The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.com Thursday, October 31, 2013 -- 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October 31, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. State House votes to add extra safety drills in schools Michigan schools would con- duct one extra lockdown drill and one fewer fire drill a year under legislation approved in the state House. Republican Rep. Joseph Graves of Linden said Wednes- day that his bill also would require school districts to post documentation of completed disaster safety drills on their websites within five school days. The measure was introduced after MLive.com reported school safety laws were rou- tinely ignored and state officials didn't know the scope of the problem. It's backed by a task force -appointed by Gov. Rick Snyder after the school massa- cre in Connecticut. BUFFALO, New York Bus driver stops woman from jumping off bridge A bus driver is being hailed as a hero for preventing a woman from jumping off a Buffalo high- way overpass. About 20 McKinley High School students had just stepped aboard Darnell Barton's Metro bus Oct. 18 when he spotted a woman who had climbed over a guardrail and stood leaning over the afternoon traffic zipping along the Scajaquada Express- way below. With cars and an occasional pedestrian continuing to pass by her, Barton wasn't sure at first that the woman was in distress. He stopped his bus, opened the door and asked if she needed help, at that moment conflicted between the rules of his job, which required him to call his dispatcher, and his training as a former volunteer firefighter and member of the Buffalo Special Police, which told him that if he made contact, he shouldn't break it. LONDON British journalists * plead guilty for phone hacking A prosecutor said Wednes- day that there was "a con- spiracy which involved a significant number of people" to hack phones at the Rupert Mur- doch-owned News of the World, revealing that three senior journalists at the now-defunct newspaper have pleaded guilty to illegally eavesdropping on voicemails. Opening the long-awaited hacking trial of former News of the World editors Rebekah Brooks, Andy Coulson and oth- ers, prosecution lawyer Andrew Edis said hacking and other illegal activity at the paper and its sister tabloid, The Sun, went on for a decade. He said it was inconceivable that the top exec- utives didn't know about it. MEXICO CITY Mexico evacuates 4,500 residents due to gas line leak A geyser of gasoline spewing from a state-owned pipeline in western Mexico forced officials to evacuate about 4,500 people on Wednesday. Officials blamed the accident on fuel thieves. Photos from the scene in the town of Tlajomulco, near the city of Guadalajara, showed a plume of gasoline shooting into the air from the pipeline, located in a field near a hous- ing development. Guadalajara is Mexico's second-largest city and the capital of Jalisco state. The gasoline had not caught fire and there were no immedi- ate reports of injuries. The clos- est homes were about 150 yards (meters) from the leak. -Compiled from Daily wire reports A S: upport for rebel groups must cease In this Aug.1 photo, a teenage sex worker, right, lights up a cigarette as her pimp identified as Chimoy, left, looks on in a room at a boarding house in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. inors pimping out kids for sex in Indonesia R ec BA - Ch draw cheek Dunh umn He attitu of a w only: terfly and s embh Ch accou and s Sh when sister for s frien she e. ation a hou girls a mar poor( "T} to res proud ingleaders can and 16 have been caught work- ing as "mamis" so far this year, irn up to $400 and there are likely far more. It's easier than ever. Kids per month in can use text messages and social media to book clients and commission make transactions without ever standing on a dark corner in a .NDUNG, Indonesia (AP) miniskirt and heels. imoy flicks a lighter and "The sickening thing is you s a long drag until her see 11-year-olds, 12-year-olds, ks collapse on the skinny getting into these practices,' ill Mild, exhaling a col- says Leonarda Kling, Jakarta- of smoke. based regional representative r no-nonsense, tough-girl for Terre des Hommes Nether- ide projects the confidence lands, a nonprofit working on roman in her 30s, yet she's trafficking issues. "You think: 17. Colorful angel and but- 'The whole future of this child tattoos cover her skin, is just going to waste."' the wears a black T-shirt Chimoy, who has occasion- azoned with a huge skull. ally worked as a prostitute, and imoy - by her own other teens in the sex industry tnt and those of other girls interviewed for this story are ocial workers - is a pimp. identified by their nicknames. e got into the business The Associated Press does not she was 14. A boyfriend's typically identify children who asked her to sell herself have been sexually abused. ex, but she recruited a Recently, in the eastern city d for the job instead. Then of Surabaya, a 15-year-old was stablished a pimping oper- busted after escorting three that grew to include a car, other teens to meet clients at a use and some 30 working hotel. Police spokeswoman Maj. earning her up to $3,000 Suparti says the girl employed nth - a small fortune in a 10 prostitutes - including country. classmates, Facebook friends he money was too strong and even her older sister - and ist," she says. "I was really collected up to a quarter of the d to make money on my $50.to $150 received for each taurants first to size them up. "She was running her pimp action like a professional," Suparti says. Human trafficking and sex tourism have long been big business in this vast archi- pelago of 240 million, thanks to rampant corruption, weak law enforcement and a lack of reporting largely