2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 25, 2005 NATION/WORLD Kyrgyzstan president flees U Akavev's whereabouts uniiknown, some speculate he left the country BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan (AP) - Pres- ident Askar Akayev reportedly fled on yesterday after protesters stormed his headquarters, seized control of state television and rampaged through gov- ernment offices, throwing computers and air conditioners out of windows. A leading opponent of the Akayev regime, Felix Kulov, was freed from prison and praised the "revolution made by the people." Kulov said Akayev had signed a letter of resignation, the ITAR- Tass news agency reported. Members of the reinstated parlia- ment that was in power before Febru- ary's disputed election met yesterday night to discuss keeping order in the nation and conducting a new presiden- tial vote, perhaps as early as May or June. They elected a former opposi- tion lawmaker, Ishenbai Kadyrbekov, as interim president. Sitting in Akayev's chair surrounded by supporters, opposition activist Ulan Shambetov praised the latest uprising to sweep a former Soviet republic. "It's not the opposition that has seized power, it's the people who have taken power. The people. They have been fighting for so long against corruption, against that (Akayev) family," he said. The takeover of government buildings in Bishkek followed similar seizures by opposition activists in southern Kyrgyz- stan, including the second-largest city, Osh. Those protests began even before the first round of parliamentary elections on Feb. 27 and swelled after March 13 run-offs that the opposition said were seriously flawed. U.S. and European officials concurred. Lateryesterday, Kyrgyzstan's Supreme Court declared the election invalid and recognized the former parliament as the legitimate legislature, said former parlia- mentary speaker Abdygany Erkebayev. Akayev's whereabouts were not known. Both the opposition and Rus- sian news agencies said he had left the country but U.S. officials raised doubts about whether he was no lon- ger in Kyrgyzstan. Opposition leader Kurmanbek Baki- yev appeared on state TV and declared: "Akayev is no longer on the territory of Kyrgyzstan." The Interfax news agency, without citing sources, said Akayev had flown to Russia but later said he had landed in "The intelligence reports do not ver- ify what you cited from press reports. I'm confident there will be no issue with respect to U.S. forces," Rumsfeld said. Bakiyev also said the prime min- ister had resigned but that those in charge of the Security, Interior and Defense ministries were working with the opposition. Politics in Kyrgyzstan depends as much on clan ties as on ideology, and the fractious opposition has no unified pro- gram beyond calls for more democracy, an end to poverty and corruption, and a desire to oust Akayev, who held power in the former Soviet republic for 15 years. The fragmented opposition has shown no signs it would change policy toward Russia or the West. Any change would have impact, since both the United States and Russia have cooperated with Akayev and have military bases near Bishkek. There are about 1,000 U.S. troops at Manas air base outside Bishkek. Defense Secre- tary Donald Rumsfeld said he did not believe they would be adversely affect- ed by the turmoil. Kyrgyzstan's role as a conduit for drugs and a potential hotbed of Islamic extremism makes it volatile. There is no indication that the opposition would be more amenable to Islamic fundamental- ist influence than Akayev's government has been. "The future of Kyrgyzstan should be decided by the people of Kyrgyzstan, consistent with the principles of peaceful change, of dialogue and respect for the rule of law," State Department spokes- man Adam Ereli said. The takeover began with a rally yesterday morning on the outskirts of Bishkek, where about 5,000 protesters roared and clapped when an opposi- tion speaker said they soon would control the entire country. "The people of Kyrgyzstan will not let anybody torment them," Bakiyev told the crowd. "We must show persistence and strength, and we will win." Interior Minister Keneshbek Dushe- bayev addressed demonstrators and urged them to obey the law, but he also departed from his warnings a day earlier of a violent crackdown, saying no force would be used against peace- ful protesters. About 1,000 people surged toward the hulking, Soviet-era building that contained Akayev's offices and met little resistance from the helmeted riot police who held truncheons and shields next to a protective fence. About half of the crowd entered through the front. Others smashed windows with stones, tossed papers and tore portraits of Akayev in half and stomped on them. NEWS IN BRIEF UNITED NATIONS U.N.: Investigtion needed in Lebanon A U.N. report into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri concluded that Lebanon's probe of the killing was unsatisfactory and an international investigation is needed. The report, released yesterday, says there was a "distinct lack of commitment" by Lebanese authorities to investigate the crime, and the investigation was not car- ried out "in accordance with acceptable international standards. In Beirut, Lebanese President Emile Lahoud responded by saying he had told U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan to do "what is necessary" to learn who was behind the Feb. 14 killing. Hariri died in a blast in central Beirut that killed 17 other people. The Lebanese opposition has blamed Syria and its Lebanese allies, who have both denied any involvement. The report does not directly assign blame, saying the causes could not be determined. "However, it is clear that the assassination took place in a political and security context marked by an acute polarization around the Syrian influence