$A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 14, 1995 NATIoN/WovULD Rwandans find peace is elusive From Daily Wire Services KIGALI, Rwanda -In the country- side, saboteurs pull down electrical power poles. The armymoves in to bunt them down. There is an ambush. A lieutenant is killed. Furious soldiers fan into the muddy banana groves. Shoot- ing starts. Machetes flash in the moon- light. Ten hours later, the crackle of gun- fire and the cries of its victims cease. yesterday morning, 108 men, women and children are piled dead in three adjacent rural villages. Sixteen other people are gravely injured. Peace will not give Rwanda a chance. "The problem is,it doesn't take alot of people to do harm," said Charles Murigande, a Cabinet minister in Rwanda's struggling young government. "It is the nature of human beings that people who want to do bad have more commitment and energy and determina- tion than those who want to do good." By midday yesterday, the United Na- tions and the world's human rights and relief organizations were demanding: Whowasbehindthesekillings?Fewboth- ered with the other question: Why? This is Rwanda, and that is why. The fresh massacre on the western border is grim evidence of Rwanda's slide backward toward war. How rapid andhow consumingthistragedy will be is guesswork, but its likelihood is not. Rwanda's government has an ever- growing army, now estimated at 50,000 men and women, predominantly ethnic Tutsis. Across its borders camps in neighboring nations is a defeated and increasingly restless army of ethnic Hutus; it may also be about 50,000 strong. In between are about 2 million peasant Hutu refugees, frozen in place by fear of the two armies. "One has at the back of his mind, always, that civil war can break out again. This country is held together by a slender thread.... And the history of Rwanda tells us that this slender (thread) breaks from time to time," says Shaharyar Khan, the U.N. special rep- resentative to Rwanda. The world is spending $750million a year to feed and care for the refugees. Another $720 million has been pledged by developed nations to assist the Rwandan government in rebuilding the nation from last year's civil war - a convulsive episode that cost 600,000 lives and left perhaps 100,000 orphans. Refusal to extradite Mideast suspects creates controversy In response, Israel hints at delaying Palestinians' release AP PHOTO Pales Ortute (center) embraces a supporter after askIng the U.N. women's conference to protect lesbians from dlscrdmhumon. t UN. women's conference, gay iights topic sparks conflict BEIJING (AP)-Never before has a U.N. document tackled the topic of homosexuality. Lesbians are now won- dering whether this international women's meeting will also end with silence on the subject. Heading into the final full day of the Fourth World Conference on Women, delegates were still divided over the issue of asking for a ban on discrimina- tion against lesbians, conference orga- nizers said yesterday. Delegates from 189 countries worked into the early hours of the morning on the conference platform, a sweeping call to improve the lives of women worldwide. The full conference is to vote on the platform tomorrow before the meeting ends.. The conference platform is not le- gally binding, but is expected to serve as a guide to governments. Latelast night, negotiators reaffirmed a woman's right to sexual freedom. But 23 countries-all predominantly Mus- lim or Roman Catholic - either said they would lodge objections or issue statements with their own interpreta- tions. The provision calls for women to be able to make sexual choices without "violence, coercion or discrimination." -The drfficulty lies in the fact thatit's the first time this is being discussed at the UN. level." -- Therese Gastaut Conference spokeswoman Delegates say the phrasing is meant to stretch across a range of cultures and situations, covering girls subjected to ritual genital mutilation as well as bat- tered wives. Several nations said they might lift their objections to the wording if a footnote were added, saying that all issues of reproductive health must be guided by religious, cultural and tradi- tional values. Critics argue that these phrases are often used to restrict human rights. During nearly two weeks of talks, participants say many previously taboo subjects have come out into the open. One of them is homosexuality. But even if delegates are ready to talk about lesbian rights, they might not be prepared to act on them yet. "I wouldn't say (I'm) optimistic," conference secretary-general Gertrude Mongella said when asked about pros- pects for the provision's