Sudan peace agreement in peril, UN warns
By DPA,
New York : The comprehensive peace agreement between the Sudanese government and southern Sudan would unravel unless the two sides take steps to implement it, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Thursday in an progress report.
The 2005 agreement ended a decades-long civil war between the Muslim-led Khartoum government and Christian groups in the south, with the inclusion of southern leaders in the Khartoum government. But key benchmarks in the deal remain unfulfilled, including north-south border demarcation, disarmament and census.
Nine jailed in China for mine flood that killed 38
By IANS,
Beijing : Nine people have been sentenced to varied terms in jail for a deadly flood in a Chinese coal mine that killed 38 people two years ago.
New Zealand women told to behave like ladies not men
By DPA
Wellington : In their drive for equality with men, New Zealand women have forgotten how to be ladies, the National Council of Women said Saturday.
In a statement marking International Women's Day, the council said they act more like men behaving badly and are particularly drinking too much alcohol.
"Politically and economically, New Zealand women are blazing across the barriers," said council president Christine Low, in a reference to the fact that the prime minister, chief justice, and Speaker of parliament are female.
UN calls for ‘reinvigoration’ of agriculture
By IANS,
New York : As the world is facing a severe food crisis, agriculture needs to be reinvigorated to produce enough food to feed the burgeoning global population, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has said.
"After a quarter century of relative neglect, agriculture is back on the international agenda, sadly with a vengeance," the UN chief said Wednesday in an address at the start of the three-day high-level segment of the annual meeting of the Commission for Sustainable Development (CSD) in New York, WAM news agency reported Thursday.
Two held in US on Cuba espionage charges
By DPA,
Washington : US authorities have arrested a retired State Department employee and his wife on charges of spying for the Cuban government, a spokesman said Friday.
Authorities allege that Walter Kendall Myers served as an illegal agent for the Cuban government for nearly 30 years, State Department spokesman PJ Crowley said.
His wife, Gwendolyn, was arrested on similar charges. The couple was taken into custody Thursday, Crowley said.
Former Argentine general gets life sentence
By DPA,
Buenos Aires : One of Argentina's most feared former generals has been handed a life sentence, 31 years after crimes committed during 1976-83 military dictatorship in the country.
A court in Cordoba, Argentina's second largest city, ruled late Thursday that Luciano Benjamin Menendez, 81, was responsible for the kidnapping, torture and murder of four opposition party members in 1977 during the period known as the "Dirty War."
India regrets Kashmir issue being raised at UNHRC
By Arul Louis
United Nations, Sep 12 (IANS) India has expressed regret that the Kashmir issue is being raised at the UN Human Rights Council...
4 dead, 53 missing in China landslide
By Xinhua,
Chengdu (China) : At least four people were killed in a landslide triggered by heavy rain in southwest China's Sichuan province, authorities said Thursday.
Fiftythree people were still missing in Kangding county, the ministry of civil affairs said.
Lake that disappeared in Chile reappears
By IANS
Santiago : Chile's Lake Tempanos, whose disappearance in May left scientists and residents of the southern region of Magallanes stumped, is again filling with water, the Spanish news agency EFE said.
Madonna an ‘ex-wh***’, says Russian deputy PM
By IANS,
Moscow : Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin has termed pop star Madonna an "ex-wh***" over her backing of imprisoned punk rockers Pussy Riot, RIA Novosti reported.
Hong Kong leader draws flak on Tiananmen dissident handed to China
By DPA,
Hong Kong : Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang was under increasing pressure Tuesday to investigate the case of a former Tiananmen Square dissident sent over the border into China to be arrested.
Zhou Yongjun, 42, a student leader in the 1989 pro-democracy movement who is now in the process of becoming a US citizen, has been held for a year in China after being picked up in Hong Kong.
He faces fraud charges in mainland China after being found allegedly using fraudulent identity documents in Sep 2008 to enter Hong Kong from neighbouring Macau.
Videocon-Bharat Petroleum venture acquires Brazilian firm
BY IANS,
Mumbai : Videocon Industries and its joint venture partner Bharat PetroResources have acquired the Brazilian oil assets of Canadian natural gas producer EnCana Corp for $165 million, Videocon said Friday.
In a regulatory statement, it said an additional $118 million was paid towards acquiring EnCana (Brasil) Petroleo Limitada, the Canadian company's Brazilian subsidiary, which has 10 deepwater offshore exploration blocks.
The acquisition was made through VB (Brasil) Petroleo, the joint venture between Bharat PetroResources and Videocon.
Dialogue only after all issues put on agenda
Islamabad: Sartaj Aziz, the Pakistan prime minister's advisor on National Security and Foreign Affairs, has said Islamabad will not resume dialogue with New Delhi...
Ghana’s central bank five-year bond oversubscribed
By IANS,
Accra : The five-year bond issued by Ghana's central bank Thursday was oversubscribed by 141 percent.
Quake kills two, injures 140 in Chile
By IANS
Santiago : Two people were killed and about 140 injured when an earthquake measuring 7.7 on the Richter scale rocked northern Chile, the Spanish news agency EFE reported Thursday.
Officials said the town of Tocopilla, the epicentre of the quake, bore the brunt. Both two deaths occurred there. Of the injured, 110 were from that city.
According to Carmen Fernandez, head of the National Office of Emergencies, doctors have set up makeshift clinics to attend to the injured as the town's hospital was heavily damaged.
Myanmar begins census
Yangon : Myanmar's national census, the first in three decades, started Sunday to collect data on population, economic and social facts. It was aimed...
South African parliamentary team for outsourcing business to India
By IANS,
Kolkata : A South African parliamentary delegation Thursday evinced interest in outsourcing business to India and sought this country's participation in various sectors, including automobiles and mining.
The 11-member team, led by Mewa Ramgobin, held an interaction with Indian businessmen and consultants at a programme organised by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and urged Indian companies to pump money in venture capital businesses, small and medium enterprises and pharmaceuticals.
Call for Australia to have referendum on republic
By Neena Bhandari, IANS,
Sydney : With leaders of the two major Australian political parties sharing the vision of an Australian head of state replacing the British monarch, the Greens Party Wednesday called for a referendum on the republic during the 2010 federal elections.
"We think the time is right, the stars are aligned. We have a prime minister and a leader of the opposition who support the republic. We Greens are going to move before Christmas for a referendum at the next election on the republic, just a yes-no question," Australian Greens Party leader Bob Brown told reporters.
