The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 27, 2011 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, September 27, 2011 - 3 " NEWS BRIEFS CALEDONIA TOWNSHIP, Mich. Helicopter crash in northern Mich. kills two men A Macomb County man and his friend were killed when a small, private helicopter crashed as they flew to a hunting cabin in Michi- gan's northern Lower Peninsula. The helicopter's wreckage was found yesterday morning by a hunter on his property in a remote part of Alcona County, Michigan State Police Detective Gary Nesbitt said. About the time the wreckage was found yesterday, the pilot's family had filed a missing per- son's report at the state police * post in Richmond, northeast of Detroit, Nesbitt said. The crash site is in a wooded section of private land in Cale- donia Township, about 85 miles north of Bay City. The pilot's cabin is in the Alpena area, about 15 miles northeast of Caledonia Township. NEW YORK, N.Y. Strauss-Kahn asks N.Y. court to reject maid's lawsuit Dominique Strauss-Kahn 0 claimed yesterday he has diplo- matic immunity and asked a New York court to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the hotel maid who says he sexually assaulted her. Attorneys for the former Inter- national Monetary Fund leader filed the motion in a Bronx court, arguing judges there do not have the ability to try the case, because Strauss-Kahn's time as head of the fund gives him immunity from the litigation. The 62-year-old Strauss- Kahn was initially charged with attempted rape and held under pricey house arrest after the maid, Nafissatou Diallo, said he attacked her in his hotel suite May 14 and forced her to perform - oral sex. The case was eventu- ally dismissed when prosecutors said they had lost faith in Diallo's credibility after a series of lies she told them unrelated to the assault allegations. FAIRFAX, Va. Grandmother on trial for murder of S2-year-old girl A woman who killed her 2-year-old granddaughter bytoss- ing her off an elevated walkway at Virginia's largest shopping mall was motivated by hatred of her son-in-law for getting her daugh- ter pregnant out of wedlock, pros- ecutors said yeterday. Defense lawyers, meanwhile, acknowledged that Carmela Dela Rosa, 50, of Fairfax, tossed her granddaughter, Angelyn Ogdoc, off the sixth-level pedestrian bridge but said she was mentally ill and legally insane at the time. A jury in Fairfax County heard opening statements Monday at Dela Rosa's murder trial. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina Gas blast kills woman, hurts nine others near city An explosion wrecked two homes, abusiness and several cars early yesterday, killing a woman and injuring nine people on the outskirts of Argentina's capital. Early reports by some witness- es that they had seen a ball of fire fall from the sky around the time of the 2 a.m. explosion caused a sensation, but authorities said later that evidence pointed to an explosion of leaking gas. Officials said a search by the more than 100 police and others turned up a canister of natural gas with a poor connection to a pizza oven. After the reports of a fireball coming down, the government dispatched the large number of searchers to check for radioactiv- ity and any material that might have come from outer space. -Compiled from Daily wire reports U.S., Ukraine agree to remove uranium supply Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Ai-Moualem addresses the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters yesterday. Syrian nlnister: Violence result of int'l ivoveen Under deal, U.S. to finish nuclear research facility for medical isotopes NEW YORK (AP) - The Unit- ed States and Ukraine signed a deal yesterday to remove the for- mer Soviet country's stockpile of weapons-grade uranium by early next year. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Kostyantyn Gryshchenko represented their nations in signing the agreement to remove the stockpile, which could provide enough material to build several nuclear weapons. The deal was announced last year at an international nuclear security conference hosted by President Barack Obama but was not formalized until yesterday. Clinton and Gryshchenko had hoped to sign the deal in July, but it was delayed amid Ukrai- nian reservations, according to U.S. officials. Among other rea- sons, Ukraine wanted assuranc- es that the United States would complete a $25 million nuclear research facility called for under the deal. The research facility will be able to produce 50 different types of medical isotopes, using only low-enriched uranium and Clin- ton said the U.S. was fully com- mitted to meeting the timelines for constructing the facility so it would be up dnd running by 2014. The Ukrainian government also wanted to ensure that the. uranium deal was properly approved under government regulations. The government may be particularly sensitive, because former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko was arrested and charged with not obtaining proper approval when signing a natural gas import contract with Russia in 2009. Clinton praised Ukraine for making the "bold commitment" to world security. "This deal is a win-win for both countries and both peo- ples," she said. "It provides tan- gible benefits for the people of Ukraine and it makes the world safer for all people." . The agreement calls for Ukraine to remove all of its bomb-grade uranium to Rus- sia by April 2012. The mate- rial would be blended down and made useless for bombmaking. Late last year, the United States helped Ukraine make the first shipment of 110 pounds. Clinton also took the oppor- tunity to gently chide the Ukrai- nians for recent backsliding on democratic principles, saying that the 20th anniversary of Ukraine's independence in 2011 is art opportunity to reflect on U.S.