1 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 24, 2009 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS Suicide bomber LANSING Cdeb b r 5 5percentpaycut kills 23 in blast for state emnlovees proposed yesterday in Irag i Republicans in the Michigan House yesterday called for a 5 percent pay cut for state employ- ees and a 5 percent cut to state departments to help address a growing deficit in this year's budget. GOP leaders said state gov- ernment is spending $5 million more each business day than is being collected in tax rev- enue. A plan proposed yesterday would cut salaries 5 percent for 52,000 state workers, make state employees and retirees pay high- er health care premiums, and reduce spending by 5 percent across the board in state depart- ments. "It is time to bring state gov- ernmentin line withthe econom- ic realities of the private sector," said House Minority Leader Kevin Elsenheimer, R-Kewadin. WASHINGTON Investigation opens more possibilities for plane crash Speculation over the crash of a single-engine turboprop plane into a cemetery shifted to ice on the wings yesterday after it became less likely that overload- ing was to blame, given that half of the 14 people on board were small children. While descending Sunday in preparation for landing at the Bert Mooney Airport in Butte, Mont., the plane passed through a layer of air at about 1,500 feet that was conducive to icing because the temperatures were below freezing and the air "had 100 percent relative humidity or was saturated," according to AccuWeather.com, a forecasting service in State College, Pa. Safety experts said similar icing condition existed when a Continental Airlines twin-engine turboprop crashed into a home nearBuffaloNiagaraInternation- al Airport last month, killing 50, HARTFORD, Conn. Legislators consider apology for slavery Connecticut legislators are considering making their state the first in New England to apol- ogize for slavery and other racist policies of old. A legislative committee heard * testimony yesterday on a resolu- tion that would issue a formal, general apology and express the General Assembly's "profound contrition" for the official acts that sanctioned and perpetuated slavery hundreds of years ago. The state's African-American Affairs Commission, a liaison between black communities and the government, is urging leg- islators to pass the resolution, which ithas called "an exercise in reconciliation" and not an effort to determine fault for slavery. Concerns raised over possible resurgence of violence in Iraq BAGHDAD (AP) - A suicide bomber struck a tentfilled yester- day with Kurdish funeral mourn- ers, unleashing a huge fireball that killed at least 23 people in a northern town where Kurds and Arabs are competing for power. Also yesterday, Turkey's visiting president pressed the Iraqi gov- ernment to crack down on Kurd- ish rebels who stage cross-border raids into Turkish territory from sanctuaries in northern Iraq. The provincial security office said 23 people were killed and 34 wounded in the suicide attack in the town of Jalula some 80 miles (120 kilometers) northeast of Baghdad. A member of the provincial security committee, Amir Rifaat, said 24 people were killed and 28 wounded. The difference could not be immediately reconciled. Karim Khudadat, whose father was being mourned, said he was receiving visitors when the bomber struck. "I was with my relatives out- side the tent receiving people who came to offer condolences when suddenly the explosion took place," Khudadat said. "Suddenly a huge flame engulfed the tent and I was wounded in my head and legs." capital Elsewhere, eight people were killed and 10 wounded in a bomb- ing near a bus stop west of Bagh- dad, and a policeman died and eight people were wounded in a suicide blast at a market in the northern town of Tal Afar. A series of high-profile bomb- ings this month has raised concern that insurgents may be regrouping as the U.S. begins to scale down combat operations and hand over security responsibility to the Iraqis ahead of a planned American troop withdrawal by the end of 2011. The attack in Jalula was note- worthy because it points to ris- ing tensions in the north between Kurds and Arabs over control of a swath of territory that the Kurds want to incorporate into their self- ruled region. U.S. officials believe Kurdish- Arab tension is among the major flashpoint issues threatening Iraqi stability now that the threat posed by Sunni and Shiite insurgents has been diminished. Last August a suicide bomber killed 25 people, mostly police volunteers, in Jalula, a predomi- nantly Arab town where the Iraqi army forced out Kurdish fighters of the self-ruled Kurdish govern- ment last year after a standoff that U.S. officials feared would lead to armed conflict. A Jalula resident who was wounded in Monday's blast blamed al-Qaida in Iraq, a Sunni Arab orga- nization that typically carries out suicide bombings. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner watches President Obama during a meeting with small business owners at the White House. Stocks soar after new a -mortgage purchase plan Plan would purchase nearly $1 trillion in bad mortgages WASHINGTON (AP) - The Obama administration aimed squarely at the crisis clogging the nation's credit system yesterday with a plan to take over up to $1 trillion in sour mortgage securities with the help of private investors. For once, Wall Street cheered. The announcement, closely stage-managed throughout the day, filled in crucialblanksinthe admin- istration's financial rescue package and formed what President Barack Obama called "one more critical element in our recovery." The coordinated effort by the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. relies on a mix of government and private money - mostly from institutional investors such as hedge funds - to help banks rid their balance sheets of real- estate related securities thatare now. extremely difficult to value.. The goal, said Obama, is to get banks lending again, so "families can get basic consumer loans, auto loans, student loans, (and so) that small businesses are able to finance themselves, and we can start get- ting this economy moving again." It was a huge gambit and one that came like a tonic to Wall Street, whichhad pannedanearlier outline of the program that lacked detail. Stocks soared, the Dow Jones industrial average shooting up nearly 500 points, thanks to the bank-assets plan and a report showing an unexpected jump in home sales. The introduction of the plan was closely choreographed so that the president - rather than Treasury Secretary TimothyGeithner --would be the first administration official to appear on camera at midday to dis- cuss it. Geithner met earlier in the day, before markets opened, with a group of reporters at the Treasury Department to go over specifics. But cameras and broadcast-quality audio recorders were barred. It was the reverse of what hap- pened Feb. 10. Then, after Obama had helped raise expectations toward Geithner and the plan, the treasury secretary went before cameras and bombed, The. Dow plunged about 300 points amid investor confusion about details. The fleshed-out plan is designed to help fix a value on damaged mortgage loans and other toxic securities. If the value of the securities goes up, the private investors and taxpayers would share inthegains. If the values go down, the govern- ment and private investors would incur losses. "This will help banks clean up their balance sheets and make it easier for them to raise capital," Geithner said. The plan will take $75 billion to $100 billion from the government's existing $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. The govern- ment will pair this with private investments and loans from the FDIC and the Fed to generate $500 billion in purchasing power. Sudanese president flaunts UN charges al-Bashir travels to Eritrea despite pending warrant for war crimes KHARTOUM (AP) - Sudan's president traveled to Eritrea yes- terday, choosing one of Africa's most politically isolated nations for his first trip abroad since an inter- national court sought his arrest on charges of war crimes in Darfur. The one-day visit followed Eri- trea's official invitation to Sudan's Omar al-Bashir, who faces the arrest warrant by the Nether- lands-based International Crimi- nal Court. Eritrean television showed live coverage of al-Bashir being greeted at the airport in the Eri- trean capital Asmara by his coun- terpart President Isaias Afwerki; along with drummers and danc- ers. Sudanese state television later yesterday showed live images of al- Bashir returning to Khartoum. SudaneseForeignMinisterDeng Alor said the visit was "important" and reflected Eritrean "solidar- ity ... with Sudan against the ICC." Eritrean Information Minister Ali Abdu told The Associated Press that al-Bashirwas accompaniedbyheads of security and intelligence and was there to discuss regional security, ... The ICC charged al-Bashir on March 4 of leading a counterinsur- gency against Darfur rebels that involved rapes, killings and other atrocities against civilians. His government has been accused of unleashing Arab militiamen known as janjaweed against Darfur civil- ians in a drive to put down a revolt by ethnic Africans in the region. Up to 300,000 people have died and 2.7 million driven from their homes in the conflict since 2003, according to the U.N. Under the ICC charter, member states are bound to arrest those indicted when they enter their ter- ritory. Eritrea is not a signatory, however, and has vehemently con- demned the indictment, making it a kind of safe haven for el-Bashir to visit. "It's unjustifiable and illegal and illogical and futile, the so-called ICC decision," said Abdu. "We believe it's an extension and symp- tom of the ongoing world hegemony and domination by a few powers in this world." t ak e th is su m m e r i MEXICO CITY Mexico gov't offers reward for Tuesdays Are South Of The Border . Carona/Dos Equis Specials All Night drug traffickers & rplj nea VOSVJrin2 Mexico's government yeter 25%Off Mexican Fare & NO COVER day offered $2 million each for ia or Bomb S ocials 10 to Close information leading to the arrest r. - / , r of 24 top drug lords in a public + 9 O Ld next Ste M ynaed r $NMyctwo challenge to the cartels' violent grip on the country. The list indicated that drug gangs have splintered into six main cartels under pressure from the U.S. and Mexican gov- ernments. The two most power- ful gangs - the Pacific and Gulf cartels - each suffered fractures 8 9 1 5 2 4 that have given rise to new car- tels, according to the list pub- lished by the Attorney General's Office. The list offers 30 million pesos 6 ($2 million) in rewards for 24 top members of the cartels and 15 3 4 million pesos ($1 million) for 13 of their lieutenants. Mexico's drug violence has killed more than 9,000 people since President Felipe Calderon 5 3 9 took office in December 2006 as gangs battle each other for terri- tory and fight off a government crackdown. Some of that violence 4 7 9 is spilling over into the United States, especially the Southwest, where kidnaps and killings are on 1 5 3 2 4 7 the rise. - Compiled from Daily wire reports