2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 19, 2001 NATION/WORLD Israel demands week of peace; 2 militants die JERUSALEM (AP) - On the eve of a major U.S. policy statement, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon yesterday refused to ease demands for a week without violence as a condition for peace talks with Palestinians. A bomb went off near the King David Hotel in Jerusalem while police tried to defuse it. No one was hurt by the device, which exploded shortly before Sharon met at the hotel with a European diplomatic delegation. Police said it apparently was planted by Pales- tinians. In the Gaza Strip, Israeli tanks and troops moved about 200 yards into Palestinian territory near the town of Beit Lahiya and killed two armed Palestinians heading for a nearby Jew- ish settlement, the military said. In addition, two Palestinians, ages 17 and 70, died of wounds suffered in earlier clashes with Israeli forces. Sharon noted that the United States agreed to Israel's condition of "seven days of quiet and no less" before a June cease-fire plan negotiated by CIA direc- tor George Tenet can be enforced. The seven days must be followed by a six-week cooling-off period before Israel begins confidence-building mea- sures such as a freeze on Jewish settle- ments, Sharon said at a news conference after meeting European Union leaders. Palestinian Cabinet Secretary-Gener- al Ahmed Abdel Rahman said the demand for total calm was "an excuse, in effect hampering the efforts aimed at the resumption of peace talks." The comments came a day before a much anticipated speech on the Middle East by Secretary of State Colin Powell. Israeli media said Powell was expect- ed to withdraw U.S. support for the Israeli demand during his speech at the University of Louisville. But Powell indicated that was not the case, saying on Fox TV that peace talks cannot pro- ceed until violence stops. The Bush administration has been pressing Israel and the Palestinians to tone down their conflict, recently endorsing the creation of a Palestinian state. Washington fears continued vio- lence could undermine Arab support for the U.S. campaign in Afghanistan. Israeli-Palestinian violence has killed 759 people on the Palestinian side and 197 on the Israeli side in the last 14 months. Despite Sharon's tough talk, the Israeli army pulled out of areas it had occupied for weeks in the West Bank town of Tulkarem. That left Jenin the last Palestinian town partly occupied - out of six seized last month in response to the assassination of Israeli Tourism Minis- ter Rehavam Zeevi. That killing was claimed by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, avenging the August killing of its leader Mustafa Zibri, whom Israel accused of plotting attacks on civilians. Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhof- stadt said the EU is prepared to help Israelis and Palestinians make peace. The EU delegation met with Sharon and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres a day after talks, with Palestinian leader Yassir Arafat and Egyptian Pres- ident Hosni Mubarak. The Palestinian Cabinet leader, Abdel Rahman, welcomed the Euro- pean efforts, but Israel was skeptical. Raanan Gissin, a Sharon spokesman, said European nations are biased for the Palestinians. Family members of David Chen of Honolulu, a victim of the crash of American Airlines Flight 587, sit with his portrait during a memorial service yesterday. Mourners greve for. crash victim-s NEWS IN BRIEFf, . HEADLINES FMARU..HEWJL MANAMA, Bahrain 2 U.S. sailors missing in Persian Gulf The U.S. Navy was searching yesterday for two U.S. sailors missing in the Persian Gulf after boarding a rickety tanker deemed to be smuggling Iraqi oil. Six other American sailors were rescued after the United Arab Emirates- flagged tanker sank at about 4:45 a.m yesterday in the northern Persian Gulf, said Lt. Melissa Schuermann, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Naval Forces Central Command in Bahrain. The missing Americans were identified as Petty Officer 1st Class Vincent Parker, 38, of Preston, Miss., and Petty Officer 3rd Class Benjamin Johnson, 21, of Rochester, N.Y., a Pentagon official said on condition of anonymity. The entire 14-person crew of the tanker, Samra, was believed to be Iraqi, she said. The body of one crew member was recovered, and three others were miss- ing, Schuermann said. The U.S. Navy said the tanker was carrying an estimated 1,900 tons of Iraqi oil in violation of U.N. sanctions against Iraq. Schuermann, who described the ship as being in "overall poor condition" and "grossly overweighted," said it was too early to speculate on the reason for the sinking. It was not clear whether the sunken Samra was leaking oil. The Navy said it was still focusing on search and rescue. MADRID, Spain Judge orders eight al-Qaida suspects jailed A Spanish magistrate accused eight men of involvement in the Sept. 11 terror- ist attacks on the United States yesterday, ordering them jailed and charging them with belonging to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network. The suspects "were directly linked to the preparation and carrying out of the attacks perpetrated by 'suicide pilots' on Sept. 11, 2001," Judge Baltasar Garzon said in his jailing order. Garzon, an investigative judge, formally charged the men with membership in a terrorist organization - al-Qaida - and with document falsification, robbery and weapons possession. He accused them of "as many ter- rorism crimes as there were victims on Sept. 11." The men denied the charges, which Garzon said were based on evidence from telephone conversations of the group's alleged leader - Imad Eddin Barakat Yarkas, whose alias is Abu Dahdah - before and after the attacks. Entries in a diary found in Germany also linked him to Mohammed Atta, one of the hijackers, Garzon said. The judge did not provide any details of the evi- dence. The eight were among 11 detained Tuesday. The others were released without charges. 