Page 8/The Battalion/Thursday, August 6,1987 World and Nation I! ro +-» - i= tn _ _ in mssf 3 Ortega offers to discuss possible cease-fire pla| MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — Presi dent Daniel Ortega on Wednesday offered to discuss with the U.S. government a peace plan announced in Washington that calls for a cease-fire between Sandinista troops and Contra rebels. “The government of Nicaragua invites the government of the United States to im mediately initiate negotiations in Washing ton, Managua or in a third country to have an unconditional dialogue to discuss the said initiative,” Ortega said. He also said the meeting would be a time to discuss as well “Nicaraguan initia tives with the purpose of developing a ne gotiating process that would conclude with a signing of a just and verifiable accord that would guarantee the legitimate inter ests of Nicaragua and the United States.” President Reagan said Wednesday in Washington he would hold off on seeking further military aid for Contra rebels if Ni caragua’s leftist government agrees to a cease-fire and democratic reforms. The $100 million in U.S. aid for the Contra rebels approved last year expires Sept. 30. The Contras have been fighting the leftist Sandinista government here for the past 5 1 /? years. (Jrtega said a refusal by the United States to meet with Nicaraguan officials would show the the proposal from Wash ington is only a maneuver to appease the U.S. Congress. “The rejection of this dialogue would show that the Reagan administration, with its initiative, wants to boycott (other) peace efforts of the region ... to obtain a biparti san consensus of Congress for the appro val of more funds for the mercenaries and the strengthening of its current interven tionist escalation which the administration insists on continuing,” Ortega said. The president read the brief statement to journalists invited to the government headquarters. He announced before reading the statement that he would accept questions at some other time. Ortega is scheduled to attend a summit of Central American presidents Thursday and Friday in Guatemala City, where For eign Minister Miguel D’Escoto earlier said Reagan “is becoming more and more con vinced that it’s going to be difficult to ob tain more funding for the Contras.” “He’s trying to create the impression that he is not a warlike president, that he is open to peace,” D’Escoto said Tuesday nmht. Ijj “But he is a true ‘bandolero,’a mar. (VJ operates totally outside the law." ^ The Sandinista newspaper Barra ^ here Wednesday called the Reagan prcE sal “a maneuver against the summit^ the pro-government newspaperNue\ ario termed it "unacceptable.’’ The summit is intended to disciis plan for peace first proposed by Cost: can President Oscar Arias in Febman The Contadora Group of Mexico,h ama, Venezuela and Colombia has > trying since January 1983 todraftay. treaty for Central America. h California lawmaker proposes penalties for highway shooters LOS ANGELES (AP) — A law that would imprison highway gun slingers for at least three years was proposed Wednesday as violence spread from the freeways to the sky, where one pilot reported another one drew a gun on him. “Maybe next time they can do it in rocket ships,” said a spokesman for the Marines Corps, which volun teered the use of a helicopter in an unsuccessful attempt to catch the airborne gunman. The spate of motorist-to-motorist violence, which started in mid-June, has left four people dead and 15 in jured on southern California free ways. Eighteen people have been ar rested, although one was released for lack of evidence. More than 40 shootings, rock-throwings and other attacks have been recorded. Most of those arrested so far have been booked for investigation of at tempted murder. A first-degree at tempted murder conviction carries a prison sentence of 25 years to life. It appeared the highway violence had moved to the crowded sky over the region Tuesday when the pilot of a Cessna 150 reported that the pi lot of a Citabria brandished a gun at him as the two planes flew off the coast of Oceanside, 70 miles south east of downtown Los Angeles, Fed eral Aviation Administration spokeswoman Elly Bekke said. No shots were fired. The Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro volunteered a CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter in an unsuccessful attempt to find the gun-wielding pi lot, said Maj. Hank Polacke. “I guess this is a new twist to the freeway shootings,” Polacke said Wednesday. “Maybe next time they