-Ukrainian relations. She noted that it isn't easy to build a democracy from the collapse of a Soviet republic, but said the U.S. wanted to see improvements. "We are very committed to democratic progress continu- ing in Ukraine and therefore it is vital that the government avoid any actions that could undermine democracy or the rule of law or political participation," she said. She did not elaborate but her comment was a clear reference to the case of Tymoshenko. The United States has criti- cized the arrest as politically motivated and said it raises ques- tions about Ukraine's commit- ment to the rule of law. Mousalem diverts blame of about 2,600 deaths from President Assad UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The Syrian foreign minister, ignoring the mounting death toll from the bloody govern- ment crackdown on dissent, told the United Nations yester- day that external critics were to blame for the violence and for causing delays in President Bashar Assad's plans for demo- cratic reforms. In a speech to the U.N. Gen- eral Assembly, Foreign Minister Walid Moualem sought to paint the Assad regime as having been on the brink of wide-rang-_ ing democratic reforms when foreign inspired religious radi- cals and armed groups forced the Assad regime to put down the rebellion to hold the country together. Moualem said reforms "had to take a back seat to other priorities. Our overriding pri- ority was facing the external pressures which were at times tantamount to blatant conspira- cies." The Syrian government is under stiff sanctions by world governments, including the United States which has said Assad should step aside. The Syrian uprising began in mid-March, inspired by the Arab revolutions that have driven out autocratic rulers in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Presi- dent Bashar Assad unleashed a deadly crackdown that the U.N. estimates has killed some 2,600 people. Assad insists the unrest is being driven by terrorists act- ing out a foreign conspiracy to fracture Syria. The regime dis- putes the accounts of civilian deaths and says 1,400 people have been killed, evenly split between security forces and the opposition. The longtime foreign minis- ter said that internal desires for reform "have been manipulat- ed to futher objectives which are alien to the interests and express desires of the Syrian people. Human Rights Watch was quick to dispute Moualem. "The facts on the ground, as documented by the UN or our- selves, speak louder: the Syrian government has engaged in a merciless campaign of killings, torture, and arbitrary deten- tions to silence its people. The Security Council needsto take notice and act," the human rights monitor said in a state- ment. In a speech to the U.N. on Wednesday, U.S. President Barack Obama called on the Security Council to sanction Syria. The Security Council's response to months of violence in Syria was a statement con- demning Assad for turning his forces against his people. Start Your Career in Accounting. New Libyan leadership to end state security courts NATO continues air strikes against Gadhafi forces TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) - Lib- ya's transitional justice minis- ter said yestserday that he has approved a measure to abol- ish the country's state security prosecution and courts, which sentenced opponents of the old regime to prison. At a press conference in Trip- oli, Mohammed al-Alagi, part of Libya's new leadership after the ouster of Moammar Gad- hafi, said he has signed a docu- ment to disband the bodies. The step still needs approval by the National Transitional Council that now runs the country. "I am personally very happy to sign an approval to end the state security prosecution and court, and the state security appeals court," al-Alagi said. He said the document includes a request to abolish a third court for special cases where many opposition mem- bers were sentenced to life terms in prisons like Abu Salim in Tripoli, where inmates were massacred by Gadhafi's regime. Libyans are. pressing for ward with efforts to do away with some of the most hated remnants of the former regime even though fighting continues and the ousted leader's where- abouts remains unknown. Hundreds of civilians fled Gadhafi's hometown of Sirte yesterday to escape growing shortages of food and medicine and escalating fears that their homes will be struck during fighting between revolutionary forces and regime loyalists. Anti-Gadhafi fighters launched their offensive against Sirte nearly two weeks ago, but have faced fierce resis- tance from loyalists holed up inside the city. After a bloody push into Sirte again over the weekend, revolutionary fight- ers say they have pulled back to plan their assault and allow civilians more time to flee. NATO, which has played a key role in decimating Gadhafi's military during the Libyan civil war, has kept up its air cam- paign since the fall of Tripoli last month. The alliance said yesterday its warplanes struck eight military targets near Sirte a day earlier, including an ammunition and vehicle stor- age facility and rocket launcher. Sirte, 250 miles (400 kilo- meters) southeast of Tripoli on the Mediterranean coast, is one of the last remaining bas- tions of Gadhafi loyalists since revolutionary fighters stormed into the capital last month. The fugitive leader's supporters also remain in control of the town of Bani Walid, southeast of Trip- oli, and pockets of territory in the country's south. Civilians fleeing Sirte Mon- day described grave shortages of food, fuel, drinking water and medicine. Eman Mohammed, a 30-year-old doctor at the city's central Ibn Sina Hospital, said the facility was short on most medicines and had no oxygen in the operating rooms.She said most days, patients who reach the hospital find no one to treat them because fuel shortages and fear keep staff from coming to work. Northeastern's MS in Accounting/MBA for non-accounting majors: . Earn two degrees in just 15 months. " Complete a 3-month paid residency at a leading accounting firm. . Proven track record of 100% job placement. 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