French Room (look for sign outside) 8:45 Wednesday evening I.The center or origin of activity or change... 2.A college Ministry prog discussion, connection wi students and drinking cof "The final who stole Christmas" jjFeV J - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A a4 $i~pewadMAtM4 DepaW~d m w t ost ti &w ~tffatfdowfrg ,.. $5.00 Matinees til 6pm $4.75 Kids & Seniors all s ows $5.75 with Student ID The M'chigan Daiy {ISSN 0745967) is published Monday through Friday durng the fall andwinter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term. star ting in September via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April; is $105. yearlong (September through April) Is $180. On-campus subscriptions fortail tern" are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 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