The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 31, 1986, Image 10

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    1
Page 10/The Battalion/Friday October 31,1986
Battalion
France says it made no deals
Classifieds with terrorists, denies reports
NOTIC6
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38110/22
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Battalion
PARIS (AP) — The French government
Thursday branded as fiction reports it struck a
truce with Middle Eastern bombers who terror
ized Paris, and it denied that France planned to
exchange arms for Syrian help in the anti-terror
ist Fight.
Denis Baudouin, spokesman for Premier Jac
ques Chirac, acknowledged that Syria has been
cooperating with France in an effort to put an
end to the terror campaign, which killed 10 peo
ple and hurt 162 in the French capital last
month.
But Baudouin stressed that there has been no
contact or negotiations with the terrorists.
A group calling itself the Committee of Solida
rity with Arab and Middle East Political Prisoners
claimed responsibility for the five bombings be
tween Sept. 8 and Sept. 17. It demanded the re
lease of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah and two other
Middle Eastern men imprisoned in terrorism
cases.
The newspaper Le Monde reported Wednes
day that Syria helped obtain a truce in the bomb
ings and that the brothers of Abdallah, pre
sumed leader of the Lebanese Armed
845-2611
Revolutionary Factions, agreed lo suspend their
attacks until February 1987, after being threat
ened by Syrian security services.
Abadallah is serving a four-year term for pos
sessing arms and false papers. He is expected to
go on trial in February for complicity in the 1982
murders of an American military attache and an
Israeli diplomat in Paris.
Asked about the Le Monde report, Baudouin
said: “That’s Fiction and it has never been a ques
tion of (making) a truce that would have been
paid for in one way or another, either by f reeing
Mr. Abdallah . . . or, secondly, in the Financial
sphere and in the sphere of armaments. We cat
egorically deny it.”
Syria’s vice president, Abdel Halim Khaddam,
confirmed on French television Wednesday
night that Syrian secret services have been coop
erating with the French to prevent further bomb
ings in Paris. He did not say how.
Police have said Abdallah’s four brothers and
five other people, all living in a Syrian-controlled
area of northern Lebanon, are the prime sus
pects in the bombings.
Le Monde said that the Syrian secret services
“threatened reprisals if the attacks resi .,
and that the French government sent a
to the Abdallahs via Syria and Algeriasa)i
while the bombings were making it impossl
release Abdallah, the trial “could turmoil
vantage.”
French newspaper reports have suggest:
the prosecution does not have a stror;-
against Abdallah and that the governmenist
c ceding with the trial only because of Autt,
pressure.
A statement signed by the Committeeofk,
clarity with Arab and Middle East PoliticalW
oners said Thursday it will not abide by w
leged truce, saying, "The Abdallahs do J
represent the committee. . . . Any cornu]
agreement with them is not binding on tlietJ
mittee.”
Fi ance lias come uncler criticism both!*
and abroad for its dealings with Syriadespiit
pit ions here that the Syrians mayhavebett
solved in helping the bombers.Officialism!:
have no proof of Syrian involvemeniandHii
make accusations without it.
Vatican tells bishops to stomp out
pro-homosexual views in Church
VATICAN CITY (AP) — The
Vatican instructed bishops Thurs
day to stamp out pro-homosexual
views within the Roman Catholic
church and oppose any attempt to
condone homosexuality through
legislation or other means.
In a letter to the bishops approved
by Popejohn Paul II, the Vatican ac
cused pro-homosexual groups of
“deceitful propaganda” and trying
to gain a foothold in the church,
which has 810 million followers.
“Increasing numbers of people,
even within the church, are bringing
enormous pressure to bear on the
church to accept the homosexual
condition as though it were not dis
ordered and to condone homosex
ual activity,” it said.
The Vatican told the bishops and
priests not to support organizations
that “seek to undermine the teach
ing of the church (on homosexual
ity), which are ambiguous about it,
or which neglect it entirely.”
The 15-page letter was dated Oct.
1 and made public Thursday. It was
drawn up by the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, the watch
dog of doctrinal deviation headed by
West German-born Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger.
An Italian homosexual rights
group named Fuori (Outside) issued
a statement calling the church docu
ment “a futile attempt to force dis
crimination by those who, perhaps
because of love based on true faith,
have discovered tolerance.”
Prelates in some countries, includ
ing the United States, have struggled
with government authorities over
homosexual rights. Church leaders
in New York City unsuccessfully
contested an action designed to pro
tect homosexuals from job discrimi
nation.
The Vatican has taken discipli
nary action against some churchmen
for advocating liberal views on ho
mosexuality.
