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Putin reaches flood-hit town

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russian President Vladimir Putin has arrived in the southern town of Krymsk that has been severely damaged by floods caused by torrential rains.

Hostage reveals drama inside Sydney siege

Sydney : Sydney hostage Joel Herat has revealed the drama that unfolded inside the cafe where he and 16 others were held at gunpoint...

Three held in Denmark on terror charges

By IANS, Copenhagen : Three people - including a Jordanian and a Turk - were arrested in the Danish capital Friday on suspicion of preparing for a terrorist act, officials said.

Now paparazzi face $50,000 fine for unauthorised clicking in California

By IANS, Washington : A new California law will fine paparazzi for taking photos that invade a celebrity's right to privacy. The law also targets media outlets that purchase the photos. Signed by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger Sunday, the new law makes it a crime to take and sell unauthorized photos of celebrities in "personal or familial activity." Violators face fines up to $50,000. The anti-paparazzi amendment takes effect in January.

Detroit plotter Abdulmutallab indicted by grand jury

By DPA, Washington : A federal grand jury Wednesday indicted Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab on charges relating to his alleged attempt to blow up a US airliner on Dec 25 over Detroit. The indictment in Detroit accuses 23-year-old Abdulmutallab of detonating PETN explosives on board a Delta-Northwest flight from Amsterdam as it was coming in for landing in Detroit. The explosive failed to detonate but caused a small fire that was extinguished by other passengers and crew.

Nepali Congress calls shutdown over ‘police brutality’

By IANS, Kathmandu : Nepal's Maoist government faced its first closure Friday with the main opposition party Nepali Congress calling a closure of Kathmandu valley to protest the death of a youth leader. Pradeep Khadka died Thursday, allegedly due to police beating. Protesters also closed down Udaypur district in eastern Nepal while a separate strike was called in Bhojpur district over the alleged assault of a person by another ruling alliance member, the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist.

Thai army leader denies invitation to lead political party

By Xinhua Bangkok : Thailand's Council for National Security chairman and last year's coup leader General Sonthi Boonyaratkalin Friday dismissed reports that he had been invited to lead Rak Chart political party to contest the elections late this year. His close aide Panlop Pinmanee had recently said that Sonthi would run under the Rak Chart banner. But Sonthi said the party had nothing to do with him.

Killer of former Colombian president’s sister nabbed

By IANS/EFE, Bogota : Authorities here have arrested a leftist rebel on charges of kidnapping and murdering a sister of former Colombian president Cesar Gaviria, officials said. A team of the Attorney General's office and the army has arrested Beatriz Villalba Betancourt of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the country's largest leftist guerrilla group, according to officials Saturday. Liliana Gaviria, sister of the ex-president, was killed in a failed kidnapping attempt in April 2006. Cesar Gaviria governed the country from 1990 to 1994.

About 850 million people are underfed worldwide: FAO official

By Xinhua Budapest : About 850 million people worldwide do not have enough to eat, a UN official said here, warning that the number could rise by threefold unless there is a timely response to global climate change. Africa is the worst off while in Eurasia the biggest concerns are in Central Asia, the Caucuses and the Balkans, European and Central Asian regional director of the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) Maria Kadlecikova told a news conference Wednesday at FAO's European regional headquarters in Budapest.

Madonna takes another swipe at Gaga

By IANS, London: Pop diva Madonna has appeared to take another swipe at Lady Gaga, saying "imitation is the highest form of flattery".

8 soldiers killed in insurgent ambush in Thai south

By Xinhua Bangkok : Eight security personnel were killed when a patrol unit was ambushed by insurgents in Thailand's restive southern province Narathiwat Monday morning, while two soldiers from a teacher escort unit were injured in a bomb attack in nearby province Yala. Meanwhile insurgents launched attacks at local telecommunications system, causing suspension of phone service, in the three southernmost provinces -- Narathiwat, Yala and Pattani, where unabated insurgent violence have killed over 2,800 people since it resurrected four years ago.

SGPC, DSGMC to start ‘langar’ in quake-hit Nepal

Chandigarh/New Delhi : The Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) and Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Managing Committee (DSGMC) will airlift 25,000 food packets daily for earthquake-hit...

US to host global finance crisis summit

By DPA, Washington : US President George W. Bush and French President Nicolas Sarkozy Saturday said an emergency global summit on the finance crisis will be held in the US, possibly before the end of November. The announcement was made at the US presidential retreat, Camp David, outside Washington, where European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso also joined the meeting. "I look forward to hosting this meeting in the near future," said Bush, who added that developed as well as emerging economies would be included. "We're dealing with a significant problem."

Olive tree in Italy to be named after Michelle Obama

By IANS, Rome : A 1,400-year-old olive tree in Italy will be dedicated to American first lady Michelle Obama for her efforts to promote healthy eating.

Seven jihadis stopped from leaving Australia

Sydney: Seven young Australian jihadis on their way to enlist with terrorists in the Middle East were intercepted at the Sydney airport, Immigration Minister...

Seven killed in Malaysia bus-tanker collision

By Xinhua Kuala Lumpur : Seven people were killed and 28 injured when a tour bus crashed into the back of a tanker carrying chemicals near Ipoh in northern Perak state Tuesday morning. The driver and co-driver of the bus as well as four passengers died on the spot and another victim died at the Ipoh Hospital, a police spokesperson said. All the victims had been taken to the Ipoh Hospital. "The bus carrying 35 people was on its way from Kubang Pasu to Cameron Highlands when the accident occurred," the national news agency Bernama quoted the spokesperson as saying.

Spain withdraws contaminated Chinese toothpaste

By IANS

Brussels : The European Commission has confirmed that Spanish authorities are withdrawing two brands of toothpaste of Chinese origin from the Spanish market because of a risk to public health.

Bomb threat forces French plane to land in Brazil

By DPA, Rio de Janeiro : An Air France jet with 405 passengers made an emergency landing in north-east Brazil after a bomb threat, which later turned out to be false, local media reported. The aircraft which also had 18 crew was en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris when the control tower received a bomb threat, Brazilian newspaper O Globo reported. The Boeing 747 was isolated in one sector of the Recife airport after landing, but an inspection found no explosives.

