Page 10/The Battalion/Tuesday, April 14, 1987 Ghadafi's four-year-long try to conquer Chad crumbles Stories tell of desolation across countryside FAYA LARGEAU, Chad (AP) — A wrecked loudspeaker van, a larger-than-lifesize photo of Li bya’s Moammar Ghadafi pasted on one window, stands with all its wheels removed in the yard of a disused school building. The scene seems to symbolize Gadhafi’s four-year-long attempt to impose a form of Libyan colo nialism in neighboring Chad. His efforts in Faya Largeau collapsed in disgrace last month when highly mobile Chad forces handed the Libyan army its most crushing defeat, chasing it from most of the 500,000-square-mile northern Chadian desert. Faya Largeau, 600 miles north east of the capital, N’Djamena, is Chad’s largest oasis. The homes of rich merchants and camel trad ers are still visible in walled gar dens, amid palm trees and ole ander bushes. But most are in ruins, looted of everything, even window panes and light switches. All but 3,000 of Faya Largeau’s 25,000 inhabitants fled from the Libyan occupation. Two weeks after the Libyan defeat, they be gan trickling back in trucks carry ing relief supplies. Women wept when they saw their wrecked homes. Those who stayed behind tell of a ruthless regime that tried to Libyanize them against their will with the help of local collabora tors. In the once-thriving market, many stalls remain deserted. Women squat on the ground sell ing dates and vegetables. A hand ful of fresh tomatoes costs three Libyan dinars ($4). In August 1986, all trade in consumer goods stopped when former rebel leader Goukouni Oueddei defected from the Li byan side. The Libyans had con sidered Goukouni a trusted ally and had left it to his guerrillas to protect Libya’s supply routes through the Tibesti mountains. A month later, three leaders of the Goukouni faction were ar rested, driven out of town and summarily executed, Doumi said. The Libyans suspected them of planning to join Goukouni, he said. “Fifteen minutes after the ar rested men left town, we heard three bursts of machine-gun fire, and no one ever saw them again,” Doumi recalled. Doumi said that Adoum Aba- kar, a pro-Libyan political leader, suffered the same fate last Jan uary and that barely two weeks before their collapse, the Libyans summarily executed Oumar Moussa Bokori, chief of Goukou- ni’s military police. Habre’s local military com mander, Gaille Emchi, said “the only Chadians on the Libyan side were there under duress, and vir tually all of them have now rallied to the government. I don’t know about any being shot.” Habre apparently has no wish for those who once opposed him to be martyrs. Furthermore, a mi nority of Chadians led by Ach- eikh Ibn Omar continues to fight for Gadhafi’s colonized version of Chad. Emchi said Libyan troops in Faya Largeau sneaked out with out firing a shot the night of March 27. “After we overran their main base in Ouadi Doum, 100 miles to the east, they became completely demoralized and fled in panic,” he said. Eleven Libyan tanks in brand- new condition, Czechoslovak- made T-55s, stand in line on the edge of the oasis. Their Libyan crews apparently jumped into faster vehicles and fled. Pope draws criticism in Argentic for not denouncing government ROME (AP) — Pope John Paul 11 denounced human rights abuses in Chile, but he disappointed those who hoped for the same in Argen tina, where the church has been crit icized for not condemning torture and killing under past military rule. During the two-week tour ending Monday, the pope spoke firmly against the conduct of Chile’s right- wing government. In neighboring Argentina, which is adjusting to a 3-year-old democ racy and struggling with economic crisis, John Paul provoked criticism for not saying more about the mili tary juntas that governed for nearly nine years and had a close relationship with the Argentine church. “I believe there were serious defi ciencies . . . because Pope John Paul II did not make contact with the hu man rights organizations,” said Adolfo Perez Esquivel, an Argenti nian who won the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize. He said local Roman Catholic leaders “organized a beautiful tour ist trip but not a pastoral visit.” After arriving in Rome on Mon day, the pontiff said of Argentina, “You don’t see the tension that you saw in Chile.” Chilean church officials keep me ticulous records of presumed kid nappings, allegations of torture and harassment of labor activists, priests. nuns, lawyers, social workers and others who have denounced the 13- year-old military government of President Augusto Pinochet. The church in Argentina has the reputation of doing little during the Faculty (Continued from page I) could cause reverse discrimination. A case-by-case evaluation, he said, would better serve the women expe riencing unfair salary disparity. “We don’t have salary discrimina tion, to the best of my knowledge, in the College of Engineering," Russell said. “If you give across-the-board raises to the women in the College of Engineering, you will have a woman in at least one department — a lower-ranked individual — making more than half to three-quarters of the people in the next rank. And that doesn’t make any sense.” In other business, the Senate: • Concluded its approval of Uni versity Rules and Regulations changes. The remaining changes, approved with very little argument, include rules dealing with computer security, an official University policy on sexual assault and a rule prohihit- military’s “dirty war'onli 1976 to 1983. President Raul Alfomin’sfj ment says at least 9,000 appeared, presumably tilled,I human l ights groups sav tW bci may be lout times that mg the use of any A&Msra political campaigns. ( )ne regulation says thaiasj has the right to consult an at at a disciplinary hearing,buiti attorney cannot represent||J dent. Bill Kihler, cliairmanofthfl^^^ and Regulations Commiittt, that this change just mates n prat tit es of fic ial. Attorneyss not be able to directly qne® ( 11 ^s-ev.unine witnesses,hesa < an sc an informal admiist heal mg is not a court of U • I leartl am address froitl Suns, former student bodia dent. Sims emphasized that lie dent anti Faculty senatessliotilo, tinue tt) work together, mi sin t essfiil compromises,sriflu i ore curriculum. Sims suggested a tfopdiw i ussitm on the finals com with \ andjyet and members Student and Faculty senates. 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