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Philippoussis apologises for sorry showing

By DPA, Adelaide : Australian Mark Philippoussis Thursday apologised for a miserable performance at the World Tennis Challenge, as the two-time Grand Slam finalist made a timid return to the game. The 32-year-old was competing for the first time in more than a year since re-injuring his right knee and undergoing another operation. Australia with Philippoussis and Pat Cash lost to the US side with Jim Courier and Taylor Dent.

China sacks official over breach in dam

By IANS, Beijing : A Chinese official has been sacked following a breach in a dam.

Snooki put on make-up before giving birth

By IANS, London: Reality TV star Snooki put on bronzer and false eyelashes before she gave birth to her son Lorenzo because she wanted to look "pretty" for her baby.

Russia prepares for future combat in the Arctic

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia must be ready to fight wars in the Arctic to protect its national interests in a region that contains large and untapped deposits of natural resources, a high-ranking military official said in an interview published Tuesday.

Crawford strikes deal in drug possession case

By IANS, London: American actor Chace Crawford who was arrested last year for drug possession has struck a deal with prosecutors to make a fresh start.

Rising demand for energy threatens world’s wetlands

By IANS, Washington : Critical food shortages and growing demand for bio-fuels prompted by rising fuel prices present the biggest threat to the preservation of wetlands worldwide. Protecting wetlands is vital for preservation of local water supplies, bio-diversity, which also trap and store greenhouse gases, according to 700 leading world experts at the conclusion of a week-long meeting in Cuiaba, Brazil.

Muslim prisoners mistreated as potential terrorists in UK

By IRNA, London : Muslim prisoners risk becoming radicalised by being mistreated as potential terrorists, the chief inspector of prisons in England and Wales warned Tuesday. Dame Anne Owers said the treatment of the rapidly growing population of Muslim prisoners as potential or actual extremists is prevalent throughout the prison system despite the fact that fewer than 1% are in prison for terrorist-related offences.

Wikipedia tightens editing policy to prevent online vandalism

By DPA, San Francisco : Online collaborative encyclopedia Wikipedia announced a tightening of its editing rules Wednesday aimed at preventing vandalism, as it becomes an increasingly important source of information. The new guidelines will require that all edits to articles about living people be approved by authorised editors. The rules represent the most far-reaching changes ever undertaken by the user-written encyclopedia, which had previously allowed anyone to contribute articles or revise information on existing articles.

Ex-IOC chief Samaranch suffers heart attack

By DPA, Paris : Former president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Juan Antonio Samaranch has been hospitalised in Monaco after a heart attack, the Paris sport newspaper L'Equipe reported late Tuesday. The 89-year-old Spaniard, who led the IOC from 1980 to 2001, was admitted to the Princesse Grace hospital.

Russia, Britain want peaceful settlement in Syria

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: The situation in Syria should be resolved by means of negotiations, Russian President Vladimir Putin and British Prime Minister David Cameron have agreed.

‘Pro-Tamil’ broadcasting station attacked in Sri Lanka

By DPA, Colombo : A private radio and television station on the outskirts of Sri Lanka's capital has been attacked by an armed gang, causing extensive damage to the studio complex and interrupting its broadcasts, a spokesman for the station said Tuesday. A gang of 15 to 20 men stormed the Maharaja TV and Maharaja Broadcasting Corporation at Pannipitiya, 20 km southeast of the Colombo, holding the staff at gunpoint and assaulting some of them before causing the damage early Tuesday, the spokesman said.

Up a chimney to combat climate change

By Joydeep Gupta, IANS, Poznan (Poland) : Mossy pine groves and picture postcard lakes give way to huge grey gashes in the earth where giant machines scoop up brown coal and deliver it to the power plant next door. The mine and the power plant were once proud signs of industrial activity. Today they are badges of pollution. Eleven activists from the international NGO Greenpeace have just spent 48 hours atop a 150-metre chimney of the thermal power plant to draw the attention of the world to the ill effects of coal use.

Modi promises Nepal non-interference, $1 bn credit

By Anil Giri , Kathmandu: Making the first bilateral visit by an Indian prime minister in 17 years, Narendra Modi Sunday pledged not to interfere...

Russian, Italian firms agree to speed up gas pipeline project

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine gas dispute, the heads of Gazprom and Italy's Eni have agreed to speed up the construction of the South Stream gas pipeline, the Russian energy giant has said. The South Stream project is a new pipeline under the Black Sea which will serve as another route to transit Russian gas to Europe. "Gazprom and Eni agreed to speed up the work of the joint working group with preparations for the South Stream project," Gazprom said in a statement late Thursday.

Protesting Tibetan teens breach UN walls in Nepal

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : Three dozen Tibetan teenagers scaled the walls of the UN headquarters here Friday to register their protest against the crackdown by Chinese authorities on their people in Tibet. Police swooped down on the rest of the protesters and arrested more than 60 people. "We have asked the (Nepal) authorities not to take any action against the children," said UN spokesperson John Brittain, whose Unicef agency is looking after the teenage protesters inside the UN compound.

Nepal urged to reject reconciliation bill

New York : Nepali legislators should reject problematic provisions of the proposed Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) bill introduced in parliament, Amnesty International, Human...

Nepal’s last king bids adieu to aides

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Before making his final exit from the royal palace and beginning life as a commoner in an inferior summer palace in the suburbs, Nepal's last king Gyanendra began bidding adieu to his former ministers and advisors, expressing his gratitude for their support.

US nears charging 6 in September 11 case

By IRNA New York : Military prosecutors are in the final phases of preparing the first sweeping case against suspected conspirators in the plot that led to the deaths of nearly 3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001, International Herald Tribune said. The charges, to be filed in the military commission system at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, would involve as many as six prisoners, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the former senior aide to Osama bin Laden who has said he was the principal planner of the plot.

Violence at anti-G8 demonstration

By DPA

Rostock (Germany) : Masked protestors smashed the windows of a police car and missiles were thrown at police in the first signs of violence during an anti-globalization rally Saturday in the northern German port of Rostock to protest at this week's G8 summit.

France suspects Syrian regime of using chemical weapons

Paris : France suspects that the Syrian regime under Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons in an attack in the northwest of the country over...

