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WORLD- U.S. air N~wsIN BIEFf, f_.f HEADLNES ROUN THEWORL A~Hfl~l --l raid kills 11. Arhan Shiites protest U.S.-backed government 4 officials Say KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) - A U. S. air raid in southern Afghanistan killed 11 villagers, including four chil- dren, Afghan officials said yesterday. The U.S. military said it killed five militants in the weekend raid in the insurgency-plagued Uruzgan province. Sunday's incident came as American commanders and Afghan officials hunt for Taliban and al-Qaida suspects and try to improve security in the lawless south and east ahead of planned sum- mer elections. Their task was highlighted anew by a bold daylight raid on a remote mili- tary base that injured three American soldiers. Abdul Rahman, chief of Char Chino district in Uruzgan, said the attack occurred around 9 p.m. Sun- day in Saghatho, a village where he said U.S. forces hunting for insur- gents had carried out searches and made several arrests. He said the victims were outside a house and a helicopter was hovering nearby when "a big plane came and dropped bombs." "They were simple villagers, they were not Taliban. I don't know why the U.S. bombed this home," he told an Associated Press reporter by telephone in the southern city of Kandahar. The provincial governor, Jan Mohammed Khan, confirmed Rah- man's account that four men, four chil- dren and three women were killed in the American attack. He said U.S. authorities told him they found ammunition in a search of the village. During the search, "The people were afraid, they started run- ning," Khan said. Lt. Col. Bryan Hilferty, a U.S. mili- tary spokesman, said a warplane killed five armed militants north of Deh Rawood, a town in Uruzgan where the American military has a base, but had no more information on the exact loca- tion or time, and no word of any civil- ian casualties. Saghatho is 25 miles north of Deh Rawood. He said an AC-130 gunship attacked the men when they left a house fre- quented, by insurgents. ",They were running away from a known bad-guy site," Hilferty told AP, insisting mili- tary planners "carefully weigh the use of deadly force." Tens of thousands of Shiite Muslims marched peacefully in Baghdad yesterday to demand an elected government, as U.S. and Iraqi officials pre- pared to seek U.N. endorsement of American plans for transferring power in Iraq. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has been reluctant to let the United Nations play a greater role in Iraq until he is convinced the country is safe. Underscoring those dangers, 31 people were killed and about 120 were wounded Sunday when a suicide bomber blew up his pickup truck at a gate to the headquarters compound of the occupation authority in Baghdad, Iraq's Health Minister Khudayer Abbas said yesterday. Huge crowds of Iraqi Shiites, estimated by reporters at up to 100,000, marched about three miles to the University of al-Mustansariyah, where a representative of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani delivered a speech he said was directed at Annan, the U.S.-led occupation authority and its Iraqi allies. It was the biggest display of Shiite political power in Baghdad since Sad- dam Hussein's regime collapsed in April. It followed a similar demonstra- tion on Thursday by some 30,000 Shiites in the southern city of Basra. Sharon: Peace with Syria requires withdrawal Addressing two of Israel's thorniest issues, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon told law- makers yesterday that peace with Syria would require a full withdrawal from the Golan Heights and ordered a review of the contentious West Bank separation barrier. Sharon's comments on the Golan, made to parliament's Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee, were an unprecedented admission by the career hard-liner. In the past, right-wing Israeli governments insisted a peace deal could be reached without a withdrawal from the strategic plateau captured in the 1967 Mideast war. The prime minister did not tell the closed-door meeting whether he was willing to pay what he defined as the price for peace. However, one com- mittee member said it was clear from the context that Sharon is not ready to return the Golan in exchange for a peace deal. Also yesterday, the Hamas founder announced a change in strategy, saying the Islamic militant group would increasingly recruit female suicide bombers. Last week, Hamas sent its first female assailant, a 22-year-old woman who blew herself up at the Gaza-Israel crossing and killed four Israeli border guards. Episcopalian faction to establish protest group Conservative Episcopalians opposed to a gay bishop's consecration and other liberal trends were on track to establish a nationwide protest organization by the close of a two-day meeting today. Planners insist the budding Network of Anglican Communion Dioceses and Parishes is not a schism or denomination- al split but a "church within a church" whose backers will remain Episcopalians. The immediate cause of dissent was the Episcopal Church's decision last summer to elevate Bishop V Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, who has lived for years with a gay partner. But the meeting's chairman, Bish- op Robert~Duncan of Pittsburgh,, told a news briefing that the denom- ination "split from its own history this past summer, so who left?" get tested for the leg disease, called peripheral arterial disease or PAD. Severe PAD can lead to amputation. Worse, if your leg arteries are clogged and stiff, your heart arteries are too. Having PAD quadruples your risk of a heart attack or stroke, important to know so you can seek protective treat- ment.Anybody can get PAD. At least 12 million Americans are thought to have it, most of them undiagnosed. PIERRtE, S.D. Janklow resigns prior to court sentencing Whether they loved him or hated him South Dakotans will notice when Rep. Bill Janlow leaves the political stage he has dominated for nearly three decades. Janklow's resignation from Congress takes effect today, six week after the for- mer four-term Republican governor was convicted of manslaughter, speeding and running a stop sign in an Aug. 16.acci dent that killed a motorcyclist. On Thursday, Janklow, 64, will be sentenced and could get a maximum of just over 11 years in prison. Whatever the legal penalty, his remarkable public life is over. " I just wish we could wave a magic wand and make this all go away and end his career on a positive note;' said Har- vey Woliman, a Democrat who preceded Janklow as governor. WASHINGTON High cout Study: Most diabetics _ risking pDoor health to rule on combatant detaiment WASHINGTON (AP) - An inter- rogator begins questioning an al-Qaida prisoner who may know of a pending attack. The captive turns to his lawyer, who tells him that he can remain silent. The suspect clams up. The scenario is the Bush administra- tion's legal nightmare, but there is signif- icant concern that it could come true. The Supreme Court will decide this year whether U.S.-designated "enemy com- batants" can be detained indefinitely without lawyers and hearings. "Any lawyer worth his salt will say (to a client), 'Don't say anything because it can be used against you,' said Lee Casey, a Justice Department lawyer in the Reagan and first Bush administrations. Several former Justice Department officials and the former highest-ranking Army lawyer said if the Supreme Court sides with the combatants, it could be devastating for intelligence-gathering. "It'~s vital to national security to inter- rogate individuals and obtain informa- tion about threats, including immediate threats to our country," said Alice Fish- er, who recently left the Justice Depart- ment as a deputy assistant attorney general overseeing counterterrorism cases. "A private attorney may stunt the ability to get vital information." There are two U.S. citizens being held as enemy combatants, while more than 600 suspected al-Qaida and Taliban fighters are detained at the U. S. Navy base in Guantanamo, Cuba. There's grim news on the diabetes front: Nearly two-thirds of diabetics aren't properly controlling their blood sugar. And one in three older diabetics likely also has a serious leg disease that could cost their limb. This year, specialists for the first time are urging every diabetic older than 50 to - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 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