Iran begins ‘Holy Prophet 5’ war games
By IANS,
Tehran : Iran will test-fire a range of "home-built" missiles during its military exercises that kicked off Thursday in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, a media report said.
Code named "Holy Prophet 5", the three-day war games will show the naval strength of Iran's Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), IRNA news agency reported.
Gunmen hold 170 hostage at Mali hotel, three killed
Bamako : At least three people were killed on Friday as gunmen took 170 people, including 20 Indians, hostage inside a five-star hotel...
Russia to cut budget spending by another 15 percent: Report
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : The Russian government has instructed ministries to cut spending by another 15 percent on top of the 15 percent budget cuts approved late last year, a business paper reported Monday.
Budget cuts will affect all budget fund recipients, except courts.
The biggest cut will hit the energy ministry (33 percent) and the transport ministry (30 percent), while the least affected will be the education ministry (11 percent), the State Duma (12 percent) and the foreign ministry (12 percent), Vedomosti reported.
Astronauts take call from White House
By DPA,
Washington : The crew of the International Space Station and space shuttle Discovery received a phone call from US President Barack Obama Tuesday.
Obama made the call from the White House along with a group of school children and members of Congress, whom he described as just as excited as the kids to speak with astronauts. He said he was proud of the US astronauts, but also of the international cooperation in the building and operation of the space station.
EU starts implementing Iran nuclear agreement
Brussels : The European Council said here on Friday that it has adopted the first legal acts implementing the latest Iran nuclear deal, which...
Boston bombings: One suspect dead
By IANS,
Boston : A suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings was captured but later died Friday, while a second one is on the loose, police said.
Plot to kill Mexican president unearthed
By EFE,
Mexico City : Mexican authorities have arrested a drug kingpin for allegedly plotting to kill President Felipe Calderon, officials said Monday.
Dimas Diaz Ramos was arrested Sunday along with four other suspects in Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state.
The arrest comes as the leaders of the region gathered in the western Mexican city of Guadalajara for the North American Leaders' Summit Aug 9-10.
US President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper also attended the summit.
Officials did not provide further details about the plan to kill Calderon.
Hindu activists prevent official access to Shambo
By IANS
London : Hindu worshippers at the Skanda Vale temple in Wales prevented veterinary officials from reaching the 'sacred' bull Shambo, who is scheduled to be slaughtered after testing positive for TB infection.
In the battle of wits between officials and the Hindu groups, police help had to be requisitioned. Over 100 Hindu worshippers from various parts of Britain, Switzerland and New Zealand began reciting hymns and prayers from early Thursday morning.
London : Hindu worshippers at the Skanda Vale temple in Wales prevented veterinary officials from reaching the 'sacred' bull Shambo, who is scheduled to be slaughtered after testing positive for TB infection.
In the battle of wits between officials and the Hindu groups, police help had to be requisitioned. Over 100 Hindu worshippers from various parts of Britain, Switzerland and New Zealand began reciting hymns and prayers from early Thursday morning.
Election Officials Arrested in Zimbabwe
By Prensa Latina
Harare : The Zimbabwe Police arrested seven officials from the Electoral Commission (ZEC), claiming they have committed fraud to favor opposition candidate Morgan Tsvangirai,
The arrested ZEC members diverted 5,000 votes from President Mugabe to Tsvangirai candidature, police sources said.
The commission has not yet given the results for the presidency polls despite of the fact that the vote was cast last March 29.
ZEC reports a victory for the opposition Movement for the Democratic Change (MDC) in the dispute for the National Assembly's seats.
Not-so-cuddly panda mauls man in Beijing
By DPA,
Beijing : A giant panda at Beijing Zoo mauled an intruder who climbed into its enclosure, state media said Thursday.
The 110-kg panda, Gugu, bit the legs of the man who climbed into its pen to retrieve a toy dropped by his young son Wednesday, the Beijing Morning Post said.
The animal's attack on Zhang, a tourist from the eastern province of Anhui, was its third reported in the last three years.
In 2007, a 15-year-old boy suffered serious leg injuries after Gugu mauled him when he scaled a fence in a attempt to cuddle the panda.
Ten die in Russia road accident
By IANS,
Moscow: Ten people died in Russia Sunday when a minibus collided head on with a truck, authorities said.
China erases Dalai Lama’s face from Lhasa
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Lhasa : There are 999 rooms and a sprawling cave in the awe-inspiring, centuries old Potala Palace in the centre of Lhasa Valley in Tibet. But there is not a single photograph of the exiled Buddhist spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, in the palace-turned-museum where he spent his teenage, was educated, held religious ceremonies and met government officials and envoys.
28 killed in Kenya attack
Nairobi: At least 28 people were killed Saturday in an attack on a bus in Kenya's Mandera county, authorities said.
A group of over 100...
4 bombs explode near Georgian region of Abkhazia
By SPA,
Tbilisi, Georgia : Four bombs exploded early Sunday in the tense border area between Georgia and the separatist province of Abkhazia, officials said. No injuries were
reported.
The blasts went off near the Inguri river, which divides Georgia and Abkhazia, Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili said.
Lt. Col. Alexander Novitsky, a spokesman for the Russian peacekeeping forces in Abkhazia, was quoted by the ITAR-Tass news agency as blaming the blast on Georgian
agents.
Two Indians jailed for involvement in Singapore riots
Singapore : Two more Indian nationals in Singapore were sent behind bars Tuesday for their involvement in the December 2013 riots in the Little...
President Hu visits Hainan to attend int’l economic forum
By Xinhua
Beijing : Chinese President Hu Jintao inspected the southern province of Hainan before attending the annual meeting of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) opening on Saturday.
The forum, April 11-13, is a platform for high-level interaction between leaders from Asia and the world. Boao has been the permanent venue of the annual regional economic forum since 2001.
Cuba: Spain twists human rights
By NNN-Prensa Latina
Madrid : The Cuban Embassy has criticized Spain for over its manipulation of Cuba’s record in human rights.
The embassy to Spain pointed out in a communique published on the Day of Human Rights that the enemies of the Revolution are the same as those who started wars like Iraq and killed hundreds of thousands of innocent victims.
Hafeez suspended from bowling for one year
Dubai: Pakistani all-rounder Mohammad Hafeez was on Friday suspended from bowling in international cricket for the next 12 months following an independent assessment of...
Spokesman: Iran blasts Obama for repeating Bush’s mistakes
By Xinhua,
TEHRAN : Iran's government spokesman Gholam Hossein Elham on Saturday criticized the new U.S. President Barack Obama for following George Bush's approach towards Iran, Iran's semi-official Fars news agency reported.
