"Am I therefore become your enemy,because I TELL YOU THE TRUTH...?"
(Galatians 4:16)

Tropical Storm Fay floods hundreds of Fla. homes

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.-Hundreds of central Florida homes flooded Wednesday as Tropical Storm Fay drenched the state for a third consecutive day, and forecasters warned the waters could worsen because the storm had stubbornly stalled.The storm could dump 30 inches of rain in some areas of Florida and the National Hurricane Center said up to 22 inches had already fallen near Melbourne, just south of Cape Canaveral on the state's central Atlantic coast."In some areas, it's waist-deep," said Erick Gill, a spokesman for St. Lucie County, which is south of Melbourne. "We've had reports of people having 3 to 5 feet of water in their home." Gill said hundreds of homes had been flooded, though a count was incomplete. Homes also were flooded in Brevard County, said Bob Lay, the county's emergency operations director. Floodwaters also had caused sewage to back up, affecting another 40,000 to 50,000 people in three towns.The Florida National Guard mobilized about a dozen guardsmen and some high-water vehicles to assist with damage assesment and help evacuate people trapped in homes, said Jon Myatt, spokesman for the Florida Department of Military Affairs.Forecasters had originally expected Fay to energize over the ocean and possibly become a hurricane. But the storm's center remained just inland early Wednesday and forecasters said it might not go over the water until the afternoon.Yvonne Martinez, spokeswoman for the city of Palm Bay, said 2 to 3 feet of water rendered many roadways impassable. "From what I've seen, some people won't be able to get out of their houses until the water recedes," she said.The storm remained near Cape Canaveral at 2 p.m. EDT Wednesday, not having moved much in several hours. Its maximum sustained winds were back up to about 50 mph and it was expected to resume slowly moving north later Wednesday.Steve Letro, chief meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Jacksonville, said Wednesday parts of northern Florida could get 10 to 15 inches of rain, while southern Georgia could receive 3 to 6 inches.Bands from Fay, meanwhile, brought intermittent rains to Georgia's 100-mile coastline Wednesday from St. Marys at the Florida state line to Savannah.Robyn Butler, 45, and her husband fled their 32-foot camper in Vero Beach, Fla., after it flooded. They got a hotel room inland in Sebastian, but planned to leave it Wednesday and return home because storm water was also pooling there. The toilets were backing up, Butler said, and wouldn't flush."(My husband is) from Kansas and he gets all bug-eyed when he hears tornadoes," Butler said. "So we decided to evacuate."A hurricane watch was discontinued for parts of north Florida and Georgia. A tropical storm warning was extended, covering an area from Fort Pierce, Fla., to Altamaha Sound in Georgia. A warning means such conditions are expected within 24 hours, while a watch means such conditions are possible within 36 hours.The storm hit the Florida Keys on Monday, veered over the Gulf and then traversed east across the state Tuesday on a path that would have taken it over the Atlantic before it curved toward the Florida-Georgia border. It was welcome in rain-starved croplands."It's very seldom we're hoping for a hurricane, but we are," said Randy Branch, a farmer in southeast Georgia where lingering drought has left about a third of his cotton and peanut crops bare this summer. "We need some rain pretty bad."In Duval County, which surrounds Jacksonville, officials prepared shelters, cleared drainage areas that could flood and readied emergency response teams. Public schools canceled Wednesday and Thursday classes, and mobile home residents were encouraged to find sturdier shelter.In southeast Georgia, Camden County public works crews cleaned storm drains and ditches in preparation for possible flooding. The Georgia Emergency Management Agency also began 24-hour operations Tuesday afternoon to monitor the storm.Fay formed over the weekend in the Atlantic and was blamed for 20 deaths in the Caribbean before hitting Florida's southwest coast, where it fell short of predictions it could be a Category 1 hurricane when it came ashore.The storm flooded streets in Naples, downed trees and cut power to some 95,000 homes and businesses in South Florida on Monday. Tornadoes spawned by the storm damaged 51 homes in Brevard County, southeast of Orlando, including nine homes that were totaled.Two injuries were reported in the Brevard County tornado, and a kitesurfer who was caught in a gust of wind Monday was critically injured when he slammed into a building in front of the beach near Fort Lauderdale. Kevin Kearney, 28, was still in critical condition Tuesday, Broward General Medical Center officials and his family said.

As in the days of Noah...

NYC mayor calls for wind turbines atop skyscrapers

NEW YORK-Wind turbines would top New York City skyscrapers and bridges and dot the city's shorelines, while the mighty tides that drive the Hudson and East Rivers would also generate power under a new plan Mayor Michael Bloomberg presented on Tuesday,"I think it would be a thing of beauty if, when Lady Liberty looks out on the horizon, she not only welcomes new immigrants, but lights their way with a torch powered by an ocean windfarm," Bloomberg said in a copy of a speech he will give in Las Vegas at the 2008 National Clean Energy Summit.Geothermal plants and rooftop solar panels are also options, said the billionaire mayor, whose second and final term ends in January 2010. He gave companies until September 19 to submit innovative proposals toward the mayor's broad goal of making the city greener by 2030. Bloomberg, an independent who has pushed into the national sphere with gun-control and infrastructure plans, faulted politicians for "treating us to a political silly season" and "pandering" to voters instead of solving the energy crisis, which he called the nation's top issue.Calling a carbon tax the only measure that will work "corruption free," he added: "Some want a cap-and-trade system, which is like taking three right turns instead of one left."Last week marked the fifth anniversary of the black-out that deprived 50 million people in the Northeast and Canada of electricity, Bloomberg noted. The country must play "catch-up" he said, citing estimates that producing 20 percent of U.S. electricity by 2030 with wind power will require $60 billion of spending on transmission infrastructure.New York City also will soon push private building owners into conserving electricity. New laws and regulations will require energy users to receive more information about the "real value" of conservation. "And they'll also require cost-effective retrofits of our existing larger buildings," he added.
http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSN1931306420080819
As in the days of Noah...

Fay's path of destruction

Tropical Storm Fay Still a Threat to Florida

PHILIPPINES FLOODS:Village in a waterworld of its own

Floods force thousands to flee homes in India, Nepal

GUWAHATI, India-Floods triggered by heavy monsoon rains left some 50,000 people homeless in India's remote northeast, officials said on Wednesday, warning of more rains in one of the country's most flood-prone regions. Floodwaters swamped some 100 villages in Assam state, destroying homes and croplands and forcing thousands of people to the safety of high grounds. Officials set up temporary shelters for the homeless in school and government buildings, and used wooden boats to rescue those marooned. Many camped on highways under plastic sheets with what little they had salvaged of their belongings."Water levels of all rivers are rising and hundred villages have been completely submerged," said P. C. Deka, an official at the worst-hit Majuli, a riverine island in Assam's Jorhat district. "Around 50,000 people are badly affected so far."The regional weather office warned of more showers in the next 24 hours in the region.In neighboring Nepal, at least 20,000 people were displaced and sheltered in relief camps in the country's southeast after a river broke a dam and flooded six villages, an official said on Wednesday.Local media reports said three people were killed but an official said he had no information about the deaths.Television channels showed video clips of people wading waist-deep water to higher ground, carrying babies in their arms and balancing their belongings on their heads.Nepal's new Maoist Prime Minister Prachanda is scheduled to tour the affected areas on Wednesday, official said. He has already announced $300,000 as immediate relief to the flood victims.
To read more go to:
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSSP1011920080820
As in the days of Noah...

