The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 10, 2014 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, February 10, 2014 - 5A NEWSBRIEFS CANTON TOWNSHIP, Mich. Teen shot at Detroit dance club A 16-year-old boy was shot in the thigh outside a suburban Detroit dance club for teens. WDIV-TV and WXYZ-TV report that the shooting took place shortly after midnight Sun- day in the parking lot of the Aft\er Dark Teen Club in Canton Town- ship, west of Detroit. The victim was arguing with a group of teenagers when some- one pulled a gun and shot him. He was taken to an area hospital. His name and condition were not released. No arrests have been made. WXYZ-TV reports that the club holds parties for youth 19 years andyounger. PHILADELPHIA Power gradually restored after massive ice storms The number of customers without power in Pennsylvania has fallen to about 65,000 after peaking at 849,000 in the state following a midweek snow and ice storm. Utility crews have been gradu- ally restoring power since the Wednesday storm knocked down trees and snapped power lines primarily in the Philadelphia area. The latest outages Sunday morning include more than 29,000 customers in hard-hit Chester County, or about 14 per- cent of customers who get their electricity from PECO, the domi- nant power utility in the state. . Montgomery County had about 14,000 customers without elec- tricity, while Bucks County had nearly 12,000. Maryland officials reported nearly 500 customers still with- out power as of 9:30 a.m., up from about 300 just a few hours earlier. ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Ambulance hijacked with man inside sleeping Authorities say an Albuquerque ambulance worker catching some sleep in the back of his vehicle woke up to find himself the victim of a carjacking. Police have arrested a man and a woman accused of driving off in the ambulance around 3 a.m. Sat- urday while it was parked outside Lovelace Medical Center in down- town Albuquerque. Police spokesman Elder Gue- vara says the employee was asleep in the vehicle's rear but was able to jump out when the ambulance slowed near an intersection. Officers then pursued the ambulance as it headed east- bound, and then westbound, on Interstate 40. The ambulance finally came to a rest on 1-40, over Tramway, after authorities used spikes to deflate the ambulance's tires. BEIRUT S.A. president's son tied to fatal car crash in early Feb. A son of South Africa's presi- dent is being investigated in a case of culpable homicide, or negligent killing, after his lux- ury car collided with a minibus taxi on Feb. 1, killingone woman, South African media reported Sunday. President Jacob Zuma's son, Duduzane, was driving a Porsche when the accident hap- pened in Sandton, an affluent area of Johannesburg, South Africa's Sunday Times newspa- per reported. Duduzane Zuma, a businessman, could face charges, said The Sunday Independent. .Brig. Neville Malila, a pro- vincial police spokesman, said one person died and two were injured in a road accident on Feb. 1, but he declined to reveal the names of the drivers, pending an investigation. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Muslim Brotherhood accused of staging attacks, street rallies WALTER BIRI/AP Voters stand in line to vote in Zurich, Switzerland on Sunday. Swiss voters were being asked to decide on a proposal to cap immigration to the Alpine republic, a long-standing demand of Switzerland's most powerful party SVP. Voters narrowly approve Swiss immigration limits New policy may have negative implications for Swiss-EU relations GENEVA (AP) - Voters in Switzerland narrowly backed a proposal to limit immigra- tion Sunday, in a blow for the government after it had warned that the measure could harm the Swiss economy and relations with the European Union. The decision follows a suc- cessful last-minute campaign by nationalist groups that stoked fears of overpopulation and rising numbers of Muslims in the Alpine nation. Opinion polls before the vote put opponents of the plan in the leadbut asballotdayneared the gap began to close. Swiss public television SRF reported that some 50.3 percent of voters eventually backed the proposal to introduce quotas for all types of immigrants. About 49.7 percent voted against it, a difference of fewer than 30,000 votes. Support was particularly strong in rural areas, while cit- ies such as Basel, Geneva and Zurich rejected the proposal. "This has far-reaching con- sequences for Switzerland...and our relations with the European Union," Justice Minister Sim- onetta Sommaruga said after the vote. "It's a shift away from the current system of free move- ment of people." Although Switzerland isn't a member of the EU it enjoys close ties to the 28-nation bloc. Bern has painstakingly negoti- ated a series of bilateral agree- ments with Brussels, including one that allowed most of the EU's 500 million citizens to live and work in Switzerland with little formality. Swiss citizens, in turn, could do the same in the European Union. Under Swiss law the govern- ment now has to renegotiate its treaty on the free movement of people, though it is still unclear what kind of caps will be placed on immigration, and when. Switzerland already introduced quotas for immigrants from eight central and eastern Euro- pean nations two years ago. The latest decision is likely to have much more far-reach- ing consequences though, as hundreds of thousands of well- educated foreigners from Ger- many, France, Italy and other EU countries work in Switzer- land. Ahead of Sunday's referen- dum business groups warned that many of the 80,000 people who moved to Switzerland last year are vital for the country's economy, and curtailing immi- gration further could cost Swiss citizens' jobs too. The Swiss Bankers Associa- tion expressed disappointment at the vote. "We urgently need to hold constructive talks with the EU to explain our posi- tion," it said. al-, gi clair CAI author the ou Brothe tary w securit provin rallies ers wa steadil Suci cast ye alread ation i populo a seri cide a overth Mohar larly b The denied author attack that h the int it a te al-Qai. in the has cl most o month Hos Sunda what spread ously t who u cockta nades es. Th found ers wl declin. contin rity cr .Qaida-ins pired The alleged armed branch evoked by the Interior Ministry roup presently Sunday was described as being based in the city of Beni Suef, ms responsibility some 115 km (71 miles) south of Cairo. Ministry spokesman for attacks Hani Abdel-Latif named 12 people he said belonged to the RO (AP) - Egyptian alleged Brotherhood-led unit. 