Australian court charges forest-fire arson suspect

By DPA, Sydney : An Australian court Friday charged a man suspected of lighting one of the forest fires that last weekend killed at least 181 people, destroyed 1,800 homes and made 7,000 homeless. A magistrate's court charged him with arson causing death, intentionally or recklessly causing a fire and a further charge of possessing child pornography. The man, who didn't appear in court, was described as being "in a fragile mental state". He was remanded in custody for his own safety. The court suppressed his identity.

Eight members of Ebola fact-finding mission killed in Guinea

Dakar: Eight members of a government team were killed with machetes and knives by residents of a village in a remote area of Guinea...

Bolivia nationalizes four oil firms, telecom company

By DPA, La Paz : Bolivia Thursday said it had taken over four international energy companies in a continuation of the nationalization of its oil industry and would also take control of a telecommunications firm. The energy companies are Transredes, part of British firm Ashmore; Andina owned by Spain's Repsol; Chaco, a subsidiary of Pan American Energy; and CLHB, controlled by joint Peruvian and German firm Kapital/Oiltanking GmbH, newspaper La Razon reported. The government also said it would take control of telecommunications firm Entel, which is owned by Italy's Telecom Italia.

Ex-Thai PM’s wife jailed for tax fraud

By Xinhua, Bangkok : The wife of former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra was sentenced to a three-year jail term Thursday by a court here for tax fraud involving 546 million baht (about $15.8 million). The court found Pojaman Shinawatra guilty of tax evasion involving 546 million baht and sentenced her to a three-year jail term. Pojaman's stepbrother Bannaphot Damapong and her personal secretary Kanchana Honghern were also found guilty in the same charges filed by the Attorney General in March 2007.

Britain announces aid package to combat food price crisis

By DPA, London : Britain Tuesday announced an aid package totalling 455 million pounds ($910 million) to help tackle the crisis over rising global food prices. The Department for International Development (DFID) said 30 million pounds were in support of recent appeals by the World Food Programme (WFP) for countries most at risk from the crisis.

Nepal Army chief calls on Antony

By IANS, New Delhi: Nepali Army chief General Chhatra Man Singh Gurung Tuesday met Defence Minister A.K. Antony and discussed ways to enhance the defence cooperation between the two countries. Gurung, who is on a nine-day visit to India since Dec 11, was Monday conferred the honorary rank of General of the Indian Army.

Six Sri Lankan Naval personnel killed in an attack by Sea Tigers

By KUNA New Delhi : At least six Sri Lankan Naval personnel have been killed in an attack by the sea wing of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) off the northern coast of the island nation. "Six Navy sailors were killed in an attack late last night by the Sea Tigers off the coast of Thalaimannar," news agency Press Trust of India reported Thursday quoting a Sri Lankan military source. However, the Navy was successful in rescuing one naval sailor from the attack, the news agency said.

NAM calls for removal of limits on use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes

By NNN-KUNA, United Nations : The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) has said that the use of nuclear technology for peaceful purposes without discrimination is an "inalienable" right and therefore any restrictions to limit that use is "regrettable" and "should be removed."

Asia-Pacific ministers warn economic crisis not over

By DPA, Singapore : Ministers of the Asia-Pacific economies Wednesday warned that the global economic crisis was not yet over, saying the situation was still fragile despite the current upturn. "The consensus is that this (crisis) is by no means over," said Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo after hosting a meeting with foreign and trade ministers at the summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum. "The upturn that we now have is a respite," Yeo said. "The situation is still fragile, and we should still address the root causes of the problem," he added.

Scientists demystify behaviour of glass

By IANS, Sydney : Two scientists are one step closer to explaining the nature of glass and its transition from liquid to solid, says a study. Peter Harrowell and Asaph Widmer-Cooper, theoretical chemists from the School of Chemistry along with colleagues from Columbia University, have been studying the transition of a fluid into a rigid glass in an attempt to understand stress relaxation in a disordered state.

Hong Kong most pessimistic about the prospects of coming year

By DPA, Hong Kong : Hong Kong residents have emerged as some of the most pessimistic in the world concerning their expectations for the coming year, according to an online survey published Wednesday. Around seven out of 10 citizens - or 67 percent - of the former British colony expect 2009 to be worse than this year - almost twice the global figure of 35 percent.

India, China to explore reasonable border solution: Modi

Beijing : Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Friday that he had candid, constructive and friendly talks with the Chinese leadership and both sides...

GM cutting 10,000 jobs; Nike another 1,400

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Troubled automaker General Motors is cutting 10,000 workers or 14 percent of its salaried jobs worldwide, with a third of layoffs coming in the US. Nike Inc, the world's largest athletic shoe and clothing maker, is also planning to slash 1,400 jobs out of about 35,000 globally. GM, which is preparing to present a long-term viability plan to the US Treasury Department next week, said Tuesday that the cutbacks are part of the restructuring plan it submitted to Congress Dec 2 when it first asked Washington for federal assistance.

No cancer in polyps removed during Bush’s medical exam

By Xinhua

Washington : No cancer was found in the five polyps removed from US President George W. Bush during a routine colon exam last Saturday, the White House has said.

"The president is in good health," White House spokesperson Tony Snow said Monday. "There's no reason for alarm."

Despite no cancer being found, doctors recommended that Bush undergo colonoscopy in every three years because polyps were discovered, he said.

Japan’s ruling LDP confirms line-up of party leadership

By Xinhua Tokyo : Japanese ruling Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) newly-elected President Yasuo Fukuda formally announced the line-up of the party's leadership Monday. Education Minister Bummei Ibuki, 69, was appointed party secretary general, General Council Chairman Toshihiro Nikai, 68, retained the post, and former finance minister Sadakazu Tanigaki, 62, became Policy Research Council chairman, Kyodo News reported. The line-up was confirmed at an extraordinary General Council meeting of the party.

Modi visit to give new impetus to US rebalance in Asia?

By Ranjana Narayan, New Delhi/Washington : America’s “pivot” towards Asia, now rechristened “strategic rebalance”, could get new impetus during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s summit talks...