NASA says magnetic pole-shift could be 2012

Dramatic Video: Tropical Storm Winds Slam Thrill-Seeking Kite Surfer Into Building

FORT LAUDERDALE,Florida,August 18/08'-Emergency officials have been warning South Floridians to seek shelter during Tropical Storm Fay but a man in Fort Lauderdale seeking some thrills on the rough surf didn't heed that warning and ended up in the hospital after being hurt in an astonishing kite boarding accident that was caught on camera.A news crew was on Fort Lauderdale beach at A1A and east Las Olas Boulevard when a huge gust of wind from Fay blew down the beach and took the kite boarder by surprise. The kite boarder was harnessed into his sail when the wind violently picked him up and slammed him onto the sandy beach. Then, he was dragged across the sand before being lifted up into the air again and blown across the street where the wind slammed him into a building.Witnesses ran to help the unidentified kite surfer who lay crumpled on the ground in pain.

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=cb5_1219102524

As in the days of Noah...

'Boomerang' Fay Strengthens Over Florida

'Boomerang' Fay May Intensify Into Hurricane, Strike Florida Again

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.-Tropical Storm Fay continued its erratic path Wednesday reaching the coast and headed for the Atlantic Ocean, where it could strengthen and curve back toward Florida-possibly as a hurricane.Meanwhile, as Florida and Georgia prepared for what could be another hit from the storm in the coming days, some farmers in the region hoped a soaking would boost crops hurt by a lingering drought.The storm first hit the Florida Keys, veered out to sea and then traversed east across the state on a path that would take it over the ocean before it curves toward the Florida-Georgia border.Forecasters expected the storm to get a dose of energy Wednesday when it moves over the Atlantic Ocean, where it should linger until Thursday, possibly reaching hurricane strength. It's expected to then veer back toward the mainland, and a hurricane watch was posted for parts of north Florida and Georgia."This storm is going to be with us for a while. That's obvious now. It looks like it could be a boomerang storm," said Gov. Charlie Crist, urging residents to be vigilant for what could be the storm's third hit to the state.The storm was on Florida's east coast at 2 a.m. EDT Wednesday, about 15 miles south-southeast of Melbourne. Its maximum sustained winds remained near 50 mph. The storm was moving toward the north-northeast near 7 mph.And while forecasters warned rainfall from the storm could just as easily be catastrophic as benign, farmers in drought-plagued areas were cautiously optimistic."It's very seldom we're hoping for a hurricane, but we are," said Randy Branch, a farmer in southeast Georgia where lingering drought has left about a third of his cotton and peanut crops bare this summer."We need some rain pretty bad."National Weather Service meteorologist Steve Letro said it's possible southern Georgia could receive 10 to 20 inches of rain — enough to cause severe flooding — if it makes a second landfall."I know people hate drought, but when you're talking about a tropical cyclone relieving drought conditions, be careful what you wish for," said Letro, the chief meteorologist in Jacksonville, Fla.In Duval County, which surrounds Jacksonville, officials prepared shelters, cleared drainage areas that could flood and readied emergency response teams. Public schools canceled Wednesday and Thursday classes, and mobile home residents were encouraged to find sturdier shelter."Our biggest concern is complacency. Jacksonville has a history of being shielded from storm systems. While we don't want anyone to panic, we want everyone in the area to take this storm seriously," said Misty Skipper, a county spokeswoman.In Georgia's southeastern corner, Camden County had public works crews cleaning out storm drains and ditches in preparation for possible flooding. The Georgia Emergency Management Agency also began 24-hour operations Tuesday afternoon to monitor the storm.A National Hurricane Center forecast late Tuesday projected that the storm's path would take it through Alabama over the weekend. However, projections varied widely, prompting some in South Carolina to hope for crop-sating rain."I just came in from the fields. Everything is burning up," said Belton, S.C., farmer Charles Campbell. "If a storm is brewing down there, just send it up I-26."Fay formed over the weekend in the Atlantic and was blamed for 20 deaths in the Caribbean before hitting Florida's southwest coast, where it fell short of predictions it could be a Category 1 hurricane when it came ashore.Though it flooded streets in Naples, downed trees and plunged some 95,000 homes and businesses in the dark, most Floridians thought they had dodged a bullet. The worst of the storm's wrath appeared to be 51 homes hit by a tornado in Brevard County, southeast of Orlando. Nine of the homes were totaled, said Brevard County Emergency Operations Center spokesman David Waters.Brevard County sheriff's deputies arrested three men for looting in the mobile home park, and a trapper was called to remove an alligator discovered wandering there.Two injuries were reported in the Brevard County tornado, and a kitesurfer who was caught in a gust of wind Monday was critically injured when he slammed into a building in front of the beach near Fort Lauderdale. Kevin Kearney, 28, was still in critical condition Tuesday, Broward General Medical Center officials and his family said.Flooding remained a concern as Fay heads up the Florida peninsula, with rainfall amounts forecast between 5 and 15 inches. The storm could also push tides 1 to 3 feet above normal and spawn tornadoes. Counties in the storm's path called off school for Wednesday and opened shelters.
Click here for more from MyFOXTampaBay.com.
As in the days of Noah...

PERSECUTION WATCH:SRI LANKA--Attacks on Churches on the Rise Again

Attacks on Christian places of worship are on the rise again this time the flash point being Kalutara with Buddhist monk-led mobs allegedly issuing death threats to pastors....
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah...

QUAKEWATCH:Quake hits southwest China, no reports of casualties

BEIJING-An earthquake hit southwest China on Wednesday, knocking down houses and forcing around 1,200 people to evacuate from near the site of a devastating quake which killed at least 70,000 people in May, state media said....
To read more go to:
http://quakewatch.blogspot.com/
As in the days of Noah...

