| Show q - - g— ' f ' fill:14N 11- - A - - P '4 k)r r- 401111P'111141S- ca7 11)R 4 VOLUME 246 INI:MBER 151 - t ' ilki 114 Z 4 :t- - Cd i II 1:1 i'::i 11 11 t- :1 i'll '-- 'Q U t1 11 tA Li 5 t t:r SUNDAY TODAYS READERSHIP: 428700 1 lii 0 r ic 49S3 THE SALT LAKE TMEL-N- SALT LAKE CITI SEPTEMBER 11 1993 84111 I THE NEW SLAVERY: BARBARITY LIVES ON t:''''':t4 s41'--4 1 '" Ile -- By John Barbour )t is 't Le e 7- Broad Coverage Hallmark of Health Proposal - : ''''' '' - 4 II 1 4 --- '- I 11 it ' - - i it - ' -': 0 a - :1 C i t 7 ' ' : 11 ' t light districts in Belgium the Netherlands Germany Switzerland France Italy and Greece One window in Antwerp advertises "We have new girls every week" Even Great Britain has its share of the trade in p 2 See tit --- -- - 1 II 1 701--7- 0 t - - I r r t1-''''- )- - ': 04 '' - : By Jacqueline Frank :'- 4'Ll 4"41 I I REUTER NEWS SERVICE i 1- 3 - -- i All k P - 1 i ' s k 4 : - A-11-- !I N v14 '''' '1 1-- - ' Ni t A- '"e- - 0 "fr - i - - - 1- - t t seven-memb- Rod-ha- See m ' - N g - - : 4 t f a t i: $4 ' c'f 1! i '''-- '' s '''' 41 '' ' e - 41 0 : ' " — — - t04' '' ' ' -- ' '' - ‘ ''-' A ' I 51::611o '' t :' :'' f Icr s ''''' - 1 I 4 44 ' ''-'- k ' ' ' ii tf Or ' 4 4 11-- A lot A gli - I - 4 1 q 1 :''' - i 'P kg61 44- - 11 IIII t"16'' ' t ' i trj R ' 1: E See - Ar :' 1 "' : z k e b l'IN irt g - 4'A rg:4io4---1 1 -T- I A- © 1993 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Latai Mohi moved his family from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City five years ago to escape gang violence and get a better education for his five children Gangs were part of teen life in California And the laborer's only son Asi Mohi — was unable to avoid them Asi's cousins were gang members His fellow football players belonged Street hoods plagued his neighborhood "They were pressuring us to join" says Asi's Revo Skeen cousin When he came to Utah Asi thought he had escaped In lengthy phone calls to his younger cousin Revo he would brag about normal teen life dances dates concerts and most importantly football at West High Asi urged Revo to join him "He'd tell me about the snow and school and his friends over here" says Rev° "He'd tell me how they'd go out to movies here instead of going out into the neighborhood looking for trouble and for your enemies" Revo who lived with his grandmother By Christopher Smith ' ' i '— ': 't ''''' Rancher Dan kreed says environmentalists just dodi get range management '' During the first westward expansion the land was an enemy to be tamed The government encouraged ranchers to fence it plow it water it and graze it Now the second westward expansion is under way with some 346000 city slickers pouring into the Intermountain Area last year To these new settlers the land is a recreational playground that should be protected Uncle Sam appears to be listening The Clinton administration is raising the rent on ranchers who've used millions of acres of public land as cheap pasture for a century Cowboys say it's going to make them L homeless on the range But others i'ay it's tt INSIDE murder of Aaron Chapman WRONG? in an LA suburb ultimately moved in with Asi's family on Salt Lake's northwest side But like Asi Revo soon learned he couldn't shed his gang reputation simply by relocating Because they were Tongans from LA everyone assumed they were gang members "When you first come down here they're scared of you" Revo says shyly "They think 'Oh these people are from LA They're crazy'" Today those words sound like a prophecy s concert in After a downtown Salt Lake on Sept 1 Aaron Chapman was blocked in traffic outside the Triad Amphitheater when eight to 10 Tongan Crip Gang members challenged him about the flannel shirt he'd bought earlier that day It was red — the color worn by rival gang members The Bloods Sitting in the driver's seat the 1993 Granite High graduate ignored the taunts: "What's up cuz?" He stared straight ahead The boys threw punches through the open window until Aaron's niece Monica Vigil self-fulfilli- rhythm-and-blue- time to end federal subsidies to livestock producers "These Western whiny welfare cowboys are the same people who come into the offices of Congress and demand this government be run like a business" says a champiRep Mike Synar on of federal grazing reform "Well we're going to give them a dose of good business sense" Ranchers say those pushing higher grazing fees couldn't tell one end of a cow from the other "To us some of these dude environmentalists don't know what they're talking about and don't understand range management" says Daniel Freed a partner of the Skull Valley Co in tiny losepa one of the largest public-land- s ranches in Utah with more than 350000 acres under Bureau of Land Management permits Western politicians are trying to head