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UN demands halt to civilian casualties in Sri Lanka

By DPA, Colombo : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has called on the Sri Lankan government and Tamil rebels to avoid further civilian casualties in the conflict in the north of the country. "The secretary-general is appalled at the killing of hundreds of civilians in Sri Lanka over the weekend," a statement said. The statement came after an estimated 400 civilians were killed in north-eastern Sri Lanka during fierce fighting between government forces and rebels.

Missile-defence test comes at pivotal time

By DPA

Washington : The Pentagon plans to conduct a test of its missile-defence system in the next few days that could be crucial for US President George W. Bush's effort to get Congressional support for deploying the shield to Eastern Europe.

Federer wins French Open to complete Grand Slam

By DPA, Paris: Roger Federer defeated Robin Soderling 6-1, 7-6 (7-1), 6-4 in the French Open final Sunday to become the sixth man in tennis history to win all four Grand Slam titles. The second-seeded Federer took one hour and 55 minutes to beat the 23rd-seeded Swede Soderling, who had upset four-time winner and world number one Rafael Nadal earlier in the tournament. Federer joined Fred Perry, Don Budge, Roy Emerson, Rod Laver and Andre Agassi as winners of all four majors.

11 dead, 25 hurt in Russia blast

By RIA Novosti, Rostov-On-Don (Russia) : At least eleven people died and about 25 were wounded Monday when a powerful bomb blast took place in Nazran, the largest city in the Russian North Caucasus republic, police said. According to police, the blast occurred near the city's police headquarters, and may have been caused by a car bomb set off by a suicide bomber. "At about 9.08 a.m. (05.08 GMT) a yellow GAZelle truck broke through a gate at a check point near the building. A powerful explosion followed shortly after that," an investigator told RIA Novosti.

Oil rises above US$101 a barrel as weakening dollar draws investors to commodities

By SPA Singapore : Oil prices rose above US$101 a barrel Wednesday as a slide in the U.S. dollar prompted investors to pump more money into energy futures as a hedge against inflation, AP reported. The greenback sank to a record low against the euro after the release of three disheartening U.S. economic reports Tuesday that show that the economy is slowing even as prices are rising. The dollar's decline prompted investors to seek a safe haven from turmoil in the financial markets and the threat of inflation.

Amnesty begins protest torch run in Germany

By DPA, Freiburg (Germany) : Amnesty International began its own torch relay through Germany Saturday to draw attention to what it described as human rights breaches in China. The run, organised by university students, was set to last several weeks and pass through 25 German cities, starting Saturday in Freiburg im Breisgau in southwest Germany. It was modelled on the Olympic relay for this summer's Beijing Olympic Games. Pro-Tibet protests accompanied the official relay.

Taiwan issues sea, land warnings for Typhoon Hagupit

By DPA, Taipei : Taiwan braced Monday for Typhoon Hagupit as the storm approached the Bashih Strait between Taiwan and the Philippines. After issuing a sea warning Sunday afternoon for Hagupit, the Central Weather Bureau issued a land warning early Monday as the storm was intensifying and moving closer to Taiwan. In the last eight hours, Hagupit had moved some 200 km closer to Taiwan, and its strength has also intensified, the bureau said. By 2:30 a.m. Monday, the eye of Hagupit was 530 km southeast of Erlunpi, Taiwan's southern tip.

Hungarian transport minister, railway chief resign

By Xinhua, Budapest : Hungarian Transport Minister Pal Szabo and MAV Hungarian Railways Board Chairman Miklos Kamaras resigned following Monday's passenger train crash, the Hungarian government spokesman said. Hungarian News Agency MTI reported that Hungarian Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcasny accepted both resignations. MAV CEO Istvan Heinczinger also submitted his resignation, but the prime minister did not accept it.

Bodies of 21 babies recovered from Chinese river

By DPA, Beijing: Workers recovered the bodies of 21 babies, some with hospital identification tags attached, from a river in eastern China's Shandong province, state media said on Tuesday. The workers found the babies dumped inside plastic bags, at least one of which was marked "hospital waste", in a suburb of Jining city, Shandong province, the Beijing News and other media reported.

Radical cleric Abu Hamza awarded life imprisonment in US

New York : A US court Friday awarded life imprisonment to radical cleric Mustafa Kamel Mustafa, also known as Abu Hamza, who was found...

Cypriot businessman killed in Mumbai attacks

By Xinhua, Nicosia (Cyprus) : A Cypriot businessman was killed in the terror attacks in India's commercial capital Mumbai, the country's foreign ministry has said. Andreas Liveras, 73, who holds a dual Cyprus-British citizenship, had immigrated to Britain in 1963. He had set up a yacht business in Monaco. His brother Theophanis told the Cyprus media that Liveras was in Mumbai to attend a cruise-liners' exhibition. The terrorists had abducted him from a dining restaurant in a hotel before he was shot dead.

