Sign Outside the Lutheran Campus Centre, site of solidarity hunger strike in Vancouver. | Continued from page 1 Wor store employees.” Je action is of particular Wnificance since the junta has ted former export limits on Chilean wines and some of those ls have recently been listed by ae B.C liquor distribution Tanch. They have also been pro- i through national advertis- Earlier this week, B.C. Federa- On of Labor president Jim Kin- ard affirmed the federation’s ull Support for the boycott. ‘‘The boycott is aimed at bringing Ublic attention to the plight of © Chilean people under the ilitary dictatorship which replac- ed the legally elected government °f the Chilean people six years Chile boycott given — wide labor support ago,’’ a federation statement declared. Kinnaird added that letters had been sent to all regional managers of those banks which had made loans to Chile, calling on them to reverse their policy of supporting oppression with Canadians’ money. Delegates to the regional con- vention of the International Woodworkers of America also heard president Jack Munro pledge the union’s full support to the boycott. The 200-odd delegates were ex- pected to be a major contingent in “‘boycott-Chile’’ march through downtown Vancouver streets, Sean Griffin photo Chile strike wins demand Hunger strikers in Chile suspend- ed their 10-day-old fast Wednesday as General Pinochet announced that he would accede to one of the strikers’ four demands, to release the bodies of those found murdered in the abandoned mine shaft at Lonquen, Chile. The concession from the junta came amidst mounting pressure as world solidarity reached a peak on the sixth anniversary of the fascist coup. Joan Duerr, representative of the Toronto-based Co-ordinating Com- mittee for Solidarity with Democratic Chile, said that the strike had only been suspended as Pinochet. had still not made any - _.commitment to release information Castro backs new Kampuchea gov't Continued from page 1 “Cuba is: the victim of a blockade,’’ Manley said, ‘‘but at the same time no government is able to impose a blockade against South Africa.”’ Ethiopian President Haile Mariam Mengistu demanded that U.S. imperialism ‘immediately lift the blockade against Cuba and pay adequate compensation for its ag- gressions and return Guantanamo to the sovereignty of the Cuban people.”’ But Secretary of State Vance fail- ed to mention the U.S. military presence in Cuba when he chose to question the validity of Cuba’s non- alignment position. On the other hand, the delegates at the conference condemned the U.S. military presence around the world, such as at the Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean. They said that the primary task of the non- aligned movement is to struggle for peace and detente, and the ratifica- tion of SALT II. They denounced. the reactionary forces in the U.S. for trying to place obstacles in the ratification process. Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Van Dong spoke Wednesday to the 53 heads of state government and liberation movements gathered in Havana, urging them to “strengthen the solidarity between our movement and the forces of socialism.”’ = : A so-called neutral approach toward non-alignment, ‘“‘is in essence aimed at making the non- aligned movement deviate from its anti-imperialist objectives,’” Pham said, day, the Nicaraguan delegate an- nounced.its government’s recogni- tion of the new Kampuchean government as the sole and legitimate representative of the Kampuchean people. The Organization of Solidarity with the Peoples of Asia and Africa (OSPAA) also repeated its recogni- tion of the Peoples Republic of Kampuchea. Indira Gandhi sent a message to the conference calling on the non- aligned movement to work out an international program of aid to Kampuchea to help restore their ravaged economy. The tragedy of the Kampuchean people, the message said, is without precedent in the history of that country. Out of four million people who rémained alive, one million people are maimed, the message said. In his opening remarks Fidel Castro called on the non-aligned delegates to recognize the new Kam- puchean government. Without question, Castro said, for Cubans and for anyone who values the most elementary humanitarian and democratic prin- ciples, it is extremely difficult not to experience a deep feeling of repugnance before the represen- tatives of a regime that slaughtered nearly three million people. It was shameful, he said, that such a genocide could have been committed in Kampuchea in the name of revolution and socialism. Some press media, Castro said, place great emphasis on the fact that Vietnam sent combatants to aid. the. Kampuchean: patriots. But. an late teeta scheduled for noon Thursday. =. bolt the disap P prisowters: The «question: of «Kampuchean:. they» withhold “the fatti