off higher grazing fees stricter environmental controls and diversified management of federal lands The political muscle being flexed is surprising given there Zlit5attgalit'enbunt Amte- ef' 1F0910110114VoloWSWItnOutlettgt"""111103111M40104010triftadtlAateOtottapittlilte40Ak4Pnt"twml"11"frMEsIvo'ArAd"tIb""'"Mr&trroAtIta t 4 41 t :0 11011krnfrurt012!1110rP"orilMtcatarit"Proliklestlmagt : : t 4 :e 4 r ri tmi4 4 ' )04 441ii Ai' 0 ) IV:! ‘v 4 bi Emi Sakurai age 11 has more than a mental image of what she wants to be when she grows up — a pediatrician That's more than a lot of kids have Local: Page C-1 WEATHER Cooler chance of rain across the state Page 2 C-- SPORTS Cougars claw their way past Hawaii while Utah edges the Aggies Page B-- I SUNDAY N Column '1'il4 - st A-- 6 4 ‘'1 4 are only 30000 people in the 11 Western states who run cattle or sheep on federal rangeland of the nation's total livestock production only 3 percent comes from public More lands west of the Mississippi people in the West belong to the Sierra Club than the National Cattlemen's Association All the Utah ranchers running cattle and sheep on public lands would not have enough votes to elect a City Council member in Sandy They generate less than one percent of the state's total income So why should anyone fret if a small subsidized group rides off into the sunset? "The incredible arrogance that sug gests the numbers of a group aren't big enough so we can be as unfair as we like shows that people don't appreciate the kinds of economic problems created by rancher out of driving the public-land- s business" says Sen Malcolm Wallop R- ti See ettly i v3?4:11'' 4 ) ki fr ''' 't 1 1' '$'' :jit !:A :44140 PP:I 107 Reform special-intere- Opo i4:1$:(44tzp -' Wit : er d ' r11-"- pulled him from the car The gang members slammed Aaron to the sidewalk and in front of several hundred people punched and kicked him Asi was leaving the concert and saw his gang friends embroiled in a fight He rushed to the scene where witnesses say Aaron begged for mercy What happened next ended one life and heralded the failure of another Police say Asi admitted drawing a handgun and shooting Aaron once in the chest The Chapman a baseball player who hoped to attend technical school or join the military doubled over and said "I've been shot" He died 45 minutes later at LDS Hospital Asi was arrested at his fiancee's Bountiful home the next morning and led police to a planter outside the Triad Center where they recovered the murder weapon He will be tried as an adult on charges of criminal homicide and faces life in prison if convicted Rem who admits to being with Asi the night of the shooting says a week See A45 Column 2 — 1 - 1 1 FamilysFled LA But Gang Troubles Trailed Son to Utah By Norma Wagner and Michael Phillips Column A-- 4 L t W-)-- Ti s - T Be Their Financial Undoing 00Vrt '''r - ''' - A t - Football held the promise of advancement for Asi Mohi — until his arrest in the Sept 1993 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE i i A - A :7 - i1 At41 ' N r-' 174- - ': ' t 4 free-trad- e t ve - i t Livestock Owners Say a Hike In BLNI Grazing Fees Will : tii 4telts04""Prr''1""'''''''''' 'S-- ' Column 5 A-- 4 : ! 1 4i -' : - 7- Homeless on the Range? Ranchers Wary of Public-Lan- - - ' - er e - 4' e i e 239-pag- b i 1 ' 1 "" 'I t- f ' Ak''' ''50 ! : 4 '''Zi- u1 — To support- WASHINGTON ers it's a bold economic strategy that will expand markets for American products To opponents it's a crass power-graby corporate America at the expense of ordinary workers who will lose jobs to cheaper labor south of the border But to most Americans the North American Free Trade Agreement is an enigma Polls show that a majority of Americans know nothing about the agreement even though negotiators from the United States Canada and Mexico finished work on the 2000-pagmain text more than a year ago The pact would create the world's zone stretching largest from the Yukon to the Yucatan linking the three nations into an economic unit of 360 million 1 1 '' THE ASSOCIATED PRESS a - : !- - By Martin Crutsinger 1 - ' i A - il Column 5 A-- 4 Need to Knotv --- - See M ii NAFTA: All You 1 -- ' peace agreement O called for protests armed resistance and a "day of wrath" on Monday when the historic accord is to be signed Radicals and Muslim organiza 40-- 44041 te-------- il Opponents in Lebanon of the t ' ! 