due to family embarrassment or little faith in the system. The U.N. International Labor Organization estimates 40,000 to 70,000 children become vic- tims of sexual exploitation in Indonesia annually.. Much of this abuse is driven by adults, but poverty and con- sumerism play a role. Indone- sia's have-nots rub up against a growing middle class obsessed with the latest gadgets and the ultra-wealthy flaunting their designer clothes and luxury cars. It was a smartphone that drove soft-spoken Daus into prostitution at age 14. The son of a factory worker and a street food vendor, the lanky boy says he was soon making $400 to $500 a month for having sex regularly with three women in their 30s and 40s. "I didn't want to do it, but I had to have the BlackBerry," he says. Indonesia is a social- media crazed country that ranks as one of the world's top Facebook and Twitter users. "If we don't have a BlackBerry, we feel we are nothing, and we are ignored by our friends." Syrian leaders comments casts more doubt on peace efforts DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Syrian President Bashar Assad told the Arab League-U.N. envoy Wednesday that foreign support for the armed opposi- tion must end if any political solution to the country's con- flict is to succeed, state-run media said. Assad's comments to Lakhdar Brahimi during their meeting in Damascus cast further doubt on already sputtering efforts to convene an international peace conference to try to end the country's civil war. The United States, Russia and the United Nations have been trying for months to bring the Syrian government and the opposition together in Geneva to attempt to negotiate a politi- cal resolution to the conflict. After repeated delays, efforts renewed in earnest last month to organize the conference, but the Syrian opposition remains deeply divided over whether to attend, while the government refuses to sit down with the armed opposition. Brahimi's trip to Damascus was the latest stop on a region- al tour in recent days as he tries to lay the groundwork for the proposed peace talks in Geneva that are tentatively planned for next month. But Assad, whose government has regained the momentum in recent months in the conflict, showed little sign of inching toward compromise. "For any political solution to be successful, it is crucial to halt support for terrorist groups and' the countries that sponsor them, facilitate the entry of terror- ist mercenaries and offer them money, weapons and logistical support," Assad was quoted by Al-Ikhbariya television as tell- ing Brahimi. "The Syrian people alone are entitled to draw the future of Syria. Any solution must be approved by them and reflect their wishes away from any foreign intervention." "This is paramount to prepare the circumstances for dialogue and put clear mechanisms that achieve this goal," Assad said. Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar are among the Syr- ian opposition's most active sup- porters, providing financial and logistical support to the rebels. The United States and some ofits European allies have provided non-lethal aid, although Wash- ington has promised for months to send light arms to Western- backed opposition fighters. The meeting Wednesday between Brahimi and Assad was the first direct contact between the men in 10 months. After his last trip to Syria in December 2012, Brahimi angered Syrian authorities when he said that 40 years of rule by Assad's fam- ily was "too long." Syrian offi- cials then accused him of being biased. The diplomatic push aims to end a conflict that has killed more than 100,000 people and forced some 2 million more to flee the country. Now in its third year, the civil war pits a primari- ly Sunni Muslimrebelmovement against a government whose security forces are stacked with members ofAssad'sAlawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights activist group said rebels killed at least 17 people in an attack on a predominantly Alawite village in the central province of Homs early Wednesday. Observatory directory Rami Abdurrahman said the opposi- tion fighters killed six govern- ment troops at a checkpoint in Shallouh before sweeping into the village itself, where they killed 11 residents. The SANA state news agency blamed the attack on a "terror- ist group," and said 13 locals were killed. The report did not mention any slain soldiers. The government refers to those try- ing to topple Assad as "terror- ists." own." Two years ago in Indonesia, there were zero reports of child pimps like Chimoy who work as the boss with no adults behind the scenes. But the National Commission for Child Protec- tion says 21 girls between 14 call. She conducted business over the popular BlackBerry Mes- senger service, earning up to $400 a month, says Suparti, who uses one name like many Indonesians. The girl also met potential clients in malls or res- Saudi writer who opposed driving ban detained Newtown families ask task force to not release 911 tapes Relatives say written transcripts of the calls are permissible HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - A husband and a mother of two victims of the Sandy Hook Ele- mentary School massacre told a Connecticut task force Wednes- day they don't want the 911 tapes released, saying no one needs to hear the sounds from that day. Bill Sherlach, whose wife, Mary, was killed on Dec.14, said the panel should recommend a compromise to state lawmakers, such as providing members of the media and others a written transcription of the emergency calls. 