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After the bombs, lingering car wrecks haunt Iraqis

By Abdulrahman Taher

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Blackened, broken and twisted, they are a daily reminder of the violence which Baghdad residents would rather forget.

Across the Iraqi capital the shells of bombed and burnt-out cars litter the streets, stranded by the roadside long after the bombs go off, the dead and wounded are dragged away and the blood and shrapnel are swept up.

“Look at this ugly sight. How can someone forget the war when he sees these cars, their destruction, the blackness?” asked Fayez Saddiq Ahmad, pointing to a central Baghdad parking lot filled with wrecked vehicles.

Dozens of cars in various stages of destruction have been dumped at the site, across the road from a school in the Salhiya district.

Some are almost intact, their windows blown out and black marks showing where an explosion may have struck. Others are charred shells, their doors or bonnets blown out by the blasts.

A few, probably used as car bombs, are little more than mangled sheets of metal. Traces of orange and white — the distinctive color of Baghdad taxis — are the only recognizable feature in one pile of scrap.

“This has a psychological impact on people. When they see it they remember the fear, terror, death,” said Wathiq Adnan. “We want to remove this image and replace it with something more optimistic and joyful, so people can forget what is happening.”

U.S. and Iraqi forces have stepped up security across Baghdad in recent months, hoping to stem the waves of roadside bombings and car bombs which have killed thousands of people since U.S.-led forces toppled Saddam Hussein four years ago.  Continued…

Sri Lanka says sinks Tamil Tiger arms ship

COLOMBO (Reuters) - Sri Lankan forces sank a Tamil Tiger arms vessel after a 36-hour deep sea chase south of the island, authorities said on Sunday.

“The navy sank a big LTTE vessel caring weapons off the southern sea,” said navy spokesman Commander D.K.P Dassanayake. “We believe there were about 12 to 15 on board.”

The navy said it believed there were no survivors and it was currently collecting floating items.

It said the 70-metre vessel was sunk about 1700 km (1,000 miles) off Sri Lanka.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who say they are fighting for an independent state for minority ethnic Tamils in the north and east, were not immediately available for comment.

An estimated 5,000 people have died since last year in renewed fighting after a peace process collapsed.

Separately, the military said 10 rebels and one soldier were killed in ground battles.

Vietnam provinces fight worst floods in decades

THANH HOA, Vietnam (Reuters) - A typhoon followed by floods
and landslides killed up to 34 people in Vietnam, cut power and
closed roads in some of the worst flooding in decades,
officials said on Sunday.

The government storm prevention committee said that at
least 19 people were missing in the aftermath of typhoon
Lekima, which slammed several provinces on Wednesday night.

Thanh Hoa and Nghe An provinces in north-central Vietnam
were hit hardest by torrential rains and strong winds blowing
off roofs and then flooding submerged entire villages.

“This may be the worst flooding since 1945,” said Phan Dang
Khoa, a Communist Party official in Thach Thanh district of
Thanh Hoa where a dyke on the Buoi river broke, causing
extensive flooding.

Khoa said the river rose to 14.25 metres (46 ft 9 in),
almost 2.5 metres (8 ft 2.42 in) higher than the highest level.

A Reuters cameraman and photographer on the scene said most
houses were submerged in murky brown water. Many people sat on
roof tops with their meagre belongings.

Helicopters have dropped dry food supplies such as instant
noodles to stranded villagers and rescuers waded through
chest-high water to help people to safety.

The underdeveloped Southeast Asian country of 85 million
faces up to 10 storms a year that cause millions of dollars in
damage and kill hundreds of people.

Lekima was the fifth of 2007, but flooding and landslides
in the aftermath have been even more devastating. The storm and
floods destroyed about 100,000 homes mainly in central
provinces and 15,000 ha of rice crops.  Continued…

Race, religion still divisive issues in Malaysia: PM

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Fifty years after independence, race and religion remain divisive issues in Malaysia, with the nation at times coming “close to the brink of disaster”, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said.

Malay Muslims form about 60 percent of the country’s population of roughly 26 million. Hindus, Buddhists and Christians dominate among the Indian and Chinese minorities.

Many non-Muslims say the authorities and the courts are allowing their rights, including freedom of religion, to be trampled by the Muslim majority.

Abdullah said the country would not be as successful if racial and religious issues were not addressed, newspapers reported on Sunday.

“We have been solving one racial issue after another. That is a fact,” Abdullah told a meeting of the mainly Chinese-backed Gerakan party, a component of the ruling coalition.

“I do not want to pretend that everything is great and there are no problems, no weaknesses and no flaws. I do not want to be in a state of denial,” he said.

The growing racial and religious divide has stoked fears of more tension ahead of an anticipated early general election. Increasingly, leaders of the multi-racial government are urging Malaysians to heed the lessons of 1969, when racial tensions burst into deadly riots.

Abdullah criticized those who were trapped in the mindset of turning everything into a racial or religious issue.

“We respond readily when there is something that we perceive to be a racial issue. We respond quickly when someone we do not like brings these matters up. This makes the issue more complicated and harder to resolve,” he said.

Typhoon kills 5 in Taiwan, heads for China

By Ralph Jennings

TAIPEI (Reuters) - A strong typhoon headed for China on Sunday after killing five people, injuring 53 and cutting power to more than 2 million people in Taiwan as it lashed the island with heavy rain and high winds.

Typhoon Krosa was on course to reach China around noon while continuing to dump rain on Taiwan, forecasters said.

At 11:30 p.m. EDT (Saturday), it was packing sustained winds of 101 kph and gusts of 126 kph about half way between Taiwan and the mainland, where more than 1 million people have been evacuated as a precaution.

“We can’t say it’s totally past Taiwan, and there will still be some impact felt here,” said Lin Guan-chen, an inspector with the Ministry of the Interior’s disaster response centre in Taipei. “We haven’t lifted our warnings.”

A landslide killed two people in a mountainous area of the capital, Taipei, while isolated accidents caused by high winds killed another two. A traffic accident caused the fifth casualty, Taiwan’s National Fire Agency reported.

Another 2,394 people were evacuated and 1,453 put in temporary shelters, the agency said.

Also on Saturday 2.2 million homes and businesses lost power. All but 146,000 outages had been restored by Sunday, the agency said. Wind-blown rain flooded homes, blocked roads and downed signs and trees across the island.

The storm led to the cancellation on Sunday of 71 of 584 international flights 242 of 307 domestic flights. The government continued to advise against going to work or to any classes.  Continued…