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"40 years of Quality Service” Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi German Auto Service 342-2912 • 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 Nation & world briefing Shiite dissident asserts he is running Baghdad Liz Sly Chicago Tribune (KRT) BAGHDAD, Iraq — Baghdad got a new leader Thursday, but no one seems to know who he is. Stepping out of nowhere into the power vacuum left by the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s regime, Mo hammed Mohsen al-Zubaidi, 50, a Shiite dissident who has spent the past 24 years in exile, declared him self the leader of Baghdad and began setting up an administration in the corner of an unused coffee shop at the back of the Palestine Hotel. Baghdadis said they hadn’t heard of him, and American officials dis claimed any involvement in his self styled Executive Council for the Re construction of Baghdad. But Zubaidi, who returned to Baghdad from London last week, is already acting as if he runs the city. He spent the day sweeping in and out of the lobby of the hotel surrounded by a presidential-style throng of advisers, bodyguards and hangers-on. He visited a hospital where he pressed flesh with doc tors and patients. He played host to a gathering of Baghdad’s tribal lead ers at his temporary headquarters in the coffee shop, where he pledged to work to restore electrici ty, water and security to Baghdad — the three biggest complaints of residents right now. He issued a proclamation declar ing himself in charge of the city and urged all tribal leaders to disarm their followers and cooperate with U.S. forces. “The Americans have given us freedom, and anyone who shoots an American soldier must be punished,” he told the gathering of tribal leaders from around Baghdad. Such is the confusion in Bagh dad right now — virtually anyone could declare himself or herself a leader and get away with it. Clerics from Shiite neighborhoods have al ready moved to fill the power vacu um by setting up street commit tees of armed young men to guard against looters. Zubaidi’s claim to authority appears to have some substance, however. He has launched his own radio station, In formation Radio, the first Iraqi sta tion to go on the air since the col lapse of the Hussein regime’s propaganda apparatus. On Thurs day it began broadcasting a mix ture of Arabic music and anti-Hus sein propaganda, including repeated appeals to Iraqi citizens to report any information on the whereabouts of members of the former regime to U.S. Marines. Zubaidi is staying in a suite of rooms marked “private” at the Pales tine Hotel. He said he derives his au thority from elections that have tak en place over the past five days among “important personalities.” “I was elected by the tribes, the religious leaders, Sunni and Shiite, the engineers, the doctors and the military officers,” he said. “All of them elected me chief of the execu tive council of Baghdad.” Many Baghdadis, who have broad ly welcomed President Bush’s prom ises of democracy, were skeptical. “He had good times, happy times, outside Iraq, and now he comes back and declares himself a leader? I don’t think he will be accepted,” said Dr. Raed al Khazraji, a doctor at Iraq’s Kindi Hospital. U.S. military spokesmen also dis counted Zubaidi’s claims. “The only person that maybe could be consid ered the mayor of Baghdad right now is the commander general of the 3rd Infantry Division,” said Marine spokesman Gpl. John Hoellwarth. Zubaidi’s announcement coincid ed with the arrival in Baghdad of Ahmed Ghalabi, the leader of the op position Iraqi National Congress (INC), which has close ties to the United States. He has taken up resi dence at the premises of the Iraq Hunting Club, a former hangout of Hussein and his relatives, which is now being closely guarded by U.S. Special Forces. Although he is well-known in Western Circles, Ghalabi has no sup port base inside Iraq and is perhaps best known here for his indictment on corruption charges in Jordan. © 2003, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. News brief Chairman: PATRIOT Act won’t become eternal WASHINGTON—House Judiciary Chairman Jim Sensenbrenner said Thursday he would fight any effort now to make permanent many of the expanded police powers enacted after the Sept. 11,2001, terrorist attacks as part of the USA PATRIOT Act. “That will be done over my dead body,” said Sensenbrenner in an interview. The Wisconsin Republican also said it was “way premature” for Con gress to consider a new package of anti-terrorism proposals being draft ed by the Justice Department — a so-called “Patriot Act Two.” 15% off for one time purchase only (show student ID) The store for any budget Hours: Mon-Sat 11-6, Sun 12-4 1510 Coburg Road • 685-0335 in breezeway near Safeway Your Community Soccer Source Before that happens, he said, the “burden of proof” is on the Justice Department to prove the merits of what he called “Patriot Act One.” Sensenbrenner’s comments are notable because he is a critical play er in the running debate between the Bush administration and civil liber ties advocates on both the right and left who see the new search and sur veillance powers as a threat to priva cy and individual rights. The committee chairman has charted a middle course in that de bate, supporting the 2001 PATRIOT Act despite misgivings. He fought for the sunset provision in the act, which provides that some of the gov ernment’s new surveillance and in vestigative powers will automatical ly lapse at the end of 2005 unless Begihning glas classes start... April 23rd Eugene Glass School 5 sessions $ 150°“ { • fusing \ • flame working • bead making Call 342-2959 a 1399 Cal Youfig | Eugene, Oregon 97^0t~ -^ 5S ^ V Congress passes and the president signs another law extending them. The Bush administration opposed the sunset, but agreed to it as part of a legislative compromise in which it got most of the new powers it sought. Now there is a reported push by some in Congress and the adminis tration to undo the time limits, though it’s not clear how serious and urgent the effort is. Last week, Sensenbrenner’s Senate counterpart, Republican Judiciary Chair Orrin Hatch of Utah, circulated an amendment to drop the sunset in the PATRIOT Act. Aides described it as a tactical move related to another piece of intelligence legislation. A Hatch judiciary aide was noncom mittal Thursday about whether the senator plans to aggressively pursue a repeal of the sunset anytime soon. “I can tell you that Sen. Hatch did not support the sunset when the PA TRIOT Act was passed,” spokes woman Margarita Tapia said. “He will continue to monitor the biparti san, constitutional PATRIOT Act to ensure our intelligence and law en forcement officials have the neces sary tools to prevent a terrorist act.” The Justice Department did not re turn a phone call seeking comment. Sensenbrenner said repealing the sunset provision is a “non-starter” with his committee, and the “Senate better not try it.” He called the sun set rule the only leverage lawmakers have in overseeing the law and get ting Attorney General John Ashcroft and his department to answer ques tions about how they are using it. — Craig Gilbert, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (KRT) Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub lished daily Monday through Friday dur ing the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is pri vate property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. NEWSROOM — (541)346-5511 Editor in chief: Michael J. Kleckner Managing editor: Jessica Richelderfer Freelance: Ayisha Yahya, editor News desks: Brook Reinhard, Jan Montry, news editor. 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