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Dominican Republic: Tropical Storm Melissa Batters, Causing Damage and Disruptions 2

Tropical Storm Melissa swept through the Dominican Republic, toppling trees, traffic lights, and triggering small landslides. Authorities closed schools and government offices across several provinces as the storm disrupted water systems and threatened severe flooding. Melissa is expected to strengthen into a Category 4 hurricane this weekend as it lashes the Caribbean with heavy rain and destructive winds.

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Indonesia: Mt. Lewotobi Erupts, Triggers Highest Alert and Spews Ash High Into Sky

Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki on Flores Island, East Nusa Tenggara, erupted late Tuesday, October 15, and again early Wednesday, spewing ash up to 10 kilometers into the sky. Indonesia’s volcanology agency raised the alert to its highest level after detecting deep tremors that signaled possible explosive activity.

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Australia: Record Flooding Batters Northern NSW After Heavy Rainfall 2

Flooding has battered cities and towns across the Mid-North Coast and the Hunter Region in northern New South Wales, leaving many residents stranded or forced to evacuate after days of heavy rainfall. In the city of Taree, the Manning River surpassed its 1929 record of six meters and was still rising as of Wednesday morning, May 21. Authorities have issued 13 emergency-level alerts.

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Australia: Record Flooding Batters Northern NSW After Heavy Rainfall 3

Flooding has battered cities and towns across the Mid-North Coast and the Hunter Region in northern New South Wales, leaving many residents stranded or forced to evacuate after days of heavy rainfall. In the city of Taree, the Manning River surpassed its 1929 record of six meters and was still rising as of Wednesday morning, May 21. Authorities have issued 13 emergency-level alerts.

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US: Severe Weather Warning for Houston Area With Hail, High Winds, Tornado Risk

The National Weather Service issued a severe thunderstorm warning for the Houston area until evening of Monday, May 5. It brought hail, damaging winds, flooding, and possible tornadoes.

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US: Sunset Fire Ignites In Hollywood Hills, Triggering Mandatory Evacuation Orders

A brush fire, dubbed the Sunset Fire, broke out in the Hollywood Hills on Wednesday evening, January 8, triggering mandatory evacuation orders.

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Philippines: Thunderstorms Hit, Bringing Intense Rainfall To Central Regions

The regions of Visayas, Bicol, Calabarzon, and Mimaropa may experience cloudy skies with scattered rains as isolated thunderstorms hit. According to reports, heavy rainfall of 100 to 200 mm was expected in Northern Samar on Monday.

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Decade after heroic death

Decade after heroic death

TOKYO, Japan - South Korean woman Shin Yoon Chan (L) places flowers on a platform at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo on Jan. 26, 2011, where her son Lee Su Hyon was killed by a train as he tried to rescue a stranger 10 years ago. On the right is Lee's father Lee Song Dae. Lee Su Hyon was 26 and studying at a Japanese language school when he was killed along with 47-year-old photographer Shiro Sekine, who also attempted to save a drunken man who had fallen off the platform on Jan. 26, 2001. The drunken man also died. (Pool photo by Kyodo News)

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Singer Sugi performs in memorial concert for Li Su Hyon

Singer Sugi performs in memorial concert for Li Su Hyon

SEOUL, South Korea - Japanese singer Ryotaro Sugi sings in a memorial concert in Seoul on March 18 for Li Su Hyon, a 26-year-old South Korean who was killed while jumping onto the tracks and trying to pull a drunken man to safety at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku district in January 2001.

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Memorial service held in Tokyo for 2 train heroes

Memorial service held in Tokyo for 2 train heroes

TOKYO, Japan - A joint memorial service is held in Tokyo on Jan. 26 for Lee Su Hyon, a 26-year-old South Korean student (L) and, Shiro Sekine, a 47-year-old Japanese photographer (R) who were killed by an oncoming train a year ago when they attempted to rescue a man who had fallen off the platform of a Tokyo train station. About 400 citizens and Japanese government officials, including Foreign Minister Makiko Tanaka, attended the ceremony to mark the first anniversary of the accident, which occurred on the tracks at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku Ward.

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S. Korean train hero honored at 1-year memorial service

S. Korean train hero honored at 1-year memorial service

PUSAN, South Korea - A memorial ceremony for Lee Su Hyon, who was killed last year when he tried to rescue a man who had fallen onto the tracks at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku Ward, is held in Pusan on Jan. 26, the first anniversary of his death.

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Train platform safety improved substantially

Train platform safety improved substantially

TOKYO, Japan - Ninety percent of major train stations in Japan have installed or are in the process installing escape mechanisms to reduce fatal accidents on tracks, the government said Jan. 25. The effort follows the deaths of three passengers in January last year at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku Ward. Photo shows escape space completed at JR Shin-Okubo Station.

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Evacuation area construction begins at JR Shin-Okubo Station

Evacuation area construction begins at JR Shin-Okubo Station

TOKYO, Japan - East Japan Railway Co. men begin work early on the morning of June 21 to construct emergency evacuation areas under the platforms of Shin-Okubo Station following an accident in January in which three people, including a South Korean student and a Japanese photographer, were killed.

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Sculpture to commemorate 2 train heroes set near station

Sculpture to commemorate 2 train heroes set near station

TOKYO, Japan - A sculpture is unveiled near JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo on March 16 to commemorate a South Korean student and a Japanese photographer killed by a rush-hour train in January while trying to save a drunken man from the tracks. The granite sculpture, which depicts a gate, was created by Mitsuzo Yamada, a 55-year-old artist in Sakura, Chiba Prefecture, to honor the self-sacrifice of South Korean student Lee Su Hyon, 26, and Shiro Sekine, a 47-year-old photographer from Yokohama.

