Netanyahu seeks approval of Palestinian peace accord By Laurie Copans The Associated Press JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu easily sur vived a no-confidence motion in parliament today in his battle for political acceptance of his new peace deal with the Palestinians. Earlier in the day, the prime minister lost an initial political fight in the Knesset, with lawmak ers deciding to present an early elections bill to parliament for a vote. In the West Bank town of He bron today, an Israeli security guard was shot three times and his body was dumped in a street in an apparent attack by Palestin ian militants. Hours later, an anonymous caller directed police to the body of a Palestinian man. The caller said the Palestinian was slain to avenge the killing in Hebron. It was not immediately clear whether the violence would en danger the implementation of the peace agreement, under which Is rael is to withdraw from 13 per cent of the West Bank over a 12 week period in exchange for a Palestinian crackdown on Islam ic militants. In a first step toward toppling the Netanyahu government, par liament’s Law Committee voted 9-7 to hold a first reading on a bill to disperse parliament and hold new elections within 100 days. The suggested date for the elec tions was March 16. The bill was supported both by coalition hard-liners opposed to the West Bank withdrawal and by dovish opposition legislators hop ing to bring down the prime min ister. Committee chairman Hanan Porat said the first reading of the bill could be held within two weeks. A bill needs to be ap proved in three readings before it becomes law. The early elections bill will need to be backed by a special majority of 60 of the 120 legisla tors. Supporters of the bill said they were confident they could pass the legislation. Opposition leader Ehud Barak said he was trying to topple Ne tanyahu without hurting the im plementation of the peace agree ment. As a result, Barak said his Labor Party would not back a motion of no-confidence submitted by the far-right opposition party Moledet. With Labor’s help, Netanyahu easily defeated the no-confidence motion with eight votes in favor, 21 against and 15 abstentions. A majority of the legislators, includ ing Netanyahu, did not show up for the vote. Labor will also back the govern ment when parliament votes on the peace agreement at the end of a two-day debate starting Nov. 3. “We will give Mr. Netanyahu an ad hoc safety net for the vote on the agreement. There is no connection between implementa tion of the peace process and ear ly elections,” Barak told Associat ed Press Television News. However, today's slaying of an Israeli security guard in Hebron — and the death of a Palestinian in an apparent revenge attack — raised questions about how much violence the new West Bank deal can withstand. President Yeltsin cancels Austria visit because of poor health By Greg Myre The Associated Press MOSCOW — Boris Yeltsin, re duced to a part-time president in recent months, was ailing again Monday and canceled yet anoth er foreign trip, this time to recu perate from high-blood pressure and extreme fatigue. Yeltsin’s fragile health is a source of daily specidation, and a growing chorus of critics ques tions his fitness to guide Russia through its worst economic crisis in the post-Soviet era. His doctors ordered Yeltsin not to make a one-day trip to Austria on Tuesday because he was suf fering from an ‘‘asthenic condi tion,” the president’s office said. Asthenia refers to a lack of physi cal strength. Yeltsin’s blood pressure was also unstable, presidential spokesman Dmitry Yakushkin said, adding that doctors recom mended a vacation for the presi dent. “I think everything will be fine” with Yeltsin, Prime Minis ter Yevgeny Primakov told Asso ciated Press Television on Mon day. Primakov will travel to Vienna for talks with the Euro pean Union instead. Yeltsin aide Oleg Sysuyev said the 67-year-old president would likely start a vacation Wednesday and would probably stay near Moscow. "The president is not ill enough to be considered inca pable of working,” Sysuyev said on the Russian TV program “Hero of the Day.” Sysuyev said it was difficult for Yeltsin to cancel the Austria vis it. “This is perhaps the first time recently when the president has listened to his doctors’ advice.” If Yeltsin were to resign — and he insists he won’t — he would be replaced temporarily by Pri makov, who would be required to call new elections within three months. Primakov has been prime min ister for only six weeks and has yet to produce his own blueprint to deal with the country’s deep rooted economic problems. But he is widely respected by all po litical factions and is seen as a sta bilizing influence at a time when Yeltsin has receded into the back ground. In Washington, President Clin ton’s spokesman expressed confi dence Monday that Yeltsin’s lat est health setback would not delay efforts to resolve Russia’s econom ic crisis. “We wish him a speedy recov ery," White House press secretary Joe Lockhart said. For several months now, Yeltsin has rarely put in full days at the Kremlin, spending most of his time at a secluded country home in the woods west of Moscow. Yeltsin has been weakened by recurring health problems, in cluding heart bypass surgery in 1996. The president and his doc tors insist that he’ll serve out the rest of his term, set to end in the summer of 2000, and they deny he has crippling health problems. Still, Yeltsin clearly lacks the energy he displayed in his early years in office. He visits the Krem lin two or three times a week, and usually only for a few hours at a time. Public appearances and foreign trips have become rare, and poten tial candidates m the 2000 presi dential race have already begun an informal campaign to replace Yeltsin. The leading contenders include Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov and Alexander Lebed, a former general and now gover nor of a vast Siberian region. Russian newspapers have spec ulated that Yeltsin is afflicted with Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s dis ease, but their reports are based simply on his public appearances, not on medical examinations. Yeltsin cannot point to any ma jor accomplishments since he was re-elected in 1996. His critics say he lacks the political and physical strength to take on any major pro jects and should quit. But others say his resignation would trigger a political crisis on top of Russia’s economic turmoil. Yeltsin was forced to cut short a trip to Central Asia earlier this month because of a respiratory in fection. Doctors said last week he had recovered. Yet Monday, Yakushkin said a committee of doctors that usually meets before Yeltsin travels voted unanimously for canceling the Austria trip. There were no plans to hospitalize Yeltsin, Yakushkin said. In Vienna, Yeltsin had been scheduled to discuss security is sues and Russia’s economy with Austrian Chancellor Viktor Kli ma, holder of the rotating Euro pean Union chairmanship. Yeltsin has already canceled a visit to Malaysia that was planned for next month, but a visit to India in December was still on his schedule. COMPLIMENTARY PASSES EXCLUSIVELY FOR AMERICAN EXPRESS' CAROMEMBERS. WHEN AND WHERE. October 29 Cinema World WHAT. Cardmembers get two complimentary passes to a preview screening of Universal Pictures' new film Meet Joe Black to be released November 13th. HOW. Just bring your American Express* Card and your student ID to the location listed below to pick up your passes. SPECIAL OFFER JUST FOR APPLYING. Receive 2 complimentary passes when you apply for the new American Express Credit Card for Students (stop by the location listed below). MORE TO COME. Meet Joe Black is one in a series of three major motion pictures to be previewed on your campus this year, com pliments of American Express. PICK UP YOUR TICKETS HERE. 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