The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, December 11, 2006 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS PORTRAIT O BEIRUT, Lebanon Protesters call for concessions from U.S-backed leader Hundreds of thousands of Hez- bollah members and their allies flooded central Beirut yester- day demanding changes in the government's makeup as soldiers r strung more barbed wire around the offices of the Western-backedk premier. Buoyed by the big turnout after a week of street protests, the pro- Syria opposition gave Prime Min- ister Fuad Saniora an ultimatum of a "few days" to accept its demand to form a national unity govern- ment with a big role for Hezbollah, or face an escalating campaign to. oust him. Saniora, who has been holed up LSA freshman Maria Svidler reviews her in his fortified office downtown, Alice Lloyd Residence Hall yesterday rejected the demand and urged his foes to resume negotiations. But despite the heated rhetoric H am S IC of the political confrontation, yes- terday's mass gathering remained peaceful and left the door open to the possibility of a settlement. D e nieh e HOUSTON For little town of Space shuttle safe Jesus's birth, small after heat shield cheer in tough times inspection BETHLEHEM, West Bank Brutal Chilean dictator dies unpunished at 91 General said to be responsible for more than 3,197 deaths SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - Gen. Augusto Pinochet, who overthrew Chile's democratically elected Marxist president in a bloody coup and ruled this Andean nation for 17 years, died yesterday, dashing hopes of victims of his regime's abuses that he would be brought to justice. He was 91. Pinochet suffered a heart attack a week ago and underwent an angio- plasty, and the brief announcement by the Santiago Military hospital said his condition worsened sud- denly yesterday. Dr. Juan Ignacio Vergara, spokesman for the medi- cal team that had been treating him, said his family was with him when he died. Police ringed the hospital, but a small group of Pinochet supporters remained at the entrance, shouting insults at people inpassingcars. The supporters, including some weeping women, repeatedly called out"Long Live Pinochet!" and sang Chile's national anthem. Chile's government says at least 3,197 people were killed for politi- cal reasons during his rule, but after leavingthe presidencyin 1990 Pino- chet escaped hundreds of criminal complaints because of his declining physical and mental health. Pinochet took power on Sept. 11, 1973, demanding an unconditional surrender from President Salvador Allende as warplanes bombed the presidential palace in downtown Santiago. Instead, Allende commit- ted suicide with a submachine gun he had received as a gift from Fidel Castro. As the mustachioed Pinochet crushed dissent during his 1973-90 rule, he left little doubt about who was in charge. "Not a leaf moves in this country if I'm not moving it," he once said. But when it came to his regime's abuses, Pinochet refused for years to take responsibility, saying any murders of political prisoners were the work of subordinates. Then on his 91st birthday - just last month - he took "full political responsibility for everything that happened" during his long rule. The statement read by his wife, however, made no reference to the rights abuses. In the days following Pinochet's seizure of power, soldiers carried out mass arrests of leftists. Many detainees, including two Americans, were herded into the National Stadium, which became a torture and detention center. The Americans were among those exe- cuted by the Chilean military, their deaths chronicled in the 1982 film "Missing." Other leftists were rounded up by a death squad known as the "Caravan of Death." Victims were buried in unmarked mass graves in the northern Atacama desert, in the coastal city of La Serena and in the southern city of Cauquenes. Pinochetpledgedto stayin power "only as long as circumstances demand it," but soon after seiz- ing the presidency, he said he had "goals, not deadlines." eye MiGKIN/Oaily r prints at a printmaking workshop in fund n holida Palestinian Tourism Minister Jou- deh Morkos has modest expectations. Last year, only about 2,500 for- eignvisitors came on Christmas, but he's counting on the usual busloads of Christians from Arab towns in Israel to boost turnout. Before the Space shuttle Discovery looks to be in good health so far, NASA managers said yesterday, although it will be at least two days before engineers can rule out any possible damage from the program's first night launch in four years. "So far so good," said lead flight director Tony Ceccacci as Dis- covery's astronauts wrapped up a meticulous inspection of the shut- tle's heat shield, looking for anyj possible damage from liftoff. As expected, small pieces of foam debris and ice fell off Dis- covery's external fuel tank during Saturday night's launch, but they didn't appear to strike the shuttle, said deputy shuttle program man- ager John Shannon, chairman of the mission management team. (AP) - Islamic militants may be in outbreak of the Palestinian upris- charge, but that doesn't mean there ing in 2000, Bethlehem drew more won't be Christmas this year. than 90,000 pilgrims a month. The cash-strapped Hamas gov- With just two weeks until Christ- ernment is promising $50,000 to mas, Bethlehem is only sparsely dress up Jesus's traditional birth- decorated. place for the holiday, more than A few neon stars are nailed to twice the amount spent in previous storefronts on the mrain streets. years. The only decoration on the Luther- Yet even the extra cash - if an Christmas Church in a busy Hamas pays up - may not be market area is spray-painted graf- enough to bring Christmas cheer fiti below the pointed steeple that to Bethlehem, hit hard by the last reads "Islamic Jihad" - a Muslim six years of Israeli-Palestinian militant group. fighting. The town is now walled In Manger Square, next to the in by Israel's West Bank separation church built over Jesus' traditional barrier, poverty is deepening and birthplace, only two of six souvenir Christians are leaving Bethlehem shops and a small cafe were open on in droves. a recent afternoon. Rumsfeld says goodbye Headaches Hurt. But it wouldn't hurt to consider our research study. You may be eligible to participate in a clinical research study of an investigational oral drug compared to placebo for the treatment of a single moderate or severe headache if you: " Are male or female, 18 - es years old, and generally healthy . 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The Illinois senator said he is still "running things through the traps" as he considers whether to join a field of Democrats that's expected to include front-runner Sen. Hillary Clinton and several other more experienced political hands. RAMALLAH, West Bank Palestinian president threatens early elections Palestinian President Mah- moud Abbas threatened on Satur- day to call early elections to end an impasse with Hamas but set no date for the vote, signaling he has not given up on forming a unity government with the Islamic mili- tant group. Hamas greeted the proposal with anger, saying Abbas lacked the authority to replace the gov- ernment it leads. Abbas' watered-down threat, which was reported by PLO offi- cials, reflected the dilemma facing the Palestinian leader after fruit- less efforts to form a joint admin- istration with Hamas that would be more moderate toward Israel and end a Western aid boycott. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Lame-duck defense secretary says fight must go on BAGHDAD (AP) - Outgo- ing Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld paid a surprise visit to Iraq over the weekend and said American forces should not quit the war until the enemy is defeated. Just days after a U.S. bipartisan commission called the situation here "grave and deteriorating" and called for a major shift in U.S. gov- ernment policy, Rumsfeld showed no sign on Saturday of backing down from his long-standing position that insurgent groups such as al-Qaida in Iraq mustbe crushed. 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