The Michigan Doily-Thursday, June 19, 1980-Page 5 STATE REPUBLICANS WIN BATTLE House to vote on tax LANSING (UPI)-House Republicans yesterday won their battle for more rural tax relief at city dwellers' expense as the House Taxation Committee voted to send an $800 million tax shift proposal to the full chamber. The plan is intended to compete with the 50 per cent tax-cutting plan heralded by Shiawassee County Drain Factional st Afglhunistar ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP)-Dis- membered bodies of five supporters of President Babrak Karmal of Afghanistan were discovered at a housing project in Kabul, a resident of the Afghan capital said yesterday. The account appeared to corroborate Western and non-aligned diplomatic reports of intensified friction between factions of the ruling Khalq (People's) Party. KARMAL WAS installed in Decem- ber after Soviet troops helped over- throw his predecessor, Hafizullah Amin, who was executed. Unconfirmed reports said Karmal made an unsuccessful attempt to com- mit suicide and his air force comman- der had been shot and wounded within the past few days. Factional strife within Karmal's par- ty dates back to the April 1978 coup that brought in the first of three successive Marxist regimes. A KABUL RESIDENT, a university student who declined to be named said the bodies of five Karmal supporters were discovered early this month at the Soviet built housing project where par- ty members have been allocated apar- tments. Reports from Western diplomats this week said Afghan informants told of an average of 10 assassinations a day of low-level party members, many ap- parently victims of the in-fighting. The factions supporting and opposing Karmal have splintered further since the Soviet intervention. A number of career army officers, personally recruited into the party by Amin, were believed still united in their opposition to Karmal, seen by some staunch Marxists as a puppet of Moscow, Afghan sources said. RADIO KABUL SAID Maj. Gen. Ab- dul Qader, who had a major role in the April 1979 coup, left the Afghan capital yesterday for medical treatment in the Soviet Union. The broadcast, heard in India, did not mention the nature of Qader's ailment. Nor did it mention a report carried by a traveler from Afghanistan to New Delhi that Qader, the former air force commander, was wounded Monday in the compound of the Afghanistan Foreign Ministry in Kabul. The traveler, who refused to be identified, said the assailant was a member of a group opposing Karmal's faction within the ruling party. Renorts from Kabul said Qader has Commissioner Robert Tisch. THE PANEL approved the Senate- passed plan on a 12-3-1 vote during a tension-filled three-hour meeting in- terrupted for last minute negotiations between state Budget Director Gerald Miller and GOP lawmakers. Republican panelists, who had threatened to oppose the proposal en masse, won their fight to have the ri e in Sintensifs amount of property tax relief in the plan hiked to aid farmers and outstate residents-a move which subsequently will hurt urban taxpayers. The plan, which was drawn up by legislative leaders and aides to Gov. William Milliken, is now set for House action next week. UNDER THE PLAN adopted by the committee, homeowners' property tax assessments would be cut by $7,100. The original measure cut assessments by $6,500ooThenew cut equalsabout $370 itl tax relief as opposed to the earlier $350. To make up the lost revenue, the state's 4 per cent sales tax would be raised to 5.5 per cent. The compromise uses a complicated method in which homeowners will receive credits only on millage levied for city operating costs-not those used to pay off debts, such as bond issues. shift WHILE RURAL communities are generally free of such deficits, tax- payers in cities such as Detroit may pay up to 25 per cent of their bills for debt retirement. However, all three, Detroit Democrats supported the plan. Committee debate took place under the watchful eyes of Miller and House Speaker Bobby Crim. The panel last week rejected the plan after amen- dments were added which the governor and Crim did not support. The panel threw out those amen- dments, including one which would have based farm assessments on pred- sent use instead of potential production. Republican Donald Van Singel of Grant, who originally opposed the plan, said he and other GOP lawmakers would support the compromise. been mentioned as a possible successor to Karmal in rumors circulating about possible leadership changes or a new coup. The unconfirmed report of the shooting of Qader reached New Delhi about the time as one saying Karmal had tried last Friday to kill himself but was stopped by his security guards. In- dian news agencies quoted Radio Pakistan as carrying that report. There could be no independent con- firmation and diplomatic sources in New Delhi said they had heard nothing about such a suicide attempt from their embassies in Kabul. The East Germany news agency ADN on Sunday quoted Karmal as saying in a speech to provincial leaders that they should. support the gover- nment..: SUNNY* SUNJUNS Light, bright; comfort-loving canvas SUNJUNS® in new sun-time styles from America's quality shoemaker. ; SUNJUNS - only by BASS®. 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