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Obama to tour hurricane damage on Monday
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Aug 31, 2012


US President Barack Obama will tour storm damage and visit victims of Hurricane Isaac on Monday, the White House said Friday, as Republican rival Mitt Romney headed for the disaster zone.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said top officials had assessed that Monday was the most appropriate day to visit Louisiana as they were keen to ensure the huge presidential security operation did not detract from relief efforts.

Carney told reporters on Air Force One that Obama would meet officials dealing with the aftermath of Isaac, which tore ashore in New Orleans exactly seven years after killer Hurricane Katrina.

But he sidestepped questions inviting him to judge whether it was appropriate for Romney, who has no official role in dealing with the storm, to go to Louisiana hours after accepting his party's presidential nomination.

"It is always important to draw attention to the fact that individuals and families and business owners are profoundly affected by the storm," Carney said.

Romney is expected to meet Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal and first responders in the town of LaFitte later Friday.

Romney's team announced the last-minute change early in the day in Lakeland, Florida, where the candidate and his running mate Paul Ryan had scheduled a rally.

In a press call, the White House underscored that the decision to travel to the region on Monday was made before Romney announced his plans.

Three days after Isaac made landfall, authorities in Mississippi and Louisiana urged residents to seek shelter amid fears a dam, under pressure from elevated river levels, could fail.

Mindful of the high political price former president George W. Bush's administration paid for the botched handling of Katrina, Obama made a forceful public effort to show he was closely managing Isaac.

He warned people to heed warnings from local officials, in an apparent effort to show Americans that the vast machinery of the US government, which Republicans decry, could be wielded for everyone's benefit.

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Hurricane Kirk strengthens in Atlantic
Miami (AFP) Aug 30, 2012 - Hurricane Kirk strengthened rapidly over the open Atlantic Ocean on Thursday, though it posed no hazard to land, US forecasters said.

The Miami-based National Hurricane Center forecast that the storm, while powerful with top winds gusting at 90 miles (145 kilometers) per hour, would likely spin out over the open seas as it heads east toward Europe.

At 2100 GMT, Kirk was about 1,065 miles northeast of the northern Leeward Islands as it headed north-northwestward at a speed of 13 miles per hour, according to the NHC.

Kirk is a category one storm on the five-point Saffir-Simpson scale and was set to gather strength over the next couple of days, perhaps becoming a category two storm as early as Friday.

Kirk became the fifth hurricane of the 2012 Atlantic season earlier as the US Gulf Coast bears the brunt of Isaac, which caused massive flooding when it swept through Louisiana as a hurricane. It has since been downgraded to a tropical depression as it moved inland.

To the south of Kirk, Tropical Storm Leslie formed, though it also posed no current threat to land. It was on track to become a hurricane in a day or two, according to the NHC.

The eye of the storm was located about 1,060 miles east of the Windward Islands as it spun rapidly westward at 21 miles per hour with top winds of 45 miles per hour.

Leslie was expected to eventually move to the northeast of the lesser Antilles.



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SHAKE AND BLOW
Second typhoon pounds S. Korea, kills two
Seoul (AFP) Aug 30, 2012
A new typhoon hit South Korea's southern coast on Thursday, killing two people, as the country cleared up damage from a powerful storm earlier in the week that left 19 dead. Typhoon Tembin, with winds of up to 83 kilometres per hour (52 mph), made landfall at the southern city of Suncheon and brought more than 150 millimetres (six inches) of rain to some parts of the country, the weather ser ... read more


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