W - The Battalion ORLD Tuesday - June 3, 1991 French president faces uneasy alliance FALL LSAT • 46 hours of instruction plus free extra tutoring. • 4 full-length LSAT’s administered under test conditions plus computer analyzed score reports. • 14 additional real LSAT’s. • Maximum class size of 15. • Effective LSAT taking skills. • All classes are live, even makeups. No videos here. We’ve redesigned our course for killer improvements! MM THE PRINCETON REVIEW (409) 696-9099 info.cs@review.com PARIS (AP) — Making a quick change of command, President Jacques Chirac handed the premier ship Monday to former opposition leader Lionel Jospin, whose f ■■■■■■■■ Socialists routed Chirac’s conserv atives in a stun ning parliamen tary upset. Both Chirac and Jospin were tight-lipped about how they will share power and battle the record unem ployment that led to the right’s downfall in Sun day’s vote. Ques tions also remained over whether Communists will join the Socialists in a coalition government. A poll today confirmed job cre ation was the top priority for French voters, who overwhelmingly cited Jospin’s promised job program for young people as their chief demand. The French elected us to succeed, but they also know the road will be difficult.” Daniel Vaillant Socialist Party That and other Socialist cam paign promises would reverse the conservatives’ budget-cutting mea sures, which aimed to boost the pri vate sector and ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ qualify for the euro. The Eu rope’s single cur rency planned for 1999 is part of an effort to turn the 15-nation Euro pean Union into an economic su perpower. “The New Chance,’’ the leftist daily Lib eration said in a headline Mon day, after the left swept the right from power. Chirac had miscalcu lated in calling the vote 10 months early, hoping to save his crumbling majority in Parliament. Monday began with Chirac’s loyal lieutenant, Premier Alain Juppe, submitting his resignation at the president’s Elysee Palace, giving the news media only a tight- lipped smile. When the left took an early lead in the first round of voting on May 25, France’s most unpopular pre mier in 40 years promised to re sign after the second round. But it was not enough for the right to survive: Voters fired him before he could quit. Barely two hours after Juppe’s ouster, his Socialist rival walked up the palace steps to take power. A jubilant Jospin, talking to re porters on the steps, called his meeting with Chirac “excellent." The 59-year-old Socialist said he will form a new government “quickly, within the week,’’ half the time he is allotted to do so. He did not elaborate, but he faces the tough task of forming a diverse, leftist coalition that can keep his promises. The Socialist Party’s No. 2 leader, Daniel Vaillant, appeared to be trying to temper high expectations. “The French elected us to suc ceed, but they also know the road will be difficult,” Vaillant told RTL radio. The Socialists won 252 seats, short of the 289 needed for a ma jority. They’ll need to gather sup port from among the Commu nists, who won 38 seats; independent leftist parties with 16; and environmentalists with seven. The former governing cen ter-right coalition won 243 seats. The far-right National Front of Jean-Marie Le Pen took only one seat but played the spoiler, draw ing votes from the center-right. Le Pen himself stayed out of the par liamentary election for the first time in three decades. While Communist leader Robert Hue has expressed hostility toward the sell-off of state industries and the euro currency, he sounded concilia tory Monday. Jospin has said he would not block existing privatiza tions and that he backs the euro, though not at the cost of jobs. Under French law, Chirac must wait a year to call elections again, and will otherwise govern in a split government with a leftist National Assembly until the next scheduled elections in 2002. Election results*- Official results of the June 1st French election Seats won ... Left alliance Ind. left 21 Nat. Front - 1 non-affiliated -1 14* A party or coalition of parties needs at least 289 seals,, to form a majority in the 577-seat National Assem Percent of popular vote... Rally for the Republic (RPR) Union of French Democracy (UDF) Independent Right 2.4, | Socialist Party 40|p Communist Party 3,8’: Ecologists 'I 2.1 Independent Left National Front 5,7 Remaining votes were split among minor parti«| Voter turnout: 71.1% . 1 Where There’s A Will... There’s A Murder Help solve a NEW murder mystery while enjoying an elegant, four-course gourmet feast. Its Saturday, June 14 at 7pm in Messina Hof’s romantic barrel room. Call Designer Events at 778-9463 for more info & reservations. Canada’s Liberal P losses in • A.. governing Liber- severe early setbacks jida’s parliamentary elec t-thirds of its seats in the s, including two held by ters. . raisec er Jean tri: ed go’ erals gh to te del Mi i lose and for a mino le centrist cocky en< is early, were s share of the 30 nt, including 31 of the 32 aritime provinces. But of those Maritime seats, i Scotia seat of Health Mini: 11 and the New Brunswick si Minister Doug Young, er the Liberals, the next ts were expected to go L ;ts and to the western w Reform Party, which opposes 1 status for Quebec. e Liberals’ claim to be tional party in Canada wai y were in danger