2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 11, 2002 NATION/WORLD OPEC will not pump more oillWBEF* . x* HEALIN S OMARUD HEWOL LONDON (AP) - OPEC has no plans to pump more oil to replace the crude Iraq is withholding from the market, reasoning that the recent spike in oil prices will ease once violence between Israel and the Pales- tinians abates, the group's top official said yesterday. OPEC Secretary-general Ali Rodriguez defended the decision to keep output steady until at least late June by insisting that global supplies were "normal" in relation to the physical demand for crude. Oil prices seesawed on a day of conflicting market signals. Iran's oil minister reaffirmed that his country would not join Iraq in suspending its crude exports unless other Muslim countries also do the same. However, the International Energy Agency warned that political uncertainties in the Middle East and labor strife in Venezuela still could upset the market. May contracts of North Sea Brent crude rose 22 cents a barrel in London before slipping to $26.01, down 7 cents from Tuesday's close. In New York, contacts of light, sweet crude for May delivery rose 31 cents to close at $26.13 a barrel "Twenty-six dollar Brent isn't a terrible, terrible number," said Peter Gignoux, head of the petroleum desk at Salomon Smith Barney. But he hastened to add: "It's not a great number." The big question, Gignoux said, is how quickly other oil producers can replace the crude that Iraq has kept away from markets. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein suspended oil exports on Monday for 30 days or until Israel withdraws from the Palestinian territories. Iraq, which has a daily production capacity of 2.5 million barrels, exports at least 1.8 million barrels a day under the close supervision of the United Nations. Iraq is OPEC's third-largest producer but doesn't par- ticipate in the group's production agreements. Iran and Libya had earlier expressed support for the idea of using an embargo as a means of pressur- ing the United States to lean on Israel to end its mili- tary offensive against the Palestinians. Libya has been quiet on the issue since Iraq began its boycott, but Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zangeneh insisted that Iran would not act on its own to suspend its crude shipments. Iran is OPEC's second-largest producer after Saudi Arabia. Zangeneh said political tensions and speculation are driving the crude market and insisted there is no short- fall in global supplies. Rodriguez said that Iran and Libya both had assured him they would not restrict output. OPEC will stick to its current production ceiling of 21.7 million barrels a day until June 26, when oil ministers from the group's 11 member countries are to meet again, Rodriguez told reporters at OPEC's headquarters in Vienna, Austria. Powell not shaken by violent surge WASH INGTON _-ai Bush pushes for U.S. ban on cloning0 President Bush pressed the Senate yesterday to ban cloning of human embryos for research, saying science must not rush ahead "without an ethical compass." Senators promised a fight, seeing great promise in cloning for cures of terrible afflictions. Bush called medical researchers, ethicists, lawmakers, ministers and disabled people to the White House to explain why he objects to human cloning and to embrace a ban proposed by Sens. Sam Brownback and Mary Landrieu. "We can pursue medical research with a clear sense of moral purpose, or we can travel without an ethical compass into a world we could live to regret," Bush said. "How we answer the question of human cloning will place us on one path or the other." "Life is a creation, not a commodity," he added. The president was looking to tamp down an evolving Senate compromise, crafted by Sens. Arlen Specter, Edward Kennedy, Tom Harkin and Dianne Fein- stein, that would outlaw cloning for reproductive purposes but allow it for research on illnesses such as cancer, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. "It would be a mistake for the U.S. Senate to allow any kind of human cloning to come out of that chamber' Bush said. CIA accused of spying on Russian military The Russian successor to the KGB yesterday accused the CIA of trying to acquire military secrets, allegations that include such traditional spy tradecraft as invisible ink, secret drop points and mind-altering drugs. Russian television showed grainy footage provided by security services. Mark Mansfield, spokesman for the Langley, Va.-based CIA, declined to comment. Agency officials routinely decline to discuss foreign allegations of U.S. espionage. Despite the end of the Cold War, experts say the spy business is alive and well between Russia and the United States and that both sides have a healthy interest in trying to predict the other's next moves - even if they're now allies. A spokesman for the Federal Security Service, the Soviet-era KGB's chief suc- cessor, said CIA officers posing as embassy officials in Russia and another, * unidentified ex-Soviet republic had tried to recruit an employee at a secret Russian Defense Ministry installation. The security service interfered at an early stage and was able to monitor the CIA officers' activities and prevent serious damage to Russia's security, the spokesman said on condition of anonymity. MADRID, Spain (AP) - Secretary of State Colin Powell said yesterday he would push ahead with his peacekeeping mission in the Middle East despite Israel's refusal to halt military incursions and its objections to his meeting Yasser Arafat. Powell brushed