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Another set of human remains were found in Lake Mead near Las Vegas, the second time this month that remains have been found in the country's largest reservoir, officials said Wednesday.
The remains were discovered at Swim Beach in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area around 8:00 p.m. Monday, according to the National Park Service.
With the help of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department's dive team, park rangers responded and set up a perimeter to retrieve the body, the NPS said.
The Clark County Medical Examiner was contacted and is working to identify the person and discover the cause of death, the park service said.
This is the fifth time since May and the second time this month that human remains have been found in Lake Mead, where water levels are receding at a historic rate.
A firearm was also recovered in "close proximity" to where one of the human remains was found, though it is unclear if it is connected, police said Thursday. A journalist discovered the weapon on Wednesday and alerted investigators, police said.
"Although it is not uncommon for firearms to be found at the lake, it is too early to determine whether it is connected to the current investigation," the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said in a statement.
Lake Mead, formed by the Hoover Dam on the Colorado River, supplies drinking water to millions of people in California, Arizona, Nevada and part of Mexico.
Officials said the water levels are so depleted, they could soon reach "dead pool" status, in which the water is too low to flow downstream to the Hoover Dam. According to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, the minimum water surface level needed to generate power at the dam is 1,050 feet.
On May 7, human skeletal remains were found near the lake's Callville Bay, according to NPS. The discovery came a week after the decayed body of a man was found stuffed in a steel barrel near the reservoir's Hemenway Fishing Pier, over 20 miles from Callville Bay, according to Las Vegas police.
On July 25 and Aug. 6, human remains were also discovered at Swim Beach.
Violent thunderstorms and hurricane-force winds have left at least eight people dead in France and Italy, uprooting trees in Tuscany and on the French island of Corsica and ripping away brick shards from St. Mark's famed bell tower in Venice.
Over 100 boats in the Mediterranean Sea called for emergency help, authorities said on Thursday.
The storm produced gusts of more than 220 kph in some areas, the national weather agency Meteo France said. About 45,000 households were without power on Corsica. Dozens of people were injured and 12 were hospitalised in Corsica, one in critical condition, authorities said.
The Italian regions of Tuscany and Veneto both declared a state of emergency, as the violent storms in the north contrasted with temperatures up to 43 degrees Celsius in southern Italy.
Storms in recent days have slammed Western European countries after a summer of extreme weather, while neighbouring countries in Central and Eastern Europe are still suffering exceptional heat waves and drought.
Two people were killed on Thursday in separate incidents in Tuscany when trees were ripped up by storms, one near the city of Lucca and another near Carrara. Dozens were reported injured, including four people hurt by falling trees at a campground near Carrara.
In Corsica, a 13-year-old girl died after a tree fell in a campsite in the coastal town of Sagone. A 72-year-old woman was killed when a beach restaurant roof fell on her vehicle in Coggia, and a 46-year-old man died at a campsite in Calvi.
Rescue crews found the bodies of a 62-year-old fisherman and an unidentified kayaker off Corsica's coasts, according to the French maritime authority for the Mediterranean. It said both died as a result of the sudden storm and that more than 100 grounded, wrecked or stranded ships in the area have called for emergency help.
French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin traveled to the island on Thursday to inspect the damage.
In Venice, high winds detached pieces of brick from St. Mark’s bell tower, which stands in front of the famed cathedral. Tourists were evacuated from the structure, which was cordoned off. The storm upended chairs and tables in St. Mark’s Square and elsewhere, and swept away beach chairs on the nearby Lido.
The winds rose suddenly yet were calm within about five minutes, Carlo Alberto Tesserin, the caretaker of the Basilica and bell tower, told The Associated Press.
"These were not usual winds for us,'' Tesserin said.
In northern Italy, an overnight storm forced a train line southeast of Genoa to shut down after high winds carried beach structures onto the tracks, damaging the electrical circuitry.