Protesters shut down Bangkok’s international airport

By DPA, Bangkok : Anti-government protesters Tuesday forced a temporary closure of departure flights from Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi International Airport, airport officials confirmed. "Arriving flights are still coming in but we've stopped all departures," said a Suvarnabhumi Airport spokeswoman, who asked to remain anonymous. The protesters, belonging to the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), laid siege to the airport Tuesday evening as part of their efforts to topple the government by Wednesday.

Tsunami warning following quake in Papua New Guinea

Sydney : A tsunami warning was issued following a 7.5-magnitude earthquake that struck 150 km south of Papua New Guinea on Tuesday. According to the...

Sri Lanka’s ruling coalition wins in provincial polls

By P. Karunakharan, IANS, Colombo : President Mahinda Rajapaksa's ruling coalition party registered a landslide victory at the poll held Saturday for two provincial councils, refreshing its mandate to conduct its fight-to-finish military campaign against the Tamil Tigers. According to results announced Sunday, United People Freedom Alliance (UPFA) retained its control in the North-Western and Northern provinces by winning the polls by nearly two-thirds majority.

Obama names Preeta Bansal on body to make government work better

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : President Barack Obama has named Indian American lawyer, Preeta D. Bansal, as Vice Chair of an administrative reform body described as a "public-private partnership designed to make government work better". The appointment of Bansal, currently the General Counsel and Senior Policy Advisor for the Office of Management and Budget, and nine other official and non-official members of the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) was announced by the White House Thursday.

Philippine massacre suspect blames Muslim rebels for carnage

By DPA, Manila : A scion of a powerful political family detained for allegedly masterminding a gruesome massacre of 57 civilians in the southern Philippines Friday blamed Muslim separatist rebels for the carnage. Andal Ampatuan Junior maintained his innocence concerning Monday's grisly attack on mostly women and journalists in a hilly village in Ampatuan town in Maguindanao province, 930 km south of Manila.

Indonesia sends condolence, aid to Myanmar

By Xinhua, Jakarta : Indonesia on Tuesday expressed deep condolence to Myanmar and pledged one million U.S. dollars in humanitarian aid to the cyclone-torn country, said State Spokesman Dino Patti Djalal. The cyclone Nagris which badly hit Myanmar over the weekend and left at least 150,000 dead was the second largest disaster in Asia after the tsunami in Indonesia's Aceh in December 2004 that killed more than 220,000 people, the spokesman said.

Rescuers find 255 survivors in Indonesian ferry boat disaster

By NNN-Antara, Tanjungpinang (Riau,Indonesia) : Rescuers have found a total of 255 survivors up to Monday after the "Dumai Express 10" ferry boat sank off Tokong Hiu, Karimun district, Riau Islands province, on Sunday morning. Tanjung Balai Karimun Naval Base Commander Lt Col Edwin said here the number of survivors rose to 255 on Monday, from 254 on Sunday evening. "Today we found another survivor at around 12.30 am WIB (Western Indonesian Standard Time)," Edwin, field coordinator of a joint search and rescue team, said.

Tourist outcry over Maoist extortion grows in Nepal

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : Even as a red-faced Nepal government arrested two Maoist guerrillas after the tale of their assault of a Swiss tourist hit the headlines worldwide, complains started pouring in from more and more foreigners about their harassment at the hand of the rebels, whose leadership takes pride in saying no foreigner was ever attacked during the 10-year armed uprising.

British family shares home with 80 animals

By IANS, London : A British family shares its home with an amazing collection of 80 exotic animals that include boa constrictors, pythons and tarantula spiders.

Christians’ execution by IS: Egypt reserves right to respond

Cairo: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said Monday that his country reserves the right to respond at the proper time to the killing of...

Benedict XVI: Disarm Nukes

By Prensa Latina Rome : In his message for World Peace Day Tuesday, Pope Benedict XVI called the international community to mutually agree to dismantle existing nuclear weapons. In the text published by the Vatican, the pope stressed the threat that more countries want to acquire nuclear weapons, and that tensions among nations could increase. Benedict XVI urged world nations to resume talks with more determination because the non-proliferation process is slowing down.

Nigerian terror suspect described as loner by friends

By DPA, Nairobi/Abuja : Friends of Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian man who allegedly tried to blow up a passenger jet in Detroit Dec 25, described him as a pious loner, but not one who had ever showed an interest in political violence, reported a Nigerian newspaper Monday. Abdulmutallab was religious, but focussed more on daily situations or moral questions, not politics, a childhood friend told the Daily Trust newspaper. He never came across as a religious extremist, the friend told the newspaper.

‘Payment in Kind’ programme gives Mexico worthy art

By DPA Mexico City : In 1957, painter David Alfaro Siqueiros proposed that artists in Mexico be allowed to pay taxes with their work. Half a century later, this idea has given rise to one of the world's most important collections of contemporary art. The unprecedented programme, Pago en Especie (Payment in Kind), went into force in 1975 through a presidential decree, but it received the support of the artists Raul Anguiano, Luis Nishizawa and Adolfo Best Maugard who donated works to get it going.

Zimbabwe’s opposition pulls out of polls

By DPA, Johannesburg/Harare : Zimbabwe's main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change, has decided to withdraw from the presidential run-off elections June 27, party sources said Sunday. The decision was made Sunday morning at a meeting of the pro-democracy party's national executive in Harare, said the source, asking not to be named. He said the decision would be announced by Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC's leader and its candidate in the elections, later Sunday.

Nepali EC to mobilize special class officials in observation of election

By NNN-Xinhua Kathmandu : The Election Commission (EC) will mobilize special class officials of the Nepali government in monitoring and observation of the April 10 Constituent Assembly election, the National News Agency RSS reported on Monday. According to the RSS, a 51-member monitoring team that also includes officials of constitutional bodies have been authorized to observe the election process and its activities in 44 locations of various districts for 15 days individually.

Russian authorities resume talks with doomsday sect hardcore

By RIA Novosti Penza : Russian authorities have resumed talks with the members of a doomsday sect still remaining underground in central Russia amid reports that two of the group have died. Twenty-four members of the group, which went underground in November to wait for the end of the world, which they say will come in May or June, have left the dugout in the Penza Region in the last two weeks after most of the shelter's roof caved in following heavy rain.