"The era of this (Bush's) literature has passed and speaking in the language of the past is not suitable for today's situation," Elham said, referring to Obama's emphasis on the need for the suspension of Iran's nuclear activities.
"Today you cannot speak illogically and you cannot set preconditions," he added.
Japan police raids firms on N. Korea nuclear connection
By KUNA,
Tokyo : Japanese police have raided two companies on suspicion they helped supply Japan-made vacuum pumps to North Korea being used in uranium enrichment.
Last week, the authorities searched Tokyo Vacuum, a machinery maker in Kanagawa Prefecture, south of Tokyo, and the Tokyo-based trading firm Nakano Corp., police and Nakano Corporation said Thursday.
US bombs IS positions in Iraq’s Sinjar region
Baghdad: US combat aircraft Sunday bombarded positions of the Islamic State (IS) Sunni extremist group in the Sinjar region of Iraq's Nineveh province, Kurdish...
Kenya needs transit visa to deport terror suspect
By DPA,
Nairobi : A radical Islamist preacher listed as a suspected terrorist cannot be deported from Kenya to his home country Jamaica, as Britain and South Africa have refused the required transit visa, The Standard reported Thursday.
Sheikh Abdullah al-Faisal, deported from Britain several years ago after preaching hatred against Jews, Hindus, and the West, continued to be held in Kenya as no direct flights to Jamaica were available and travel via third countries required a transit visa.
N. Korea Exposed S. Korea Harm on Ties
By Prensa Latina,
Seoul : The PDR of Korea denounced the South Korean newly elected government has been rising pro-US support to the detriment of reunification with North Korea.
Communist party daily, Rodong Sinmun, calls President Lee Myung Bak and his group traitors for they talk cooperation to try and calm disgust in Pyongyang.
The PDR of Korea will not talk or negotiate with a group that does not respect our nation and refuses to observe the joint statements of Jun 15, 2000 and Oct 4, 2007.
New York man kills fellow commuter over train seat
By DPA,
New York: A New York man has been charged with stabbing to death a fellow commuter on a train after the they got into an argument over a seat, according to a report Sunday.
The 37-year-old suspect had demanded that a reportedly homeless 36-year-old man move a bag from the seat where he wanted to sit on the train he boarded at the city's Rockerfeller Center, the New York Daily News reported.
The newspaper said that after the man refused and assaulted him, the suspect drew a steak knife.
Indonesia-Timor Leste Frontier Not Impregnable
By Bernama,
Atambua : The commander of Indonesian military troops guarding the border with Timor Leste, Lt Col Muhammad Kusdaryanto, said limitations to the infrastructure and facilities at his unit's disposal had made it quite possible for foreigners to cross the frontier illegally, Indonesia's Antara news agency reported.
"There are many, many obscure back-country routes foreigners can take to go to or come from the neighbouring country. Moreover, they know the region well. Most border-crossings are done at night, and we are short of night-vision binoculars," he said here Monday.
Merkel receives World Statesman award
New York, Sep 26 (DPA) Hours before her first address to the United Nations as Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel was honoured as World Statesman by a US foundation that works for religious freedom in New York.
The award by the Appeal for Conscience Foundation was given in part for her past interventions on the side of Israel. Merkel said she was grateful for the honour and that she would continue to battle the threat of right-wing extremism in Germany.
Musharraf forgotten, Bush to call new bosses in Pakistan
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : US President George W. Bush is expected to have high-level contacts with the new government of Pakistan soon, but the White House would not say if and when he would call his "personal friend" Pervez Musharraf.
"I would expect that the president will have high-level contact with Pakistani authorities in the near future. We'll certainly keep you updated on that," White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe told reporters at Bush's Crawford, Texas ranch.
Australia donates money to help Philippine typhoon victims
By Xinhua,
Canberra : Australia announced Thursday it has donated an initial 500,000 Australian dollars (478,000 U.S. dollars) to the Philippines National Red Cross to help the typhoon victims.
Typhoon Fengshen struck the Philippines last week, leaving more than 280 people dead.
An AusAid officer has been dispatched to the disaster area to determine how much further assistance will be required, reported Australian Associated Press.
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has sent a letter of condolence to Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
Peruvian president deploys troops against quake looting
By DPA
Lima : Two days after a massive earthquake in central Peru, widespread looting prompted President Alan Garcia to start deploying navy and army troops to keep order in Ica, the area most affected by the powerful quake.
In one case, a local mayor was trying to transport material to affected quake areas when robbers attacked him. In other cases, truck drivers fired guns in retaliation.
Civil Defence authorities said the official death toll from the country's worst quake in 37 years had increased to 446 and put the official number of injured as high as 1,008.
Brown hails end of ‘free market dogma’ ahead of G20 meeting
By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS,
London : British Prime Minister Gordon Brown Thursday hailed with apparent relief the end of “free market dogma,” saying he would now work to build a “progressive era” around the world.
“When the history books come to be written, 2008 will largely be remembered for the scale of the great economic and financial crisis. A year in which an old era of unbridled free market dogma was finally ushered out,” Brown said in his New Year's day message to the nation.
Ingushetia activist ‘accidentally’ shot by police – investigators
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : The opposition figure shot dead in police custody in the Russian republic of Ingushetia was killed by the accidental discharge of a police officer's gun, a paper said on Monday, quoting investigators.
Magomed Yevloyev, the founder of a banned opposition website, was detained by police at the North Caucasus republic's Magas airport in late August. Officers then put him in a police car to take him to Nazran (the republic's largest city) to give testimony regarding "a criminal case."
Nepal bus ‘blast’ kills seven ahead of polls
By IANS
Kathmandu : As Maoist chief Prachanda was warning of violence and possible assassination of political leaders ahead of the April election, a blaze in a packed bus, reportedly caused by a blast, killed seven passengers in trouble-torn south Nepal and injured nearly two dozen more.
Krishna Moktan, who along with his wife and two kids had Friday boarded the bus heading towards the frontier town of Birgunj from Janakpur in the Terai plains, said the vehicle stopped at one place where two women passengers got down.
Man held in Germany for Al Qaeda links
By IANS,
Berlin : A 27-year-old German Islamist has been arrested for his alleged links to an Al Qaeda-linked outfit, officials said.