The storm struck during Italy’s busiest beach vacation week. The mayor of Sestri Levante, Valentina Ghio, appealed to visitors to stay away from beaches until the severe weather had passed.
Hail the size of walnuts pummeled Italy's Liguria region with enough force to break the windows of homes and damage orchards and gardens.
While northern Italy has suffered its worst drought in decades this year, heavy rains in recent days brought scattered hailstorms, whirlwinds and flooding that have damaged or destroyed entire crops of fruits and vegetables along with vineyards and olive orchards, according to the Italian agricultural lobby Coldiretti.
Thunderstorms on Wednesday flooded Paris subway stations and the Old Port of Marseille, and winds over 100 kph were recorded at the top of the Eiffel Tower during a flash flood on Tuesday.
The fierce rains come amid a summer of of drought, heat waves and forest fires across Europe that scientists link to human-caused climate crisis.
Yet to the east, on Hungary’s Southern Great Plain, shepherd Sandor Kalman can only dream of rainfall. He grazes sheep on lands desiccated by intense heat and low rainfall. As he walks on his pastures, what grass there still is crunches beneath his boots.
“In this heat wave, this clay soil actually burns the sheep’s feet, it’s so hot,” he said, adding that his herding dogs also find it difficult to walk on the parched earth. “I’m 57 years old, but I’ve never seen a drought this big.”
Hungarian meteorological data this year shows the most severe lack of rainfall since 1901.
Water levels on the Danube River, one of Europe’s largest waterways, have dropped 1.5 meters in three weeks near Budapest, leading the regional water company to warn that the supply of drinking water could be threatened.
“The future is hard to predict, but forecasts and climate models suggest that further severe droughts are likely,” said Klara Kerpely of environmental group WWF Hungary, warning that officials will need to prepare for more frequent extreme weather and rework Hungary’s water retention system.
Source: AP
Hundreds of families on New Zealand's South Island have been forced to leave their homes after flooding caused a state of emergency to be declared in three regions.
A state of emergency was declared on Wednesday in Buller, on the west coast, and Nelson – where 233 homes were evacuated on Thursday after a month's worth of rain fell in just 15 hours.
A tropical storm has dumped more than 30 centimetres of rain on parts of the South Island, causing rivers to burst their banks. The extreme weather has also felled trees.
The deluge turned Nelson's main river, the Maitai, into a torrent – flooding homes, exposing pipes and leaving streets knee-deep in water.
The city's mayor Rachel Reese described the flash flooding as a "one-in-100-year event" as search and rescue teams, plus military personnel, helped people on submerged streets.
She warned locals to treat all water as contaminated because some sewers had broken.
Nelson resident Sam Lagrutta said the situation was "frightening" after police gave him just five minutes to leave his home.
"I literally just grabbed a carry-on bag and filled it with my passport, wallet, and anything important I could find," he told the New Zealand Herald.
A further 160 families along the South Island's west coast were also asked to evacuate.
A wet winter
Buller has been hit by repeated flooding in the past few years.
Mayor Jamie Cleine said frequent evacuations took a toll on a community bracing itself for more flooding.
"It is extremely troubling for people financially and mentally. This is our reality until a long-term solution can be put in place," he told news site Stuff.
Emergency Management Minister Kieran McAnulty was due to visit Nelson Thursday, with more heavy rain expected.
The North Island has also been affected, with three people injured in a car accident in Northland after a tree fell on State Highway One.
The wet winter continues after New Zealand was soaked by its wettest July on record.
Before the damage can be repaired, New Zealand's largest insurer IAG has said building in flood-prone areas must stop.
The climate crisis is having an enormous impact on the insurance sector as 10 major floods in the past two years have led to total losses of around $251,260, the insurer said.
About one percent of New Zealand's homes, some 20,000 properties, are at risk of flooding.
Source: AFP
Sixteen people have died and 36 others are missing after flash flooding hit northwest China.