It said in the instructions that the
church position cannot lx* revised by
pressure from civil legislation.
States, a majority of its victims are
homosexuals.
The church is “really concerned
about the many who are not rep
resented by the pro-homosexual
movement and about those who may
have been tempted to fvelieve its de
ceitful propaganda,” the letter said.
In an apparent reference to the
dangers of AIDS, the letter said:
“Even when the practice of homo
sexuality may seriously threaten the
lives and well-being of a large num
ber of people, its advocates remain
undeterred and refuse to consider
the magnitude of the risks involved.”
Acquired immune deficiency syn
drome is spread primarily by sexual
contact and the sharing of needles
by drug abusers. In the United
Although the church
violent malice in speech (
against homosexuals, tl:
said, bishops must state <
homosexuality is immora
pressure from the pro-h
movement within the
change its teaching.
Bishops shoui
oi church building
including faciliti
schools anti college
"To some, such
rhurch property n
ttdemns
Vatican
arly that
nd resist
xuosexu.ti
not tx*
and charital
misleading and
Ratzinger’s ager
The documer
Christians to le
declared:
“It is onli
relationship tha
ual faculty can
oft
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NEW Y0RK(AP)-T
market chalked upasofe
heavy trading Thurs
pclled In hopes forlo*
i ales and some faio
nomic news.
I he Dow Jones ave
industrials climbed
1,878.37, stretching ns
the week's start to46!
Volume on the Nt»
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million shares, the seven:
total evei. against IMF
m tlte previous sessiw
cord for a single sessiocK
m shares was set Sep
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Waldheim denies fighting in Nazi operation
rK
VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Presi
dent Kurt Waldheim on Thursday
said he did not Fight Yugoslav parti
sans during a Nazi operation and
denied he was approached after the
war to work for Soviet intelligence,
according to his spokesman.
Gerold Christian, the spokesman,
made the comments after new alle
gations appeared in the U.S. media
about Waldheim’s activity in World
War II.
The Washington Post reported
Thursday that Waldheim acknowl
edged after months of denial that he
had played a role in the brutal Nazi
“pacification” operation that cost
thousands of lives in Yugoslavia.
It said that in a 13-page memo
sent to the Post in April, the former
U.N. secretary-general had denied
he was involved in the 1942 opera
tion to remove all 80,000 residents,
including 3,500 armed partisans,
from Kozara, a mountainous region
in Yugoslavia.
The newspaper Thursday quoted
Christian as saying “additional re
search” revealed the president’s ear
lier statement was incorrect.
But in a telephone conversation
with the Associated Press on Thurs
day, Christian said the earlier
statements by Waldheim that he was
not involved in the Kozara operation
“were not incorrect.”
Christian said, “The war record
was, however, supplemented after
files and documents were found”
and the information was made avail
able to U.S. authorities in August.
Christian, who said Waldheim was
in the Kozara area for a short pe
riod, quoted the president as saying
he was not directly involved in fight
ing and did not witness mass killings.
Waldheim “never was present
during combat action,” Gnristian
said. “He was unfit for the front and
never had a rifle to sli
The spokesman :
“never got into physi
partisans, because h
subordinated activity
ficer.
A secretary in Waldheim'
later telephoned the AP with
glish-language statement,
“With regard to the Kozara
Dr. Waldheim’s service was
oot with. ..
aid Waldheim
:a! contact with
‘ performed a
’ as a supply of-
one of 29 memberso
N’.t/i commander ir
IT eidrich von Stahl.
Hie newspaper s
show Stahl recommei
and 38 others for th
> office
an En-
saying,
(area),
limited
¥
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1
>s
to the normal duties of a junior sup
ply officer and did not involve any
combat activity."
Waldheim’s recent campaign for
the presidency was marred by allega
tions that he was involved in wartime
atrocities against partisans and Jews
in Yugoslavia and Greece.
Waldheim denied the charges and
maintained he was the victim of a
campaign to deny him the presi
dency.
Fhe Post cited German reports
showing that Lt. Kurt Waldheim was
n.ui gttinnnifiii' r . j m
Medal for “heroicbrawf
tie against the insurp
spring and summer of /
also received an oak lei t
diers who distinguisiieo
“under enemy fire," thee
description of the me;/
ported.
Stahl’s order was torts
ra's entire populationik:
with a “reliable ’ populi'
said. Yugoslav figures»1>
itsans and 13,000 d\t
killed ordiedduringtkf
Christian also saiOB®
Waldheim “caiegoricali' -■
was contacted to wort i 1
lot the Yugoslavs or the/
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