Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 30, 1986, Page 4A, Image 4

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Suspected killers captured
TEI. AVIV. Israel (AP) —
Security forces on Tuesday cap
tured Syrian-backed guerrillas,,
suspected of killing a British
tourist in Jerusalem and of lur
rying out three other shootings
in the holy city, police
spokesman Raft Levi said.
The captured gang belonged
to the breakaway Abu Mousa
faction of the Palestine Libera
tion Organization. Levi said.
A Jerusalem court, without
giving its reasons, clamped a
news blackout on the case.
Police declined to say how
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A
many member* of the gang were
arrested and where or how they
were picked up.
'===>• • .
But bevi said the group was
responsible for four shootings,
including the killings of British
tourist Paul A ' 1 y *n o,,,
walled Oiu OH. >umiay. and
of Israeli realtor Zehava ben
Ovadia in her office overlooking
the Old City on April 14.
The guerrillas also are believ
ed to have shot an American
tourist on March 7 and a West
Cerman tourist on April 16.
I^evi said.
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Hours: Downstairs
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Hours: Upstairs
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World news
Soviets ask Sweden for help;
thousands leave affected area
MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union struggl
ed Tuesday to cope with one of histor, » gravest
nuclear catastrophes, appealing for foreign help
to fight a reactor fire and evacuating thousands of
people from the imperiled countryside.
In its first report on casualties, the Soviet
government said the Ukrainian nuclear plant
disaster killed two people and injured an
unspecified number of others.
A radioactive cloud loosed by the accident
shifted, from Scandinavia back toward Central
Europe.
Poland ordered emergency measures, and
European political leaders angrily demanded that
Moscow explain why it did not quickly alert the
rest of the world to the disaster, an apparent reac
tor meltdown believed to have occurred late last
week.
“It shouldnlt be that way in a modern socie
ty,” declared Denmark's prime minister, Paul
Schlueter.
Some called on the Soviets to shut down all
their nuclear plants until international inspec
tions could be carried out.
The Soviet government claimed the “radia
tion situation" had been stabilized at the damag
ed Chernobyl plant, 450 miles southwest of
Moscow. But Swedish officials said the Soviets
had asked the Stockholm government for infor
mation on combating nuclear-plant fires, in
dicating continuing serious problems.
The official Soviet news media provided only
sketchy accounts of the accident. Other reports,
however, drew a picture of hurried exodus from
the affected area, but seeming unconcern in the
Ukrainian capital of Kiev, just 00 miles away',.
A West German technician working at the
Chernobyl facility said an 18-mile security zone
had been established around the damaged plant',. (
the Danish state radio reported. Truck convoys,
were streaming north from the area, near the
Dnieper River, said Swedish radio, citing unnam.
ed sources in the Soviet Union. •. ; ■ v
But foreigners living in Kiev said life in the
city of 2.4 million people appeared normal.
“No one was aware of anything No .one . '
seemed upset or concerned at all. Activity...was «
completely normal." U.S. Air Force Col. Robert •
Berls said Tuesday after arriving here from Kiev’,. ,
Western experts said serious health hazards
were unlikely beyond’a 30-mile range of the'.site., •
’ The. power station is'.hou'sed tn .Pripyat. a
new town with a population of about'25.(K)(>/The
three other evacuated towns were not identified.' .
Indictment says U.S. targets sought
ANKARA, Turkey (API — A prosecutor's
indictment says a Libyan Intelligence officer
visited Turkey in January to scout American
targets for terrorist attacks.
Security Court prosecutor Ulku Coskun
prepared the indictment, a copy of which was
obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press, for
the trial of five Libyans accused of planning a
grenade attack on a U S military officers' club
in Ankara
Two of the Libyans were captured near the
club before the attack could be carried out on
the evening of April 18. three days after the
U.S. air raids on Libya. They were carrying a
bag containing six hand grenades
The indictment said the club was chosen
because it would be crowded. About 100 peo
ple were attending a wedding party that Friday
night, and the prosecutor has said the explo
sion of lust one grenade could have killed or
wounded half of them.
Coskun’s indictment said the two Libyans
confessed to investigators and revealed details
of the plan.
it said Capt. Abdullah Mansur of Libyan
intelligence visited Istanbul for about 15 days
with one of the arrested Libyans “to determine
locations of U S installations" and “targets."
The trial is expected to start in about two
weeks.
All five Libyans are charged with con
spiracy to kill and bringing weapons into the
country illegally. Each could receive 12 to 20
years in prison