Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 08, 2001, Page 4, Image 4

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Security tightens
after U.S. air strike
By Seth Borenstein and
Sumana Chatterjee
Knight Ridder Newspapers
(KRT) The nation braced Sunday
for reprisal after America’s attack
against targets in Afghanistan.
Security increased at airports
across the nation, embassies across
the globe, seaports in select cities,
football stadiums, government
buildings and even historic land
marks, such as the Liberty Bell in
Philadelphia.
Officials emphasized that citi
zens must be alert, but not neces
sarily afraid.
“The American people need to
be alert,” White House spokesman
Ari Fleischer said in a Sunday
news briefing. “Threats do remain
and government and law enforce
ment agencies are taking all due
precautions. This is war.”
The U.S. Coast Guard stepped up
to a higher stage of alert in selected
regions, and the Federal Aviation
Administration advised airports to
ratchet up security in advance of
Sunday’s offensive. The State De
partment increased security in its
Washington headquarters and put
out a new travel warning to Ameri
cans overseas, spokesman Richard
Boucher said.
As security tightened across the
nation, former Pennsylvania Gov.
Tom Ridge prepared for his first day
as head of a new Homeland Securi
ty Council, modeled after the Na
tional Security Council. Monday, he
will have a staff of 100 and a huge
challenge. He’ll need to work with
40 different agencies that also are
dealing with domestic terrorism.
Americans should be vigilant,
one independent expert on terror
ism said Sunday, but they should
also realize their everyday risk from
a reprisal is still small.
“People are visibly frightened,
and they’re visibly frightened about
things that are so unlikely to hap
pen to them,” said Amy Smithson
of the Henry L. Stimson Center, a
Washington international relations
think-tank. “The best thing that
Americans can do for their country
right now is to go back to work, get
back in airplanes and go back to
business-as-usual — as difficult as
that may be. If they don’t, then al
Qaida has won because what they
seek to do is to prevent us from liv
ing our normal lives.”
Knight Ridder correspondents
Warren P. Strobel, Nancy San Mar
tin, David Green, Steve Harrison,
David Ashenfelter and Elisa Ung
contributed to this report.
© 2001, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information
Services.
Pakistan’s president
denies Afghans support
By Juan 0. Tamayo
Knight Ridder Newspapers
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (KRT)
- Girding for violent reactions to
Sunday’s U.S. attacks against
Afghanistan, Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf on Sunday
sacked two army generals sympa
thetic to Afghanistan’s Taliban
rulers and ordered thousands of
police and soldiers to guard key
points and foreigners in Pakistan,
a top government security official
said.
The government also closed all
Muslim seminaries and banned
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public protests in the North West
Frontier Territories, a vast and
largely lawless region on the
Pakistan border with Afghanistan,
which is largely populated by eth
nic Afghans, the official added.
Four Afghan helicopters appar
ently carrying fleeing Taliban offi
cials tried to land Sunday afternoon
in the Pakistani border town of
Parachinar, but were ordered back
by authorities, one Interior Ministry
official said.
Anti-aircraft fire was heard from
the western side of the border as the
helicopters returned home, and
there was no indication of their
fate, the official told Knight Ridder
Newspapers.
Musharraf’s removal of the two
generals from powerful jobs reflect
ed his uncertainty over the mili
tary’s support for his decision to
add Pakistan to the U.S.-led anti
terrorism alliance.
The Pakistani government Sun
day also slapped travel restrictions
on pro-Taliban Maulana Fazal-ur
Rehman, whose small but extrem
ist Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, or Party
of Islamic Clerics, has vowed to
launch a holy war if America at
tacks Afghanistan. The party called
for mass protests Monday.
Knight Ridder correspondents
John Walcott and Mark McDonald
contributed to this report.
© 2001, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information
Services.
Oregon Daily Emerald
P.O.Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403
The Oregon Daily Emerald is published
daily Monday through Friday during the school
year and Tuesday and Thursday during the
summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald
Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon,
Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates
independently of the University with offices in
Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The
Emerald is private property. The unlawful
removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law.
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