The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 27, 2006 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip Palestinians, 0lmert urge restraint as cease-fire begins Rocket fire from Gaza died down yesterday after a daybreak cease- fire, raising hopes for an end to five months of bloody destruction and a new opening toward peace talks. The surprise truce was supposed to take effect at 6 a.m., but in the four hours that followed, 11 rock- ets were fired from Gaza at Israeli towns and villages and some Pales- tinian militants threatened to keep up the attacks. Israel did not retaliate. Rivals Hamas and Fatah, the two main factions in the Pales- tinian government, also publicly backed the truce and by nightfall, it appeared to take hold. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah, who has been pressing for a reopening of peace talks with Israel, ordered his secu- rity forces to patrol the Gaza border yesterday afternoon to stop rocket attacks. Battle-hardened Israelis and Pal- estinians were wary, having seen similar truces and peace efforts disintegrate and slip back into vio- lence. WASHINGTON Bush to seek Iraq help on trip President Bush is reaching out to allies this week for help in quelling violence in Iraq and Afghanistan, in a burst of diplomacy from a Baltic summit of NATO partners to Mideast talks with Iraq's prime minister. Just back from an eight-day trip to Asia, Bush was leaving today on another overseas trip as pressure builds at home for a change inhis administration's Iraq strategy amid deepeningtensions and violence in that country. The president stops first in Esto- nia en route to a NATO summit in neighboring Latvia where a debate over peacekeeping operations in Afghanistan is expected to domi- nate. BAGHDAD, Iraq Iraqi leaders call for calm as chaos reigns Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish lead- ers called yesterday for an end to Iraq's sectarian conflict and vowed to track down those responsible for the war's deadliest attack. But as they went on national tele- vision to try to keep Iraq from slid- ing into an all-out civil war, fighting between Iraqi security forces and Sunni Arab insurgents raged for a second day in Baqouba, the capital of Diyala province north of Bagh- dad. By the end of the day, the prov- ince's latest casualty figures were a microcosm of the brutality in Iraq: 17 insurgents killed, 15 detained, 20 civilians kidnapped, three bodies found, one U.S. Marine killed and two wounded. LONDON U.K. minister blasts Putin on poisoning * ABritishCabinetminister accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of "attacks on individual liberty and on democracy" and said yesterday that relations with Moscow were strained after a former KGB agent was poisoned to death in London. Peter Hain, the government's Northern Ireland Secretary, said Putin's tenure had been clouded by incidents "including an extremely murky murder of the senior Russian journalist"Anna Politkovskaya. They were the strongest com- ments leveled at Moscow since Alexander Litvinenko died Thurs- day from poisoning by the radioac- tive element polonium-210. 22 Pounds of marijuana a EUNICE, NEW MEXICO resident found under the back seat of a used car he purchased last week. The man turned the pot over to the police, who said it was worth $28,000 and that the man "did the right thing." IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK A LOT LIKE CHRISTMAS " -ITol~r3 ngry Turks i3 protest pope's upcoming vis1t ROB M IGRIN/Daily Ann Arbor residents gather in the courtyard of Kerrytown Market and Shops to sing Christmas carols and light a tree yesterday. War protester's suicide a mystery Benedict's comments about Islam have angered Muslims ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) - Tens of thousands of protesters denounced Pope Benedict XVI as an enemy of Islam at a rally yester- day that underlined deep divisions straining Turkey ahead of the pon- tiff's visit this week. Officials hoping to promote clos- er ties with the West urged calm, but Islamic groups wary of Western ways united in anger over Benedict's remarks two months ago linking Islam to violence. Chants of "No to the pope!" rose among nearly 25,000 demonstrators at every mention of his remarks on violence and the Prophet Muham- mad. Many protesters wore head- bands with anti-pope slogans and waved placards that included a depiction of Benedict as the grim reaper. The protest, organized by an Islamist political party, was the largest mass gathering so far against Benedict's four-day visit scheduled to begin tomorrow - his first papal journey to a mostly Muslim nation. The outcry also was designed to rattle Turkey's establishment. Turkish officials hope to use the visit to promote their ambitions of becoming the first Muslim nation in the European Union and show- case Turkey's secular political system. But Islamic groups, which have been gaining strength, see Benedict as a symbol of Western intolerance and injustices against Muslims. "The pope is not wanted here," said Kubra Yigitoglu, a 20-year- old protester wearing a head scarf, ankle-length coat and cowboy boots. Nearby, alarge banner was raised amid a sea of red flags of the Saadet, or Felicity, party. It called the Vati- can "a source of terror." Security forces are on full alert for the pope'svisit. Nearly 4,000 police, including units in full riot guard, watched over the protest. Surveil- lance helicopters buzzed overhead and protesters were frisked before entering the square in a conserva- tive stronghold of Istanbul. The pope's visit has two distinct - and difficult - objectives: calming Muslim ire and advancing efforts to heal a nearly 1,000-year divide in Christianity between the Vatican and Orthodox churches. Benedict plans to meet first with political and Muslim religious lead- ers in the capital, Ankara, including Turkey's president and the Islamic cleric who oversees the country's religious affairs. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to attend a NATO meeting in Lat- via during the papal visit, but could briefly greet the pontiff at the air- port. The pope then heads to Istanbul - the ancient Byzantine capital of Constantinople - to be hosted by the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I. The pope strongly backs efforts for closer bonds between the two ancient branches of Christian- ity, which formally split in the 11th century over disputes including papal primacy. But some Orthodox leaders, including Russia's power- ful Patriarch Alexy II, are wary of deepening ties too fast. While in Istanbul, Benedict also plans to visit the famous 17th cen- tury Blue Mosque. The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lom- bardi, called it a "sign of respect" toward Muslims. The mosque is one of the city's major tourist sites and its slender minarets are a prominent landmark in Istanbul's ancient center. Musician set self aflame on Chicago off-ramp CHICAGO (AP) - Malachi Ritscher envisioned his death as one full of purpose. He carefully planned the details, mailed a copy of his apartment key to a friend, created to-do lists for his family. On his website, the 52- year-old experimental musician who'd fought with depression even penned his obituary. At 6:30 a.m. on Nov. 3 - four days before an election caused a seismic shift in Washington poli- tics - Ritscher, a frequent anti-war protester, stood by an off-ramp in downtown Chicago near a statue of a giant flame, set up a video camera, doused himself with gasoline and lit himself on fire. Aglow for the crush of morning commuters, his flaming body was supposed to be a call to the nation, a symbol of his rage and discontent with the U.S. war in Iraq. "Here is the statement I want to make: if I am required to pay for your barbaric war, I choose not to live in your world. I refuse to finance the mass murder of innocent civilians, who did noth- ing to threaten our country," he wrote in his suicide note. "... If one death can atone for anything, in any small way, to say to the world: I apologize for what we have done to you, I am ashamed for the may- hem and turmoil caused by my country." There was only one problem: No one was listening. It took five days for the Cook Sharpton slams NYC cops after shooting outrage at vigil for bridegroom shot on County medical examiner to iden- tify the charred-beyond-recogni- tion corpse. Meanwhile, Ritscher's suicide went largely unnoticed. It wasn't until a reporter for an alter- native weekly, the Chicago Reader, pieced the facts together that word began to spread. Soon, tributes - and questions - poured in to the paper's blogs. Was this a man consumed by mental illness? Or was Ritscher a martyr driven by rage over what he saw as an unjust war? Was he a convenient symbol for an anti-war movement or was there more to his message? "This man killed himself in such a painful way, specifically to get our attention on these things," said Jennifer Diaz, a 28-year-old gradu- ate student who never met him but has been researching his life. Now, she is organizing protests and vig- ils in his name. "I'm not going to sit by and I can't sit by and let this go unheard." Mental health experts say vir- tually no suicides occur without some kind of a diagnosable mental illness. But Ritscher's family dis- agrees aboutwhether he had severe mental problems. In a statement, Ritscher's par- ents and siblings called him an intellectually gifted man who suf- fered from bouts of depression. They stopped short of saying he'd ever received a clinical diagnosis of mental illness. "He believed in his actions, however extreme they were," his younger brother, Paul Ritscher, wrote online. "He believed they could help to open eyes, ears and hearts and to show everyone that a single man's actions, by taking such extreme personal responsibility, can perhaps affect change in the world." His son, who shares the same name as his father, said his father was trying to cope with mental ill- ness. Suicide seemed tobe the next step, and the war was a way to give his death meaning. "He was different people at dif- ferent instances and so, so erratic. I loved him no doubt, but he was a very lonely and tragic man," said Ritscher, 35, who is estranged from the rest of the family. "The idea of being a martyr I'm sure was attrac- tive. He could literally go out in a blaze of glory." Born in Dickinson, N.D., with the name Mark David, Ritscher dropped out of high school, mar- ried at 17 and divorced 10 years later. Eventually, he would change his name to match his son's and, coincidentally, a world-famous prophet. At the end, he worked in building maintenance and was a fixture in Chicago's experimental music scene. He described himself as a renais- sance man who'd amassed a collec- tion of more than 2,000 musical recordings from clubs in Chicago. He was a writer, philosopher and photographer. He was an alcoholic who collected fossils, glass eyes, light bulbs and snare drums. He paid $25 to become an ordained minister with the Missionaries of the New Truth and operated a handful of Web sites protesting the Iraq war. A member of Mensa who claimed to be able to recite the infinite num- ber Pi to more than 1,000 decimal places, he titled his obituary "Out of Time." Students Fly Chemier Sample Roundtrip Airfares From Detroit to: New York $151 Paris $389 Philadelphia $151 Madrid $398 Seattle $272 Lisbon $486 Oher taxes andfeesvary depending on the itinerary and are not inluded.vfaesare subet toav ty and cange wthout notice. Domestfghts vai dMon-Thu with an 8 day advance purchase. 2 day min stay including a Sat night required and max stay is 30 days. International flights valid Mon- Wed with a 8 day advance purchase. Europe/Asa fares valid for depar tures between Nov l and Dec 14. Latin Amerkca fares valid for departures through *C StudentUniverse.com eve of wedding NEW YORK (AP) - A crowd angrily called on police yesterday to explain why authorities fatally shot a 23-year-old man on the day of his wedding, and some called for the ouster of the city's police com- missioner. To play: Complete the grid so At a vigil and rally, family mem- bers and friends chanted and and every 3x3 box contail prayed. Community leaders said they wanted to know why officers There is no guessing o fired as many as 50 rounds at an just use logic to solve. Gc unarmed group Saturday as they left Sean Bell's bachelor party in a car. Difficulty: Easy "We cannot allow this to con- tinue to happen," said the Rev. Al 5 6 Sharpton, who has been speaking t for Bell's family since the shooting. "We've got to understand that all of ---- us were'in that car." 8 The civil rights advocate led the crowd in chants of "No justice, no peace." At times some in the crowd j- . yelled that Police Commissioner 2 Raymond Kelly should be ousted. "Kelly must go!" people shouted. , 7 4 The shootings occurred outside the Kalua Cabaret, a strip club where the bachelor party was held. The surviving victims were Joseph Guzman, 31, who was shot at least 11 times, and Trent Benefield, 23, who was hit three times. Both men are at Mary Immaculate Hospital,u where Guzman was in critical con- dition and Benefield was stable. I FOR MORE INFORMATION, CA L734.6I5.6449 i t A A A