4 2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 8, 2003 NATION/WORLD Afghans angered by bombing mistake Nine Afghan children killed in U.S.-led attack aimed at terror suspect HUTALA, Afghanistan (AP) - Hats and shoes littered a blood-stained field in this desolate Afghan village yester- day, a day after U.S. warplanes - tar- geting a terror suspect - mistakenly killed nine children. American officials offered their regrets yesterday and said they were "deeply saddened" by the deaths. The United Nations called for an investiga- tion. And the Afghan government urged the U.S.-led coalition hunting Taliban and al-Qaida fighters to make sure such an accident is never repeated. In Hutala yesterday, a line of fresh graves marked the tragedy, and village men stood quietly by a stream in a dusty field where the children had been play- ing. They seemed as bewildered as they were angry. "First they fire their rockets. Then they say it was a mistake," Haji Amir Mohammed told The Associated Press, as dozens of American soldiers sent to investigate the incident offered condo- lences or lay in the warming winter sun. "How can we forgive them?" Villagers said the young victims had been playing with marbles in a dusty field beside mud homes in this impover- ished valley, some 150 miles southwest of Kabul, when the A-10 ground attack aircraft homed in. Military officials said yesterday they had no idea children were in the area when they decided to attack. U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said the suspect targeted and killed was a former Taliban commander named Mullah Wazir, adding that he was "deeply saddened" by the "tragic loss of innocent life." Khalilzad said the former commander "had bragged of his personal involve- ment in attacks on innocent Afghan citi- zens," including aid groups and Afghans working on the Kabul-Kandahar road, a site of frequent violence. Lt. Col. Bryan Hilferty, a spokesman for the coalition, told the AP in Hutala that it had appeared to the pilot of the aircraft that "just that person that we wanted, that terrorist, was in the field. So we fired on him." Troops discovered the children's bod- ies after rushing to the scene to verify that they had got Wazir. U.S. officers flew in yesterday to apologize to village elders, Hilferty said. But residents were adamant that the military had acted on bogus intelligence. Many said the man killed was not Wazir, and that the former district commander under the Taliban had left the village some days before the attack. "There are no terrorists, no Taliban or al-Qaida here," said Abdul Majid Farooqi. "Just poor people." NEWS IN BRIEF HEADLINES FROM AROUND THE W BALTIMORE Motive sought in prosecutor's slaying Federal prosecutor Jonathan Luna traveled in recent months to the area of Pennsylvania where his body was found, and authorities were not immediately aware of any work-related business that would have taken him to the region, The Associated Press learned yesterday. Investigators also were looking into a credit card Luna held without his wife's knowledge and into postings of messages by someone who went by the name of Jonathan Luna in websites where people advertise for female sex partners, according to a federal law enforcement official who spoke to the AP on the condi- tion of anonymity. Baltimore FBI spokesman Larry Foust said yesterday that investigators were still trying to determine a motive for Luna's killing. His body was found Thurs- day, stabbed 36 times and left face down in a creek. "This is a'full-court press, but we just don't know. There's a lot of infor- mation and a lot of misinformation out there," Foust said. "We have people working nonstop, overturning every stone, going where the facts lead them." While a federal la:, enforcement source told the AP that investigators had found nothing to indicate the killing was related to Luna's work, Luna's father and friends are convinced his death was tied to his career. WASHINGTON More U.S.-trained Iraqi forces may be needed Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said he wants senior commanders in Iraq to consider whether the Pentagon underestimated how many U.S.