2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 25, 2003 NATION/WORLD Oil field clashes force many from Iraq NEWS IN BRIEF KUWAIT CITY (AP) - Fighting that just drove up, waving a white around the southern Iraq oil fields that flag. They just surrendered to us," ISTANBUL, Turkey U.S.-led forces had previously thought Krause said. " Snrotests Turkish intervention in Iraq were secure has driven out civilian "A little while later, five more U.S. p firefighters trvinu to mt nt the nil P)WQ dinv Bn ti inaR~~hC &t; y .",s gic11Ll Uy1 g wPULU one e11 well blazes, the top firefighter said yesterday. "It's not nearly as safe as they said it was," said Brian Krause, vice president and senior blowout specialist for Hous- ton-based Boots and Coots. "We're kind of sitting ducks out there." The Iraqi resistance in the oil fields challenges U.S. claims that southern Iraq is quickly falling under allied control. U.S. Marines declared the southern Rumeila oil fields in Iraq unsafe for journalists to visit yesterday, forcing the cancellation of a trip under Marine escort intended to give the media a firsthand view of the blazing wells. U.S. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks said Iraqis set demolitions on some well heads and detonated them, but only seven fires were burning in a field with 500 well heads. Speaking at the U.S. Central Command's Gulf post in Qatar, Brooks said that was "a very important story for the future of Iraq." Krause said he was told that Iraqi fighters dressed as civilians had clashed with British forces near the oil fields Sunday night, forcing the evacu- ation of his firefighting team. "Yesterday, we captured five POWs s s arove up to some rt ush sot- diers waving a white flag, and when they got close they opened up with machine guns." Lynn Wray, a spokeswoman for the British military, said she could not confirm the fighting or location, but said two British soldiers were missing in southern Iraq. U.S. military officials said armed Iraqis in civilian clothes, some of them possibly using women and children as screens, were operating in the southern Rumeila area. Krause was meeting with U.S. mili- tary officials yesterday in Kuwait to discuss tighter security arrangements so his men can pursue the dangerous work of putting out the fires. Securing the Rumeila oil fields was one of the top priorities of commanders of the invasion into Iraq; military plan- ners want to use Iraq's oil output to finance the rebuilding of the country. British forces initially secured the area with nearly all the key infrastruc- ture intact. Krause said putting out the fires appears to be a straightforward job, easier than extinguishing the 700 well fires set by Iraqi forces fleeing Kuwait in the 1991 Gulf War. Um Khaled covers her face with a handkerchief to protect herself from smoke as she walks from the market in a Baghdad suburb. "I don't see them as too difficult," Krause said. "The biggest challenge now is getting in enough water and security." A team of 25 Kuwaiti firefighters operating independently across-the border extinguished one of seven wells known to be burning yesterday, said Sheik Talal Al Sabah, spokesman for Kuwait's oil industry. "Al-Rumeila is a large field," Al Sabah said. "In the area where the Kuwaiti team is working, it is safe." U U Special rebate offer Enroll now and get $100 back!. Receive $100 back through Kaplan's Rebate' when you enroll in an LSAT, MCAT, GMAT, GRE, DAT or TOEFL classroom course between March 1St-March 31St Call or visit us online for more Information or to enroll. ESSAY CONTEST For UM Students The International Institute invites students to submit 1,000-word essays, to be con- sidered for publication and a $250 prize, in response to the symposium, "For a University of the World," on Thurs, 3/27, 2:30-4 pm, Power Center. This is part of the inauguration of UM President Mary Sue Coleman Deadline: 5 pm, Wed, 4/2. Info/submissions: akehoe@umich.edu 1 -800-KAP-TEST wi kaptest.com/100rebate Test names are registered trademarks of their respective owners. tTo be eligible, you must enroll between March 1-31, 2003. Other restrictions applyCall 1-800-KAP-TEST or visit kaptest.com/100rebate for details. ra- A , l' f 9 0 0 0 e >been taking crazy pills. Free 10GB iPod with a 12 or 17 in. PowerBook. The Americans and Kuwaitis plan to meet today to coordinate their efforts and get water and fire teams to wells burning deeper inside Iraq. The far- thest one is about 12 miles from the Kuwaiti border. "They've got water. We need water," Krause said. Krause said he heard that Iraqis blew up pipelines 20 miles inside the country during the past day. U.S. mili- tary officials could not immediately confirm the report. First case on spying rejected by court WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court rejected yesterday a case that challenged how the government spies on terror suspects in America, a blow to people who say the administra- tion has used the Sept. 11 terror attacks to encroach on personal freedoms. It was the first terrorism appeal to reach the high court. The justices will have other opportunities to hear cases set in motion by Bush administration efforts to give law enforcers latitude to track and hold potential terrorists. Issues that have inspired the court challenges include government spying, secret detentions, confidential deporta- tion hearings, imprisonment of wartime prisoners without lawyers and access to suspected foreign terrorists held at undisclosed overseas locations. The administration has argued in courts that national security justifies aggressive terror-fighting strategy, and judges have only limited authority to interfere. The Supreme Court refused yester- day to be drawn into a dispute over the boundaries of a post-Sept. 11, 2001, law that gave the government broader surveillance authority. The American Civil Liberties Union and other organizations wanted the justices to consider when the gov- ernment should be allowed to monitor telephone conversations and e-mail, then use the information to prosecute the monitored person. WAR Continued from Page 1 1,500 sorties over Iraq yesterday. So far, 80 percent of the bombs and mis- siles used by the Air Force have been guided by lasers, radar, satellites or video cameras, a defense official said. The Pentagon says the munitions are highly accurate, but Iraq claimed that 252 civilians had been killed