Army Moves Ahead With Mobile Laser Cannon

Under the High Energy Laser Technology Demonstrator (HEL TD) Phase II contract, awarded Aug. 15, Boeing will complete the design of, then build, test and evaluate, a rugged beam control system on a Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck. Boeing also will develop the system-engineering requirements for the entire HEL TD laser weapon system.
The Army is moving head with plans to mount a laser cannon on a massive, 35-ton-plus truck.
The service just handed Boeing a $36 million contract to "continue developing a truck-mounted, high-energy laser weapon system that will destroy rockets, artillery shells and mortar rounds," according to a company statement.Low power demonstrations are scheduled for 2010, with battlefield-strength laser tests to follow in 2013.About a year ago, the Army asked Boeing and Northrop Grumman to work up preliminary designs for the HEL beam control system-and promised to choose a winning model by 2009. So the program appears to be on track. And it's one of a number of energy weapon projects that have been picking up steam, after deacdes of unfulfilled promise. Relatively easy-to-deploy electric lasers have just about worked their way up to weapons-grade. Boeing recently test-fired the real-life ray gun on its Advanced Tactical Laser-a blaster-equipped gunship.Raytheon has worked up a prototype of its Phalanx mortar-shooter, already deployed in Iraq, that uses fiber lasers, instead of traditional ammo, to knock down targets. Even the eternally-delayed Airborne Laser-a modified 747, designed to zap ballistic missiles-may finally get a long-awaited flight test.
By Noah Shachtman
As in the days of Noah...

Cracks in Pakistan coalition day after Musharraf quits

ISLAMABAD-A day after President Pervez Musharraf quit, leaders of Pakistan's fractious coalition government squabbled over the judiciary on Tuesday and a bomb killed 25 people, underscoring the challenges facing the nation.Musharraf, the former army chief and key ally of the United States in its campaign against terrorism, resigned as president of nuclear-armed Pakistan on Monday to avoid impeachment.Coalition leaders, who campaigned against Musharraf, met for several hours to set about tackling pressing economic and security problems and to discuss a new president but got bogged down over the fate of judges Musharraf purged last year.The bickering and prospects of more to come are likely to dismay investors and allies."If they cannot agree on the restoration of the judges in a matter of days, then clearly something is not right with the coalition," said Farid Khan, an analyst at Credit Suisse."We cannot afford to lose months, or even weeks on these political issues. They need to get to the economy, and only a strong government can take the tough decisions needed for the economy," the Karachi-based Khan said.Security is also a huge problem, as the suicide bomb attack at a hospital in the town of Dera Ismail Khan illustrated.The bomber struck in the compound of the hospital as members of the Shi'ite Muslim minority were holding a protest against the killing of a leader earlier in the day.
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah...

Pakistani newspapers urge action after Musharraf

ISLAMABAD-Pakistani newspapers cheered the resignation of Pervez Musharraf as president and said on Tuesday that the coalition government now had no excuse not to tackle a deteriorating economy and militant violence.Musharraf quit on Monday to avoid impeachment charges, nearly nine years after the key U.S. ally in its campaign against terrorism took power in a coup.Many Pakistanis celebrated the departure of the unpopular president, and financial markets rallied on an end to the political wrangling over his fate.Newspapers also welcomed an end to the confrontation between the president and the coalition government, led by the party of assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, and said the government now had to turn to the country's problems."Determining what the priorities should be is not difficult: militancy, the economy and relations with India and Afghanistan need to be addressed urgently," the Dawn newspaper said. "Solutions, however, may prove more elusive ... But at the very least, the politicians must show the same purpose and focus in dealing with the problems that they have demonstrated in taking on the president," it said in an editorial.Dawn said the restoration of judges Musharraf purged last year and the election of a new president had to be addressed immediately.Both issues could prove divisive for the coalition dominated by two old rival parties, Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party and the party of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif.
To read more go to:
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSISL4446820080819
As in the days of Noah...

Divisions Emerge As Post-Musharraf Era Begins

Dozens die in hospital bomb

Bomb blast at hospital kills 23 in Pakistan

PESHAWAR, Pakistan-A suspected suicide bomber killed 23 people in the compound of a hospital in northwest Pakistan on Tuesday as members of a religious minority were holding a protest, police said.Violence in northwest Pakistan is a major test for the coalition government led by the party of slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, especially after the resignation of former army chief Pervez Musharraf as president on Monday. The bomb went off outside a hospital in Dera Ismail Khan, 280 km (175 miles) southwest of Islamabad, as Shi'ite Muslims were protesting against the killing of a leader. Gunmen shot the leader earlier and his body had been taken to the hospital.North West Frontier Province police chief Naveed Malik Khan said 23 people had been killed in the blast, and up to 20 wounded. He said Sunni Muslim militants were believed responsible."This area has been hit by sectarian violence for many years and this is also a sectarian-related incident," Khan said.Most of the dead were protesters, a city official said.Musharraf oversaw security after he threw Pakistan's support behind the U.S.-led campaign against terrorism. His departure has raised questions about the government's commitment, even though it has made security a priority.The United States and other allies are keen to see Islamabad turn its attention to security and pressing economic problems now that the controversy over Musharraf is out of the way.
To read more go to:
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSISL17301120080819
As in the days of Noah...

Algeria suicide attack on recruits

Bomb kills 43 at Algerian military academy

ISSERS, Algeria-A bomb at an Algerian military academy killed 43 people and wounded 45 on Tuesday, the interior ministry said, one of the bloodiest incidents in years in the OPEC member state.A ministry statement said the target of the attack was the gendarmerie training school at Issers, 55 km (34 miles) east of the capital Algiers.It said 42 of the dead were civilians and one of the dead and 13 of the wounded were gendarmes-armed paramilitary soldiers.The bombing follows several recent attacks by al Qaeda's north African wing, but there was no immediate claim of responsibility.The local al Qaeda affiliate has claimed several attacks including the twin suicide bombings of U.N. offices and a court building in Algiers in December 2007 which killed 41 people.Witnesses said Tuesday's attack was carried out by a suicide bomber who rammed his car into a group of prospective recruits lining up to get into the school for qualifying exams."Most of the dead were young men aged between 18 and 20. They were in line waiting to enter the school for recruiting exams when they were mowed down by the blast," a witness said."The car explosion destroyed part of the outer wall of the school and blew a huge crater into the ground, about three meters (yards) from the main gate," he said by telephone.Many young Algerians see military jobs as the ticket to a better future amid fierce competition for their hearts and minds between the military and radical Islamists, analysts say.
To read more go to:

As in the days of Noah...