-trained Iraqi security forces would be needed before a sovereign Iraqi government can take over next summer. Rumsfeld, who spent Saturday in Iraq, said he alone has raised doubts about whether the current goal of about 220,000 Iraqi security forces would be adequate, but he asked commanders to review their estimates. He was interviewed on the flight to Washington, arriving early yesterday after a weeklong trip that also included a stop in Afghanistan. "I raised that question not because I have conviction that we need more, but because I worry that budgets will begin to get committed, and we may not know if we need more until sometime, for example, in February or March or April," he said. By then, he said, the money might not be available. "I'm concerned that we might not have the option of increasing if, in fact, that proves to be necessary,' he said. The number of Iraqis now in uniform is now said to be about 140,000, many of whom were rushed through training programs. AP PHOTO Childrens' clothes are seen placed on the graves of nine children who were were killed Saturday in a U.S. air strike aimed at a suspected terrorist in Hutala, Afghanistan. The 11,500 U.S.-led troops hunting when Afghan officials said 48 civil- Taliban and al-Qaida remnants in south ians at a wedding party were killed and east Afghanistan often are support- and 117 wounded by a U.S. Air ed by air power, and there have been a Force AC-130 gunship in Uruzgan string of military mishaps. province, which borders Ghazni The worst occurred in July 2002, province. Study: Terror cases result in little jail time WASHINGTON (AP) - The Jus- tice Department has sharply increased prosecution of terrorism- related cases since the Sept. 11 attacks, but many fizzled and few produced significant prison time, a study released yesterday finds. About 6,400 people were referred by investigators for criminal charges involving terror in the two years after the attacks, but fewer than one-third actually were charged and only 879 were convicted, according to govern- ment records reviewed by Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. The median prison sentence was just 14 days, according to a study by clear- inghouse co-directors David Burnham and Susan Long. Only five people were sentenced to 20 years or more. Critics seized on the numbers to question whether Attorney General John Ashcroft and other top law enforcement officials have been over- stating the success of their anti-terror- ism efforts. Nearly every time Ashcroft talks about the subject, he reads a long list of statistics on arrests and convic- tions to buttress his contention that great progress is being made. Sen. Charles Grassley, a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee with oversight of the FBI and Justice department, said the report "raises questions about the accuracy of the department's claims about terror- ism enforcement." "This report shows that despite the focus on terrorism-related crimes, most of the people accused of terror- ism involvement are getting little jail time, if at all," said Grassley (R-Iowa). Justice Department and FBI offi- cials said the study is rooted in past conceptions of crime and punishment and does not reflect the reality that would-be terrorists seek to blend into society until they are ready to strike. Lack of lengthy prison terms in many cases can be explained by the effort by prosecutors to stop would-be terrorists long before they are ready to attack, often charging them with lesser offenses, such as identity theft, docu- ment fraud and immigration violations. Prosecutors feel it is better to get suspects off the streets and press them for information than wait for events that could produce harsher penalties. They also said the study makes no mention of the value of intelligence collection and the need to reward cooperation with lesser sentences. TRAFFIC Continued from Page 1A The traffic analysis also said that even though the Islamic Center parking lot was full on the last Friday of Ramadan, the condition for a traffic light was not met because it was a special day for Muslims. But Abdallah Nasr, president-elect of the Islamic Center, said on Fridays, the parking lot is always full and on other days, it is half-full. Nasr and