Giant Persian rug sets Guinness record

By IANS, By RIA Novosti, Moscow: A gigantic Persian carpet woven in the Iranian city of Nishapur has been recognised by Guinness World Records as the world's largest handmade rug.

Chinese arms ship called back to China after protests

By DPA, Beijing : The China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO) Tuesday called home a ship carrying arms to Zimbabwe after African ports refused to allow the ship to dock. Speaking to the reporters here, foreign ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu defended the delivery as "a normal military product trade." "The relevant contract was signed last year. It has nothing to do with the current situation in Zimbabwe," she added, saying that "nobody should politicize" the issue.

Cent-Asian Organizations Strengthen Cooperation

Dushambe, Oct 6 (Prensa Latina) The agreement signed between Shanghai Cooperation Organization (OCS) and the Collective Treaty Security Organization (OTSC) will strengthen collaboration in this field, stated one of the signatories here on Saturday. The document will enable widening coordination of regional entities in the struggle against transnational delinquency and repression of drug trafficking, asserted OCS general secretary Bolat Nurgaliev.

Indian president to visit Tajikistan

By RIA Novosti, Dushanbe : Indian President Pratibha Patil would arrive on a two-day official visit to Tajikistan late Sunday, a spokesman for the former Soviet state's foreign ministry said. On Monday, the Indian president will meet with her Tajik counterpart Emomali Rakhmon, Prime Minister Akil Akilov and the speaker of the lower chamber of the country's parliament, Sadullo Khairullayev. No bilateral agreements are expected to be signed during the visit.

Global sourcing top priority for Asia-Pacific IT executives

By DPA Singapore : Developing a strong global sourcing and delivery strategy is the top concern of Information Technology (IT) executives in the Asia-Pacific region this year, according to a study published Monday. Research agency IDC said global delivery includes functions such as business process outsourcing, IT outsourcing and project-based services.

Kosovo independence to become reality in March – Belgian media

By RIA Novosti Brussels : Serbia's Albanian-dominated province of Kosovo will declare independence on February 17, but the decision will not come into force until March, Belgian media reported on Wednesday. European Union officials also recently said they expect Kosovo's independence to be declared on February 17. Belgian newspapers said that sources in Brussels indicated that the Kosovan declaration of independence would enter into force in March alongside the adoption of a new Constitution.

Massachusetts hosts America’s first-ever Dalit art exhibition

Organized by Adavi Myah, an art collective led by Dalit and Bahujan women, the exhibition will run for four weeks until May 30, 2022. BOSTON,...

Dalai Lama appeals to China to work to resolve Tibet crisis

By NNN-PTI Dharmsala : Tibet spiritual leader in exile Dalai Lama Friday renewed his appeal to China to hold a "meaningful dialogue" with Tibetans to resolve the Tibet crisis and also urged the Chinese leadership to "exercise wisdom". "I urge the Chinese leadership to exercise wisdom and to initiate a meaningful dialogue with the Tibetan people," the Dalai Lama said in an appeal addressed to "Chinese brothers and sisters" across the globe.

London riots: Home secretary cuts short holiday, 100 held

By IANS, London : British Home Secretary Theresa May Monday cut short her holidays after over a 100 people were arrested following a second night of rioting across London.

Powerful quake strikes off Samoa Islands

By IANS, Wellington : An earthquake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale struck off Samoa Islands, the US Geological Survey said Thursday. The quake occurred at 1720 GMT Wednesday with the epicentre 198 km southwest of Apia, the capital of Samoa, Xinhua reported. There was no report of casualties or damages and no tsunami alert was issued by the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre.

Thailand to invite all parties to discuss roadmap

By IANS, Bangkok : Thailand's government will invite all concerned parties to discuss a a five-point national reconciliation roadmap June 12, prime minister's office said Wednesday. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva will after that officially unveil the roadmap to the public, PM's office minister Sathit Wongnongtoey said. "The prime minister will invite all Thai people to join the reconciliation creating effort and the government will regularly hold activities for the unity of Thai society," Xinhua quoted Sathit as saying in a Bangkok Post website report.

Doctors in former LTTE-held areas under interrogation

By IANS, Colombo : Three doctors who provided information to the media during the height of the military operations against Tamil Tigers in northern Sri Lanka were being questioned by police before being charged in the courts, a police spokesman said. The three doctors, now in police custody, treated people injured in the conflict and also gave media interviews and e-mailed photographs on a daily basis before the government re-took the last rebel-held territory in the country and killed the guerrilla leadership May 18, ending a 26-year conflict.

Russia announces completion of Iran’s first nuclear power plant

By RIA Novosty, Bushehr (Iran) : Russia has completed the construction of Iran's first nuclear power plant at Bushehr and is launching start-up operations, the head of Russian nuclear power corporation Rosatom said Wednesday. The plant in south Iran, which Russia undertook to finish as part of a 1998 contract, was originally scheduled to go on line at the end of 2006, but the date has been pushed back several times.

Missing Australians rescued from New Zealand mountain

By DPA, Wellington : Six Australian mountaineers trapped in bad weather while climbing New Zealand's Southern Alps were airlifted to safety Saturday by a search and rescue helicopter. The four men and two women from Sydney were reported to be well when they were flown to the village at the foot of 3,745-metre Mount Cook. They were found on a glacier after a brief break in the weather allowed a helicopter to take off and hone in on an emergency beacon that the group activated Thursday night when they ran into difficulties.

Fire rages at Bangkok mall; 1 dead, 40 injured

By NNN-TNA, Bangkok : Injured patrons of a burning Bangkok sauna rooftop were rescued by helicopter as a fire raged through a landmark commercial and residential building in the Chinatown business district Sunday night, leaving at least one man dead and injuring 47 others, including guest house residents and spa customers.

6.7 magnitude earthquake rattles Indonesia

By DPA, Jakarta : An earthquake measuring 6.7 on the Richter scale jolted the eastern part of Indonesia early Saturday, the meteorology agency said. No damage or casualties have been reported so far. The quake's epicentre was in the Maluku province, 194 km northwest of Saumlaki regency. The quake was 72 km beneath the ocean, which was quite deep for the area, so there was no potential of a tsunami, the report said. In December 2004, a 9.1 magnitude quake triggered tsunamis that struck nine countries. The waves killed some 177,000 people in Indonesia's Aceh province alone.

