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Nation & world briefsMom of decapitated baby: ‘I didn’t mean to do it’
SAN ANTONIO – A Texas woman accused of decapitating her 3 1/2-week-old son screamed that she didn’t mean to kill her child after her sister made the gruesome discovery and called police.
The four-minute 911 call San Antonio police released Wednesday ends with mother Otty Sanchez crying, “I love him. I didn’t mean to do it. He told me to.” Her sister pleads with the 911 operator for an ambulance to come to the house. Priscilla Sanchez also tells a dispatcher during the call that her sister stabbed herself in the heart and stomach and that “there is blood all over the bed.” Authorities say Otty Sanchez told them the devil made her kill Scott Wesley Buchholz-Sanchez early Sunday. Otty Sanchez is charged with capital murder and being held on $1 million bond. Schwarzenegger to call special session on taxes The Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger says he’ll call a special session of the state Legislature to address California’s volatile tax system. The governor wants lawmakers to take up the findings of a tax commission he created last October to recommend changes to the tax structure. Exit poll: Pro-Europe parties win Moldova election The Associated Press CHISINAU, Moldova – A leading exit poll predicted that pro-Europe parties will win enough combined votes to defeat Moldova’s ruling Communist Party in national elections Wednesday – raising the likelihood that the impoverished ex-Soviet republic will move closer to the West. The poll by the Institute for Public Politics projected that four center-right opposition parties won 54.9 percent of the vote in parliamentary balloting widely seen as a referendum on whether to linger in Russia’s loose orbit or edge toward the European Union. It said President Vladimir Voronin’s Communists – who have held power since 2001 – were trailing with 40.5 percent. The institute said the poll was based on interviews with about 17,000 voters in 200 polling stations around Moldova. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points. Alexandru Tanase, deputy chairman of one of the opposition blocs – the Liberal Democratic Party – confirmed that all four would negotiate on the formation of an alliance. “The conclusion is that the Communist Party lost the elections after an exhausting campaign where there were enormous pressures not just on the political parties but also on the ordinary people,” he said. If official results confirm the projections, the opposition would be in a position to form a government if they forge an alliance, but still might have to negotiate with the Communists on a successor to Voronin. Parties need to win at least 5 percent of the vote to earn a place in the 101-seat parliament. Three parties failed to do so, meaning their votes would be redistributed – a move that likely will boost the opposition’s vote haul. With 39 percent of the vote counted, the Communists and the opposition bloc were running neck and neck, but many ballots still had not been tallied in Chisinau, the capital, where opposition support runs higher. Voronin criticized the exit pollsters, suggesting they were criminals, and he urged Moldovans to “be patient, attentive and disciplined and wait for the results.” Moldova has been in political paralysis since April parliamentary elections sparked violent protests, with the opposition claiming that vote had been rigged by the government. At least three people were killed and hundreds of others arrested after protesters – some of whom used the social network Twitter to organize after cell phone networks went down – stormed parliament and the president’s office after the April vote. A pro-Europe victory would move Moldova closer to the EU and NATO. It also would help Moldova repair relations with neighboring Romania. Voronin accused Romania of trying to overthrow his government during April 7 riots, and Moldova subsequently imposed visa requirements on Romanians. Moldova was part of Romania until 1940, and gained its independence after the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union. “This is the most important thing for us in power,” Voronin said as the projections came in. “This is the most important achievement – that we were able to organize civilized and democratic elections.” Voter turnout was just under 59 percent, the Central Electoral Committee said. In an effort to discourage any attempts at vote fraud, more than 3,000 foreign and Moldovan observers were monitoring Wednesday’s elections. A member of the opposition Our Moldova Alliance, Sergiu Bumbu, was shot in the leg near Chisinau by a man accompanied by two Communist Party politicians. An argument had broken out over allegations the Communists were breaking election rules, said Leonid Bujor, a spokesman for Our Alliance Party. Interior Ministry spokeswoman Ala Meleca confirmed the shooting and said police were investigating. The Communist Party declined comment. During April’s ballot, the Communist Party led by Voronin – who has been president since 2001 – took the most votes but failed to win enough parliamentary seats to elect a successor. Voronin already has served the maximum two terms. After the violent protests, opposition parties boycotted the vote in parliament for a new leader. Twice, lawmakers failed to vote in a president. That led to parliament being dissolved, which in turn triggered Wednesday’s election. Moldova’s president wields considerable power and influence. The president heads the armed forces and border police and can fire ministers, although he needs parliament’s approval to dismiss a prime minister. The president also can return legislation to parliament. The current vote was overshadowed by the world economic downturn, which has exacted a heavy toll on Moldova. The country’s average monthly wage is only $350 (euro245), and the International Monetary Fund has warned that its gross domestic product will tumble 9 percent this year. “On one hand, we either have European integration, or if the Communist Party continues in power, then we have the same situation as we had up to now: no proper reforms, only political statements that do not correspond to reality,” said Vlad Lupan, a political analyst. Ivan Mihailicenko, a 68-year-old retiree from Chisinau, said he voted for the Communists. “Only the Communists can give us stability and order in the country. ... The opposition will only bring chaos and destruction.” But accountant Andreea Gaibu, 28, said the country needed reform. “We urgently need change; things can’t go on like this. We saw what the Communists were like when three people died in the protests. Things need to get back to normal. We need a free press and a free economy.” ––– Associated Press Writers William J. Kole in Vienna and Alison Mutler in Bucharest, Romania, contributed to this report. |
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