2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 18, 2002 NATION/WORLD El-Al hijacking attempt foiled ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) - Security guards on Israel's national airline El Al overpowered a man who tried to hijack a flight from Tel Aviv to Istanbul yesterday. None of the 170 passengers on board the Boeing 757 was harmed and the plane landed safely, said Oktay Cakirlar, an official at Istanbul's Ataturk International Airport. The semi-offficial Anatolia news agency identified the hijacker as Tawfiq Fukra, a 23-year-old Arab with an Israeli passport. Cakirlar said El Al Flight 581 sent out a hijacking signal as it approached Istanbul but the suspect was overcome. "No one was injured," Cakirlar told The Associated Press by telephone. "The terrorist is in custody at the police station at the airport." Turkey's private CNN-Turk and NTV televisions quoted police sources as say- ing that the alleged hijacker was an Israeli Arab and was armed with a knife. The television reports said the man was overpowered by two Israeli security guards aboard the plane. He reportedly first threatened a flight attendant with a knife and tried to approach the cockpit but he was overpowered by two security guards, one posing as a passenger, CNN-Turk television said. "We heard people saying there was fighting and half a minute later it became clear that from row five or six a man ran amok toward the pilot's cabin, attacked a stewardess and tried to enter the cockpit," an Israeli passen- ger on the plane told Israel army radio. "We saw a stewardess running like crazy from the front of the place to the business section ... She was terrified," said the passenger, Menachen Binet. Security guards "threw him to the floor with his legs spread and his face to the floor. The passengers were hysteri- cal but the flight attendants were very cool, they calmed us down," he said. At the airport, passengers could be seen going through security checks, where they were frisked, and passport control. El Al is widely regarded as the world's most protected airline, but also one of the most threatened. From the late 1960s into the 1980s, El Al planes and passengers were subjected to shooting attacks, hijacking and bombing attempts. El Al's formidable security includes armed guards at check-in, on-board marshals and extensive searches of lug- gage. Passengers re told to arrive three hours ahead of flights to allow enough time for the security checks. On the Fourth of July, an Egyptian immigrant, Hesham Mohamed Hadayet, opened fire at the El Al ticket counter at Los Angeles Airport, killing two people before he was shot dead by an airline security guard. Nothing was found to link the incident to terrorist groups and the motive remained unknown. Hadayet, however, had previously told U.S. authorities that he was false- ly accused of being in a militant Egyptian group that the United States now lists as a terror group. NEwsmN BRIEF LARNACA, Cyprus Inspectors anticipate Saddam's response The chief U.N. weapons inspector landed in Cyprus yesterday to assemble his team for a return to Baghdad and said the "question of war and peace" awaits an answer from Saddam Hussein. President Bush has warned that Saddam faces military action if he fails to coop- erate fully with the inspectors, who will fly to Iraq today. Saddam faces a three- week deadline to reveal weapons of mass destruction or provide convincing evidence he no longer has any. Chief U.N. inspector Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei, overseeing the Interna- tional Atomic Energy Agency's search for nuclear arms, flew to Cyprus from Vienna, Austria. They joined about two dozen other members of the advance team assem- bling here to prepare for a resumption of inspections after a nearly four-year absence. "The question of war and peace remains first of all in the hands of Iraq, the Security Council and the members of the Security Council," Blix said. Blix, who will lead the overall mission, said his team was prepared to meet the challenge of ensuring Iraqi compliance. But he said he hoped Iraq would not try to hide anything. The 74-year-old Swedish diplomat said inspectors would be taking along much more sophisticated equipment than was available when the inspection program was suspended in December 1998. Iraq possesses chemical weapons knowledge Iraqi scientists know how to make chemical weapons that can penetrate mili- tary protective clothing, and Iraq imported up to 25 metric tons last month of a powder that is a crucial ingredient to such "dusty" weapons. Iraq told the United Nations the powder was destined for a pharmaceutical compa- ny that a former weapons rispector says was ordered by President Saddam Hussein before the 1991 Persian Gulf War to work on chemical and biological weapons. The powder, sold under the brand name Aerosil, has particles so small that, when coated with deadly poisons, they can pass through the tiniest gaps in protective suits. Experts inside and outside the U.S. government say they are not certain Iraq has dusty chemical weapons. Declassified U.S. intelligence documents say Iraq produced a dusty form of the blister agent mustard in the 1980s and used it during its eight-year war with Iran. If Iraq made and used a powdered form of its deadliest nerve agent, VX, it could kill U.S. troops dressed in full protective gear, according to a 1990 Defense Intelligence Agency assessment. Although the military's protective suits have been improved since then, experts say dusty weapons could penetrate the new suits. 4 0 Israel reponds after weekend Hebron attack HEBRON, West Bank (AP) - Israel's mili- tary appealed to Jewish settler leaders Saturday to restrain vigilantes after an ambush by Islam- ic militants in a dead-end alley left 12 Israelis dead and 14 others wounded. Troops backed by 10 tanks retook control of the divided city Saturday - blindfolding 43 Palestinian suspects and herding them into army buses - as Prime Minister Ariel Sharon faced growing pressure to strike back hard for what Israel calls a "Sabbath massacre." Two Palestinians were killed Saturday by army fire in the West Bank. An army commander, Col. Noam Tibon, said there was concern that Jewish settlers from Hebron and the nearby settlement of Kiryat Arba would strike back once the Sabbath ended at sundown Sat- urday. "This is a huge problem. We will do whatev- er we can to bring law and order," Tibon said. Settlers in Hebron and Kiryat Arba have a history of vigilantism against Palestinians, and Tibon met with settler leaders Saturday to urge restraint. How- ever, settlers refused to call off a protest rally sched- uled at the ambush site after sundown