Hong Kong joins China in three-day mourning
By DPA,
Hong Kong : Hong Kong Monday joined China in declaring three days of official mourning for the victims of the earthquake which shook Sichuan province killing thousands last week.
Government offices and workplaces throughout the city fell silent at 2.28 p.m. - the exact time that the earthquake struck Monday, May 12 - to observe a three-minute silence to commemorate the dead.
The stock exchange also suspended trading for three minutes and border traffic came to a temporary standstill as buses, MRT trains and ferries sounded their horns to signal the start of the silence.
Victoria Beckham snubs Mel B’s wedding invitation
By IANS,
London : Former Spice girl Victoria Beckham has snubbed an invitation to ex-band member Mel B's lavish Egyptian “wedding”.
Mel B is flying friends and family out for an all-expenses-paid trip to see her renew her vows to husband Stephen Belafonte, who she married in Las Vegas last year, reports thesun.co.uk.
The Beckhams, however, don't plan to attend the tacky four-day bash in Hurghada.
It is not known yet if the other Spice Girls Geri Halliwell, Emma Bunton and pregnant Mel C will attend the event.
Rebels may hijack pro-democracy movement in Myanmar
Syed Zarir Hussain
Moreh (Myanmar-India Border), Sep 28 (IANS) The military crackdown on protesting monks in Myanmar is stoking public anger against the junta with fears that several ethnic rebel armies in the impoverished nation could hijack the pro-democracy movement.
Argentines are Latin America’s biggest smokers
By EFE,
Buenos Aires : Argentina tops the list of countries that smoke the most in Latin America, consuming 1,014 cigarettes annually for every inhabitant over age 15, media reports said Sunday, citing a World Lung Foundation study.
Argentina is followed on the list by Paraguay, with annual consumption of 968 cigarettes, and Chile, with 909, while Peru has the lowest cigarette consumption in the region at 129 annually per inhabitant.
Relief teams helping Haiti’s traumatised quake victims
By IANS,
Port-au-Prince/Sao Paulo: A mammoth relief operation slowly picked up Thursday in a race against time to help survivors of the earthquake that devastated the Haiti capital of Port-au-Prince.
Relief teams were distributing small quantities of food as thousands of hungry and traumatized residents wandered aimlessly through the streets of the city of 1.9 million.
The capital and its surroundings were the areas hardest hit by the powerful 7.0 magnitude earthquake that struck the impoverished Caribbean country Tuesday afternoon.
Philippines to take action against former coup plotters
By Xinhua
Manila : The Philippines government Thursday condemned the protest staged by a group of former coup plotters and said it would not allow another mutiny to happen like the 2003 Oakwood mutiny in Makati City.
A group of military officers, including newly elected opposition senator Antonio Trillanes IV and Brig Gen Danilo Lim, walked out of a courtroom in Makati City Thursday morning and began a standoff with the government in a five-star hotel, asking for the ouster of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo over alleged corruption and misrule.
‘France offers joint nuclear deterrence, Britain reluctant’
By IANS,
London : French and British officials have discussed a nuclear deterrence-sharing scheme but Britain has opposed the idea "so far" on grounds of political unacceptability, a media report said Friday.
The Guardian quoted an unnamed British official as confirming that the French government had proposed sharing the expensive task of patrolling the seas with nuclear weapons-armed submarines.
Known as "continuous at-sea deterrent", the task has currently been undertaken individually by the two countries at a projected future cost to Britain of up to 100 billion pounds.
Israel launches spy satellite targeting Iran
By DPA,
Tel Aviv : Israel launched its latest spy satellite as Tel Aviv, along with many other world governments, is wary of Iran's nuclear programme and its "belligerence" toward the Jewish state, a newspaper said here Wednesay.
The satellite, dubbed Ofek 9, was launched on board a booster rocket Tuesday night from the Palmachim airbase, 10 km south of Tel Aviv, the Jerusalem Post said.
From its low Earth orbit at an altitude of around 600 km, the 300-kg satellite is to join its precursor Ofek 7.
Raninder re-elected NRAI president
By IANS,
New Delhi: Raninder Singh was Saturday re-elected unopposed as the president of the National Rifle Association of India (NRAI).
AIG takeover signals new US era of regulation, intervention
By Chris Cermak DPA,
Washington : In a country that prides itself on free market principles, US taxpayers' money is already on the hook for more than $300 billion in financial industry bailouts, and, by some accounts, the government is just getting started.
The Federal Reserve's unprecedented, $85-billion loan and effective takeover of the largest US insurer, American International Group (AIG) Inc, was only the latest in a string of emergency interventions this year on Wall Street.
18 dead as typhoon Chan-Hom hits Philippines
By DPA,
Manila : At least 18 people were killed in landslides and other accidents caused by a powerful typhoon that pummelled the northern Philippines, disaster relief officials said Friday.
Six people were also reported missing and 10 injured in landslides in the northern provinces of Ifugao and Zambales, according to the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC).
Ten people were killed in a landslide in Ifugao, while five drowned in the provinces of Bataan, Batangas and Pangasinan, local officials said.
Former US first lady Barbara Bush hospitalised
By DPA,
Washington : Former US first lady Barbara Bush, 83, underwent tests at hospital after she complained of stomach pains, CNN reported.
Bush, who is also the mother of the current US President George W. Bush, was hospitalised in Houston, Texas Tuesday night, the broadcaster reported, quoting a family spokeswoman.
Jim McGrath, a spokesman for Bush's husband, former president George H.W. Bush, told CNN that the tests were negative and she was due to be released Wednesday.
McLeod Russel’s unit acquires 75 percent stake in US firm
By IANS,
Kolkata : Borelli Tea Holdings Ltd, the Britain-based subsidiary of Indian tea producer McLeod Russel, has acquired 75 percent equity stake in Olyana Holdings LLC of the US for $2.75 million.
Borelli and Olyana signed a shareholders' agreement in this regard Monday, McLeod Russel chief financial officer Kamal Beheti said here Tuesday.
The balance 25 percent will be held by Olyana promoter George W. Rubagumya.
Olyana had earlier signed a share sale agreement with the government of Rwanda for acquiring 60 percent shares in Gisovu Tea Co in the African country.
UN prepares for donor conference for Haiti in March
By DPA,
New York : The UN is studying the "best mechanism" to fund the reconstruction of Haiti following the destructive earthquake of Jan 12, UN officials said Tuesday.
Technical experts from various international financial institutions and the UN have already begun what is known as the post-disaster needs assessment to work out a list of initial demands for the international donor conference scheduled to take place in New York in late March.