Space shuttle Atlantis first landing put off

By IANS

Washington : Inclement weather again Friday forced US space shuttle Atlantis, carrying Indian American astronaut Sunita Williams and six other crew, to put off its first landing attempt and instead try for a second one later.

Britain reeling under fuel shortage

By Venkata Vemuri, IANS, London : A fuel strike in Britain ended Tuesday morning, but it will be sometime before petrol can reach hundreds of empty pumps across country while people have turned to alternative fuels like vegetable oil. The shortages across Britain have forced people off the roads as hundreds of petrol pumps have closed down and private stations profiteer by hiking prices. The strike since the weekend by haulers who refused to carry Shell fuel demanding a pay hike led to the closure of over 600 petrol pumps in the country, mostly in the south-west and Wales.

Snow forces shutdown of British n-site

By IANS, London : A nuclear site in Britain was shut down Friday as rain and snow swept across the country causing transport chaos, floods and power failure, a media report said.

Sri Lanka urged to restore access to TamilNet

By IANS

New York : The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has urged the Sri Lankan government to restore domestic access to the TamilNet website that supports the Tamil Tigers.

Chadian Army drives rebels out of capital

By Xinhua Yaounde (Chad) : The Chadian Army said that it has driven the rebels out of the capital N'Djamena and also repulsed an attack on the eastern town of Adre. According to reports reaching here from N'Djamena, the army said late Sunday the security forces quashed the rebels' offensive on the capital and forced them to retreat. The rebels now pose no threat and the army troops are seeking a victory with hot pursuit, the statement added.

UAE, China discuss economic relations

By IANS/WAM, Abu Dhabi: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and China have held talks over their bilateral economic relations.

Mounting opposition to Fiji martial law

By DPA Wellington : Opposition mounted at home and abroad Friday to Fiji military strongman Commodore Voreqe (Frank) Bainimarama's move to reinstate martial law in the South Pacific island state. Bainimarama, who seized power in a bloodless coup in December 2006, assumed emergency powers Thursday and accused the prime minister he ousted, Laisenia Qarase, of destabilizing his regime.

Hundreds of flights cancelled as ice storms hit US

By DPA, Washington : A snow and ice storm swept across the US South Sunday, spreading power outages and prompting more than 1,400 flight cancellations by Delta, whose hub is Atlanta, Georgia.

Selfie stick saves girl from drowning

New York: Although selfie sticks have drawn much criticism of late, they can also be helpful in certain emergencies. Recently, a selfie stick saved...

Polish Prime Minister in Germany

By Prensa Latina Warsaw : Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk travelled to Germany on Tuesday to meet with federal Chancellor Angela Merkel, in a bid to improve bilateral relations. According to Polish official sources, Merkel and Tusk will review links between both states, which were affected by the previous head of government, Lech Kaczynski. During his elections campaign, the new prime minister committed to improving relations with his neighbouring countries, Germany and Russia, and the European Union, which is the aim of his visit to Brussels.

China issues first ever white paper on energy conditions and policies

By Xinhua Beijing : China's Information Office of the State Council issued the country's first ever white paper on its energy conditions and policies here on Wednesday.

30 feared killed in South Africa bus plunge

By DPA, Johannesburg : At least 30 people were believed to have died when their bus plunged from an embankment into a gorge in southern South Africa, emergency services told SAPA news agency Tuesday. The accident occurred in KwaZulu-Natal province Tuesday morning and a large rescue operation was underway to retrieve around 30 people still trapped inside the bus, which was believed to be carrying around 80 people, SAPA reported. Some of the injured were being treated at the scene, where extra medical personnel were being flown in by an army helicopter.

Sarkisyan leads with 53% of vote in Armenian presidential polls

By RIA Novosti Yerevan : Armenia's prime minister Serzh Sarkisyan, garnered 52.8% in Tuesday's presidential elections with 99% of votes counted, the central election commission said on Wednesday. A total of 642,859 people voted for Sarkisyan, who is also the chairman of the ruling republican party. He nearest rival, Armenia's first president Levon-Ter-Petrosyan, received 21.5% of the vote and ex-parliamentary speaker Artur Bagdasaryan 16.7%. Vaan Ovannisyan, a deputy parliamentary speaker and a member of the Dashnaktsutyun party's bureau, garnered 6.2%.

Berlin mulls abandoning US-led anti-terror mission: report

Berlin, Feb 16, IRNA ,The German government is contemplating leaving the controversial US-led anti-terror mission in Afghanistan, code-named 'Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)', the weekly Der Spiegel news magazine said in a report to hit the newsstands on Sunday. Washington has reportedly linked a German pull-out from OEF to a stronger German military engagement in war-stricken southern Afghanistan following the first round of bilateral talks.

Bomb blast reported in Colombo

By IANS, Colombo : An explosion was reported early Wednesday in Dehiwala, south of here, police and defence sources said. Defence ministry officials said there were waiting for details about the reported blast.

Muslims in the US – assimilated but apprehensive

By DPA

Washington : Muslims living in the US are better integrated and have higher living standards than their counterparts in Europe, yet most have doubts about American intentions in the war on terrorism and have become more fearful since Sep 11, pollsters have found.

British MP caught playing game on iPad in parliament

London : A British MP was caught playing Candy Crush, a popular puzzle game, on his iPad while attending a parliamentary committee meeting. Conservative Party...

India, South Korea to discuss nuclear cooperation Monday

By IANS, New Delhi: After its bilateral nuclear accords with the US, France and Russia, India will explore possibilities of civil nuclear cooperation with South Korea, a member of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), when the leaders of the two countries meet here Monday. "Both sides are keen to cooperate in this area. We are aware of their capabilities in this area," Gautam Bambawale, joint secretary (East Asia) in the external affairs ministry, told reporters here. "But we will have to wait for directions from the political leadership first," he added.