in Lebanon," the report said. PENELLAS PARK, Fla. Fla. court refuses to save Terri Schiavo With Terri Schiavo visibly drawing closer to death yesterday, her parents refused to give up the fight to reinsert their brain-damaged daughter's feeding tube, despite being rebuffed by both the nation's highest court and a Florida judge. Bob and Mary Schindler held onto the slim hope that Gov. Jeb Bush would somehow find a way to intervene or a federal judge who had turned them down before would see things their way. But Bush warned that he was running out of options. As of yesterday afternoon, Schiavo, 41, had been without food or water for six full days and was showing signs of dehydration - flaky skin, dry tongue and lips, sunken eyes,according to attorneys and friends of the Schindlers. Doctors have said she would probably die within a week or two of the tube being pulled. "It's very frustrating. Every minute that goes by is a minute that Terris being starved and dehydrated to death," said her brother, Bobby Schindler, who said see- ing her was like looking at "pictures of prisoners in concentration camps." A Kazakhstan. Defense Secretary feld was asked about a stop in Guatemala. Donald H. Rums- the reports during GONE FIsHI Iraqi chemist's death 6 0 0 still under investigation TEXAS CITY, Texas Deadbody found near Texas plant explosion Al-Izmnerly was crucial to the Iraqi weapons underworld before his mysterious death NEW YORK (AP) - The U.S. Army says it has reopened an investigation into the sus- pected bludgeoning death of a key Iraqi scientist in American custody, a chemist who allegedly experimented with poisons on prisoners in the days of Saddam Hussein. Mohammad Munim al-lzmerly, 65, is the only known weapons scientist among at least 96 detain- ees who have died in U.S. custody in Iraq. Ques- tions have surrounded the death ever since his body was dropped off at a Baghdad hospital in February 2004, two weeks after he died. When it first came to light in press reports last May, the U.S. military, newly under fire for prisoner abuse in Iraq, refused to answer queries about the chemist's death. Now, months later, the Army says an investigation has begun. "The case was initially closed, but after further investigative review a determination was made to reopen the investigation," Army spokesman Christopher Grey told The Associated Press. The Pentagon would say nothing about the timetable or thrust of the inquiry. Rod Barton, an Australian member of the CIA-led teams that ques- tioned al-lzmerly and other weapons scientists, says such prisoners may have been beaten during the futile U.S. hunt for banned arms in Iraq. When .al-Izmerly's body was delivered to Al-Kharkh Hospital, the Americans enclosed a death certificate saying he died of "brainstem compression," without saying what caused it, Britain's Guardian newspaper reported after viewing the document last year. A subsequent Iraqi autopsy determined he was killed by a blunt trauma injury, a blow to the head, Iraqi doctors told Baghdad reporters. New details are emerging about the role al- Izmerly played in Iraq's weapons underworld. In contrast to a "distinguished chemistry pro- fessor," the portrayal in one press report last May, U.S. weapons investigators now say al-Izmerly was an early leader of Iraq's effort to make chem- ical arms, and an assassination specialist who once devised a "poison pen." The Egyptian-born scientist had been in U.S. detention since April 2003. His family was allowed to visit him in January 2004 at the Baghdad air- port, where he was believed held at Camp Cropper, a U.S. military detention center for "high-value detainees." A month later they were notified by the Red Cross he was dead. His son, Ashraf, 22, told reporters that when he went to the hospital morgue to claim the remains, zipped up in a U.S. body bag, he saw an injury to the head. The dated death certificate indicated the Americans had held the body for 17 days. The lone worker unaccounted for after an explosion at a BP oil refinery was found dead in the rubble, bringing the death toll to 15 in a blast that also injured more than 100 people, officials said yesterday. BP spokesman Bill Stephens said the worker was found near the site of the blast. Earlier, officials said records had indicated the worker checked out and left the refinery after the Wednesday afternoon explosion. Officials said about 1,100 employees and 2,200 contract workers were at the refinery when the blast shot flames into the sky, forced schoolchildren to cower under desks and showered plant grounds with ash and charred metal. It rattled windows more than five miles from the 1,200-acre plant near Houston. COPENHAGEN, Denmark Chess legend released from detention in Japan Chess legend Bobby Fischer, en route to a new life in Iceland, said yesterday that freedom felt "great" after nine months' detention in Japan, where he had been held for trying to leave the country using an invalid U.S. passport. Fischer was released from Japanese custody earlier in the day and stopped over in Denmark before he was to board a private plane for Iceland, which has granted him citizenship. Upon arriving in Reykjavik, Fischer will stay at the Hotel Loftleider - the same place where he stayed in 1972 when he defeated Russian Boris Spassky in the Cold War chess showdown that propelled him to international stardom. Compiled from Daily wire reports 60 p Don't Miss This Great Opportunity To Learn About Outstanding Careers In Pharmacy www.michigandaily.com 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. Additional copies may be prcked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $110. Winter term (January through April) is $115, yearlong (September through April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. 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