The Battalion WORLD & NATION 9 Monday, November 27,1989 Mexican officials suspect foul play Poll watchers discover signs of ballot stuffing at election sites lyno- your 'IUW critic, tasif (and start tones Nets ted to iesert ' she "Sol ties as o me ling I o cut thing seven i un- dness MATAMOROS, Mexico (AP) — More than 1,000 suspected fraudulent ballots were im pounded in Sunday’s state and municipal elec tion after poll watchers found ballot boxes stuffed with votes cast for the ruling PRI party before the polls opened. ! At Matamoros precinct No. 35A, where only 18 people had signed in to vote by mid-morning Sunday, election officials counted 562 ballots cast in the race for state representative and 429 in the separate box for the mayoral election. Almost all of the extra ballots were for candi dates of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, known by its Spanish initials as the PRI. Mayoral candidate Jorge Cardenas with the opposition Authentic Party of the Mexican Revo lution (PARM) accused PRI officials of orches trating “a huge fraud” throughout the state of Tamaulipas. “The people of Matamoros will not accept this, and neither will the people of Tamaulipas,” Car denas said. At Precinct 35A, where 30 times as many bal lots were cast as the number of people who had voted, voting was suspended temporarily while election officials counted the votes in front of public notaries called in to record the evidence. “Fraude, fraude, fraude (fraud, fraud, fraud),” chanted a crowd gathered in the govern ment health clinic, while the votes were being counted. Reymundo Padilla, precinct president, said he did not know how the ballots ended up in the boxes before polls opened. “Somebody put them in the boxes,” Padilla said. At another precinct set up at a Matamoros el ementary school, the PRI poll watcher called in a complaint to denounce alleged ballot-stuffing by his own party. Reynaldo Carrillo Nava, PRI pre cinct representative, said he called after finding 380 ballots — all cast for the PRI — inside a box before voting was to start at 8 a.m. “There were ballots already inside,” Carrillo said. “I protested, but they (other PRI officials at the precinct) didn’t want to recognize it.” After election officials emptied the 380 suspect ballots into a garbage bag to await inspection by the State Electoral Commission, a man ran off with the bag, but threw it down before escaping, said Mariano Aguilar Estrada, who helped re trieve the bag of ballots. Voting temporarily was suspended while nota ries recorded the evidence. PRI mayoral candidate Javier Muzquiz said voting fraud would be impossible in Matamoros because precinct officials would discover irregu larities. “They (PARM) are inventing stories of fraud when they don’t need to invent stories of fraud,” Muzquiz said Sunday. “I am not interested in winning with fraud.” PARM officials on Sunday turned over an other 300 ballots marked for the PRI after dis covering a man carrying them with him. “They were to be used for tacos,” Valentin Ji menez Mora, a PARM candidate for state rep resentative, said. A “taco” in a Mexican election is a ballot with several additional ballots secretly folded inside, making it possible for one person to cast more than one vote for a candidate. Cabrera said there had been no reports of vio lence as of mid-afternoon. I st c«' y, bn enm- say: Britii ilishec storie Sh«- siciai' utn# s utte; s Bat. ngtlx ies oi inllif le tit High winds delay Discovery’s return after successful spy satellite launch CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Blustery winds in the California desert Sunday forced NASA to delay space shuttle Discovery’s return to Earth until Monday following a se cret mission that put a spy satellite in orbit. Mission Control in Houston in formed the five astronauts of the “wave-off’ about three hours before they were to fire rockets to drop the craft out of orbit to start an hour- long descent to a nighttime landing at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., in the Mojave Desert. “Discovery has been waved off from its scheduled landing this eve- Jining due to unacceptably strong - winds,” a statement from the Na tional Aeronautics and Space Ad ministration said. The statement said that condi tions were forecast to be favorable Monday night and landing was re scheduled for 4:32 p.m. PST, mak ing it a daytime rather than a night landing, as had been planned for Sunday. Winds gusting to nearly 30 mph sent small dust storms whipping across the Edwards runways. Mis sion rules dictate that a shuttle not land at night if crosswinds are more than 12 mph. “Another problem is that we have no upper-level wind data because the winds keep breaking our weather balloons,” NASA spokes man Linda Copley said. Discovery carries