US economic policy is the ‘road to hell’: Czech PM

By DPA, Strasbourg (France) : The US decision to pump ever-larger sums into its economy is "road to hell", Czech republic's Prime Minister and holder of the European Union's rotating presidency Mirek Topolanek said Wednesday. The US is repeating the mistakes of the 1930s and has chosen the "road to hell" in the process, said the Czech prime minister, the morning after his government lost a vote of confidence by a narrow margin.

Taiwanese embassy in Costa Rica closes after 63 years of ties

By DPA

San Jose : The Taiwanese embassy in Costa Rica has been closed down as 63 years of diplomatic ties between the two countries ended after San Jose established relations with China on June 1.

Researchers develop faster, cheaper DNA sequencing method

By IANS, Washington : Biomedical engineers have hit upon a way of speeding up genome sequencing by cutting down the amount of DNA required in existing methods, which are costly, time-consuming and error-prone. A team led by Amit Meller, a Boston University biomedical engineering associate professor, reduced the number of DNA molecules required for such sequencing by 10,000 times, from about one billion sample molecules to 100,000. "The current study shows that we can detect a much smaller amount of DNA sample than previously reported," said Meller.

Suu Kyi meets senior Myanmar junta official

By DPA Yangon : Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi was Friday permitted to leave her home, where she is under house arrest, to meet a senior member of the military junta, according to witnesses. The junta's shadowy chief, General Than Shwe, has promised to enter into talks with Suu Kyi if she abandons her call for economic sanctions and drops her "confrontational" approach.

Earthquake causes panic in south Lebanon

By SPA Beirut : A moderate earthquake hit southern Lebanon in the early hours Tuesday, causing no damage but sending many panicked residents into the streets in the coastal town of Tyre, DPA quoted police sources as saying Tuesday. The quake struck at 2:20 am (0020 GMT) and measured 4.0 on the Richter scale, according to Moueen Hamze, head of Lebanon's National Centre for Scientific Research. "The quake was six kilometres east of Tyre," Hamze was quoted as saying in radio reports.

Sri Lankan rebels ready for talks if govt stops operations

By IRNA New Delhi : The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) has expressed readiness to hold talks with the government if it stops the military operations against them. According to All India Radio (AIR) report, LTTE political head P Nadesan told a group of Parliamentarians from the pro-rebel Tamil National Alliance (TNA) in Wanni, Sri Lanka recently that it was the government which started the war. He said, the offer of the LTTE for a ceasefire and talks should not be construed as any desperation on LTTE part to stop the war.

Sri Lankan Govt troops take Thampanai from LTTE rebels

By NNN-LKNews Colombo : Sri Lankan security forces continued to advance in the Vavuniya-Mannar sector Monday, taking full control of Thampanai town on the Madhu as Tiger cadres in the area withdrew amid heavy fire, according to defence sources. The fall of Thampanai town is considered a major breakthrough in the efforts to flush out the LTTE from these areas and clear the path to Wanni, senior military officers state.

British man given life term for failed suicide bombing

By DPA, London : A British man convicted of staging a failed suicide bomb attack on a crowded restaurant in a university town last summer was Friday given a life sentence for attempted murder. Nicky Reilly, a 22-year-old Muslim convert, was the only person injured when he accidentally set off his home-made nail-bomb in a toilet of a restaurant in Exeter, southwest England, last May. Sentencing him at the Old Bailey Criminal Court in London, the presiding judge said it was "sheer luck or chance" that the planned attack did not succeed.

Tiger Woods scandal costs sponsors $12 bn

By DPA, San Francisco : Tiger Wood's sexual indiscretions have not just wrecked his marriage and his squeaky-clean reputation. They also wreaked $12 billion worth of havoc on the companies that paid him millions of dollar in sponsorship and endorsement fees, according to a new study released Tuesday. The researchers at the University of California-Davis said that shares at companies like Gillette and AT&T and Nike lost $12 billion in value in the 13 trading days after the scandal first broke in November.

British ministers to visit India; meet Modi, Sushma

New Delhi: British ministers William Hague and George Osborne will meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi and External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj when they visit...

Torture memos’ release to impact US counter terrorism: Stratfor

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : The Obama administration's release of four classified memos authorising "enhanced interrogation techniques" on terror suspects has had a "chilling effect" on US clandestine services working on counter-terrorism issues, according to Stratfor. Realistically, those most likely to face investigation and prosecution are those who wrote the memos, rather than the low-level field personnel who acted in good faith based upon the guidance the memos provided, the global intelligence company noted in an analysis Wednesday.

Self-defence, not occupation

By Sheldon Schreter In my January 30 op-ed in The Jerusalem Post, I contended that our settlements weaken rather than strengthen us by seriously eroding both our own and the world's belief in the justice of our cause. That cause is asserting the right of the Jewish people to a sovereign state in their ancient homeland. In over 100 "talkbacks" on jpost.com, letters to the editor, and some personal communications, my views were mostly attacked, though occasionally supported. Let me address some of the criticisms of my argument.

Obama’s top economic advisor to step down

By IANS, Washington : Christina Romer, who chairs the White House Council of Economic Advisors (CEA), will step down next month, Xinhua reported. After her resignation, effective Sep 3, Romer will resume her position as professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, where her son will be starting high school in the fall, the White House said in a statement Thursday. As CEA chair, Romer is one of the key economic advisers who meets President Barack Obama on almost daily basis to help chart the response to the deepest recession since the Great Depression.

Poland to have new government in November

By IANS, Warsaw : Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has announced that the new government will be formed by Nov 22 in the country, Xinhua reported.

Cathay Pacific cuts 10 flights to Canada, US

By IANS, Vancouver : Cathay Pacific Airways, one of the six five-star airlines in the world, is reducing its flights to North America to cut costs because of high fuel prices. In a statement issued Monday, the Hong Kong-based airline said it was cutting 10 North American flights and adding eight new flights to Australia and switching its bigger aircraft to 14 more profitable European flights each week.

US stocks surge again as Bush goes for ‘partial nationalisation’ of banks

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : As the US Tuesday unveiled an "unprecedented and aggressive" plan to pour at least $250 billion to partly nationalise nine major banks and expand federal insurance protection, the Wall Street was on the upward curve again. In an early morning speech from the White House, President George W. Bush described the administration's plan as an "essential short term measure to ensure the viability of American's banking system".

