BREAKFAST BURRITOS Campus Location - 510 E. Broadway Come join us on. March 3, 2002 @ 6:30pm in EMU Ballroom Tickets available now at the UO ticket office $6 (students/children) $7 (adults) Presented by the KSA ksa@gladstone.uoregon.edu on WOtftH fcmsKH art on death row work by artists on death row and by artists on the topic of the death penalty . l opening: Saturday, march 2nd, 4:30pm exhibit dates: march 1st - april 3rd, 2002 brought to you by the UO Cultural Forum and the Wayne Morse Center Adell McMillan Gallery - EMU, 2nd floor, UO Check OUt www.dailyemerald.com • ODE online edition j U.S. State Department says kidnapped reporter is dead By Juan 0. Tamayo Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal correspondent kid napped in Pakistan last month as he investigated radical Muslims’ links to international terrorist groups, is dead, the U.S. State De partment said Thursday. The U.S. Embassy in the Pak istani capital of Islamabad “has confirmed today that they have received evidence that ... Pearl is dead,” said State Department spokesman Richard Boucher. Boucher gave no details but The Associated Press quoted two U.S. officials as saying the FBI had received a video showing Pearl’s body. Pakistani media have reported he was killed dur ing an escape attempt Jan. 31. Pearl, a 38-year-old native of Princeton, N.J., became the ninth journalist killed while covering the U.S. war on terrorism. The others died in Afghanistan. Pearl’s wife, Mariane, is six months pregnant with the cou ple’s first child. The publisher of The Wall Street Journal, Peter Kann, said Pearl’s murder “is an act of bar barism that makes a mockery of everything Danny’s kidnappers claimed to believe in. They claimed to be Pakistani national ists, but their actions must surely bring shame on all true Pakistani patriots.” From Beijing, President Bush said: “Laura and I and the Ameri can people are deeply saddened to learn about the loss of Daniel Pearl’s life. We are really sad for his wife and his parents and his friends and colleagues who have been clinging to hopes for weeks that he would be found alive.” In Washington, Attorney Gen eral John Ashcroft extended his “heartfelt thoughts and prayers” to Pearl’s family. “Daniel Pearl’s murder serves as a stark reminder that the face r of terrorism is brutal and cruel,” Ashcroft said in a prepared state ment. “Daniel Pearl devoted his life to thd noble pursuit of informing our free and open society. He paid the ultimate sacrifice for his commitment to that freedom.” He pledged to “bring to justice terrorists who kill innocent Americans.” Boucher, at State, called the murder “an outrage” and said the U.S. and Pakistani governments “remain committed to identifying all the perpetrators of this crime and bringing them to justice.” Apparently addressing specu lation that Pakistan’s Inter Ser vice Intelligence agency, long supportive of radical Muslims, had been less than helpful in in vestigating the kidnapping, Boucher added that Pakistani au thorities “made every effort to lo cate and free Mr. Pearl.” A Stanford University gradu ate, Pearl joined the financial dai ly 12 years ago and reported from Washington, London and Paris before he was named South Asia correspondent last year, based in the Indian city of Bombay. Pakistani security officials and media reports said he ran into trouble when he started rooting around the Pakistani port city of Karachi for possible links between radical Muslims and Richard Reid, accused of trying to detonate a bomb in his sneakers on a Paris Miami flight in December. In early January, Pearl met at the Akbar International Hotel in Islamabad’s twin city of Rawalpindi with a man who called himself Bashir Ahmad Shabbir, but who was probably Sheikh Omar Saeed, a British born radical who studied at the London School of Economics and has a record of perpetrating polit ically motivated violence. Saeed spent five years in an In dian prison for kidnapping one American and three Britons for 11 days in 1994 in a bid to force New Delhi to release an impris oned leader of Mohammed’s Army, a Pakistani group fighting Indian rule over disputed Kash mir. Saeed was freed in 1999 after supporters hijacked an Indian jet liner to Afghanistan and threat ened to kill its 155 passengers. “Shabbir” communicated with Pearl by telephone and e-mail for several days, then told him to meet with another man, Imtiaz Sidiqque, on Jan. 23 at a restau rant in Karachi. It was a trap. Pearl called his wife after the meeting to say he would be home by 7 p.m. It would be the last time that the French-born daugh ter of a Dutch father and Cuban mother would hear from him. Four days later, e-mails from “kidnapperguy” announced he had been abducted and included photographs of Pearl, an automat ic pistol just inches from his head. Two days later, another e mail with two more photos branded Pearl a CIA spy and threatened to kill him unless the United States freed all Pakistani suspects held at the Guantanamo Navy base, delivered F-16 jets to Pakistan and released Afghanistan’s former Taliban am bassador to Islamabad. But Pakistani police were mak ing progress in the investigation, sometimes using sophisticated techniques to track down the source of the e-mails, sometimes with harsh measures such as jail ing a suspect’s wife and children until the suspect surrendered. On Feb. 5, police arrested three Mohammed’s Army members who admitted to sending the ran som e-mails from Internet cafes in Karachi, a city of 14 million on the Arabian Sea. ©2002, The Miami Herald. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. 1 High Demand Career Opportunities Master's Degree Programs Correctional Administration General Teacher Education Information Technology Rehabilitation Counseling APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED NOW! Graduate Office (best to apply by March 15) Western Oregon University Monmouth, OR 97361 503-838-8492 www.wou.edu/provost/graduate e-mai!:sendelj@wou.edu WESTERN OREGON UNIVERSITY Your success is our mission. Save money! 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