Hassan both agree that the Friday prayers bring in the most traffic. "The most hazardous situation is created between 12 and 3 p.m. when heavy traffic comes in and out of the Islamic Center drive for the Friday prayers," Nasr said. He noted that many student pedestrians from North Campus also come to the mosque for the prayers. Sipowski said traffic analyses usually use 24-hour counts, although there is no require- ment to do so. "The logic behind it is that if the warrant is not met during, say, the 12 busiest hours, the chance that a warrant is met outside this time period is negligible," Sipowski said. In addition to road traffic counts, minimum pedestrian volume was also measured. Nasr said many pedestrians are students from North Campus who cross the road to reach either the Islamic Center or the Willow Tree apartment complex, which is located behind the center. "There is a continual flow of pedestrians and there is no specific time of a peak in pedestrian volume," Nasr said. The report states that the highest average volume at the intersection was about 20 pedestrians per hour. Nasr estimated that the volume was a little higher, at about 25 to 30 pedestrians per hour. INITIATIVE Continued from Page 1A later upheld the use of race in admissions according to set guidelines. "This is much broader than the University," Peterson said, adding that numerous companies seek diversity in their workforce. But Peterson said the University is limited by state law in the amount of active work it can to with the new group. Although the University is allowed "to educate and inform" the public, it cannot participate in advertising endeavors or use University funds to run a campaign. "We were much more active and vocal during the lawsuits. The situation is somewhat different for us," she said. Peterson added that University President Mary Sue Coleman still plans to actively speak with groups and editorial boards around the state to promote the Univer- sity's cause. WASHINGTON $373B spending bill COuld be postponed The House seems ready to vote its belated approval for a $373 billion spending bill, but a Senate showdown could wait until late January, which would slow and perhaps jeopardize some of President Bush's priorities. The bill is to provide money for most domestic agencies for the budget year that started Oct. 1. Law- makers have injected big increases for veterans' health care and high- way construction and adorned it with billions of dollars for muse- ums, hospitals and thousands of other projects for their districts. The massive bill is well-stocked with trophies for Bush, too. That means the president also stands to lose political prizes if disputes on overtime pay and other issues block passage. "If there is no bill, no one will get any of their special priorities," said Richard May, a private consultant who monitors budget issues. MOSCOW Russian voters show favor toward Putin The main party supporting President Vladimir Putin led rivals by a large mar- gin in Russia's parliamentary elections yesterday, according to partial official results, putting Putin on the path to the solid majority he seeks to increase his hold on the country. More might in the State Duma, Russia's lower parliament house, would make it easier for Putin to push through the sometimes unpop- ular market-oriented economic reforms he has promised and cut the bureaucracy that stifles Russian growth. It could also let him pass constitutional changes giving him a third term in office. ATLANTA CDC warns of harsh flu season this year Flu experts say it's clear this flu season will be much worse than in the past few years, but they are not ready to predict it will be one of the deadliest in modern times. Epidemiologists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention don't know how long this year's flu season will last nor how many people it might affect. Already, it is worrisome because sev- eral children have died, and some parts of the country are facing flu shot shortages and swamped hospitals. It is one of the earliest flu seasons in a quarter-century but some flu outbreaks can peak as early as December, rather than February, which is the norm. