The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 6, 2012 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS COMMERCE TOWNSHIP, Mich. Detroit-area woman stalked by Iranian Supreme Court orders re- aggressive turkey trial for ex-iviarine An Oakland County woman says she's become a prisoner on her own property, stalked and harassed by a 25-pound turkey. Edna Geisler calls the foul bird "Godzilla." The 69-year-old told the Detroit Free Press thatcthe tur- key wanders near her Commerce Township property each day from nearby woods. She recently couldn't get to her front door after atrip to the grocery store. "I have to go to the post office atf6 o'clock in the morning to avoid him," said Geisler, who has been bumped and clawed. She has tried changing her schedule but this turkey is no dummy. A friend, Rick Reid, said * the turkey went after him, too, when he opened the door on his minivan. LANSING State debuts toll- free abuse hotline A new call-in system for report- ingabuse and neglect debutedyes- terday in Michigan, another step toward compliance with a court- ordered mandate for the state to improve conditions for children needing protective services. The new system establishes a single phone number statewide for reporting abuse or neglect related to children and adults. The num- ber will be staffed around-the- clock, including weekends and holidays. Decisions on whether to investigate a child abuse case are expected to be made on the spot, no matter what time of day or night, before being directly referred to county-level child pro- tective services staff. The statewide complaint intake system will be based in Kent County, where a six-county pilot program testing the system has run since September. The state- wide system replaces one where calls were made to individual Department of Human Services county-level offices, which some- times led to inconsistent results. MANILA, Philippines Philippine quake cracks buildings, sparks panic Amoderatelystrongearthquake cracked buildings and knocked televisions and glassware from tables today in a central Philip- pine province, injuring at least five people and sending others rushing outside in panic, officials said. Renato Solidum of the Philip- pine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said the quake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.2 struck this morning and was cen- tered just two miles (three kilo- meters) north of Masbate City on the island province of Masbate. The quake, which was caused bytmovement in a local fault, was felt in nearby provinces. Masbate City Mayor Socrates Tuason told The Associated Press by telephone that there were no immediate reports of major damage, and power and ' communications were unaffect- ed by the temblor in his hillside city of 90,000 people. UNITED NATIONS U.N. says disasters last year were most * costly on record The economic cost of disasters in 2011 was the highest in history - with a pricetag of at least $380 billion, mainly due to earthquakes in Japan and New Zealand, a U.N. envoy said yesterday. Margareta Wahlstrom, the sec- retary-general's special represen- tative for disaster risk reduction, said the figure was two-thirds higher than the previous record in 2005 when Hurricane Katrina struck the southern United States. In addition to the earthquakes, Wahlstrom said major floods in Thailand and other countries caused extensive damage. "The main message is that this is an increasing - very rapidly increasing trend with increasing economic losses," Wahlstrom said. "But the economics of disasters is becoming a major threat to a number of countries," Wahlstrom said. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Amir Hekmati, 28, was sentenced to death in January TEHRAN, Iran- Iran's Supreme Court has ordered the retrial of an ex-U.S. Marine who was sentenced to death on charges of working for the CIA, a news agency reported yesterday. The case has added even more tension to U.S.-Iran relations, as Washington and its allies press ahead with sanctions over Iran's contentious nuclear development program, and Iran threatens punishing retaliation if it is attacked. Amir Hekmati, 28, was sentenced to death in January, the first American to receive a death penalty since the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran. Hekmati was born in Arizona. His parents are of Iranian origin. Iran accuses Hekmati of receiving special training while serving at U.S. military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan before heading to Iran for an intelligence mission. In December, Iran broadcast a video on state television in which Hekmati was shown delivering a purported confession and said he was part of a plot to infiltrate Iran's intelligence agency. The U.S. government and his family have denied the charges against Hekmati. Yesterday, the semiofficial Isna news agency said the case would be retried. The report quoted state prosecutor Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehei as saying, "There was an appeal on his verdict. The Supreme Court found shortcomings in the case and sent it for review by an equivalent branch" in the court system. The report did not elaborate. Hekmati was born in Arizona and grew up in Michigan, where his father Ali Hekmati teaches at Mott Community College in Flint. Last month Hekmati's mother Benhaz Hekmati visited him in prison and met with Iranian officials. Some saw this as a sign that Iran might show moderation in the case. A lawyer for the family, Pierre Prosper, welcomed word of the retrial. Prosper said he is "waiting for official confirmation, but we are pleased with reports coming out of Tehran." Prosper said the family is looking forward to working with the Iranian government. The lawyer said an appeal has been in the works and progress in the case may be unrelated to the escalating pressure on Iran over its nuclear program. Dawud Walid, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations' Michigan chapter, described the news of the new trial "as a positive development." His organization sent a letter in January appealing for clemency to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader. "We're hopeful that Mr. Hekmati will get a fair trial with transparency," Walid said. A previous incident involving Americans in Iran was resolved, but only after two years. In 2009, three U.S. citizens were detained along the Iraq border. The three said they crossed the border unintentionally during a hike. They, too, were charged with espionage, but there were no specific allegations of CIA ties and training as in the case of Hekmati. HADI MIZBAN/AP Mourners pray over the coffins of security forces killed in attack in Haditha, Iraq, at their funeral in Falluah, 40 miles west of Baghdad. 