The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, December 9, 2010 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, December 9, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Vote delayed on health benefits for same-sex couples The Michigan Civil Service Commission is postponing action on a proposal that could allow same-sex partners or other adults living with state employees to be covered by state-paid health insur- ance. The proposal was tabled yester- day because commission members had questions about it. The propos- al could be revisited early next year. The proposal could cover boy- friends, girlfriends or other adults who have lived with a state employ- ee for at least 12 months. Children of the adults who aren't state work- ers also would be covered by the insurance. The state had agreed in 2004 to begin covering same-sex ben- efits but implementation has been delayed because of legal issues. The extension could cost about $6 million in 2011. Opponents worry a state government already facing a projected deficit can't afford it. "When it comes to creating jobs, government hasn't gotten the job done," he said. NEW YORK NYC mayor: White House, state leaders fail to create jobs New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg lashed out at the White House, Congress and state leaders yesterday for what he called failed attempts to create jobs, accusing both parties of being too distract- ed by partisan politics to address unemployment. The billionaire mayor, who has been mentioned as a long-shot pres- idential candidate but has repeat- edly said he doesn't plan to run in 2012, delivered a campaign-style speech in Brooklyn. He spent half his time reiterating familiar com- plaints about partisan gridlock and the other half outliningvague ideas to get more Americans working. Bloomberg, who has been a member of both parties and is now unregistered, also carefully bur- nished his bipartisan credentials - equally praising and criticizing the beliefs and approaches of Dem- ocrats and Republicans. He blamed both parties for unfairly vilifying the concept of success and for too quickly dis- missing the idea of cooperating within government and across party lines. PARIS 14 former Chilean officials charged with kidnapping A French court put 14 former Chilean officials on trial in absen- tia yesterday over the disappear- ance of French citizens under the regime of Chilean dictator Augus- to Pinochet. The 14, mostly former high- ranking military officials, face charges including kidnapping and torture and are the subject of inter- national arrest warrants. They face up to life in prison, if convicted. While the defendants did not appear in court yesterday, fami- lies of the victims hope the trial offers some justice more than 30 years after the four Frenchmen disappeared - and four years after Pinochet himself died following failed efforts in Chile and abroad to prosecute him for human rights abuses. The 14 are being tried in connec- tion with the disappearances of the four men between 1973 and 1975. BAGHDAD Bombs and gunfire kill 5, wound 24 Scattered bombings and gunfire killed five people and wounded 24 yesterday in attacks around the Iraqi capital, including one on a bus of Iranian pilgrims headed to a Shiite religious ceremony. The violence came as a Defense Ministry spokesman announced the arrest in the killing last month of a journalist as proof that Iraqi security forces are making head- way in curbing insurgents. In the deadliest attack, a car bomb outside a restaurant killed three people in the town of Taji, some 12 miles (20 kilometers) north of Baghdad. The explosives-packed car also wounded 16 people, police and hospital officials said. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. In the face of debt crisis, Irish premier seeks re-election An area of the San Miguel prison is burned after a fire killed at least 81 prisoners in Santiago, Chile yesterday. A fire that started during a prison riot killed at least 81 inmates at the Chilean prison and seriously injured at least 14 others, officials said. Chile prison fire kills at least 81 injures 14 Irish leader's remarks come day after $8-billion proposed budget cut DUBLIN (AP) - A defi- ant Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen vowed yesterday to push through Europe's tough- est slash-and-tax budget in the face of voter fury, then defy the odds to win re-election despite a debt disaster that has shaken the entire eurozone. Cowen mounted a vigorous defense of his embattled lead- ership a day after lawmakers narrowly backed a 2011 budget containing 66 billion ($8 billion) in cuts and tax hikes that will take an estimated 63,000 ($4,000) per year out of average Irish house- holds. The unprecedented scale of the budget-tightening was a key con- dition for Ireland's recent agree- mentofa 67. Sbillion ($90billion) EU-IMF rescue fund to help Ire- land cover its European-leading deficit and revive its debt-struck banks. The Irish were forced to take aid after its two-year strug- gle to prevent the collapse of Dub- lin banks proved impossible to finance on their own. Cowen - whose public approv- al ratings have recently fallen to a record-low 8 percent - insist- ed he wouldn't resign, as many lawmakers