12 arrested for grenade attack in Colombo

By Xinhua, Colombo : Twelve people have been arrested over Saturday's grenade attack in the Sri Lankan capital that killed two civilians, the police said Sunday. The blast in Wellawatta killed two civilians and injured 10. The motive behind the blast could not be immediately known, the police said. The 12 arrested were of Tamil decent. A bus bound for the eastern town of Batticaloa was parked near the site of the attack. "We are investigating if someone had hurled the grenade," police spokesman Ranjith Gunasekera told reporters.

North Korea tests short-range missiles

By DPA, Seoul : North Korea Monday test-fired two short-range missiles off its eastern coast towards the Japan Sea, the South Korean Yonhap news agency reported, quoting government sources. Further details were not immediately available. In recent weeks, the Stalinist state has adopted a more conciliatory position and said it was willing to return to international talks on ending its nuclear weapons programme.

Ameenah Gurib-Fakim first woman president of Mauritius

Port Louis: The Mauritius parliament on Thursday appointed Ameenah Gurib-Fakim as the island nation's new president, making her the first woman to hold the...

Hillary Clinton wins West Virginia primary

By DPA, Washington : Major US television networks projected Hillary Clinton's victory in the Democratic Party's West Virginia presidential primary immediately after voting stations closed Tuesday evening.

Recession closes 7,000 SMEs in Taiwan

By DPA, Taipei : More than 7,000 small and medium enterprises (SMEs)have shut down in Taiwan in the past two years due to recession, a government agency said Monday. "At the end of 2006, there were 1.23 million SMEs enterprises in Taiwan. By the end of 2007, the number had dropped by more than 7,000," Lin Ping-pin, secretary-general of the National Association for Small and Medium Enterprises, said at a conference for smalland medium enterprises, which is held every third year.

Zimbabwe poll panel says runoff vote needed

By DPA, Harare/Johannesburg : Zimbabwe's Election Commission said Friday neither President Robert Mugabe nor his main challenger Morgan Tsvangirai had won outright in the March 29 presidential election, meaning a runoff vote was needed. The commission said that while Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader Tsvangirai had beaten Mugabe, he had won only 47.9 percent of the vote - not the 50 percent required for an outright win. Mugabe had won 43.2 percent of the vote.

Kenya earmarks 6.5 Billion Shillings for dams to fight floods

By Catherine Atundi, NNN-KBC Nairobi : The Kenyan government has earmarked 6.5 billion (about 97 million USD) to build three dams as part of its strategy of finding a permanent solution to the problem of floods in Budalangi constituency. Programmes Minister John Munyes says the funds will also be used to create waterways, construct dykes and canals in order to control the flow of water into the River Nzoia.

Michelle Obama votes early in US polls

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Washington : US First Lady Michelle Obama has voted early in the presidential elections.

Sri Lanka steps up air raids as army-LTTE fight pitched battles

By IANS, Colombo : The Sri Lankan Air Force Saturday carried out "a string of air strikes targeting LTTE battlefield fortifications" as advancing ground troops have been locked in pitched battles with Tamil Tigers on the outskirts of Kilinochchi, the rebels' political power centre, during the past couple of days. Air force spokesman Wing Commander Janaka Nanayakkara said the fighter jets had completed "six successful air raids" against targets of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), located south of Kilinochchi and west of Paranthan.

Malaysians accept Badawi’s marriage with grace

By Mahendra Ved

IANS

Kuala Lumpur : The Malaysians have treated the marriage of their 67-year-old prime minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, last week with grace and good cheer.

Tamil Tigers’ entry into Canada feared

By IANS, Vancouver : A ship carrying over 250 Sri Lankan Tamils, reportedly including members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE), is set to enter Vancouver, authorities said Wednesday. Since the LTTE - which was destroyed last year by the Sri Lankan forces - is a banned organisation in both Canada and the US, the impending arrival of the ship has raised alarms bells here since members of banned terror organisations are not allowed to enter Canada. The LTTE was banned in Canada in 2006.

Is US part of Pakistan’s anti-India terror, BJP asks

By IANS, New Delhi: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Thursday took exception to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton saying that "Pakistan's struggles are my struggles", asking if America was a party to anti-India terror activities emanating from Islamabad. "Clinton's statement at a meeting with Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi that 'Pakistan's struggles are my struggles' amazingly belies an utter disregard for facts and history," BJP spokesman Tarun Vijay said. "Pakistan is also sponsoring a terror war against India. Is that also a part of Hillary Clinton's war?"

Italians protest against Obama peace prize

By IANS/AKI, Vicenza (Italy) : Italian peace activists opposed to the construction of a US airbase in the northern city of Vicenza have travelled to Oslo to challenge the presentation of the Nobel Peace prize to US President Barack Obama. "Our goal is to protest against president Barack Obama, who will be receiving the Nobel peace prize for his war policy," said the No Dal Molin organisation on its website. "It materialised in Vicenza with the construction of a new and devastating military base."

Lankan troops step up pressure on LTTE in Mullaitivu

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lankan troops advancing towards the last bastions of the Tamil Tiger rebels in the north-eastern Mullaitivu district have stepped up attacks and captured several LTTE fortifications in the area, the military said here Monday. The military said that several LTTE hideouts in the area northwest and east of Puthukkudiyiruppu "have reportedly fallen into army hands one after the other during late Sunday when 57, 58, 59 Division troops and the Task Force II mounted heavy and surprise attacks on them".

Your win a triumph of Gandhi’s teachings, Advani to Obama

By IANS, New Delhi : Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) prime minister hopeful L.K. Advani has congratulated US president-elect Barack Obama, saying his sweeping win has "signalled the triumph of the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr". In a letter to Obama released Friday, Advani said that this was one of the reasons why the victory was a matter of special joy in India. Another is that "it reaffirms the close bond between India, the largest democracy in the world, and the US, the most powerful democratic nation in the world", he said.

