News Digest Edited by Jennifer O'Cilka Kurdish rebels retreating into mountains OUTSKIRTS OF DOHUK, Iraq - Kurdish rebels Monday retreated on foot into their traditional mountain strongholds, surrendering more ur ban centers under a steady onslaught by Iraqi loyalist forces. Also Monday, Iraq said it captured documents proving the complicity of more than one foreign government in unrest designed to unseat Saddam Hussein and accused the United States of 92 “provocative” reconnaissance flights last weekend. Baghdad said its troops had re taken Dohuk, Erbil and Zahko. Low on morale, frightened refu gees asked why President Bush and his allies were allowing Saddam to use artillery and helicopters to break the rebellion. “Why have they abandoned us to Saddam?” refugees repeatedly asked Western reporters. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds fearing government reprisals were fleeing by any means possible into the mountains along the Iranian and Turkish borders, turning roadways into ribbons of humanity. Many women and children were forced to walk. Some laid on the roadside without food or water. Refu gees camped in the mountains, with out protection from rainstorms and the cold. In Washington, State Department deputy spokesman Richard Boucher said heavy fighting continued in north ern Iraq. The oil center of Kirkuk “seems to remain in government hands despite renewed fighting in that city late Fri day and Saturday,” he said. Govern ment forces had taken control of Erbil and Dohuk, and have also moved against rebel forces in the Zahko area along the Iraqi-Turkish border. Boucher also said there had been additional fighting near Basra and in the lower Euphrates and Tigris rivers. U.S. officers said Iraqi troops had crushed uprisings by Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq, and some units were being redeployed north to put down the Kurdish uprising. “Whoever is revolting is losing,” said Lt Col. John Kalb of Bay Vil lage, Ohio, whose 3rd Armored Divi sion units operate a refugee camp inside allied-occupied Iraq. One of the senior U.S. Army commanders along the border area, Col. Bill Nash of the 3rd Armored Division’s First Brigade, said some Iraqis arriving at the camp or nearby checkpoints claim to be resistance leaders and have asked for arms to combat Saddam’s forces. The Bush administration last week said it would not help the rebels, although it remains hopeful that Sad dam’s forces have been weakened enough that the Iraqi leader could be deposed at some point. Both the Kurds and the Shiite Muslims of southern Iraq rose against the Iraqi government after U.S.-led coalition forces routed Saddam 's troops from Kuwait in February. Iraqi troops moved against the Kurds after beat ing back the Shiites. “Iraqi forces attacked the towns of Erbil and Dohuk with air and artillery shellings. Helicoptergunships, fixed wing aircraft and multiple rocket launchers were used indiscriminately,” Hoshyar Zebari of the Kurdistan Democratic Party said in London. The umbrella Iraqi Kurdish Front on Sunday accused loyalists ol using napalm, phosphorous bombs and other weapons in Erbil. INA quoted the government-run newspaper Al-Joumhuriya as saying Monday that searches Friday in Erbil and Kirkuk produced “weapons, equipment and documents that con firm the involvement of more than one foreign party in the events of March in the region.” In other gulf developments Mon day: •The U.N. Security Council sched uled its First consultations on the proposed gulf war cease-fire resolu tion. •Ayatollah Mohammed Taki Mo daresi, a Shiite Muslim rebel leader, claimed in Damascus, Syria, that southern rebels made a nighttime at tack on government headquarters in the holy city of Karbala. Iraqis still in control of Kuwaiti territory ABDALY, Kuwait - More than a month after President Bush declared Kuwait liberated, Iraqi forces still control a small pocket of the emir ate’s territory, a Kuwaiti tank com mander said Monday. About 300 Iraqi soldiers remain inside Kuwait, just south of the Iraqi port of Um Qasr, Capt. Nasser Al Duwaila said. He badly wants to get them out. “This is our land,” said Al-Duwaila, the acting commander of Kuwait’s 7th Armored Battalion. “Kuwait is not