Israeli prime minister discloses he has prostate cancer
JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told Israelis on Monday that he has been diagnosed with prostate cancer, but said the disease was not life-threatening and will not disrupt his work as the country’s leader.
The disclosure came at a sensitive time in Mideast diplomacy, with Olmert and another one-time prostate cancer patient — Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas — struggling to bridge gaping differences ahead of a U.S.-brokered peace conference.
Speaking calmly before a packed hall of reporters, Olmert said the disease was caught early and that he would have surgery "over the next few months.” Vice Premier Haim Ramon said the surgery would be done after the conference.
"I will be able to carry out my duties fully before the treatment and within hours afterward,” Olmert said. "My doctors ... informed me that there is a full chance of recovery and there is nothing about the tumor that is life-threatening or liable to impair my performance or my ability to carry out the mission which has been bestowed upon me.”
Dominican Republic: At least 20 killed in Tropical Storm
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic — Tropical Storm Noel lashed the Dominican Republic with heavy rains on Monday, causing flooding and mudslides that killed at least 20 people and left another 20 missing, officials said.
Noel was expected to dump up to 20 inches of rain on the Dominican Republic and Haiti, which share the island of Hispaniola, as it heads northwest toward the Bahamas.
The storm was expected to veer away from the United States, but forecasters said a tropical storm watch, which means that tropical storm conditions are possible within 36 hours, may be issued for southeast Florida later Monday. The spinning tropical storm had been forecast to hit Haiti hardest but veered toward the Dominican Republic, apparently catching residents offguard.
"We didn’t know that it was going to be like this, it took us by surprise,” said Guarionex Rosado as he left his home in La Cienaga, one of Santo Domingo’s most affected neighborhoods. Noel temporarily knocked out the Dominican Republic’s entire power system early Monday, plunging 9.4 million people into the dark for about two hours, said Radhames Segura, vice president of the state-owned electric company.
Some buildings tumbled down hillsides near the Dominican capital and a cell phone tower slammed to the ground in the southwestern province of Barahona. At least 10 people went missing when the Maimon River overflowed its banks and a sent a torrent of muddy water rushing through the town of Piedra Blanca.
Manuel Antonio Luna Paulino, president of the Dominican Republic’s National Emergency Commission, said at least 20 people had died and another 20 were reported missing.
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Three of those killed died when they were swept up by a fast-moving river in San Jose de Ocoa, southwest of the capital. Three more — a couple and their child — were killed in a mudslide in the port city of Haina, officials said.
International aid workers believe the death toll is certain to rise as reports come in from remote areas of the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
"I think this has taken some officials by surprise. The storm was predicted to go more toward Haiti,” said Holly Inuretta, a regional adviser for U.S.-based Catholic Relief Services.
Haitian Prime Minister Jacques Edouard Alexis said there were no immediate reports of casualties in his country, but he urged people to seek shelter.
"It’s very serious now,” Alexis said at a news conference in the presidential palace. "It’s moving very slowly and dropping a lot of rain.”
Haiti is prone to deadly flooding because of its steep mountains and hills deforested by people who cut down the trees to make charcoal. Floods earlier this month killed at least 37 and sent more than 4,000 people to shelters.
At 8 p.m. EDT, Noel’s center was about 205 miles south-southeast of Great Exuma Island in the central Bahamas, forecasters said. It was heading northwest at roughly 14 mph.
A tropical storm warning remained in effect for the northern peninsula of Haiti, central and southeastern islands in the Bahamas, the Turks and Caicos Islands, and a portion of central and southeastern Cuba, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center.
The storm’s center was expected to move between the northern coast of Cuba and the central Bahamas late Monday and Tuesday.
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Associated Press writer Jonathan M. Katz in Port-au-Prince, Haiti contributed to this report.

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