The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com tV8 Thursday, February 24, 2011 - 3A I NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Video recordings released of local store explosion Newly released audio and video recordings reveal chaos, calm and acts of charity in the aftermath of a suspected gas main explosion that leveled a Detroit-area furniture store, leaving two employees dead and critically injuring the owner. The recordings obtained by The Associated Press through a Freedom of Information Act request include 911 calls, police and fire radio traffic and images captured by cameras mounted to police cars and inside a nearby business. The video footage doesn't show the event itself, but one of the police car cameras does show debris flying through the air and landing on the street and smoke lifting into the air. "Oh my God. We have the entire city on Wayne Road," Sondgerath said. "Actually, the entire county." NEW YORK Man charged for killing victims on subway and streets A man charged with kill- ing four people and wounding four others in a 28-hour ram- page across New York City was charged yesterday with slashing a subway rider's head in a final burst of violence moments before his dramatic arrest beneath Times Square. Maksim Gelman didn't enter a plea or speak as he was arraigned on attempted murder and assault charges, appearing via video link from a hospital where he's being held in a psychiatric ward on a slate of murder and other counts. The Ukraine-born Gelman is accused of attacking his stepfa- ther; a woman whose friends say Gelman was obsessed with her; the woman's mother; and total strangers in a spree that spanned homes, streets and subways. Most victims were stabbed or slashed; one was run over. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. Court asked to clear way for Calif. gay marriages Lawyers for two same-sex couples again asked a federal appeals court yesterday to allow gay marriage to resume in Cali- fornia while the court consid- ers the constitutionality of the state's ban on same-sex unions. The couples' attorneys filed a motion asking the 9th U.S. Cir- cuit Court of Appeals to lift the stay it imposed in September on a trial court ruling that struck down the voter-approved ban known as Proposition 8. The request was prompted by an "intolerable" delay created last week when the California Supreme Court said it needed the rest of the year to consider a piv- otal legal question in the case - whether Proposition 8 sponsors have authority to challenge the lower court's decision, lawyer Theodore Olson said. BRUSSELS U.N. may mandate no-fly zones in Libyan air space A no-fly zone may be imposed over Libya to protect civilians from attacks by government aircraft, the U.N.'s top human rights official said yesterday. U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay says if unconfirmed reports of aerial attacks against civilians turn out to be true, "I think there's an immediate need for that level of protection." In an interview with The Associated Press yesterday, Pil- lay said she was "appalled" by the level of violence in Libya because protesters are only demanding basic human rights. -Compiled from Daily wire reports a EMANUEL EKRA/AP South African soldiers providing security for South African President Jacob Zuma wait for his arrival at the airport in Abidjan, Ivory Coast Monday, Feb.21, 2011. Libyan protesters de-mand removal of leader Gadhafi On prank phone call, Wisconsin gov. discusses strategy In talk with editor cozy relationship with two bil- 'e lionaire brothers who have Walker reveals plans poured millions of dollars into conservative political causes, to dismantle public including Walker's campaign last year. employee unions Walker compared his stand to that taken by President Ron- MADISON, Wis. (AP) - On ald Reagan when he fired the a prank call that quickly spread nation's air-traffic controllers across the Internet, Wisconsin during a labor dispute in 1981. Gov. Scott Walker was duped into "That was the first crack in the discussing his strategy to cripple Berlin Wall and led to the fall of public employee unions, promis- the Soviets," Walker said on the ing never to give in and joking recording. that he would use a baseball bat The audio was posted by the in his office to go after political Buffalo Beast, aleft-leaning web- opponents. site based in Buffalo, N.Y., and Walker believed the caller was quickly went viral. a conservative billionaire named Ian Murphy told The Associat- David Koch, but it was actu- ed Press he carried out the prank ally the editor of a liberal online to show how candidly Walker newspaper. The two talked for at would speak with Koch even least 20 minutes - a conversation though, according to Democrats, in which the governor described he refuses to return their calls. several potential ways to pres- Murphy said he arranged sure Democrats