2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 19, 2004 NATION/WORLD Explosion in Iran kills more than 200 NEWS IN BRIEF tA NEYSHABUR, Iran (AP) - Run- away train cars carrying a lethal mix of fuel and chemicals derailed, caught fire and then exploded hours later yes- terday in northeast Iran, killing more than 200 people, injuring at least 400 and leaving dozens trapped beneath crumbled mud homes. Most of those reported dead were firefighters and rescue workers who had extinguished most of the blaze out- side Neyshabur, an ancient city of 170,000 people in a farming region 400 miles east of the capital, Tehran. The dead also included top city offi- cials - including Neyshabur's governor, mayor and fire chief as well as the head of the energy department and the direc- tor-general of the provincial railways - who had all gone to the site of the derail- ment, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported. The explosion devastated five vil- lages, where authorities rushed in blood supplies and appealed through loudspeakers for donors. Hardest hit was Hashemabad, where 41-year-old Zahra Rezaie, whose mud home was near the tracks, was cooking lunch for her family when she heard the explo- sion and felt the ground shake. Then the ceiling collapsed. "It knocked down and broke some dishes. I was sure it was an earthquake, and my first thought was to rush to the school and save my children," Rezaie told The Associated Press. Her chil- dren were safe. An AP photographer who arrived in Dehnow, one of the most severely dam- aged villages close to the train tracks some 500 yards from the blast, said most of the village's homes were flat- tened. "The houses are all built of clay, and nearly every one has been destroyed, like they had collapsed in an earth- quake," Hassan Sarbakhshian said. "Everyone appears to have been evacu- ated," he said, adding he could see thick, black smoke billowing about 500 yards ahead. The blast was so powerful that win- dows were shattered as far as six miles away. In an apparent indication of the explosion's force, Iranian seismologists recorded a 3.6-magnitude tremor in the area, IRNA reported. Many of the buildings that collapsed in a Dec. 26 earthquake in Barn, in southeast Iran, also were mud-brick structures. That tragedy killed more than 41,000 people. Authorities were investigating what caused the 51 cars to roll out of the Abu Muslim train station, outside Neyshabur, at 4 a.m. Forty-eight of the cars derailed on reaching the next stop at Khayyam, about 12 miles away, and caught fire. Iranian TV showed black plumes of smoke and orange flames billowing into the sky from the cars, 17 of which were loaded with sulfur, six with gasoline, seven with fertilizer and 10 with cotton. Dozens of people, some wearing face masks to protect themselves from the smoke, were seen walking around or putting out flames on the scene. HEADLINES FROM AROUND THE WORLD if- FORT LEWIS, Wash. Guardsman charged for aiding al-Qaida A National Guardsman accused of attempting to pass military intelligence to the al-Qaida terrorist network has been formally charged, an Army spokesman said yesterday. Spc. Ryan G. Anderson was charged Feb. 12, but the Army did not immediately release that information, Lt. Col. Stephen Barger said. A military defense lawyer has been appointed for Anderson, but Barger refused to identify the lawyer. Anderson was charged with two counts of attempting to supply intelligence to the enemy, the Army said. He could face the death penalty if convicted. Speaking on condition of anonymity, defense officials have said Anderson signed on to extremist Internet chat rooms and tried to get in touch with al-Qaida operatives. It is unclear how the U.S. government got wind of his alleged offer to supply military information to the terrorists. It does not appear he transmitted any infor- mation to al-Qaida, authorities said. Barger said the soldier's alleged attempts to pass information occurred between Jan. 22 and Feb. 11. WASHINGTON White House retracts early job predictions The White House backed away yesterday from its own prediction that the econ- omy will add 2.6 million new jobs before the end of this year, saying the forecast was the work of number-crunchers and that President Bush was not a statistician. Bush himself stopped short of echoing the prediction. "I think the economy's growing, and I think it's going to get stronger," said Bush, the nation's first president with an MBA. He said he was pleased that 366,000 new jobs have been added since August. "But I'm mindful there are still people looking for work, and we've got to continue building on the progress we've made so far." The administration's refusal to back its own jobs estimate brought criticism from John Kerry, the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination. "Now George Bush is saying he's going to create 2.6 million jobs this year alone - and his advisors are saying, 'What, you didn't actually believe that, did you?' Apparently George Bush is the only person left in the country who actually believes the far-fetched promises he's peddling," Kerry said in a statement. 0 AP PHOTO Firemen carry a victim away from the burning debris caused by a train explosion In Neyshabur, Iran, yesterday. More than 200 people were killed in the explosion, at least 400 people were injured and dozens were trapped beneath crumbled homes. " CAP-HAITIEN, Haiti Bush troubled' by same-sex marriage Police unable to stop --. --------- - - , --aita h l atarlr WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush said yes- terday he was troubled by gay weddings in San Fran- cisco and by legal decisions in Massachusetts that could clear the way for same-sex marriage. He declined to say whether he was more inclined now to back a constitutional ban. However, he spoke privately with conservative Catholics about the issue, and a conservative activist who favors such a ban suggested the president would soon announce his support. "I have watched carefully what's happening in San Francisco, where licenses were being issued, even though the law states otherwise," Bush said at the White House. "I have consistently stated that I'll sup- port law to protect marriage between a man and a woman. Obviously these events are influencing my decision." Bush didn't answer directly when asked whether he was any closer to endorsing a constitutional ban