The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, January 23, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, January 23, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Two dozen hearses lead anti-violence parade through city About two dozen hearses led a motorcade yesterday through Detroit as part of a campaign to call attention to killings in the city. The United Communities of America organized the "Thou Shall Not Kill" motorcade, with a course from downtown through several crime-ridden neighbor- s hoods before ending with a rally at Fellowship Chapel. "God does speak," Pastor Ovel- la Andreas, an organizer, told the crowd. "And I pray today that those who have ears will hear what He is saying." The Detroit Free Press report- ed that the funeral home hearses were followed for blocks by cars, trucks and vans. Police cars with their sirens blaring escorted the procession. LOS ANGELES Severed body parts found near Hollywood sign Authorities have determined that a dismembered head and other body parts found in a rug- ged hillside park near the famed . "Hollywood" sign are the remains of a man who lived in an a nearby apartment. The victim was Hervey Medel- lin, a 66-year-old from Los Ange- les, coroner's Lt. David Smith said Friday night. Investigators, who are search- ing for suspects, served a search warrant on a Hollywood apart- ment in the area a day earlier, but it wasn't immediately clear if it was Medellin's apartment. "We don't want to give out too much information because the investigation is ongoing," Andrew Smith said. MANILA, Phillipines All 32 passengers aboard ships saved after sinking A cargo ship loaded with cement sank in the central Philip- pines yesterday and another ves- sel carrying iron ore went down off the country's eastern coast, the coast guard said. All 32 crewmen from both ships were rescued. The ship carrying iron ore, the Panamanian-registered M/V Sun Spirit, began to list Saturday off Catanduanes province and sent a distress signal. Though coast guard officials immediately deployed three ships and a helicopter for a search and rescue, it was a Philippine cargo * ship and a fishing boat that saved the crew of 12 Indonesians and two Koreans, who had abandoned the ship, coastguard Adm. Ramon Liwag said. SANAA, Yemen Yemeni president leaves for U.S. due to health problems Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh left his battered nation yes- terday on his way to the U.S. for medical treatment after passing power to his deputy and asking for forgiveness for any "shortcom- ings" during his 33-year rein. But in a sign that Saleh's role as Yemen's top power broker is likely far from over, he said he would return to Yemen before the offi- cial power transfer next month to serve as the head of his ruling party. Saleh's departure marks a small achievement in the months of dip- lomatic efforts by the U.S. and Yemen's powerful Gulf neighbors to ease the nearly year-old politi- cal crisis in the Arab world's poor- est country. An active al-Qaida branch there has taken advantage of the turmoil, stepping up opera- tions and seizing territory. -Compiled from Daily wire reports U.S. top officials talk to Afghan insurgents' SUNDAY ALAMBA/AP Soldiers stand guard at a major road junction prior to Nigeria President Goodluck Jonathan's visit to the site of a suicide bombing at the police headquarters in Kano, Nigeria yesterday. More than 150 people killed in attack in northern Nigerian city Discussions hope to speed up peace moves ISLAMABAD (AP) - Anx- ious to accelerate peace moves, top-level U.S. officials have held talks with a representative of an insurgent movement led by a former Afghan prime minister who has been branded a terrorist by Washington, a relative of the rebel leader says. Dr. Ghairat Baheer, a represen- tative and son-in-law of longtime Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hek- matyar, told The Associated Press this week that he had met sepa- rately with David Petraeus, for- mer commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan who is now CIA director, and had face-to-face dis- cussions earlier this month with U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and U.S. Marine Gen. John Allen, currently the top commander in the country. Baheer, who was released in 2008 after six years in U.S. detention at Bagram Air Field in Afghanistan, described his talks with U.S. officials as nascent and exploratory. Yet, Baheer says the discussions show that the U.S. knows that in addition to get- ting the blessing of Taliban chief Mullah Mohammad Omar - a bitter rival of Hekmatyar even though both are fighting inter- national troops - any peace deal would have to be supported by Hekmatyar, who has thousands of fighters and followers primar- ily in the north and east. Hizb-i-Islami, which means Islamic party, has had ties to al-Qaida but in 2010 floated a 15-point peace plan during infor- mal meetings with the Afghan government in Kabul. At the time, however, U.S. officials refused to see the party's delegation. "Hizb-i-Islami is a reality that no one can ignore," Baheer said during an interview last week at his spacious home in a posh sub- urb of Pakistan's capital, Islam- abad. "For a while, the United States and the Kabul government tried not to give so much impor- tance to Hizb-i-Islami, but now they have come to the conclusion that they cannot make it without Hizb-i-Islami." In Washington, National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden would not con- firm that such meetings took place but said the U.S. was main- taining "a range of contacts in support of an Afghan-led recon- ciliation process." AU.S. official, speakingon con- dition of anonymityto discuss the high-level meetings, said Petrae- us last met with Baheer in July 2011 when he was still command- ing NATO forces in Afghanistan. Petraeus