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 4 LEAD WITH INTEGR ITY! Michigan LeaderShape® 2004 " Understand your Passion + Develop a Vision + Make your Dream a Reality Session Dates: May 3 - 8, 2004 August 23 - 28, 2004 I S CC Every Tuesday I s =- - - - a - Calming and restorative, I I U I I I I v rFFrCollegeNight! a One Hour Soak for TWO Sunday-Thursday Not valid on holidays or weekends. Notvalid with any other offer. Coupon required Expires 12-15-03. Must be 18 with ID. the soothing surroundings of a well-tended garden setting... spacious and private, a sparkling clean hot tub and the great outdoors! Call for reservations. t t- I t ,t ,t I .,......, ..,.,.,...,....,. - E I OAi _HOT Tub GAQDN6 (734)663-9001 ' Applications available at: Office of Student Activities and Leadership 2205 Michigan Union www.umich.edu/-salead APPLICATIONS DUE DEC. 19th, 2003 RTONBRO OK PROPERTIES W W WMiCHIGANDAI LY. COM The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- tions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. E-mail letters to the editor to letters@michigandaily.com. EDITORIL STAF"F " Louie Meizlish, Editor in Chief eic@michigandaily.com NEWS Shabina S. Khatri, Managing Editor 763.2459, news@michlgandal.com EDITORS: C. Price Jones, Kylene Klang, Jennifer Misthal, Jordan Schrader STAFF: Farayha Arrine, Jeremy Berkowitz, David Branson, Ashley Dinges, Adhiraj Dutt, Sara Eber, Victoria Edwards, Margaret Engoren, Cianna Freeman, Alison Go, Michael Gurovitsch, Aymar Jean, Carmen Johnson, Michael Kan, Andrew Kaplan, Emily Kraack, Tomislav Ladika, Evan McGarvey, Naila Moreira, Jameel Naqvi, Kristin Ostby, Mona Rafeeq, Adam Rosen, Karen Schwartz, Maria Sprow, Dan Trudear',Trista Van Tine, Ryan Vicko OPINION Aubrey Henretty, Zac Peskowitz, Editors 763.0379, opinion@michlgandallycom ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Daniel Adams, Sravya Chirumamilla, Jason Pesick, Jess Piskor STAFF: Nicole Avenia, Benjamin Bass, David Betts, Darryl Boyd, Aryeh Friedman, Emily Hanan, Christine Heath, Bonnie Kellman, Sowmya Krishnamurthy, Andy Kula, Suhael Momin, Laura Platt, Ben Royal, Jeff Segal, Courtney Taymour CARTOONISTS: Sam Butler, Colin Daly COLUMNISTS: Steve Cotner, Johanna Hanink, Joel Hoard, An Paul, Hussain Rahim, Lauren Strayer SPORTS J. Brady McCollough, Managing Editor 764.8585, sports~mdchigandaIlycom SENIOR EDITORS: Chris Burke, Courtney Lewis, Kyle O'Neill, Naweed Sikora NIGHT EDITORS: Daniel Bremmer, Gennaro Filice, Bob Hunt, Dan Rosen, Brian Schick, Jim Weber STAFF: Jeremy Antar, Eric Ambinder, Kyle Carpenter, Waldemar Centeno, Ian Herbert, Josh Holman, Brad Johnson, Jamie Josephson, Melanie Kebler, Megan Kolodgy, Phil Kofahl, Matt Kramer, Julie Master, Sharad Mattu, Ellen McGarrity, Michael . Nisson, Jake Rosenwasser, Steven Shears, Matt Singer, Ryan Sosin, Anne Uible ARTS Todd Weiser, Managing Editor 763.0379, artspage@mlchlgandalycom EDITORS: Jason Roberts, Scott Serlila WEEKEND MAGAZINE EDITORS: Charles Paradis, Rebecca Ramsey SUB-EDITORS: Katie Marie Gates, Johanna Hanink, Joel Hoard, Ryan Lewis, Sarah Peterson STAFF: Jennie Adler, Aliya Chowdhri, Sean Dailey, Laurence Freedman, Andrew M. Gaerig, Matthew Grinshpun, Brandon Harig, Lynn Hasselbarth, Mary Hillemeier, Andrew Horowitz, Lia izenberg, Megan Jacobs, Alexandra Jones, Erin Kaplan, Michelle Kijek, Zach Mabee, Vanessa Miller, Jared Newman, Neal Pais, James Pfent, Christopher Pitoun, Adam Rottenberg, Melissa Runstrom, Julie Sills, Niamh Slevin, Jaya Soni, Anthea Stolz, Justin Weiner, Douglas Wernert. Alex Wolsky a -rv Vii..aa S2edreu oomriouse Available May '04 Great Location Please view our website: www. bartonbrook. com i C PHOTO Tony Ding, Brett Mountain, Managing Edit 764.0563, photo@michigandallycom ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Elise Bergman, Seth Lower NIGHT EDITORS: Jason Cooper, Ryan Weiner STAFF: Trevor Campbell, Forest Casey, Joel Friedman, Ashley Harper, Curtis Hiller, Jeff Lenert, Kelly Lin, Danny Moloshok, Brendan O'Donnell, Shubra Ohri, Laura Shlecter, Jonathon Triest, David Tuman ONLINE Geoffrey Fink, Managing Edi 763.2459, onlinemichigandally.com EDITOR: Ashley Jardina STAFF: John Becic, Kate Green, Janna Hutz, Mira Levitan ors itor i 1174.VODa us i1rSS i cnrgur uauy.Gum W d