enough fuel and other supplies to remain in orbit at least through Tuesday. If conditions remained bad at Edwards, the shut tle could land at either White Sands, N.M., or at Cape Canaveral. Edwards landings are preferred because of the long, wide-open run ways. Because the mission is classified, no information is being reported by NASA. So the reaction of the astro nauts to the delay was not made pub lic. The statement did say the crew “continued to be in excellent condi tion.” This was the sixth time in 32 shut tle flights that a landing has been waved off by bad weather. Discovery was slated to be only the third shuttle to land at night. Its launch Wednesday was the third af ter dark. Most news about the flight was blacked out on Pentagon orders since Discovery blazed away from Cape Canaveral, Fla. NASA was al lowed to make only periodic statements that the spaceship was doing fine and to announce the landing time. The after-dark liftoff and touch down were dictated by the need to put the shuttle’s satellite in a specific orbit and by the military experi ments conducted by the astronauts. s ery len Deadliest battle in El Salvador’s civil war I. t Z' . : J sets stage for more bloodletting in future vil- wo idy an lin en- - a lall icy idr vay i to ter the ted ton 3 p- ns- :tty in the un- ost s a l in wn e'U ays ind ur- ind ten At- ur- hit .ess for iles ton nto an af- the i i i SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador ; (AP) — The two deadliest weeks of the 10-year-old civil war have served only to set the stage for more blood- letting. The battle of San Salvador — at least the first one — is over. The huge rebel offensive that began Nov. 11 failed to achieve its principal ob- Ijective of persuading the govern ment to make significant concessions in the quest for a negotiated solu tion. Indeed, with the administration claiming victory and demanding what amounts to the rebels’ surren der, and the insurgents promising to [finish off “the mortally wounded yfascist beast,” Salvadorans can only expect weeks or months more of warfare of an intensity unseen since early 1981, when the rebels’ first “fi nal offensive” failed. “This battle against ARENA is a battle that cannot turn back, a battle to sweep fascism once and for all : from our country,” the rebel clan destine Radio Venceremos said late last week. ARENA is the rightist Na tionalist Republican Alliance, the governing party. “They (the guerrillas) tried, and they lost,” President Alfredo Cris- tiani said, proclaiming the military defeat of the Farabundo Marti Na- [ tional Liberation Front, or FMLN. The government contends its forces killed or wounded a third of the rebel army, estimated at about 7,000 full-time combatants. Most foreign journalists who spent day af- her day in the combat zones doubt the official claim that more than 1,000 guerrillas were killed. The Figure appears inconsistent with the relatively few dead guerril las seen by reporters who daily com pared notes on what they saw where and when. Cristiani says the decimation suf fered by guerrilla forces has been so telling that they will be capable from now on of only “terrorist” actions. The contention is suspect, as the [president, the defense minister and [every colonel who went on record in the months prior to the spectacular push said the same thing: that insur gent capacity had been reduced to isolated terrorist activity. Cristiani acknowledged in an in- [terview after the fighting waned last [week that the guerrillas “are doing some things that look more like re grouping than withdrawing.” Radio Venceremos on Friday re ferred to the 10-day concerted as- , sault on the capital and several pro vincial cities as “the first period of offensive,” implying that others are in the offing. The war began in late 1979, but its [roots go back decades. El Salvador is the smallest country on the Western Hemisphere’s main land. With 5 million people in an area the size of Massachusetts, it is also the most densely populated. The consolidation of land hold ings by relatively recent immigrant families — not of the centuries-old Indian-Spanish mix that makes up more than 90 percent of the popula tion — disenfranchized hundreds of thousands of peasants who raised subsistence crops on collectively held village lands. Landless peasants be came migrant peons who went sea sonally from the coffee harvest to picking cotton to cutting cane — the work force of an economy that was almost completely dependent on the export of those three products. The agricultural export economy made vast fortunes for a tiny elite. The rich have mansions on their plantations, sumptuous homes in the capital’s posh western sector and houses or apartments in Miami, New York or Los Angeles. They tune in to U.S. television stations