■UNITED STATES
Tuskegee Airman dies
Lieutenant Colonel Howard Lee Baugh, who flew scores of World War II combat missions as one of the original members of the all-black Tuskegee Airmen, died on Saturday. He was 88. Baugh died at a suburban Richmond, Virginia, hospital after a brief illness. “He fought for this country and helped open some doors,” said a son, Howard Layne Baugh. “He helped show people the idea of black people as second-class citizens ... was wrong.” Baugh enlisted in the Army in 1942 and joined the all-black fighter group that trained at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. He flew 135 combat missions as part of a fighter squadron in Sicily, Italy. Tuskegee Airmen Inc said that fewer than 140 of the unit’s pilots are estimated to be still living.
■BRAZIL
Rapporteur calls for rights
A UN special rapporteur on indigenous rights on Monday urged the government to do more to overturn “critical” health and educational deficiencies and combat economic woes suffered by its native population. James Anaya, a US legal scholar descended from Apache Indians, spent nearly two weeks visiting indigenous areas. “The health and educational situation is critical for many indigenous peoples,” he told reporters in Brasilia. He questioned whether many social programs implemented, in fact, reached the Aboriginal population, and said that a government scheme to boost infrastructure projects appeared to run roughshod over opposition from affected indigenous communities.
■CANADA
Six prisoners escape
Five prisoners described by police as dangerous and possibly armed have escaped from the Regina Correctional Center in Saskatchewan. Police said on Monday that six prisoners escaped on Sunday night, but one was apprehended shortly before midnight. Police say no one was injured during the escape. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Regina Police Service are investigating.



