By The Associated Press Edited by Alan Phelps —Funeral mourners once again target of Sarajevo attach SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzcgovina— A gre nade slammed into a funeral at a Sarajevo cemetery Monday, killing one person, while continued fighting in Gorazde kept U.N. offi cials from sending an aid convoy to the city. In Belgrade, nationalist deputies in Serbia’s federal parliament demanded a no-confidcnce vote against the government of Yugoslav Prc mier Milan Panic. In their strongest challenge to Panic yet, they accused him of overstepping his authority at last week’s London peace con ference. And the U.N. Human Rights Commission’s special envoy to former Yugoslavia submitted a damning report in Geneva that blamed Serb forces for the worst human rights violations in the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The report, by former Polish Prime Minister Tadcusz Mazowiecki, urged creation of an international commission to investigate war crimes. The attack at Sarajevo’s Lions Cemetery was the second in a month on mourners burying their dead there. In early August, an elderly woman was seriously wounded while burying her baby granddaughter, killed when a children’s convoy was fired on. The grenade Monday morning hit during a soldier’s funeral. One person was killed and three injured. Overnight fighting contihucd on Sarajevo’s outskirts. In a 24-hour period ending early Monday, 23 people were killed and 259 wounded around Bosnia, the Ministry of Health reported. It remained unclear exactly what was hap pening in Gorazde, the lone government hold out in eastern Bosnia. Tens of thousands of people were trapped there. Serbs announced over the weekend they were lifting their five-month siege of the city. But Muslims also claimed to have “liberated” 80 percent of Gorazde after several days of fierce fightingr~7 Radovan KVadzic, Ieaderof Bosnian Serbs, told The Associated Press that Muslim forces were attacking Serb villages as Serbian fighters withdrew. Bosnian President Alija Izctbcgovic said he would boycott peace talks this week in Geneva if the “murderous assault on the Bosnian people in Sarajevo does not cease.” The United Nations and the European Com munity are sponsoring another round of talks, to begin Thursday in Geneva. Idaho fugitive surrenders following 11 -day standoff NAPLES, Idaho — A fugitive holed up in a remote mountaintop cabin surrendered Monday after an 11-day standoff during which his son and wife and a U.S. marshal died in shootouts. Randy Weaver, 44, came out of the cabin with his three surviving children, an infantdaughlcr and two older girls, said James “Bo” Gritz, who has been a liaison between Weaver and authorities since Fri day. Weaver had a gunshot wound in his arm, an official said. Gritz (pronounced GR1TES), a retired Army Special Forces lieu tenant colonel and Populist Party presidential candidate, said federal authorities had agreed to let Weaver's girls stay with a family that lives in the area. A Marshals Service spokesman said authorities made no deals for Weaver’s surren der. Weaver was flown to Boise, where he was led away in shackles under heavy guard. He was taken to a hospital for a checkup and then to county jail pending arraignment Tuesday,said Mike Johnson, U.S. marshal for Idaho. “He docs have a gunshot wound in the arm, but it is pretty much healed,” Johnson said. Weaver, a devotee of the Chris tian Identity Movement that com bines Old T estament, right-wing and while-supremacist beliefs, and his family were holed up in the cabin since February 1991, when he failed to appear in court on a federal wcap onscharge. Heallegcdly sold sawed off shotguns to an undercover agent. Authorities traced the family to the cabin and conducted periodic surveillance, saying they hesitated to risk a confrontation because of the children. On Aug. 21, six deputy U.S. marshals ran into Weaver, his son and Weaver’s friend Kevin Harris during a reconnaissance patrol near thccabinonSelkirk Mountain,about 40 miles south of the U.S.