The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, November 9,2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS WOODHAVEN, Mich. Father of 9-year- old driver charged with child abuse A 9-year-old girl cried yes- terday as she explained how she drove a full-size van in suburban Detroit while her father sat in the passenger seat after a night of drinking whiskey. The girl said her dad, Shawn Weimer, asked her if she wanted to drive in the wee hours of Oct. 8. "I said yeah but I'd be a little scared," she said. Weimer, 39, was charged with child abuse after police in Brownstown Township stopped the van and found the girl behind the wheel. A judge will decide Nov. 15 whether he will stand trial. The girl cried throughout her brief testimony. Judge Michael McNally tried to calm her and offered a soft drink before call- ing a recess. WASHINGTON D.C. qualifies for federal funding after earthquake President Barack Obama has signed a disaster declaration for the District of Columbia from this summer's earthquake. The damaged Washington National Cathedral could be eligible. Yesterday's declaration makes federal funding available to repair buildings damaged by the 5.8-magnitude quake on Aug. 23. Mayor Vincent Gray's adminis- tration says damages to govern- ment facilities total $6.8 million. Gray says money is needed to repair schools and other gov- ernment buildings as well as the cathedral, which was heav- ily damaged. Initial repairs are expected to cost $15 million. Federal Emergency Manage- ment Agency spokeswoman Rachel Racusen says Gray could seek funds for cathedral areas not used for religious purposes. The funds can also go toward prepar- ing for future emergencies. NEW ORLEANS Coast Guard ends BP oil spill cleanup * The Coast Guard has approved a pian to end cleanup along the Gulf Coast from the BP oil spill, a move officials said opens a new phase of work for BP - restoring areas damaged by the largest off- shore spill in U.S. history. According to the document obtained by The Associated Press yesterday, the plan "provides the mechanisms for ceasing active clean-up operations." In it, the Coast Guard spells out protocol for ending the clean- up. It has been going on since April 20, 2010, when the Deep- water Horizon exploded off the Louisiana coast. Coast Guard spokeswoman Lt. Suzanne Kerver says the shore- line plan outlines "the standard for clean." She said about 10 percent of the Gulf Coast fouled by the BP spill remains to be cleaned. PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti U.N. asked to pay for damages of Cholera outbreak A human rights group said yesterday it has filed claims with the United Nations seeking dam- ages on behalf of more than 5,000 Haitian cholera victims and their families. The claims filed by the Boston- based Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti argue that the U.N; and its peacekeeping force are liable for hundreds of millions of dollars for failing to adequately screenpeacekeepingsoldiers. They cite a range of studies that indicate the infected sol- diers caused the outbreak when untreated waste from a U.N. base was dumped into a tributary of Haiti's most important river. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Defiant Cain says he won't drop out of race Italian Premier Silvio Berlusoni waves to journalists as he leaves the Quirinale, Presidential palace, after meeting with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, in Rome, yesterday. Berlusconi to resig as Italian prime minister Demands for achieved the feat of becoming his nation's longest-serving pre- economic reform mier. The media baron dominated provoke possible Italian politics. for nearly two .sg .in decades. He served as premier three times over the past 17 years - a charismatic if polarizing fig- ROME (AP) - Silvio Berlusco- ure who sold Italians a dream of ni survived sexscandals and cor- prosperity with his own person- ruption trials. Tawdry accounts al story of transformation from of sexy "bunga bunga" parties cruise-ship crooner to Italy's turned him into an international richest man. He also owns AC laughing stock. Prosecutors pur- Milan, one of Italy's famous soc- sued him over a mind-boggling cer clubs. array ofsuspected improprieties. But in his last years in power, Every time he seemed fin- he became almost a grotesque ished, the perma-tanned pre- caricature of the charming bil- mier managed to miraculously lionaire who cast a spell over his bounce back. nation. But he just couldn't beat the The hair transplants and plas- markets. tic surgery became all too obvi- Berlusconi announced yester- ous. His reputation as a seducer day he would resign after parlia- gave way to allegations of trysts ment passes economic reforms with prostitutes and underage demanded by the European girls. He embarrassed Italy with Union. He acted in the face of jaw-dropping gaffes at interna- a relentless investor attack on tional summits. Italy's government bonds and Accusations grew that he