US shuts 149 airport control towers
By IANS,
Washington: The US has announced that 149 airport control towers will be closed across the country beginning April 7 due to a budget saving implementation plan.
Czech military to reduce officers to save money
By IANS,
Prague : The Czech military is to reduce the number of officers at its headquarters to slim down the command structure and reduce costs, Deputy Defence Minister Jiri Sedivy has said.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives in China
By Xinhua,
Beijing : US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived here Friday evening on her first visit to China since she took office.
Clinton was greeted by Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Jieyi at the airport.
During her stay in China, Clinton is scheduled to meet Chinese state leaders to exchange views on bilateral relations as well as international and regional issues of common concern, according to the Chinese foreign ministry.
US manufacturing sector expands
By IANS,
Washington: The US manufacturing sector resumed expansion in September after three consecutive months of contraction, an industry survey showed Monday.
East Asian states move close to foreign exchange swap
By Xinhua,
Madrid : Finance ministers of China, Japan and South Korea Sunday reached an agreement on the key elements of a regional foreign exchange reserve swap.
"We reached an agreement on several key elements of the CMI (the Chiang Mai Initiative) multilateralization," the finance ministers said in a joint statement after they met on the sidelines of an annual Asian Development Bank (ADB) meeting.
Rioting in Zambia over presidential poll results
By DPA,
Lusaka : Rioting broke out in Zambia's capital overnight, after it emerged that acting president Rupiah Banda had overturned opposition leader Michael Sata's lead in Thursday's presidential by-election with only a few results left to count, reports in South Africa said.
With just two constituencies out of 150 in the southern African country left to be announced, Banda, 71, the candidate of the ruling Movement for Multi-Party Democracy, was poised to become president for the next three years, replacing ex-leader Levy Mwanawasa, who died in August.
Taiwan premier resigns
By DPA,
Taipei : Taiwan Premier Liu Chao-shiuan said Monday that he submitted his resignation to the president to take the blame for a disaster triggered by last month's Typhoon Morakot that left close to 700 dead and thousands homeless.
Liu said his resignation was approved by President Ma Ying-jeou Saturday ahead of a cabinet shuffle Thursday.
Unesco general conference opens in Paris
By DPA,
Paris: Representatives from Unesco's 193 members gathered in Paris Tuesday for the opening of the organisation's bi-annual general conference.
The aim of the 17-day meeting is to determine policies and main lines of work as well as to adopt the budget and programme for the next two years.
In addition, the conference is expected to name Bulgarian diplomat Irina Bokova as its next director-general, replacing Japan's Koichiro Matsuura, who served for 10 years.
Investigation cites pilot error for air crash near Everest
By DPA,
Kathmandu : An investigation into an air crash near Mount Everest in October 2007 blamed pilot error for it, a government report said Thursday.
The crash at Lukla airport, about 175 km north-east of the Nepalese capital Kathmandu, Oct 4, 2007, killed 18 people, including 12 Germans, two Australians and four Nepalese nationals.
The only survivor was the plane's captain.
A report submitted to the government said the primary cause of the accident of the Yeti Airlines Twin Otter aircraft was misjudgement by the pilots while landing at the airport.
Syria: US Hindering Lebanese Elections
By Prensa Latina
Damascus : The Syrian government has accused the United States of hampering elections in Lebanon and contributing to fuel the current political crisis in that country.
Minister of Information Mohsen Bilal blamed the White House for thwarting Syrian and French attempts to make election of a Lebanese president possible.
On Sunday Bilal denounced that Deputy National Security Advisor Elliott Abrams and US Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs David Welch, both known for their support to Israel, were in Lebanon last week.
Guessing game on over Hillary Clinton joining US cabinet
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : The guessing game continues. Will Hillary Clinton get the job of President-elect Barack Obama's Secretary of State or not?
Those in the prediction markets think it's in the bag for her. Others suggest it may well depend on a review of the business activities of her husband, former president Bill Clinton. But the Obama transition team is mum on her chances.
South Korea to open gold trading market
Seoul: South Korea's financial regulator said Sunday that market will start trading gold on spot next week to disclose gold transactions, which were blamed...
Flood deaths increase to 119 in northern Vietnam
By Xinhua,
Hanoi : Flash floods in some Vietnamese northern provinces caused by a storm since last Friday have killed119 local people and left 40 others missing, according to the country's Central Committee for Flood and Storm Control on Wednesday.
The flash floods and landslides by 21:00 Tuesday had also injured 86 others in the 10 provinces of Lao Cai, Yen Bai, Phu Tho,Quang Ninh, Ha Giang, Lang Son, Bac Can, Lai Chau, Thai Nguyen andDien Bien.
I have stabbed my baby: British woman tells cops
By IANS,
London : A 23-year-old British woman stabbed her 11-month-old daughter to death, and called the police to say: "I've got a baby and stabbed her."
Indian-origin hair doc jailed for lewd acts on clients
By IANS,
London : An Indian-origin hair specialist accused of groping women while giving them head massages has been jailed for three years in Britain.
The Reading crown court also banned Praminder Mankoo for life from giving treatment without a witness present. He will also have to sign on to the Sex Offenders' List indefinitely.
Mankoo had been charged with lewd acts with his clients on Sep 14.
Mankoo ran a successful clinic in Thame, Oxfordshire. The instances of his lewd acts occurred between 2003 and 2007, but three of his victims came forward only recently to nail him.
EU leaders to hold crisis talks with Bush
By IRNA,
Paris : European Union leaders are to hold talks with US President George W. Bush on the financial crisis.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, and EC President Jose Manuel Barroso will discuss at Camp David the framework for a summit of G8 leaders planned for November that may include China, India and other major economies.
The Europeans want the summit to pave the way for talks on an overhaul of the world's financial regulatory systems.
Earlier, Sarkozy said that without regulation there could be no freedom.
Al Gore’s oratory electrifies Bali summit
Bali, Dec 13 (IANS) In a speech likely to go down in history as an oratorical milestone in the fight against global warming, Al Gore, former US vice-president and co-winner of this year's Nobel Peace Prize, electrified the Dec 3-14 UN conference on climate change on its penultimate evening Thursday.
Clearly speaking from his heart, Gore exhorted the nearly 11,000 delegates from 187 countries gathered here for the summit to bypass the US government delegation that is threatening to derail the entire Bali roadmap to start global negotiations that will help fight global warming.
