Tuesday, November 10,1987/The Battalion/Page 7 World and Nation Sri Lankan police say bomb killed at least 32 I COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — A bomb explosion on a major road :xpl where thousands of commuters I waited for buses home Monday blew ;ople to bits and set vehicles ablaze. Police said at least 32 people were killed and 105 injured. Rescue workers put the death toll ; at more than 50 and said it may feach 70. Bodies and body parts lay scat tered on the street and sidewalks in jthe capital’s Maradana neighbor- Ihood. The air smelled of burning Hlesh. Ambulances and private cars Ipore away the dead and wounded, f At least 25 damaged cars and §)buses littered the area. One bus was Icompletely burned. Broken glass Pfrom buildings covered the street. I Whether the bomb was planted ||jnside a car or bus was not known. It I nvent off about 5:40 p.m. near a po lice station and a main bus stop llightly over a mile east of downtown ^Colombo. I Thousands of people had lined the Maradana Road waiting for buses home to the eastern suburbs. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Police at the scene blamed nationalist Sinhalese op posed to a peace pact arranged by India to end the civil war by rebels of the Tamil minority, although the Maradana area and eastern suburbs are mainly Sinhalese. A Parliament debate on imple menting the peace agreement was scheduled to begin Tuesday. Constable Wimal Fernando said he was leaving the police station when “the blast of the bomb almost threw me back inside. I was shocked when I realized there were bodies all over and vehicles were on fire.” Chandrasiri Rupasinghe, 31, was walking toward a bus stand. After the explosion, he saw smoke rising from cars and began pulling wounded people away from the flames. “Some of them were on fire,” he said. Soldiers fired into the air to dis perse crowds impeding rescue work. Police and military units cordoned off the area. Police and soldiers in Colombo had been on alert because officials expected an attempt by radicals in the Sinhalese majority to foment ri ots on the eve of the Parliament de bate. Leaders of the People’s Liberation Front, the major Sinhalese national ist group, have threatened death to anyone who supports the peace accord aimed at ending the four- year war by Tamil rebels who want a separate nation. More than 6,000 people had been killed by the time India and Sri Lanka signed the peace agreement July 29. It provides autonomy for northern and eastern Sri Lanka, where most Tamils live. Monday’s explosion was the first major bombing in Colombo since a car bomb April 21 killed at least 180 people at the main bus terminal. o ol Irish Army claims bomb that killed 11 ENNISKILLEN, Northern Ireland (AP) — The Irish Repub lican Army said Monday it plan ted the bomb that killed 11 civil ians and injured 63 at war memorial services, but that it meant to kill soldiers and the bomb went off prematurely. The attack stirred a wave of re vulsion on both sides of the Irish island, among Protestants and Roman Catholics alike. Pope John Paul II sent a tele gram to the local church in Ennis killen, espressing his “heartfelt condolences to the families of the innocent persons killed by this cruel (bombing) act.” In a statement to Irish news media, the outlawed IRA sought to excuse the high civilian toll by saying the 40-pound bomb should have blown up as soldiers marched by during the Remem brance Day ceremony for fallen British soldiers. Authorities arrest white supremacist in sedition case LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — White supremacist Louis Ray Beam Jr., one of 14 people indicted on se dition in April and one of the FBI’s 10 most wanted fugitives, was ar rested by Mexican police in Guadala jara Friday, the FBI said Monday. Beam, born in Lufkin, was a for mer grand dragon of the Texas Klan. He was to be returned to Fort Smith Monday afternoon. Sedition is plotting the overthrow of the federal government. Beam’s wife, Sheila Marie Toohey Beam, 20, opened fire on arresting officers and critically injured a Mexi can police officer, said Don K. Pet- tus, special agent in charge of the FBI in Arkansas. Mexican authori ties are holding her for assault on a police officer. Pettus said Beam, 41, was one of the founders of the white supremac ist movement in the United States. He was affiliated with the Aryan Na tion Church of Jesus Christ Chris tian in Hayden Lake, Idaho. “Prior to the indictment he had been in and out of Arkansas,” Pettus said. “To our knowledge he has not been in Arkansas since the indict ment.” The indictments were returned April 21. The indictment charges Beam and 13 others with participation in a sedidous conspiracy to violently overthrow the U.S. government and with financing their efforts through armed robberies and counterfeiting. It also is alleged that they conspired to diminish confidence in the gov ernment bjr assassinating federal of ficials and members of ethnic groups, by bombings and by destruc tion of utilities. Oil industry leaders don’t expect adverse effects from stock crash CHICAGO (AP) — Top officials of several major oil companies said Monday they do not expect the re- t cent collapse of world financial mar- Lkets to adversely affect their busi- ! ‘ nesses in the near future. And despite the continuing slide of the dollar, the heads of Exxon, Corp., Chevron Corp. and Amoco Corp. also said they expect oil prices to remain near current levels for the I next several years, barring some ex traordinary development. “Regarding the stock market crash, I don’t really see that it will have a substantial impact,” Lawrence Rawl, chairman of New York-based Exxon, said. Rawl acknowledged that contin ued U.S. budget and trade deficits could bring on a recession that would “result in a direct impact.” But he pointed out that various stock market indicators currently are still above their levels earlier this year despite the events of Black Monday and subsequent market vol atility. “I see these things as an aberra tion,” Rawl said, referring to the Oct. 19 crash. “I don’t see any great big changes in demand (for oil), un less we have a substantial recession. And I don’t see that happening.” The head of the nation’s largest oil company met with reporters as the annual convention of the Ameri can Petroleum Institute, a Washing ton-based trade association, was get ting under way. Sessions says FBI failed to uncover drug use WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI failed in 143 in terviews over four years to turn up evidence of mari juana use by Douglas H. Ginsburg, FBI Director Wil liam Sessions disclosed Monday. For the final background check — which was to have been due Monday — the White House gave the FBI just one week instead of the usual 25 days after President Reagan nominated Ginsburg to the Supreme Court, the officials said. 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