Ban suggests to Sarkozy holding expanded emergency G-8 Summit in NY later this year

By KUNA, United Nations : Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Saturday wrote a letter to French President Nicolas Sarkozy of France in support of the latter's proposal to hold an expanded emergency G-8 Summit later this year to discuss the need to respond "urgently and decisively" to the international financial crisis, his office said in a statement. Ban's letter was sent following a meeting of the two officials earlier today on the sidelines of the Francophonie Summit in Quebec City to discuss the matter.

UK forces involved in rendition, says former SAS soldier

London, Feb 25, IRNA ,British special forces are and have been used to detain suspects in Afghanistan and Iraq for extraordinary rendition to torture camps, a former member of the UK's elite SAS revealed Monday. Ben Griffin, who resigned from the SAS last year on moral grounds, accused the UK government of being "deeply involved" in the process, in which US forces have transported terror suspects around the world for interrogation, since the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan.

President greets Somalia on National Day

New Delhi: President Pranab Mukherjee on Tuesday greeted the government and people of Somalia on the eve of its National Day. In his message to...

Texas executes Mexican, defies Bush, international court

By DPA, Washington : Texas has carried out the execution of a Mexican-born rapist and killer, defying orders from US President George W. Bush and a ruling by an international court, newspaper reported Wednesday. Jose Ernesto Medellin Rojas was executed Tuesday for the rape and murder of two Houston teenagers 15 years ago, after the US Supreme Court rejected his request for a reprieve in a split vote, the Houston Chronicle newspaper reported.

China’s president calls for further cooperation with US

Beijing(Xinhua) : Chinese President Hu Jintao Thursday called for further cooperation between China and the US, as the two countries wound up their two days of economic talks here that culminated in a series of agreements. "I hope the two sides can make efforts to perfect the dialogue so that it can better serve the overall development of the Sino-US constructive and cooperative relations," Hu told a delegation to the 3rd Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) headed by US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

Bolivian draft constitution approved

By IANS Oruro(Bolivia) : The Bolivian parliament has approved, in the absence of the main opposition, a draft constitution that failed to respond to the demand of shifting the capital to Sucre from La Paz. After more than 13 hours of debate at a university facility here Sunday, the proposal was voted for article by article by two-thirds of the participating assembly delegates, Spanish news agency EFE reported Monday. Out of total 255 delegates, only 165 were present at the debate on the new draft constitution proposed by President Evo Morales.

Nigerian police kill Islamist leader, face criticism

By DPA, Nairobi/Abuja: Nigerian police Friday hailed the killing of the leader of an Islamist sect as a victory over extremism, but human rights workers called for an investigation into his death. Mohammed Yusuf, 39, whose Boko Haram sect caused mayhem and hundreds of deaths across northern Nigeria this week, was shot Thursday night as security forces cracked down on his followers. "Mohammed Yusuf was killed by security forces in a shootout while trying to escape," a police spokesman told Nigerian television.

12 feared dead after Indonesian boat capsizes in Malaysia

By Xinhua, Jakarta : The Indonesian Police said Wednesday a boat with 14 people on board has sunk in Malaysian waters, leaving six passengers dead and six others missing. Police officer Muhammed Shamsuddin says rescuers are searching for survivors from the mall boat that sank Sunday in bad weather off Malaysia's southern Johor state. The two survivors are a 40-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman, both Indonesians. They were picked up from a beach Tuesday, Muhammed was quoted by major newspaper The Jakarta Post's website as saying.

Russia, Ukraine sign new gas deal

By DPA, Moscow : Russia and Ukraine clinched an agreement Monday ending a protracted dispute that froze gas shipments to Europe for nearly two-weeks. Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Yulia Tymoshenko were shown on Russian television presiding over the signing of a new contract on gas prices and transits between the two states in Moscow. Gas flows to Europe would resume "shortly" after the contract was signed, the two premiers said earlier.

Oppose the Myanmar junta, Obama tells India

By IANS, New Delhi: US President Barack Obama Monday urged India to come out against the military junta in Myanmar, gently telling New Delhi that it had often remained silent on such issues.

China issues 62 media bans in 2009 as web censorship intensifies

By DPA, Hong Kong : China issued 62 media blackouts in 2009, banning media from reporting on issues ranging from public protests to photos of a topless actress in the Caribbean, according to a report Sunday. The report by the International Federation of Journalists listed the bans newspapers and magazines in China were subjected to and said journalists in China face a "range of impediments". Released in Hong Kong Sunday, it also detailed what it called "intensifying efforts of authorities since early 2009 to control online content and commentary".

Wonderful meeting Obama, says Modi after ‘Kem Chho’ greeting

Washington : Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he had a "wonderful meeting" with US President Barack Obama at the White House and both...

ISS crews head to Baikonur for final training

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: The main and reserve crews for a new space expedition to the ISS have headed to the Baikonur launch site for final training before lift off later this month.

20-vote win for Dosanjh in Canada after another recount

By IANS, Vancouver : Heavyweight Indo-Canadian politician Ujjal Dosanjh was finally declared winner from his Vancouver South seat after yet another judicial recount of the vote Tuesday. However, the margin of his victory was further reduced from 22 votes to 20. It has been reported to be longest recount in Canadian electoral history. On the election night Oct 14, Dosanjh was declared a winner with a 33-vote margin. But since election laws make a court-supervised recount mandatory if the victory margin is one one-thousandth of the votes cast, a recount was ordered.

Fidel Castro resigns as Cuban President

By IRNA Madrid : Fidel Castro resigned as Cuba's President and commander in chief. Castro's brother Raul is his designated successor. window.onload = function() {var adsPercent =...

India assures foreign investors of a modern tax regime

By Arun Kumar, Washington : India's Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has assured foreign investors that the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi was working on...

US courts act in New York Hindu temple row

By IANS, New York: A US court has told a Long Island pharmacist to stay away from the elderly president of a Kali temple here after allegations of embezzlement led to an attack on the latter.

Reporters in Pyongyang for satellite launch

By IANS, Pyongyang : About 30 foreign journalists from around the world are in North Korea to cover the country's satellite launch, the official media reported.

China to raise reserve requirement ratio for 10th time this year

By Xinhua

Beijing : China will raise the reserve requirement ratio by one percentage point for commercial banks in an effort to cool the booming economy, the central bank announced Saturday.

