Thursday, July 6,a Thursday, July 6,2000 WORLD THE BATTALION Page. 5 known Anti-Catholic marches, protests continue in Northern Ireland Wm. J. Gastello, S. Holfnw Jews in Brief ian Serb is allegation xual assault AGUE, Netherlands(AP n Serb, accused oftai lim women from aspff molesting them during: war, denied yesterday lem and said he ” when first told oft ljub Kunarac, who ided a local paramS d is also accused ofte women to his troops tied at an international! ial on charges of sexual nt. ac is one of three Bos' ;hters charged witli id crimes against hum? pe, torture andenslaw i and girls in the soiitte town of Foca inthew® tisements Courant itself," account detailing slavei! >y Thomas Green, ’T the newspaper in ?aper ran such ads all® >, and that many mers of runaway slaves# i rewards, iper's early editors alsoe penly racist views. Tho® bought The Courantmt' me editorial: "Webelieve!* i variety of the iperior to the Negro van? ould breed the best stock. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) — Police commanders and politicians appealed Wednes day for Protestant hard-liners to call off street protests that have caused rioting, fear and de struction across Northern Ireland. At daybreak, Belfast commuters picked their way carefully down roads strewn with shattered glass, rubble and occasional burned-out vehicles, the product of a third consecutive night of unrest in hard-line Protestant neighborhoods. In the most serious incident, unidentified gunmen ex changed fire with police in north Belfast but no body was reported injured. The mounting attacks on police and Catholic properties are designed to force British authori ties to reverse their decision to bar a traditional Protestant parade from a Catholic neighborhood this Sunday. The now-annual dispute first trig gered widespread violence in 1996, when police eventually reversed a decision to block the same parade by the Orange Order. Many Catholics despise Orange parades, which often feature drum-thumping "kick the pope" bands and commemorate 300-year-old Protestant victories over Catholics. More than 2,000 such parades are staged each summer, only a few dozen of which go through pre dominantly Catholic areas. This time Northern Ireland's police force, the Royal Ulster Constabulary, has responded firm ly when challenged, particularly in farm fields near Portadown, 30 miles southwest of Belfast. There, security forces for the past three nights have prevented Protestant mobs from reaching the nearby Garvaghy Road, where most of Por- tadown's Catholic minority lives. On Wednesday morning, British army engi neers erected a 20-foot-high steel barricade backed by concrete across the Orangemen's in tended path. Late Tuesday, police came under attack from a 500-strong Protestant mob. Attackers hurled firecrackers and rocks, fired ball bearings from slingshots, and squirted acid from syringes at rows of riot police, who were heavily girded with body armor, helmets, shields and flame-retardant uniforms. Police said nine officers suffered in juries ranging from acid burns to punctured eardrums. Police deployed two mobile water cannons on loan from Belgian police. After repeatedly dous ing the crowd, riot police with clubs and locked- together shields pushed protesters back up a hill to the Anglican church that is the focal point for the annual march. They arrested four people and the rest gradually dispersed. Leaders of the Orange Order, Northern Ire land's major Protestant fraternal group with more than 50,000 members, said they would continue to call for supporters to rally at the con frontation point and to block roads across the British territory. They say they are determined to march down the Garvaghy Road back into Por tadown on Sunday. "We don't want to see violence, but the ordi nary Protestant people now are so frustrated, so angry, because our views and rights have been ignored throughout this so-called peace process," said David Jones, chief spokesperson for the Orange Order in Portadown. Politicians from the province's two major Catholic-supported parties and the biggest Protestant-supported party, the Ulster Unionists, called that position irresponsible. "You cannot call people onto the roads and then be able to control events. We've learned that lesson year after year," said Reg Empey, an Ul ster Unionist member of Northern Ireland's new Protestant-Catholic administration, the corner stone of a 1998 peace accord. "There is nothing at all that justifies shooting incidents or throwing bricks," said Paul Berry, a member of the hard-line Democratic Unionist Party. "But we must understand that there is great frustration within the Protestant unionist community over the rights that are being taken away from us." Troubled march through Portadown Officials in Northern Ireland are appealing for Protestant hard-liners to call off street protests that have caused rioting, fear and destruction across the region The protests and attacks are to force British authorities to cancel the ban on a traditional Protestant parade through a Catholic neighborhood. The Orange Order Largest Protestant organization in Northern Ireland with about 80,000 active members. «► Formed in 1795 after a clash between Protestants and Catholics in the Battle of the Diamond near Portadown. ► The Orange Order stages more than 2,000 marches each summer to commemorate a variety of historical events. The annual Portadown march, every first or second Sunday in July, recalls Protestant losses in World War I. Its biggest mobilization, every July-? 1690 defeat of Catholic the Protestant William of Battle of the Boyne. 12, celebrates the King James II by Orange at the In recent days security forces have prevented Protestant mobs from reaching Garvaghy Road, where most of Portadown’s Catholic minority lives. Source: Compiled from AP wire reports Wm. J. Gastello/AP News in Brief Saudi to produce additional crude oil HPt. #38 LONDON (AP) — Oil prices fell 6 percent Wednesday as traders dis missed attempts by OPEC mem bers to dissuade Saudi Arabia from its plan to unilaterally pump an ad ditional 500,000 barrels of crude per day. Libya appeared to side with Iran, Iraq and other OPEC members urg ing Saudi Arabia not to act alone, and the Saudis, strove to find con sensus on the divisive issue. However, industry analysts pre dicted that Saudi Arabia, the world's No. 1 oil producer, would push ahead with its plan to boost output if oil prices fail to drop sharply in coming days. The mar kets seemed to anticipate a pro duction increase, with crude and other oil-related products declining. “I don’t think they’re backing off,” Leo Drollas, chief economist of the Center for Global Energy Studies in London, said of the Saudis. “I think they’d be willing to put the oil on the market themselves.” The 10 other OPEC members re acted with anger and disbelief after Saudi Arabia said Monday it would add about 2 percent to the cartel’s official output of 25.4 million bar rels a day. Except for Kuwait and the Unit ed Arab Emirates, no other OPEC members have enough surplus ca pacity to quickly raise their produc tion levels. In a conciliatory gesture, a Sau di official, speaking Wednesday on condition of anonymity, stressed that Saudi Arabia would make a de cision after consulting with other OPEC members. took at all these useless student organizations. Student Leaders for Leadership and Leading Tomorrow's Leaders? There’s even an organization here that's trying to ban Napster from campus! Yeah, most of those use our student fees money Yeah, once I was in an organization that wcs founded to stop the forming of useless organizations like that by ky(e w Well after a while we D~~~~ realized we were useless as the clubs we were , j to stop. The resulting irony drove several students insane QUEEN BEA BY NOTORIOUS U.B. m {flNTMTKO (WMNiatf BY J. 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