In the World

Attack kills 14 soldiers in Yemen
Fourteen Yemeni soldiers were killed Saturday in a "terrorist attack" on a headquarters for political security intelligence in Aden, the Defense Ministry said on its website.
Seven other people were injured when the attackers fired weapons including rocket-propelled grenades, the ministry said. A booby-trapped car was used as part of the attack and an armored vehicle was set on fire, according to the website.
Resident Fawaz Sharabi said by phone from Aden that he saw six wounded people, among them three soldiers and three employees of the nearby Aden Radio station. The radio station building was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade and an armored vehicle was seen burning after heavy clashes and blasts in the area, he said.
Yemen, bordering Saudi Arabia and Oman at the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, is struggling to recover from protests that weakened the central government's authority and forced Ali Abdullah Saleh, who ruled the country for more than three decades, to cede power last year. - Bloomberg News
S. Korea subway attack injures 8
SEOUL, South Korea - Eight people were stabbed or cut by a man wielding a box-cutter Saturday at a subway station just outside of South Korea's capital, police said.
No one died in the 10-minute rampage and the injuries weren't life-threatening, according to three police officers who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk to the media. A man was arrested running away from the station in Uijeongbu, which is home to U.S. and South Korean military bases, the officers said. Such attacks are rare in South Korea.
The Yonhap news agency quoted witnesses as saying that the suspect began stabbing people on a train and then on a station platform after a man and woman confronted him for spitting in the train. - AP
Morsi to attend talks in Iran
CAIRO - Egypt's President Mohammed Morsi will attend a summit in Iran this month, a presidential official said Saturday, the first such trip for an Egyptian leader since relations with Tehran deteriorated decades ago.
The visit could mark a thaw between the two countries after years of enmity, especially since Egypt signed its 1979 peace treaty with Israel and Iran underwent its Islamic revolution. Under Morsi's predecessor Hosni Mubarak, Egypt, predominantly Sunni Muslim, sided with Saudi Arabia and other Sunni-dominated Arab states in trying to isolate Shiite-led Iran.
The official said that Morsi will visit Tehran on Aug. 30 on his way back from China to attend the Non-Aligned Movement Summit, where Egypt will transfer the movement's rotating leadership to Iran. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not yet authorized to make the announcement. - AP
Breivik link seen in Czech arrest
PRAGUE - A man believed to be a sympathizer of Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik has been arrested in the Czech Republic for building up a stash of weapons, explosives, a detonator, and an automatic rifle at his home, according to local media reports.
The unidentified man, 29, had used Breivik's name in e-mail communication, Czech news agency CTK reported Saturday. He was arrested Aug. 10 in Ostrava. Police would not comment further on the apparent Breivik link. The suspect has been convicted five times on explosives-related charges.
Right-wing extremist Breivik shot dead 69 people on a rampage at a youth camp at Utoya island, Norway, on July 22, 2011, after killing eight people in a bombing in Oslo. - AP
Elsewhere:
Philippine Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo is missing after a suspected light-plane crash, the government said. Search operations are under way for an aircraft carrying Robredo, presidential spokesman Edwin Lacierda said in a cellphone message.