India, China will reshape international system: US
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington: With the rise of India and China continuing to reshape the international system, the US looks at India as a strategic partner with rapidly improving military capabilities and shared democratic values.
"As the economic power, cultural reach and political influence of India increases, it is assuming a more influential role in global affairs," the Pentagon noted in its Quadrennial Defence Review (QDR) released Monday by US Defence Secretary Robert Gates.
EU confident Asean community can spur growth in Eastern Asean region
By NNN-Bernama
Mira, Malaysia : The European Union (EU) is confident the initiative to achieve an Asean Economic Community by 2015 will spur growth in the Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia and Philippines East Asean Economic Area (BIMP-EAGA).
The European Commission (EC) Ambassador to Malaysia, Vincent Piket says the economic blueprint adopted by the 10-member Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) will lead the region to harness its potentials and raise its economic importance.
US targets key financiers of Al Qaeda, Al Nusra Front
Washington: The US Friday imposed sanctions on two alleged key financiers of al-Nusra Front and Al Qaeda, authorities said.
Abdul Mohsen Abdullah Ibrahim Al-Sharikh and...
Spain refuses to receive Guantanamo prisoners
By Prensa Latina,
Madrid : Spain has refused to accept any inmate from the Guantánamo prison, saying that would create serious legal problems.
In a press conference here, Spanish President Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said Friday "his government was neither requested to receive any inmates not it has plans" to accept them as that would result in unnecessary legal problems.
Who is the world’s richest man?
By DPA
Mexico City/Washington : It no longer seems clear who tops the world of the super-rich, after Mexican media claimed that Mexican telecommunications tycoon Carlos Slim had surpassed Microsoft founder Bill Gates as the richest man on the planet.
Dog dies saving drunken owner from train
By IANS,
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow: A dog was run over by a train moments after it managed to pull its drunken suicidal owner off railway tracks in a Kazakh city.
US plane crash kills 10
By Xinhua,
Los Angeles : At least 10 people were killed when the plane in which they were travelling crashed near the Arches National Park in the US state of Utah, officials said Saturday.
Rescue officials rushed to the crash site but no survivors were found, Grand County Sheriff James Nyland said.
The twin-engine plane crashed and burst into flames shortly after take off from the Canyonlands Field airport late Friday, Nyland said.
Meeting fans is celebration, says Minaj
By IANS,
Los Angeles: Hip-hop star Nicki Minaj is always surprised by the love her fans have for her and says it always feels like a celebration when she meets them.
South Africa’s street children, child beggars to be provided government shelter
By IANS,
Pretoria : Street children in South Africa will now be provided shelter by the government and helped in leading a better life free from exploitation.
Police and the Health and Social Services in Pretoria have started an initiative where they are seeking out children begging at road intersections and offering them instead a place of safety, BuaNews, the national news agency, reported.
Indonesian presidential candidate withdraws from poll process
Jakarta : Indonesian presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto and his running mate Hatta Radjasa Tuesday announced their withdrawal from the election process alleging fraud in...
Mugabe back home as officials deny reports of his illness
By DPA,
Harare : President Robert Mugabe has returned home from "a private visit" to Dubai, government officials said Wednesday, contrary to reports that he was undergoing treatment there.
An official who requested anonymity said Mugabe had returned home Tuesday evening in the Air Zimbabwe plane that flew him there last Wednesday.
Myanmar opposition party to sue junta over election laws
By DPA,
Yangon : Myanmar's main opposition party decided Friday to sue the military-run government for issuing unfair election laws, opposition sources said.
An executive meeting of the National League for Democracy (NLD) - which is headed by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi - decided to sue the government over election laws promulgated last week, NLD Rakhine member Aye Tha Aung said.
He said the NLD found clauses that excluded the participation of Aung San Suu Kyi and other political prisoners from the election process as unlawful.
Pranab’s three-day visit under close scrutiny in Nepal
By IANS,
Kathmandu : India's External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee begins his three-day official trip to Nepal Monday, eclipsing visits by a British minister and a senior UN official who also arrive in Kathmandu the same day.
Mukherjee's visit -- the first by a high-level Indian official since the formation of a Maoist-led government -- will be watched closely by the former guerrillas, the opposition as well as royalists who blame the ouster of Nepal's 239-year monarchy on India's support.
Bush threatens sanctions against Mugabe
By DPA,
Washington : US President George W. Bush Saturday criticized the presidential election run-off in Zimbabwe, calling for sanctions and a weapons embargo against the government led by President Robert Mugabe.
In a declaration from the White House, Bush denounced the Zimbabwe presidential polls in which Mugabe was the sole candidate as a "sham election" and repudiated "the Mugabe regime's blatant disregard for the Zimbabwean people's democratic will and human rights".
Bush promised to take strong action through the United Nations as well as taking bilateral actions.
Kenya’s Rudisha hopeful of competing in Commonwealth Games
Nairobi:Olympic 800m champion David Rudisha will return to action during the Doha Diamond League meeting in Qatar May 9 and said he hoped to...
Super model Naomi Campbell arrested, under investigation
By DPA
London : Super model Naomi Campbell, 37, is under investigation for attacking a police officer, London police said Friday, one day after the model was arrested at Heathrow Airport following a dispute over luggage.
The model, who is known for her temper, had been handcuffed and detained on board a British Airways aircraft at Heathrow's newly-opened Terminal 5 Thursday afternoon, but was later released on bail, Scotland Yard said.
According to media reports she spat into the face of a police officer and hit him.
US to boycott UN conference on racism
By DPA,
Washington : The US will boycott a UN conference on racism over concerns about a document being prepared for the event that singles out Israel.
US representatives had travelled to Geneva to provide input on the document to replace an earlier controversial draft written in 2001 at a conference in Durban, South Africa.
But the US representatives had not been able to overcome objections about Israel being targeted, as well as efforts to restrict freedom of speech by banning "defamation of religion".
18 dead in China landslide
By IANS,
Beijing : At least 18 people were confirmed dead in a rain-triggered landslide in China, rescuers said Wednesday morning.
Bhutan MP recovers in Kolkata hospital
By IANS,
Kolkata: Bhutan MP Ugen Tenzing, admitted to a private hospital here after an arrow struck him on the head, has been operated upon and is recovering, the attending doctor said.
Tenzing was brought to Kolkata by a special flight from Bhutan Monday with the arrowhead still stuck in his head, and admitted to the Medical Institute of Neurological Diseases (MIND).
"He has been operated upon and right now his condition is better. He can talk but in a low voice. He got the injury while practising archery with some friends," said attending doctor L.N. Tripathi.