The move, which will take effect on Dec. 25, will push the ratio to a new high of 14.5 percent, after it reached a ten-year high of 13.5 percent on Nov. 26.

Venezuela expects to double its gas output by 2012

By IANS, Caracas : Venezuela expects to double its current gas production to some 11.5 billion cubic feet by 2012, according to a top official at state-owned oil company, EFE news agency reported Monday. Venezuela currently produces 6.3 billion cubic feet of gas and expects to increase its output to nearly 11.5 billion cubic feet in the coming four years, Anton Castillo, director of gas processing at Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA) said, official ABN news agency reported Sunday.

British recluse considered a sadhu by Hindus passes away

By Prasun Sonwalkar, IANS London : A recluse who lived in the middle of a busy road in an English town and was adopted as a Sadhu by local Hindus has died. A grumpy, bearded loner who shunned company and material possessions, Josef Stawinoga, 87, became an Internet phenomenon as thousands signed up to a Facebook site in his honour. For decades, he lived in a tent in the middle of the ring road in Wolverhampton, and became part of the local landscape as motorists zipped by.

People are living longer, but what does it mean?

By IANS, Washington : People in developed nations are living in good health as much as a decade longer than their parents did, not because aging has been slowed or reversed but because they are staying healthy to a more advanced age. "We're living longer because people are reaching old age in better health," said demographer James Vaupel, author of a review article appearing in the March 25 edition of Nature.

South and North Korean leaders to meet

By DPA Seoul : The leaders of South and North Korea will hold their second ever summit meeting later this month, South Korea's president's office said Wednesday. South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun will travel to Pyongyang from August 28-30 for talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong II. The first such inter-Korean summit was held in June 2000. Talks are expected to revolve around achieving peace on the Korean peninsula and ending North Korea's nuclear programme.

EU signs visa waiver pacts with six countries

By Xinhua, Brussels : The European Union (EU) Thursday signed visa waiver agreements with Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Mauritius, Saint Kitts and Nevis and the Seychelles. The agreement provides for visa-free travel (not exceeding three months during a six-month period) for citizens from the 27-member European block and the six Island nations. To obtain the scheme, citizens must have valid passports. The provision applies to all purposes of travel, except to persons travelling to carry out a paid activity.

Air Canada posts $727 million loss

By IANS, Toronto : Air Canada, which is the world's eleventh largest airline, Friday reported a net loss of $727 million in the fourth quarter of 2008. This also includes an operating loss of $146 million for the fourth quarter, compared to the income of $72 million in the corresponding period for 2007. Attributing its losses to higher fuel costs and global slowdown, the Montreal-based airline said, ``A net loss of $727 million in the fourth quarter of 2008 included net losses on foreign exchange of $527 million.''

Chinese premier says China-U.S. strategic dialogue “fruitful”

By Xinhua Beijing : Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Thursday described the just-concluded Sino-U.S. Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) as "fruitful". Wen made the remarks in a meeting with U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

US hesitant about goals in reducing emissions

By DPA

Washington : The US has emphasized the importance of the latest international report on global warming, but said it would not adopt corrective actions that would seriously damage the economy.

Catholic peace group joins demo against Blair’s first faith lecture

By IRNA London : Pax Christi, the Catholic-led international Christian peacemaking movement, was holding a silent vigil Thursday against the first lecture given by former prime minister Tony Blair on Faith and Globalization since stepping down from power last year.

China welcomes Myanmar ceasefire

Beijing: China on Friday welcomed a ceasefire declared in northeast Myanmar, Xinhua news agency reported. "We hope the conflicting sides can show restraint and stop...

Two Spanish fishermen found alive after 20 days adrift

By Xinhua Madrid : Two Spanish fishermen were found alive Friday after drifting in the Atlantic Ocean south of the Canary Islands for 20 days, the government delegation in Canarias, Spain said. The two men, who were on a recreational fishing trip and ran out of drinking water eight days ago, were spotted by the merchant ship "Pontovremon" on Friday 160 miles south of the island of Tenerife and were rescued.

Air France-KLM and Delta form transatlantic joint venture

By DPA, Paris : Europe's largest airline, Air France-KLM, and US carrier Delta Airlines have agreed to a joint venture involving transatlantic flights, the French-Dutch airline announced Wednesday in Paris. The partnership will cover 25 percent of all transatlantic flights and "will be an essential element in competing with the two other large alliances present on the market", Air France-KLM said in a press statement, referring to partnerships around British Airways and Lufthansa.

China Criticizes Western Media

By Prensa Latina Beijing : The Chinese press criticized again western media for distorting the separatist riots that took place in Tibet recently, saying that their coverage of the events did not match reality. According to the China Daily, many Chinese residents in other countries emailed their indignation against the way certain media organizations have published false information about what happened in that region.

Obama marks Ramadan by praising Islam

By DPA, Washington : US President Barack Obama extended his best wishes to Muslims around the world Friday as they prepare to begin the holy month of Ramadan. Obama reiterated his desire to mend relations between the US and Muslim countries that have historically suffered, an effort he began with a major speech in Cairo in June designed to reach out the Islamic community.

Medellin named world’s most innovative city

By IANS/EFE, Medellin (Colombia): This metropolis in northwestern Colombia was named Friday as the winner of the Innovative City of the Year competition, beating out New York and Tel Aviv.

Kem cho, Obama asks Modi

Washington : "Kem Cho," said US President Barack Obama as he greeted Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. "The 'Kem cho' moment. Prez @BarackObama greets PM...

Sri Lanka pushes ahead with resettlement plans for displaced

By DPA, Colombo : Brushing aside sweeping allegations of widespread killings of civilians in the final stage of their campaign to crush Tamil rebels, Sri Lankan officials said Monday they will press ahead with plans to care for thousands of war refugees who will eventually be sent back to their homes. Colombo made no official response to allegations by British newspapers and human rights organisations of human rights abuses in the final days of the conflict.

