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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/12/2013 3:26:46 PM

Philippines battered by year's strongest typhoon; nine missing

Reuters

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MANILA (Reuters) - The year's most powerful typhoon slammed into the Philippines on Monday, triggering landslides and floods, cutting power and communications and leaving 9 fishermen missing, weather and disaster officials said.

Typhoon Utor, packing winds of 140 km per hour (87 mph) near its center and gusts of up to 170 km per hour, weakened slightly after hitting the country's north and is moving slowly west-northwest at 19 km per hour, the officials said.

The coastal town of Casiguran in Aurora province, 343 km northeast of the capital Manila, suffered the worst damage, after Utor set off landslides that blocked its only access road.

"Power was cut in the wee hours of the morning up to now, as well as communication lines in three towns in Aurora, Casiguran included," provincial governor Gerardo Noveras told ANC television, adding that the full extent of damage was still unknown.

Devastation ranged from uprooted trees, fallen lampposts and tangled power lines to several flattened houses, a television broadcast showed.

The typhoon, the 12th tropical cyclone this year, is expected to sweep through the northern Philippine provinces of Benguet and Ilocos Sur before exiting towards the South China Sea by Tuesday, disaster and weather officials said.

The national disaster agency said there were no reports of casualties so far but nine fishermen were missing from the southeastern coastal provinces of Camarines Norte and Catanduanes.

About 20 typhoons hit the Philippines every year, often causing death and destruction. A state of national calamity was declared last December after typhoon Bopha killed more than 700 people in the resource-rich south, but most storms make landfall further north.

(Reporting by Rosemarie Francisco; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/12/2013 3:33:59 PM

Deadly Typhoon Utor strikes Philippines

Residents wade along a flooded stretch of road as heavy rains brought on by Typhoon Utor hit Manila on August 12, 2013 (AFP, Jay Directo)
(AFP) – 3 hours ago

MANILA — The strongest typhoon to hit the Philippines this year flattened houses, caused flash floods and triggered landslides in remote towns on Monday, killing at least one person.

With gusts of 200 kilometres (124 miles) an hour, authorities said they feared many more people may have died as Typhoon Utor swept across coastal and mountainous regions of the northern Philippines.

"It looks like the death and damage toll is going to go up... with wind like this, you can expect a lot of damage," Francis Rodriguez, a senior officer with the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, told AFP.

Rodriguez said authorities would likely not receive reports from isolated villages that were in Utor's direct path until Tuesday.

Hundreds of people die each year in the Philippines from the roughly 20 typhoons that strike the country.

The wind from Utor, which made landfall before dawn on Monday, was the strongest recorded in the Philippines this year, while the typhoon also brought intense rain.

Rodriguez said the first confirmed fatality was a man crushed by a landslide while trying to clear a mountain road in the northern Benguet province.

A local television cameraman in another northern province also filmed the horrifying ordeal of a woman who was swept down a swollen river on the thatched roof of her house.

The woman stood on the roof as if it was a surfboard, as people screamed out in alarm from high ground.

She quickly disappeared amid the crashing of the fast-moving water, and it was unclear if she survived.

Rodriquez said 13 fishermen were also still missing after they went out to sea as the storm approached.

Authorities said large areas of the coastal province of Aurora, where the storm made landfall, suffered heavy damage.

"Infrastructure, farms, homes were destroyed. Trees were knocked down," Elson Egargue, Aurora's disaster management officer, told AFP.

He said the coastal town of Casiguran, home to about 20,000 people, was believed to have been hit particularly hard, although officials had yet to make contact with residents or authorities there.

"The roads in these areas are blocked because of landslides and overflowing creeks," he said, adding mobile phone networks were also down.

He said there was also extensive damage to two other nearby towns, home to about 25,000 people.

In Manila, the nation's capital, roughly 200 kilometres (120 miles) to the south of the storm's path, there was heavy rain overnight and throughout Monday but no major flooding.

Schools across the capital were closed on Monday in an automatic response to a government storm alert.

Such precautionary measures have become standard after the death tolls of storms in recent years have been exacerbated by poor preparations.

Over a thousand people were killed when Typhoon Bopha hit the Philippines in December, the deadliest storm in the world in 2012.

In 2009, more than 460 people were killed when tropical storm Ketsana led to flooding across 80 percent of Manila.

The weather bureau said the eye of Utor had travelled west out of the Philippine and into the South China Sea on Monday afternoon, going towards southern China.

But it said Utor was expected to continue bringing heavy rains to Luzon on Monday night and Tuesday.

Authorities in Hong Kong said they were preparing for Utor to potentially dump heavy rains there this week. The Hong Kong Observatory raised a stage one typhoon alert. Stage 10 is its highest-level alert.

Copyright © 2013 AFP. All rights reserved. More »

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/12/2013 3:41:53 PM

Syrian rebel commander visits front in Assad's home province

Reuters

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A Free Syrian Army fighter aims his weapon as he takes position in al-Jdeideh neighbourhood in the old city of Aleppo, August 11, 2013. REUTERS/Hamid Khatib

BEIRUT (Reuters) - The head of the rebel Free Syrian Army has visited the coastal province of Latakia, according to video footage, a show of force in President Bashar al-Assad's family's home province.

