| Show -- -- - -" ': - - - - - - - - - ' k ! 4 I 14A The Salt Lake Tribune Sunday February 3 26 1989 1' t Would-B- e 4 Immigrants Lay Low in Mexico By David Sedeno Associated Press Writer MATAMOROS Mexico — Central Americans who want political asylum in the United States hut know their chances are slim under a new policy say they will wait in hiding in this border city until they can cross the Rio Grande and elude federal agents The number of Central Americans bothering to apply for asylum has plummeted since Ilast week when the US Immigration and Naturalization Service toughened its stance On political asylum applicants The INS said it processed 233 asylum applications Tuesday the first day of the procedure Only 19 were processed Friday over that period three were granted asylum get-toug- h Israel's Army Pledges To Avenge Death of Soldier Girl Critical JERUSALEM (AP) — A girl was in critical condition with head wounds after clashes with Israell troops Saturday and the army chief vowed to avenge the death of a soldier killed when Arabs dropped a cement block on his head Arab doctors said Israeli troops fired rubber-coate- d steel pellets and live ammunition at Palestinian in Gaza's Rafah refugee camp wounding a man and the girl identified as Lulu Mahmoud Abu Dahl They said she suffered a broken skull and was in critical condition The hospital officials reported seven other Palestinians wounded in clashes throughout the occupied territories An army official confirmed two wounded including the girl who he said was "badly wounded in the head" and transferred to Tel Hashomer Hospital near Tel Aviv All spoke on condition of anostone-throwe- nymity In the West Bank city of Nablus the army enforced a curfew and raided dozens of homes in search of Palestinians who killed Sgt Binyamin Meisner on Friday by dropping a 33- pound cement block on him from a rooftop ii 'q '4''Y''1:zl Y1 i )11 'f'2 4' ' 'J fr 4 4' - or t - Border Patrol officials say the Central Americans are hiding wherever they can until they believe they can enter the United States illegally "We think they're just lying low maybe at hotels in 'Matamoros' with or with sympathizers" said Silvestre Reyes chief of the Border Patrols McAllen sector At a Catholic Church-rushelter called Casa Juan Diego dozens of Central Americans talked about why they fled their homelands and about their long difficult journeys during which they were robbed and were forced to beg for rides and food They also asked about the new INS rules under which asylum petitions can be denied in one day and the applicants then jailed pending deportation and how difficult it would be to reach destinations like Los Angeles Miami or New York "I don't know what we're going to do but we'll find a way to cross no matter what the cost is" said 21- year-ol- d Nicaraguan Marta Salcedo who arrived Monday with five other Nicaraguans "We don't want to go back to our own country We'll be killed because " we are viewed as she said "We'll get to the other side somehow" But US Border Patrol agents in the Rio Grande Valley say getting past them will be tough More than 125 agents have been sent to the district bringing the total to 500 And shifts they all work Ms Salcedo whose father was an officer in the Anastasio Somoza regime that was overthrown by the leftist Sandinistas fled with her family to Guatemala in September 1987 and began her journey to the United States earlier this month Fellow Nicaraguan Marina Espinoza and her three children said they were robbed by police near Mexico City They want to go to Los Angeles to see the children's father Vicente Espinoza who filed for asylum after entering the country more than a year ago Casa Juan Diego is just a concrete shell with a sparsely furnished kitchen and sleeping quarters where mattresses and blankets are placed on top of cinder blocks Residents have a maximum stay and are provided one meal daily ' - ' d 4" A v 3 4 k A $ 4 : iv t : 4 ' i ' k c 1 J t t - ' 4 4- I': - ' - e4 ' le - 11?‘ - ' :' Ii:!:::- '' ' ? f'1- 1 1 ' '2'' p' to : ? 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Superb support and in four firmnesses Place 15 4 a - ''ik : '' : i 4 it:::) First Love: Loving Yourself S( IN I "if: a' 61 Some 40 embassy officials do not have proper documentation They do not recognize the Foreign Ministry that would update their visas driver's licenses or license plates The deadline for new 1989 plates is next week and the embassy is already preparing to rent cars for personnel The American ambassador and other embassy officials are frequently portrayed in very unflattering cartoons in the local press --- - ' :1- 4 ' '''' a fARI'M M IT HOSPITAL K-- ! -'- Acxori - ot Speaker AIfaker 0 ' i 'tisp- - 4010 '': Daletrime Tuesday February 28th 7:00pm t4 D2 7N441 - discussion is free) )i' Ttme Soca k'At :01'i 97ii7 -- Who's your hest friend? Do you tell yourself Do you constantly seek the approval of others Are you afraid of cdticism? 