Exit monarchy, but long live the king in Bhutan

By Syed Zarir Hussain, IANS Thimphu : Bhutan's century old monarchy may be on the way out, but the 28-year-old king will continue to wield considerable influence in shaping his Himalayan nation's future policies if the results of the historic parliamentary election this week are any guide. Unwavering allegiance to the institution of monarchy, despite the revolutionary changes towards parliamentary democracy that it brought about, and total faith in the king's policies could be among the main reasons for the landslide win of the Druk Phuensum Tshogpa (DPT) in the elections.

Pakistan violates ceasefire in Jammu

Jammu: The Pakistan Army on Friday fired at Indian positions along the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir's Poonch district, an official...

China, Russia hold talks on strategic stability in Beijing

By Xinhua, Beijing : A consultation between China and Russia on strategic stability was held here on Friday, according to the Foreign Ministry. The two nations exchanged views on the current international security situation, non-proliferation, hot regional issues and multilateral arms control, a press release from the ministry said. The two nations agreed, according to the press release, that it is of vital importance for world peace and security to safeguard global strategic stability, boost mutual trust among nations and resolve international disputes by peaceful means.

Kosovo Albanians seek freedom without further delays

By DPA Pristina : Kosovo Prime Minister Agim Ceku Friday reiterated the Kosovo Albanians' intention to proclaim independence for the breakaway Serbian province before the end of the year. "We are not going to accept any further negotiations, delays or postponements of status resolution," Ceku said. The deadline for the Kosovo Albanian leaders is December 10, which marks the end of the 120-day period given for last-ditch negotiations on Kosovo's status between Belgrade and Pristina.

Toyota’s president apologises for recall

By DPA, Toyota : Toyota Motor Corp's president apologised for recalls of millions of his company's cars worldwide in his first public appearance since the problems began last month at the world's largest carmaker, which once had a stellar reputation for quality. Akio Toyoda, grandson of Toyota's founder, said at a hastily convened news conference late Friday that the company would establish a quality-control committee as part of its efforts to win back its customers' trust.

US, Libya, formally end half century of hostility

By DPA, Tripoli/Washington : US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Libyan leader Moamer Gaddafi formally ended a half century of hostility as Washington's chief diplomat became the highest ranking US official to visit Tripoli since 1957. The two officials discussed their common fight against terrorism and laid the basis for cultural and trade ties during their historic meeting Friday.

EU constantly works to enhance relations with GCC — official

By KUNA, Brussels : The European Union (EU) constantly works to enhance its relations with the member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), through agreements over important issues, said an EU official. The official, requesting anonymity, told KUNA that there were a number of issues that needed to be addressed before the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between the two sides could be signed.

German police identify 14 of 18 dead in Nepal crash

By SPA, Wiesbaden, Germany : Pathologists have identified all 14 foreign tourists aboard a Twin Otter plane that crashed, killing 18 people, in Nepal this month, DPA quoted German federal police as saying Thursday. Four Nepalese people were killed in the crash on October 8 at Lukla in the Himalayas. Medical records from the tourists' homelands were used to identify the foreigners' remains. Germany's BKA federal police sent a pathologist, a dentist and a police physician to Nepal to confirm the identities of 12 Germans and two Australians killed.

Anti-flu shot does not reduce death risk

By IANS, Washington : Flu vaccine does confer protection against specific strains of influenza, but its overall benefit seems to have been exaggerated by observational studies, especially in case of the elderly. "Over the last two decades in the US, even while (flu) vaccination rates among the elderly have increased from 15 to 65 percent, there has been no commensurate decrease in hospital admissions or all-cause mortality," said Dean T. Eurich, clinical epidemiologist and assistant professor at the School of Public Health, University of Alberta.

Tony Blair releases Chinese edition of his memoirs

By IANS, Beijing : Former British prime minister Tony Blair inaugurated the Chinese edition of his memoirs, "A Journey", in Beijing Tuesday.

Merkel says Germany to help Brazil stage the Olympics

By DPA, Berlin: Germany is to assist Brazil in staging the 2016 Summer Olympic Games, according to German Chancellor Angela Merkel after a meeting in Berlin Thursday with visiting Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. The Germans are to provide similar help in getting Brazil ready for the 2014 Football World Cup in Brazil. Germany is Brazil's principal trading partner in Europe, with two-way trade worth nearly 18 billion euros (27 billion dollars).

Toll in Nigerian clashes now put at over 600

By DPA, Nairobi/Abuja: The death toll in recent bloody clashes in the town of Maiduguri and other northern Nigerian districts was stated by police and military sources Sunday to have been more than 600, well above earlier estimates of between 300 and 400. A spokeswoman for the Red Cross in Maiduguri was quoted as saying there was a real danger of disease breaking out on a large scale as hundreds of bodies had been left out on the open streets for days.

85 protesters arrested in US

By IANS, Washington : Police in Oakland city in the US swept through a protesters' camp Tuesday, and arrested 85 people for unlawful assembly and illegal lodging.

German no-fly zone extended but air travel restrictions eased

By IRNA, Berlin : German no-fly ban has been extended until 2 pm (1200GMT) Tuesday, however air travel restrictions have been eased since Monday afternoon, according to media reports. Several German airliners, among them Lufthansa and Air Berlin, have resumed flights at the country's major airports with a limited schedule. The planes are flying at a low altitude, enabling pilots to navigate by sight.

Putin orders new commission to regulate foreign investment

By DPA, Moscow : Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin Monday called for the creation of a government commission to decide on foreign requests to buy into key sectors such as oil and gas, media and telecoms. Under a law passed in April, the prime minister would head the commission, giving Putin final say on foreign investments into one of 42 sectors defined as "strategic" by the bill.

British police using ‘ghost trains’ to catch thieves

By IANS, London : To catch the surging number of scrap metal thieves red-handed, undercover British policemen have now started travelling at night by special locomotives, dubbed "ghost trains".

Swapo Calls Independent Media Detractors

By Bernama, Windhoek : The Swapo-Party has rubbished recent media reports about brewing political tensions and factionalism within the ruling party leadership as mere rumours and fabrications, Namibian news agency, NAMPA, reported. Swapo's Secretary-General Pendukeni Iivula-Ithana told reporters at the party headquarters on Monday that the ruling party is 'solidly united like a rock' despite media reports to the contrary.

