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East Coast Braces for Tropical Storm Fay, Flooding Reported Already

Two Swedes Jailed for Bombing Danish Tax Office

COPENHAGEN—A Copenhagen court on Thursday found two Swedes guilty of bombing the Danish tax agency and sentenced them to five and four years’ jail respectively. Zacharias Tamer Hamzi, 24, and Nurettin Nuray Syuleyman, 23, were convicted of transporting a bomb via the Oresund Bridge, known from the TV crime series “The Bridge”, and detonating the device in August 2019. The explosion in Copenhagen shattered glass doors and windows and scorched metal cladding at the main entrance of the building in Nordhavn, just north of the city center. One person was slightly wounded. The motive for the bombing remained unclear, but the court dismissed terrorism charges. The prosecutor had sought lifetime sentences for the childhood friends, neither of whom had been convicted of a serious crime before. “I’m pleased that my…

East Coast Braces for Tropical Storm Fay, Flooding Reported Already

Tropical Storm Fay, which is currently barrelling up the mid-Atlantic, has already produced heavy rains on Friday as it moves northward along the East Coast.

Tropical storm warnings and watches, as well as flash flood warnings, advisories, and watches were in effect for much of the northeastern United States and the mid-Atlantic region.

“Tropical Storm Fay will bring heavy rain with flash flood potential, and isolated tornadoes to the Mid-Atlantic and New England,” according to the National Weather Service.

In some parts of New Jersey, street flooding was reported on Friday morning by locals in Stone Harbor.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) said in its 11 a.m. ET update that a tropical storm warning is now in effect from聽Fenwick Island, Delaware, to Watch Hill, Rhode Island, including Long Island and Long Island Sound.

The agency noted that Fay is currently moving to the north at around 12 mph and is located 40 miles east of Cape May, New Jersey.

East Coast Braces for Tropical Storm Fay, Flooding Reported Already The “cone of uncertainty” for Tropical Storm Fay at 11 a.m. on Friday. (National Hurricane Center)

“A northward to north-northeastward motion at a faster forward speed is expected over the next couple of days. On the forecast track, the center of Fay is forecast to move near the mid-Atlantic coast this afternoon and evening and move inland over the mid-Atlantic and northeast United States tonight and Saturday,” according to the NHC’s bulletin.

As the storm moves inland, it will weaken to a tropical depression on early Saturday, the bulletin said.

Fay’s main threat appears to be heavy rainfall, with 2 to 4 inches falling in and around “Delaware northward into New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, southeast New York, and southern New England,” the NHC said. However, isolated totals of up to 7 inches could fall in some areas.

The rain could trigger flash flooding and urban flooding in places with poor drainage, although widespread river flooding isn’t anticipated, forecasters said.

Gusts of up to 50 mph in some areas can be expected, the agency said.

“Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 140 miles (220 km) from the center,” the agency said. “A Weatherflow station at Lewes, Delaware, recently reported a sustained wind of 40 mph (65 km/h) and a wind gust of 50 mph (80 km/h). A National Ocean Service observing site at Lewes recently reported a sustained wind of 40 mph (64 km/h) and a wind gust of 49 mph (79 km/h).”

Around nine people were rescued from the Atlantic Ocean near Long Beach on Long Island on Thursday, officials told ABC News. Four were taken to hospitals and one person died, officials said.

Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach noted that Fay is the earliest sixth-named storm on record.

The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 until Nov. 30.

Focus News: East Coast Braces for Tropical Storm Fay, Flooding Reported Already

Moscow to Reopen Schools as Daily Cases Fall

MOSCOW—Moscow on Thursday said it would reopen schools and universities next week, in the latest lifting of coronavirus restrictions as the number of new daily infections in the Russian capital fell to 568. Moscow, which has overall recorded more than 227,000 cases of the virus, last month lifted a lockdown in place since March and has staggered the reopening of businesses and the lifting of other restrictions. Sergei Sobyanin, Moscow’s mayor, said on Thursday the outbreak was waning in the city and it was time to further ease restrictions. He said schools, universities, summer camps, and cultural centres could reopen starting next week. From the same time, residents of the city of nearly 13 million will no longer be required to wear masks outdoors, he said. But masks will remain…