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LAS VEGAS

Controller stripped of

duty over “near-miss”

A veteran air-traffic controller was stripped of tower duty at McCarran International Airport while authorities investigated how two commercial airliners nearly collided on a runway.

No one was hurt in the Sept. 22 incident, and more than 100 feet separated the planes in what a Federal Aviation Administration spokesman characterized as a minor runway incursion but what the airport director, Randall Walker, called a “near- miss.”

“They admitted there was a controller error,” Walker said. “One plane was allowed to land where another plane had just crossed.”

The FAA said it did not appear the pilots of America West Flight 539 to Cleveland and Air Canada Flight 593 from Toronto had to take evasive action.

IRAQ

Human error cited

for Jan. copter crash

A helicopter crash in Iraq in January that killed 30 Marines and a sailor – the deadliest air tragedy in more than two years of combat – resulted from human error, not mechanical failure or hostile fire, according to a Marine investigation.

The crew of the CH-53E Super Stallion became disoriented when the weather turned bad and flew the helicopter into the ground, the report said.

The helicopter was taking troops to western Iraq to guard polling places during the Iraqi elections when it went down in the desert on the night of Jan. 26. A second helicopter made the trip safely.

NASHVILLE, Tenn.

Jewish organization

rips Southern Baptists

A leading Jewish organization is condemning the Southern Baptist Convention for using a group of “messianic” Jews – people who have converted to Christianity – in its evangelism.

Anti-Defamation League director Abraham Foxman said the effort is offensive because the Southern Baptists are using Jews who have converted to Christianity “to go after other Jews.”

“If people convert, that’s their individual business,” Foxman said. “But don’t use them as a tool to convert other people.”

At the heart of the ADL’s complaint is a decision by the Southern Baptist Convention executive committee to ask its missionary boards to study the idea of recognizing the Southern Baptist Messianic Fellowship as “an evangelistic mission to Jewish people.”

BRUSSELS, Belgium

Warrant issued for

Chad’s former leader

Belgium has issued an international arrest warrant for Chad’s former leader, Hissene Habre, charging him with atrocities during his 1982-90 rule, the Justice Ministry said Thursday.

Human-rights campaigners said the decision would serve as a precedent for prosecution of other exiled leaders accused of abuses.

Habre, who lives in exile in Senegal, is being pursued under a Belgian law that allows prosecutions for war crimes even if they are committed outside the country.

Habre, 63, is accused of torture, murder and other crimes in his eight-year reign.

A commission set up in Chad in 1992 accused Habre’s regime of 40,000 political killings and 200,000 cases of torture.

GENEVA

U.N. says 29 killed

in Darfur attack

The U.N. high commissioner for refugees said Thursday an unprecedented attack on a displaced-persons camp in Sudan’s embattled Darfur region reportedly has killed 29 people.

Antonio Guterres, chief of the U.N. agency, cited aid workers’ reports of the attack Wednesday at Aro Sharow camp, which also left 10 seriously injured.

These reports said up to 300 armed Arab men on horses and camels attacked the camp in northwest Darfur and burned about 80 makeshift shelters.

Some 4,000 to 5,000 Sudanese were believed to be living in the camp, and most reportedly fled into surrounding countryside, UNHCR said.

The nearby village of Gosmeina was also reportedly attacked and burned.

KIEV, Ukraine

Tribute paid to Jews

massacred by Nazis

Weeping survivors clutching red carnations paid tribute Thursday to tens of thousands of Jews massacred by Nazis 64 years ago at the Babi Yar ravine.

At a memorial park erected at the chasm just outside Kiev’s city center, about 200 people bowed their heads and laid flowers at the bronze monument marking the area where the killings took place in September 1941.

Senior Jewish community leaders bemoaned the fact that some of the country’s most senior leaders were unable to attend. The massacre began when Nazi forces occupying Kiev marched Jews to the brink of the ravine and shot them. More than 33,700 were killed in just a few days.

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