111 Israel-PL- ::::::'4: ' ' f r cm: --- In other developments Saturday: jtor44 1 11 rt ' 711 1 — President Clinton's health plan proposes a reform guaranteeing comprehensive health care and gives WASHINGTON g ' 1 g k - 111 4 i 411----7- 4 l early-mornin- anti-Araf- Monday invitation l come-al- 1): r t1 :k' A-- 2 State Warren Christopher called to urge him to attend Arafat is scheduled to arrive in Washington this evening Rabin is expected in the hours from President Clinton that broke a long taboo on contact with leaders of the organization Rabin Israers prime minister accepted an invitation early Saturday morning when Secretary of L-- — support died with Soviets: PLO's 44 11- - 1 come-on- e 1 'f 0 211 Column 9 " p4mAni4i ' A-1- 'IN 1 II Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin who for more than a quarter-centurfought on opposite sides of the bloody Palestinian-Israel- i divide will meet in Washington on Monday for the signing of a pact that maps the road to peace Arafat head of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) seized on the opening offered by a y : ' sex-sho- tions were reported to be planning similar protests in Palestinian refugee camps in neighboring Syria on Monday as the camp strove to step up its campaign to wreck the accord In the occupied West Bank a protest against the accord escalated into violent clashes as Israeli soldiers shot dead two Palestinian youths and wounded eight others II On another peace front Israel and Jordan were in virtual agreement on an agenda that could serve as a framework for a peace treaty said US officials Jordan's King Hussein conI- TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICES - Government Would Hold Power To Control Delivery Spending the government unprecedented power to control delivery and spending according to a draft copy obtained by reporters The government would have the power to limit insurance premiums determine the basic services every American will receive regulate drug prices for some patients and even limit lawyers' fees for malpractice suits The plan requires all Americans to pay benefits in resomething for health-car- e turn for a right to a national health card that qualifies them for comprehensive coverage they cannot lose It also requires employers to pay up to 80 percent of the cost of health insurance for their workers but caps their total spending at 79 percent of payroll expenses The White House gave members of draft explaining the Congress a new system in exhaustive detail Clinton is to formally unveil the plan to the public Sept 22 in a televised address before a joint session of Congress A new national healthcare board would be established to set the national health-car- e budget regulate insurance premiums oversee state healthcare systems and determine whether prices on newly approved drugs are too high States will be given until the end of 1997 to set up a system of health alliances that will choose and sell health plans to people in their region If states fail to act the federal government will have the power to step in and take over the state system Until the new plan is in place insurers will be prevented from dropping coverage for any person rates will be regulated and the 37 million uninsured Americans would be eligible for care in a national risk pool set up by the Department of Health and Human Services which will contract with insurance firms The success of Clinton's plan hinges on the federal government's ability to rapidly reduce the rate of growth in Medicare and Medicaid programs for the elderly and poor task The White House health-carforce headed by first lady Hillary Clinton told Congress a slower rate of growth in federal programs will save A 1 h s ' 10' 1 f so''- - t 4 11-- - - " - 4 1 This is almost the 21st century and yet uncounted Tni MODS of the world's people live in some form of slavery From Bangkok to New York from Brazil to Kuwait from Africa to Europe They are mostly women and children who have been sold into servitude prisoners of debt doomed to lifetimes of bondage Some are among the 2 million illegal aliens in the United States where at least 100000 illegals slip across the borders each year Authorities expect an estimated 13000 Chinese to attempt illegal entry into the United States by the end of the year Of those who succeed many will spend the rest of their lives fruitlessly trying to pay off the price of transportation and keep White slavery is rampant Women from the former Soviet bloc are lured to Western Europe by the thousands with promises of jobs and then are forcibly kept in brothels and red WS 4 I PRESS THE ASSOCIATED F:04'1r' "'-'4- in s Arafat and Rabin to 'Wake Peace Pilgrimage to DC '' 4-- 1 Utah Jazzman Karl Malone's top truck driverdispatcher is a woman For Sue Drechsel it's the job of a lifetime Page D-1 THE ARTS As summer winds down Utah dance companies are set to spring into fall with a new season Page E-- 1 BUSINESS The king of gourmet chocolate-chicookies returns to Utah p Page Ann Landers D4 Intermountain Col Attitude D-- Jack Goodman BarberiScruggs C-- 3 Jumble D-- Movies 3 EvansEgan Bill Hall Births Classified - 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