r, -IAmoal The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 1, 1995 - South African taxi drivers threaten blockade in el, MMABATHO, South Africa (AP) - Taxi drivers have threatened block- ades and troops have been deployed to deter possible violence when North West Province joins most of South Af- rica in electing local officials today. The nation's second democratic vote has uncovered long-simmering disputes in the province that is home to fervent African National Congress supporters and a party loyal to a former black homeland leader ousted last year. A holiday was called today for elec- tions at 12,000 polling stations nation- wide to choose almost 700 local and rural councils that will replace the last vestiges of apartheid rule. President Quebec Premier Parizeau resigns MONTREAL (AP) - Stung by de- feat in the secession referendum, Que- bec Premier Jacques Parizeau said yes- terday he plans to resign. He also apolo- gized forblamingthe loss on non-French immigrants. Parizeau maintained staunch support, however, for the separatist cause that has been at the heart of his long political career. He said his Parti Quebecois would choose new leadership capable of achieving independence for the mostly French-speaking province. Parizeau, 65, was elected premier last year after promising to hold a refer- endum on secession. His side lost Mon- day, but only narrowly - 50.6 percent to 49.4 percent. But at a time when the separatists could have been taking heart at their strong showing, Parizeau shocked even his allies with a bellicose speech at campaign headquarters, blaming the defeat on immigrants. "It's true we have been defeated, but basically by what?" Parizeau said. "By money and the ethnic vote." Parizeau's co-leader in the separatist camp, Lucien Bouchard, distanced him- self from the ethnic remarks yesterday, signaling that the premier's position had become untenable. Nelson Mandela and his ANC came to power in the nation's first all-race elec- tion in April 1994, and most of the local councils also were expected to be black- led. While many of the races have failed to ignite the passion of last year's vote that ended apartheid, and balloting was expected to be mostly peaceful, parts of North West Province were tense on election eve. Much of the territory formerly was the Bophuthatswana black homeland, one of the puppet states set up by apart- heid South Africa to strip blacks of South African citizenship. Former homeland leader Lucas Mangope, ousted for trying to prevent last year's vote, and his United Chris- tian Democratic Party continue to hold pockets of support in a province other- wise dominated by the ANC. Mangope was accused of corruption and authoritarian rule during the years he led Bophuthatswana, with the gov- ernment this week ordering him to pay back $5 million in missing public money. Still, he attracted larger rallies than the ANC in recent appearances. Soldiers in armored personnel carri- ers patrolled yesterday in Mmabatho, the provincial capital, and along the province's western edge where citizens complain the new border with neigh- boring Northern Cape province cuts their community in two. Two taxi organizations operating in the province have called on members to blockade key routes to prevent people from voting. They are demanding an end to violence in the private taxi indus- try that serves most black commuters, and seek government subsidies. Provincial officials urged the taxi operators to keep roads open, and the patrolling troops were expected to act against anyone trying to form block- ades. "We are aware that there are people bent on derailing this process, so we're not surprised the troops are there," said Willie Modise, spokesman for provin- cial Premier Popo Molefe of the ANC. "There are people not prepared to wel- come the new democracy." But some in Mmabatho believe Molefe and the ANC are acting undemocratically. Workers at the former homeland tele- vision station, still called Bophuthatswana Broadcasting Corp., threatened to quit because they believe Molefe is reneging on early retirement deals. The packages designed to reduce the staff of 725 by a third were so lucrative that all but nine employees signed up., They were supposed to take effect to- ections day and cost Molefe's provincial go- ernment $130 million. Molefe says his government never approved them. 0 At an angry confrontation yesterday employees with placards saying "Popo will fall harder than Mangope" de- manded they be allowed to quit today and get their money. An agreement last night called for further talks and workers to continue at their jobs. With 81 percent of a potentialt.7 million voters registered, the dusty. poor region hugging South Africa's border with Botswana may have a better turn- out than other areas. Interest rates fall; Canadian market rallies after vote Stung by defeat in the secession referendum, Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau announces his resignation, which will go into effect at the end of the fail parliamentary session. His wife, Lisette Lapointe, looks on yesterday in Quebec City. Los Angeles Times TORONTO - Canadian financial markets rallied strongly across the board yesterday as the federal government and banks lowered key interest rates in the wake of the voters' narrow defeat of a referendum allowing Quebec to leave Canada. Investors, who in recent weeks had retreated to the sidelines, were relieved with the outcome and poured money back into Canadian investments, giving stocks their biggest single-day boost in eight years. Bond and currency markets also rallied. "There is a big sigh of relief," said Ruth Getter, chief economist for Toronto Dominion Bank. "If it had gone the other way there would have been a monumental disaster." Still, the slim margin -Quebec vot- ers rejected the referendum by a 50.6 percent to 49.4 percent margin -raises longer-term concern about Canada's political and economic stability, which could dampen investor enthusiasm. The vote also raises uncertainty about the government's ability to continue re- ducing its big budget deficit. "My view is, enjoy the rally now because it won't be sustained," said Patti Croft, senior economist for CIBC/ Wood Gundy in Toronto. The most euphoric reaction came on Bay Street in the heart of Toronto's financial district. The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index shot up nearly 3 percent at the opening bell before falling back a bit. The index closed at 4462.80, up 83.04 points. In- dividual, institutional and international buyers participated. It was the third-biggest gain ever for the Toronto index, though it didn't quite cancel out the 100-point loss recordeda week earlier. Financial stocks were among the strongest