25 Iraqi police killed in insurgent shooting spree Attack seen as attempt to reassert al-Qaida power in region BAGHDAD - Assailants wav- ing the battle flag of al-Qaida gunned down 25 policemen yesterday in a brazen and well- orchestrated challenge to gov- ernment control over a strategic town fraught with Iraq war sym- bolism. The attack replicated tactics used by Sunni insurgents during the war and appeared aimed at reasserting al-Qaida's grip now that the Iraqis can no longer rely on American help. The attackers drove through the town of Haditha claiming to be government officials and methodically executed guards and commanders. After half an hour they escaped into the des- ert, leaving a terrified populace demanding protection. Local authorities imposed a curfew and deployed troops. Mohammed Owda al-Kubai- si, a relative of one of the slain policemen, spoke of his four chil- dren, "now orphans because their father was assassinated by the cold blood of insurgency while our government keeps watching and denouncing." The choice of target was sig- nificant in several ways. Haditha is just 65 miles (105 kilometers) from the border with Syria, where rebels fighting the regime are allegedly gaining recruits from Iraq. During the Iraq war the town of 85,000 was a critical pawn in the battle, and was overrun and held by al-Qaida insurgents for months until U.S. forces ousted them. It was also the home of Abu Musab al-Zarqa- wi, leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, as well as the scene of a U.S. massa- cre of civilians. Iraqi officials described yes- terday's attack as a system- atic plot to kill policemen. The attackers came at 2 a.m. in cars painted as Iraqi Interior Minis- tryvehicles and brandished false arrest warrants for city police officials. At the first checkpoint they confiscated cell phones and shot nine guards, said Moham- med Fathi, spokesman for the governor of Iraq's western Anbar province, where Haditha is located. The convoy then stopped at the homes of two Haditha police commanders, including the colonel who served as the city's SWAT team leader. They were killed less than a quarter of a mile (400 meters) away, Fathi said. He said the attackers had false arrest warrants for 15 police officials. At a checkpoint near the main market a gun battle broke out, with the gang raising the al-Qaida flag, according to a police lieutenant in Haditha who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information. Six policemen were killed in that skirmish, and another eight were killed as security forces chased the gang through the city, Fathi said. The police lieutenant said most of the gang escaped north, but one of the insurgents' cars was shot up and found to con- tain an al-Qaida flag, black with a Quranic inscription, and al- Qaida propaganda. Fathi said at least one of the insurgents was killed. Local police said three were killed. Egyptian lawmaker ousted after lying about his nose job Ultra-religious political party forces member to issue apology CAIRO (AP) - A lawmaker from Egypt's most conservative Islamist party resigned from parliament after he was caught lying to cover up a nose job, claiming the injuries to his heavily bandaged face were from a carjackingand beating. Parliament member Anwar al-Balkimy represented the Al-Nour party, whose members known as Salafis follow a strict interpretation of Islam that forbids cosmetic surgery as meddling in God's work. The party said yesterday that he had resigned and Al-Nour was forced to issue an embarrassing and apologetic statement. "In light of the regretful incident involving Al-Nour party lawmaker Anwar al-Balkimy, the head of the party, Emad Abdel-Ghafour, wentto the hospital with a team of party members to question the lawmaker," itsaid. The party added that it found his claims of an attack were not true. Al-Nur spokesman Nader Bakar was quoted on the group's official Facebook page as saying al-Balkimy was expelled from the party. "Based on what the hospital officials said, we decided to expel him from the party, and so he submitted his resignation," Bakar said, adding that al-Balkimy apologized. "We are tryingto bring forth a new set of social values in politics based on Islamic principles," he added. "He may be suffering from an emotional disorder." Local media have been awash over the past few days with pictures of al-Balkimy's face swathed in such heavy bandages that only his eyes, mouth and black-bearded chin could be seen. According to Egyptian media reports, al-Balkimy checked into a Cairo hospital on Feb. 28 for plastic surgery on his nose and the next day checked into a second hospital, where doctors said he tried to claim he had been beaten and mugged. He also reported to police that he was attacked during an attempt to steal his car while he was driving on the outskirts of Cairo. He also claimed his attackers robbed him of more than $16,000. His false claims led to an outcry against the government for failing to address a crime wave that has been plaguing Egypt since last year's uprising ousted authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak. Just days before the false report, an Islamist presidential hopeful was beaten in a carjacking, and another Islamistlawmgaker was injured in a hit-and-run. While al-Balkimy was in the second hospital, a stream of visitors came to see him, among them the head of parliament who hails from the rival Islamist party of the Muslim Brotherhood. The episode was a major embarrassment for Al-Nour, fresh off its strong showing in parliamentary elections, which turned out to be the biggest surprise of the first free and fair democratic vote in Egypt in decades. Al-Nour championseone of the most conservative interpretations of Islam, partly inspired by Saudi Arabia's Wahhabism, and wants Islamic law strictly applied in Egypt. It captured a quarter of seats in both houses of parliament, making it the second largest party. The Brotherhood's party won nearly half the seats in parliament. Together the rival religious parties control about three-quarters of parliament. The statement apologizing for the lie was posted Al-Nour's official Facebook page, where there were thousands of shares and "likes" on the post. Hundredssresponded with commenuts such as "you all look really bad" and "how embarrassing." One person wrote: "Liars," using the common refrain employed by liberal activists against the country's military rulers. 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