'There must be some sort of balance between making sure that the public's right to know is sustained while the victims-of- certain-atrocities' right to pri- vacy is also honored," Sherlach told the task force members. He added that "911 transcripts can relay all the necessary informa- tion that the public wants with- out having to hear the sounds of a slaughter in the background." Hours later, the prosecutor leading the investigation of the shooting filed an application, ask- ing a Connecticut court to stay an order by the state's Freedom of Information Commission last month to release the 911 tapes. The panel had ruled in favor of The Associated Press, which sought access to the recordings. Danbury State's Attorney Stephen Sedensky II argued that the stay would ensure his appeal of the FOI's decision is not rendered moot; records of child abuse are not unlawfully disclosed; victims and witness- es are not intimated; and state- ments of victims and witnesses are not released. The AP routinely requests such documents in news gather- ing. It was done in part to exam- ine the police response to the massacre that sent officers from multiple agencies racing to the school. The shooting left 20 first graders and six educators dead. If the recordings are released, the AP would review the content and determine what, if any of it would meet the news coopera- tive's standards for publication. "AP's motivation here is sim- ple. This was one of the worst school shootings in U.S. history, and we're pressing for access to recordings that could shed light on the law enforcement response," said William J. Kole, New England bureau chief for the news cooperative. In June, Connecticut law- makers passed legislation that prevented the public release of crime scene photos and video evidence depicting a homicide victim if those records consti- tute an "unwarranted invasion of personal privacy" of the victim or the victim's surviving family members. The new law also cre- ated a one-year moratorium on the release of certain portions of audiotape and other record- ings in which the condition of a homicide victim is described. The exemption did not, how- ever, include 911 emergency call recordings, which are typically released in Connecticut. The same legislation cre- ated The Task Force on Victim Privacy and the Public's Right to Know and charged it with coming up with recommenda- tions for the General Assembly to consider in next year's new legislative session. Earlier this month, an attorney represent- ing 22 of the 26 families who lost relatives in the shooting asked that the audiotape of the Sandy Hook 911 calls not be publicly released. Both Sherlach and Nicole Hockley, whose son, Dylan, was killed, said they are not asking for a categorical exclusion of all 911 audio tapes from the state's FOI Act. Rather, they said dif- ferent elements of each case need to be considered before releasing the tapes. "We're not saying all or noth- ing," Hockley said. They maintain that the sensi- tivity of the Sandy Hook shoot- ing, the emotional impact the tapes would have on families and the fact there's no question about who committed the crime support their argument that the tapes should not be released in their case. They also remain con- cerned about the crime scene photos someday being released, predicting such images and sounds would live forever on the Internet and would be used by people with various political agendas. Male columnist had criticized gov. crackdown on women drivers DUBAI, United Arab Emir- ates (AP) - Saudi authorities have detained a columnist who supported ending his country's ban on women driving, activ- ists said Wednesday. The activists, who wished to remain anonymous for fear of retribution, said Tariq al- Mubarak was called by inves- tigators in the capital Riyadh concerning a stolen car over the weekend. When he arrived at the Interior Ministry's Crimi- nal Investigation Department on Sunday, he was interrogated instead about his role in a cam- paign launched by reformers seeking the right of women to drive in the kingdom. When his friends were informed they could pick him up at the investigator's office, they too were detained for sev- eral hours and questioned over the campaign's activities, activ- ists said. Human Rights Watch and activists who know al-Mubarak say he remains in detention with no access to a lawyer. The New York-based organization called for al-Mubarak's imme- diate release and on authorities "to stop harassing and trying to intimidate activists and women who defied the driving ban." The spokesman for the Inte- rior Ministry, Mansour al- Turki, could not be reached for comment. In a column published in the pan-Arab daily Asharq al- Awsat the day of his arrest, al- Mubarak said extremists are intimidating people from exer- cising'their rights. He said the courts in Saudi Arabia do not have sufficient provisions to deter those who threaten and terrorize others from exercis- ing their freedoms because "rights and freedoms ... are not instilled in our culture, nor our interpretation of religion." Al-Mubarak, who also works as aschoolteacher, was among a core group of active young Sau- dis calling for women's right to drive. Around 60 women claimed they got behind the wheel Sat- urday to oppose the ban. The campaign sparked protest by the kingdom's ultraconserva- tive religious establishment. The reformers behind the Oct. 26 driving campaign say their efforts are ongoing and that they continue to receive videos by women filming them- selves flouting the driving ban. The activists told The Asso- ciated Press that they have been followed for the past sev- eral days and are anticipating arrest. They have put in place contingency plans and emer- gency numbers for journalists and rights organizations to call in case they are detained. At least two women have been fined recently by police for driving, the activists said. Samia El-Moslimany said she was given a nearly $135 fine for driving in the kingdom, though she has a U.S. driver's license. 4 A A