free if there is one Iraqi soldieron our land.” Al-Duwaila said there were no Kuwaiti officers in authority when allied units first moved into the area, apparently producing brief uncertainty about the border’s location. “This is a big mistake here,” Al Duwaila recalled telling allied offi cers when he reached the area later. “They said, 'No, there’s a cease-fire.’” Bush called off the pursuit of Iraqi forces on Feb. 28, declaring that '“Kuwait is liberated, Iraq’s army is defeated.” The area in question covers about two square miles directly south of Um Qasr, and was attacked by Iraq once before, in 1973, Al-Duwaila said. He said the Iraqis occupy scattered Kuwaiti military facilities, including a barracks and an observation post. They have built new roads “so they can say to the world, ‘there are our roads, this is our area,’” he said. “Their plan is to cut up our land piece by piece.” The matter has been brought to the attention of allied headquarters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. One of the senior U.S. Army commanders along the border area, Col. Bill Nash of the 3rd Armored Division’s First Brigade, said he knew of the Kuwuiu complaints but ex pressed no interest in getting involved. “Our task is to defend the DML (the demarcation line established at the end of hostilities), not the interna tional boundary he said. “I’m where I’m supposed to be, and nobody has intruded into my space.” Nash of Hayden, Ariz., said there was no indication of significant Iraqi military movements in the region as a formal cease-fire becomes increas ingly likely. “There’s no military threat to my command,” he said. Al-Duwaila said he was confident that the U.S. commander, Gen. Nor man Schwarzkopf, would eventually | IRAQ AP ensure that Kuwait’s long-disputed borders w ith Iraq were protected. “We are a small country and we can’t afford to lose any piece of our land,” he told reporters visiting his command post. “We want it back immediately.” Al-Duwaila said he told allied officers at a weekend meeting that they should oust the Iraqis themselves, or allow Kuwaiti troops to reclaim the area, or let Kuwaiti forces occupy a similar-size portion of Iraq until a formal cease-fire is signed. Communists claim victory TIRANA, Albania * Communists claimed a convincing victory Mon day in Albania’s historic multiparty elections, but the opposition scored wins in all major cities and beat Presi dent Ramiz Alia .n his parliamentary race. The main opposition Democratic Party conceded it had garnered fewer than one-third of the seats in the leg islature, but predicted the Commu nists would soon lose their giip on power anyway. Sunday’s election effectively ended one-party rule in Albania, which had been the last hard-line Communist holdout in Europe. Official results were not yet avail able. Transportation and communi cations are primitive in the impover ished BrJkan nation, which is strug gling to emerge from nearly a half century of Stalinist rule and interna tional isolation. The Party of Labor, as the Com munists call themselves, said it won about two-thirds of the 250 seats in the People’s Assembly parliament. Communist spokesman Xhelil Ghoni said the results showed the parly is “the major political party in our country, and it enjoys the 4*11 trust of the people.” The opposition had been euphoric late Sunday as initial results showed it doing well in Albania’s cities. But when returns began coming in from “44 -- Yesterday, we marked not a Democratic vic tory, but a victory for democracy. Pashko Democratic Party leader -» - the countryside, it became clear the Communists would keep the power they have guarded for 46 years. It was unclear whether the Com munists and the opposition could cooperate in the legislature after the election, which split Albania’s 3.2 million people along geographic and demographic lines. One of the Democrats’ leaders, Sali Berisha, told about 3,000 sup porters at a rally outside party head quarters that “there will be no coali tion’’ with the Communists. Berisha said his party would take about 72 seats. Official television said the Party of Labor would win about 167 seats in parliament. It projected the Demo crats would win 65 seats. It said an