The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 21, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LONDON Blair to announce partial withdrawal of troops from Iraq Prime Minister Tony Blair will announce today a new timetable for the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq, with 1,500 to return home in several weeks, the BBC reported. Blair will also tell the House of Commons during his regular weekly appearance before it that a total of about 3,000 British soldiers will have left southern Iraq by the end of 2007, if the security there is sufficient, the British Broadcast- ing Corp. said, quoting government officials who weren't further iden- tified. The BBC said Blair was not expected to say when the rest of Britain's forces would leave Iraq. Currently, Britain has about 7,100 soldiers there. LANSING State to close major prison in Jackson The state plans to close a 1,500- inmate prison in Jackson by July to save money and help balance the state budget, a spokesman for the Department of Corrections said yesterday. The Southern Michigan Correc- tional Facility - one of five prisons in Jackson - will close, correc- tions spokesman Russ Marlan told The Associated Press. Nearly 7,800 inmates are incarcerated in Jackson overall - 15 percent of Michigan's prisoner population. The prison closing likely won't be the only one, as Gov. Jennifer Granholm plans to parole 5,000 more prisoners in the next budget year to cut costs. It costs $35 million a year to run the Southern Michigan Correction- al Facility. The state also plans to close the Charles Egeler Reception and Guidance Center Annex in Jack- son, which serves as an intake point for male prisoners before they're housed elsewhere. WASHINGTON New Jersey begins issuing civil unions A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that foreign-born prison- ers seized as potential terrorists and held in Guantanamo Bay may not challenge their detention in U.S. courts, a key victory for Presi- dent Bush's anti-terrorism plan. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled 2-1 that civilian courts no longer have the authority to consider whether the military is illegally holding the prisoners - a decision that will strip court access for hun- dreds of detainees with cases cur- rently pending. Barring federal court access was akeyprovisioninthe MilitaryCom- missions Act, which Bush pushed through Congress last year to set up a system run by the Defense Department to prosecute terrorism suspects. Attorneys for the detainees immediately said they would appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court, which last year struck down the Bush administration's original plan for trying detainees before military commissions. SYDNEY Australians phase out incandescent light bulbs The Australian government announced plans to phase out incandescent light bulbs and replace them with more energy- efficient compact fluorescent bulbs across the country. Legislation to gradually restrict the sale of the old-style bulbs could reduce Australia's greenhouse gas emissions by four million tonnes by 2012 and cut household power bills by up to 66 per cent, said Environment. Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Under the Australian plan, bulbs that do not comply with energy efficiency targets would be gradu- ally banned from sale. Exemptions may apply for special needs such as medical lighting and oven lights. - Compiled from Daily wire reports .16 Number of convenience stores robbed by two men in Pennsylva- nia, New Jersey and Delaware by throwing coffee or hot chocolate in the clerk's face and then steal- ing money from the cash register, according to the Philadelphia Daily News. The thieves, who usually strike in the early morning, are still at large. 7-Eleven and Wawa stores are offering a $10,000 reward for information about the men. Accusation of rape leads to fear in Iraq Anglican church rebukes U.S. branch over same-sex unions Taboo subject causes sectarian stir amid security crackdown By MARC SANTORA The New York Times BAGHDAD - The most wicked acts are spoken of openly and with- out reserve in Iraq. Torture, stab- bings, and bodies ripped to pieces in bombings are all part of the daily conversation. Rape is different. Rape is not mentioned by the victims, and rarely by the authori- ties. And when it is discussed publicly, as in several high-profile cases involving U.S. soldiers and Iraqi women, it is usually left to the relatives of the victim to give the explicit details. So when a 20-year-old Sunni woman from Baghdad appeared on the satellite television station Al Jazeera on Monday night with a horrific account of kidnapping and sexual assault at the hands of three officers in the Shiite-dominated Iraqi National Police, people across the country were stunned, some disbelieving, others horrified, but all captivated. Almost immediately, Shiite leaders lined up to condemn the woman and her charges as pro- paganda aimed at undermining the new security campaign. Sunni politicians offered the woman their support. Whatever the truth of the accusation, though, it played to sec- tarian fears on both sides. For many Shiites, the charges appeared to be an attempt to smear them and attack the Shiite-led gov- ernment; for Sunnis, the woman's account only highlighted what they already believed to be true - that the Iraqi government cares little for justice and promotes a Shiite agenda. Bitter exchanges between politi- cians of different sects were relayed to millions on television, inter- spersed with clips of the woman telling her story, her face veiled, just the tears in her eyes visible. The Americans, who have advis- ers who work with the Iraqi Nation- al Police, found themselves caught in the middle and with no answers. The woman claimed that the Americans had rescued her from the officers and gave her medical treatment. The U.S.