Nukes unlikely to be affected by Musharraf leaving

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Pervez Musharraf's departure from the presidency is unlikely to have a significant impact on how Pakistan's nuclear weapons are controlled.Experts say a 10-member committee, and not just the president, makes decisions on how to use them and only a complete meltdown in governance-still a distant prospect in Pakistan-could put the atomic bomb in the hands of extremists."Pakistan's nuclear assets are not one man's property," said Maria Sultan, a defense analyst and director at the London-based South Asian Strategic Stability Institute."Any (political) transition in Pakistan will have no effect on Pakistan's nuclear assets because it has a very strong custodial control."The committee, known as the National Command Authority, is served by a military-dominated organization with thousands of security forces and intelligence agents whose personnel are closely screened. The nuclear facilities are tightly guarded."The reality is that Pakistan's government exists on different levels. One of the levels it exists and works at is in the control of its nuclear weapons," said Patrick Cronin, director of the Institute for National Strategic Studies at the National Defense University in Washington."Where it does not work is in providing effective services, jobs, education and health that people need."Although one of Asia's poorer nations, Pakistan became the Islamic world's first atomic power through a combination of guile, determination and illegal procurement of technology on the international black market. It tested the bomb in 1998, a year before Musharraf took power, in response to a similar test by its historic rival India.The prospect of a nuclear conflagration on the subcontinent has eased in recent years as Pakistan and India have talked peace. But political volatility in Pakistan, combined with the revelation in 2004 that its chief scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan had shared nuclear know-how and technology with Iran, North Korea and Libya, heightened concern over how safe the weapons and nuclear infrastructure were.Those fears have persisted as al-Qaida and Taliban militants have gained a firm foothold along the lawless northwestern frontier with Afghanistan. Pakistan also has struggled to dispel suspicions that elements in its intelligence services have extremist sympathies.Early this year, after Pakistan was assailed by a wave of suicide attacks-including one that killed former prime minister Benazir Bhutto-the Musharraf-led administration went out of its way to reassure the international community that its nuclear assets remained safe.Khalid Kidwai, head of the Strategic Plans Division which handles Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, told journalists that Pakistan uses 10,000 soldiers to keep the weapons safe and has received up to $10 million in U.S. assistance to enhance security.He said there was "no conceivable scenario" in which al-Qaida or Taliban militants would take power, and asserted that Pakistan's nuclear weapons, fissile material and infrastructure were "absolutely safe and secure."The military-run Strategic Plans Division was instituted by Musharraf.While little is expected to change in how it functions after his resignation from the presidency on Monday, the chairmanship of the 10-member National Command Authority that would make the final decision on the deployment or use of weapons will now transfer to acting president Mohammedmian Soomro, the chairman of the upper house of parliament.That high-powered committee also includes the chiefs of the army, navy and air force, the prime minister, several Cabinet ministers and Kidwai, himself a retired general.Kidwai said in January that any decision to use the weapons would be reached "hopefully by consensus but at least by majority." The decision would be conveyed to the Strategic Plans Division and then through the military chain of command."Pakistan's nuclear arsenal is in the hands of the army and the army is not changing hands, so whatever the situation was before is largely what it will continue to be," said Teresita Schaffer, director of the South Asia Program at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.Talat Masood, a retired Pakistani general, said the civilian government elected in February may push to transfer the chairmanship of the command authority from the president to the prime minister, Yousaf Raza Gilani, to reflect the shift in power away from the presidency. The premier currently serves as its vice chairman. The military, which has distanced itself from politics since Musharraf ceded command of the armed forces in November, would not necessarily oppose that. The powers of the presidency may soon be diluted — if the government follows through on plans to amend the constitution — reverting it to a largely ceremonial position.While experts say Pakistan's nuclear assets will stay in safe hands for now, fears persist about the potential for an Islamist takeover."If Pakistan becomes a more fragile and even failing state, then the nuclear assets will be everybody's problem internationally. The best way to prevent that from happening is in strengthening the new government's ability to govern," Cronin said.

As in the days of Noah...

Girl from polygamist group ordered into state care

SAN ANGELO, Texas - A 14-year-old girl allegedly married to jailed polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs with her parents' blessing at age 12 was ordered back into foster care Tuesday by a Texas judge.District Judge Barbara Walther(picture left) said that there was "uncontroverted evidence of the underage marriage" and that the girl's mother, Barbara Jessop, refused to guarantee the girl's safety. The girl, shown in photographs submitted to the court kissing Jeffs, must immediately enter foster care.Her 11-year-old brother, whom Texas child welfare authorities also wanted placed in foster care, will be allowed to stay with his mother but will have to undergo psychological evaluation in the next month.The girl's case marked the first effort by Child Protective Services to retake custody of a child who lived at the Yearning For Zion Ranch in Eldorado before the April raid that resulted in 440 children being placed in foster care for six weeks. The Texas Supreme Court later struck down that early custody decision, saying the state failed to show any more than a handful of teenage girls might have been abused.The children were returned to their parents in June. Since then, the child welfare agency has asked for custody of seven children, including the 14-year-old girl and her brother. It sought the dismissal of cases involving 76 children, including nine who have turned 18. The rest of the cases remain under investigation.Lawyers reached settlements Tuesday in three of the cases in which state officials had sought custody, according to court filings. The three girls in those cases can stay with their mothers, provided that the women restrict contact with men accused of being involved in underage marriages and comply with other, more routine custody-related court orders.Hearings on the other two children the agency still wants in foster care were under way Tuesday afternoon. Both are daughters of Dr. Lloyd Hammon Barlow, who was indicted on three misdemeanor counts of failing to report child abuse. Authorities allege that he didn't report the babies he delivered to underage girls and that he married a 16-year-old.In the case of the 14-year-old allegedly married to Jeffs, Walther said she felt she had to place the girl in foster care because Jessop "was unable to provide assurances that she'd be able to protect the child in the future."On Monday, Jessop refused to answer roughly 50 questions asked by attorneys for Child Protective Services, including what constituted abuse, the names of her children and her relationship with their father."I stand on the Fifth (Amendment)," she said repeatedly.Her attorney Gonzalo Rios said she was exercising her right against self-incrimination because of the continuing criminal investigation. Two of her husband's sons have been indicted on charges of sexual assault of a child, as has Jeffs.Invoking the Fifth Amendment can protect Jessop in a criminal case. But previous court rulings have found that negative inferences can be made in civil cases, like the child custody case, if she refuses to answer.Rios said after the hearing that Jessop's decision to invoke the Fifth Amendment probably hurt her custody case, but he plans to argue on appeal that the welfare agency didn't make a reasonable effort to keep the family together, as required under Texas law.He also said Jessop was being treated differently from other parents from the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. All the other parents were given a chance to keep their children if they complied with agency requirements."It's fundamentally unfair," Rios said. "She's the only parent they wouldn't negotiate with." Jessop is married to Fredrick "Merril" Jessop, who according to court documents blessed several underage marriages. He did not attend the hearing and has not provided a court-ordered DNA sample.FLDS spokesman Willie Jessop said no marriages have been conducted for two years, and the church has said it will refuse to bless any unions involving underage girls.The FLDS believes polygamy brings glory in heaven. It is a breakaway sect of the mainstream Mormon church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which renounced polygamy more than a century ago.Jeffs, convicted as an accomplice to rape in Utah and awaiting trial on similar charges in Arizona, was indicted along with four followers in Texas last month on charges of sexual assault of a child. One of the followers was also indicted on a bigamy charge.

As in the days of Noah....