Reforms will be implemented in full: Maldives president

By IANS Colombo : Maldives President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, Asia's longest-serving leader, has said that the political reforms initiated in the Indian Ocean island nation four years ago will be implemented in full and will be his "legacy". "I firmly believe that the political reforms that I proposed in June 2004 can be implemented in full in a few years from now," Gayoom told Hamaroalhi Daily, a Maldivian newspaper last week.

People express mixed feelings over SAARC Summit in Sri Lanka

By Xinhua, Colombo : People in Sri Lankan capital Colombo Tuesday expressed mixed feelings over the forthcoming 15th South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) Summit. The 15th SAARC Summit, which will be attended by heads of state or government of eight member countries in South Asia and delegations from seven countries and regions, will be held here on Aug. 2-3 amid tight security.

Pentagon extends tanker deadline to accommodate EADS

By DPA, Washington : The US Defence Department said Wednesday it was willing to issue a 60-day extension of the deadline for bids on a lucrative contract to build the next generation of aerial refuellers. The decision would push the May 10 deadline to July 9, allowing the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS) more time to come up with a proposal after its US partner, Northrop Grumman, dropped out earlier this month.

Wanted, a Facebook to tackle global financial crisis: WB chief

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick has suggested formation of a core group comprising seven emerging powers, including India, joining the Group of Seven to deal with the global economic crisis. "The G-7 is not working. We need a better group for a different time," he said in a speech to the Peterson Institute for International Economics here Monday. "For financial and economic cooperation, we should consider a new Steering Group including Brazil, China, India, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, and the current G-7."

Trucks set on fire in Chile

By IANS/EFE, Santiago : Hooded assailants intercepted two freight trucks, pulled out the drivers and set the vehicles on fire in a southern town in Chile. The incident took place Wednesday in Araucania region, where ethnic Mapuche Indian activists have torched vehicles, highway toll booths and lumber shipments on earlier occasions as part of a protest to reclaim ancestral lands from business and forest products companies.

11 dead as bus plunges off cliff in Brazil

By IANS, Rio De Janeiro: At least 11 people were killed and as many injured Monday afternoon in a Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro, after a passenger bus plunged over a cliff, Xinhua reported.

Japanese PM arrives in Hokkaido to host G8 summit

By Xinhua, Tokyo, Japan : Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda arrived in Hokkaido on Sunday for the summit of the Group of Eight (G8) industrialized nations. Fukuda, host of the summit in the resort of Toyako, is expected to meet U.S. President George W. Bush in the afternoon. Japan has put talks on climate change high on the agenda of the gathering in the northern resort of Toyako to build on the outcome of last year's summit in Germany, where leaders agreed to seriously consider a target of halving greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century.

Rebel attack foiled, president returns claiming victory

By DPA, Colombo : The army foiled a last-ditch, predawn attempt by Tamil rebels using boats to breach military defences Sunday, killing at least 70 fighters and destroying a six boats, a military spokesman said. Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said rebels initially posing as civilians had come across a lagoon and made an attempt to breach the defences around 1:30 a.m., but were confronted and killed. He did not say whether the army suffered any casualties in the incident.

World leaders arrive for Copenhagen climate summit

By DPA, Copenhagen: The first of over 100 heads of state and government and other leaders arrived Tuesday in Copenhagen for the closing days of the United Nations climate change talks. President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe was one of the first heads of states to arrive Tuesday as did UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. Danish organisers expect some 110 heads of state and government by Friday when the conference is scheduled to end, including US President Barack Obama.

Haiti cholera deaths top 1,500

By IANS, Port-au-Prince : An estimated 1,523 people have died of cholera and the epidemic could last for years in Haiti, the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO) has said.

Fire destroys Sikh temple in Washington state

By IANS, Washington: A Sikh temple and school that was under construction in Vancouver in Washington state has been burned to the ground in an early morning fire, according to a media report.

Miliband: West ready to solve Iran’s nuclear issue

By IRNA, London : British foreign secretary despite repeating west’s past accusations against Iran’s peaceful nuclear program said Wednesday west is ready for surveying various multilateral initiatives aimed at solving Iran’s nuclear issue. According to IRNA, David Miliband added at question and answer session of the British Parliament, “We support the Russian investments in Iran’s Bushehr Nuclear Plant.” The British top diplomat added, “The nuclear NPT should be the basis for any kind of dealing with Iran’s nuclear program.”

EU stresses significance of int’l coordination on Kosovo

By Xinhua, Luxembourg : The European Union (EU) stressed on Monday the significance of international coordination on Kosovo, in particular during the transition period. At a meeting of the EU Troika with the delegation of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Slovenian Foreign Minister Dimitrij Rupel, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, said the OSCE mission should continue to work and cooperate with the EU police and justice mission EULEX, as well as the special EU representative to be deployed to Kosovo by the EU.

Thai army chief asks PM to dissolve parliament

By Xinhua, Bangkok : Thai Army Chief Anupong Paochinda Wednesday urged Prime Minister Somchai Wonsawat to dissolve parliament in the wake of massive protest of the opposition People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) demanding the resignation of the prime minister. Paochinda also asked the protesters who laid siege to the Bangkok international airport disrupting all flights to disperse. Anupong made the "suggestions" Wednesday afternoon at a press conference after holding an urgent meeting with military and police top brass, business leaders and academics.

Uruguay president-elect will farm too

By EFE, Montevideo : Jose "Pepe" Mujica, winner of the presidential runoff in Uruguay, said he will alternate his duties as head of state with working the land on his small farm on the outskirts of Montevideo. "Everybody has his own interests and you have to respect them," the 74-year-old former guerrilla leader and political prisoner told reporters. Mujica, candidate of the governing leftist Broad Front, lives in a house with a dirt road in front in the Rincon del Cerro area.

US leaves nuclear deal timing to India

By Arun Kumar Washington, Oct 10 (IANS) The United States says it supports India in its efforts to complete the remaining steps to conclude their civil nuclear deal, but will leave the timing to New Delhi. Apparently mindful of the crisis facing the Indian government over opposition to the deal from its communist allies, a US official sought to downplay reports that India had not yet approached the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to get its nod.

