Israel, Palestinian talks improve / ■ Clinton calls for com promise; Arafat and Barak meet to plan next move. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton tried Thursday to pick up the pace of slow-moving talks between Israel and the Palestinians, telling the two sides “no one can get everything” in an accord. Calling for compromise as he sat down with Yasser Arafat in the Oval Office, Clinton said he would be dis appointed if a settlement were not reached. “We have the leaders who can do it,” he said, offering again to do whatever he could to resolve their dif ferences. Arafat agreed there would be diffi culties along the way, but he said nego tiations would deal with them. He declined to say whether he was willing to accept less than all his demands. With evident satisfaction, Arafat said he had reached agreement with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak for Israel to transfer another 6.1 percent of the West Bank to the Palestinian Authority. “Within two weeks, we will receive the 6 percent,” Arafat said. “This is something Prime Minister Barak and I agreed to 24 or 48 hours before arriving.” Arafat and Barak met outside Tel Aviv on Monday to implement Israel’s commitment to turn over the territory under a U.S.-brokered agreement between the two leaders in September. It was not clear from Arafat’s remark whether the two sides had resolved exactly what land Israel would surrender. After the meeting with Clinton, the Palestinian leader said he had asked for Clinton’s help to assure successful negotiations; “It was a very fruitful and productive and important meet ing,” Arafat said. With Clinton’s support, Barak and Arafat last year set Feb. 13 as the dead line for resolving their disputes over Palestinian statehood aspirations and the future of Jerusalem, at least to the extent that Israel and the Palestinian Authority could complete a frame work accord. A final settlement, which also would deal with refugees and other issues, is due in the fall. Clinton is trying to juggle slow moving negotiations on the Israeli Palestinian front with sidetracked peace talks between Israel and Syria. State Department spokesman James P. Rubin said Syrian officials would come to Washington next week, to be followed by Israeli experts, in an effort to deal with some of die nagging issues on that track. Direct Israel-Syria talks were set to resume Wednesday at Shepherdstown, W.Va., but they were suspended indefinitely. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and other U.S. officials have said each side wanted its demands given immediate priority. Clinton said Wednesday he would take on the task of nudging Syria and Israel along, and that neither side was giving up despite the suspension of talks. In Damascus, Syria’s state-run newspapers urged Washington to push Israel harder to spell out its intentions on returning the Golan Heights. Arafat had lunch Thursday with Albright in her home before heading ^ It was a very fruitful and productive and important meeting." Yasser Arafat Palestinian leader to the White House. The Palestinian leader told reporters the discussion with Albright was “warm, positive and beautiful,” a description echoed by the secretary. Neither gave any clue to the substance of their meeting. Arafat is seeking the 60 percent of the West Bank that Israel still controls, wants to establish a state and be given part of Jerusalem as its capital. Barak and his ruling Labor Party seem to agree with having a Palestinian state on their country’s border but have dealt ambiguously with its scope and Jerusalem. German party accountant commits suicide ■ Parliament member’s death unrelated to scandal, party officials say. BERLIN (AP) - The senior accountant in parliament for the scan dal-plagued Christian Democrats committed suicide Thursday, stun ning lawmakers as new questions arose about the financial dealings of the party that has dominated postwar German politics. Party officials sought to quell speculation that the death was linked to the scandal, saying a suicide note had been found citing “personal motives.” Berlin prosecutors, however, said they were conducting a preliminary investigation into possible breach of trust based on the note. The Berlin B.Z. tabloid reported the note refers to Wolfgang Huellen’s concerns that an upcoming audit would reveal he had diverted money from official accounts. Huellen’s suicide - disclosed hours after lawmakers sparred in par liament over the affair - compounded the sense of despair consuming the conservatives since their former leader, ex-chancellor Helmut Kohl, admitted last month that he managed secret accounts in the 1990s. A parliamentary committee issued a summons Thursday for Kohl to testify in its investigation into whether the $1 million he acknowl edges having taken - or millions more in other allegedly illicit funds uncovered since - were tied to politi cal favors. Kohl has repeatedly denied such charges, but his refusal to reveal the source of the cash has kept alive sus picions of bribery. The tiny Alpine tax haven of Liechtenstein said Thursday it has frozen bank accounts in connection with a Swiss investigation into alleged payoffs in the 1992 sale of the Leuna oil refinery in former East Germany to France’s Elf-Aquitaine. Norbert Marxer, head of Liechtenstein’s legal service, declined to give details. But a Berlin daily, the Berliner Zeitung, reported the accounts were linked to Dieter Holzer, a business man living in Monaco, who is sus pected of having funneled the alleged payoffs to Kohl’s Christian Democrats. Holzer denied in Die Welt news paper donating money to any German party. Social Democratic Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who ended Kohl’s 16 years in office in 1998, sat quietly during Thursday’s parliament debate while other lawmakers from his center-left coalition accused the Christian Democrats of money laun dering. Peter Struck, floor leader of the governing Social Democrats, accused Kohl - who did not attend - of hin dering efforts to clear up the scandal with his stubborn refusal to identify the donors. “Do your country one last service and cleanse it of the suspicion that shady figures influenced German policy for years,” Struck said, declar ing the Christian Democrats “morally discredited.” Kohl, who was humiliated into resigning this week as honorary party chairman, said on national television last month that the money he accept ed came from “patriotic” donors wanting to help build up the party in the former communist eastern states. But some critics, noting that no one has come forward to back his ver sion, have suggested that there are no donors, and the money came from shady sources. Just a few hours after the debate ended, parliament suspended a regu lar session while Christian Democrats were informed of the death of Huellen, who was the senior accountant for the party’s parliamen tary group since 1984. He was found hanged in his Berlin apartment. Huellen, 49, had not been pub licly implicated in the scandal. However, government legislators have raised questions about the legal ity of a $570,000 cash transfer from the parliamentary group to the party headquarters in 1997. The Christian Democrats have denied wrongdoing. l || f | | p*** iw mi St St & &J