-Canadian border. A shootout ensued, and Deputy Marshal William F. Dcgan and Weaver’s 14-ycar-old son, Samuel, were killed. Weaver’s wife, Vicki, 43, was slain and Harris was wounded in a gun battle the next night. Harris, 24, surrendered Sunday to get treat ment and was hospitalized in seri ous condition, authorities said. At a news conference Monday, FBI spokesman Gene Glenn and Marshals Service spokesman G. Wayne “Duke” Smith refused to discuss details of the shoolouts and the three deaths. Who’s the boss? Leaders hard to come by in Florida effort . HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Hundreds of Marines built the first tent city for hurricane victims Monday,a full week after Andrew left thousands home less, and the first two ships of a Navy convoy arrived with heavy-duty re lief equipment. But while thousands of south Flo ridians remained without adequate food or shelter, slate and federal offi cials bickered over who was in charge of relief from the worst natural disas ter in U.S. history. And throughout southern Dade County, people waited in line: for food stamps, for mail, for Red Cross vouchers, for checks from insurance companicsand the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Thousands of others fumed in traf fic jams as Miami-arca businesses reopened, some for the first time since the hurricane struck. “There’s no way you can do it all at oncc,”Gov. Lawton Chiles said while touring the tent city on a baseball f old in hard-hit Homestead, 30miles south west of Miami. The governor raised the estimate of hurricane-wrecked homes to 85,000; Estimates of the number of homeless people have ranged from 180,000 to 250,000. Chiles warned that if the federal government did not pay 100 percent of reconstruction costs, “the state of Florida will be totally busted.” White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwatcr said Bush was “quite sym pathetic” to Chiles’ plea, but that no final decision had been made. There was confusion about who was in charge of the enormous relief effort. An Army spokesman, Ll Col. Bill Reynolds, said U.S. Transporta tion Secretary Andrew Card was in charge. But Chiles’ chief of staff, Tom Herndon, insisted the state and fed eral agencies were leading their own programs. “There is no single boss of all bosses,” he told reporters. Many people in the relief pipeline have complained of a lack of coordi nation. “I’m shuffled here, Jhcrc and there,” said Mike Phipps, 49, who pedaled a bicycle to West Homestead Elementary School to collect Red Cross vouchers for food and clothing. “I go to the Army and ask for a tent, they say go to City Hall. I go to City Hall, they said see the Army.” The confusion has led to spoilage of donated food left ouLsidc and to clothing being dumped in the trash after silling in mud puddles. Some have urged unified radio frequencies for all relief agencies and a high profile disaster czar, such as retired Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf. i The first tent city was erected on Homestead’s Harris Field by 450 Marines who had worked all night. Fourteen cols fit into each of the 108 tents. The Defense Department said that by the end of the day, south Florida * would have 11,510 federal troops, 4,600 portable toilets, 15,500 radios, 34 portable food kitchens, 638,600 ready-to-eat meals, 240,000 cans of insecticide and enough tents to hold 23,570 people. It was difficult to confirm how . much of that had arrived, in part be cause traffic was heavy and telephone service had not been restored to all areas. About 525,000 people still had no electricity. Thunderstorms hit for a third ^ straight day Monday and steady, sea sonal rain was forecast throughout September. The Federal Emergency Manage ment Agency started handing out re lief checks Monday in Louisiana, where the storm caused an estimated $400 million in damage. More than 50,000 Louisiana resi dents still had no power. The Red Cross said 25,000 people there were homeless. The number of deaths blamed on Andrew in Florida, Louisi ana and the Bahamas stood at 35. U .JN. continuing Iraqi inspections BAGHDAD, Iraq — U.N. weap ons experts arrived Monday for their first inspections since the U.S.-led allies set up a southern no-fly /.one to protect Iraqi Shiite Muslim rebels. Italian team leader Maurizio Ziffcrcro said inspection of nuclear sites would begin Tuesday. He said he did not expect fallout from the allies’ quarrel with Baghdad. Fourteen chemical experts also traveled to Iraq to join a team prepar ing to destroy 40,000 chcm ical weap ons at the Muthana facility outside Baghdad, said Doug Englund, regional chief of the U.N. inspection operation in Bahrain. - U.S. and British warplancsarc fly ing more than 100 missions a day to prevent Iraqi military and civilian aircraft from flying below the 32nd parallel. Four French Mirage 2(XX) planes were flying Tuesday to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, to join the patrols, said Gen. V inccnt LanaLa, chief of staff of the French air force. The Pentagon has given no cost assessment