-backed Shiite- led government said the Americans would show the woman's claims to be false. The U.S. military said only that they were investigating the charges. That was also the first response of Prime Minister Nouri Kamal al-Maliki, who issued a statement soon after the woman appeared on television on Monday, promising a full investigation and the most severe punishment for anyone involved. Only hours later, however, al- Maliki reversed himself. His office released a second statement, after midnight, this one calling the woman a liar and a wanted crimi- nal and going on to praise the offi- cers involved. "It has been shown after medical examinations that the woman had not been subjected to any sexual attack whatsoever, and that there are three outstanding arrest war- rants against her issued by security agencies," said the second state- ment. "After the allegations have been proven to be false, the prime minister has ordered that the offi- cers accused be rewarded." The government did not elabo- rate on the statement or say why the prime minister had so quickly reversed himself. His office only said that "known parties" had been responsible for the allegations. But in siding with the security forces, al-Maliki threatened to only heighten the tensions surrounding the already highly charged case. His government also released the woman's name, which is not being published by The NewYork Times. Sunni politicians rushed to her defense, accusing the government of revealing its true sectarian bias. The case "should not be dealt on a sectarian basis," said Sal- eem Abdullah, a spokesman for the Tawafiq bloc of Sunni parties, which helped the woman come forward with her charges. "She is a sister for all Iraqis." He went on to say the govern- ment's handling of the issue could undermine its credibility in direct- ing the security crackdown. With fears of violence pervasive throughout the country, many Iraq- is stay inside their homes whenever they can. Satellite television is their connection tothe outside world and, just as often, their own country. On the two most prominent channels, Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya, they would have heard the woman tell- ing her story over and over. If she made up the story, it was an elaborate piece of propaganda and the contradictory statements by the Iraqi government only added to its power. The woman was lying on a bed as she was interviewed, a blue blanket pulled up nearly to her chin. She had a light-pink scarf covering her hair and a black scarf covering her face. She said she was taken from her house Sunday morning by the National Police while her husband was out, something no one dis- putes. The officers, she said, were looking for weapons but when they arrived at the police garrison, they accused her of cooking for Sunni insurgents. It was at the garrison that she claims the first officer raped her, covering her mouth to muffle her screams. Ultimatum is latest development in crisis within church By SHARON LaFRANIERE and LAURIE GOODSTEIN The New York Times Facing a possible churchwide schism, the Anglican Commu- nion on Monday gave its Episcopal branch in the United States less than eight months to ban bless- ings of same-sex unions or risk a reduced role in the world's third- largest Christian denomination. Anglican leaders also estab- lished a separate cotncil and a vicar to help address the concerns of conservative U.S. dioceses that have been alienated by the Episco- pal Church's support of gay clergy and blessings of same-sex unions. Although the presiding American bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori, agreed to the arrangement, some conservatives described it as an extraordinary check on her author- ity. The directive, issued after a five-day meeting of three dozen top leaders of the Anglican church gathering in Dar es Salaam, Tanza- nia, constituted a severe rebuke of the small but affluent U.S. branch. Conservative Anglicans described the communique as a landmark document that affirms the primacy of Scripture and church doctrine for the world's 77 million Angli- cans, only 2.3 million of whom are Episcopalians. "This is very, very, very signifi- cant," said Bill Atwood, who serves as a strategist for a group of the conservative bishops. "It was either call the Episcopal Church back or lose the Anglican Communion, and the group agreed it was better to call the Episcopal Church back." The decision comes after years of debate and remonstrations within the Anglican Communion over whether and how to force the Episcopal leaders to conform to the wider church's view of homosexu- ality - a controversy that has also enveloped other mainline Chris- tian denominations. Episcopalians in favor of gay rights immediately urged Ameri- can bishops to reject the demands. "The American church is not going to just roll over and turn back the clock on blessings," said the Rev. Susan Russell, an Episcopal priest. in Los Angeles and president of Integrity, an Episcopalian gay rights group. Anglican church teaching, reit- erated in a series of meetings since 1998, states that sex is reserved for married heterosexual couples. The Episcopal Church directly challenged that teaching in 2003 by consecrating V. Gene Robinson, a gay man living with his partner, as bishop of New Hampshire. The church's bishops have also allowed priests to bless gay unions. In response, more than a third of the other Anglican churches around the world - by some counts more than half - have curtailed their interaction with the Episco- pal Church. The church has also faced an internal rebellion from nearly one-tenth of its dioceses, which have appealed to the Angli- can Communion to free them from oversight by the presiding Episco- pal bishop, Jefferts Schori. Several dozen more parishes have aligned themselves with bishops outside the United States whose churches are more conservative theologi- cally. At a late-night news conference in Dar es Salaam, the Most Rev. Rowan Williams, archbishop of Canterbury, the denomination's spiritual leader, said the group hammered out "an interim solution that certainly falls very short of resolving all the disputes." Tensions ran so high at the meeting that church officials aban- doned the traditional group photo of the leaders on Sunday. Even church services were a tense affair as seven conservative archbishops declined Holy Communion rather than celebrate the Eucharist with Jefferts Schori. U GY WHERE WHEN ' WANT * Experience the culture and excitement of living in another country from 1-3 months while tutoring your host family in conversational English for a maximum of 15 hours per week. * FlI rloon e lard provided ky hosf fai A ROAD * No tutoring experience necessary! L/ * The OET experience is an opportunity of a lifetime! Apply now! 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