Tainted Maoists lose Nepal PM’s poll

By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS, Kathmandu : Dogged by allegations of trying to buy MPs and fighting a leaked tape that purportedly caught a senior aide seeking NRS 500 million from a "friend" in China, Maoist chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda crashed out of Nepal's prime ministerial race Sunday, ending the former rebels' hope of recapturing power through parliament.

Protests by Indian Americans in four US cities over rising ‘Hindu nationalist fanaticism in...

By TCN News, Boston (USA): Alliance for Justice and Accountability (AJA), an umbrella coalition of progressive organizations across...

Former CEO among nine get jail sentences in Austrian bank trial

By DPA, Vienna : All nine defendants in Austria's biggest banking scandal BAWAG fraud case were given prison terms Friday, with the bank's former CEO getting the maximum sentence of nine and a half years in jail. Helmu Elsner, CEO of the Bank fur Arbeit und Wirtschaft (BAWAG) was found guilty of breach of trust and serious fraud, as he had ordered "aggressive and high-risk" investments carried out by US-based investor Wolfgang Floettl in the Caribbean.

Three killed in small plane crash in California

By IANS, San Francisco : Three people were killed in a small plane crash Thursday in a lagoon in the US state of California, authorities said. The plane, a twin-engine Beech 65 Queen Air, crashed in the Redwood Shores area at around 11:51 a.m. local time, just 30 seconds after taking off from San Carlos Airport, about 30 km south of San Francisco, Xinhua reported. The body of a woman in her 40s was first pulled out of the water and rescuers believed more people may have been aboard the plane. Several hours later, two male bodies were found among the wreckage in the water.

Israel offers scholarship to Indian students, professionals

New Delhi, (IANS): Celebrating 25 years of its multi-faceted relation with India, Israel on Friday offered scholarship and training to Indian nationals in its...

Fiat defies downturn to post sales increase

By IANS/AKI, Rome: Italian car giant Fiat defied the economic downturn and recorded a dramatic increase in car sales across Europe in November. According to the latest sales figures released Tuesday, the Fiat Group recorded a 30.7 percent increase in November sales with Fiat vehicle sales up 33.3 percent and sales of Lancia vehicles up 37.9 percent. Sales of Fiat's Alfa Romeo cars rose by 4.5 percent, the company said. The sales increase was a significant turnaround in the slowdown that has struck the auto industry in the past few months.

Territorial integrity wins in Kosovo independence case

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From Sunday, Nepal government becomes null and void

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : Nepal's coalition government faces its gravest crisis ever with just 48 hours left to it, after which it will become constitutionally null and void. "From Sunday, the government of Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala loses its validity and the constitution itself becomes null and void," warned Shambhu Thapa, one of the framers of the new constitution and a leading lawyer in Nepal. The crisis has come due to the government's inability to hold a critical election in November.

Five displaced civilians killed in Sri Lanka shelling: LTTE

By IANS, Colombo : The Tamil Tigers said Sunday that military shelling in the rebel-held Kilinochchi district in Sri Lanka had killed five Tamil civilians, including two children, displaced by fighting. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) also said that three others were wounded in the shelling Saturday evening.

China reports record trade surplus

By Xinhua, Beijing : China announced Tuesday a trade surplus of $35.2 billion in October, despite economic slowdown. It hit another historic monthly high as the figure gained for the fourth consecutive month since July. The aggregate foreign trade rose 17.6 percent from the same period last year to $221.4 billion in October, according to the China Customs website. Though exports growth further slowed down to 19.2 percent from 21.5 percent in September, it rose further because of sharply declining imports.

Two killed, 31 wounded in Colombo bomb blast

By IANS, Colombo : At least two people were killed and 31 wounded in a suicide bomb blast in the heart of the Sri Lankan capital Friday evening, military officials said. Air Force spokesman, Wing Commander Janaka Nanayakkara, told IANS that "an LTTE suicide bomber has blew himself up opposite the Colombo Air Force camp at Slave Island, killing two people and wounding 31".

Bhagat Singh’s sister passes away in Canada

Chandigarh : Parkash Kaur, the younger sister of revolutionary and freedom fighter Bhagat Singh, has died in Canada, a family member said here Monday. Kaur,...

Norwegian cabinet approves joining no-fly zone operation

By DPA, Oslo : Norway has given approval for its six F-16 fighter jets to take part in the no-fly zone operation over Libya, Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg told parliament Wednesday.

Hindu festival in the middle of Nevada desert

By IANS New York : A traditional Indian rath yatra, or a chariot procession, a Hindu wedding and a life size temple of Lord Jagannath are among the major highlights of this year's annual Burning Man festival in Nevada desert. A Krishna camp will also be organised at the seven-day festival beginning Aug 27 when an American couple will get married in traditional Hindu style. A replica of the Lord Jagannath temple with life-size deities has been erected.

Toll in Italy gas explosion rises to 20

By RIA Novosti, Rome : The toll in the gas explosion at a railroad station in northern Italy rose to 20 after two people injured in the accident died at a hospital, a health spokesman said Friday. The powerful explosion occurred late Monday in the town of Viareggio when a 14-carriage freight train carrying liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) derailed and two carriages exploded, creating a fireball that engulfed nearby houses, destroying at least two. At least 50 people were injured, and around 20 were in hospitals in critical condition.