A search and rescue operation has been launched, the provincial emergency management department said in a statement on Thursday, without providing more details.
The floods occurred in a mountainous region of Datong county in Qinghai province.
The deluge comes during a summer of extreme weather in China, with multiple cities recording their hottest days.
Heatwaves and floods
Four people were killed and nine others injured in a flash flood in southwest China on Saturday, local authorities said.
And severe flooding in southern China in June displaced more than half a million people and caused an estimated $250 million in damage.
Meanwhile, millions of people in southwest China are facing rolling power cuts this week as a crushing heatwave led to an electricity supply crunch that has forced factories to halt work.
Scientists say extreme weather across the world has become more frequent due to climate change, and will likely grow more intense as global temperatures rise.
Source: agencies
The Cabinet held on Wednesday its weekly meeting at Seif Palace and announced two law-decrees of necessity concerning the parliamentary elections. After the meeting, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Oil, and Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs Dr Mohammad Al-Fares said that the meeting approved an amendment to law 35/1962 concerning the elections, enabling now voters to use their civil ID cards to cast their ballots. Another amendment was for law 42/2006, adding new areas to the first, second, fourth and fifth constituencies, indicated the minister.
Anjifa will be added to the first constituency. Shuwaikh Industrial Area, Shuwaikh Health Zone, Nahdha, northwest Sulaibikhat and Jaber Al-Ahmad City were added to second constituency. Meanwhile, West Abdullah Al-Mubarak, South Abdullah Al-Mubarak, Al-Oyoun, Al-Naeem, Al-Naseem, Al-Qasr, Taima and Al-Waha will be added to the fourth constituency. Abu Fatira, Al-Masayel, Abu Alhasani, Sabah Al-Ahmad City and Al-Khairan will be under the fifth constituency. The decrees will be forwarded to His Highness the Amir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah for approval.
Minister Fares said that the Cabinet moved to discussed recent developments in the region and the world. The Cabinet expressed solidarity with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and its efforts to maintain security and peace within its lands. This support came on the background of the recent security operation in Jeddah city to apprehend a wanted individual. The suspect below himself up during the operation leading to the injury of three officers. The Minister also expressed the State of Kuwait’s sorrow over a fire, which erupted in a Church in Egypt, leading to several casualties.
Kuwait offered condolences over those who died in the incident and wished for the swift recovery for those wounded, affirmed Fares. He also noted that the State of Kuwait stood in solidarity with Burkina Faso against the terror attack that occurred in the northern Yatenga province, leaving several dead and injured. The State of Kuwait offered condolences for the families of the victims and wished for the swift recovery for those affected by the heinous attack. – KUNA
The Cabinet on Wednesday approved an emergency decree, for the first time requiring voters to use their civil IDs to prove their residential addresses as a way to combat suspected corruption in elections, Minister of Justice Jamal Al-Jalawi announced. In a second decree, the Cabinet added new residential areas to the existing five electoral districts to allow eligible voters in those areas to participate in the polls.
The requirement to use only civil IDs for voters to prove their place of residence is a major change in Kuwaiti elections, which in the past depended on electoral rolls prepared by the interior ministry and updated every year in February. The use of electoral rolls had allegedly allowed candidates to illegally move voters from one district to another to dramatically boost their chances of winning a seat in the National Assembly.
Such allegations were widely made in the local media and on social media, where the names of the alleged culprits were published without evidence. According to the new method, voters can cast their votes in the Assembly elections only in the constituencies where they live based on the address stated on the civil ID. The Public Authority for Civil Information (PACI) will issue new electoral rolls based on the voters’ addresses.
This measure will prevent corrupt candidates from moving voters from one constituency to another, depriving them of means to boost their chances to win seats in the Assembly. Two weeks ago, the National Assembly was dissolved by an Amiri decree, which also called for holding snap elections to elect a new parliament. The decree cited continued political disputes between the government and opposition MPs as the cause of dissolving the house.