of winning > in the far west, perhaps lea lous Ontario as their only real About 20 million Canadian: to cast ballots at 53,000 po spread across the world’s s< country in terms of geograph; * tes were running. form, which won 52 seats during its first national campaign in 1993, tried to ex pand its support with suggestions that Chre tien and other mainstream leaders have spent too much energy trying to defuse sep- —ist sentiment in Quebec. form’s leader, Preston Manning, denounced as an anti-Quebec bigot by several of his rivals, including Jean Charest, whose Progressive Conservative ) Party was battling with Reform for right- of-center votes. The Progressive Conservatives, reduced to just two seats in the 1993 election, fared well in the Maritimes, winning at least 13 seats. The Other big winner there was the . ...... The NDP was the c i hard on the need to ct JulUCJ Cll [ >- consecutive t- to a landslide » . • vm L-* O ... . ^ IV ?r since 1953 to win '3 led the Liberals 3 as voters fed up iced the Progres- t a parliamentary election April the Liberals e- with Brian Mi sive Conservat majority to only When Chretie 27, opinion _ would add to th< outgoing Parlian But the Libe paign, and the ed they would >72 need at least 151 to retain a majority. 1 .. Lit ! ts they held in the a lackluster c last week in' some seats. Nigerian warships attack; military coup headquarter FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) — Nigerian warships bombarded the port capital of Free town on Monday, pounding away at the head quarters of the leaders of a week-old military coup. At least seven people died in the attack and fighting onshore. Mutinous troops responded by taking aim at the beachfront Mammy Yoko Hotel, where hun dreds of Nigerian troops sent in to back the oust ed government have set up a command post. Hundreds of frightened foreigners cowered in the basement of the hotel after Nigerian gun- ships off the coast started firing toward the coup headquarters in the former defense headquar ters a few miles inland. “We’ve been attacked by the Sierra Leonian soldiers,” said one hotel guest, who refused to give his name. “The Nigerians are trying their best, but they’re running out of ammo.” He said six Nigerian solders had been wounded. Low-ranking troops in Sierra Leone’s dis- grunded military ousted the elected president on May 25 in the West African country’s third coup in five years. Nigeria — the chief power in the region — bolstered its military presence in Sierra Leone over the weekend to fry to pressure coup lead ers to surrender power, then launched a suiprise offensive Monday. The attack appeared timed to follow the weekend evacuation of most Westerners and came after the coup leader, Maj. John ny Paul Koroma, made clear he had no in tention of giving up. On Sunday, Koroma named a 20-man ruling council to govern the country, a sign that diplo matic attempts to restore President Ahmed Te- jan Kabbah to power had failed. Some of the foreigners evacuated earlier from the hotel arrived Monday in neighboring Guinea, including an American woman who managed to get 18 orphans out of Freetown on U.S. military helicopters. “It was just awful. It was terrible,” said the woman, Pinkie McCann-Willis, who heads Freetown office of the Indianapolis-basi Americans for African Adoption agency, a' McCann-Willis said she and the child™ spent two days pinned down by gunfire in the* Freetown compound before she was able to pile the children into the back of her pickup trucl and make a dash for the Mammy Yoko. Once there, McCann-Willis obtained State Department permission to carry the non-Amen ican orphans out on evacuation choppers. In #1 the U.S. helicopters carried 1,200 foreigners from the hotel grounds over the weekend. At least one shell fired by the mutineersfi'offl j their hilltop headquarters hit a house in the Ab erdeen neighborhood between the rebels’ ari Nigerians’ strongholds. At the Connaught Hospital, the main govt ernment hospital in central Freetown, thq bodies of two women and a child from Ab erdeen were brought to the morgue. Itwl unclear whether they had died from shra* nel or bullet wounds. A hospital official interviewed by Siena Leon ian journalists said four other people had die! of bullet wounds east of the city, near the site | earlier skirmishes. The Nigerian offensive appeared to surprisS other countries involved in efforts to negotiag* Koroma’s exit and tire return of Kabbah, who ft to Guinea after the coup. | “We have all along insisted on a negotiati settlement. This morning’s attack came asasur prise,” said Foreign Minister KwamenaAhwoii Ghana, which sent soldiers into Freetown ovi the weekend both to stabilize the situational! to evacuate about 1,000 Ghanaian civiliaL trapped there. In Washington, White House spok Mike McCuny said the United States was "in terested in diminishing the violence.” “We are supporting efforts to deal directly with the parties, both factions, rebel factions,) encourage the institution of a cease-fire,” Me; Curry said. Sign up for these fun Summer ‘97 noncredit programs and workshops. Register now! 845-1631 The date of the earliest class session is shown after each class title. “ST? Stop by our convenient location on the lower level of the Memorial Student Center at Texas A&M. 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