for its part in the mission. At a news conference Sunday, Lt. Gen. Michael A. Nelson,commander of U.S. forces in the gulf, said he didn’t know how much Operation Southern Watch was costing. Saddam Hussein issued a blister i mg statement over state radio and TV Sunday, urging Iraqis to prepare to resist the (light ban. He threatened “to reject the bold aggression and conlront it with all mcansavailablc and on all levels.” He gave no specifics. The official Iraqi News Agency said Saddam presided over a meeting Monday of members of the military council of Iraq’s ruling Arab Baalh Socialist Party. It gave no details. Travelers from Iraq arriving Mon day in Amman, Jordan’s capital, said the party had reopened recruiting and training centers throughout Iraq. It appeared Saddam was mobiliz ing the paramilitary Popular Army that was assembled after Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990, and disbanded after the U.S.-led coalition drove out the Iraqi occupiers and a cease-fire was declared. Dozens of Soviet-designed T-72 tanks were sent south from Baghdad in recent days, said the travelers, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Most were deployed in Kut, lOOmilcs south of Baghdad. That suggested Saddam was boost ing defenses around the capital to protect his regime, rather than build ing up for a ground campaign against the Shiite rebels south of the 32nd parallel. In New York, U.N. spokesman Francois Giuliani said U.N. workers were placed on maximum alert after a bomb was found attached to the car of three U.N. guards after they crossed into northern Iraq on Friday. Jan Eliasson, the U.N. secretary general for humanitarian affairs, pro tested to Iraq’s U.N. ambassador, Abdul al-Amir al-Anbari. Al-Anbari rejected responsibility, “saying that it was an act of provocation from the allied powers,” Giuliani said. The windshields of two vehicles driven by U.N. personnel in Baghdad were smashed Monday, hostile phone calls were made to U.N. personnel, and the tires of U.N. workers’ cars were slashed, Giuliani said. The Security Council last year or dered inspection and destruction of Saddam’s nuclear program,chemical and biological weapons and ballistic missiles in Resolution 688, outlining Gulf War cease-fire terms. Ziffcrcro’s team of 22 includes Americans, French, Germans, Ital ians and Poles. More than 40 U.N. teams have visited Iraq since the ccasc-firc. Ten sions have brought repealed threats from President Bush and other allies that military force could be used to enforce the U.N. inspectors’ man date. """ ' 1 " ■ » Mob demands resignation of Tajik leader Nabiyev MOSCOW — Hundreds of lajikislan’s opposition members surrounded the presidential palace in the central Asian country’s capi tal Monday, took senior govern ment officials hostage and de manded the resignation of Presi dent Rakhmon Nabiyev, news re ports said. The opposition has criticized Nabiyev, a former Communist Party leader, for failing to stop a bloody tribal conflict that rages in two areas of the central Asian re public. They also accuse him of (ailing to move quickly enough on democratic reforms. In other unrest in the former Soviet Union, fighters ignored a cease-fire agreement in the seces sionist Abkhazia area of Georgia, and a prospective truce also ap peared threatened by new Armc nian-Azerbaijani violence that re portedly killed scores of people in Nagorno-Karabakh. Georgian Interior Ministry spokesman Vladimir Gogolashvili said 25 Georgian troops were killed and 50 wounded in weekend clashes in Abkhazia. The news agencies ITAR-Tass and Nega reported that refugees from the fighting-tom regions of Tajikistan gathered around the presidential palace in the Tajik capi tal of Dushanbe. The protesters blocked the pal ace and the government parking lot and later were allowed by police to occupy the building’s first floor, the reports said. ITAR-Tass said the officials were kepi hostage on the palace’s first floor. But Nega said four offi cials were taken away by opposi tion members who demanded a meeting with Nabiyev. Nega identified the hostages as Vice Premiers Tukhboy Gafarov and Jamshed Karimov, Cabinet business manager Ramazan Mirzoyev and presidential military adviser Kholbobo Sharipov. Nabiyev’s whereabouts were unknown but he was not in the palace, the reports said. The opposition has demanded greater religious and political free doms in the nation of 5.1 million people, 2,000 miles southeast ol Moscow on the borders of China and Afghanistan. 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