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/ 3 October 2005

Tropical Storm Stan hits Central America

Heavy rains and floods from Tropical Storm Stan hit Central America over the weekend, killing 15 in El Salvador, four in Guatemala and four in Honduras, authorities said on Monday. In El Salvador, the driving rain sparked a number of mudslides that led the government to declare a national ”red alert”.

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/ 3 October 2005

Fires burn out of control in three provinces

Firefighting teams are battling to extinguish 15 forest and veld fires that continue to burn out of control in Mpumalanga, Limpopo and KwaZulu-Natal, Working on Fire (WF) said on Monday. WF spokesperson Val Charlton said about 26 WF firefighting teams are battling the blazes across the northern parts of the country.

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/ 3 October 2005

Nigeria’s anti-gay bishop fights new battle

Nigerian Archbishop Peter Akinola, a strong opponent of the acceptance of homosexuality within the worldwide Anglican Church, has chosen a different battle at home — the fight against corruption and what he calls the ”dirty game” of politics. Akinola said the government’s fight against ”the evil of corruption” is not going nearly far enough.

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/ 3 October 2005

Bush nominates loyalist for Supreme Court

United States President George Bush nominated White House counsel and long-time loyalist Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court on Monday, a move that may shape legal battles on divisive issues such as abortion for decades. If confirmed by the US Senate, she would replace retiring Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.

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/ 3 October 2005

Dispute over support for Cosatu strike

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) claimed to have shut down the clothing industry in the Western Cape on Monday during a one-day strike in the province and in the Eastern Cape. But a Western Cape clothing-industry spokesperson described the shutdown claim as ”a joke”.

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/ 3 October 2005

Darfur peace talks in full swing

Members of Sudan’s government and the two rebel movements fighting in the war-torn Darfur region began substantive peace talks on Monday as the African Union called for an end to a recent upsurge in violence. ”We cannot understand the repeated acts of banditry in Darfur,” AU conference chairperson Salim Ahmed Salim said.

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/ 3 October 2005

Typhoon in China: Police academy swept away

Fifty-nine trainee police officers were missing on Monday after mountain torrents swelled by Typhoon Longwang swept away two buildings at their academy in south-east China, state media reported. At least three people were killed as Typhoon Longwang brought heavy rain, flooding and strong winds to south-eastern China.