2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 7, 2002 NATION/WORLD *I U.S. believes Omar is in Pakistan KANDAHAR, Afghanistan . (AP) - Afghanistan's interim leader promised yesterday that fugitive Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar will be tracked down, even as reports said the one-eyed cleric may have eluded capture and fled to another province. Meanwhile, American officials said the highest- ranking Taliban official in U.S. custody - former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan Abdul Salam Zaeef- has been moved to an American warship. The Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press reported yesterday that U.S. forces and their Afghan allies, backed by airstrikes, were carrying out operations in the Spinghar mountain range of eastern Afghanistan near Jalalabad, where al- engin Nepal fails tc end conflict KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - A brief meel between the leaders of India and Pakistan faile resolve a standoff between the nuclear-armed neight Last night India said it downed a small, unmanned]I istani spy aircraft. The private meeting at a regional summit in Nepal was first between Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf since both c( tries put their armies on war alert last month. The continuing tension was apparent last night as Indian military claimed to have shot down the dr after it intruded 2.5 miles into Indian air space over disputed region of Kashmir. Pakistani officials imm ately denied this, and the state-run news age: claimed the aircraft was India's own. Indian defense analyst C. Uday Bhaskar said in New Di that he did not believe the downing of the aircraft would Qaida holdouts were suspected to be hiding. It said 40 were arrested and handed over to the Americans. Visiting an orphanage in the Afghan capital of Kabul, Prime Minister Hamid Karzai told The Associated Press that Omar, America's most want- ed man after Osama bin Laden, will be taken into custody when found. "We are looking for him, and we will arrest him," Karzai said. Omar appeared to have eluded capture in Baghran, in mountainous central Afghanistan, where government officials claimed a few days ago he was surrounded by anti-Taliban forces negotiating his surrender. Omar's close associate, Indian arm jeeps carry artillery guns to the frontli india-Pakistan border in Samba, 30 miles southwe Jammu, India. to war, but emotions remained high in Kashmir Pakistan have fought two of their three war Himalayan province, which is claimed by both S nations. As they left for home after the two-day South As in Nepal, Vajpayee and Musharraf said neither the nor televised handshakes had eased tensions along mile border that divides their countries. Abdul Wahid, is the tribal chief there. Reports from some former Taliban soldiers say Omar and his former intelligence chief, Abdul Razzak, may be in Zabul province, north of Kan- dahar. Meanwhile, two members of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee said yesterday officials are beginning to believe that bin Laden has fled Afghanistan, possibly for Pakistan. Sen: John Edwards, traveling with other sena- tors in the region, told "Fox News Sunday" that Uzbekistan's military intelligence service believes bin Laden has crossed into Pakistan. Uzbekistan, like Pakistan, borders Afghanistan and has been a U.S. ally in the military campaign. Sharon Arafat for weapons JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon held Yasser ne along Arafat personally responsible yester- est of day for a massive cache of weapons intercepted in the Red Sea, declaring the Palestinian Authority president "a . India and bitter enemy." *s over the At a news conference in the Red outh Asian Sea port of Eilat, where the Israelis put the weapons on show, Sharon sian summit accused Arafat of attempting to ir brief chat thrust the region into a wider war. g the 1,100- He said the arms seizure exposed "the true face" of the Palestinian Authority. Sharon's government, at a Cabinet meeting earlier in the day, threatened to take even tougher action against the Palestinian Authority. Formally declar- ing it an enemy would open up a cata- @ 9 , log of potential diplomatic and military reprisals. The Palestinian Authority, for its Library- part yesterday, strongly denied any ents involvement in- the 50-ton shipment and offered to cooperate in an inves- tigation into the weapons' prove- nance. Palestinian officials accused Israel of a propaganda trick intended y jIS to undermine the mission of U.S. special Middle East envoy Anthony our!. C. Zinni - who, despite the arms controversy, is ending a four-day visit today on a relatively optimistic a' note. "After four days of intensive discus- sions with Israelis and Palestinians, it is clear that, while serious challenges remain, there are real opportunities for progress," State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said yes- terday in Washington. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina Argentina ends link with U.S. doliar Argentina's economy minister announced a sharp devaluation of the peso yes- terday, overriding foreign investors' concerns and ending a decade-long policy pegging the currency one-to-one with the U.S. dollar. Outlining what many expect will be a tricky dual exchange rate, Jorge Remes Lenicov said 1.4 pesos would now buy $1 for import, export and other capital transactions, while individual Argentines would have to buy hard currency on the open market. That free-market rate will be determined after a two-day banking holiday that starts today to allow for the transition from the old currency regime. The announcement came hours after lawmakers granted President Eduardo Duhalde emergency powers to rebuild Argentina's economy, ravaged by nearly four years of recession. Once seen as an inflation-slaying panacea for emerging markets, the dollar peg, in place since 1991, has recently been blamed for dragging Argentina deep- er into the slump by making its goods too expensive to compete abroad or to fend off imports at home. "This is a change of course," Remes Lenicov told a news conference. "The old way wasn't going anywhere." WASHINGTON Dems blame Bush tax cut for economic woes Democrats and Republicans pointed fingers at each other yesterday in a debate over the economy, in what amounted to a game plan for each side's elec- tion-year strategy. Democrats blamed last year's tax cut for vanishing budget surpluses, while Republicans said anyone who criticizes a tax cut must want to raise taxes instead. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) spelled out most candidly the dilemma of law- makers facing new budget deficits and re-election at the same time: Taking back or delaying some of President Bush's 10-year, $1.35 trillion tax cut is not "politically salable," McCain said on NBC's "Meet the Press." Administration officials defended the tax cut, a centerpiece of Bush's first year in office. "The way to stimulate this economy is to give this economy tax relief," Com- merce Secretary Don Evans said yesterday on ABC's "This Week." Democrats led by Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, along with indepen- dent analysts, note the tax cut helps explain why the federal government is now facing a budget deficit after several years of mounting surpluses. 0 Loyola's MSW, accredited since 1921: Winter Term " Clinical specializations: children, families, 1 adults, couples, elderly, health, and school Apply now at the Law social work non-Law Stud n Four dual degree programs: MSW and Child a tude Development (MS); Law (JD); Divinity " Law Students (MDiv); or Child and Family Law (MJ) " S.I. Students " Available at Loyola's Water Tower Campus, Chicago, and at Carthage College, M inimm p Kenosha, Wis. A n.mum hp Also available at Loyola's School of Social Work: 8.50 per h BSW and PhD degree programs3 Chicago's Jesuit University Apply at the hiring table LOYOLA M.S.W. Admissions: outside room 5-180 in UNIVERSITY Jude Gonzales he Law Librarys CHICAGO at 312.915.7289 Graduate School 3 2undergroun ' ?c. .of Social Work E-mail: addition. UNITED STATES Report: College too costly in 45 states A new study being released today on the skyrocketing cost of higher educa- tion says only five states have four-year public colleges that low-income stu- dents can afford without financial aid. In a third of all states, low-income students need loans even to attend some two-year community colleges, the study found. The findings of the year-old Lumina Foundation for Education have sparked sharp criticism from higher education groups. The foundation rated nearly 3,000 colleges and universities, and said that while at least half the public four-year schools in 40 states are financially manageable for median-income stu- dents, those students often need loans. Only Alaska, Arkansas, Hawaii, Kentucky and Wyoming offer four- year public colleges that are affordable to low-income people, it said. WASHINGTON Anti-terrorism costs exceed $60 billion Congress has provided more than $60 billion since September to com- bat terrorism at home and abroad and to rebuild from the attacks on New York and Washington. That's roughly five times what the nation spent to fight terrorism in the previ- ous year. Some costs are one-time expenses or will diminish in coming years - like helping communities recover from the Sept. 11 devastation, but other anti-terrorism programs are sure to grow. When he sends Congress his $2 trillion budget for fiscal 2003 next month, President Bush is expected to propose billions more for the military's $345 billion wartime bud- get for the rest of this year, plus a hefty increase for next year for gov- ernment-wide anti-terrorism efforts. Fiscal 2003 begins Oct. 1. SAN FRANCISCO Search continues for Oregon killer A stolen vehicle linked to a man whose wife and three young children were slain in Oregon was found yester- day at San Francisco International Air- port, the FBI said. Christian Longo, 27, is accused of killing his wife and children and dump- ing their bodies into two Pacific Coast inlets near the towns of Newport and Waldport, Ore. The family had moved to the Newport area from Ypsilanti about three months earlier, police said. A warrant for his arrest was issued Dec. 28, and he is the subject of a nationwide manhunt. Police have not revealed a possible motive for the killings. But they say Longo, who owned a construction cleaning company in Michigan, had faced a multitude of legal and financial problems. Police believe Longo may have been using the vehicle as a base, driving another car to and from the airport. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 0 AA/EOE 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. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-0552; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. 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