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British Prime Minister David Cameron says he wants an investigation into reports that MI6 helped deliver a terror suspect and his family to Libya , where they were likely tortured, the BBC reports. An ongoing inquiry into British involvement in torture has agreed to look into it. British lawmaker Jack Straw,…

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Texas battles huge wildfires as hundreds of homes destroyed

A 20-year-old woman and her 18-month-old daughter were killed when they were trapped in their mobile home by flames Sixty separate wildfires, whipped by strong winds, were burning across Texas, destroying hundreds of homes and killing at least two people, officials said. Authorities in Gregg County, in northeast Texas, say a 20-year-old woman and her 18-month-old daughter were killed on Sunday when they were trapped in their mobile home by flames. The Texas Forest Service estimates 424 homes may have been destroyed so far, including 300 from the so-called Bastrop County Complex fire east of Austin. Texas Govenor Rick Perry, the front-running Republican Party presidential candidate, cancelled his appearance at a candidate roundtable in South Carolina on Monday to return to Austin. “I have seen a lot of mean-looking fires in my time, but this one is the meanest. You realise the devastation when you see it first hand,” Perry said at a news briefing. “I am not paying any attention to politics right now. There are people’s homes and lives in danger, and that is far more important,” he said to a smattering of applause. “I have never seen a fire season like this. We have lost more than 3.5 million acres to brush fires, that is an area larger than the state of Connecticut,” he said. “We have a long way to go to get this thing contained.” More than 3.6 million acres (1.5 million hectares) in Texas have been scorched by wildfires since November, fed by a continuing drought that has caused more than $5 billion in damage to the state’s agricultural industry and shows no sign of easing any time soon. The Texas Forest Service responded on Sunday to 63 new fires burning on more than 32,000 acres (13,000 hectares), including 22 new large fires. Officials said the worst of the fires was the Bastrop County Complex fire, which stretched for 16 miles (26 km). They said the fire had jumped a road that they had hoped to set up as a barrier, and has now spread to 25,000 acres (10,000 hectares). “We have about 16 miles long at this time and about 6 miles wide (10 km),” said Bastrop County Fire Chief Ronnie McDonald. Residents said the fire had moved very quickly, driven by the strong, gusty winds. “It’s pretty dire,” Justice Jones of the Forest Service said on Monday morning. The Bastrop Complex fire has forced the evacuation of several subdivisions in the county of 70,000 people. “This is a shock,” said one man as he drove out of the fire zone near Bastrop with his family. “We had some nice plans for Labor Day, and this gives you a sick feeling.” The Texas Forest Service said dozens of aircraft were responding to fires, including four heavy airtankers, 15 single-engine airtankers, and 13 aerial supervision aircraft. In the Steiner Ranch area of Austin, a separate fire has forced the evacuation of some 1,000 homes. One woman desperately scanned the wall of thick black smoke and flames looking for her lost dog. “I was just driving around the neighborhood, I’m five months pregnant, and I was taking in smoke and I was freaking out,” she said. “I looked to the right of me and everything over there was full of fire, it was just gone.” About 200 homes had to be evacuated due to a brush fire in the Austin suburb of Pflugerville, and about 150 homes were evacuated in Longview, in east Texas. A dozen homes were under mandatory evacuation on Monday near Tyler in east Texas. Texas United States Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk

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President Barack Obama said today that congressional Republicans must put their country ahead of their party and vote to create new jobs as he used a boisterous Labor Day rally to aim a partisan barb at the GOP. In a preview of the jobs speech he will deliver on Thursday…

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A spike in gay domestic violence slayings has alarmed advocates in Massachusetts, who say the justice system is insensitive to warning signs of gay-on-gay abuse. The state has seen seven such killings since 2010, but attempts to educate police have sputtered, the Boston Globe reports. “It was pretty traumatizing,’’…

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For all the Harvard grads out there, don’t kick yourself—but your school has come in second around the world… again. The Independent reports that QS World University Rankings has given the prize of best university to Cambridge for the second year in a row. Filling out the top five,…

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Move over, Justin Bieber. Jesus Christ is here. The New York Times reports that a Facebook page called Jesus Daily is generating more “Likes” and comments than Bieber’s page simply by posting the words of Jesus four or five times a day. Last week it racked up 3.4 million…

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A French judge may have just sent Viagra sales soaring: He ruled that a 51-year-old man in southern France must pay his wife 10,000 Euros for “lack of sex over 21 years of marriage.” The judge referred to Article 215 of France’s civil code, which says married couples must…

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Honda Motor Co. says it will recall a total of 962,000 cars worldwide to fix power windows and computer systems. Honda will recall 936,000 units of the Fit subcompact, CR-V crossover, and Fit Aria in North America, Asia, Europe, and Africa, the company said today. The Fit is…

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“Everyone in Washington” should be crying out, “My God, what have we done?” writes Paul Krugman in the New York Times . His reasons: The puny 2% interest rate on 10-year national bonds is proof that President Obama’s deficit spending did not raise interest rates, as critics had predicted. Also, the…

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Hurricane Irene relief fund estimated at $1.5bn

White House says cost to taxpayer comes on top of $5.2bn needed to deal with other recent disasters The damage caused by Hurricane Irene will cost $1.5bn in disaster relief, the White House has estimated. White House budget director Jacob Lew said the cost to taxpayers came on top of $5.2bn needed to deal with other recent disasters, including tornadoes that leveled much of Joplin, Missouri. Announcing the initial estimate, Lew said the $1.5bn relief fund should last through next year. More than 40 people were killed when Irene lashed the eastern easboard from the Carolinas to Maine. Despite being downgraded to a tropical storm as it hit land, Irene destroyed many homes and caused serious flooding in Vermont and upstate New York. The damage is expected to total billions of dollars but federal government aid does not include costs covered by private insurance. The costing came as the remenants of Tropical Storm Lee killed a man in Mississippi when he was swept away by floodwaters. John Howard Anderson Jr, 57, had been in a car with two other people trying to cross a rain-swollen creek. Tishomingo County coroner Mack Wilemon said he was told Anderson was outside the car and had been thrown a rope to be rescued, but he could not hold on. The storm was last night sweeping across Alabama and pushing into Georgia, where strong winds, possibly of tornado strength, sent trees crashing into homes and injured at least one person. Lieutenant Jay Baker of the Cherokee county sheriff’s office, northwest of Atlanta, said one person was taken to a hospital with injuries that were not life-threatening. By Monday afternoon at least 16,000 people were without power in Louisiana and Mississippi, which bore the brunt of the storm over the weekend. Hurricane Irene Natural disasters and extreme weather United States David Batty guardian.co.uk

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