can do it in rocket ships.” FAA spokeswoman Barbara Abels said Wednesday that investigators had located the Citabria pilot and said he denied drawing a gun. She said the pilots each accused the other of traveling too close to the other. State Assemblyman Paul Zeltner announced Wednesday that he will propose urgency legislation later this month to crack down on freeway shooters. His bill would permanently re voke the driver’s license of anyone convicted of shooting from one car at another, require a minimum prison sentence of three years for anyone convicted of such a crime, and require a minimum state prison sentence of up to seven years if a death occurs during such a crime. Witnesses tell of death, destruction in Mecca MECCA, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Friday began in peace, as befits a day of the annual Moslem pil grimage to holy Mecca, but there were whispers during early afternoon prayers at the Grand Mosque. Then the trouble began. This account of the protests and riots, in which hundreds of people were killed, was assembled from interviews with witnesses: Two million Moslems from all over the world had come to Mecca on the annual hajj, or pil grimage. Many observers in the sea of white, seamless robes noticed clusters of Iranians forming in the vast yard and outside the prayer compound. The pious scene around the Grand Mosque quickly became one of violence, panic and death. Groups of Iranians moved in tight formations, in a brisk half-step march despite the tempera ture of 115 degrees, with large numbers of chan ting women in the front. Shouting and sounds of confusion came from the rear of the huge crowd. Hajiis, or pilgrims, from other countries were squabbling with the Iranians, who had blocked several streets. A car was overturned and began to burn. Some in the front fought police, grabbing offi cers and striking them with pieces of wood or metal. Police retreated behind water cannons, whose jets knocked over protesters and started more stampedes. Saudi authorities say the toll was 402 dead: 275 Iranian pilgrims, 42 other hajiis and 85 po lice officers. They said the police did not fire on the protesters, and the deaths and hundreds of injuries were caused by trampling and riots. U.S. chief of protoco Diplomatic immunitf is necessary policy WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department’s chief of pro tocol on Wednesday defended a treaty that guarantees diplomatic immunity, despite testimony from victims who told tales of rapes and assaults gone unpu nished. “We are an honorable nation — we are not an Iran,” Selwa Roosevelt told a Senate panel. Roosevelt said she feels com passion for victims of diplomatic crime, but she said legislation to limit diplomatic immunity here would ultimately hurt U.S. en voys abroad. “We have set our signature on a treaty,” she said. “If the United States unilaterally alters its treaty obligation, we surely will invite more harmful reciprocal action.” The department has estimated that about 27,000 foreigners and their families are covered by dip lomatic immunity, although the American Federation of Police put the number closer to 40,000. Under the 1961 Vienna Conven tion on Diplomatic Relations, these people can’t be tried on criminal charges here unless the home country waives immun: But Roosevelt, whose husl is a scion of the family of odore Roosevelt, acknowl that rarely happens. Instead, diplomatic cna generally go unpunished, ii4 nesses told the Senate Fort! Relations Committee. Kenny Skeen, of Silver Spn| Md., was working as a nigh:: bouncer in 1982 whenht. shot by a young man later :c: fied by police as thesonofa Brazilian ambassador. Skttni he was just coming outofsurr when he was told thatthcra had l>een released. “When I heard the new:, this man was a diplomat's johe': would be cut free, that fab:; mind,” Skeen said. TmanA- ican. He’s over here onmyr erty, my country. He shoo: and he gets away scot-free. | Years later, Skeen disco'?’ that the ambassador's sor. been arrested another timt “assaultive conduct” and Ktl on d iplomatic-imtmiDj grounds. The son wentbadl Brazil a few days after Sleet| shot. — SAVE ON MEN’S SWIMWEAR AND SUMMER ACTIVEWEAR 40% OFF SIZZLING SAVINGS ON ■ JANTZEN ■ NEWPORT BLUE ■ LORD JEFF ■ SPEED0 AND MORE! Orig. 10.00-35.00, sale 9.00-21.00. Get ready for your favorite kind of summer fun and save! Choose from shorts, pants, shirts, swim trunks and more in a variety of popular styles. Solid colors or prints; sizes s-m-l-xl. 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