In a televised speech delivered by HH the Crown Prince two months ago, HH the Amir vowed to prevent corruption in the forthcoming elections and pledged the government will not interfere in the election of the Assembly speaker. Adopting civil IDs to vote was one of the major demands by opposition MPs to ensure free and fair elections.
No date has been decided yet for the snap polls, but under Kuwait’s constitution, the new elections must be held within two months of dissolving the Assembly – before October 1 in this case. A decree setting the election date and inviting voters to elect a new 50-member Assembly is expected to be issued next week./agencies
More than 2,000 cases of racist favoritism were reported successful Germany past year, according to a caller study by the country’s apical anti-discrimination agency.
The country’s anti-discrimination commissioner, Ferda Ataman, said the figures are alarming and called for stronger ineligible measures.
"People successful Germany inactive acquisition favoritism each day, particularly successful the occupation marketplace and successful mundane concern and erstwhile looking for accommodation, and sometimes by nationalist authorities oregon connected the street," Ataman said.
"I besides privation radical to cognize their rights and that favoritism is illegal. I privation to marque the German Equality Law amended known and amusement however favoritism tin beryllium specifically prevented,” she added.
According to the report, a full of implicit 5,600 radical filed favoritism complaints, 37% of those cases were of favoritism successful the workplace.
Some 9% of those complaints were filed by radical who experienced favoritism oregon disadvantages owed to their religion.
The Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency offers consultation to radical who successful their nonrecreational oregon backstage lives person experienced favoritism connected grounds of their taste origin, religion, belief, intersexual identity, age, disablement oregon gender.
To conscionable a important summation successful inquiries, the Anti-Discrimination Agency acceptable up a work halfway past twelvemonth to supply caller and expanded telephone consultation services.
"It is precise important to maine that we tin amended assistance affected radical successful Germany. We besides announcement from the results of our survey that the instrumentality that we person astatine the infinitesimal does not ever assistance enough; unfortunately, the anti-discrimination bureau lone has the accidental to marque a ineligible assessment,” Ataman said.
"The existent anti-discrimination instrumentality is precise weak. People person to spell to tribunal unsocial if they privation to spell to court, but what we tin bash arsenic an anti-discrimination assemblage is we tin inquire for a connection from the employer, oregon from the different idiosyncratic involved. We tin effort to assistance them scope a settlement, but successful bid to instrumentality ineligible action, radical person to marque that determination themselves and, for now, we tin lone springiness them a ineligible opinion,” she added.
Since 2019, the Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency publishes yearly reports astir its activities./agencies
Ipswich Conservative MP Tom Hunt has vowed to root out Islamophobia from his local association after hearing that a Tory borough councillor had retweeted two anti-Islam posts.
Steve Flood was elected to represent the Sprites ward for the Tories in 2021 - and had previously been a councillor between 2004 and 2008.
Mr Flood's recent Twitter feed includes retweets of two posts - one saying Islam should not be allowed in the UK and another saying it is a religion that does not allow free speech.
He has now been summoned to a meeting with borough Tory group leader Ian Fisher and Ipswich Conservative Association vice-chairman Tim Buttle.
Mr Hunt said: "This issue has been brought to my attention. I've seen the two social media posts in question that have been shared by a Conservative councillor.
"The social media posts in question contain Islamophobic views. One of the views in particular I find reprehensible.
"I'm all for freedom of expression, but at the end of the day hate is hate and it should have no place on social media or any mainstream political party.
"The views expressed were not published by the Conservative councillor in question. However, clearly it's completely wrong for hate towards any religious group to be amplified and shared on social media.
"I represent a large number of Muslim constituents who I work with closely, like I do with all religious groups across the town.
"Many of my Muslim constituents have spoken to me before about the Islamophobia they often have to endure and I want them to know that as their MP I feel very strongly that there is no place in politics or social media for Islamophobia.
