flkf 1A7 CZ T Associated Press X ft %r Edited by Jennifer O'Cilka Turks moving Kurds from theii mountain camps ISIKVEREN, Turkey - Turkey or Monday began moving thousands of ill and starving Iraqi Kurds from this mountainous border settlement to camps farther inside Turkey where they will be closer to relief supplies. Iraq, meanwhile, claimed that thousands of the refugees had begun to return home. But a Turkish official said the Kurds were still coming across the border and that their number could soon reach 700,000. Reporters on Iraq’s border with Iran and Turkey said that thousands of refugees continued to stream out of the troubled country. “Iraq is my homeland. 1 was bom there and I want to die there,” said Dia Sindi, a 17*year old Kurd in this tent city of 160,000 refugees. “If the> kill Saddam I will go back,” he said Sindi was among 2,100 refugees moved down from this 7,200-foot plateau to a new camp near the town ship of Silopi, 36 miles inside Tur key. The new camp will have water, electricity and medical supplies. The tent settlement will have a 400-bed hospital, 64 doctors and 129 medical personnel, Health Minister Halil Sivgin said. The order to move the refugees to new bases represented a major policy shift for President Turgut Ozal’s government, which previously had kept the refugees in the mountains, saying it could not deal with the in flux. Turkey has fought attacks by its own restive Kurdish minority and still shelters thousands of Kurds who fled Iraq in 1988. The Istanbul newspaper Hurriyet said Turkey allowed the refugees deeper into the country after Presi dent Bush reportedly assured Ozal that the refugees would return to Iraq ■ Turkey thousands . • refugees from the _•-'. c ; ^ III;:mountainous border ;£:. .settlement of tefcveren to 1 k-.Erbil' 4—Kurd Majority . «-s ! § Mediterranean © I cfa __ Baghdad '' IRAN * C~ '"^.x IHAQ ISRAEL 4V JORDAN SAUDI g ARABIA lv Demilitarized ^ zone KUWAlft' VV?/''?5 ■ Iraqi reports say refugees are accepting 9 Saddam’s amnesty and returning to the Kurdish cities of Dohuk and Erbil. ■ U.S. troops begin to pull out of southern Iraq and a U.N. peackeeping mission j prepares to move into the buffer zone. Med f ■ Foreign ministers of the European Sea Community urge the U.N. to bring % Saddam Hussein to trial for war crimes. ■ An envoy was en route to Baghdad to It assess humanitarian needs in Iraq for a \ U.N. emergency aid program. )_ As of 5 p.m. EDT AP when Saddam Hussein’s government collapsed. Turkish officials stressed that the resettlement was temporary. Hayri Kozakcioglu, governor of Turkey’s southeastern border region with Iraq, said that the number of refugees may rise to 700,000 in the next few days as Iraqis continue to flee. Officials have said 500,000 refu gees are already on the Turkish bor der. Iran’s official radio, meanwhile, said the country ’ s Red Crescent Soci ety, the equivalent of the Red Cross, was running out of relief supplies for the more than 900,(XX) of Iraq’s 4 million Kurds who have fled to Iran. Hundreds of refugees are believed to have died in the border camps. In other developments Monday, Kurdish rebels renewed a plea to the United Nations for protection from Iraqi loyalist forces inside Iraq. Kurdish refugees distressed; Iraqi police to handle border SAFWAN, Iraq - Iraqi police will handle law and order in part of the demilitarized border zone with Ku wait, and refugees said Monday that is tantamount to sending them to prison or worse. Several serious problems remain unresolved as U.S. troops pull out of southern Iraq and a U.N. peacekeep ing mission prepares to move into the buffer zone straddling the Iraq-Ku wait border. About 300 worried refugees blocked a road Monday with a sit-in outside their dusty tent camp, chanting slo gans in English such as “Save The People of Iraq,” and “Saddam, Sad dam, Same As Hitler.” The U.S. Army is caring for more than 11,000 refugees at an abandoned construction company in Safwan. About 6,000 displaced people, mostly Iraqis, are at a Red Crescent camp about a mile away on the Kuwaiti side of the border. They are among 40,000 Iraqi refu gees in Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Ara bia, and some say they will try to prevent the Americans from leaving Safwan. “We will sleep in front of the American trucks,” said Abu Nathal.a history teacher from Nassiriya. “Only the Americans can protect us from Saddam Hussein.” The tens of thousands of U.S. troops still in southern Iraq are being with drawn rapidly through the desert now that a formal gulf war cease-fire is in place. Nearly half the 540,000 American troops have left the theater, the U.S. Central Command said, including the 17,000 troops of the 1st Infantry Division of the VII Corps, which this week began rolling from the Euphrates River south toward Saudi Arabia. Some U.S. soldiers will remain temporarily with the refugees in the demilitarized zone until the U.N. Iraq Kuwait Observation Mission, a Lightly armed 1,440-person peacekeeping contingent, is in place. The DMZ stretches six miles into Iraq, and three miles into Kuwait along 120 miles of border. The head of the mission, Austrian Gen. Gunther Greindl, arrived Satur day in Kuwait, where he met with government officials before traveling to Baghdad, on Monday for similar discussions. But U.N. peacekeepers are not expected to arrive in Kuwait until later this week, and it would appear their deployment on the border is still one to two weeks away. U.N. offi cials have refused to give any time table. Once in place, the peacekeepers have a strict and limited mandate to observe and “to interfere as little as possible” in the affairs of Iraq and Kuwait, said Joachim Hutter, the U.N. delegation’s acting spokesman. Iraq and Kuwait will not be al lowed to send troops into the DMZ, but their governments will handle civil administration in their territory, in eluding police duties. The Iraqi refugees, who include many fighters against Saddam’s rule, say this is intolerable. “The police will arrest us and kid nap us,” said Ali Ali, a teacher from the southern city of Najaf. “Many of us will be executed for opposing Saddam. They will write down our names and kill our families.” The U.N. peacekeepers will carry sidearms which are to be used only in self-defense, said Hutter. “Given Saddam’s track record, these people (refugees) probably have a reason to be scared,” said U.S. Maj. Tom Grubbs, of Olney, Md., who helps administer the refugee camp in Safwan. Rail workers to strike