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- WORLD, Page 41PANAMASincerely, Manuel
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- Writing from Miami, Noriega stirs up trouble back home
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- Stuck in a subterranean Miami jail cell and facing charges
- that could keep him imprisoned for life, Manuel Antonio Noriega
- would seem to be a beaten man. So much for appearances.
- According to federal law-enforcement officials, Noriega is
- fomenting trouble by penning political directives and having
- them faxed to his followers back home.
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- Although the former ruler is legally entitled to communicate
- with the outside world, U.S. officials contend that he is
- intimidating witnesses who may be called to testify against him
- and is urging followers to harass the U.S.-backed government
- of President Guillermo Endara. "He's saying such things as our
- case against him is weak and that he will return once he gets
- off," says a Bush Administration official. "That scares an
- awful lot of people. He's also running a faction of the
- opposition, and his objective is to provoke as much instability
- as he can. Obviously, that's something we find very disturbing."
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- The Endara government believes that Noriega may have gone
- beyond talk. Last month the three-year-old grandson of onetime
- Noriega crony Marcos Justines was kidnaped and killed. In
- charge of military finances for the Noriega regime, Justines
- is jailed in Panama City, charged with stealing $47 million
- from the National Bank and $33 million from safe-deposit boxes
- on Dec. 20, the day the U.S. invaded Panama. There have been
- unconfirmed reports that he has agreed to testify against his
- former boss. Late last month Panamanian authorities arrested
- two Noriega loyalists suspected of having planned the kidnaping.
- Says a Justice Department investigator: "This is bound to have
- a chilling effect on those thinking of cooperating with us."
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- Though Noriega lawyer Steve Kollin confirmed that his client
- has had many messages faxed to Panama, he denied that any of
- them were even vaguely threatening and dismissed the
- allegations as "the figment of someone's imagination."
- Meanwhile, Carlos Lehder Rivas, the once powerful Colombian
- drug lord who is now in a U.S. federal prison in Marion, Ill.,
- awaiting appeal on his life sentence for drug charges, has
- written to Noriega. He advised his fellow prisoner to confess
- all and save himself the trouble and expense of a trial.
- That's advice Noriega is likely to ignore as long as he is able
- to continue vexing his enemies.
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- By Ricardo Chavira/Washington.
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