.. .. ... ...y The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 8, 1995 - 11 China to delegates: Worry about your own countries first BEIJING (AP) -- China may be sorry it ever asked the United Nations t hold a women's conference here. Stung by critics including Hillary Rodham Clinton, the government bluntly told conference delegates yes- terday to pay attention io the prob- lens in their own countryes instead. Bt even as the Foreign Ministry wasadmonishing outspoken foreign- ers, a group of conferees staged a silert protest in the heart ofChinese pow---the Great Hall ofthePeople. Fol Chinese authorities, the site is espedally sensitive, as it adjoins Tianamen Square, scene of the blood 1989 crackdown on pro-de- mocrty activists. Chita is also growing increasingly irritatelby criticism of heavy-handed securiti and nightmarish logistical problens at the sprawling, muddy site it povided for non-governmen- tal wonen's groups in Huairou, 30 miles ontside Beijing. Yesterday the official Xinhua News Agency said Western media had "male a fuss over trifles" and "wantony distorted" conditions at the privac forum, which ends today. This, andearlier testy Chinese com- mentary,have been the only hint to ordinary Chinese of foreign criticism at the sesions. Delegaes to the gatherings in Beijing ani Huairou have repeatedly raised subjects embarrassing to China, challenging Beijing's posi- tion on issues ranging from its one- child policy to its security practices. China has reluctantly allowed pro- tests on the Huairou conference grounds, though it has monitored and sometimes intimidated activists. Earlier today police arrested three Hong Kong television journalists covering a small human rights pro- test in the complex where the U.N. meeting was being held. Nuclear testing by the Chinese and the French, who exploded a test blast in the South Pacific on Tuesday, has been the target of frequent demon- strations. Yesterday's silent protest, how- ever, was the first outside the grounds of either gathering - and the first involving delegates in their official capacity as U.N. conferees. At a conference-connected meet- ing with Chinese lawmakers, nine Danish lawmakers wore T-shirts em- blazoned with a picture of an atomic blast and the words "Stop" in Chi- nese and "No" in French. Then they posed on the steps of the hall while Chinese security hurriedly shoved reporters away. At %he U.N. gathering - formally known as the Fourth World Confer- ence on Women - China has been embarrassed by the heavy emphasis on human rights, over which it fre- quently spars with the Clinton ad- ministration. China's detention of Chinese AP PHOTO Two Algerian delegates to the U.N. women's conference cover their faces to avoid being identified as they march in protest of Islamic fundamentalism. American activist Harry Wu - who was eventually expelled - nearly scuttled Mrs. Clinton's trip to Beijing. During the two days Mrs. Clinton was in town, China stayed silent on her speech Tuesday to delegates, a rallying cry in favor of human rights worldwide and a rebuke to China over activists in Huairou. As soon as she left town, though, the government let loose a blast of criticism - and a veiled warning. "Some people from some coun- tries have made unwarranted remarks or criticism of other count-ries," said Foreign Ministry spokesman Chen Jian, in response to a question about Mrs. Clinton's speech. "We would like to caution these people to pay more attention to the problems in their own countries," he said, adding that the criticism ran counter to the spirit of the U.N. gath- ering. Today, though, the U.S. delega- tion was keeping up the pressure. "By now you've heard our mes- sage loud and clear: this conference is about human rights," said Geraldine Ferraro, the U.S. ambas- sador to the U.N. Human Rights Com- mission. Tensions between delegates and host China were stealing the spot- light from the real work of the con- ference: crafting an ambitious plan to improve the lot of women every- where. Working behind closed doors, del- egates were said to be making slow progress in resolving disputes over gay rights, abortion and artificial con- traception. Negotiators acknowledged there will have to be some hard bargaining in the conference's remaining nine days. A full one-fifth of the platform remains in dispute. "The range of views is very great," said negotiator John Mathieson. UC Berkley reveals plan for racial diversity Los Angeles Times OAKLAND, Calif. - Despite the abolition of affirmative action at the University of California, UC Berkeley officials pledged yesterday to maintain racial diversity at the flagship campus by helping minority students long be- fore they reach college age. "We want all students to know they still have an opportunity to receive the finest education at Berkeley -no mat- ter whether their skin is white, black, brown or yellow," said UC Berkeley Chancellor Chang-Lin Tien. "We pledge to keep the opportunity alive." Speaking to a group ofinner-city Oak- land students, Tien unveiled "The Ber- keley Pledge,"a program to helpprepare disadvantaged students to meetadmis- sion requirements at UC Berkeley. The initiative, designed to avoid con- troversy by targeting students according to family income and education level rather than race, also will provide $60 million in scholarships for diadvan- taged students accepted for admission. The Berkeley campaign is tlie- first concrete step taken by any University of California campus to maintain racial di- versity since the UC Board of Regents voted in July to ignore recommenda- tions by the UC president and the heads- of its nine campuses and end race-based preferences in student admissions.: Tien insisted that the "Berkeley Pledge" is consistent with the regents' action and is a way of helping Minori- ties without relying on the racial and ethnic criteria used under current affir- mative action programs that graqt pref- erence to students from undertrepre- sented minority groups. "As a public university, our campus has a historic responsibility to serve all ofCalifornia," Tien said. "Ourcommit- ment has made Berkeley an iiterna- tional model for 'excellence through diversity.' We do not intend to-retreat from our commitment." UC Regent Ward Connerly, who led the fight to dismantle UC's affirmative action policies, said he was thrilled by the Berkeley program and pledged to raise $50,000 for the scholarship fund. "This is exactly the kind of initiative that I certainly contemplated vhen I offered the resolution about eliminat- ing the use of race and ethnicity and other factors," he said. Allied planes bomb rebel Serb ammunition dumps, key base Los Angeles Times SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Striking at Bosnian Serb headquar- ters, Americanand European warplanes yesterday bombed ammunition dumps and a key military base as NATO offi- cials widenedtheiraircampaign agaist the separatist rebels. The bombing raids, which continued early today, came as diplomats in Geneva prepared to negotiate a U.S. peace initiative that includes the draft- ing of a map to divide Bosnia. The Geneva talks-the first face-to- face, high-level meeting of Balkan en- emies in two years - are crucial to finding asettlementforthewarinBosnia but may be doomed by continuing Bosnian Serb military defiance and the West's forceful response. Massive puffs of white and gray smoke filled the sky above Pale, the nountaintop Bosnian Serb stronghold ine miles southeast of Sarajevo, after ckets plunged into a munitions depot. allied bombers also attacked the bsnian Serb army base at Lukavica, a Sb-held suburb of Sarajevo, for the seond time and targeted bridges along suply routes. 't's high time that something was dot for Sarajevo," said Salem Bajtal, 50, n unemployed factory worker as he ad his neighbors sat outside their owntomb-damaged apartment build- ing itSarajevo and craned their necks at plaes overhead. In Pie, terrified women rushed from their himes, sobbing and rounding up their hildren, as NATO bombs droppot Secondary explosions of warehc sed ammunition reportedly damag4 several civilian homes in the area. Despie stepped-up raids made pos- sible bylear weather, the Serbs con- tinued tconfound NATO and U.N. officialsvho want them to move their heavy w4pons at least 12 miles from this capiti and other U.N.-designated safe area, The Serbs refuse, appar- ently unwhing to budge on their siege of Sarajep, a probable negotiating chip. } "It appers they have not yet had sufficient pin inflicted on them," said U.N. militar.spokesman Lt. Col. Chris Vernon. "B daily that pain must be growing becuse ... gradually, slowly, (the Serbs')ilitary capability is being eroded." On the eve f the Geneva talks, the Bosnian govenment continued inter- nal debate ove a U.S. peace initiative that essentiallydivides Bosnia along ethnic lines an allows the Serbs to estabish an "etity" on most of the tetav ,e ive r,. nne ., n th rangement resembles the Greater Serbia whose creation was a major impetus to the war. There is also wide disagree- ment on how the "entity" would be administered. "Bosnia's integrity will not be en- dangered by the existence of the so- called Serb entity," IvoaKomsic, a mem- ber ofthe Bosnian presidency, saidyes- terday, "but it would be endangered if the Bosnian Serbs were allowed to cre- ate a confederation with Serbia." Attending the meeting, from which nomajoragreement is expected, are the foreign ministers of Bosnia, Croatia and, in representation of the Bosnian Serbs, Serb-dominated Yugoslavia. U.S. officials have argued that the aerial bombardment does not threaten the negotiations but, rather, puts pres- sure on the sides to talk. But the Yugoslav government yesterday urged an end to the air strikes, which it called "a direct attack on the current negotia- tions." Since launching air attacks Aug. 30 in retaliation for a Serb shelling of Sarajevo's main market, NATO has flown more than 2,100 sorties, target- ing Serb military command centers, radar, communications and weapons and ammunition storage areas. NATO maintains that all of the targets are military, but the Bosnian Serbs insist there have been numerous civilian ca- sualties. Biljana Plavsic, a hardline Bosnian Serb civilian leader, told Bosnian Serb television that NATO and the United Nations were trying to force Serb "ca- pitulation." "We, of course, would not accept that," she said. That continued defiance has appar- ently surprised Western alliance offi- cials, who expected the Serbs to more readiy obey the demand to withdraw their weapons. U.N. officials said they were trying to exploit potential dissension among local-level commanders who might be more inclined to comply. "We've double-checked and triple- checked, and we can't find any trace of compliance," said U.N. spokesman Alexander Ivanko said. "We had hoped they would have complied much ear- lier. They have not." AP PHOTO A British U.N. soldier scans the Bosnian Serb stronghold in Pale as NATO planes roar overhead. A local boy sits nearby. U I SNIPES PATR(K SYIATYZ JOHN LEGO IZAMO I I Don't PanIi! If you think you're pregnant... Call us-we listen, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. i . I I M i c h i g a n U n i o n UNO Building Access Frida Saturday UM students, faculty, & staff- must show valid University of Michigan I.D. rmay bring three escorted guests i to Era aM 1 , dii _u nx