Saturday. Israel's retaliation was expected to focus on Hebron itself, and a Sharon adviser said there was no current plan to expel Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat - as has been demanded by sev- eral Cabinet members, including Foreign Minis- ter Benjamin Netanyahu. Friday night's ambush brought caused ten- sions in Hebron - home to 130,000 Palestini- ans and 450 Jewish settlers - to soar. The attack began after Jewish worshippers, escorted by soldiers, finished Sabbath prayers at the Tomb of the Patriarchs and were walking back to their settlement of Kiryat Arba, about a half mile away. The downtown Hebron shrine is revered by Muslims and Jews as the traditional burial place of the biblical patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Moments after soldiers were told the worship- pers were escorted safely, shots burst from an olive grove and nearby Palestinian homes. An army jeep chased the gunmen into a dead- end alley and was fired on from all directions, Tibon said. Four soldiers were killed. Reinforcements also were shot and killed. They included the Hebron brigade commander, Col. Dror Weinberg, the highest-ranking Israeli officer shot dead in more than two years of Mideast violence. AP PHOTO n the he Mourners gather around the coffins of three Jewish settlers who were killed late Friday i southern West Bank town of Hebron during t funeral procession. ifru thinkroure pregnant.++ CR iUS-O isten, we Care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 97S-4357 Any time, any day, 24 hours- Fusly ovnfidewtbaE Serving Students since 197O. A look at the underside of U of M www.universitysecrets.com I Work hard, play hard... In the same place. Photographer DJ Ridge says no new threats to securty WASHINGTON (AP) - With the Senate set to approve the agency he's expected to lead, President Bush's homeland security adviser played down as "really nothing new" an alleged al-Qaida threat of attacks in New York and Washington yesterday. Tom Ridge also said he doubted the Bush administration would create an agency separate from the FBI to gather domestic intelligence. Several senators said the White House should not pursue that idea without congressional input. Ridge declined to discuss whether he wants to become secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. A senior administration official confirmed Sunday that Ridge, a former Pennsylva- nia governor and close friend of Bush, is the president's choice for the job. Appearing on three morning talk shows yesterday, Ridge tried to mini- mize the alleged al-Qaida threat. "We're familiar with that piece of information. There are no new threats. There are the same old con- ditions," Ridge told "Fox News Sun- day." "It's just part of the continuing threat environment that we assess. It's really nothing new." A correspondent for the Arab satellite TV station Al-Jazeera told The Associated Press he received an unsigned, six-page document on Wednesday, a day after the station broadcast an audiotape believed made by al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden. The United States and other govern- ments blame bin Laden and his al- Qaida terrorist network for the attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center in New York and damaged the Penta- gon in Washington, killing more than 3,000 people on Sept. 11, 2001. While the correspondent says he is certain the statement came from al- Qaida's leadership, Ridge said the administration was unsure of its source, but recognizes that the United States is a primary target. "The war on terrorism has come to our shores. We have to deal with it," he said. Ridge said a recent visit he made to M15, the British domestic intelligence agency, was "very revealing," but added that he thought it was unlikely DURHAM, N. H. Journalist discovers Saddam's e-mail Even Saddam Hussein gets spam. He also gets e-mail purporting to be from U.S. companies offering business deals, and threats, accord- ing to a journalist who figured out a way into an Iraqi government e-mail account and downloaded more than 1,000 messages. Brian McWilliams, a free-lancer who specializes in Internet security, says he hardly needed high-level hacking skills to snoop through e- mail addressed to Saddam. While doing research late one Octo- ber night, the Durham resident clicked on the official Iraqi government web- site, http://www.uruklink.net/iraq. The site, which worked last week but was off line yesterday, included links that allow visitors to, send e- mail to Saddam and allowed users of the government-controlled site, which is hosted in Dubai, to check their own accounts. CHICAGO Doctors grant new life to extinct heart Doctors testing a new treatment for heart attacks said yesterday they have restored life to seemingly dead heart mus- cle by seeding it with cells borrowed from patients' own thigh muscles or bones. The idea is to find an alternative to transplants for people whose hearts are ;:mod i so damaged that they fail to pump blood forcefully enough. This condition, called heart failure, is a growing health prob- lem that afflicts an estimated 5 million people in the United States alone. Two years ago, a French doctors described a novel alternative: He put millions of immature skeletal muscle cells into the badly damaged heart of a 72-year-old man. His heart began to pump more powerfully, although it was unclear whether the benefit came from the new cells or from coronary bypass surgery he received at the same time. JERUSALEM Pioneering Israeli diplomat dies at 87 Abba Eban, the famously eloquent statesman who helpedpersuade the world to approve creation of the Jew- ish state and dominated Israeli diplo- macy for decades, died yesterday, hospital officials said. He was 87. Eban was known for his dovish views about Israel-Arab relations. Yitzhak Her- zog, a nephew who served as Israeli Cab- inet secretary, said Eban "was a pragmatist who believed in pragmatism on the one hand and the need to talk and talk and talk, and on the other hand, to stand firm on the basic principles of Israeli defense and foreign affairs." Born in South Africa on Feb. 2, 1915, Eban grew up in England, attaining honors at Cambridge Uni- versity, where he honed his oratory as a leader of the Cambridge Union. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 4 4 9 3 4 3 4 K. 94 U h~ S f G N x 5f' a0 t Xt:S 7G v$ ). ........................ .5. - . }- Organizer 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 allreaders. Additional'copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. 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 Collegiate Press. 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