aside Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's assertion that the Arafat meeting this week- end would be "a tragic mistake" and said his mission was "not in the least in jeopardy." He said he hoped Sharon would help the meeting take place and also ease restrictions on Arafat in Ramallah to help him communicate more readily with other Palestinian leaders. "He is the partner that Israel will have to deal with," Powell said afterhis peace mission was endorsed in Madrid by the European Union, the United Nations and Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov. Powell will face daunting challenges as he tries to persuade Sharon to pull back, Arafat to speak against terror and both sides to get back to the peace table. The crux of Powell's two-step plan isto try to arrange a cease-fire between Israel and the Palestini- ans and then steer them into negotiations that would culminate in a Palestinian state on land Israel now holds. But Sharon pledged yesterday to maintain the offensive until Palestinian militias are destroyed. Even if Powell gains a cease-fire, many in the region question how well it might hold if there are more Palestinian suicide attacks. Further, mistrust would make talks about future borders and a Pales- tinian state difficult, with the constant threat of a wider war in the region. As he trekked through the Middle East and then detoured to Spain, Powell made plain that his other objectives include renewing security cooperation between Israel and the Palestinians, asking Saudi Ara- bia for assistance to rebuild Palestinian facilities and organizing a worldwide relief effort for Palestinians. "We understand the difficult situation that Israel finds itself in, but we believe that the best way to relieve this tension, the best way to move forward and provide a solution to the crisis that we find our- selves in, is for the withdrawal of Israeli forces," Powell said at a news conference. Powell is due in Israel late today after a stop in Jor- dan to talk to King Abdullah II. He is to see Sharon in Jerusalem tomorrow and hopes to see Arafat on Saturday. President Bush, after first strongly supporting the. Israeli leader, last week demanded that Sharon call a halt. As a result, U.S. policy is now more in line with the views of Arab and European governments. WRITE FOR THE DAILY THIS SUMMER. E-MAIL THE NEWS EDITORS AT SUMMERNEWs2002 @UMICI.EDu , New At Bell's: Milkshakes $3.25 Vanilla, Strawberry, Chocolate, Caramel, Chocolate Chip, Coffee, Peanut Butter, Mint, Raspberry, Pineapple, and Banana Everyday special of - Two Medium Cheese Pizzas $11.49 Extra Items $1.25 each per Pizza Only $8.49 Monday thru Thursday Special One Large Pizza with Cheese & 1 Item Extra Items $1.40 Each A look at the underside of U of M Purchaser must pay sales tax for both specials OPEN UNTIL 4 A.M . Minimum Delivery $6.00 Price subject to change Corner of State and Packard Coupon expires 4/20/02 995-0232 www.universitysecrets.com SCOREKEPERS Syw+ d&. KABUL, Afghanistan Perpetrators arrested in rocket attack case Afghan officials yesterday announced arrests in a rocket attack on international peacekeepers and a bombing that targeted the country's defense minister. The arrests came as factional fighting persisted within Afghanistan, and a U.N. envoy said establishment of an Afghan army and police force is the only way to ensure long-term stability. Defense Ministry official Mir Jan said four people were taken into custody in the eastern city of Jalalabad, where a bomb exploded Monday near a convoy, missing Defense Minister Mohammed Fahim but killing five people. Five people were arrested in a Kabul neighborhood where two mis- siles were fired Sunday at a German- Danish garrison of peacekeepers, according to Gen. Din Muhammad Jurat, an Interior Ministry official. No one was injured. HONOLULU Taiwanese tmu o be tried in Hono ulu A Chinese cook accused of stab- bing to death the captain and first mate aboard a Taiwanese fishing ves- sel is being brought to trial in Hon- olulu in a rare case in which the United States has asserted jurisdiction over a mutiny on the high seas. The case could throw a spotlight on the issue of human rights abuses at sea and the clandestine practice of catching sharks and slicing off their fins for use in Asian soups and folk remedies.. Shi Lei has been in U.S. custody since his arrest March 21 on suspi- cion of killing the two men during an argument aboard the Full Means 2 while the vessel was in international waters. The first mate's body was found in the ship's freezer; the cap- tain's body had been thrown over- board. DOVER TOWNSHIP, NJ. Police officer shoots neighbors, boss, self A veteran police officer shot five neighbors to death, wounded his boss and then committed suicide, shocking a community still reeling from an almost identical rampage in February. Authorities said yesterday that the officer, Edward Lutes, had apparently feuded with some of his neighbors in Dover Township. They did not elabo- rate, but neighbors said he threw eggs at the home of two of his victims last October. "There was a great deal of acrimony between Mr. Lutes and his neighbors," prosecutor Greg Sakowicz said. "Cer- tainly, it wasn't a random shooting." Some acquaintances portrayed Lutes as the neighborhood grouch and said he had gone through bankruptcy several years ago and lost his girlfriend in a car accident about a year ago. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 01 S$1 CALL CA DRINKS FRIDAY )CUT B E A M D1 JOHN KING AND DANCING 0 --I 26 Taps! Full Menu! BOTTLES Only 750! 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