on same-sex marriages, as conservative groups say the White House has privately promised. "I'm watching very carefully. But I'm troubled by what I've seen," Bush said. "People need to be involved with this decision. Marriage ought to be defined by the people, not by the courts." One group took issue with Bush's insistence that "people," not the courts, need to resolve the issue. "In San Francisco, the democratically elected mayor took this action just weeks after hundreds of thousands of people voted for him," said Jon David- son, senior counsel of Lambda Legal, a gay and les- bian legal group., "It's the right-wing groups that have taken this into courts seeking to define marriage in a way that would exclude same-sex couples, in violation of Cal- ifornia's constitution," Davidson said. White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Bush recognized that gay marriage is a divisive topic. But he said, "This is an issue where he believes it is important for people to stand up on principle." Yesterday, Bush met with 13 Roman Catholic con- servatives. They included Deal Hudson, the publisher of Crisis magazine and a friend of Bush political adviser Karl Rove; William Donohue, president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights; Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan, former 1141UMI IICUC;l QLL4%.:ln "I have consistently stated that I'll support law to protect marriage between a man and a woman. Obviously these events are influencing my decisionB' - President Bush speechv Kathryn Reviewj White presiden issue an Bush: amendm Separ presiden will bac University Activities Center www.umich.edu ~uac u AMAZIN' BLUE * MUSKET * COMEDY COMPANY ( Q Q 0 urt Bin cal u hbaracters m z" X 54 0CS0 0 ..."'.:.. ... u > U CAU I > > m UA . nt 4 uto .................................... .o ,.,.,,,y'. .44.4 '5. - 44 o y a p li,5: 5 iislihlri ......... ......... z 4.44r 444/.-1 er writer for President Ronald Reagan; and n Jean Lopez, associate editor of National magazine. e House spokesman Trent Duffy said the it spoke to the group about the gay marriage d a wide array of other topics. reiterated his pledge to back a constitutional nent "if necessary," Duffy said. ately, Gary Bauer, a conservative and onetime tial candidate, said Rove has assured him Bush k an amendment. Suicide bombing injures 100 HILLAH, Iraq (AP) - Suicide bombers detonated explosives outside a Polish-run base yesterday, killing 10 Iraqis and wounding more than 100 peo- ple, more than half of them coalition sot- diers. The United States arrested seven guerrillas believed linked to al-Qaida in an early-morning raid to the north. The attack in Hillah, the third suicide bombing of security targets in two weeks, was part of a wider effort "to isolate us from the kaqi people;' coali- tion military commander Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez told reporters in Tikrit. Coalition and military officials said at least 106 people were hurt in the blasts, which happened in theHayy Babil neighborhood near Camp Char- lie. The wounded included 32 Iraqis and 26 Poles, as well as Hungarians, Bulgarians, Filipinos and an American. The casualty toll could have been much higher had guards not opened fire and prevented the bombers from entering the camp. One truck exploded under the gunfire and another blew up after hitting a concrete barrier. The 7:15 a.m. blasts - from 1,540 pounds of explosives - flattened 11 homes nearby and blew down the entire sides of several other houses in this town south of Baghdad. Earlier yesterday, U.S. troops arrest- ed seven militants believed linked to al-Qaida in the turbulent city of Baqouba, north of the capital, the mili- tary said. It gave no details on the nationalities of the militants. There was no indication the attacks and the U.S. raid were directly linked. Troops from the 4th Infantry Divi- sion carried out the raid early yesterday targeting an "anti-coalition cell" that may have ties to Osama bin Laden's terror group, a statement from the U.S. ommrnd said Frightened police barricaded them- selves inside their station house yester- day, and said they could not repel a rebel attack on Haiti's second-largest city if it comes. The country's embattled leaders warned of an impending coup and appealed for outside help. None was forthcoming. On the streets of this northern port city, the last government stronghold in the region, militant defenders of Presi- dent Jean-Bertrand Aristide vowed to fight on. "We have machetes and guns and we will resist," said carpenter Pierre Frandley. "The police might have been scared, but the people got together and organized. ... We blocked the streets." There were fears the rebels already have infiltrated the city. TEHRAN, Iran Dissident demands cleric accountability The leader of Iran's ruling clerics must be made more accountable to reform demands and should shed some powers to break a "vicious circle" of control, the most prominent dissident lawmaker and brother of the country's president said yesterday. But Mohammad Reza Khatami - who was deputy parliament speaker and among more than 2,400 candidates blackballed from Friday's elections - warned against public demonstrations to demand change, saying Iranians have no appetite for another revolution. In an interview with The Associated Press, he offered glimpses of a high- stakes gambit: trying to pressure Iran's supreme leader and the Islamic power base that controls everything from for- eign policy to the media. LOS ANGELES Mother arrested 14 years after abduction Police arrested the mother of a 17- year-old boy after her son saw his picture on a missing children's website and dis- covered that she was accused of abduct- ing him from his father 14 years ago. Acting on a Canadian-issued warrant, U.S. marshals arrested Giselle-Marie Goudreault, 45, at her home in the San Fernando Valley. She was being held without bailuntil Canadian authorities can extradite her on child abduction charges, authorities said. Goudreault "was shocked and very emotional" during the Feb. 11 arrest, said Jimell Griffin, a deputy U.S. marshal in Los Angeles. The boy's father had cus- tody of his son, and Griffin said Goudreault did not return him after a court-ordered visit. - Compiled from Daily wire reports WWW.MICHIGANDAILY.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. 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