
Tropical Storm Fay floods hundreds of Fla. homes

NYC mayor calls for wind turbines atop skyscrapers

http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSN1931306420080819
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Floods force thousands to flee homes in India, Nepal

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http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSSP1011920080820
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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
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'Boomerang' Fay May Intensify Into Hurricane, Strike Florida Again

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PERSECUTION WATCH:SRI LANKA--Attacks on Churches on the Rise Again
QUAKEWATCH:Quake hits southwest China, no reports of casualties

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Army Moves Ahead With Mobile Laser Cannon

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.
Cracks in Pakistan coalition day after Musharraf quits

Pakistani newspapers urge action after Musharraf

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http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSISL4446820080819
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Bomb blast at hospital kills 23 in Pakistan

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http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSISL17301120080819
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Bomb kills 43 at Algerian military academy

Nukes unlikely to be affected by Musharraf leaving

Girl from polygamist group ordered into state care

LDS Church Sees Remarkable Surge in Mormon Home Food Storage
Book Based on Prophet Muhammad's Child Bride Yanked At 11th Hour

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

Report: Iran to build more nuclear power plants

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080819/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_nuclear
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Russia says to sign air defense pact with Belarus

Highway blocked by Russians key for Georgia economy

Aid agencies press Russia for access to S.Ossetia

Russia says to pull back Georgia force by Aug 22

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSLJ63443020080819
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Russia Dismisses Nato Warning
Russia smashes Georgian army, sends NATO message

"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.
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'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

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

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

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
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Iran satellite launch a failure: U.S. official

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSN1935578420080819
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'IDF detects Syrian rocket test'

Reactor shut down after fire at Calif. nuke plant
