2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 23, 2002 NATION/WORLD Five dead after Israeli offensive NEWS IN BRIEF. .1 -4. RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) - Israeli tanks tightened their stranglehold on Yasser Arafat's office yesterday, flattening buildings in his devastated compound and sparking curfew-defying marches and clashes that left five Palestinians dead through- out the West Bank. Palestinian leaders declared a general strike for today, appealed to the Arab world for help and called on their people to resist the Israeli operation, which began Thursday after a Palestinian suicide bomber blew up a Tel Aviv bus, killing himself and six others. In Washington, White House spokeswoman Jeanne Mamo said yesterday that Israel's assault was "not helpful in reducing terrorist violence or promoting Palestinian reforms."1 France led a European wave of criticism against the Israeli assault, calling it "unacceptable." A Greek Foreign Ministry statement said that Arafat asked Greece to work with the United States and Europe to end the siege. The U.N. Security Council was to con- vene today about the siege. Israelis themselves debated the usefulness of the operation, the third inside Arafat's compound this year, especially given the persistent reports that its actual goal was to compel Arafat to leave the Pales- tinian territories - a dramatic prospect that could redefine the terms of the current conflict. Palestinian officials had also warned that Israel's pulverization of Arafat's compound endangered the safety of the feeble 72-year-old Palestinian leader, and after nightfall Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said the demolition work had ended. "There is no physical danger, neither to Arafat nor to the other people," Peres said yesterday on CNN's Late Edition. "We don't want to expel him, we don't want to kill him, we don't want to hurt him," he said. "There was a vote in the government. The majority of the gov- ernment decided against expulsion." Earlier in the day, Israeli soldiers fired tear gas and bullets to try to stop demonstrations in West Bank towns as thousands of marchers disregarded military orders confining them to their homes. Four protesters were killed during the demonstrations, Palestinians said. Later, a 13-year-old boy was also killed under dis- puted circumstances: Palestinians said he was shot while violating the curfew, while Israeli military sources said a firebomb he was trying to light ignited his clothing instead. For three days, huge Israeli bulldozers systemati- cally knocked down buildings in the city-block- sized compound in the West Bank town of Ramallah, closing in on Arafat's office, where the beleaguered leader was holed up in four rooms with his aides. The Israelis surrounded the building with barbed wire. Water and electricity in the office building were cut for several hours. Palestinians interpreted this as pressure on Arafat, who continued to resist Israeli demands to hand over the people in his office. The Israeli military said the lines were cut by accident as huge bulldozers leveled structures in the area and that the lines were later repaired. A few hundred yards away, dozens of protesters defied army orders to return to their homes. As sol- diers used loudspeakers to declare that the curfew was still in effect, the demonstrators chanted back, "No more curfew!" In a statement, the Palestinian parliament called on Palestinians to "show their willingness to resist this escalation," warning that Israel's operation might lead to a regional explosion and blaming both Israel and the United States. "The American administration bears responsibility of blood of our people and of our leadership," the statement said, a reference to U.S. APPHuO Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon addresses a gathering of more than 2,000 Christians as he officially opened the 23rd Feast of the Tabernacles. support for Israel. Israel insisted that Arafat was not a target, but demanded the surrender of everyone inside his office, about 200 people, saying that most would probably be released. Initially, Israel had said only some 20 people inside were wanted and singled out West Bank intelligence chief Tawfiq Tirawi. Dore Gold, an adviser to Sharon, said 38 Pales- tinians had turned themselves in since Thursday, and "most of them" were released. Sharon spokesman Raanan Gissin said terrorists were hid- ing inside, and "as long as they are not put on trial before their Maker or before a judge, we will not end the siege." HEDIE ROM AON H Oi" , KINDU, Congo Eastern Congolese rebels kill 50 civilians When a notorious rebel commander showed up leading a crackdown on pro- government tribal fighters in eastern Congo, it ended in the cold-blooded murder of more than 50 civilians. Coming a month after Congo and neighboring Rwanda signed a peace deal, the Aug. 30 bloodbath is a sign that for many people in and around this vast Central African country, their four years of horror are far from over. Signs of trouble appeared last month when the bodies of dozens of Rwandan-backed rebels floated downstream past this Congo River port in the Maniema province. They were victims of ambushes by Mayi Mayi tribal fighters in Maniema, whose history is written in the blood of cannibalism, the hunt for slaves and ele- phant ivory and tribal wars. Then 14,000 people displaced by the fighting flooded into Kindu, whispering how rebel troops had shot and killed at least 56 civilians on a large island in the river on the morning of Aug. 30 after tying their hands behind their backs and grilling them for information about the Mayi Mayi. Some 200 men are missing after they were seized by rebel troops led by Gabriel Amisi, deputy chief of staff for the army of the Rwandan-backed Con- golese Rally for Democracy, human rights activists said. ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast Bloodshed follows Ivory Coast uprisings French troop reinforcements and helicopters touched down in Ivory Coast yes- terday to protect Westerners in the former French colony, as a showdown loomed between loyalists and forces behind the West African nation's bloodiest-ever mili- tary uprising. Fears grew of wider conflict splitting West Africa's onetime economic power- house, as thousands of angry civilians in the second-largest city, Bouake, marched in support of coup forces who have seized that city, and one other in Ivory Coast's predominantly Muslim north. "We are armed to the teeth, and there is no going back," a rebel commander known by the nom de guerre Samsara 110 declared in the rebel-held city of Korhogo. Late yesterday, shooting was heard in Bouake, but it died down after about 30 minutes. Residents were on edge, waiting for a government assault that President Laurent Gbagbo's government has pledged since Saturday would be imminent. Worried residents of Bouake included about 100 American children, ranging in age from infants to 12-year-old school children, who attend a boarding school in the city. 6 Looking for