2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 11, 2002 NATION/WORLD 01 Israeli warplanes bomb Gaza City BEERSHEBA, Israel (AP) - Two Palestinian gunmen sprang from a car and sprayed automatic gunfire at Israelis outside a military base in the southern desert city of Beersheba yesterday, killing two soldiers and seriously wounding five people' before the attackers were shot dead by troops. In apparent retaliation, Israeli warplanes and heli- copters struck the main Palestinian security installa- tion in Gaza City and what Israel said was a rocket factory in the nearby Jebalya refugee camp. Although the security building had been evac- uated before the strike, at least a dozen people were taken to the hospital, most suffering from shock and cuts, hospital officials said. The injured included two workers at the nearby offices of the United Nations, where all the win- dows were blown out. The Israeli army declined to comment. The U.N. envoy to the region, Terje Roed-Larsen, condemned the Israeli strike in a statement express- ing "outrage" over such a heavy bombardment so close to civilian areas and U.N. offices. "Israel's security needs will not be met by hit- ting civilian targets or by destroying the Pales- tinians' ability to police and maintain order," the statement said. For the first time in more than 16 months of fighting, Palestinians fired two high-powered Qassem-2-type rockets into Israel from the Gaza Strip, Israel's military said. The rockets landed in farm fields and no one was injured,'but Israel said it regarded Palestinian use of the weapon as a serious escalation. The shooting attack in Beersheba came just hours before Prime Minister Ariel Sharon returned home from a U.S. visit. During the visit, the Americans said they would press Yasser Arafat to clamp down on militants but turned down Sharon's request to cut contacts with the Palestinian leader. The gunmen started shooting with automatic weapons outside a cafe near the gates of the army's southern command headquarters in the center of the city, police said. Many soldiers were on the streets during their lunch break yesterday afternoon, and they quickly began firing back at the attackers, who were shot dead within minutes, witnesses and officials said. The seven people shot by the attackers included soldiers and civilians, and two women soldiers died shortly thereafter, according to Israeli officials. "I was on the street and suddenly the two got out of a car and started firing in all directions," Israeli army Capt. Guy Shaham told Israel Radio. "They were spraying from the hip in all directions." "I whipped out my gun and started firing back at them," Shaham said, adding that he felled one of the attackers. NEWS IN BRIEF 2DIEFRMAONTH1 KARACHI, Pakistan Musharraf wants economic, political aid When he meets with President Bush this week, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf will be looking for more than a pat on the back for helping the war on ter- rorism. He wants economic aid and political support to strengthen his hand against Islamic extremists who have challenged him over the war in Afghanistan and Pak- istan's crisis with India. Musharraf, who meets Bush on Wednesday, needs to show both friends and foes at home that he has the firm support of the United States as he seeks to steer Pakistan away from the fundamentalist course his predecessors followed for nearly 20 years. To succeed, analysts believe Musharraf will have to show his people that the new relationship with America will bring tangible improvements to their lives. Some Pak- istanis want Washington to forgive Pakistan's $3 billion official debt, encourage U.S. investment in Pakistan and open the huge American market to Pakistani exports. "He needs more of a reassurance from the Bush administration that the relation- ship that Pakistan is now forging with the United States is a permanent one and that after the war on terrorism is over, the United States is not going to abandon us," said Riffat Hussein, a professor of international relations at Qaid-e-Aam University in Islamabad. HOUSTON Experts say Enron lawyers may be sued * Fight against terrorism sparks hunt for Hussein WASHINGTON (AP) - Emboldened by success in Afghanistan, some lawmakers are beating the drum for quick action to get rid of Iraq's Saddam Hussein. They take a different view of other nations singled out by President Bush as trouble. Saddam should be removed, and soon, Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D - Conn.) said yesterday. "He is a time bomb." An Iranian official, speaking for a government also labeled part of an "axis of evil" by Bush, bris- tled at the president's threatening language but pledged cooperation in keeping al-Qaida terrorists out of his country. "What we have experienced in the past couple of weeks has been a great deal of U.S. rhetoric, outright animosity and hostility, that has been put by various U.S. officials against my country," Javad Zarif, Iran's deputy foreign minister for international affairs, said on "Fox News Sunday. But he said al-Qaida terrorists are "enemies" of Iran and if any are found in his country, "we will return them to their own countries or to the govern- ment of Afghanistan." Bush's State of the Union speech, lumping Iran, Iraq and North Korea together as an axis threaten- ing international security, continues to resonate - through Congress and around the world - almost two weeks after its delivery.North Korea called off a visit by a group of former U.S. ambassadors in reaction to Bush's harsh words, two members of that unofficial delegation said over the week- end. An internal Enron Corp. report and a request for more information by the bank- rupt company's creditors have heightened the possibility that Enron's outside lawyers could be sued, legal experts say. The Houston law firm of Vinson & Elkins is vulnerable to lawsuits by Enron's creditors, shareholders, former employees and even the company itself, the observers say. Last week's report by a special committee of Enron's board provided new details about partnerships that inflated Enron's profits and hid losses. The report also gave a rare glimpse at the work done by a major corporation's law firm. The authors said Vinson & Elkins helped Enron obscure details of the partnerships that seemed designed to enrich insiders instead of benefiting Enron. "The report didn't paint a pretty picture for Vinson & Elkins," said James Fin- berg, a San Francisco lawyer representing pension funds that lost money in Enron investments. "A lot of things were brought to their attention, and they didn't do anything to stop the web of transactions." 