1991 ty [ht’s e is ign- the 'en- fied rom for icer :e is tus. 3n’s >uld hey World and nation n Wednesday, January 16, 1991 The Battalion PLO deaths Police arrest Palestinians in slayings of officials Worth nths to >nce he 1 work, iplete. -ounce epskin. xves as fhe fit- arm is iccause ad can hane, I of this capped >me up goods 1 make dren to ’erry of :as city Austin. Roland ets his le does ler stu- ;rs any TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — Police arrested seve- [jl Palestinians, including a PLO bodyguard with inks to terrorist Abu Nidal, after the assassina- lions of three PLO officials. But many Arabs ilamed Israel. Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied territories pured into the streets to protest the assassina- jons, waving black mourning flags and the trico lor banner of Palestine. Israeli army gunfire ied three people and wounded 74. Israel flatly denied involvement. “We had nothing to do with it,” Israeli Defense Minister Sloshe Arens told ABC-TV. Killed Monday night were Salah Khalaf, sec ond in command to PLO chairman Yasser Ar- ifat; Hayel Abdel-Hamid, the PLO’s security thief; and Abu Mohammed al-Omari, Khalafs thief body guard. Arafat returned Tuesday from Baghdad to the Tunis headquarters of the Palestine Liber ation Organization, canceling a trip to Paris. The PLO eulogized Khalaf and Abdel-Hamid as lead ers who symbolized the Palestinian cause and lauded al-Omari as a PLO fighter. A statement from Fatah, the main branch of the PLO, said the gunman, identified by the PLO and Tunisian officials as Hamza Abu Zid, was a “planted agent who undertook dealing with trai torous parties.” “This crime will never be left without punish ment,” the statement said. However, the statement dropped earlier PLO accusations that the killings were sponsored by Israel, and gave weight to reports the gunman was allied with Abu Nidal, Arafat’s sworn enemy. There was no statement from Abu Nidal. PLO security sources said Abu Zid split from Abu Nidal, head of the Fatah-Revolutionary Council, during a mutiny in Libya. The sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Abu Zid came to Tunis six months ago and was hired as Abdel-Hamid’s bodyguard. Palestinian sources said one gunman killed the three PLO officials. The Tunisian police report indicated there was one gunman, but Tunisian officials said other Palestinians were arrested. “All people implicated in this attack were ar rested,” the official TAP news agency reported, adding all are “Palestinians known to the PLO.” Israeli army radio said as many as a dozen people were arrested. The police report made public Tuesday said the three men were killed with two Kalishnikov automatic rifles. Initial reports said the gunman used an AK-47 assault rifle. Shevardnadze replaced Diplomat named to position MOSCOW (AP) — President Mik- sail S. Gorbachev sought to put |U.S.-Soviet relations back on track Tuesday by replacing Foreign Min ster Eduard A. Shevardnadze with ike Soviet ambassador to Washing- Itn. Gorbachev nominated veteran liplomat Alexander A. Bessmert- jjiykh, one of the country’s top spe- alists on the United States, to take jiarge of Soviet foreign policy. The supreme Soviet legislature quickly approved his choice. In Washington, White House Press Secretary Marlin Fitzwater relcomed Bessmertnykh’s appoint- uent, which was effective immedi ately. “The president has known him for a number of years,” Fitzwater said. “And he’s been very instrumen tal in shaping U.S.-Soviet relations. We know him well, respect him. We can work with him.” The legislature was nearly unani mous in ratifying Gorbachev’s choice. As the vote of 421-3 was an nounced, Gorbachev turned and smiled at Bessmertnykh, who had flown back from Washington to at tend the legislative session. Lawmak ers broke into applause. “The policy of new thinking ... will be preserved and developed,” he told lawmakers. Bessmertnykh, 57, becomes the first Soviet foreign minister with a diplomatic background rather than one in the Communist Party or gov ernment bureaucracy. “It is a good choice,” Nikolajs Nei- lands, a former deputy Latvian for eign minister, told reporters. “He is intelligent and a professional. ... He is one of the best experts about the United States.” Marshal Sergei F. Akhromeyev, who joined Bessmertnykh in super power arms talks and is an adviser to Gorbachev, called him “a very capa ble diplomat.” Greyhound strike enters court nation red. lat dis- onnec- y case, ire girl Wing- lay re- e case 11 said Mon- tpone- ap re- came three- th the iation after yland. r Red com ic next MILWAUKEE (AP) — The gov ernment and striking bus drivers be- gan presenting evidence Tuesday on whether Greyhound Lines Inc. used illegal bargaining tactics that forced abitter strike 10 months ago. About 100- proteif^ri 11 'chanted ‘Scabs out, union in','’ 1 and carried placards outside the federal building where the National Labor Relations Board began its hearing against the only nationwide intercity bus com- '■ pany. “I’m here to see that justice is done,” said Charles Randolph, 52, of Milwaukee, a bus Greyhound driver for 21 years before he and 6,000 other drivers were fired for striking last March. “It’s about fair progress for the workers who helped make a name for the company,” said Randolph, a father of three children. “We have kids we want to send to college.” Inside the building, Administra tive Law Judge Robert Giannasi ac cepted the NLRB’s 122-page com plaint alleging Greyhound unfairly declared an impasse in negotiations and intimidated striking workers be fore firing them. He must rule whether the com pany violated federal labor laws when it declared an impasse before talks broke down, implemented its own contract proposal without union consent and hired 3,000 re placement workers. The government and Amalga mated Council of Greyhound Local Unions are seeking reinstatement of the 6,000 unionized drivers and back pay, NLRB attorney Phil Bloe- dorn said. Greyhound officials have declined to discuss their defense for the hear ing but have denied any wrong doing, saving an impasse did exist. IRS answers tax questions over phone WASHINGTON (AP) — The In ternal Revenue Service spends a lot of effort to make its forms and in structions more understandable but a glance at your 1990 tax package might lead you to believe the job is still not complete. If, after getting down to work on your return, you run into questions that do not seem to be answered in the instructions, the IRS offers seve ral forms of assistance. You may take your questions to your local IRS office or use the toll- free telephone number for your area that is listed in the instructions. The process will work best if you make your questions as specific as possible and have available records that will help you respond to queries from the IRS person. IRS telephone assistants gave the correct answer 77 percent of the time last year, an improvement from 64 percent the previous year. But if you don’t trust them, consider using Tele-Tax. This is a system of tape- recorded answers to questions on 140 different tax topics, ranging from how to claim the earned-in- come credit to what you should do when you receive an IRS notice of tax due. The toll-free number for Tele- Tax in your area is in the back of your tax package, along with a list of tax topics. 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