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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 25

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
25
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Boston Globe Monday. October 9, 1978 25 i i 9 irp jr rr tit lUMSU Sm MtM Nm mm tmt mm mm yJ ALB 1 XI From left, Rev. Ndabaningi Sithole, Prime Minister Ian Smith and National Security Council President John M. Fisher. (UPI photo) Smith charges West tacitly backing rebels i i i IV 1 jackets, and more in all th lat- sisting instead on a total takeover of power in Rhodesia.

That, Smith argued, is because Nkomo and Mugabe fear rejection by Rhodesia's blacks if they abandon their guerrilla war and take their chances in the elections being prepared by the transitional government. "They won't accept the decision of the ballot box because they know they will lose," he said. "Therefore they insist that a solution should be imposed from the outside." Both Smith and Sithole made clear they are suspicious of an all-parties conference because they believe it would be become a device for giving the Patriotic Front the power it seeks. By continuing to insist on the conference, they added, the US and British governments are playing into the hands of the most radical Rhode-siaian elements by encouraging them to continue their terrorist tactics. Desegregation expected Associated Press SALISBURY, Rhodesia Rhodesia's multiracial transition government plans to announce the abolition of all remaining racial segregation laws this week, published reports said yesterday.

The reports here said Ernest Bulle, black cominisier of justice, made the announcement at a political rally Saturday. Bulle was quoted as saying the timing of his announcement was coincidental and was not designed to head of embarrassing questions in the United States about Rhodesia's tardiness in dropping segregationist laws. Although race laws here have been much less stringent than in neighboring South Africa, Rhodesia was formerly divided into a patchwork of roughly equal-size areas for its 260,000 whites and 6.7 million blacks. This week's announcement is expected to eliminate separate schools, hospitals and residential areas for whites and blacks. SMITH Continued from Page 1 faith with the Smith government by failing to honor understandings and commitments made by the US government before Carter took office.

Specifically, Smith is asserting that his government's plan for majority rule, known as the "internal settlement," embodies the principles of an Anglo-American plan for a Rhodesia solution worked (put two years ago by then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Referring to their meeting in Pretoria 'two years ago, Smith said yesterday that Kissinger "made clear we would have to accept the principle of one-man, one-vote 'if we wanted to be part of the free world." Coming to terms with that demand had been "a traumatic experience" for the liWhite minority that has dominated Rhodesia since its break with Britain in 1965, Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe, of the Patriotic Front guerrilla forces waging war against Rhodesia om bases in neighboring black African countries. "Now the Americans and British are back," he added pointedly. He was talking about the current joint British call for an all-parties peace -conference between his government and Joshua Nkomo and Robert Nugabe, leaders of the Patriotic Front guerrilla forces waging war against Rhodesia from bases Jin neighboring black African countries, j- The Carter Administration insists it is (not hostile to Smith or Rhodesia's white minority. Instead, Administration sources (contend, they believe that any solution filing to make provision for a sharing of (power by the Patriotic Front will lead Rhodesia into escalating civil war and jjtipen the way for Soviet and Cuban involvement in southern Africa.

In their TV appearance yesterday, gmith and Sithole repeated their arguments that the Patriotic Front leaders ave spurned all attempts to give them a sfole in the internal settlement and are in- i I READY TUESDAY r0 MISSES' WOMEN'S WINTER COATS reg. 26.99 to 79.99 NOW thru October 14th save on every coat in the department. Wanted styling and colors in assorted fabrics, includ ing all-weather and wool Dienas. sizes s-ia, it'2- 2412. Not all sizes, styles, colors in all stores.

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Pages Available:
4,495,822
Years Available:
1872-2024