Sunday, including 194 in Baghdad. It did not give any figures for military deaths. Asked about ground forces, McChrystal said, "We have not gotten into direct firefights with Republican Guard forces." That seemed a matter of not much time, though. The Army's 3rd Infantry Division was within 50 miles of the capital, bat- tling sandstorms more than Iraqi fire as it neared the approaches to Baghdad. SADDAM Continued from Page 1 fiercest fighting, a hoped-for wel- come from civilians had not materi- alized, British spokesman Col. Chris Vernon said. Coalition forces sent radio broad- casts and leaflets to Basra to urge resi- dents to oppose Saddam's militia from inside the city, Vernon said. Comman- ders have held off storming the city, hoping its Iraqi defenders would sur- render, but they have held firm. Elsewhere yesterday, residents of the border town of Safwan stoned a pass- ing U.S. military convoy. Saddam and his propaganda machine have soared no effort in JERUSALEM Palestinian youth dies in West Bank conflict A Palestinian teenager was shot to death yesterday during a clash with Israeli soldiers on the West Bank as troops searched houses on a routine sweep for militants. Three other youths were wounded, witnesses said. Ahmed Abahreh, 15, was shot in the head, according to doctors at Jenin Hos- pital in the West Bank. Witnesses said Abahreh was throwing stones at the sol- diers. The army said he tossed a home- made firebomb at troops. Another youth was injured in the leg. The army said a Palestinian was hurt when a firebomb exploded in his hand but it was unclear whether it was the same boy. Two other Palestinians were wounded when troops fired on them after they climbed aboard an army vehi- cle, the army said. Their condition was unknown. The skirmishes came as troops dis- mantled an illegal Jewish settlement near. the West Bank city of Hebron. HONG KONG Doctors find lead as fear of disease grows A mystery disease spread new fears across Asia yesterday as Singapore quarantined hundreds of people, and Hong Kong and Vietnam reported more deaths amid closed schools and growing fear. At the same time, scientists in Gene- va and the United States said they believe the cause of the flu-like ailment that has stymied them for weeks could A U.S. special envoy rushed back to Turkey but failed to reach agreement yes- terday on Turkey's plans to send troops into northern Iraq over Washington's objections. Fearing friendly fire incidents with U.S. forces and clashes with Iraqi Kurds, the United States opposes Turkish intervention. President Bush said Sunday his adminis- tration had made clear that it expected the Turks to keep out of northern Iraq. U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, who was accompanied by U.S. Ambassador Robert Pearson and American military officials in his meetings with Turkish leaders, said afterward that no agreement had been reached. He pledged to hold more talks today. Opposition to a Turkish intervention increased yesterday with Germany and Belgium announcing that a Turkish incursion could force NATO to review its mission to boost the country's defenses against a possible Iraqi attack. The coun- tries said such a move would compromise the defensive basis of NATO's deploy- ment of AWACS surveillance planes and other specialist units to Turkey. The European Union also warned Turkey against entering northern Iraq. Such a move could hurt Ankara's candidacy to join the union. Even so, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan discussed a possible Turk- ish intervention yesterday with the country's military leader, Gen. Hilmi Ozkok. BAGHDAD, Iraq Iraqi TV station broadcasts prisoners of war Iraqi state television yesterday showed two men said to have been the U.S. crew of an Apache helicopter forced down during heavy fighting in central Iraq. Gen. Tommy Franks, the U.S. war commander, confirmed that one helicop- ter did not return from its mission Sunday and that its two-man crew was missing. The men were identified as Chief Warrant Officer Ronald Young Jr., 26, of Lithia Springs, Ga., and Chief Warrant Officer David Williams, 30, of Orlando, Fla. If confirmed, the airmen would be the second set of POWs displayed by the Iraqis in as many days. On Sunday, the Arab satellite station Al-Jazeera carried Iraqi television footage of five U.S. soldiers who were captured near An Nasiriyah, a crossing point over the Euphrates River. Unlike those soldiers, the men shown yesterday did not appear to be injured. The two wore cream-colored pilots' overalls and did not speak to the camera but appeared confused. They turned their heads and looked in different directions while being filmed. One of the men sipped from a glass of water, looking wary but not cowed. be one of the viruses that causes the common cold. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said yesterday that evi- dence is mounting the cause is a coron- avirus, a bug that can cause colds. CDC director Julie Gerberding, in Atlanta, said a form of the virus unlike any seen in humans before has been found in the lungs and other tissue of some victims. Furthermore, patients seem to develop antibodies to the virus as they get sicker with the pneumonia, Gerberding said. VLADIKAVA, Russia Vote may rile out peace in Chechnya Russian officials declared yesterday that the approval of a new constitution by Chechnya's voters has completely discredited the separatist cause, further dimming hopes the Kremlin would negotiate an end to the 3 1/2-year war. The constitution, which confirms the region's status as part of Russia, was overwhelmingly approved in a referen- dum Sunday. The Kremlin had advertised the referendum as the beginning of a peace process for Chechnya, which since 1994 has experienced two brutal wars pitting Russian forces against separatists and an interim period of de facto independence marked by lawlessness. Critics said no fair vote was possible in a war and that the only path to peace would be to negotiate with rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov - an option Russian officials previously ruled out. -- Compiled from Daily wire reports. 12 in. Display / 867 MHz / 256MB SDRAM / 40GB / Ethernet / DVD-ROM/CD-RW Combo D~rive /13 year warranty & phone support Special Student Price: $1763 You Save: $419 OR The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. 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