LDS Church Sees Remarkable Surge in Mormon Home Food Storage

"The prophet Joseph Smith in the beginning talked about that a man should be out doing good and trying to find people where they are in the world to help."....(LDS Church)

Book Based on Prophet Muhammad's Child Bride Yanked At 11th Hour

NEW YORK-A racy, historical novel based on the Prophet Muhammad's child bride A'isha was supposed to hit book stores in the U.S. Tuesday.But in a rare case of self-censorship to preempt possible violent reaction by Muslims, one of the world's largest publishing houses pulled the plug on the book just before its release date.Sherry Jones, author of The Jewel of Medina, said she received word from Random House Inc. that the book's release would be "postponed indefinitely."The decision came after copies of her book were sent to stores, her book tour was scheduled and her work of fiction was accepted by the Book of the Month Club (it was scheduled to be in the August selection)."My book is a respectful portrayal of Islam, of A'isha, of Muhammad. And anyone who reads it with an open mind will come away with an understanding of Islam as a peaceful religion," said the American author.In a statement to FOXNews.com, Random House said that although it supports a free discussion of ideas, it decided to stop the book from hitting the shelves due to security concerns."We felt an obligation to take these concerns very seriously. We consulted with security experts as well as with scholars of Islam, whom we asked to review the book and offer their assessments of potential reactions," the release stated.But Jones questions the 11th-hour balk."I'm going to tell you there are no terrorist threats against Random House. There was never received any terrorist threat," she told FOXNews.com."By saying that Muslims will be violent, that they can't intelligently discuss this book, it's disrespectful to Muslims," Jones said. "To me, it feels racist for them to say that someone will try to attack them, that someone will try to go after me."Jones said Random House will pay her a $100,000 advance, and that it will allow her to seek another publisher for the book.Terrorism expert Steven Emerson head of The Investigative Project on Terrorism said Random House's decision to scrap the book sets a dangerous precedent for freedom of speech."This is one of the most despicable episodes of appeasement," Emerson told FOXNews.com. "You can intimidate publishing and media to not publish anything critical about Islam, and just by an indirect threat of not being happy about it."At issue is Jones' portrayal of the prophet's wife A'isha, whom Muhammad is said to have married when she was 9 years old. In her novel Jones describes the consummation of their marriage when A'isha was 14.In an excerpt Jones wrote: "The pain of consummation soon melted away. Muhammad was so gentle. I hardly felt the scorpion's sting. To be in his arms, skin to skin, was the bliss I had longed for all my life."One Muslim scholar who was given advanced copies of the book said Jewel of Medina turned the "sacred story" of Aisha's life into "soft core pornography."Denise Spellberg, an expert on Aisha's life and associate professor of history and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, told the Wall Street Journal she was "invited to comment on the book" and described it as a "very ugly, stupid piece of work."Jones defended her work, saying she wanted to bring out the human element of Islamic history."This is historical fiction. It's fiction," she says. "I've not contradicted Koran. I just said, 'Gee what if this happened?' I wanted to show A'isha's maturation."John Vall, associate director of the Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown University, has spoken with Spellberg about Jones' book."What you have then is a clearly controversial highly emotional writing. The author has taken liberties with historical framework, she tried to present a historical novel, but it's a harlequin thing," Voll said. "Denise's position is that the manuscript takes liberties and is historically inaccurate," he said.Emerson compared this case with others where violent Muslim reaction suppressed the release or discussion of alternative perspectives of Islam.A series of cartoons that depicted the image of the Prophet Mohammad, which is deemed offensive to Islam, were published in Denmark, leading to worldwide protests when they were first printed in September 2005. Last winter, also in the Netherlands, there were protests when a Dutch lawmaker released a controversial, anti-Islamic film."The means the Rushdie rules now rein supreme," said Emerson, referring to author Salman Rushdie's book Satanic Verses, which inspired worldwide protest and death threats when it was published in 1988."You can intimidate publishing and media to not publish anything critical about Islam and just by an indirect threat of not being happy about it."Jewel of Medina has already been withdrawn from bookstore shelves in Serbia, where it was published by Belgrade publisher Beobuk three weeks ago. Some members of the Muslim community there are demanding that all of the published copies be handed in to the publisher."It's just surreal that this book is being debated around the world and it hasn't even been published," Jones said, referring to the U.S."Fear is an irrational emotion [that] provokes irrational responses," she said. "I was never angry at Random House, but I was bitterly disappointed because I thought they were wrong."
PS:Now with all respect for Mrs Jones....isnt she aware of the islamic blind fanaticism and jihadist spirit in most muslim across this world?What was she expecting?Isnt she aware of teh danger that she is putting -herself&family&publishers and etc,etc-at risk for thsi racy book???????
This is not joke:when you write ANYTHING about ISLAM and MUHAMAD--it doesnt matter if its true or not--ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE....
The preemptive pull out of this book from the shelves proofs once more the FEAR OF ISLAM that many are under...The INTIMIDATION is stronger --it seems--than any action or speech or statement against ISLAM....
That's the state of things...We are back in the ages when SWORD RULED.....
As in the days of Noah...

TERROR WATCH:Britain's youngest terrorist, Hammaad Munshi, faces jail after guilty verdict

