2A - The Michigan Daily --Tuesday, April 16, 2002 NATION/WORLD Sharon: Forces in Ramallal RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) - Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said yesterday that Israeli troops would press ahead with a campaign against Palestinian militants in two major West Bank towns despite U.S. pleas for a full withdrawal. Israel also grabbed a senior aide to Yasser Arafat whom Sharon says was behind suicide bombings. But Sharon told President Bush in a telephone conversation yester- day that Israeli troops would, within a week, pull out of, Jenin and Nablus, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said. However, Sharon said in a CNN interview that Israeli forces would remain indefinitely in Ramallah, where they surround Arafat's headquarters, and in Beth- lehem until terrorists surrender for trial or exile. "Altogether, we are on our way out," Sharon said in the first indication of a time frame for ending the large-scale campaign against Palestinian militants that began March 29. Secretary of State Colin Powell, meanwhile, continued his efforts to calm regional violence, visiting Lebanon and Syria. He also sup- ported an Israeli proposal for a Mideast peace conference led by the United States, saying it would be "a way to get the parties together and talking." Powell said the United States would not host the conference, which Sharon wants Arafat excluded from. The Israeli withdrawal was far from the complete rollback that the American government is seeking. The two exceptions to the pullback Sharon gave were Bethlehem, where Israeli forces are engaged in a standoff with more than 200 armed men in the Church of the Nativity, and Ramallah, where tostay Israeli troops surround Palestinian leader Arafat's office. Sharon said Israeli forces will not leave Bethlehem until the standoff is over and will not leave Ramallah until those behind the October assassination of Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi are handed over. In response, Palestinian Informa- tion Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo said, "We don't plan to deal with these conditions. He must leave every city that has been reoccupied without any conditions. We are not going to bargain with the Israelis over every town and village." NEWS IN BRIEF . ~I JERUSALEM Powell in favor of peace conference Secretary of State Colin Powell on Monday embraced the idea of an international conference aimed at stopping Middle East violence and restarting Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. Sidestepping a clash with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who wants to exclude Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, Powell said the meeting might be held at the foreign minister level. But European and Arab leaders said any such conference needs Arafat's presence to be effective. "It's a way to get the parties together and talking," Powell said on the ninth day of a peace mission that has made little progress so far. Pressing on, Powell will meet today with Sharon for a third time and is making arrangements to visit Arafat for a second time Wednesday in his battered Ramallah headquarters, U.S. officials said. "We will maintain close contact with both sides in the coming days," the State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said. Powell said the United States would not necessarily be host for such a conference and that Arafat could send high-level Palestinian officials to represent him if talks were held at the foreign minister level. a Men stand trial for bomb attempt on Strasbourg The Washington Post BERLIN - With its single spire, the Gothic Cathedral of Notre Dame, once the tallest build- ing in Christendom, has dominated the skyline of the French city of Strasbourg for centuries. On Dec. 23, 2000, the marketplace beneath the cathedral was bustling with shoppers and tourists - a scene captured on video by a group of men believed to be Algerians who had traveled by car from Germany. "This cathedral is God's enemy," an Arabic speaker said on the shaky 20-minute video, which also recorded jihad battle songs on the car's cas- sette player as the men allegedly planned a bomb attack on the marketplace. "Here we see the ene- mies of God as they stroll about. You will go to hell, God willing." The video captured the group's final preparations to set off a bomb eight days later, during New Year's celebrations, and unleash what could have been one of Europe's deadliest terrorist attacks, according to German police and prosecutors. An intercepted phone call between one of the men seeking more cash and the group's alleged leader, who was based in London, tipped British intelligence to the plot, according to a report by Italy's antiterror- ist police. On Dec. 26, a special German police unit raided apartments the men had rented in Frankfurt. The police found a bomb-making laboratory and seized a detonation device, machine guns, rifles with long-distance sights, $14,000 in cash, fake pass- ports made in Thailand and the homemade video. Yesterday, in one of the first major trials of a cell linked to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network, five men went on trial in Frankfurt for planning the attack in Strasbourg. They are CAIROEgypt New video declares Sept. 11 a 'victory' Osama bin Laden, his top deputy and a man identified as a Sept. 11 attacker were shown in brief video excerpts aired yesterday by the pan-Arab satellite sta- tion Al-Jazeera. It wasn't clear when the tapes were made. The deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, was shown claiming the Sept. 11 attacks as a "great victory." An Al-Jazeera official told The Associated Press the tapes were received a few days ago at its headquarters in Doha, Qatar. Al-Jazeera, known for airing bin Laden statements, said it would air the complete tapes Thursday. It was not immediately clear how the station received the tapes. The excerpts aired by the Arab station yesterday were part of a series of clips from what appeared to be videotapes from bin Laden's al-Qaida network. In one, E bin Laden and al-Zawahri kneeled side-by-side. Only al-Zawahri was shown speaking. Al-Jazeera also showed a man identified as one of the Sept. 11 hijackers speak- ing to the camera in a style similar to videotapes made by Palestinian suicide bombers before attacks. Concrete barriers cordon the public entrance of the court house in Frankfurt, Germany yesterday. charged with planning to commit murder, planning to cause an explosion, belonging to a terrorist organization and falsifying documents, as well as various weapons offenses. I . I Life moves you in any directions. KI HAE, South Korea Thirty-nine survive South Korean crash An Air China jet carrying 166 people crashed into a mountain in rain and fog yesterday as it prepared to land in South Korea's second largest city. Thirty-nine people survived, police said. The Boeing 767-200, on a direct flight from Beijing, was approaching Kimhae Airport near Busan when it hit the mountainside near a residential area, police said. There were no casual- ties on the ground, they said. Survivor Kim Mun-hak, 35, told the cable news network YTN that Flight CA-129 crashed shortly after an announcement advising passengers to buckle their seat belts. "The plane crashed with a roaring sound, and I managed to come out from the plane, and I saw thick smoke and. flames," he said. The jet hit one side of the 1,000-foot mountain and plowed toward the peak, leaving a trail of fallen trees 30 yards wide and 100 yards long. KANDAHAR, Afghanistan U.S. soldiers die in accidental explosion At least four U.S. soldiers were killed yesterday and a fifth was injured when rockets they were try- ing to destroy accidentally blew up. The casualty toll could rise because some soldiers were missing after the noontime explosion, U.S. officials said. The accident, coming at a time of increased combat activity as the winter snows melt in the rugged Afghan mountains, highlights the dangers troops face even when not under hostile fire, Pentagon offi- cials said. The blast occurred at a demolition range next to the compound that once housed former Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, accord- ing to local government spokesman Yusuf Pashtun. Several U.S. special forces troops live in the compound. 6 ROME U.S. cardinals invited to Rome to visit Pope Pope John Paul II has summoned American cardinals to the Vatican for an extraordinary meeting to talk about sex abuse scandals in the U.S. church. The talks will take place early next week, a senior Vatican official said yes- terday. The official said the cardinals would meet with some Vatican officials as well as the pope. A source close to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said the meeting has been scheduled for April 23-24. The source spoke on condition of anonymity. "Bringing together this level of Church leadership in Rome on this most serious issue is the right move at the right time," Detroit's Cardinal Adam Maida, who plans to attend, said in a statement. Maida is leader of the Arch- diocese of Detroit's 1.4 million Roman Catholics. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. - __idiig n _ il_ 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. 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