European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - December 3, 1991, Darmstadt, Hesse Tuesday december 3, 1991 the stars and stripes a Page 9mubarak doubts . Will act against Libya Cairo up a egyptian president Hosni Mubarak said in remarks published monday that he did not think the United states would take military action against Libya Over charges that two libyan agents blew up a pan am Airliner Over Scotland three years ago. The . Justice department and Scotland s lord advocate charged two libyan intelligence agents with planting the bomb aboard the ill fated Airliner causing an explosion Over Lockerbie Scotland that killed 270 people. Both the United states and Britain have not ruled out military action unless Libya extradited the two suspects for trial. Libyan Leader Moa mar Qadhafi has rejected the charges and refused to extradite the men. A i done to think that the United states will take military action because the present american leadership is prudent a Mubarak told Mayo the mouthpiece of Egypt a ruling National democratic party. A we in turn Tell them the americans our views frankly and honestly on any topic. This is motivated by our Pursuit of common Good not personal Mubarak denied he was taking sides in the .-Li-Byan dispute saying Cairo was seeking a solution to the problem. A i favor nobody. As for the economic embargo or whatever related it is too Early to speak of it a said the egyptian Leader who maintains Good relations with both Washington and Tripoli. Last week he held three hours of talks with Qadhafi in the egyptian Mediterranean resort of Alexandria. A we Are looking for solutions and the Issue has already entered into the political Arena a Mubarak said. A i done to want to go into further details. I will just say that i had Contact with the United states and i done to think America will embark on any military asked whether a plan to Settle 1 million egyptian Farmers in Libya was still under consideration after negative signals from the libyan Side Mubarak said the proposal was still being examined. His government does not intend to proceed unless there were guarantees for the housing and safety of the egyptian immigrants he added. A we have been talking about settling in Libya for Over a year now a he said. A has anybody settled there no. Nobody. Because such settlement should be preceded by guarantees such As accommodation Ana All that ensures a decent and Safe life for our people. A we wont ferry people there telling them to act on their own. There should be resources. And when 1 million people Are to be settled they will not go in All at once but rather gradually Over a number of years provided they have Access to needed missing name on Wall leads son to his father Las vegas a Scott Amon a quest for his father began when his Mother find his name on a Monument for soldiers who died in Vietnam. It ended saturday with a tearful meeting at Mccarran International Airport a and Amon a wedding where his newfound father was Best Man. A a he a the handsomest Man in be Ever seen a Amo said after an emotional embrace with 46-year-old James Warnack who dated Amon smother in the 1960s before he was shipped to Vietnam with the marines. A for us this is Day one. It starts Here a said Warnack who flew from Ohio to meet his 26-year-old son and take part in his wedding saturday night. Amon smother Patricia Pierce of Carson City also was at the Airport with her husband James. Accompanying Warnack was his wife Charlotte. A we both have Happy marriages and now we a be Parent partners which is Nice a said Patricia Pierce 45. She said the quest began in april when she went to see the travelling Wall memorial in Carson City. A Mutual Friend had told her in 1965 that Warnack had been killed in action but she find his name on the Monument and the Marine corps refused to provide any information to Settle her doubts. Remembering he was from Ohio she called the department of motor vehicles there and located him in Streetsboro. A the was a Little angry with me because i Hadnot called him sooner a she said. A then 1 explained to him that i thought he was dead and he understood. Then i started crying and he told me to Calm Down and that everything was of they met in Hemet calif., in 1964 when she was 18 and he was a 19-year-old Marine. They dated for a few months before he was sent to Vietnam. Then she discovered she was pregnant. She had Scott and later married. Statistics astrology indicate High chinese birth rate in 92 Beijing up officials warned monday that at least 24 million babies will be born in China in 1992, when a Fertility Peak will be magnified by the chinese desire to Bear children during the auspicious year of the Monkey. Coupled with slowing mortality the surge in births will add at least 16 million to a population that will surpass 1.16 billion this year said state family planning commission chief Peng Meiyun. The number of women in or entering the Peak childbearing Ages of 20 to 29 will soar next year to a record 123.7 million Peng said and 13.25 million women will turn 23 years old a the age at which chinese women Are statistically most Likely to give birth. Peng hinted the birth rate could go even higher saying 24 million births was a conservative estimate. Exacerbating the situation is the widespread belief in chinese astrology. Millions of chinese couples Are believed to have timed their pregnancies to avoid having children during 1991, the unlucky year of the Goat and deferring childbirth until the year of the Monkey. Couples Are limited to a single child in China a cities and generally Only two in Rural areas so Many chinese go to great lengths to assure their children get an auspicious Start in mass the Rev. Ante Mia Ujevic celebrates a roman Catholic mass on sunday in an underground shelter in the front line Village of instar Yugoslavia which has been under heavy shelling. Meanwhile . Special envoy Cornu Vance arrived la Belgrade on sunday for talks on sending peacekeeping forces into War torn croatia.. Committed genocide in Gulf Clark says London a former . Attorney general Ramsey Clark on sunday accused the United states of committing a deliberate genocide during the Gulf War. Clark was participating in a British commission of inquiry one of a series of panels in the United states and Many countries to assemble evidence for a War crimes tribunal planned for feb. 28 and 29 in new York City. A the commission accuses the . Of pre planning War blocking negotiations controlling the Media manipulating the United nations deliberate genocide and other crimes against humanity and violations of the . Charter and International Law a Clark said in his statement the commission has set out 19 charges against the United states. It said that . Conduct at least since 1989 was a intended to Lead Iraq into provocation justifying . Military action against Iraq and permanent . Domination of the it said the United states intentionally bombed civilians and defenceless iraqi military personnel corrupted . Functions As a Means of securing Power to wage War and destroyed the environment. Member of parliament Tony Benn of the opposition labor party also spoke at the hearing. Benn said the War was really about the determination of the United states to control the Oil in the persian Gulf Region a and to assert its military Ascendancy Over its client .-led forces attacked Iraq and Kuwait on Jan. 19, 1990, to Force occupying iraqi troops out of Kuwait. Five weeks later president Bush declared Kuwait liberated. . Military officials speaking on condition of anonymity have said More than 100,000 iraqi soldiers were killed. They also have said 148 american servicemen Bers were killed during operation desert storm. Clark attorney general from 1967 to 1969 in the administration of president Lyndon Johnson had just conducted a similar hearing in Stuttgart Germany. He planned to hold further meetings in Madrid Spain Copenhagen Denmark Oslo Norway and Stockholm Sweden. Hearings also have been held in 35 . Cities said Sara flounders of the staff of the commission of inquiry for an International War crimes tribunal. She said the commission is Basing its charges on International conventions on warfare to which the United states and its War allies Are signatories