was crumbling support in parlia- in politics not for Italy's sake but ment, almost certainly ending for his own - to boost his busi- a political career in which he ness interests and change laws to shield himself from prosecu- tion. As pressure for his resignation grew, he remained defiant, label- ing opponents "communists" to, be kept at bay and prosecutors as "terrorists" defying the will of the people who elected him. Even as his allies were defect- ing, he anointed himself Italy's savior at the close of the Group of 20 summit in Cannes, France, last week. "I feel a duty to continue these things," he said. "This is a great duty and sacrifice for me. Here, at the Cannes summit, I looked around and I don't see anyone in Italy who is up to representing our country. I asked myself, you could represent Italy if I weren't there?" But he had only so many polit- ical lives. The magnetic smile, the confident wisecracking, the perennial optimism were no lon- ger reassuring. When Italy became the new focus of the eurozone debt crisis, the financial markets delivered their verdict: Berlusconi him- self was the problem. ( rep SC( Under Repul Herm repute fully d of sex yester sy wo race fc "Ai declar Cai after the ca than voice1 allega MittI distur Spe Cain this,", paign er in as Ro tive ri At be wi test, I his an Th was i week surroi camp politi over 1 the le nomir Ro oppor answ nent full a grow conse "If a par yes, i Perki Famil interv An jain questions as well, when one of his two origi- nal accusers gave an interview utation of one of to The New York Times and was identified publicly by news orga- his accusers nizations including The Associat- ed Press as Karen Kraushaar, now OTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) - a spokeswoman in the Treasury r rising pressure from fellow Department's office of inspector blicans, presidential hopeful general for tax administration. an Cain sought to muddy the When asked about Kraushaar, ation of one accuser, force- Cain said he recalled her accu- lenied any and all allegations sation of sexual harassment but ual impropriety and vowed insisted "it was found to be base- day the growing controver- less." 'uld not drive him from the Kraushaar and her lawyer, or the White House. Joel Bennett, did not respond to n't gonna , happen," he questions from The Associated red. Press. But Bennett has told other in flashed defiance one day news organizations that he hopes a woman publicly accused to arrange a news conference in indidate of groping her more which all of Cain's accusers will a decade ago, adding her appear. to three other accusers with An upstart in the presidential tions that presidential rival race, Cain shot to the top of opin- Romney called "particularly ion polls and emerged in recent bing." weeks as Romney's main oppo- taking at a news conference, nent, with tea party activists and vowed, "we'll get through otherconservatives flockingto the as he sought to steady a cam- former pizza company executive's that has made him the lead- tell-it-like-it-is style and outsider an unofficial race to emerge image. mney's principal conserva- But, since Oct. 30, he's been val. dogged by accusations from one point he said he would women that he acted inappro- illing to take a lie detector priately toward them while he but then appeared to hedge headed the National Restaurant iswer seconds later. Association in the 1990s. And e Georgia businessman in recent days, the women have n the midst of his second started to step forward publicly. trying to curtail the furor At least two women who unding his unorthodox worked at the restaurant asso- aign. There were signs his ciation the same time as Cain filed cal trouble was far from sexual harassment complaints ess than two months before with the trade group and received eadoff contests of the GOP financial settlements. nation fight. One of them was Kraushaar. mney joined other GOP After her name was revealed by nents in urging Cain to several news sites yesterday, The er the allegations. Promi- AP chose to publish it after inde- Republicans pressed for a pendently confirming she was one ccounting. And there were of his accusers. ing indications of unease in Kraushaar and her attorney rvative circles. previously had attempted to keep there is a pattern then it's her name out of the public discus- t of his character and then, sion, but they issued an anony- t is going to matter," Tony mous statement last week that ns, head of the conservative confirmed she had complained of ly Research Center, said in an sexual harassment and received riew. a financial payout from the trade other name confronted Cain, group. Sarkozy overheard calling Israeli prime minister a liar'/Y French prime journalists, including one from The Associated Press, over- minister's heard the conversation but did not initially report it because comment made to Sarkozy's office had asked the journalists not to turn on the President Obama headsets until the news con- ference began. The comments