UK short of aircraft to transport troops, MPs warn

By IRNA

London : Britain is struggling to meet the demands of current military conflicts because of a shortage of aircraft to transport troops and equipment, an all-party group of MPs warned Thursday.

The Defence Select Committee said that nearly half of military aircraft used to take troops and equipment on military operations and to refuel other planes are unable to carry out their required tasks and was hitting the morale of soldiers.

Russia Chooses Third President for Four Years

By Prensa Latina Moscow : Nearly 108 million Russians with the right to vote will choose a new President for a mandate of four years (2008-2012), the third President in the recent history of Russia. Elected in 2004 with 71.31 percent of the votes, Vladimir Putin will finish his second mandate on May 7, as established by the Russian Constitution, after two consecutive presidential mandates. Russia is on its fifth presidential elections since the presidency was approved in a popular consulting in 1991.

Dow industrials dip as S&P, Nasdaq book gains

By DPA New York : Major Wall Street stock indices were mixed Tuesday amid weakening consumer confidence and plummeting housing prices. The New York-based Conference Board's index of consumer confidence dropped 11.9 points to 64.5 in March, the lowest level in five years, according to the latest instalment of the continuing survey, issued Tuesday. A private index of home prices in major metropolitan areas fell in January for the 13th straight month. Shares of retailers lost ground in Tuesday trading, while stocks in commodity industries rallied.

‘Amour’ gets best foreign language Golden Globe

By IANS, Los Angeles: Austrian drama "Amour" clinched the 70th Golden Globe award for the best foreign language film.

Two LTTE rebel women killed in Sri Lanka

By Xinhua Colombo : Two rebels have been killed in a confrontation between government troops and Tamil Tiger rebels in northern Sri Lanka, the military said Saturday. The Media Centre for National Security said in a statement that the two women members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were killed in a battle triggered off by the rebels at Navathkulam in the northern district of Vanuniya around 2:30 p.m. Friday. No damages were caused to the troops during the incident, the military added.

Nepal Maoists in fresh arms row

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : While Nepal's Maoist Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal 'Prachanda' sought the international community's support in New York, the country's interim parliament saw protests Friday as MPs cutting across party lines denounced the Maoists for bearing arms in public places including in the house.

UN rights chief warns CAR fighting factions

By IANS, United Nations : UN human rights chief Navi Pillay has warned that authorities in the Central African Republic (CAR) will be held personally...

Indians protest as Nepal slaps cess on incoming vehicles

By IANS, Kathmandu : Protests have begun erupting on the India-Nepal border as the Nepal government began slapping an entry cess on Indian vehicles entering the Himalayan republic. The Bahujan Samaj Party of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati led the demonstrations Thursday in the Dasjagga area in Sunauli-Maharajgunj and stopped all vehicular traffic for three hours to protest the entry tax. The protests were also taken up by local chambers of commerce in India and a local organisation, the Hindi Yuva Vahini.

Russia and China to step up military cooperation: Putin

By DPA Moscow : Russia and China aim to step up their military cooperation in the battle against terrorism, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday while attending a major anti-terrorism military exercise by six regional states. Putin made the remarks while observing the "Peace Mission 2007" exercises by the six-nation Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Chebarkul in the southern Urals, Interfax reported.

US Navy adds destroyer for Malaysian jetliner’s search

Washington: The US Navy said Monday it has dispatched one more Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer to join the multinational search for a missing Malaysia...

Lugovoi episode may hit ties with Russia: Britain

By RIA Novosti

London : Britain may cease cooperating with Russia in some areas after the latter's refusal to extradite the prime suspect in the poisoning of Russian defector and UK national Alexander Litvinenko, British media said Wednesday.

Hamtramck becomes 5th US city council to oppose NRC and CAA

TCN News Hamtramck City Council of Michigan State in the US has passed a resolution opposing the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and Citizenship Amendment...

Depression over Bay of Bengal fizzles out

By IANS, Dhaka : The deep depression over the Bay of Bengal, which triggered flash floods and left hundreds of fishermen missing, has fizzled out. The deep depression had gathered in the northern reaches of the Bay of Bengal close to the Bangladesh and Orissa coasts. The floods have inundated at least 10 villages, destroyed crops and marooned thousands.

Thousands evacuate after Chile volcano Chaiten erupts

By Xinhua, Beijing : Chile's long-dormant Chaiten volcano spewed clouds of gray smoke, hot rocks and toxic gas on Tuesday, forcing authorities to order the complete evacuation of two nearby towns, media reports said. More than 4,000 people left the town of Chaiten, 10 kilometers (six miles) from the volcano, after the initial eruption. Several hundred are still waiting to leave. Futaleufu, 70 kilometers (44 miles) to the east, is also being evacuated.

War will continue until last Tiger is killed: Rajapaksa

By IANS, Colombo : Riding on public support for the ongoing war against the Tamil Tigers, President Mahinda Rajapaksa has declared that the military campaign will continue "until the last rebel is killed or every inch of land is captured", a media report said Tuesday. President Rajapaksa made these remarks while addressing an election rally of his United People Freedom Alliance (UPFA) at Ruwanwella in Sabaragamuwa province Monday.

Nepal loses millions by banning Indian currency

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : The Nepal government's bid to curb terror activities and the circulation of fake Indian currency has now begun to produce a side effect, causing it to lose millions in revenue. Currently, Nepal's treasury has about Rs.25 million in banned Indian currency that is destined for the incinerator since the Indian government has reportedly refused to exchange the notes with ones that are legal in Nepal.

Nepal’s parties begin talks to meet July 7 deadline for new govt

By IRNA, New Delhi : Nepal's Maoist party on Thursday reached out to other political parties to meet a July 7 presidential deadline to form a national government under its leadership, a day after the embattled prime minister quit following months of protests by the former rebels. Political parties on Thursday began consultations to meet the July 7 deadline set by President Ram Baran Yadav to recommend the name of a new Prime Minister to form a consensus government as per the constitutional provision, following the resignation of Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal on Wednesday.

Chinese premier: days since May 12 quake “shocking and touching”

By Xinhua, Chengdu : Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao called the past 110 days since the May 12 quake "shocking and touching" when speaking to journalists in southwest China's quake-hit Sichuan Province on Tuesday. "The past 110 days were days that shocked our minds, and also days that touched our hearts," said Wen. "It's not a long time, but what we did, as witnessed by people all over the world, will go down in history."