Russia offers NATO military cooperation deal
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Brussels : Russia has offered NATO a three to five year military cooperation plan, Chief of the General Staff Nikolai Makarov said Wednesday.
Mexico shuts three government departments to save money
By EFE,
Mexico City : Mexican President Felipe Calderon has said that he is eliminating the federal departments of tourism, agrarian reform and public function as part of an austerity plan to save about $6 billion.
In a message to the nation from the Los Pinos presidential residence, Calderon announced that the Tourism Secretariat will become part of the Economy Secretariat, as is the case in countries like Spain, France and Canada.
Modi hands over Bhabhatron to Mongolian cancer centre
Ulan Bator : Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday handed over Bhabhatron, a telecobalt machine developed by the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre for cancer...
YouTube taken off Russian blacklist
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : YouTube, the video-sharing website, has been take off the blacklist maintained by Russian media and communications watchdog Roscomnadzor.
US Supreme Court eases visa rules
By IANS,
Washington : In a development that could help green card seekers, the US Supreme Court has made it easier for some foreigners who overstay their visas to seek to remain in the country to seek legal status.
The top court ruled 5-4 Monday that someone who is in the US illegally may under "some circumstances" withdraw his voluntarily agreement to depart and continue to try to get approval to remain in the US.
UN rushing aid to hurricane-hit Caribbean
By DPA,
New York : The United Nations has said it was rushing relief assistance to some of the worst-hit Caribbean islands, with Haiti and Cuba heading the list, while damage and threats to residents were being assessed.
John Holmes, chief coordinator of the UN humanitarian emergency programme, said Friday that the Bahamas, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic have been affected by heavy flooding.
The Caribbean has been hit by three Atlantic storms and hurricanes in three weeks, with the latest - Tropical Storm Hanna - now heading towards southeastern US.
Big business spending millions to stop Democrats: WSJ
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : America's largest business lobby is pouring millions of dollars into an advertising push to prevent Democrats from winning dominance in the Senate, the Wall Street Journal says.
The US Chamber of Commerce says it has raised enough money this year from corporations to spend about $35 million on the election, double its budget for House and Senate races in the 2006 election.
IS ahead in turf war with Al Qaeda: US
Washington: The Islamic State is beating Al Qaeda at being the world's leading terrorist group, says the US State Department.
The "unprecedented" spread and brutality...
‘Pakistan using anti-terrorism laws against clerics’
Islamabad: The Pakistani government is using anti-terrorism laws against the ulema (religious scholars), Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-F (JUI-F) chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman has said.
Religious seminaries were...
Developing countries to get more voting power at IMF
By Xinhua,
Pittsburgh : The Group of 20 (G20) nations Friday agreed to increase the voting power of developing countries at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) by at least five percent.
"We are committed to a shift in IMF quota share to dynamic emerging markets and developing countries by at least five percent from over-represented countries to under-represented countries using the current quota formula," G20 leaders said here in a statement.
200 evacuated from North Sea oil platform after gas leak
By SPA,
Oslo, Norway : Norwegian news agency NTB reports that about 200 workers are being evacuated from an oil platform in the North Sea after a suspected gas leak.
NTB says rescue helicopters were being sent Saturday to the Statfjord A platform to assist with the evacuations.
About 40 workers will remain on the platform during the operation.
World cities join hands to combat climate change
New York, May 18 (DPA) Fifteen of the world's largest cities have agreed on a $5-billion initiative with major banks to retrofit buildings in their cities to save energy, in the first such enterprise to combat climate change.
Former US president Bill Clinton launched the initiative to coincide this week with a summit in New York attended by mayors and governors from 40 of the world's largest cities to discuss climate change.
China’s helping hand to minorities seeks to grasp stability
By DPA
Chong'an (China) : Every Friday, farmers descend from the mountains to make their way over dusty country roads to offer their produce at the weekly market in Chong'an, a town in China's poor southwestern province of Guizhou.
Many of them wear traditional garb and handmade shoes and carry chickens or ears of corn in baskets attached to long wooden poles that weigh on their shoulders.
Most of them are members of ethnic minorities with exotic names like Miao, Dong or Ge. Their faces are tanned and furrowed from the sun and long hours in the fields.
US department store chain to cut 7,000 jobs
By DPA,
New York : US department store chain Macy's said Monday it will eliminate about 7,000 positions as part of a restructuring effort designed to save money as consumers have scaled back their spending.
The jobs amount to about 4 percent of the second-largest US department store's workforce of 180,000 and come amid tens of thousands lay-offs at US companies in recent weeks.
Macy's also said it would cut its dividend to 5 cents per quarter from 13.26 cents and buy back $950 million in bonds.
Two killed, 22 injured in New York building explosion
New York: At least two people were killed and 22 injured when a powerful explosion levelled two residential buildings in New York's East Harlem...
Obama names Denis McDonough as new chief of staff
By IANS/EFE,
Washington: US President Barack Obama Friday named Denis McDonough, who had been serving as deputy national security advisor, as his new chief of staff.
Russian humanitarian aid to Kosovo Serbs
By RIA Novosti,
Pristina : The Red Cross has started distributing Russian humanitarian aid to the ethnic Serbian communities in Kosovo which declared independence from Serbia.
Gracanica, some five km from Kosovo's capital Pristina, with a population of 13,000 is one of the 22 Serbian inhabited areas that received the Russian aid.
"The humanitarian aid was provided at the request of the Serbian government and it is a sign of friendly relations between Russia and Serbia." The head of Russia's diplomatic mission in Kosovo, Andrei Dronov said.
Rio Tinto employees’ arrests an isolated case: Chinese official
By Xinhua,
Beijing : The arrest of four Rio Tinto employees on charges of stealing commercial secrets will not and should not hurt trade and economic ties between China and Australia, Vice Minister of Commerce Fu Ziying said Wednesday.
He was speaking after China's Supreme People's Procuratorate Tuesday announced the arrest of four employees of the Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto on charges of stealing commercial secrets and bribery.
Menon to meet Obama team next week
By IANS,
New Delhi : India will make its first high-level contact with the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama when Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon goes to the US next week to meet key figures of the transition team.
Menon is likely to meet influential figures in the transition team that includes Wendy Sherman, the co-chair of the state department's Agency Review Team, which is tasked with preparing policy and personnel for the soon-to-be-named secretaries.