A 16-year old schoolboy faces a jail term after being convicted today as Britain's youngest terrorist.Hammaad Munshi, who was taking his GCSEs when he was arrested, was part of a cell of cyber-groomers which set out to brainwash the vulnerable to kill "non-believers". He was convicted at Blackfriars Crown Court of making a record of material likely to be useful for terrorism over a guide to the manufacture of napalm.For nearly a year the teenager, whose grandfather is a leading Islamic scholar, led a double life, the court heard.By day he attended lessons at the local comprehensive, and did as he was told. But in the evening, he spent hours surfing jihadist sites and distributing material to others as part of what the Crown branded a "worldwide conspiracy" to "wipe out" non-Muslims. The court heard that that material contained included instructions about making napalm, other high explosives, detonators, and grenades, and "how to kill".Munshi was 15 when recruited by Aabid Khan, 23, a "key player" to help radicalise the impressionable and vulnerable in Britain and abroad with his message of "violent jihad". They lived 10 miles apart, phoned each other during 2005 and 2006, and swapped documents about "black powder explosives". Khan wanted to fulfil the teenager’s wish to go abroad and "fight jihad", and during one internet exchange discussed how the schoolboy might smuggle a sword through airport security.The Dewsbury-born teenager was detained a day after Khan as he and friends returned from local Westborough High School. The IT whizz-kid - whose online Arabic profile "fidadee" means a "person ready to sacrifice themselves for a particular cause" - ran a website selling hunting knives and Islamic flags and was the cell’s computer specialist.Two bags of ball-bearings - the shrapnel of choice for suicide bombers - were found in one of his pockets. On his PC were al-Qaeda propaganda videos and recordings promoting "murder and destruction".The teenager, whose grandfather is Sheikh Yakub Munshi, president of the Islamic Research Institute of Great Britain at the Markazi Mosque, Dewsbury, also stored notes on martyrdom under his bed."One who is not taking part in the battle nor has the sheer intention to die is in the branch of hypocrisy," they read. "I don’t want to be a person like it has been mentioned about, I don’t want to be deprived of the huge amounts or lessons Allah has prepared for the believers in the hereafter."Khan, the schoolboy’s mentor, had links with proscribed terrorist organisations Jaish'e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, and helped radicalise jailed "wannabe suicide bomber" Mohammed Atif Siddique.Khan was returning from Pakistan - possibly after terror camp training - when detained. The "routine stop" at Manchester Airport on June 6, 2006, yielded the largest cyber "encyclopaedia" of articles promoting terrorism seized by police. It included personal information, including addresses, of various members of the Royal Family, among the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, the Prince of Wales, the Duke of York, the Princess Royal, and the Earl and Countess of Wessex.There was also a guide to killing non-Muslims, and discussions about setting up a secret Islamic state in a remote area of Scotland.Also found were US and Canadian military training manuals, a Terrorist’s Handbook, a Mujahideen Explosives Handbook, and a Mujahideen Poisons Handbook containing a recipe for ricin and encouragement for "brothers" to experiment on "kuffar" (non-believers). Sketches of combat suits, which he dismissed as "ghetto clothing but with an Islamic theme", were in his Filofax. Bradford-born Khan - "Del Boy" to his contacts - ran At-Tibiyan Publications, an "online extremist support network". In one exchange, he spoke of finding a "big target and taking it out... like a military base in the UK'.Operation Praline, headed by Leeds Counter-Terrorism Unit, examined a huge number of files from hard-drives and DVDs in Khan’s suitcase, and identified two fellow "jihadists". Sultan Muhammad, 23, a post office night sorter, was Khan’s cousin and "right-hand man". They regularly chatted about killing non-believers and buying the explosives component acetone. He fled to London after Khan’s arrest and was arrested two weeks later near a "safe house. Khan, who admitted being interested in jihad at 12, insisted he was in Pakistan selling mobiles and visiting earthquake victims and claimed the material police found resulted from "hoarding and curiosity". Munshi did not give evidence, but used his barrister to also argue "curiosity".Muhammad remained in the dock as well, suggesting through counsel that the computer files belonged to others.But the seven-woman, four-man man jury which spent six days considering the evidence, convicted them of eight offences under the Terrorism Act committed between November 23, 2005, and June 20, 2006. A fourth defendant, Ahmed Sulieman, 30, from south London, was cleared of three charges of possessing terrorist materials after explaining the files found belonged to somebody else.Khan and Muhammad will be sentenced tomorrow. Munshi will be dealt with at the Old Bailey on September 18 after the preparation of a pre-sentence report, although he was warned today that he faced a custodial sentence.
As in the days of Noah....

Report: Iran to build more nuclear power plants

TEHRAN, Iran - Iran's official news agency says the country is preparing to build more nuclear power plants.Tuesday's IRNA report quotes Ahmad Fayyazbakhsh, the head of a state-owned nuclear energy production company.He says his company signed agreements with other domestic firms to find locations to build new nuclear power plants. He says the process could take about 13 months.Iran has previously announced plans to build six more nuclear power plants by 2021.The country is building its first nuclear power plant in the southern port of Bushehr with the help of Russia. It is expected to go on line later this year.The U.S. suspects Iran's nuclear program is a cover for developing weapons. Iran denies this, saying it's for generating electricity.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080819/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_nuclear
As in the days of Noah...

Nato Holds Georgia Crisis Summit

Russia says to sign air defense pact with Belarus

MOSCOW-Russia will sign a deal later this year on creating a joint air defense system with Belarus, an ex-Soviet ally which has joined Moscow in opposing the U.S. defense shield, the Kremlin said on Tuesday.Russian defense officials in the past have discussed the possibility of stationing anti-missile systems on Belarus soil to counter the U.S. shield. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Belarussian leader Alexander Lukashenko met for talks on Tuesday in the southern Russian city of Sochi, where Medvedev has his official summer residence.A statement on the Kremlin's Internet site http://www.kremlin.ru/ said the two leaders discussed preparations for a high-level Russian-Belarus summit in Moscow in the third quarter of this year."D. Medvedev and A. Lukashenko agreed by that meeting to complete work on an inter-state agreement on the creation of a single air-defense system, which will be signed during the meeting," the Kremlin statement said.The United States plans to station a radar station and interceptor missiles on the territory of Poland and the Czech Republic as part of the shield. Belarus, a staunch Russian ally, has a border with Poland.It says the shield is needed to counter missile attacks by what it calls rogue states, specifically Iran. Russia says the U.S. plan is a threat to its national security and has warned it may aim its nuclear missiles at Poland and the Czech Republic if they host elements of the shield on their soil.
As in the days of Noah....

Highway blocked by Russians key for Georgia economy

TBILISI-The blocking of Georgia's main east-west highway by Russian soldiers for nearly a week threatens the economic viability of the poor Black Sea nation, ministers and analysts say.Lorries with foreign number plates normally compete with local goods trucks and battered private cars for space on the road between the capital Tbilisi and the ports of Poti and Batumi.But since last Wednesday Russian soldiers with Kalashnikov rifles have guarded checkpoints on the road and camouflaged tanks in fields have trained their cannons on nearby hills."It will have a very serious impact on the economy," Georgian Prime Minister Lado Gurgenidze told Reuters when asked about the fallout of a prolonged Russian blockade of the road.The well-paved road is the main route across the mountainous former Soviet state. It also links Georgia's Black Sea ports with Baku, capital of energy-rich Azerbaijan on the Caspian Sea some 1,000 km (700 miles) away.Bypassing the Russian checkpoints via the narrow, rough and steep roads of southern Georgia is barely an option for cars and simply not possible for lorries, said Georgia's first deputy economics minister, Vakhtang Lezhava.Trade volumes between Tbilisi and the Black Sea have dropped by some 95 percent since the road was blocked, he said.The conflict between Georgia and its former overlord Russia erupted after Tbilisi tried to recapture the Moscow-backed separatist region of South Ossetia. This provoked a huge Russian counter-attack that has shaken ties between Moscow and the West.
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah.......

Aid agencies press Russia for access to S.Ossetia

GENEVA-Humanitarian aid agencies pressed top Russian authorities on Tuesday for safe access to South Ossetia, where tens of thousands of people are deemed in need of vital supplies.Russian troops control access to the rebel Georgian province, which has been out of reach for aid workers since the start of an 11-day-old conflict between Moscow and Tbilisi.Jakob Kellenberger, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, held talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow on Tuesday. U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres was to meet Lavrov on Wednesday."We don't have access to South Ossetia, so to have a full picture of the humanitarian impact of the conflict there is impossible at this time," ICRC spokeswoman Anna Nelson told a news briefing in Geneva."One of our top priorities for when we are able to gain access-we're hoping following a meeting with Mr Lavrov that we will have access-is to evaluate the state of medical care, particularly for weapon-wounded people," she said.Russia says 1,600 people, mainly civilians, were killed following an attempt by Georgian forces on August 7-8 to recapture the pro-Moscow province, which broke away from Georgia in the 1990s. The figure has not been independently verified.ICRC officials who reached the western Georgian town of Gori at the weekend were approached by many residents asking for food and medicine, according to the spokeswoman.The neutral humanitarian agency has flown 430 tons of food and medical supplies into Georgia in the past week, she said.
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah...