ethnic Greek party had won three seals. Elections were not held in one district in the city of Pogradec be cause of a controversy over the Democratic Party candidate. Runoffs will be held next Sunday in a handful of districts where no candidate re ceived a majority. Opposition leaders urged their supporters to be calm, fearing their dashed hopes would translate into violence, and predicted they would eventually dislodge the Communists' grip on power. “Yesterday, we marked not a Democratic victory, but a victory for democracy,” said Democratic Party leader, Gramoz Pashko, said. “The Communists who sucked our blood for 46 years are finished. Within two months they will be in pieces.” Their supporters greeted the speeches by Pashko and Berisha with shouts of “Down with the dictator ship!” Some wept in disappointment. Pashko and Berisha had strong leads in the unofficial tally in their urban districts in Vlora and Kavaje, party officials said. Alia, who succeeded Stalinist leader Enver Hoxha, suffered an embarrass ing defeat in his Tirana district race. Sources said he won only 36 per cent of the vote in his contest with the Democrats’ Franko Krrogi, a little known engineer, despite the fact that soldiers had been brought in to vote in his district. That is legal under Al banian election law. Nationwide price hikes Moscow food stores close MOSCOW - Food stores in the Soviet capita] closed Monday to curb panic-buying on the eve of whopping nationwide price hikes. City officials warned of unrest, and bakers boosted output for an avalanche of shoppers. “We haven’t had time to unload the bread from one truck to another!” said Nina Vorokina, controller at a major bread store on Novoarbat Prospect. Elsewhere in the capital, long lines formed outside bakeries, and the scene was repeated in the Soviet cities of Irkutsk, Tashkent and Leningrad. On Tuesday, prices across the Soviet Union were to double for milk, triple for beef, pork and mutton and quad ruple foi rye bread. Increases ranging from 250 to 1,000percent were set for such consumer goods as television sets, refrigerators, clothes, shoes and baby carriages. I he price hikes were the govern ment’s mostdecisive steps in 30 years to close the gap between the low prices it charges consumers and ris ing production costs. But the prevailing mood among Moscow shoppers was that the econ omy would gain little from the changes, nor would they benefit from the complex system of wage hikes and other compensation that Soviet Presi dent Mikhail Gorbachev ordered to ease resulting tensions. “It may help the economy,” said Lyubov Biryukova, who is on mater nity leave from her job at a Moscow brewery. “All this compensation is not enough.” Most food stores and farmers’ markets in the Soviet capital were closed Monday. Employees said they expected to post new priceson freshly delivered goods overnight. The Communist Party newspaper Pravda also published a presidential order threatening to punish slate-owned stores that exceeded new centrally set prices. Roman Podemy, an employee of a geological institute, called the pnee hikes ‘inevitable” but said they should have come last fall when Gorbachev agreed with Yeltsin on the so-called 500-day plan to shift from a central i-—-—_ Soviet Price Hikes Here Is a look at some of the price increases facing Soviet consumers. The average salary Is 270 rubles a month, or about 1.50 rubles an hour. In rubles*, || Old-l|| New per kg | prices § prices ..nm-iimii Beef 2.00 f 7.00 Pork 1.90 j 5.30 Chicken 3.40 fj 5.60 Cheese 3.20 1 6.40 Wheat flour 0.4Q j 1.40 Rice 0.88 j 2.20 Sugar 0.85 j 2.20 Tea 9.60 | 18.00 Eggs (ten) 1.30 I 2.60 Milk (liter) 0.28 j 0.50 Bread Rye 0.12 | 0.48 White 0.50 | 1.20 T-ahlrt 1,34 j 4.70j Man's suit 107.00: 245.00 (wool blend) Girl’s school 12 00 ; 62.00 uniform Baby 68.00 136.00 carriage Sofa 188.00 ; 346.00 Color TV 765.00 jl.218.00 ’The Soviet Union has four exchange rates: the official rate of 1.75 dollars per ruble, the commercial rate of 58 cents per ruble; die tourist rate ol 17 cents per ruble and the black market rate of 3-4 cents per ruble. AP ized to a market economy. Gorbachev then balked and the economy wors ened. 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