took over as CIA direc- tor in September. Stench of death permeates Kano as hospitals overflow with patients KANO, Nigeria (AP) - People in this north Nigeria city once wore surgical masks to block the dust swirling through its sprawl- ing neighborhoods, but swarm- ing children hawked the masks for pennies apiece yesterday to block the stench of death at a hos- pital overflowing with the dead following a coordinated attack by a radical Islamist sect. The Nigerian Red Cross now estimates more than 150 people died in Friday's attack in Kano, which saw at least two suicide bombers from the sect known as Boko Haram detonate explo- sive-laden cars. The scope of the attack, apparently planned to free sect members held by authorities here, left even Presi- dent Goodluck Jonathan speech- less as he toured what remained of a regional police headquarters yesterday. "The federal government will not rest until we arrest the per- petrators of this act," Jonathan said earlier. "They are not spirits, they are not ghosts." However, unrest continued across Nigeria as unknown assailants in the northern state of Bauchi killed at least 11 people overnight Saturday in attacks that saw at least two churches bombed, a sign how far insecu- rity has penetrated Africa's most populous nation. Friday's attacks by Boko Haram hit police stations, immi- gration offices and the local head- quarters of Nigeria's secret police in Kano, a city of more than 9 million people that remains an important political and religious center in the country's Muslim north. The assault left corpses lying in the streets across the city, many wearing police or other security agency uniforms. Yesterday, soldiers wearing bulky bulletproof vests stood guard at intersections and roundabouts, with bayoneted Kalashnikov rifles at the ready. Some made those disobeying traffic directions do sit-ups or in one case, repeatedly raise a bicy- cle over their head. Signs of the carnage still remained. Police officers wear- ing surgical masks escorted a corpse wrapped in a white burial shroud out of Murtala Muhammed Specialist Hospital, the city's biggest. Hospital offi- cials there declined to comment yesterday, but the smell of the overflowing mortuary hung in the air. An internal Red Cross report seen yesterday by an Associated Press reporter said that hospital alone has accepted more than 150 dead bodies from the attacks. That death toll could rise further as officials continue to collect bodies. At least four foreigners were wounded in the attack, the report showed. Among the dead was Indian citizen Kevalkumar Rajput, 23, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. Jonathan arrived to the city late yesterday afternoon, trav- eling quickly by a motorcade to meet with the state governor and the Emir of Kano, an important Islamic figure in the country. His motorcade later rushed to what used to be the regional command headquarters for the Nigeria police, with an armed personnel carrier trailing behind, a soldier manning the heavy machine gun atop it. The Christian president, wearing a Muslim prayer cap and a black kaftan, looked stunned as he stood near where the suicide car bomber detonated his explo- sives. Officers there said guards on duty shot the tires of the speeding car, forcing it to stop before it reached the lobby of the headquarters. However, it didn't matter in the end as the powerful explo- sives in the car shredded the cement building, tore away its roof and blew out its windows. Blood stained the yellow paint near a second-story window, just underneath a 10-foot-tall tree uprooted and tossed atop the building by the blast. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also condemned the multiple attacks yesterday. "The secretary-general is appalled at the frequency and intensity of recent attacks in Nigeria, which demonstrate a wanton and unacceptable disre- gard for human life," a statement from his office read. He also expressed "his hope for swift and transparent investigations into these incidents that lead to bringing the perpetrators to jus- tice." A Boko Haram spokesman using the nom de guerre Abul- Qaqa claimed responsibility for the attacks in a message to jour- nalists Friday. He said the attack came because the state govern- ment refused to release Boko Haram members held by the police. State legislators break law with no punishment Arizona bill would grant law makers immunity PHOENIX (AP) - An Ari- zona senator gets in a fight with his girlfriend on a Phoe- nix freeway and avoids arrest. An Arkansas legislator leads officers on a high-speed chase through two counties and doesn't get taken into custody. A Georgia lawmaker claims he couldn't be prosecuted on a DUI charge. In each case, a little-known privilege called legislative immunity that prevents the arrests of legislators while they are in session came into play. The issue is getting a closer look in Arizona this year after a lawmaker introduced a resolu- tion seeking to amend the state Constitution to delete wording barring the arrest of legisla- tors during, and 15 days before, legislative sessions. Like those in many other states, Arizona's legislative immunity protects legislators from arrest except for "treason, felony or breach of the peace." Then-Sen. Scott Bundgaard became a part of the debate after he was involved in a domestic violence incident on a Phoenix freeway last year. He and his girlfriend at the time pulled off to the side of the road after an argument while returning home from a Danc- ing with the Stars-type compe- tition. The ensuring fight left both with cuts and bruises. Police showed up and put Bundgaard in handcuffs. Offi- cers testified that he identified himself as a legislator, cited the constitutional provision and demanded that they remove handcuffs, even though Bund- gaard denies invoking legisla- tive immunity. l