ADVENTURE...? Experience Japan at the German presidential election proves close Spend a semester or year living in Japan! Earn University of Michigan credit! Finandal Aid & Scholarships readily available! No previous Japanese knowledge required! All majors welcome! Sample Courses for the 2002-03 Academic Year: Environmental Sciences in Japan; Japanese Economics & Business; Culture &Art BERLIN (AP) - Chancellor Ger- hard Schroeder's Social Democrats won Germany's closest postwar elec- tion yesterday, after a campaign that focused on fears of a war with Iraq and unleashed anti-American rhetoric. A jubilant Schroeder appeared arm- in-arm with Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer of the Greens party, the partner in his governing coalition, before cheering supporters at Social Democ- ratic Party headquarters. "We have hard times in front of us and we're going to make it together," Schroeder shouted above the din. With 99.7 percent of the vote count- ed, official results showed the Social Democrats'and Greens comibined won 47.1 percent of the vote to continue courses; Internships For more information contact: JCMU &MSU Office of International Programs are Affirmative G-513 Michigan Union Action/Eqgal (734)764-4311 Opportunity oip@umich.edu Inistutions. www.isp.msu.edu/JCMU z ~ J, __ their coalition for another four years. The conservative challengers led by Bavarian governor Edmund Stoiber had 45.9 percent in a likely alliance with the Free Democrats, who had 7.4 percent. The Social Democrats and environ- mentalist Greens won 305 seats in the new parliament of 601 seats, compared to 294 for the conservative challengers led by Bavarian governor Edmund Stoiber, according to projections by ARD public television. Smaller parties won the remaining seats. Stoiber stopped short of conceding in a speech to rowdy supporters in Munich, but predicted that Schroeder's majority would be too slim to form a lasting coalition. "Should the result not allow us to form a gbvernment, then I predict before you that this Schroeder govern- ment will rule for only a very short time," he said. Stoiber said Schroeder will have to repair relations with Washington, dam- aged by a new German assertiveness that emerged over American determi- nation to oust Saddam Hussein. Schroeder, whose outspoken defi- ance against war with Iraq was credited with giving him a late-push in the tight campaign, said he won't back down. He has insisted he would not commit troops for a war even if the United Nations backs military action. While Schroeder's anti-war stand resonated with German voters, the rhetoric reached a damaging peak in the final days of his campaign when Justice Minister Herta Daeuberl- Gmelin was reported to have compared President Bush to Hitler for threatening war to distract from domestic prob- lems. She denied saying it. The Social Democrats already have made clear she would not have a post if they are re-elected, however Schroeder sought to appease Washington with a conciliatory letter to Bush. Washington reacted cooly - indicating to analysts that a Schroeder team will have to work hard to repair the traditionally strong bond. "It seems to me that for the relation- ship and the Iraq issue itself there's no doubt that Schroeder was trying to tap radical pacifist and anti-American sen- timent in the population and prelimi- narily it doesn't seem to have hurt him. And it may have even helped him," said Jeffrey Gedmin, director of the Aspen Institute think tank in Berlin. Speaking on CNN yesterday, Sen. Joe Biden, chairman of the Senate For- eign Relations Committee, said the "core relationship between the Repub- lic of Germany and the United States is solid. What you had is Schroeder doing what a lot of politicians do, trying to get out his base." Biden (D-Del.) said the relationship between the two countries can be repaired. Stoiber, who used the ruckus over Iraq as ammunition, again accused the chancellor of whipping up emo- tions against the United States for electoral gain. Stoiber, like the chancellor, opposes unilateral U.S. action, but he insists YORK, Pa. Race riots murder trial to select jury Residents have worked for 33 years to build bridges between blacks and whites, ever since the city was para- lyzed for 10 days by race riots that left a young black woman and white rookie police officer dead. The truth of what happened then has remained elusive, but today it could begin to take shape as jury selection begins in the murder trial of three men accused in the fatal shooting of Lillie Belle Allen. One of the men is the city's former mayor, Charlie Robertson.' "I think it's important for all Yorkers to know the truth, to know what hap- pened in 1969," said John Brenner, York's current mayor, who was 1-year- old when the riots erupted. "I think we all want the same thing: who did it, who's responsible for both murders. And we want them to be held accountable." Prosecutors say Robertson, a young police officer at the time, gave ammu- nition to white gangs that ambushed a car Allen, 27, was riding in with rela- tives. The other two men are accused of taking part in the ambush. SACRAMENTO, Calif. California stem cell research underway Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation yesterday to allow embryonic stem cell research in the state, a direct contradic- tion of federal limits on the research. Davis has said the legislation is essential to keep California at the fore- front of medical research. He was joined at the ceremony by actor Christopher Reeve, who has become a medical research activist since he was paralyzed in a horse riding'accident seven years ago. The bill was opposed by the Roman Catholic church and anti-abortion groups, who say the research is tanta- mount to murder because it starts with the destruction of a human embryo. Stem cells, which are found in human embryos, umbilical cords and placentas, can divide and become any kind of cell in the body. WASHINGTON Future of waterways, oceans in jeopardy Six months before the first man land- ed on the moon, a presidential commis- sion urged Congress to use more "fully and wisely" a different'sort of vastness, one teeming with life but just as myste- rious and far closer to home - the world's oceans. More than three decades later, a sec- ond presidential commission, led by a retired admiral who headed the Energy Department in the first Bush adminis-.. tration, says the urgency is even greater than when the Eagle landed. "The oceans are in trouble; the coasts are in trouble; our marine resources are in trouble. These are not challenges we can sweep aside," said James Watkins, sounding more like a lifelong environmentalist than a for- mer chief of naval operations and national security expert. Since the last commission's report in early 1969, pressures have increased on coastal areas that are home to half the nation's population. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 4 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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