to return to the the call Tuesday after speaking Statehouse and revealed that with two Walker aides, including his supporters had considered the governor's chief of staff. He secretly planting people in pro- placed the call using Skype and union protest crowds to stir up recorded it. trouble. Walker spokesman Cullen The call, which surfaced yes- Werwie confirmed that it was terday, also showed Walker's Walker's voice on the call. Somali militants display five dead p eacekeeper bodies White House mulling options to stop violence BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) - The scope of Moammar Gad- hafi's rule in Libya was whittled away yesterday as major cities and towns closer to the capital fell into the hands of protesters demanding his ouster. In Libya's east, now allbut broken awaythe opposition vowed to "liberate" Tripoli, where the Libyan leader is holed up with a force of militia- men roaming the streets. In a further sign of Gadhafi's faltering hold, two air force pilots - one from the leader's own tribe - parachuted out of their warplane and let it crash into the deserts of eastern Libya, rather than follow orders to bomb a opposition-held city. International momentum was building for action to punish Gadhafi's regime for the bloody crackdown it has unleashed against the week-old upris- ing against his rule. The White House said it is reviewing options to compel Libya to stop violence, including sanctions. French President Nicolas Sarkozy raised the possibility of the EU cutting off economic ties. "The violence is abhorrent, it is completely unacceptable and the bloodshed must stop," White House spokesman Jay Carney said in Washington. Italy's Foreign Minister Fran- co Frattini said estimates of some 1,000 people killed in the vio- lence in Libya were "credible," althoughhe stressed information about casualties was incomplete. The New York-based Human Rights Watch has put the death toll at nearly 300, according to a partial count. In Tripoli, Gadhafi's strong- hold, protest organizers were calling for new rallies today and Friday, raisingthe potential for a new bloody confrontation. Militiamen and Gadhafi sup- porters - a mix of Libyans and foreign African fighters bused in - roamed the capital's main streets, called up by the, Libyan leader in a fist-pounding speech the night before in which he vowed to fight to the death. The gunmen fired weapons in the air, chanting "long live Gadhafi" and waving green flags. With a steady rain all day long, streets were largely empty, residents said. In many neighborhoods, resi- dents set up watch groups to keep militiamen out, barricad- ing their streets with concrete blocks, metal and rocks and searching those trying to enter, said a Tripoli activist. Gadhafi's residence at Trip- oli's Aziziya Gates was guarded by loyalists along with a line of armed militiamen in vehicles; some masked, he said. The radio station building downtown was also heavily fortified. In one western neighborhood, security forces stormed several homes and arrested three or four peo- ple, a witnesses said. "Mercenaries are everywhere with weapons. You can't open a window or door. Snipers hunt people," said another resident, who said she had spent the last night in her home awake hearing gunfire outside. "We are under siege, at the mercy of a man who is not a Muslim." But below the surface, pro- testers were organizing, said the activist. At night, they fan out and spray-paint anti-Gadhafi graffiti or set fires near police stations, chanting "the people want the ouster of the regime," before running at the approach of militiamen, he said. The Trip- oli residents, like other witnesses around the country, spoke on condition of anonymity because of fear of retaliation. In opposition-controlled Benghazi, the eastern city where the uprising began on Feb. 17, residents held a mass rally out- side the city's main courthouse, vowing to support protesters in the capital, said Farag al-Warfali, a local banker. They also called a one-day fast in solidarity with them. Afterward, young men went into the courthouse to reg- ister to obtain weapons, which had been looted from police sta- tions and military bases and then turned over to the city's new rul- ers, he said. The idea is to "take their weap- ons and march toward Tripoli," al-Warfali said - though Beng- hazi lies 580 miles (940 kilo- meters) east of the capital, and territory stilloyal-to'Gadhafi lies between them. The extent ofGadhafi's control over the country he has ruled for 41 years had been reduced to the western coastal region around Tripoli, the deserts to the south and parts of the center. Ater Gadhafi's speech Tuesday night, militiamen flooded into Sabratha, a town west of Tripoli famed for nearby ancient Roman ruins, and battled protesters who had taken over, said one resident. Around 5,000 militiamen from neighboring towns, backed by army and