China’s Long March 2F rocket ready for trip to launch center

By Xinhua, Beijing : The Long March 2F rocket designed to carry China's third manned spacecraft into space will be sent to Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest Gansu province in a few days, officials with the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT) said here Saturday. The rocket was coated in red, a color to show that it was ready to fulfill its mission, said Jing Muchun, chief designer of the spacecraft, adding that further testing will be conducted to ensure 100 percent safety after the rocket arrives at Jiuquan.

Russia to keep supporting Syria peace plan

By IANS, Moscow: Russia will keep backing the peaceful settlement plan in Syria, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said.

Russia bans Hitler’s ‘Mein Kampf’

By DPA, Moscow : Russia has joined the list of countries banning Adolf Hitler's autobiographical work "Mein Kampf", 65 years after the Nazi dictator's suicide. The state prosecutor justified the decision in Moscow Friday by saying the "extremist" work contains ideas that preach murder and racial discrimination, the Interfax news agency reported. Russian media outlets complained the move came 84 years too late, pointing out that Hitler had written "Mein Kampf" in the mid-1920s.

Russia, Japan to Talk Peace Treaty

By Prensa Latina, Moscow : Japan expects to move towards the signing of a peace treaty during the current visit to Russia of Mahasaiko Komura, minister of Foreign Affairs, diplomatic sources informed. The press secretary of the Japanese foreign ministry, Kazuo Kodama, affirmed that during talks with Komuras counterpart, Serguei Lavrof, new opportunities are expected for an arrangement that dates back to 1945. Moscow and Tokyo had not signed a formal peace treaty after the Second World War regarding discrepancies over the Kuril Islands, under Kremlin sovereignty.

Penelope’s noble cause for Haiti victims

By IANS, London : Oscar winning actress Penelope Cruz has raised $333,000 for the Haiti earthquake victims by selling her designer dresses. The 35-year-old and jewellery maker Chopard raised the sum by organising an auction for the Jenkins-Penn Haitian Relief Organisation at the Cannes Film Festival, reported femalefirst.co.uk. Other than Cruz, Hollywood stars Anne Hathaway, Julia Roberts, Gisele Bundchen, Charlize Theron and Salma Hayek donated for the cause. Hayek raised $21,000 for her burgundy Gucci gown, the first from the Italian brand's new couture range.

Tehran ready for explicit talks with Obama

Tehran, Aug 3, IRNA – Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehman-Parast said on Tuesday that Tehran is ready to hold an explicit and transparent meeting with US President Barack Obama in the presence of media. Talking to reporters during his weekly press briefing, he added that Tehran tries to inform the world nations of its strong logic and reasoning.

Russia warns Europe poll monitor against boycott

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Russia Thursday warned democracy watchdog Organisation of Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) against its election monitoring panel's threat of boycotting the country's March 2 presidential polls. OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) insisted on sending at least 50 of its observers to Russia Feb 15, five days before the date proposed by Moscow, to monitor electioneering before sending its team of election observers. The body has threatened to boycott the election if the conditions are not met.

Islamophobia threatens democracy, UK warned

By IRNA, London : A broad coalition of politicians, trade unionists, lawyers, religious leaders and peace campaigners joined together Thursday to issue a warning about the rise of Islamophobia in Britain. “We cannot stand by and watch this continue without remark or action,” said the alliance, led by former Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone, and several MPs, peers and members of the European Parliament.

UN relief agencies delivering more assistance to Haiti

By IRNA, Tehran : Despite the difficult conditions in post-earthquake Haiti, United Nations agencies are reaching more and more survivors with vital assistance, even as search and rescue operations continue for those who still might be saved. The 7.0-magnitude quake that struck the Caribbean nation on January 12 levelled buildings, including homes, schools and hospitals, damaged roads and other vital infrastructure, and left one third of the country’s 9 million people in need of food, water, medical help and other urgent aid.

Citigroup launches counterattack to stabilise firm

By Arun Kumar,IANS, Washington : Amid rumours about the impending departure of Vikram Pandit, the Indian-American CEO of Citigroup, the banking giant is reported to have launched a counterattack aimed at stabilising the company. While Citigroup executives and directors continue to wrestle with the question whether drastic changes are needed at the New York firm, its officials have been talking in recent days to Treasury Department and Federal Reserve officials, the Wall Street Journal reported Sunday.

Online game to foster awareness on warming among kids

By IANS, Sydney : Computer animation students have designed an online game to help children understand ways they can reduce their impact on climate change. Programme coordinator of multimedia at Swinburne University of Technology, Peter Ciszewski, said the University's student designers have incorporated educative elements into animation and game play techniques to produce the game.

Rajapaksa to brief Indian leaders on devolution process

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa is expected to brief Indian leaders on the progress made by an all-party committee on devolution of powers to the provinces during his visit to India to attend the second BIMSTEC summit starting Nov 13. The All Party Representative Committee (APRC) was set up in 2006 by Rajakapsa and is tasked to suggest a system of devolution of powers to end Sri Lanka's bloody ethnic war.

Hitler in pink posters cause storm in Italy

By IANS, London : Huge posters of Hitler wearing a lurid pink uniform with a love heart, instead of swastika, on his arm band have whipped up a storm in Italy. The posters, which are 18 feet high, are for a line of clothing for young people and they have been prominently set up in Palermo city. They show Hitler wearing a bright pink uniform above the slogan "Change Style - Don't Follow Your Leader", The Telegraph reported Friday. Local people have found the posters offensive and demanded that they be removed.

Japan hangs four inmates

By DPA Tokyo : Four inmates were executed Thursday in Japan, Justice Minister Kunio Hatoyama said, bringing the number of death penalties carried out there since December to 10. The convicted murderers, aged 41 to 64, were hanged at prisons in Tokyo and Osaka, Hatoyama said. The series of multiple executions over the past four months has been the biggest cluster to be carried out since Japan resumed executions in 1993. The reason for the increase has been a rise in the number of death sentences, Japanese media reported.