Karunanidhi reiterates demand for ceasefire in Sri Lanka

By IANS, Chennai : Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi Tuesday once again called for a ceasefire in Sri Lanka despite most of the opposition parties boycotting an all-party meet called to discuss the plight of minority Tamils in Sri Lanka. "We will continue to demand the declaration of a ceasefire in Sri Lanka and start of political negotiations between the island's government and the Tamil minority there... (but) will not embarrass the centre through mass resignations of our MPs or withdrawal of support to the United Progressive Alliance government," Karunanidhi told reporters.

Obama condemns deadly attack on Iranian mosque

By DPA, Washington: US President Barack Obama strongly condemned the "outrageous terrorist attacks" on a mosque in southeastern Iran that killed at least 27 people. "The murder of innocent civilians in their place of worship is an intolerable offence, and those who carried it out must be held accountable," Obama said in a statement released by the White House Friday. "The United States stands with the families and loved ones of those killed and injured, and with the Iranian people, in the face of this injustice," Obama said.

Prayers help cops in catching criminals, crime solving

By IANS, London : A senior police officer in Britain claims he has slashed the crime rate in his home town - by praying, a media report said Monday. Inspector Roger Bartlett says the power of prayer has helped catch criminals, boosted crime detection rates and even reduced the number of �people killed on the roads, Daily Express reported on its website. Bartlett, who has 23 years' experience, is �"convinced" that faith work has had a positive impact on policing in Barnstaple, Devon.

Japan’s quake-hit nuclear plant catches fire, no leakage

By Xinhua Tokyo : A fire broke out Thursday on the roof of the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant in Japan's Niigata prefecture and was put out half an hour later, Kyodo News said. The fire started from a power cable of a makeshift air conditioner at the building of the number one reactor around 10.50 a.m., the report said quoting Tokyo Electric Power Company. According to the company, employees extinguished the fire around half an hour later. No one was injured and there were no radiation leaks.

Some 20 senior officials of EU mission arrive in Pristina

By RIA Novosti Brussels : About 20 senior officials of the EU's police and justice mission (EULEX) in Kosovo have arrived in Pristina, the mission's head French General Yves de Karmebon said on Tuesday. Prior to the declaration of independence by the Serbian province on February 17, the European Union approved sending a 2,000-strong EULEX mission to Kosovo to replace the UN mission, which has been deployed there since the NATO bombing of Serbia in 1999. Kosovo has been a UN protectorate since the end of the conflict between Albanian and Serb forces.

DNA test indicates mass grave in Kathmandu

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : DNA tests on human belongings found buried in a jungle near Kathmandu have reinforced the possibility of a mass grave that could hold the remains of 49 people who disappeared during Maoist insurgency, Nepal's top rights body said Wednesday. Gauri Pradhan, spokesman at the National Human Rights Commission that last year began investigating the articles found at the Shivapuri jungle, said DNA tests by Finnish experts at Finnish laboratories had proved they belonged to a human male.

Indonesia Affected by the Weather

By Prensa Latina Yakarta : Collapses and flooding caused by recent rains in Indonesia have killed over 80, reported sources from the local authorities on Wednesday. The weather phenomenon intensified its consequences in Java province with several houses' collapses. Government spokesmen added that is very difficult to reach to the affected areas because the roads are blocked with mud. In addition, 36 corpses were recovered besides other 30 that were buried with a mountain of mud in Karang district.

Russia says some 18,000 refugees return to S. Ossetia

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Almost 18,000 refugees have returned to South Ossetia from Russia over the last nine days, Russia's emergencies ministry said on Thursday. "A total of 17,912 people returned in the period August 12-20," the ministry said in a statement. According to the ministry's data, 38,207 people fled South Ossetia across the Russian border after Tbilisi launched a massive ground and air offensive to retake the breakaway republic on August 8.

Brown not to attend nuclear security summit in US

By DPA, London: Prime Minister Gordon Brown will not attend next week's nuclear security summit in Washington due to commitments in Britain's election campaign, sending Foreign Secretary David Miliband in his place, the government said Tuesday. A spokesman said the White House had been informed of the decision and "completely understood" the reasons for Brown's absence from the international meeting. He said that Brown and US President Barack Obama would discuss moves to counter nuclear proliferation later Tuesday in one of their "regular phone conversations."

US arrest of Russian spies sparks protests in Moscow

By DPA, Moscow/Washington : The arrest in the US of 10 individuals accused of spying on Russia’s behalf has sparked strong denials in Moscow, but Washington played down the prospect of a diplomatic rift between the two countries. The Russian foreign ministry confirmed that the arrested included Russian citizens, but insisted that there was no wrong doing and that US interests were not affected. "They had taken no action which harmed the interests of the US," the ministry said on its website Tuesday.

IS claims beheading US journalist

Damascus: The Islamic State (IS) group has claimed beheading a US journalist who had gone missing in Syria nearly two years ago, a media...

Asians fastest growing population in New Zealand

By DPA Wellington : Asians are the fastest growing group in New Zealand's population and were expected to come close to outnumbering the indigenous Maoris in 18 years, according to government projections released Wednesday. The Asian population, driven by migration, is forecast to increase by 3.4 percent a year from 400,000 at the last census in 2006 to 790,000 in 2026, when it would account for 16 percent of the total, Statistics New Zealand said. The number of native Maoris is tipped to rise by 1.4 percent annually from 620,000 to 820,000, or 17 percent of the population.

Boeing teams with Space Adventures for private space flights

By DPA, Washington : Houston-based Boeing Company Wednesday said it has a tentative agreement with Space Adventures Ltd to provide seats for private passengers into outer space.

Sri Lanka asks aid workers to leave battle zones

By Xinhua, Colombo : The Sri Lankan government Monday asked the international aid agencies to leave the country's Northern province as fighting between security forces and Tamil Tiger rebels has intensified, an official said. A senior official of the defence ministry confirmed the order but did not elaborate when it would be implemented. Defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse said as no development work was taking place in the area, there was no need for the agencies to continue.
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