with their satellite dishes and send their chil dren to U.S. universities while two- thirds of the population lives in dire poverty. Peasants and workers organized widely in the 1970s. By the end of the decade, left-leaning federations demanding profound structural re form to more equitably distribute wealth were regularly putting tens of thousands of people in the street. They probably constituted, if counted together, a plurality of Sal vadorans. The growing left threatened the privileged, who reacted ferociously. About 30,000 people — most of them real or perceived leftists — are estimated to have been slain by gov ernment troops or right-wing death squads between 1979 and 1984, when such murders began to de cline. Repression combined with the vast majority’s manifest lack of eco nomic opportunity to create a fertile field for revolutionary harvest. The government and its U.S. pa tron contend a fledgling democracy is on its feet. Gorbachev supports European reform; Czech leader believes Soviet president endorses socialism with ‘human face’ MOSCOW (AP) — Mikhail S. Gorbachev displayed solid support Sunday for reform in Eastern Eu rope by endorsing socialism with a “human face” — the slogan used by the Czechoslovakian progressives toppled by a Soviet-led invasion in 1968. In the Czechoslovakian capital, Alexander Dubcek, leader of the ill- fated “Prague Spring” reforms of 21 years ago, read Gorbachev’s remarks at a rally as proof of the Soviet presi dent’s backing for change. Two days earlier, the Czechoslo vakian Communist Party dumped party chief Milos Jakes and some other leaders associated with hard line policies in an attempt to stem the political crisis that has rocked the country. With the East bloc in upheaval, the Soviet Communist Party daily Pravda published a 2 1 /2-page compi lation of Gorbachev’s thoughts on the future of socialism and his own program for “perestroika,” or re construction of the economy and so ciety. Pravda said the article was a syn thesis of recent remarks by Gorba chev. The Soviet leader’s major theme seemed to be that socialism must modernize — even adopt traits of capitalism if necessary — or risk be coming irrelevant. He offered no quick answers but said the process would take years, “into the 21st cen tury.” He also said achievements at tained under capitalism, like “equal- Mikhail Gorbachev ity of all before the law” and general prosperity, should not be dismissed because of ideology. “In the hullabaloo of our constant confrontation with capitalism, we clearly underestimate the impor tance of much that has been done by humanity over the centuries,” the Kremlin leader said. On the need for Soviet reform, Gorbachev said: “The people are tired of waiting. “Many words have been spoken about the interests of man, but they have been little reinforced with material resources and genuine deeds. As a result, in becoming a great and mighty power, the country did not create for the masses of the people the conditions of life that are natural for any civilized state. “The new face of socialism is its human face; this fully corresponds to the thought of Marx,” Gorbachev said. “Because its creation is the chief goal of restructuring, we can with full justification say we are building humanitarian socialism.” For Communists, the phrase “so cialism with a human face” is insepa rably linked to Dubcek and his ill- fated reform movement. Gorbachev has previously supported economic and social reform in Eastern Europe and pledged the Soviets would not interfere there, but by appropriating Dubcek’s words, he made his point dramatically. Some in Prague even took Gorba chev’s comments as a public admis sion that the 1968 intervention, which led to Dubcek’s overthrow, was a mistake. The Soviet Union has not yet renounced the 1968 inter vention, as it has the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan. In the Pravda article, Gorbachev sounded a note of alarm about so cialism by contrasting its present woes with the adaptibility of capital ism. Karl Marx was wrong, Gorbachev acknowledged, when he predicted capitalism’s imminent demise. Gorbachev defended the 1917 revolution that brought the Commu nists to power in the former Russian Empire as a “world-historical break through to the future,” but said so cialism has often been perverted since. Tl\ M /F7 Aggie Cinema Movie Information \aggii^^inema/ Hotline: 847-8478 Room at the Top .... Nov. 28 ^ "■ .$2.50 The Abyss ^ .$2.00 Key Largo _ Dec.6 7:30 PM .$2.00 Children under 13 -$1.00 Tickets may be purchased at the MSC Box Office. TAMU ID required except for International features. AM/RM Clinics • Minor Emergencies • General Medical Care • Weight Reduction Program 10% Student Discount with I.D. 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