approval. She said she wanted to wait for the outcome of the talks. Earlier, conference spokeswoman Therese Gastaut said the subject was uncharted territory at such a gather- ing. "The difficulty lies in the fact that it's the first time this is being dis- cussed at the U.N. level," she told reporters. "All the implications have to be taken into account ... they're very intricate." Earlier in the day, negotiators re- solved a dispute over women's inherit- ance rights, agreeing that governments should enforce legislation that guaran- tees both sexes "equal rights to succes- sion and equal rights to inherit." Delegates from many African coun- tries made inheritance rights one of their top priorities at the conference. In some traditional societies, women are left with nothing if their husbands die. From Daily Wire Services JERUSALEM - Government offi- cials charged yesterday that the Pales- tinian Authority is violating the spirit of its peace agreement with Israel by re- fusing to extradite men suspected of involvement in attacks against Israel. On a day when right-wing Jewish demonstrators opposed to the peace accord clashed with police outside Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's home and tried to block intersections across the country, ministers fumed that the Pal- estinians are embarrassing the govern- ment by thwarting Israel's extradition requests. "I view with concern the fact that the Palestinian Authority is exploiting the agreement (in order to) give refuge to all of the murderers, and to thereby create an image that it supports the murder of Jews," said Justice Minister David Liba'i. He hinted that Israel may hold up the release of some 5,000 Palestinian pris- oners until the Authority begins extra- diting suspects. Liba'i's comments were prompted by the sudden conviction Monday in a Palestinian court in Jericho oftwo cous- ins, Yussef and Shaher Ra'ii, who were accused of"incitement." Each was sen- tenced to seven years of hard labor. Israel cried foul, noting that it had said Sunday it wanted to extradite the cousins on suspicion of involvement in the July 18 murder of a pair of Israelis who were hiking in the Judaean desert. "What we saw in Jericho was a trial to stop extradition, but not a real trial," Liba'i told Israel Radio yesterday, after the Cabinet held a special session to discuss the issue. "We cannot accept a situation where the Palestinians set their own parameters for the war against terrorism and force us to accept them." Jericho is the only West Bank town now fully controlled by the Palestinian Authority. According to the Israelis, the Ra'ii cousins, suspected members of the militant Population Front for the Liberation of Palestine, fled there shortly after the double murder. A third suspect, arrested by the Israeli General Security Services in the West Bank a month ago, allegedly confessed to com- mitting the murders and implicated the Ra'ii cousins. A similarcase occurred in July, when a Palestinian court in Jericho sentenced Abdel-Majid Dudein, and Rushdi Khatib, suspected members of the Is- lamic militant group Hamas, to 12 years in prison on charges of undermining Palestinian security. That sentence was handed down a day after Israel requested Dudein and Khatib's extradition for allegedly par- ticipating in the July bombing of an bus in Jerusalem. Israel protested Dudein and Khatib's quick trial, and Liba'i formally requested of Palestinian Minister of Justice Freih Abu Medein that seven Palestinians now believed to be in Gaza or Jericho be extradited to Israel. Abu Medein said the requests would be reviewed. Some Palestinian officials subse- quently said they will never comply with the extradition requests. "We have reached a decision, and it has been taken in our highest echelons, of course, agreed to by (PLO) Chair- man (Yasser) Arafat," said Mohammad Dahlan, head ofthe Palestinian Preven- tive Security Service in Gaza. "We shall not extradite to Israel our people, even if they are Hamas people'who are wanted," Dahlan told the newspaper Yediot Aharonot. According to the Cairo, Egypt, ac- cord governing Palestinian self-rule in Gaza and Jericho, the Palestinian Au- thority may extradite any Palestinian whom Israel suspects of having com- mitted a crime on its territory. How- ever, the agreement also says that the Palestinians have the right to try the suspects in Palestinian courts and have them serve out jail terms in Palestinian prisons before extraditing them. Palestinians argue that the agreement is unfair, because it specifies that Israel will extradite only non-Israelis who commit crimes on Palestinian-con- trolled territory, then flee to Israel. m