01 AP-P HOTO 40-year-old Mohammad Sadeq, who tried to commit suicide, lies In his hospital bed in Mazar-e-Sharlf. , Afghan- e nd simi Fresh men S o p h o mo r e s. t ,....rnpt ft Y \ <4 IC~ r your}4 plno C Cr ie business savvy, but things aren't challenging. Well, come join Staff at the Michigan Daily and become an Account Executive.. advertising locally and nationally, manage your own account ate ad copy, and earn commission based pay. We're talking big warlord promises to fight KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - An Afghan warlord who led the worst fac- tional fighting since the fall of the Tal- iban vowed yesterday to fight rather than step down as governor of an east- ern province. In the north, warlords agreed to create a "security belt" to keep unauthorized weapons out of a major city. Under a plan reminiscent of stories about taming the American Wild West, travelers entering Mazar-e-Sharif will have to check their weapons upon entering - getting them back only on the way out. Checkpoints encircling the northern 'city will keep out guns under a pact by warlords to create a security force run by the central gov- ernment, not local militias, an official said yesterday. Since the fall of the Taliban in November, warlords have been reasserting their authority in several regions. The interim government led by Hamid Karzai has been, working to extend its influence and reduce the role of the militias. Yet with no national army, Karzai's administrationhas little power to impose peace on feuding warlords. At a news conference yesterday in eastern Afghanistan, warlord Bacha Khan said he has 6,000 fighters ready to do battle again with forces loyal to the town council, or shura, of Gardez, who oppose his appointment as gover- nor of surrounding Paktia province. "They are no town council," thun- dered Khan, with a bandoleer of bul- lets across his chest. "They are an al-Qaida council and a Taliban coun- cil." He addedp "We are ready to fight a- Qaida today, tomorrow or any time." Gardez shura leaders deny being al- Qaida or Taliban members and accuse Khan of being unscrupulous and cor- rupt. Fighting between the two sides in January killed at least 60 people. The town council's refusal to accept Khan, whose appointment was confirmed by the government only after he had declared himself governor, threatens efforts by Karzai's administration to extend its authority. The fighting ended with a cease- fire. Khan and shura members held talks with the government in Kabul, the capital, this weekend to seek a longer-term solution. But Khan later said he would not step down if Karzai appoints another governor. The efforts to extend the central government's authority continued as refugees in Pakistan yesterday KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia Asian terrorist group linked to al-Qaida When Yazid Sufaat arrived home to Malaysia after months in southern Afghanistan, police were waiting. Authorities say his arrest has helped expose a Southeast Asian terror net- work that has surprised governments and security experts. They say its struc- ture and capacities are frighteningly similar to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida organization. Since December, Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines have all announced arrests of purported cell members suspected of involvement in a plot to blow up the U.S. Embassy in Singapore, Navy ships and other pro- Western targets in the wealthy city-state. Philippine National Security Adviser Roilo Golez said there are indications that the militant group, which uses the name Jemaah Islamiyah, has become "very active." PORTLAND, Ore. Scalia discusses assisted suicide laws Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia said yesterday that Oregonians, not the high court, should decide. whether to uphold the state's assisted- suicide law. In a speech at Lewis & Clark Law College, Scalia said Oregonians should decide democratically whether ill residents have the right to take their own lives. He said the law shouldn't be the subject of a constitutional battle because it was not based on federal law. Someone in crowd of about 1,000 yelled, "We did that! We did that twice!" referring to two votes by Ore- gonians to uphold the law. "That's fine," Scalia responded. "You don't hear me complaining about Oregon's law." Oregon's law still faces obstacles. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia Milosevic's trial set to begin tomorrow Barely two miles from the apartment houses that mark the northwest limits of this capital lies a training compound.for elite police forces where last summer workers unearthed the bodies of scores of ethnic Albanians killed in the province of Kosovo. The mass grave brought the ugly side of the Balkan wars close to home for many Serbs, the people of Yugoslavia's dominant republic. And that sentiment is at risk of deep- ening as the trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic opens tomorrow before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague. "Every single person I talk to here is very strongly against the Hague tribu- nal," said Biljana Kovacevic-Vuco, a human-rights lawyer who supports the tribunal's work. Compiled from Daily wire reports. 0 0 0 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. Subscrip- tions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Colle- giate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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