A^ORLD Thursday • March IP ?==j£] Page 6 • The Battalion The staff at Cutler and Cutler Westgate invite you to experience a relaxing atmosphere. This ad entitles you to five dollars off your next haircut or manicure (first time visit only), or ten dollars discount on any chemical service. Cutler and Cutler Salon Westgate Plaza 4321 Wellborn Road Bryan, Texas 77801 (409) 846-9707 Aveda product used and sold exclusively. Recycle used bottles (plastic only) and receive a one dollar discount toward your Aveda purchase (Westgate store only, call for details.) Jailed Americans feel theyVe become ‘prisoners of revei □ The two aircraft mechanics said that they mistakenly crossed the border into Iraq while going to visit friends. Two Americans jailed in Baghdad feel they have become "prisoners of revenge" and are “begging the outside world to do something about their case/’ a television news network reported Wednesday. One of the men, 41-year-old David Dalib- erti, suffered a heart seizure the day he and William Barloon, 39, were sentenced, but both men appeared to be in good health, though shaken, said Cable News Network correspondent Brent Sadler, who visited them Wednesday in the Abu-Graib prison. Daliberti, of Jacksonville, Fla., and Bar loon, of New Hampton, Iowa, were arrested March 13 and sentenced Saturday for ille gally entering Iraq. The two aircraft me chanics, working in Kuwait under civilian contract to the U.S. Navy, say they inad vertently strayed into Iraq while going to visit friends. Sadler said the men were adamant that they were in U.N.-marked territory when they were arrested, and said they had passed at least two unmanned Kuwaiti barricades before they were taken into custody. Sadler visited the two Americans for two hours in the company of the Polish charge d’affaires representing U.S. interests in Iraq. Washington broke off diplomatic rela tions with Baghdad after Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990. “They seemed downcast, hollow-eyed, tired and in a complete state of uncertainty as to what their future is going to be,” Sadler said from the Iraqi capital. But generally speaking, they appeared healthy. The Polish diplomat, Ryszard Krystosik, told Associated Press Televi sion he found them to be “in muchl* shape” than when he saw them Thin and Saturday. Daliberti, however, told Sadler it suffered a heart seizure in Baghdadoc urday. Barloon hammered on the; cell doors for three hours trying toi the attention of prison guardis before 1) erti was given medicine and an elecn diogram, Sadler said. The two men felt they were “priso;; revenge” who had been “committedt«i years in jail for simply making turn,” Sadler said. Daliberti said he has a valid Iraqi;, his passport in Kuwait, and hoped: that visa to appeal his sentence. Iraq’s deputy prime ministe: Wednesday that the two American; not be given clemency because that; “create a lot of complications,” the; Iraq News Agency reported in a bra monitored in Cyprus. /VEDA* IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO ATTEND THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS MEDICAL BRANCH AT GALVESTON FOR THE FALL SEMESTER 1995, PLEASE ATTEND AN INFORMAL MEETING AT “THE DIXIE CHICKEN “ ON SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 4 P.M. - 6 P.M. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: (409) 765-5972 OR SEND YOUR NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NUMBER TO: CMS 1827 AVENUE L GALVESTON, TX 77550 Ethnic violence has nation on course toward disast □ Burundi's displaced people outnumber the dwellers of its capital. BUJUMBURA, Burundi (AP) — Burundi is a nation on the run. Refugees fleeing violence outnumber residents in the capital — and its second largest city is now a camp populated by Rwandans. It is a country where might makes right. It is a land where the tragic lessons of neighboring Rwanda have been lost. Life in the Central African country is “a little like quick sand,” said Frances Turner, the head of the U.N. Children’s Fund in Burundi. “What appears to be, isn’t. You have to anticipate not just the un expected, but the unimaginable.” The unimaginable includes the brutality of this mountain ous, hauntingly beautiful land where neighbors set upon neigh bors with machetes. A recent UNICEF study of 2,769 of the more than 14,000 children made orphans by ethnic killings since October 1993, found 58 percent had been per sonally attacked. It said 77 per cent of those children knew their attackers, and in nearly 81 per cent of those cases, the assailant was a neighbor. Killers act with impunity in Burundi. Ethnic violence be tween the majority Hutus and minority Tutsis promotes the ambitions of extremist political parties and individual politi cians intent on taking power. “People are never prosecuted for political crimes in Burundi,” said U.N. special representative Ahmedou Ould Abdallah. Revenge becomes the only av enue of retribution. Massacres by extremists on both sides breed more fear and feed ethnic hate and suspicions. The lessons of the genocide of more than 500,000 people last year in Rwanda are lost on Burundi because memories of its own past massacres erect an impenetrable barrier to reconciliation. “It’s seared into the soul of every Burundian. Every Hutu cannot forget 1972. Every Tutsi cannot forget 1993,” said Turner. More than 100,000 people were killed in 1972 in massacres that followed a failed Hutu coup attempt. An estimated 100,000 people were killed in 1993 after a failed coup attempt by ele ments of the overwhelmingly Tutsi military. Because the balance of power is different, aid workers and U.N. officials don’t expect killings on a Rwandan scale. But none rules out the possibility. In the muddy warrens of the dirt roads that make up Bujum bura’s impoverished neighbor hoods, people are hacked or shot to death for no reason other than ethnic identity. At Prince Regent Charles Hos pital, a Hutu man slashed repeat edly with a machete cried as he talked about the killings of his wife and three children in the weekend violence that killed any where from 150 to 500 people. Dr. Simba Muangwa said the man, Sylvestre Gahunga, 39, was one of only three people hos pitalized with wounds suffered in the fighting. “I’ve got a feeling that this time we didn’t see as many pa tients from the violence because the attacks were very brutal. Most were killed, not injured,” said Muangwa. “There is no political will to stop this violence,” said Muang wa. “One groups tries to increase its power and the others try to reconquer what theyhav; Burundi’s coalitionp ment, forged under tec power-sharing agrees:: year, is too fractious to gK Since the beginning year, the main Tutsi opa party has forced the reap of both the speaker of the: assembly and the prime c Diplomats contend thi end fighting, which invai army, underscored the in: the Hutu president to cc overwhelmingly Tutai Burundi, they say/ 1 country governed bt and gangs. Members of the Tut ist militia Sans Echec. means “without failun Hutu civilians in atte: ethnically cleanse once: neighborhoods of the cap: the neighborhoods ofB? Buyenzi, where thevii flared last weekend, mili'J roam unchallenged. Diplomats said the soldi ten act in concert with the J Burundi’s army, whiriJ for 35 years through a se: dictatorships, becomes powerful as the govemmt comes more unstable. 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