gainers. "People have concluded in the short term it will be business as usual," said Clement Gignac, chief economist at Levesque Beaubien in Montreal. "We've returned to where we were two months ago." The Canadian dollar also surged .83 cents to 74.41 cents against the U.S. dollar. The currency - known here as the "loonie" because it is imprinted with the likeness of a loon - recently had fallen as low as 72.5 cents and was expected to fall below the all-time record of 69 cents ifthe French-speaking sepa- ratists succeeded in winning Quebecs independence. Bonds also moved ahead sharply, spurred by reaffirmation of Canada's and Quebec's credit ratings and the interest rate cuts. The yield on the benchmark 30-year bond fell to 8.03 percent from $.21 percent. Parizeau expressed regret for his phrasing, saying he used terms "that could have been much better chosen." But he reiterated his view that Quebec's French-speaking majority had, in ef- feet, been thwarted by non- francophones. About 90 percent of English-speak- ing and immigrant Quebecers opposed secession, while French Quebecers - who make up 82 percent of the popula- tion - voted for independence by a 60- 40 margin. Earlier yesterday, Bouchard-apos- sible replacement for Parizeau - scoffed at an offer from Prime Minister Jean Chretien to negotiate a new status for Quebec. "Never again will sovereigntists be begging for anything from the rest of Canada," declared Bouchard. He said Quebec would sit down for talks with Canada only after winning a future in- dependence referendum. Chretien, chastened by the razor-thin federalist victory Monday, said he would try to get other provincial pre- miers to support changes that would decentralize the government and rec- ognize Quebec as a distinct society. Bouchard described his reaction to Chretien's offer as "boredom" and "big yawns." "Nobody's going to get us sovereigntists involved in another 30 years of sterile discussions," he said. Bouchard reiterated the separatists' promise to mount another independence drive. Current Quebec law bars a new secession referendum until after new leg- islative elections, but separatists control the legislature and could change the law. Though most of Canada welcomed the outcome of Monday's vote, Quebec was uneasy. Yeltsin's wife comforts Russia, calls for thoughtful government reform Los Angeles Times MOSCOW - Since Boris Yeltsin was rushed to the hospital last week with a new bout of heart disease, Russia has been gripped by speculation that its unpopular president is near death and that his post-Soviet reforms may be swept away in an imminent - and possibly bloody - change of leader- ship. Naina Yeltsin endured all that si- lently, with pain in her own heart - until yesterday. Then she vented her feelings in a televised interview aimed at assuring the world that her husband is on the mend and urging Russians to bear their own hardships in the name of his demo- cratic, free-market course. "We are all from the past," the first lady said. "It is very difficult to change everything overnight. We should not demand the impossible of the president now. ... We must help the president overcome." The 24-minute interview, aired partly on Russian Television, was extraordi- nary. It thrust Mrs. Yeltsin, an intensely private person, into a public role as presidential spokeswoman, eclipsing powerful Kremlin aides who have lost much of their credibility. It was also unusual that instead of limiting her remarks to her 64-year-old husband's health, she plunged into Russia's political fray, much as Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's wife, Raisa, did in the heady days of "perestroika." Mrs. Yeltsin, 63, denounced Com- munist and hardline nationalists who are favored to win the Dec. 17 parlia- mentary elections as a "black opposi- tion" bent on wrecking the country. She "It is very painful to watch this. It is not his heart alone that is in pain."a - Naina Yelstin Russian first lady defended Russia's "evolution" toward free-market capitalism and rejected as- sertions that only a tiny minority is benefiting. "We shouldn't paint all this in dark colors," she declared. "The shops are full. Russia is build- ing up. If you travel by plane, you can see construction under way. If people are building houses, it is a sign the country is surviving. It is too early to bury Russia." Mrs. Yeltsin said last springshe wants her husband to retire when his term expires next June so he can rest. She did not speak on that subject yesterday but admitted her inability to rein in his self- destructive habits. "Sadly, I cannot demand anything of him," she said. "He is very careless about his health. He has always been so." "Boris Nikolayevich is such a person who takes all his work to heart," she added. "I told him long ago, you cannot be a leader, because a leader must be indifferent. ... So much worrying falls on the heart of any leader. It is very painful to watch this. It is not his heart alone that is in pain." She said Yeltsin failed to complete prescribed treatment forhis earlier heart ailment, in July. He spent two weeks in a hospital and two weeks at a country retreat but "started having serious meet- ings" with aides a week after he was stricken, she said. The first lady attributed her husband's relapse to a demanding, self-imposed schedule during official visits last month to France and the United States, aggra- vated by jet lag. He was stricken last Thursday, two days after returning home from New York. Doctors have describedboth episodes as bouts of ischemia, which reduced the supply of blood and oxygen to Yeltsin's heart, and avoided the Russian word "infarkt," which means heart attack. They have joined Mrs. Yeltsin in insisting that the president get more rest this time - three weeks in the hospital and two weeks of vacation. Mrs. Yeltsin's interview appeared to be part of a coordinated effort to dispel any impression that the president is near death. Prime MinisterViktor Chernomyrdin and Kremlin spokesman Sergei Medvedev, among others, had been as- serting that Yeltsin was in control of the country, but they lacked credibility be- cause none had been allowed into the hospital. Yesterday, Mrs. Yeltsin and two of the few other people who have seen the president-the head of his eight-mem- ber medical team and his chief of secu- rity - stepped forward with upbeat reports on his health. "I can say with relief that his condi- tion is improving," Mrs. Yeltsin said, looking a bit tired but not on edge. "Of course we are all worried ... but I think it's simply out of place to speak about the president's incapacity." BEAUTY SPA Jeffrey Michael Powers Beauty Spa offers a sanctuary from this hectic world- _ ,. ._ . _ z. _r _. . L , - a .- 'I L""' Y.Y A L 9;