Show 16A Sunday October 1 1 WORLD 995 Paris terrorism attacks linked to dead fugitive PARIS (AP) -- A man killed in a shootout with police may have been involved in more than one of France's recent terror attacks the interior minister said Saturday i Khaled Kelkal was killed late Friday in an exchange of gunfire at a bus stop near Lyon The I Algeri- authorities found his fingerprints !on an unex-iplode- d bomb on a train track near Lyon Interior ister Jean-Lou- Min- - 'Kelkal is Debre said he has a "feeling" Kelk-'also was involved in a Paris sub-Swbombing that killed seven people He said evidence also links Kelkal to the killing of a Muslim holy man and another unexploded bomb ' He said similar detonating and timing systems were used in the Lyon bomb another found in a public al ay I m GREG FREDDE Kelkal fired first continued shooting and was killed in "legitimate Before you choose who will represent you from At Large Seat 'C consider All quality namebrand: this: seLf-defen- Only one candidate has the experience to make a difference compass maps and ammunition were found on his body in addition to his pistol the Le Monde newspaper reported after er j toilet in southern Pans and still another found in a forest hideout Investigators discovered the hideout in woods near Lyon on Wednesday two days before they caught up with Kelkal Debre said A copy of the Koran the Muslim holy book a Swiss Army knife a an had been the 'subject of a vast manhunt r I Standard-Examin- review over sixty budgets every year As a result I can identify the best and most innovative ideas from around the state and propose their implementation in Ogden City " Investigators suspect Islamic militants waging an insurgency in Algeria a former French colony are behind a bomb wave that has put France on alert Soldiers in the streets barricaded schools and identity checks have become commonplace Since the July 25 subway bombing in Paris there have been six bombings and attempted bombings in France In addition to the seven people killed in the first attack more than 100 people have been " Ogden City's Strategic Plan as part of the City's Enterprise Community Grant Initiative which was awarded to Ogden bringing nearly S3 million into the City in business tax credits and community grants '£SktmA& VERTICALS fvllNISUHDS r-h- :l(7Xi-- )t rJ SILHOUETTES V'-fo'- I SHUTTERS i Utah Legislature Staff Office of the Speaker have developed a keen understanding of the legislative process including the need for cooperation and compromise" warn m lH J pwmmsnmm woodslihds Ogden City Department of Community Development - iMjMHrV vte&rfci buettes Utah Taxpayers Association a tax watchdog group - h£- C — ffi'lTmiffrfli gBudgetn j "Quality namebrands at Budget prices!" - t i li x J " : Kashmiri j ! I rebels may fight selves SRINAGAR India (AP) - Still weakened by in his 20s pencil-thi- n a heart ailment and his years in prisons Yasin Malik was the In-Jdi- an ' unlikely hope of the people of Kashmir to lead them peacefully to independence When he was released from jail 18 months ago the former guerrilla j leader called on his people to lay down their arms to allow talks with ' New Delhi and he tried to unite the ! splintered separatist movement un- der his banner of moderation ' I Hopes for unity faded then vir--I ' tually ended in j j i i J er when a militant faction broke away Lib-- ! from Malik's Jammu-Kashm- ir eration Front and vowed to resume the war with India Now it seems possible that the two factions of the biggest Kashmiri rebel group will be fighting each Other instead of Indian troops I "Our movement is on the verge of a civil war" Amanuallah Khan we maae it any easier to pay your bills we d be pciyiiifi til I JL M y ft III leader of the breakaway faction Warned this past week at a news conference in Islamabad Pakistan ' About the same time Malik's ' ftiilitary commander Rafih Ahmed ! par bundled an Associated Press J reporter and other journalists into Cars and took them to a JKLF hide- out in Kashmir i Fifty guerrillas showed off ma-- ! thine guns and other weapons that had been hidden away after Malik i was freed from prison in May 1994 Par made clear the arsenal was be-ing kept ready in case of fighting with Khan's faction The split in the JKLF was a set- back for India's hopes of negotiat-- ! ing a settlement with Muslim militant groups that have been fighting for Kashmir's secession since 1989 Jammu-Kashm- ir is the only Muslim-majority state in India which is predominantly Hindu It contains two-thirof the original Kashmir which was split between India and Pakistan after a brief war in 1948 a year after they gained independence from Britain ' The JKLF wants to combine the Indian and Pakistani portions into t i I i 1 i ii I !!i ' - i i I 'v? a bervice vour bills are taken care or with a phone call (and of course the money in your checking account to cover them) In most cases you can do it for less than the cost I I ds of a postage stamp A one-tim- e setup call pays monthly fixed- - it lb" I amount bills like your car loan Bills that vary in amount like your 1 an independent Kashmir Malik wants to do it by negotiations leadplebiscite ing to a UN-monitor- Actually in a way we are With our new Bill Pay phone bill or your dentist can be quickly paid by phone as they occur 4! ed You'll be issued a confidential pass code so only you can while Khan's followers feel war is needed There are numerous other rebel groups espousing widely different ideologies and pursuing wildly varying strategies Some groups such as and Hizbul Muja-hedee- n Harkat CS guarantee that your bills will be paid on time ar want Indian-controlle- access your finances Plus you'll get our performance d Kashmir to merge with Pakistan a Muslim nation While the JKLF remains one of the most popular rebel groups Hizbul Mujahedeen has supplanted it iin the past two years as the best armed and most powerful If you're interested in paying your bills by phone just stop by one of our branches or India and international human Tights groups say Hizbul receives 'arms and training from Islamabad simply give us a call at Pakistani officials deny helping any of the Kashmiri rebels but groups based in Pakistan have said they send money and arms across the border i Since the Kashmir insurrection began in late 1989 about 12000 people have died in Jammu-Kashmir according to official figures Nearly daily skirmishes occur be- 'tween rebels and an estimated 300000 Indian soldiers The opposition that Malik faces J J J Start paying your bilU by phone j J i j Bill Pay with Ziond Bank -j Service ! I I within his own movement has come evident in recent weeks be- - ZIONS BANK "The JKLF under Mr Malik J J I j J ! ! ! was becoming soft almost a toy in India's hand and we had to stop that" Shabir Sidiqui who heads the breakaway faction's Indian chapter said in an interview in the state cap-ital Snnagar "We have the might of the gun and dedicated holy war-- J '7 vie M e m b ' - r - I) t C riors" Indian officials had hoped to per-- j suade Kashmiris to take part in a ' j proposed election for a state gov-- j i ernment that would replace the fed- that took charge J eral administration m 1990 of Jarnmu-KashmJ ! f J ir t- - M JttJ fcl - -- - - - 11 i |