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i4: rt 1 Reuter News Agency PANAMA CITY Panama — Life is no party for employees of the US Embassy which is locked in a standoff with military leader Gen Manuel Noriega after US efforts to force his ouster failed For a year now the embassy has been functioning without any direct contact with the government of Panama recognizing instead ousted President Eric Arturo Delvalle The policy has created some unusual diplomatic quandries US supporters call the situation unique Critics call it silly and surreal US diplomats here are not allowed to attend diplomatic events — and that means parties — where "regime officials" are in attendance ments have become much larger than their principal payments In 1987 Brazil repayed $37 billion in principal and $53 billion in interest the ministry said Mexico paid $43 billion in principal and $71 billion in interest while the Philippines paid $900 million in principal and $15 billion in interest Interest rates which are now above 10 percent in most cases would be cut by up to 5 percentage points under the new Japanese proposal This would bring them below the London Interbank Offered Rate a key rate for international loans ' ' - '40-'11:' ! 14 $' '- ' oc Noriega Mess Puts US Envoys in Sticky Position six-nig- 1 &Ale I - --' " 0II I It 1-1' f X !:'! :1- t 4 ' ' illit 1-- ' 110'' :f '' ' 3r: :: k 12-ho- 4171frimp I 19' 41' a'!t I ' ' :I: ' ! fillt$REINE111111SSESIVIIIIIIIN ‘ - I :: 14 : ': '2 : Japan to Propose Interest Cut on Asahi News Service 12'4- ''o$ ' ' 111- to TOKYO — To help g- - 4!1i k '' ' 4 t - kk !:'' 4 a :4 a N i- ' - 1 A t:-:- i 'a:'' '" 4 '::: ' ' :' '' aaa i i' i" :!1 '1H i 4e' 7 ' ' i By Jack Reed United Press International TUMAHOLE South Africa — A black activist "general" allegedly murdered by the body- guards of Winnie Mandela was buried Saturday in a ceremony that drew appeals for unity in the antiapartheid movement and warnings against avenging his death "These past weeks — with) the facts of his dying as they have been heard — will be remembered as weeks of shame and tragedy" Methodist Bishop Peter Storey told 500 people at a memorial service for Stompie Moeketsi Seipei a "young lion" who once commanded a "chilridren's army" in oting "Dear God what have we done in this land so that a child who should be studying in a classroom or run- ning with his friends in the veld or playing marbles in his back yard becomes a general with the tired eyes of an old man" he said "In another land you may have been a choir boy South Africa made you a general" Storey said "Salute his courage but do not injure him further by using this funeral as a platform for revenge" Seipei was found dumped in a field on Jan 6 with his jugulars slashed but his body was not identified by police until earlier this month Murder charges have been filed against three of Mandela's bodyguards in- chauffeur eluding her who was charged Friday Authorities usually impose tight restrictions on political funerals or ban them altogether But they allowed Saturday's funeral to proceed with remarkable alacrity evidently convinced the murder has further divided the black resistance movement and that the funeral would provide more negative publicity about Mandela A number of plainclothes police kept watch filming youths chanting in the streets but no uniformed soldiers or military vehicles were deployed as Seipei's severely decomposed body was buried in a hillside cemetery on the outskirts of the impoverished township Seipei whose leadership during township unrest between 1984 and 1986 landed him in jail for 11 months was hailed by activist Mclean Skhosane as a "revolutionary fighting for his rights" : A Ire I c :7:14'41'::::::tfOlie-4111- 41 i counter-revolutionaries- ' 'j ik 14-:- - ' e:! 9'''4 '' i 14( ' ' - ''' ' Z 4F ': 40't - 4" i 'l A N ': 'Y' :"'':''''' k'--' vi I ' I :it:::e:k I 'f'e 8 i' a '"I '4:i ' 1 vitoT ' ' I 11 14 :?' 4 : '1' A f' 'k r ter'vq l'i ' - 4 c "i"12 0) ts' 'à 1 sItIll ' 14 hl !ft ' 4: ''''1''''''''' tv ti Atip 4 ''''t I '' : ''' ' ‘ e 1 ilk c —1 '1 41t ril 0e ' It rr "' ' ' 7 - '1-''' : - - ' v ' ' '7-- : Urge Unity at Boy's Funeral P'1' " 't '''Y - k 0 i : ' - :too: f '''' ' - : cot - s '' - s : v"""' 1 1 sk40 1 Nwt c1 it Joy - n p i i' 0 f:-1:-'- - ikl t''' ' ' A iti 10 4 1 - - 0 3 404 ip e t3 '' fr e - 41 i t r 1 - i- ' - - alien-smuggle- 1 it ---- A t i le ':- - : e 'it ' ' ' r f ' Nour i f o4e i v'P 1'it t ' fl'Atbr kliv S Africa Blacks '11' 44 : 1 0 ' — E"' " 7'- 0 7 'Z:47--4:-::::- 'I ' I r ' 1 " - - --ot- awar SLIP SOUS ' America's largest chain of t mattress sleep centers Beautifully designed and crafted to enhance any decor! 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