"We need to take a strong line against all hate.
"Clearly, this is a matter for the local Conservative Association and the Conservative Group at the borough council, but I wanted to make my views clear as the local MP."
Ipswich Labour Party secretary John Cook was shocked by the retweets. He said: "I'm appalled by what I've seen on councillor Flood's twitter feed.
"There is no place on Ipswich Borough Council for this bigotry and prejudice. Ipswich Conservatives need to expel him, and bring pressure on him to resign from the council."
Mr Fisher said: "In response to being made aware of two social media posts, Cllr Steve Flood has been invited to a meeting with me and Tim Buttle where he will be expected to explain the reasons for his posts.
"We do not have trial by media so it is disappointing that Cllr Cook, the current Mayor of Ipswich, thought it best to contact the press before making a complaint directly to the council, or to myself."
We have contacted Mr Flood for comment but have not received a response.
This is the second time this year an Ipswich Conservative councillor has come under fire for social media activity - in March Gainsborough councillor Shayne Pooley was suspended by Tory group at the borough and given retraining after posting comments on Facebook justifying President Putin's invasion of Ukraine./agencies
At least 26 people have been killed and dozens of others injured in forest fires that ravaged 14 districts of northern Algeria.
Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud told state television on Wednesday that 24 people lost their lives in fires in El Tarf, near the border with Tunisia, in addition to two others who died earlier in Setif.
The civil protection agency in Setif had said that two women, "a 58-year-old mother and her 31-year-old daughter", were killed in the town.
In Souk Ahras, farther to the east near Algeria's border with Tunisia, people were seen fleeing their homes as fires spread before firefighting helicopters were deployed.
An earlier toll said four people in Souk Ahras suffered burns and 41 others had breathing difficulties, the authorities said. Media reports said 350 residents had been evacuated.
No updated toll was given on the number of people injured in the fires in other areas.
The gendarmerie has closed several roads as a result of the fires.
"Thirty-nine fires are under way in 14 wilayas (administrative councils)," the civil protection agency said, noting that El Tarf was the worst hit, with 16 fires in progress.
Human involvement?
Helicopters used bambi buckets to drop water on fires in three wilayas, including Souk Ahras.
Since the start of August, 106 fires have broken out in Algeria, destroying more than 2,500 hectares of woodland.
Beldjoud said some of the fires were started by people.
Wednesday's toll brings the total number of people killed in wildfires this summer up to 30.
Algeria is Africa's largest country but it only has 4.1 million hectares (10.1 million acres) of the forest.
Each year the north of the country is affected by forest fires, a problem that has worsened due to climate change.
Last year, at least 90 people died in forest fires that ravaged northern Algeria, destroying more than 100,000 hectares of woodland.
Source: AFP
“Israeli” troops have killed a Palestinian youth in the “Israeli”-occupied West Bank city of Nablus and wounded dozens of others.
Palestinian medics identified the man who was killed early on Thursday as Waseem Khalifa, 18, from Balata, the largest refugee camp in the West Bank.
At least 30 Palestinians were wounded, four of whom were shot with live ammunition and three of whom were in critical condition, the Palestine Red Crescent said.
Large forces of the “Israeli” army stormed Al Quds and Amman Streets, the vicinity of Joseph's Tomb, east of Nablus, and Askar and Balata camps, amid violent confrontations during which live bullets, tear gas and sound bombs were fired, Palestine's official news agency WAFA reported.
The “Israeli” military told the Reuters news agency it was checking on the incident.
Killings in Gaza
The fresh killing of a Palestinian comes after “Israeli” jets pounded the besieged Gaza enclave that saw Palestinian fighters responding with hundreds of rockets that wounded 70 Israelis.
At least 49 Palestinians were killed in Gaza, including civilians and children, and hundreds more were wounded during 56 hours of fighting.
“Israeli” forces have carried out near-daily raids in the occupied West Bank in recent months.
Source: agencies