PARIS (AP) - The French were deemed private under president's overheard remark French media traditions. to President Barack Obama French journalists rarely that Israel's prime minister report on public figures' pri- is a "liar" laid bare escalat- vate lives, for example, and ing international frustration when they report behind-the- at deadlocked peace efforts - scenes conversations involv- and left all three world leaders ing top politicians, they almost looking blemished. never cite the source of the Obama, heard through an information. interpreter, responded, "I have However, a French website to work with him every day." that analyzes media coverage Some Israelis felt French of current affairs, Arret sur President Nicolas Sarkozy images, on Tuesday reported uttered out loud what many fragments of the Sarkozy- think in private about Israeli Obama conversation. Prime Minister Benjamin Sarkozy's office would not Netanyahu. Others were comment yesterday on the shocked, and embarrassed. remarks, or on France's rela- Fragments of a conversation tions with Israel. The White between Sarkozy and Obama House and Netanyahu's were overheard by reporters spokesman also said they had last week at the Group of 20 no comment. summit in southern France, In the remarks Thursday in via headsets that were to be Cannes, Sarkozy said: "Netan- used for simultaneous transla- yahu, I can't stand him. He's a tion of an upcoming news con- liar." ference. Obama, whose remarks Sarkozy's remarks were were heard via a French trans- especially harsh for a man who lation, was not heard objecting has labored to improve French to Sarkozy's characterization relations with Israel while also of Netanyahu. According to using France's traditional ties the French interpreter, Obama to Arab countries to encour- responded, "You are sick of age peace talks - and whose him, but I have to work with maternal grandfather was him every day." Jewish. Through the interpreter, It's an awkward moment for Obama was heard asking Sar- Obama, who was already seen kozy to help persuade the Pal- as cool to Netanyahu but is estinians to stop their efforts Israel's main international ally. to gain U.N. recognition of a Several French-speaking Palestinian state. KARIN LAUB/AP Libyan Nadia Seif visits the interrogation wing of Moammar Gadhafi's intelligence service at the Abu Salim prison complex, in Tripoli yesterday. Seif says she was held there for seven months in the late 1990s, mistreated and twice raped by a guard. Moammar Gliadhafi's victimlns seek fair trials New Libyan government faces grievances amid reorganization TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) - Moammar Gadhafi's intelligence service killed Nadia Seif's hus- band for plotting to assassinate the dictator, seized her villa, then held her for seven months in a tiny cell where she says she was raped twice by a guard. The 59-year-old and others brutalized by Gadhafi's regime now demand that their tormen- tors be put on trial, but swift justice seems unlikely. Libya has just emerged from a traumatic civil war that piled new griev- ances onto the old ones of nearly 42 years of Gadhafi rule. Tens of thousands have been killed, wounded and displaced in eight months of fighting that ended with the tyrant's capture and death in late October. Many claims will likely have to be settled through media- tion and compensation, rather than the courts, to help wounds heal quickly and allow for a new beginning, said Jamal Bennour, a prominent Libyan judge. "The priority is reconciliation," said Bennour, part of a team that is drafting the rules for a "Recon- ciliation Commission" that is to hear complaints by victims of the Gadhafi regime and the civil war. Victims can also demand trials,he said, but acknowledged that Lib- ya's justice system will first have to be built from scratch. Seif, the ex-prisoner, said she fears many of the guilty will not be punished, including those who had minor roles in the regime. "The big guys, with- out the small guys they can do nothing," she said of those who imprisoned her. "We don't care about money, but we want our dignity back." Her story provided a glimpse of widespread human rights violations by the regime, which employed brutal tactics to quash dissent. Revolutionary forces have also been accused of abuses against former Gadhafi support- ers, raising the prospect of diffi- cult road ahead for those trying to rebuild the country and unite its 6 million people. Seif and her husband Mohammed had once been among the beneficiaries of the Gadhafi regime. Her husband worked for the intelligence ser- vice and the couple lived with sons Mohammed and Mukhtar in a six-room villa in Tripoli's upscale Andalus neighbor- hood. Seif, a confident woman who once worked as an English translator, said her husband eventually resigned, disgusted by his work, and opened a fur- niture store in Andalus. In 1996, he and others were arrested on suspicion they had plotted to overthrow Gadhafi, Seif said. lk i