have expected, and instead would lead his party into an early springelection. All recent polls suggest Cowen's long-ruling Fianna Fail party faces decima- tion in any national test. Tuesday night's initial pas- sage of the Irish budget package offered temporary relief for the 16-nation eurozone, where Por- tugal, Spain and Italy have faced mounting questions about their own capacity to keep financing their own debt mountains. Euro- pean and IMF chiefs sought a bailout for Dublin, in part, to stem investor fears of a debt-default domino effect. Yesterday's yields on 10-year bonds were little changed for the eurozone members rated most at risk of an eventual default, par- ticularly Greece, which in May became the first eurozone mem- ber to be saved from bankruptcy. The most significant mover was Germany, whose benchmark bonds suffered a moderate selloff, driving their 10-year yields above 3 percent for the first time since May's Greek crisis. Traders said the selling reflected investors' increased appetite for higher-risk bonds versus the Germans' top- rated and consequently low-yield- ing debt securities. The euro common currency also held its ground, rebounding from a day low of $1.3189 to rest at $1.3250 in late trade. In Geneva, the International Monetary Fund's managing direc- tor Dominique Strauss-Kahn said the euro would not break up but that its rules and governance need improvement. In' fir SAN started swept prison people whata disaste penite A pr phone. ing for inmate The Migue fightin Wedne its mt three Rodrib gator A nary re set int by who Poli Jaime' quickly inmate The fir in thre "Th inside inhum Sebasti emerge were b and sm Sant Echeve toll wt ning, o vestigators says the victims with many of the bod- ies unrecognizable. Officials said e may have been most will have to be identified by DNA. intentional Health Minister Jaime Mana- lich called it an "enormous calam- ITIAGO, Chile (AP) - A fire ity" and the worst in the history I during an inmate brawl of Chile's prison system. A fire in through an overcrowded a northern prison killed 26 people yesterday, killing at least 81 in 2001. and seriously injuring 14 in Firefighters said they were an official called the worst alerted to the fire by a call from a r in the history of Chile's cell phone inside the prison, a col- ntiary system. lection of cement towers that rises risoner using an illegal cell above a middle class neighborhood called state television plead- in the capital. r help and the screams of A fire department commu- 's briefly aired across Chile. nique said the first firefighters fire in Santiago's San arrived on the scene nine min- 1 prison began during utes after the initial alarm at g between inmates early 5:48 a.m., and found a violent fire rsday morning and reached spread over a large part of the aximum intensity in just fourth floor of Tower 5. They cut minutes, Interior Minister through several locks, allowing o Hinzpeter said. Investi- them to save 60 inmates, it said. klejandro Pena said prelimi- Hundreds of anxious and eports indicated the fire was angry relatives of inmates gath- entionally, but he didn't say ered in a chaotic scene outside am. the prison gates. Some waited six ce operations director hours before officials read out the Concha insisted police acted names of survivors - which peo- y despite coping with 1,900 ple mistook for those of the dead. s at the prison built for 700. There had been warnings of e was brought under control problems at the prison. e hours, officials said. In October, Judge Ana Maria e conditions that existed Arratia Valdebenito said that this prison are absolutely Tower 5, where the fire began, ane," said Chilean President held 484 prisoners - more than ian Pinera, who visited an 100 per floor. ency center where inmates After visiting survivors of eing treated for severe burns the prison blaze, the director of oke inhalation. Chile's National Human Rights iago region Gov. Fernando Institute, Lorena Fries, said rria said the official death the overcrowding in the South as 81. By Wednesday eve- American country's prison is a 'fficials had identified 31 of problem that has been noted by the United Nations. Chile has "55,722 people in its prisons, which have a capacity to hold 31,576 inmates," she said. Pedro Hernandez, who directs Chile's prison guards union, said there were only five guards to watch over the prison- ers. Pinera, however, said there were six guards in the prison towers where the inmates are held, and 26 others stationed at the perimeter. Many inmates died on the third floor of Tower 5. Firefight- ers had to work with police to avoid more problems with pris- oners all around them. Some relatives of inmates told state TV that prison police ini- tially closed the gates to firefight- ers, impeding efforts by 10 units to control the blaze. "They wouldn't let the fire- fighters come in. The riot police came in first and began to beat us, and later the firefighters came in," an unidentified prisoner said in a call that was played on state TV. He didn't give his name, say- ing he feared retribution. He said the guards "laughed and took photos with the cell phones of the inmates who were vomiting (from smoke) ... and didn't do anything." Officials evacuated prisoners from