despite pressure WASHINGTON - President Bush tried to budge deadlocked freight rail roads and their unions Monday, say ing a nationwide strike threatened for midnight Tuesday could severely disrupt the economy. But no progress was reported at the bargaining table. Also Monday, as part of the Bush administration’s efforts to head off a strike, Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner met with union lead ers to discuss the three-year-old dis pute over wages, health care and work rules. Meanwhile, negotiations wore on toward a midnight Tuesday deadline, when a federally imposed “cooling off’ period expires and the nation’s 235,000 freight line workers are free to follow through on their promise to strike. Bargainers “are all at the table with one eye on the clock,” said George Whaley, a spokesman for the Asso ciation of American Railroads, which represents the nation’s big freight carriers such as Burlington Northern, Conrail and Norfolk Southern. Though the strike would involve only freight crews and freight yard workers, passenger travel on Amtrak and commuter lines could also be disrupted because most of those trains run on freight-owned tracks. Wages are a key stumbling block, and the two sides don’t even agree on what figures to use when discussing the issue. Management contends rail --— We’re not interested in shutting down the nation and inconven iencing the traveling public in any way at all. FitzGerald, spokesman for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers -1* - workers receive an average total compensation package worth about $56,000 a year and says that’s far out of line with other industrial workers. The union says a typical rail worker makes between $30,000 and $40,000 a year. Sieve FitzGerald, a spokesman for the Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers, one of 11 unions involved in the dispute, said the unions are anx ious to settle. “We’re not interested in shutting down the nation and inconveniencing the traveling public in any way at all,” he said. Three unions have reached tenta tive settlement, but the others have not. In the past, if one rail union walks out, all have followed their path in a show of solidarity. Bush, speaking to a business group at the White House, said a rail strike “could potentially idle hundreds of thousands of workers and would af feet virtually all Americans in one way or another.” The president stopped short of indicating that he would ask Con gress to intervene and stop a strike, saying, “It is always better for labor and management to resolve their dif ferences and produce an agreement." Still, the president clearly was seeking to exert pressure on both sicks. Bush said a strike “could severely disrupt the economy just as the econ omy in our view is trying to turn around and get out of this recession.” Neither union leaders nor Skinner would comment on their 90-minutc session, but labor sources had said they did not expect anything signifi cant to come of it. Nebraskan Editor Eric Planner 472- 1766 Managing Editor Victoria Ayotle Assoc News Editors Jana Pedersen Emily Rosenbaum Editorial Page Editor Bob Nelson Wire Editor Jennifer O'ClIka Copy Desk Editor Diane Brayton Sports Editor Paul Domeier Arts & Entertain ment Editor Julie Naughton Diversions Editor Connie Sheehan Professional Adviser Don Walton 473- 7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board. Ne braska Union 34, 1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board For information, contact Bill Vobejda, 436-9993 Subscription price is $45 for one year Postmaster; Send address changes to the Dally Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St.,Lincoln, NE 68588-0448 Second-class postage paid at Lincoln. NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1991 DAILY NEBRASKAN Peace talks possible Baker returns to Middle East WASHINGTON - In a quick turn around, Secretary of State James Baker will return to the Middle East on Thursday hoping to capitalize on the interest Arabs and Israelis have shown in peace talks, the State Department said Monday. “No one knows how long this opportunity will exist,” Margaret Tutwiler, the department spokes woman, said in announcing Baker’s third visit to the troubled region in a little more than six weeks. He will leave Tuesday night and go first to Luxembourg for talks with European foreign ministers. In all, he will have been home in Washington between trips barely 100 hours. This time Baker may make a stop in Jordan, thereby completing a re versal of U.S. policy — from irrita tion with King Hussein for condemn ing the economic and military assault on Iraq to including the Arab king dom in planning for a Middle East settlement. U.S. aid to Jordan, which had been tentatively set at $57 million for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, was suspended and President Bush said in February that Jordan had “moved over — way over” to support Iraq. Hussein, meanwhile, said the war to free Kuwait was “against all Arabs and all Muslims and not against Iraq alone.” Jordan controlled the West Bank, now held by Israel, from 1948 until 1967. Baker last month left Jordan out of his itinerary, but on his trip last week he held talks in Geneva with Foreign Minister Taher al Masri. Stopping in Amman, the Jorda nian capital, on the new trip would be a diplomatic gesture toward the king. At the heart of U.S. policy in the Middle East is an effort to persuade Israel to give up all or most of the West Bank. Bush. Baker and other U.S. officials have been intentionally vague, however, on whether the aim is to have Jordan control the territory again. 1 Baker returned from the region late Friday night, reported to Bush over the weekend, and they concluded all parties are taking a serious ap proach to peace in the Middle East ” spokeswoman Tulwiler said. Bush and Baker believe following up now, directly with the Arabs and the Israelis, is important if progress is to be made, Tutwilcr said. She concluded the brief announce ment with the customary caveat that “there is much work to be done, ques tions to be answered, and a long way to go.” The Stale Department withheld Baker’s schedule, but it was learned he would go to Israel from Luxem bourg and then make stops in Egypt. Saudi Arabia, Syria and probably Jordan. Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy, speaking prior to the public an nouncement of Baker’s return trip, commented in Jerusalem: ‘This is a good sign. It shows his labor is bear ing fruit.”