ISIS claims responsibility for the deaths of two Syrian refugee activists who fled to
Sanliurfa,
Turkey, raising concerns about the group’s reach in countries outside of
Syria and
Iraq. Ibrahim Abdel Qader, a founder of
Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently, and Fares Hammadi are said to have been killed by an acquaintance posing as a defector from ISIS.
(New York Times)
At least four people are killed and 15 injured in an ISIL attack in the
Kurdish section of northern
Iraq.
(Al-Arabiyah)
Honda, Takata's biggest customer, announces it will not use
airbag inflaters made by Takata Corp. for the driver or front passenger side in new
Honda and
Acura vehicles for any market, worldwide.
(USA Today)(NASDAQ)
At least seven people are dead and 35 others are injured as a bus overturns near
Tula,
Russia.
(RT)
At least 30 people are killed and 35 injured after an overcrowded
bus carrying passengers inside and on its roof veered off a mountain road in northwest
Nepal.
(USA Today)
"Ravaged by months of war, Yemen now gets battered by the first tropical storm on record to make landfall."
Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Chapala slams into
Yemen's central coast, with maximum sustained winds of around 140 kph (85 mph) -- the equivalent of a
Category 1 hurricane. The storm floods coastal areas, brings down electricity lines and destroys houses, with severe threat of mudslides. Chapala is expected to pour over two or three years worth of rain, up to 300 millimeters (12 inches), in a single day.
(CNN)(Abu Dhabi Media)
Japan has delivered two more ships to
Vietnam that will be refurbished into patrol boats. The ships, which arrived in the
port city of Da Nang, are the second delivery of a 2014 deal in which
Tokyo is to provide Vietnam with six used fishing vessels that will be converted into patrol boats for Vietnam's
coast guard in the
South China Sea.
(Voice of America)
Former five-term
Bridgeport mayor
Joe Ganim wins election to a sixth term as mayor of
Connecticut's largest city, topping the six other candidates in the poll. Ganim is, in
American parlance, an "ex-con;" i.e., a
convicted felon. In 2003, he was convicted by a federal jury on 16 felony counts for racketeering, bribery, conspiracy, mail fraud, and tax evasion in an operation that also led to convictions of 10 of his associates. Ganim served seven years in federal prison; he was released from a
Hartford halfway house in 2010.
(Hartford Courant)(AP via CBSLocal.com)
Newcomer, businesswoman, and clinical psychologist Karen Weaver tops incumbent
Dayne Walling in the non-partisan,
Flint, Michigan, Mayor's election. Flint, which is dealing with lead in drinking water, has been under
State financial management for close to four full years, and is in the final stage where
control will be returned to city officials.
(AP)(Detroit News)(MLive Media)
Ballot initiatives, referendums
In
Ohio, a ballot initiative that would have established a legal oligopoly for the sale of recreational and medicinal
marijuana is resoundingly defeated by voters, according to AP.
(Los Angeles Times)
Voters in
Denver's suburban
Jefferson County recall, by 64 to 36 percent, three conservative school board members who worked to weaken the local teachers union while boosting funding for charter schools and pushing through other market-driven policy changes. In Fall 2014, the conservative-led majority drew
national attention when they wanted the
APU.S. history course to focus on citizenship and patriotism, while condemning civil disobedience and strike actions.
(Washington Post)(AP via Huffington Post)