0 NEW YORK (AP) - Mourners from New York to the Dominican Republic gathered in separate cere- monies yesterday to grieve for the passengers of American Airlines Flight 587, the Dominican Republic- bound airliner that plunged into a suburban neighborhood shortly after takeoff. "Oh Lord, we come before you with open hearts, with broken hearts," said the Rev. Ruben Diaz, who gave the invocation in New York after the singing of the Dominican and U.S. national anthems. New York's outdoor, interfaith ceremony took place at Riis Park, about two miles from the crash site on the oceanfront Rockaway Penin- sula of Queens. Mourners included Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, Gov. George Pataki and U.S. Sens. Charles Schumer and Hillary Rod- ham Clinton. It was intended to unite two com- munities that had little contact before the Nov. 12 crash. Many of the dead came from Washington Heights, a neighborhood that i s home to the largest Dominican com- munity outside the Dominican Republic. Belle Harbor, roughly 13 miles away, is largely Irish, Italian and Jewish. "What binds us together today . are the tears, a river of tears day and night," said Rabbi Michael Miller. Golf industry Internships/ Careers Available Maio! Go/uC mpanies Are Recruint, Coreer/Internship Posions Sales/ar ig Media www.1800GolfJobs.com < "We shed rivers of tears for brothers and sisters, friends and lovers, whose companionship has been torn away so suddenly." About 1,000 people attended the New York service, including Adri- ana Objio, who lost her father, Sigfrido Objio, a former Dominican ambassador to the United Nations. She said she was especially moved when tenor Ronan Tynan sang "Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears," a song about Irish immigrants at Ellis Island. "I thought of the Dominican Republic and my father, and that we won't ever see him again," she said. Some 1,500 miles away, grief- stricken relatives crowded into the tiny Altagiacia Catholic Church in Ojo de Agua, Dominican Republic. About 100 people packed the church and spilled out into the yard behind for the funeral Mass remem- bering Jose Vicente Infante, 38, the first victim of Flight 587 to be returned to the island. "Where are you, Vicentito?" his brother, 42-year-old Radames Infante, sobbed to a picture of Jose Vicente pasted to the outside of his blue coffin. "I didn't even get to see his face. They could only identify him by his fingerprints." Infante lived in both countries. On his last trip to the United States, the car salesman was scouting for vehi- cles he could import to the dealership in the capital, Santo Domingo. .a.a Israeli-Palestinian Coexistence: - What went wrong? - Why the violence? MOSCOW Chechen envoy meets with Putin A prominent representative of Chechnya's rebels met with an envoy of President Vladimir Putin yesterday for the first face-to-face talks on ending hostilities since renewed war broke out in the separatist region two years ago. Viktor Kazantsev, Putin's envoy for Chechnya, met behind closed doors at Moscow's Sheremetyevo-2 internation- al airport with Akhmed Zakayev, a rep- resentative of Chechnya's rebel president Aslan Maskhadov. Zakayev flew in from Turkey. Kazantsev said the two-hour meeting "went exclusively along the lines of the recent statement" by Putin, according to the Interfax news agency. He was referring to a speech Putin made Sept. 24 outlinitgRussia' response to the terror attacks in the United States, in which he urged Chechen rebels to discuss disarming and abandoning their separatist fight. LIMA, Peru Bus plunges from highway, killing 25 A bus plunged from a mountain highway in Peru's central Andes into a 600-foot ravine yesterday, killing at least 25 people and injuring 20 others, the country's leading radio station said. The accident occurred in the rural area of Angash, about 110 miles northeast of the capital, Lima, police said. Authorities have not yet con- firmed the number of casualties. Radioprogramas reported that the bus was heading from the provincial capital of Cerro de Pasco and that it was just 4 miles from its destination when it crashed. The cause of the crash was unclear. Scores of people are killed in bus accidents each year in Peru due to inadequate maintenance of older vehicles, winding mountain roads and speeding. TULSA. Okla. Planned oil merger worth $35 billion Phillips Petroleum Co. and Conoco Inc. have signed an agreement to merge in a deal tentatively worth $35 billion, the companies announced yes- terday. - The new business will be called ConocoPhillips and is expected to be the nation's third-biggest oil and gas company in terms of production. It will be the fifth-biggest refiner in the world. The merger still needs to be approved by the government and shareholders. Under the terms of the deal, Phillips shareholders will get one share of ConocoPhillips stock for each Phillips share they own. Conoco shareholders will get 0.468 shares of the new stock. The companies said in a statement that the merger would result in better growth opportunities, improved effi- ciency and development of energy exploration and production. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 6 a Presented by: Dr. Yossi Olmert. Monday, November 19, 2001, 7:30 pm Pendleton Room, Michigan Union Dr. Olmert , a scholar of Middle Eastern history, is former head of the Government Press Office in Israel, as well as advisor to former Israeli Prime Minister Shamir. Sponsored by American Movement for Israel - Hamagshamim, Israel Michigan Public Affairs Committee, Zionist Organization of Michigan, and Counsel General of Israel for the Midwest. For more info call 769-0500 SAY IT VAQINA* _ 1Ii + 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 $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. 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