2- The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, April 3, 2001 UCapNATION/WORLD U.S., China displute cause of crash NEWS IN BRIEF1 ' ( f 8 p4' e7 t 4 .. ,., 12 I """J WASHINGTON (AP) -- In a tense standoff with China, President Bush demanded the prompt return of 24 U.S. spy plane crew members yesterday and the release of their crippled plane "without further damaging or tamper- ing." China said there would be no access until today at the earliest. Bush, reading a sober statement at the White House, said, "Failure of the Chinese government to react promptly to our request is inconsistent with stan- dard diplomatic practice, and with the expressed desire of both our countries for better relations." The emergency landing of the turbo- prop EP-3 surveillance plane on the Chinese island of Hainai after it collid- ed with a Chinese fighter jet early Sun- day brought a new chill to already frosty U.S.-Chinese relations just as Bush was nearing a decision on an arms-sale package for Taiwan that Bei- jing has opposed. U.S. officials assumed the plane had been boarded by the Chinese military after its emergency landing on the island in the South China Sea, but they had no concrete information on the extent to which the plane, laden with high-tech surveillance equipment, iight have been searched. The United States considers the air- craft to be sovereign U.S. territory and not subject to search or seizure. China blamed the collision on the American pilot, saying the U.S. plane veered into one of its F-8 fighters. Navy spy planes fly routinely off China's southeastern coast to monitor military activity, especially any that might threaten Taiwan, and they are often shadowed in turn by Chinese fighter planes. As tensions grew yesterday, the United States was keeping three Navy destroyers in the vicinity of Hainan island instead of having them continue their journey home from the Persian Gulf. The United States sent three diplomats to the island in hopes of meeting with the crew. "Our priorities are the prompt and safe return of the crew and the return of the aircraft without further damag- ing or tampering," Bush said on the White House lawn. Later, during a picture-taking session in the Oval Office with Egyptian Presi- dent Hosni Mubarak, Bush sidestepped questions on whether the crew mem- bers were viewed as hostages or whether he believed the accident to be a provocation by China. RAAH, Gaza Strip Israel launches second airstrike in one week In the second Israeli airstrike in less than a week, helicopter gunships homed in on a pickup truck and fired rockets yesterday that killed an Islamic militant sus- pected of planting roadside bombs. In the biblical town of Bethlehem, meanwhile, Palestinian gunmen and Israeli soldiers exchanged intense fire, wounding at least eight Palestinians. Clouds of white smoke from tanks shells and grenade launchers rose from Bethlehem, arid the thunderous booms could be heard in central Jerusalem, a few miles away. In office for less than a month, Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon finds him- self in a worsening battle with Palestinian militants. Sharon has promised to restore calm, but so far he has employed military tactics similar to those used by his predecessor Ehud Barak, who was voted out of office after failing to quell the Palestinian uprising. Palestinians blamed Israel for the recent increase in fighting. "All these Israeli attacks will destroy the peace process and increase the cycle of violence in the region," said Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo. Peace talks have broken down, and there are no prospects for their revival at present. Secretary of State Colin Powell called Sharon yesterday, President Bush said in Washington. WASHINGTON U.S. approves continued aid to Yugoslavia Secretary of State Colin Powell certified yesterday that Yugoslavia has beet cooperating with the U.N. war crimes tribunal in the Netherlands, thus ensuring no interruption in U.S. aid to the Belgrade government.* The announcement came a day after the arrest of former President Slobon Milosevic, but officials said his detention was not a condition for continuing the administration's $100 million aid program for Yugoslavia. About half of that aid has not been spent and would have been subject to a cutoff if Powell had refused to certify. The certification also means continuation of U.S. support for Yugoslav loan requests in the World Bank and international lending institutions. Such loans are difficult to obtain if the United States objects. Powell did not give Yugoslavia a blank check. He said American support for a summer conference of donor countries that assist Yugoslavia would be linked-'o whether that country continues to cooperate with the tribunal, based in The Hague. The tribunal indicted Milosevic in 1999 for alleged atrocities ag' t Kosovo Albanians, and the tribunal is seeking his extradition. AP PHOTO About 100 people demonstrate outside the U.S. consulate in Hong Kong yesterday, blaming the U. S. for the collision between U.S. and Chinese military planes. C raShplaces strain on already tenseC U.S. -China relationS The Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - The sudden cri- sis over an American spy plane is forc- ing the Bush administration to make decisions about its policies toward China and the rest of Asia far earlier than it had planned. "I have to believe the