Russia says to pull back Georgia force by Aug 22

MOSCOW-President Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday that by August 22 Russia will pull its troops in Georgia back to the positions set out in a French-brokered ceasefire agreement. Medvedev told French leader Nicolas Sarkozy by telephone that "by 22 August... a part of the peacekeepers will be pulled back to the temporary security zone," the Kremlin said in a statement."The remaining contingent that was used to reinforce the peacekeepers will be pulled back to the territory of South Ossetia and to Russia," the Kremlin said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSLJ63443020080819
As in the days of Noah...

Despite Truce, Prisoners Taken in Georgia

Russia Dismisses Nato Warning

Russia has dismissed a warning by Nato that normal relations are impossible while its troops remain inside Georgia...
To watch the video click on the URL below:
As in the days of Noah....

Russia smashes Georgian army, sends NATO message

Georgians with their eyes covered sit atop a Russian armored personnel carrier while being detained by Russian troops.
TBILISI-A roll of explosions at a Russian-occupied military base this week sent a clear Kremlin message to Georgia about the frailty of its infant military and its prospects for NATO membership.The Russian army destroyed a hoard of Georgian arms and ammunition captured in a brief war that saw Georgian forces scattered, their bases seized and equipment carried off.
"Of course, there was a great symbolism to them doing this at the Senaki base," said Professor Tornike Sharashenidze of the Georgian Institute for Public Affairs."In their eyes Senaki was a bit of NATO that they just don't want to see in Georgia."Senaki, in western Georgia, was a 'showpiece' base built to NATO specifications under a military buildup launched by President Mikheil Saakashvili after his 2003 "Rose Revolution".Barracks were of a level of comfort unfamiliar to Russian soldiers, facilities and equipment were NATO-style, many of its soldiers trained in alliance countries."It's all wrecked now," Deputy Defence Minister Batu Kutelia told Reuters. "The buildings, the arms, all gone. If you consider that this is one of the few such modern bases we have, this was very important for us." Witnesses saw Russian troops, who had earlier parried a Georgian attack on the pro-Russia rebel region of South Ossetia and thrust into Georgia's heartland, remove crates of equipment at other bases, airports and ports throughout the country.
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah...

Pulling Out?Russian Troops Show first Sign of Leaving georgia

'NATO whitewash and rearm criminal regime of Georgia'

Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has commented on the result of Tuesday's NATO Foreign Ministers meeting in Brussels.....

NATO warns Moscow over actions in Georgia

BRUSSELS-NATO allies said on Tuesday that regular contacts with Russia were impossible until its troops had been fully withdrawn from Georgia, and said they were "seriously considering" the implications of Moscow's actions."We have determined that we cannot continue with business as usual," the 26 NATO states said in a joint declaration after emergency talks in Brussels over the South Ossetia conflict. Separately, they agreed to set up a new forum known as a NATO-Georgia Commission to deepen ties with Tbilisi.NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer told a news conference it would function along similar lines to an 11-year-old arrangement with Ukraine but would not prejudge Georgia's prospects of entering the alliance.De Hoop Scheffer(picture left) said Russian forces needed to return to their positions as of August 6, and until Russian troops withdrew from Georgia he could not see the possibility of a meeting between NATO states and Russia."We certainly have not the intention to close all doors," he said, but added in reference to the promised Russian troop withdrawal: "It's not happening at the moment.""Russian troops will have to withdraw now to their pre-crisis positions."Months of tension between Georgia and Russia erupted on August 7, when Tbilisi sought to regain control of its breakaway South Ossetia region. Russia, which backs the separatists, launched a massive counter-offensive that extended well into Georgia. Washington had called on NATO nations to consider at least suspending ministerial meetings with Russia, but Britain and others said it would be counter-productive to cut channels of communication with Moscow now.
To read more go to:
As in the days of Noah....

Russian Troops Take Prisoners in Georgia Port as Medvedev Says Soldiers Will Withdraw by Friday

Developing Story: A Western draft of a U.N. Security Council resolution on Georgia demands compliance with the cease-fire and an immediate Russian withdrawal to lines held before the conflict, Reuters reported.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told French President Nicolas Sarkozy by phone Tuesday that Russian troops will withdraw from most of Georgia by Friday-some to Russia, others to South Ossetia and a surrounding "security zone" set in 1999.However, a Pentagon official said that one day after they were due to withdraw from Georgia, there appears to be no significant change in the Russian military's occupation of the region."We dont see much change in the forces that were there," Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said.Also Tuesday, Russian soldiers took about 20 Georgian troops prisoner at a key Black Sea port in western Georgia, blindfolding them and holding them at gunpoint, and commandeered American Humvees awaiting shipment back to the United States.The move comes as a small column of Russian tanks and armored vehicles left the strategic Georgian city of Gori in the first sign of a Russian pullback of troops from Georgia after a cease-fire intended to end fighting that reignited Cold War tensions. The two countries on Tuesday also exchanged prisoners captured during their brief war.A FOX News crew on the ground in Georgia described the Russians as "crack and combat ready."Along with the soldiers, the Russian troops also took away a container holding U.S. military property: Five U.S. military regular humvees and one armored humvee, according to Alan Middleton, CEO of Poti Sea Port. They had been used in a military exercise recently in Georgia involving U.S. and Georgian troops and were being shipped back to a European base.It is unclear whether the Georgians seized had anything to do with the container.The deputy head of Russia's general staff, Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn, said Russian forces plan to remain in Poti until a local administration is formed, but did not give further details. He also justified previous seizures of Georgian soldiers as necessary to crack down on soldiers who were "out of any kind of control ... acting without command."An AP television crew has seen Russian troops in and around Poti all week, with local port officials saying the Russians had destroyed radar, boats and other Coast Guard equipment there.Russian troops last week drove Georgian forces out of South Ossetia, where Georgia on Aug. 7 launched a heavy artillery barrage in the separatist Georgian province with close ties to Russia. Fighting also has flared in a second Russian-backed separatist region, Abkhazia.The short war has driven tensions between Russia and the West to some of their highest levels since the breakup of the Soviet Union, but Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has icily defended Russia's actions."Anyone who tries anything like that will face a crushing response," he said Monday. Later Medvedev handed out military medals to Russian soldiers involved in the fighting.The cease-fire requires both sides to return to positions held before the fighting began, but Whitman said Tuesday morning in Washington that it didn't appear Russia had made any significant withdrawal of forces."So far we have not seen any significant movement out of Georgia," he said.A small column of Russian tanks and armored vehicles left Gori on Tuesday, and a Russian officer said they were heading back to South Ossetia and then Russia. Col. Igor Konoshenkov, a Russian military officer at the scene, gave no timetable for when the unit would reach Russia.Also Tuesday, Russia and Georgia exchanged 20 prisoners of war in an effort to reduce tensions. Two Russian military helicopters landed in the village of Igoeti, the closest that Russian forces have advanced to the Georgian capital of Tbilisi. Soldiers and men in unmarked clothing got off and two people in stretchers were taken to Georgian officials.Georgian ambulances later brought two other people to the Russian choppers. One was on a gurney.Georgian Security Council head Alexander Lomaia told reporters in Igoeti that 15 Georgians and five Russians were exchanged. "It went smoothly," he said. The operation also witnessed by Russian Maj. Gen. Vyacheslav Borisov, who commands troops in the area.
Lomaia said the exchange removed any pretext for Russians to keep holding positions in Igoeti, 30 miles west of Tbilisi, or anywhere else on Georgia's only significant east-west highway.In Brussels, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was backing the setting up of a permanent NATO-Georgia Commission to solidify ties between the Western alliance and Georgia. Diplomats said Washington also supports increasing training for the Georgian military.At the same time, NATO foreign ministers were discussing possibly scaling back high-level meetings and military cooperation with Russia if it does not abandon crucial positions across Georgia. But there were differences within the alliance over how far to go in punishing Moscow.At a separate meeting, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said Russia agreed to allow 20 more international military monitors in and around South Ossetia.Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb says the plan calls for the observers to be sent immediately to Tbilisi. The group already has nine observers based in South Ossetia.The UN has estimated that the fighting displaced more than 158,000 people. U.N. refugee chief Antonio Guterres arrived in Tbilisi on Tuesday to meet with government representatives to discuss the plight of tens of thousands of South Ossetians uprooted by Georgia's conflict with Russia.Guterres then will travel to Moscow to meet with Russian officials, U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees spokesman Andrej Mahecic said.Mahecic told journalists in Geneva that UNHCR, like other aid agencies, has not been able to reach the civilian population in much of South Ossetia because of security issues there. The area is now controlled by Russia."We have seen media reports indicating that people are being shot at while trying to leave the area," he said.In Gori, most shops were shut and people milled around on the central square with its statue of the Soviet dictator and native son Josef Stalin."The city is a cold place now. People are fearful," says Nona Khizanishvili, 44, who fled Gori a week ago for an outlying village and returned Monday, trying to reach her son in Tbilisi.
FOX News' Greg Palkot, Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
As in the days of Noah...