Clinton, Obama Back in the Ring

By Prensa Latina Washington : Democrat pre-candidates to the White House Hillary Clinton and Barak Obama resumed their fight on Saturday in the primary elections that will be held in Louisiana, Washington and Nebraska. National media is focused on this new battle between the two contenders, absent from the republican process, which shows a wide advantage of Senator John McCain, the party's possible candidate. After Super Tuesday's elections tie, those of Saturday and Tuesday will be more relevant for the Dems.

Nepal PM faces new hurdle

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Saved from a dire constitutional crisis last month by the opposition Maoist party but now at loggerheads with it once more, Nepal's government faces a fresh hurdle next month when it again needs help to pass the new budget. With a fresh quarrel erupting between Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal and the former guerrillas after the premier refused to resign by Wednesday, the ruling party might find itself in yet another difficult position.

Mediterranean boat capsize: UN calls for ‘comprehensive’ response

United Nations : UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Sunday called for a "comprehensive and collective" response to ensure "a robust search and rescue capacity...

Thai southern bomb attack kills 1, injuring 4

By Xinhua, Bangkok : A bomb planted under a motorcycle was triggered Tuesday night in Thailand's southernmost province of Yala, fatally injured a woman and wounded another four, local news network The Nation said on Wednesday. The explosion occurred at about 9:10 p.m. (1410 GMT) on Tuesday in front of Yala's Muang Municipality in Muang district. Police quoted eyewitnesses as saying that they saw two men parking the motorcycle and running away and the explosion occurred less than one minute after that.

Islamists trying to build parallel society in Canada: Report

By Gurmukh Singh, IANS, Toronto : Islamists are secretly working to build a "parallel society" in Canada, warns an intelligence report.

NASA mission to help unravel climate mysteries

By Xinhua, Washington : NASA's first spacecraft dedicated to studying atmospheric carbon dioxide is in final preparation for a Feb 23 launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Carbon dioxide is the leading human-produced greenhouse gas driving changes in Earth's climate. The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) will provide the first complete picture of human and natural carbon dioxide sources as well as their "sinks", the places where carbon dioxide is pulled out of the atmosphere and stored.

Financial problems drive Indian family in Dubai to death

By IANS, Dubai : Financial difficulties drove a young Indian family, whose bodies were fished out of the Dubai Creek, to death, police said Friday. The bodies of Girish Kumar, 29, his wife Shabija, 27, and their 20-month-old daughter Gauri Nanda were fished out of the creek in the heart of this city Wednesday. A police spokesman told reporters that the family was under heavy financial burden and that was what apparently drove to them to this extreme step. While Girish's death is being treated as a suicide, the deaths of the mother and daughter are being investigated.

34 passengers on Philippine sunken ferry rescued

By Xinhua, Manila : At least 34 passengers on the sunken Philippine ferry "MV Princess of the Stars" have been able to reach shore to be rescued by Monday as the coastal guard rescue team, with the help of the navy, continued their difficult search on the sea. In a terse report released Monday afternoon, the Philippine Coast Guard said they were able to confirm 30 more surviving passengers after four survivors swam shore on Sunday. Two were found on Romblon province while twenty-eight others had been rescued in Quezon province, north of the mishap area off the Romblon coast.

US pressing Germany on assuming greater role in Afghan anti-terror mission

Berlin, Oct 24, IRNA ,The US is pressing Germany on assuming a greater role in the controversial anti-terror mission 'Operation Enduring Freedom'(OEF) in Afghanistan, news reports said here Wednesday. A senior US Defense Department official met with key legislators of four German parties which are represented in the German parliament ahead of next month's crucial vote on extending the American-led anti -terror operations.

Germans still fascinated by the Baader-Meinhof gang

By DPA Berlin : Hanns Martin Schleyer had almost reached home when his driver braked hard to avoid a car that cut in front of him and a pushchair that rolled across the other side of the road. The police escort vehicle following the head of West Germany's powerful employers' association did not have time to stop and slammed into the back of Schleyer's Mercedes. Suddenly a group of terrorists appeared from nowhere and peppered the two cars with bullets from sub-machineguns, killing the industrialist's chauffeur and his three bodyguards.

11 killed in US floods

By DPA, Washington : At least 11 people were killed in the US state of Tennessee over the weekend after torrential rains led to heavy flooding, broadcaster CNN reported Monday. Thousands of people had to flee their homes, while hotels and nursing homes were evacuated. Rapidly moving water washed over roads and parking lots, leading to the shutdown of several highway stretches. Some drivers had to be rescued by firefighters after rising water trapped them in their cars.

Make global warming top priority: Dalai Lama to world leaders

By IANS, Dharamsala : Ahead of the Copenhagen summit, Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama Monday asked world leaders to make finding a solution to climate change their number one priority. "Protection of the global environment must take precedence over matters of national interest and politicians must make finding a solution to climate change their number one priority," the Nobel Peace laureate told reporters in Sydney, according to a post on the website of the Tibetan government-in-exile here.

Chinese vice-president meets US president

By IANS, Washington : Chinese Vice-President Xi Jinping called on US President Barack Obama at the White House Tuesday and delivered a letter from Chinese President Hu Jintao.

‘Hashish plane’ makes crash landing in southern Spain

By RIA Novosti Madrid : A light-engine aircraft carrying 600 kg of hashish crashed in southern Spain on Thursday, Spanish police said in a report. "A plane carrying 600 kg of hashish packaged in 20 bags crash-landed in rice fields not far from Sevilla," the report read, adding that the plane's pilot and its sole passenger had fled the scene of the crash. Police eventually located and arrested the plane's occupants several kilometers away from the crash site. They have been accused of drug trafficking.

US seeks dismissal of move to declare RSS terror group

New York : The US State Department has asked a court here to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a Sikh rights group for declaring...

Mount Everest ice cores to help study climate change

By IANS, Beijing : Scientists from China have obtained three ice cores from Mount Everest with the aim to understand more about climate change, an expedition leader said Monday.

58 Chinese killed on roads amid holiday travel rush

By IANS, Beijing : Five road accidents in two days have claimed the lives of at least 58 people, as thousands of Chinese started travelling across the country for the Lunar New Year.
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