Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 15, 1984, Page 4, Image 4

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    inter/national
Rebel leaders
arrive for talks
SAN SALVADOR. El
Salvador (AP) — Two top guer
rilla leaders arrived Sunday for
meetings with Pres. Jose
Napoleon Duarte aimed at end
ing the country’s five-year civil
war. It was the first time in more
than four years that rebel
leaders had appeared in public
here.
Guillermo Ungo and Ruben
Zamora, president and vice
president respectively of the
Democratic Revolutionary
Front, political ally of leftist
guerrillas fighting the govern
ment. arrived aboard a Colom
bian air force plane accom
panied by Latin and European
diplomats.
“We are here because we
want a dialogue, we want pro
gress towards peace,” Ungo
said.
“Personally, this is a very
emotional time for me. But per
sonal feelings aside, we are here
to seek peace, justice and
democracy for El Salvador,”
Zamora said.
lingo said two guerrilla com
manders — Eduardo Sancho
Castaneda, known as Ferman
Cienfuegos, of the Armed
Forces of National Liberation;
and joaquin Villa Lobos of the
Revolutionary People’s Army —
would attend the talks with
Duarte. There was no definite
word on whether the three other
rebel field commanders would
attend the talks, although a
Salvadoran church source said
they would.
El Salvador’s five main guer
rilla groups form the umbrella
Farabundo Marti National
Liberation Front.
“I cannot speak for Mr.
Duarte, but the (rebels) have
sufficient power, political and
military, to start a conversation
aimed at peace,” Zamora said.
A guerrilla leader said that
although the rebels are commit
ted to attending the talks Mon
day, four key points remained
to be settled.
Salvador Sarnayoa, one of
seven members of the commis
sion that represents the rebels’
political and military fronts in
negotiations, said Duarte has
created a ’’circus atmosphere”
in I,a Palma, the northern
mountain town where the talks
are to be held.
“There are no controls on the
population and this could lead
to an unpleasant incident,"
Sarnayoa said in a telephone in
terview from Panama with
Radio Sonora of San Salvador.
Duarte has invited his sup
porters in the labor movement
to organize a caravan of
thousands of workers and
peasants to accompany him to
La Palma. Sarnayoa said rebels
are concerned violence could
result.
A French diplomat, who ask
ed not to he identified for pro
tocol reasons, said France's am
bassador to El Salvador, Jean
Pierre Chauvet, and other
diplomats who arrived with
Zamora and Ungo planned to
travel to La Palma with the
rebels.
Ungo said he wanted the
diplomats to witness the talks
because ‘‘it would guarantee a
more complete and fair
dialogue.”
”1 don't know if they will be
invited to take part in the talks,
but everybody else is going
along for the drive so why
shouldn't we.” the French
diplomat said.
Tension reigns
at Beirut school
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) —
Karvl Wade returned to her
teaching job at the American
University of Beirut this fall,
eager for classes to get under
way.
“There are a lot of us who like
this country, who enjoy
teaching here,” she said as she
walked along the tree-shaded
mall on the 70-acre campus in
west Beirut last week. ‘‘There’s
always a possibility of pro
blems. but we've handled them
in the past and we'll handle
what comes along.”
Wade, an English instructor
from Toledo, Ohio, is one of
more than 30 American teachers
or administrators on the
450-member staff at the univer
sity this year.
That’s about a dozen fewer
Americans than a year ago. hut
the reduction does not seem
drastic, considering that the last
academic year saw the
assassination of the university
president and repeated threats
against resident Americans.
“That we have survived at all
is a miracle, I suppose.” said
one long-time Arab faculty
member who spoke on condi
tion he not be identified. “But
what we are and what we shall
become is anyone's guess. One
thing is certain: AlJB’s golden
years are over,”
Continued on Page 5
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