police units, clashed with protesters and drove them from the streets, he said. But his territory was being eroded. After intense fighting, dozens wounded, 10 AU troops killed MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - Somali militants said yester-' day they had paraded the bodies of five African Union peacekeep- ers killed in fighting and also were holding a soldier from Burundi captive after intense battles in the capital. The fighting appeared to come amid a major push in Mogadishu by Somali troops and African Union peacekeepers against the militants. Heavy fighting had broken out over the weekend after AU troops ^ discovered a trench used by militants to move supplies and fighters in the capi- tal. The violence started yester- day after AU peacekeepers and Somali troops launched a dawn attack on rebel positions, seiz- ing the former Somalia Ministry of Defense-building, which had been servi9g as the militants' base; according to Maj. Barigye Bahoku,- spokesman for the AU troops' Bahok eclined to comment on reports of heavy losses by the AU troops. An al-Shabab spokesman; Sheik Ali Mohamud Rage, said that militants had killed five peacekeepers and captured one alive. He said the militants had paraded the bodies of the five men. A Nairobi-based diplomat who quoted defense sources in Moga- dishu said reports indicated that up to 10 African Union troops were killed and dozens were wounded in yesterday's fighting. The diplomat said he could not be quoted by name because his organization does not allow it. Somalia's prime minister, Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, said yesterday that government- allied troops are expanding con- trol of the capital. U.S. denounces mistreatment of Cuban political prisoner's mother Protests mark one- year anniversary of prisoner's 83-day hunger strike HAVANA (AP) - The United States yesterday denounced what it said is a campaign of intimidation against the moth- er of a Cuban political prisoner who died after a hunger strike, and called on the government of Raul Castro to release all dissi- dents still behind bars. Meanwhile, Cuban oppo- sition leaders on the island planned low-key protests to mark the one-year anniversary of the death of Orlando Zapata Tamayo, who passed away on Feb. 23, 2010 after an 83-day hunger strike. State Department spokes- man P.J. Crowley joined a cho- rus of international criticism of Cuba for its treatment of Zapata's mother, Reina Luisa Tamayo, who was detained for about 12 hours last week in her hometown of Banes, in eastern Cuba. "Mr. Orlando Zapata Tamayo's death highlights the injustice of Cuba's deten- tion of political prisoners who should now be released without delay," he said in a statement from Washington yesterday. He called Zapata a "courageous humanitarian who died defend- ing a universal human right - freedom of expression." Amnesty International issued its own denunciation of Cuba's treatment of Zapata's mother on Tuesday. Reached by telephone in Banes, Reina Luisa Tamayo said she spent the day laying flowers and a Cuban flag on her son's grave and then went to get passport photos made for a visa to the United States, which has granted her political refuge. She said she plans to have her son cremated and bring the ashes when she departs Cuba for good - expected to be in the coming months, although Tamayo recently said she was still awaiting Cuban paper- work. Cuba had no comment on the anniversary. The government considers the dissidents to be mercenaries paid by Washing- ton to destabilize the country, and says its doctors did every- thing they could to keep Zapata alive during his fast. Since Zapata's death, the government has cleared its jails of many political prisoners. It has freed 46 activists, intellec- tuals and social commentators arrested in a 2003 crackdown, and now holds just six men arrested in that sweep who are considered "prisoners of con- science" by Amnesty. It has also freed about 25 other prisoners arrested sepa- rately for violent - but politi- cally motivated - crimes like hijacking and sabotage. Eliz- ardo Sanchez, a prominent human rights activist on the island, says around 100 such prisoners remain in Cuban jails, some convicted of violent acts including murder. Members of the Ladies in White, formed by the wives and mothers of the 2003 detainees, gathered at the Havana home of Laura Pollan, one of the opposition group's leaders, to mark the anniversary of Zapa- ta's death. Associated Press reporters saw a heavy police presence on the streets outside Pollan's home, perhaps in anticipation of a march. But another Ladies in White leader, Bertha Soler, said the women had no plans to emerge. "All we wanted was to get together and pay tribute to Zapata;" she said. "We are pray- ing, lighting candles and laying flowers. For the moment, we have no plans to march." Killiafs/ Coors Ligh t. -RIP- IIu A"° ,'wa. s. go