'ities on Sunday accused Inatelevisedstatement,Abdel- sted president's Muslim Latif said the group ran surveil- rhood of forming a "mili- lance, hunted down security 'ing" to stage attacks on forces, and provided shelter for ty forces in a southern militants. The ministry accused ce, as months-long street the men of killing five policemen by the group's support- and plottingmore attacks. ne but low-level violence Abdel-Latif's statement was .y rises. followed by footage of a man h a development would who identified himself as part t another shadow over an of a group that killed five police- y wavering security situ- men in attacksufrom motorcycles n the Arab world's most last month. He said he was the us country, plagued by son of a Brotherhood leader and es of bombings and sui- had received weapons training. attacks since the army The smaller, previously rew Islamist President unknown groups authorities mmed Morsi in a popu- believe to be disgruntled Broth- acked coup last July. erhood supporters are staging Brotherhood has always acts of vandalism such as burn- I violence and accuses ing police vehicles or attack- ities of orchestrating ing troop barracks, claiming s to justify a crackdown responsibility for the attacks as only intensified since on social networking sites and erim government labeled online Jihadi forums. These rrorist organization. An groups reject the Brotherhood's da-inspired group based official policy of staging only eastern Sinai Peninsula peaceful demonstrations. Mean- aimed responsibility for while, security forces have been f the attacks over the past arresting the administrators s. of Facebook pages accused of wever, the government's inciting attacks against police. y accusation comes amid "The people in these move- analysts perceive as a ments are likely from among ling insurgency by previ- those who refuse the coup," said unknown, smaller groups, Magdy Qorqor, a spokesman for se weapons like Molotov the main Brotherhood-led alli- ils and home-made gre- ance, referringto Morsi's ouster. to attack security forc- The escalation by security ey say the groups were forces comes nearly two months ed by pro-Morsi support- ahead of presidential elections ho are frustrated by the following Morsi's July over- t in demonstrations and a throw, after millions took to the uous heavy-handed secu- streets demanding his resigna- ackdown. tion. Same-sex couples to receive new legal ights and protections Federal decision will allow spouses to not testify against one another in court WASHINGTON (AP) - In an assertion of same-sex marriage rights, Attorney General Eric Holder is applying a landmark Supreme Court ruling to the Jus- tice Department, announcing Saturday that same-sex spouses cannot be compelled to testify against each other, should be eli- gible to file for bankruptcy joint- ly and are entitled to the same rights and privileges as federal prison inmates in opposite-sex marriages. The Justice Department runs a number of benefits programs, and Holder says same-sex cou- ples will qualify for them. They include the September 11th Vic- tim Compensation Fund and benefits to surviving spouses of public safety officers who suffer catastrophic or fatal injuries in the line of duty. "Ineverycourthouse, in every proceeding and in every place where a member of the Depart- ment of Justice stands on behalf of the United States, they will strive to ensure that same-sex marriages receive the same priv- ileges, protections and rights as opposite-sex marriages under federal law," Holder said in pre- pared remarks to the Human Rights Campaign in New York. The advocacy group works on behalf of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equal rights. Just as in the civil rights struggles of the 1960s, the stakes in the current generation over same-sex marriage rights "could not be higher," said Holder. "The Justice Department's role in confronting discrimina- tion must be as aggressive today as it was in Robert Kennedy's time," Holder said of the attor- ney general who played a lead- ership role in advancing civil rights. Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin said Holder's "landmark announce- ment will change the lives of countless committed gay and lesbian couples for the better. While the immediate effect of these policy decisions is that all married gay couples will be treated equally under the law, the long-term effects are more profound. Today, our nation moves clos- er toward its ideals of equality and fairness for all." Holder's speech was criticized by the conservative National Organization for Marriage. "This is just the latest in a series of moves by the Obama administration, and in particu- lar the Department of Justice, to undermine the authority and sovereignty of the states to make their own determinations regu- lating the institution of mar- riage," said Brian Brown, the group's president. In this photo released by an official website of the Iranian Supreme Leader's Office, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei makes a speech to military members in Tehran, Iran on Thursday. Iran to provide information on its nuclear program to U.N. Agreement indicates have worked on nuclear weap- new sentiment in political leadership VIENNA (AP) - In a signifi- cant move, Iran agreed Sunday to provide additional informa- tion sought by the U.N. nuclear agency in its long-stalled probe of suspicions that Tehran may ons. Iran insists it never worked - or wanted - such arms, and the U.N'.s International Atomic Energy Agency was pushing ahead with its investigation with expectations that Tehran would continue to assert that all of its activities it is ready to reveal were meant for peaceful nuclear use. Still, the IAEA's announce- ment that Tehran was ready to "provide information and explanations" for experiments in a type of detonator that the agency says could be used to trigger a nuclear explosion appeared to be the latest indi- cation that Iran's new political leadership is seeking to ease tensions over its nuclear pro- gram. 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