administration really wishes this (crisis) hadn't come upon them that soon," said Jonathan Pollack, head of strategic research at the Naval War College in Rhode Island. In recent weeks, senior administra- tion officials have said privately that the Bush team would make obligatory short-term decisions on China, but not focus on formulating a longer-term policy until the fall, when President Bush is scheduled to make his first trip to Asia since taking office. Administration officials also hoped they could avoid getting the United States embroiled in domestic Chinese politics, rising Chinese nationalism and the choice of a new Chinese lead- ership at a Communist Party Congress next year. All those hopes are being called into question by Sunday's midair collision between a U.S. spy plane and a Chinese fighter jet over the South China Sea. The incident raises a host of questions for U.S. China policy: To what extent should China be considered an adver- sary? Will the administration be able to reach a working accommodation with the leadership in Beijing? How does this administration reconcile the often-con- flicting interests of trade and investment in China, human rights and democracy, and military and security issues? Finance billcould withstand WASHINGTON - The Senate's move to ban large, unlimited cash con- tributions to political parties stands on strong legal ground and should survive court challenges, many legal experts say. However, the campaign finance reform measure approved yesterday also seeks to restrict the language in "issue ads" that are broadcast within 60 days of an election, a provision that some experts say will be struck down. The McCain-Feingold bill began as a move to close the so-called soft-money loophole under which huge amounts of money flowed freely to the political parties. But in the Senate, it grew into a reform movement that targeted attack ads and other irritations for politicians. The end product is a long, compli- cated bill whose detail resembles the tax code. Of the bill's various provisions, the soft-money ban probably has the best chance of surviving the inevitable legal challenges. Despite all the talk in recent weeks about the Constitution and freedom of speech, Congress and the courts long have agreed that money in politics can be regulated, even if pure speech can- not be. "Money is property. It is not speech," Justice John Paul Stevens said last year. He was part of a 6-3 Supreme Court majority that rejected a free- speech challenge to a $1,000 limit on contributions to state candidates in Missouri. "Speech has the power to inspire volunteers to perform a multitude of tasks on a campaign trail," Stevens wrote in last year's ruling. "Money, WASHINGTON Census shows all 50 states growing For the first time in a century, every state gained in population as the nation added a record 32.7 million people during the 1990s, the Census Bureau reported yesterday. While growth was universal, the West set the pace, expanding by 19 percent, and adding 10.4 million peo- ple, according to a Census Bureau review of the just-completed release of population figures for all 50 states. If current growth rates continue, sometime in the next few years the 10- state Western region will surpass the long-settled Midwest as the second most populous area of the United States. Census experts used adjectives such as "astounding" and "astonishing" to describe the Western boom: the Phoenix metropolitan area added I million peo- ple, expanding by 45 percent, while the Las Vegas metro area grew by 710,000, a torrid 83 percent pace. WASHINGTON Court: Questioning without awyer OK The Supreme Court made it easier yesterday for the police to question crime suspects without their lawyers, ruling that the lawyer who is representing a defendant for one crime need not be there when police ask him about a related second crime. The 5-4 ruling makes clear that the Sixth Amendment's "right to counsel" does not mean a lawyer must always be contacted when police want to question his client. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, speaking for the conservative majori- ty, said police should not be deterred from talking to suspects and persuad- ing the guilty to confess to tlhr crimes. "The Constitution does not negate society's interest in the ability of police to talk to witnesses and suspects," he said. LONDON English elections on hold due to disease Prime Minister Tony Blair pe poned local elections in Britain yes- terday because of the foot-and-mouth epidemic, a signal that national elections have also been put off until June. Blair, who had been expected to call national and local elections on May 3, made no comment on the date for a national vote. But Deputy Prime MitL- ister John Prescott said Monday that had wanted a national election in ?~, and had lost the argument. With more than 900 cases confirmed since the outbreak was detected on Feb. 20, Britain is struggling to control the epidemic. Blair said there was no technical rea- son to postpone an election, that it was possible to vote even in the worst affected areas. However, some farmers have said it was insensitive to have an election in the midst of their crisis. - Compiled from Daily wire reports fJp JI'H,: The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-055, Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. 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