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Steps installed to prevent platform accidents

Steps installed to prevent platform accidents

TOKYO, Japan - Workers sent from East Japan Railway Co. set up steps at Tokyo's JR Hamamatsucho Station March 3 to prevent platform accidents. Steps were placed in the wake of the Jan. 26 accident at JR Shin-Okubo Station, where two men were killed while trying to rescue a drunken man who fell onto the track. There were no evacuation spaces at the station.

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Ibuki attends funeral of railway track rescuer

Ibuki attends funeral of railway track rescuer

YOKOHAMA, Japan - Bummei Ibuki (2nd from L), chairman of the National Public Safety Commission, leaves the funeral of Shiro Sekine, a Yokohama photographer, on Jan. 29. Sekine and Lee Su Hyon, a 26-year-old South Korean student, were both killed by an oncoming train after they jumped onto the tracks at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku Ward to rescue an apparently drunk man who had fallen off the platform.

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Parents of student killed by train receive gratitude message

Parents of student killed by train receive gratitude message

TOKYO, Japan - Parents (R) of 26-year-old South Korean student Lee Su Hyon, who was run over by a train in Tokyo, receive a message of gratitude from Hidetoshi Kagawa, chief of the Shinjuku Police Station in Tokyo, at a funeral ceremony in Tokyo's Arakawa Ward on Jan. 29. Lee and photographer Shiro Sekine, 47, were struck and killed by a rush-hour commuter train on the Yamanote loop line while trying to rescue a drunken man who had fallen off a platform at JR Shin-Okubo Station.

  •  
S. Korean train hero honored at 1-year memorial service

S. Korean train hero honored at 1-year memorial service

PUSAN, South Korea - A memorial ceremony for Lee Su Hyon, who was killed last year when he tried to rescue a man who had fallen onto the tracks at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku Ward, is held in Pusan on Jan. 26, the first anniversary of his death.

  •  
Train platform safety improved substantially

Train platform safety improved substantially

TOKYO, Japan - Ninety percent of major train stations in Japan have installed or are in the process installing escape mechanisms to reduce fatal accidents on tracks, the government said Jan. 25. The effort follows the deaths of three passengers in January last year at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku Ward. Photo shows escape space completed at JR Shin-Okubo Station.

  •  
Decade after heroic death

Decade after heroic death

TOKYO, Japan - South Korean woman Shin Yoon Chan (L) places flowers on a platform at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo on Jan. 26, 2011, where her son Lee Su Hyon was killed by a train as he tried to rescue a stranger 10 years ago. On the right is Lee's father Lee Song Dae. Lee Su Hyon was 26 and studying at a Japanese language school when he was killed along with 47-year-old photographer Shiro Sekine, who also attempted to save a drunken man who had fallen off the platform on Jan. 26, 2001. The drunken man also died. (Pool photo by Kyodo News)(Kyodo)

  •  
Singer Sugi performs in memorial concert for Li Su Hyon

Singer Sugi performs in memorial concert for Li Su Hyon

SEOUL, South Korea - Japanese singer Ryotaro Sugi sings in a memorial concert in Seoul on March 18 for Li Su Hyon, a 26-year-old South Korean who was killed while jumping onto the tracks and trying to pull a drunken man to safety at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku district in January 2001. (Kyodo)

  •  
Evacuation area construction begins at JR Shin-Okubo Station

Evacuation area construction begins at JR Shin-Okubo Station

TOKYO, Japan - East Japan Railway Co. men begin work early on the morning of June 21 to construct emergency evacuation areas under the platforms of Shin-Okubo Station following an accident in January in which three people, including a South Korean student and a Japanese photographer, were killed.

  •  
Sculpture to commemorate 2 train heroes set near station

Sculpture to commemorate 2 train heroes set near station

TOKYO, Japan - A sculpture is unveiled near JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo on March 16 to commemorate a South Korean student and a Japanese photographer killed by a rush-hour train in January while trying to save a drunken man from the tracks. The granite sculpture, which depicts a gate, was created by Mitsuzo Yamada, a 55-year-old artist in Sakura, Chiba Prefecture, to honor the self-sacrifice of South Korean student Lee Su Hyon, 26, and Shiro Sekine, a 47-year-old photographer from Yokohama.

  •  
Steps installed to prevent platform accidents

Steps installed to prevent platform accidents

TOKYO, Japan - Workers sent from East Japan Railway Co. set up steps at Tokyo's JR Hamamatsucho Station March 3 to prevent platform accidents. Steps were placed in the wake of the Jan. 26 accident at JR Shin-Okubo Station, where two men were killed while trying to rescue a drunken man who fell onto the track. There were no evacuation spaces at the station.

  •  
Parents of student killed by train receive gratitude message

Parents of student killed by train receive gratitude message

TOKYO, Japan - Parents (R) of 26-year-old South Korean student Lee Su Hyon, who was run over by a train in Tokyo, receive a message of gratitude from Hidetoshi Kagawa, chief of the Shinjuku Police Station in Tokyo, at a funeral ceremony in Tokyo's Arakawa Ward on Jan. 29. Lee and photographer Shiro Sekine, 47, were struck and killed by a rush-hour commuter train on the Yamanote loop line while trying to rescue a drunken man who had fallen off a platform at JR Shin-Okubo Station.

  •  
Ibuki attends funeral of railway track rescuer

Ibuki attends funeral of railway track rescuer

YOKOHAMA, Japan - Bummei Ibuki (2nd from L), chairman of the National Public Safety Commission, leaves the funeral of Shiro Sekine, a Yokohama photographer, on Jan. 29. Sekine and Lee Su Hyon, a 26-year-old South Korean student, were both killed by an oncoming train after they jumped onto the tracks at JR Shin-Okubo Station in Tokyo's Shinjuku Ward to rescue an apparently drunk man who had fallen off the platform.

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