2A - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 2, 2003 Israeli commission criticizes police force NEWS IN BRIEF . JERUSALEM (AP) - A groundbreaking Israeli commission of inquiry found police used excessive force in quelling Arab riots three years ago and said in a stinging report released yesterday that the Jew- ish state "has systematically neglected its Arab minority. The document -the product of three years of inves- tigation - was based on the testimony of 377 witness- es and only the fifth probe of such scope in Israel's history. The panel's findings came as Israeli-Palestinian vio- lence flared anew yesterday An Israeli helicopter fired missiles at a car carrying three Hamas militants in Gaza City, killing one and wounding another. Twenty-five bystanders also were hurt in the sixth Israeli missile strike in two weeks. In the West Bank city of Nablus, soldiers shot and critical- ly wounded a 15-year-old boy after a firebomb set their tank on fire. Israel has been waging war on Hamas in retaliation for the suicide bombing that killed 21 people on a Jerusalem bus Aug. 19. With yesterday's attack, 14 Palestinians, including at least 10 Hamas members, have been killed in missile strikes. The panel of two judges and an academic urged the government to come up with a detailed plan for nar- rowing the gaps between Jews and Arab citizens, who make up about one-fifth of the population of 6.6 mil- lion people. Israeli Arabs say they have long been discriminated against in economic opportunities, land distribution and civil rights. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's office said the panel's recommendations would be discussed by the Cabinet. Successive Israeli governments have promised to do more for Arab communities, but little has been achieved. Arab leaders said the report did not go far enough, and thatsthey had hoped senior police officers would face prosecution. The commission recommended that several police commanders not be promoted and that two lower-level officers be removed. While the recommendations aren't binding, they carry great weight, and the attor- ney general could still seek criminal charges against some of the officers. The commission was appointed after police shot and killed 13 Arab citizens in weeklong riots in October 2000. A Jewish motorist was killed by a rock in the protests. Thousands of Israeli Arabs had taken to the streets to show support for Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, who a month earlier had embarked on an uprising against Israeli occupation. Then-Prime Minister Ehud Barak decided to launch a formal inquiry, in part to deflect growing Arab anger HADINE FROM ROUN THEWORL f -. .. t.... , _. 'The state and all its RICHFIELD, Ohio governments failed consistently Bush unveils 'manufacturing czar' post in dealinr with the problems I raised by the existence of a large Arab minority within the Jewish state." - Israeli police inquiry commission against his government. Barak had been elected in May 1999 on a peace platform, with strong Arab support. The report put the blame for the riots squarely on the shoulders of the Israeli establishment, saying a major cause was systematic government neglect of the Arab minority. "The state and all its governments failed consistently in dealing with the problems raised by the existence of a large Arab minority within a Jewish state," it stated. "The government's approach to the Arab sector was in large part characterized by neglect and dis- crimination. The establishment did not demonstrate sufficient sensitivity to the Arab sector, nor did it budget its resources in an equal way to the Arab population." President Bush announced yesterday he is creating a high-level government post to nurture the manufacturing sector, which is bleeding jobs in states crucial to his re-election. On a rain-soaked Labor Day trip to a factory training center, Bush said he had directed Commerce Secretary Don Evans to establish an assistant position to focus "on the needs of manufacturers." Keeping factory jobs is critical to a broad- er economic recovery, the president said, his outdoor venue ringed by cranes, backhoes and bulldozers. Bush said the nation has lost "thousands of jobs in manufacturing." In fact, the losses have soared into the millions: Of the 2.7 million jobs the U.S. economy has lost since the recession began in early 2001, 2.4 million were in manufacturing. The downturn has eliminated more than one in 10 of the nation's factory jobs. The president attributed the erosion to productivity gains and to jobs flowing to cheaper labor markets overseas. He suggested that jobs moving to foreign shores was his primary reason for creating the new manufactur- ing czar. N. Korea rejects U.S. nuclear demands Keeping up its bellicose rhetoric, North Korea yesterday dismissed U.S. demands that the communist nation scrap its nuclear program as "a game even kids won't play." North Korea took an angry, hard-line stance following last week's landmark talks in Beijing with the United States, South Korea, Japan, China and Russia about its nuclear programs. "Despite our goodwill and generosity, the United States has shown no readiness to drop its hostile policy toward the DPRK during the latest talks and blatantly put forward new gang-style demands," the Foreign Ministry said yesterday in a state- ment from its Moscow embassy, according to the Interfax news agency. "That means ... they promise not to shoot and we are supposed to lay down weapons first," the North Korean statement said. "It's a game even kids won't play." North Korea says the United States must first provide security and aid guaran- tees before it will consider abandoning its nuclear programs. North Korea on Saturday said there was no need for more talks. 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The U.S.-picked Iraqi Governing Council, meanwhile, named a new Cabi- net in a step toward reclaiming some powers from the American occupiers. The new government mirrors the ethnic and religious makeup of the 25-member council. The voice on the tape appeared to be that of Saddam and employed his well- known rhetorical flourishes in urging Iraqis not to believe those who blamed him and his followers for Friday's attack on the sacred Imam Ali shrine in Najaf that killed Ayatollah Mohammad Baqir al-Hakim and 124 other people. A BOMBAY, India 3 charged in deadly Bombay bombings Police yesterday charged two men and a woman with the twin bombings that killed 52 people last week in Bom- bay, India's financial capital. The three suspects were arrested under India's tough anti-terrorism law and would appear in court later yesterday, said M.R. Raut, chief prosecutor in Bombay. He said the three were charged with illegally possessing explosives, conspir- acy in both bombings and planting one of the bombs in the parking lot of the Gateway of India, an arch that is a tourist attraction. Raut declined to give the names of the suspects, who could face the death penalty if found guilty. About 150 people were injured when two taxis carrying explosives blew up within minutes of each on Aug. 25 in Bombay, one at the Gate- way of India and the other at a busy shopping complex. NEW HAVEN, Conn. Jackson arrested at Yale protest, strike The Rev. Jesse Jackson and 13 peo- ple were arrested yesterday after they blocked traffic on the Yale University campus in support of striking university service and clerical workers. Jackson led more than 1,000 people on a Labor Day march and rally in sup- port of the striking workers before he was arrested. "This is the site of national Labor Day outrage," Jackson said. "This is going to be for economic justice what Selma was for the right to vote." The march ended in a rally at Yale's Beinecke Plaza and Wood- bridge Hall, which houses university President Richard Levin's office. Police said 1,000 to 1,500 people marched with Jackson. LOS ANGELES Celebs slow to back Arnold in gov. race For years, Arnold Schwarzeneg- ger's movies have created more buzz in Hollywood than almost anybody else's, yet there has been a resounding silence as this industry town consid- ers whether he can also produce a hit at the ballot box office. Celebrities, even those who normally aren't shy about speaking out when it comes to politics, have so far'kept quiet about the highest-profile movie star to enter a California governor's race since Ronald Reagan. "That's the question everybody is ask- ing. Where is Hollywood?" said Bob Dowling, publisher and editor in chief of The Hollywood Reporter, one of the industry's leading trade publications. - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports. Electronics AT&T Wireless Best Buy Compucable O/E Systems U-M Computer Showcase W ireless Toyz ............... 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