Iran:Receiving 80 Lashes for a Shot of Alchohol...

IRAN:Green light from mullahs for killing of Shirin Ebadi,Nobel Prize Winner?

The charge has been prompted by an accusation issued by official sources, saying that the Nobel laureate has become Bahai. For the Iranian criminal code, this makes her worthy of death, and if someone were to kill her he would not be punished.
Tehran (AsiaNews) - The life of Shirin Ebadi, Nobel peace prize winner in 2003, is in danger. Ebadi has been fearless in denouncing the oppression of human rights in her country. The alarm has been raised by Rooz, a website for Iranian exiles, which deduces it from the "charge" made a few days ago by the official news agency IRNA, saying that Ebadi and her daughter, a student at McGill University in Canada, have become members of the Bahai religion.The Bahai are considered a heretical Islamic group, and are persecuted. The accusation, according to Rooz, is a sham set up to disguise the intention of having the woman killed, or at least of frightening her to the point of making her stop her activities in favor of human rights, or leave the country.The explanation has been given on the basis of the Iranian criminal code. Article 226 stipulates that the killing of a person is subject to 'Ghesas', or retaliatory punishment, "only if the victim did not deserve death based on the Sharia, and if the ‎victim deserved death the murderer must prove that in court, according to set criteria". According to Islamic law, apostasy, or abandoning Islam, is worthy of death. And her conversion to the Bahai faith puts Ebadi in this position.As if that were not enough, a supplement to article 295 in the same criminal code stipulates that if a person kills another because he suspects that the victim deserves death, and this is proven in court, the killing is considered accidental homicide, and the author must only pay "blood money" to the victim's family. But if the killer proves that the victim deserved death, he doesn't even have to pay the "blood money", and will not face any penalty.It is in the light of these laws that the article deduces in the first place that "they want to convince ignorant forces that Shirin Ebadi's death is necessary. Any Muslim ‎who takes her life is not punished, and perhaps goes to heaven". In the second place, "they want to frighten her to abandon all human rights-related activities or even leave the ‎country".
http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=12999&size=A
As in the days of Noah...

Iran reaches new space peak...???

Iran satellite launch a failure: U.S. official

WASHINGTON-Iran's attempt to launch a dummy satellite into orbit was a "dramatic failure" that fell far short of the country's assertions of success, a U.S. official said on Tuesday. "The attempted launch failed," the official said."The vehicle failed shortly after liftoff and in no way reached its intended position," the official said. "It could be characterized as a dramatic failure."Iran, embroiled in a standoff with the West over its nuclear ambitions, said on Sunday it has put a dummy satellite into orbit on a home-grown rocket for the first time, using a technology that could also be used for launching weapons. Iran says it has no nuclear-weapons plans and that it seeks nuclear technology to generate electricity. Iranian television showed the rocket on its launch pad, but did not show the actual lift-off."The failed launch shows that the purported Iranian space program is in its nascent stages at best-they have a long way to go," the U.S. official said.

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSN1935578420080819

As in the days of Noah...

Russia Deploys SS-21 Missiles In South Ossetia

'IDF detects Syrian rocket test'

Syria test-launched a series of ground to ground missiles in recent months, Channel 2 reported Monday. According to data released by the military censor, Damascus has been testing rockets over a period of time, and the tests have been detected by Israeli radar systems, including the systems linked to Israel's missile defense systems.Most of Syria's long-range missiles are based on the Scud design, Channel 2 reported.While Syria's arsenal of missiles is based mainly on antiquated soviet ware upgraded and improved in Syria, the missiles - with a range of 300-700 km. - can still reach any target in Israel.Syria is believed to hold chemical warheads in its arsenal and is also suspected to have experimented with biological warheads.However, the inaccurate and heavy Scud missiles - of which Syria has about 1,000 - only supplement dozens of batteries of smaller rockets with a shorter range but also greater accuracy.According to the Channel 2 report, Israel is more concerned with Syria's arsenal of smaller medium range rockets.The Syrian doctrine has changed following the Second Lebanon War, which Damascus has been watching and analyzing closely, and the Syrian army has been aping tactics used by Hizbullah in recent drills and exercises.

As in the days of Noah...

Reactor shut down after fire at Calif. nuke plant

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.-Authorities are investigating a fire at a California nuclear plant that forced a reactor to be shut down. Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant spokeswoman Sharon Gavin said Monday that there was no danger of a radiation leak after a fire the day before. The blaze was in a non-nuclear part of the plant.Gavin says one of two reactors was shut down as part of standard safety procedures. She doesn't know when it will be restarted.The plant started supplying electricity in 1985 and generates power for about 3 million homes in northern and central California.
As in the days of Noah...