Several villages in Latakia, which is a stronghold of Assad's Alawite sect, have been overrun by Sunni Muslim insurgents over the past few days.

General Salim Idriss, who leads the rebel Supreme Military Council, was shown in a video uploaded to the Internet on Sunday wearing casual dress and a shoulder-strapped gun holster and standing outside with mountains in the distance.

Speaking to rebels, he said he was in Latakia to see the "important successes and victories that our revolutionaries have gained on the coastal front".

Reuters cannot independently verify reports due to severe security and reporting restrictions.

Idriss' forces are backed by the West, but the Latakia offensive is being led by two al Qaeda-linked groups who have killed hundreds of people this month and driven hundreds more to seek refuge on the Mediterranean coast.

Underfunded and fragmented, Idriss' men have been overshadowed by these hardline groups and some more moderate rebel leaders have been killed in power struggles with al Qaeda affiliates that include foreign fighters.

One group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, issued a statement on Sunday saying its Islamist militants were now "a stone's throw from Qurdaha", the Assad family's hometown. It said the militants had fired rockets into the town.

The rebel advance into Alawite territory is a major gain for Assad's foes after months of setbacks during which they lost ground around the capital Damascus and the central city of Homs.

Combined with a steady fight back in the southern province of Deraa, it highlights the challenge Assad faces in trying to restore his authority across Syria after two years of conflict that has killed 100,000 people and fragmented the country.

Assad controls much of southern and central Syria, while rebels hold northern areas near the Turkish border and along the Euphrates valley towards Iraq. The northeast corner is now an increasingly autonomous Kurdish region.

(Reporting by Oliver Holmes, editing by Elizabeth Piper)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/12/2013 3:52:35 PM

Missing Teen, Alleged Abductor Spotted by Civilians on Horseback


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Hannah Anderson and alleged kidnapper James DiMaggio were found in the backwoods of Idaho.

Missing Teen, Alleged Abductor Spotted by Civilians on Horseback

Hannah Anderson and alleged kidnapper James DiMaggio were found in the
backwoods of Idaho

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/12/2013 3:57:58 PM

French Muslims fear surge in attacks by far-right militants


PARIS (Reuters) - Muslim leaders in the French city of Lyon said on Monday they feared a surge in attacks on mosques in the style of one averted last week in which a soldier was arrested on suspicion of planning a shooting during an Islamic feast holiday.

Anti-Muslim incidents have risen steadily in recent years in France, home to Europe's largest Islamic minority, according to the Committee against Islamophobia in France (CCIF), which blames anti-Muslim rhetoric by far-right politicians.

A far-right activist said such violence had been provoked by government efforts to suppress "nationalist movements" that provided a legitimate outlet for discontent.

Kamel Kabtane, rector of the Grand Mosque of Lyon, called on local Muslims to gather for a show of solidarity at the suburban Minguettes Mosque, which police said the soldier arrested on Saturday planned to shoot at on the Muslim Eid al-Fitr holiday.

The 23-year-old, from an air force base near Lyon, was placed under formal investigation on Monday, accused of "possessing category 4 ammunitions in relation to a terrorist undertaking". Described by the interior ministry as holding extreme right-wing views, he was also accused of lobbing a Molotov cocktail at a mosque near Bordeaux last year.

"There is a clear will today to hurt the Muslim community," Kabtane said, adding that two minor acts had been carried out against mosques in southeastern France over the weekend.

"These are no longer isolated acts. It feels like there is a whole organization being put in place," he said.

RISING ANTI-MUSLIM VIOLENCE

French media say such incidents have increased by 50 percent in the first half of 2013. The presence of far-right militants at anti-gay marriage protests highlighted half a dozen shadowy extremist groups the government has since shut down.

Alexandre Gabriac, the young founder of a now banned far-right group called the Revolutionary Youths, blamed the rise in anti-Muslim attacks on the clampdown and said the government should take some responsibility.

"Dissolving nationalist movements drives people to carry out isolated, reckless acts," he said. "Our groups enabled the anger that is rising to be channeled and transformed into a political foundation. These isolated acts will be more and more frequent."

Staunchly secular France has long struggled to assimilate a Muslim population made up largely of descendants of immigrants from ex-colonies, that has grown to around 5 million people and itself feels shut out of mainstream society and the job market.

The previous conservative government banned full-face veils in public and far-right politicians have complained about Muslim prayers spilling out onto streets from overcrowded mosques.

The clampdown on far-right groups was sparked by the death of a left-wing student in a brawl in Paris.

Kamel Arioua, head of an association that manages the Minguettes mosque, said the soldier's alleged plan to shoot at it on the holiday marking the end of the Ramadan fasting period could have set off a riot, even if there were no casualties.

The soldier, in police custody on Monday, is also accused of "defacing a place of worship in relation to a terrorist undertaking" for the Bordeaux attack, a legal source said.

In France, placing a person under formal investigation means there is serious or consistent evidence pointing to their likely implication in a crime, and moves them a step closer to a trial.

(Reporting by Chine Labbe; Writing by Catherine Bremer; Editing by Mark Heinrich)


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