lower floors instead of those inmates who were dying, the prisoner said. But Fire Department Cmdr. Jose Sanchez said it took 10 minutes for firefighters to enter the prison, blaming any delay on "the intense heat" they encoun- tered, not on the guards. Serbia refuses to honor recipient of Nobel Peace Prize Obama's plan for peace in Israel faces setback Nomination criticized as radical political move BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) - Ser- bia's decision to boycott the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony honoring imprisoned Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo triggered criticism yester- day from human rights activists and the European Union - which expressed shock that the can- didate for EU entry would meet China's demands. Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic said Serbia "pays extreme attention to the violations of human rights," but that its bilat- eral relations with China have priority. China has vilified the 54-year- old democracy advocate Liu, called the Nobel prize choice an effort by the West to contain its rise, disparaged his supporters as "clowns," and launched a cam- paign to persuade countries not to attend Friday's ceremony in Oslo. Eighteen countries, including Serbia, Russia and Pakistan, have turned down the Nobel commit- tee's invitation to send represen- tatives to the ceremony. Serbia fears its attendance could anger China, which has supported Belgrade in opposing the 2008 independence decla- ration of its former province of Kosovo. Some 70 nations, includ- ing the U.S. and most EU states, have recognized Kosovo's state- hood, but Russia and China have stood firm in supporting Serbia in its claim over the territory. Jelko Kacin, in charge of the European Parliament's evaluation reports on Serbia's bid to join the EU, said he was "shocked" by Bel- grade's decision not to attend the ceremony. "There is no candidate country, or potential candidate country, that in this way manifests its obe- dience" to China, Kacin said. The EU said on yesterday it will seek talks with the Serbian gov- ernment to persuade it to change its mind. U.S. had been trying to convince Israel to freeze settlements JERUSALEM (AP) - The U.S. decision to abandon its efforts to coax a settlement freeze out of Israel marks the biggest failure yet in the Obama administration's much-trumpeted Mideast peace push, casting serious doubts over whether the president can broker a deal by his September target. Israelis and Palestinians said yesterday that a scramble was on for a magic formula out of the impasse. But neither side showed any flexibility, and the Palestin- ians voiced new signals about trying to establish a state without Israel's agreement. The U.S. announced late Tues- day that after weeks of efforts, it had given up its attempts to per- suade Israel into renewing a lim- ited freeze on Jewish settlement construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem - an issue that has emerged as the key sticking point in Mideast peace talks. Some 500,000 Israeli settlers now live in these areas, which were captured in the 1967 Mideast War and are claimed by the Pales- tinians. With a freeze needed to draw the Palestinians back to the negotiating table, Tuesday's U.S. announcement was in effect an admission of failure. "There is no doubt that there is a crisis, a difficult crisis," Pales- tinian President Mahmoud Abbas told a news conference in Greece. A top aide to the Palestinian president, Yasser Abed Rabbo, went so far as to question Wash- ington's ability to broker a deal, asking how the Americans could possibly "make Israel accept a fair solution" when they couldn't even make it limit its settlement activities. "This is thebig question now," he said. The current round of nego- tiations collapsed in late Septem- ber, just weeks after they were launched, when a previous Israe- li settlement slowdown expired. The Americans had hoped a new, 90-day freeze would allow the sides to work out a deal on their future borders. Such an arrangement could make the settlement issue irrelevant, since Israel could resume construction in territories it expects to keep while halting building in areas given to the Palestinians. The latest setback drew state- ments of concern from Europe. Abbas' rival, the Hamas militant group, which controls the Gaza Strip, called on the Palestinian leader to stop the "futile" nego- tiations. But international Mideast envoy Tony Blair said the U.S. move was a "sensible decision in light of the impasse that we reached," adding that all sides remain determined to negotiate a peace deal. Ron Dermer, a top aide to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Wednesday that the American efforts had failed because of fears of what would happen after another freeze ends. "The Americans probably real- ized that the proposal of 90 days to get a border agreement - a Palestinian expectation - could lead to a dead end and failure of the talks," he told Army Radio. Netanyahu, who heads a coali- tion dominated by hard-line and religious parties sympathetic to Jewish settlers, appears unlikely to bend. "The whole idea of the settle- ment freeze for negotiations was a mistake," said Israeli analystYossi Alpher. -