UN programmes to help Iraqi refugees
By DPA
New York : With up to two million Iraqi refugees living in Syria and Jordan, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said the UN will boost its aid programmes and increase financial assistance to refugee host countries.
Russia-NATO Council meeting penciled for December 4
By RIA Novosti,
Brussels : The first formal Russia-NATO Council ministerial meeting since the military conflict between Russia and Georgia in August 2008 may be held in early December, Russia's envoy to NATO said on Friday.
During an informal ministerial meeting in Greece in June, Russia and NATO agreed to renew cooperation on security issues, which was frozen after Russia and Georgia fought a five-day war over the former Georgian republic of South Ossetia, after which Russia recognized the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, another former Georgian republic.
Strong quake jolts Indonesia’s Aceh
By DPA,
Jakarta : A strong earthquake jolted Indonesia's Aceh province at the northern end of Sumatra Wednesday, damaging buildings and injuring at least a dozen people, officials said.
Indonesia's Meteorology and Geophysics Agency issued a tsunami warning, but it was lifted more than an hour later after no big waves materialised.
The quake, measuring 7.2 on the Richter scale, struck at 5.15 a.m. (2215 GMT Tuesday) with its epicentre 75 km south-east of Sinabang on Simeulue island off the western coast of Aceh province. It occurred 34 km beneath the seabed, the agency said.
Inter-Korean women call for national reconciliation, reunification
By Xinhua,
Pyongyang : Representatives of women from the two Koreas met on Thursday and Friday at Mt. Kumgang Resort of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), vowing to implement two declarations on reunification.
The delegates called for promoting the national reconciliation and unity and boosting the desire for reunification, said the official news agency KCNA.
They vowed to uphold and implement the June 15 joint declaration and the Oct. 4 declaration, which were reached by the two Korea's leaders in 2000 and 2007 respectively, the KCNA added.
Zimbabwe’s cholera toll rises to 2,024
By Xinhua,
Geneva : The toll in Zimbabwe's cholera outbreak has risen to 2,024, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said Tuesday.
On Monday alone, 117 new cholera deaths were recorded in the country.
Of the 39,806 accumulated cholera cases, 1,472 cases were reported Monday, the agency said in its latest report.
Zimbabwe's devastating cholera outbreak started in August. Till date 2,024 people have died.
WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl said main cause of the outbreak was due to the collapse of the country's water and sanitation systems.
French government to look into bank’s $804-mn loss
By DPA,
Paris : French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde has asked the government's bank oversight authority to look into the country's second-largest banking group, Caisse d'Epargne, after it announced a loss of 600 million euros ($804 million) in a derivatives trade, French radio reported Friday.
The loss, which the bank described as a "market incident", occurred during the first week of October, when the Paris Bourse's CAC 40 index lost 22 percent of its value.
Save Havana’s architecture: Experts
By EFE,
Barcelona : Cuban and Spanish architects in Barcelona have expressed the need to save both the colonial and modern architecture of Havana as they warned that several modernist buildings were being lost due to deterioration and unnecessary modifications.
The Catalonia College of Architects organised between Dec 10-13 the 33rd edition of its International Architectural Heritage Days, called "Arquitecturas de Ida y Vuelta" (Architectures on a Round Trip).
Russian rocket fails to send US satellite into orbit
By Xinhua
Moscow : A Russian rocket failed to send into orbit a US communication satellite that was launched from Central Asia's Baikonur space centre early Saturday.
The AMC-14 satellite, atop of a Proton-M carrier rocket, was put into a orbit with the apogee altitude of 28,000 km instead of the planned 36,000 km, the Itar-Tass news agency said, citing Russian space agency Roskosmos.
The rocket blasted off at 02.18 Saturday from the Baikonur space centre.
BBC bought iPads, iPhones not approved for staff
By IANS,
London : The BBC spent over 40,000 pounds last year on 104 flashy Apple iPads and iPhones even though they are not approved for use by its staff, a media report said.
Senior police officer killed in Ingushetia in North Caucasus
By RIA Novosti,
Nazran : A senior police officer has been killed in an attack by unidentified assailants in the North Caucasus Republic of Ingushetia, the republic interior ministry said on Sunday.
Magomed Batkhoyev, who headed the ministry's department for struggle against the illegal trade in narcotic drugs, was driving a Volga car in Nazran when unidentified assailants opened fire at him on Sunday afternoon. Batkhoyev died of wounds on his way to hospital while his wife, who was also in the car, was hospitalized with gunshot wounds of various gravity, the ministry said.
Indonesia planted 79.1 million trees in 2008: minister
By SPA,
Depok, West Java : Indonesia planted a total of 79.1 million trees in less than one month`s time during the National Movement to Plant 100 Million Trees in 2008, a minister said, according to Antara.
According to data up to December 23, 2008, some 79.1 million trees were planted, Forestry Minister MS Kaban said here on Wednesday during a 500-tree planting event with noted poet WS Rendra.
To support the national tree planting movement, the forestry ministry had provided two million saplings to each province, according to the minister.
Chavez grants amnesty to 2002 coup plotters
By Xinhua
Caracas : Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has granted amnesty to prisoners including his opponents accused of backing an abortive 2002 coup to unseat him.
Chavez said Monday that the amnesty decree would also pardon those accused of attempting to overthrow his government or murder him in recent years.
"Nobody (in Venezuela) can talk about political prisoners," Chavez told state television on New Year's Eve. "It's a matter of turning the page. We want a country that moves toward peace."
Two-state solution key to end Gaza crisis: Germany
Amman: Germany's Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier Monday said a two-state solution is the key to end the crisis in Gaza Strip.
In a joint press...
Three killed in US church shooting
By Xinhua
Washington : Three people were killed died and several injured, when gunmen opened fire in a church in midwestern state of Missouri in US.
The gunman Sunday briefly took hostage dozens of people before surrendering to authorities, CNN reported.
French leader seeks to mediate Caucasus conflict, plans trip to Moscow
By KUNA,
Paris : French President Nicolas Sarkozy has continued a marathon round of consultations and contacts with world leaders with the aim of bringing an end to the hostilities between Russia and Georgia over the issue of South Ossetia, which both sides seek to control of the troubled area.
Sarkozy also said that after contacts with both sides, he intended to travel to Moscow in the coming days, his office announced late on Sunday.
Typhoon Hagupit displaces 1.6 mn; toll 27
Manila : Typhoon Hagupit, which has left at least 27 people dead and 1.6 million displaced in the Philippines, was downgraded Tuesday from a...