S. Korea, Russia agree on feasibility study for gas pipeline

By KUNA Tokyo : South Korea and Russia agreed on a joint feasibility study into the construction of a pipeline that can transport natural gas to Northeast Asia, the South Korean government said Wednesday. The deal reached in Moscow during the natural resources cooperation committee, would open the door for gas produced in Russia's far east and Siberia to be sent overland to South Korea, the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Energy said, according to Yonhap News Agency.

Air Canada axes 2,000 jobs, flights to cut costs

By IANS, Toronto : Air Canada Tuesday announced it would axe 2,000 jobs this year to meet the rising fuel costs. Canada's premier airline was also scaling back flights on some long-haul routes as well as autumn and winter services in North America. In a statement, Air Canada president and CEO Montie Brewer said: "The loss of jobs is painful in view of our employees' hard work in bringing the airline back to profitability over the past four years.

NATO Membership Behind Russia-Georgia Crisis

By Prensa Latina, Moscow : Russian Foreign Minister Serguei Lavrov linked growing tension between Russia and Georgia to Georgia's plans to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Lavrov said Tbilisi has been unable to negotiate with Moscow the horny NATO issue, which Moscow regards as a threat to its border security. Therefore, he called Georgia and those encouraging its NATO membership to draw the right conclusions from Russia's recent steps in the region.

Calling JNU students anti-Indian a slur: Pakistani daily

Islamabad : The reaction to the protests at the Jawaharlal Nehru University has shown the real face of today's India, and it is "not...

Computer spies breach $300 bn US fighter jet project: WSJ

By Arun Kumar,IANS, Washington : Computer spies have broken into the US Defence Department's costliest weapons programme ever, the $300 billion Joint Strike Fighter project, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. Similar incidents have also breached the Air Force's air traffic control system in recent months, it said citing unnamed "current and former government officials familiar with the attacks.

No takers for a fast track to green cards

By Arun Kumar

IANS

Washington : As President George Bush embarks on a mission to sell his plan to legalise as many as 12 million illegal immigrants, an Indian American official's blueprint to slash waiting times for green cards has found no takers.

Russia urges power transfer for Bosnia and Herzegovina

By RIA Novosti, UN : Bosnia and Herzegovina's High Representative office should be closed as soon as possible and all power transferred from international organizations to the country's legal authorities, Russia's UN envoy said Tuesday. The Office of the High Representative (OHR) in Bosnia and Herzegovina was established in 1995 immediately after the Dayton Agreement, which ended the war in Bosnia, and was created to give a mandate to international organizations to oversee the peaceful implementation of the agreement.

Taiwan seeks to join UN agencies, not full membership

By DPA, Taipei : Taiwan is taking a softer approach at this year's UN General Assembly by attempting to join UN agencies instead of seeking full UN membership, a Taiwanese official said Wednesday. Taiwan faces strong opposition against its UN membership from China and it forced the island nation to change track after trying for 15 years to rejoin the international organisation.

17 killed as lift crashes in China

By Xinhua, Changsha (China) : At least 17 workers were killed and one was seriously injured when a lift crashed at a construction site in central China's Hunan province Saturday. The accident occurred at about 7.30 a.m. at the construction site of a real estate project named "Shanghai City" in downtown Changsha, the provincial capital, according to the municipal government. Further details were not immediately available. The project was being developed by Hunan-based Dongfanghong construction group, which was established in 1965. The injured have been sent to hospital.

Bird flu claims second life in Vietnam since start of year

By RIA Novosti Hanoi : A man has died in Vietnam of the lethal H5N1 strain of bird flu, the local Thanh Nien daily said on Thursday, citing the country's health ministry. The 40 year-old man, from the northern province of Hai Duong, 50 km (31 miles) southeast of Hanoi, died after six days of treatment for severe pneumonia and multiple organ failure. His death was the second known fatality to be attributed to avian influenza in 2008.

Do you love or hate your BlackBerry?

By IANS, Sydney : BlackBerry users can't agree on whether they love or hate the device, but they are sure of one thing: it gives them very little time off work, or what is known as “corporate downtime”. The use of BlackBerry has grown rapidly in the past six years, evolving from a a senior management status symbol to a basic tool of trade, according to a University of Sydney study on how the device is being used.

US drone, Pakistani troops kill 20 militants

By DPA, Islamabad : At least 20 Taliban militants were killed in a suspected US drone strike and attacks carried out by Pakistani troops in the country's restive northwestern region Monday, officials said. A missile allegedly fired by an unmanned US aircraft targeted a vehicle believed to be carrying Taliban fighters in the North Waziristan tribal district near the Afghan border. "Four militants were killed and at least five others wounded," a local intelligence official said on condition of anonymity.

Barred from airport, Hare Krishnas to spread message elsewhere

By IANS, Washington : The Hare Krishna movement has expressed disappointment over a ban on soliciting donations inside Los Angeles International Airport but said the group plans to continue to spread its message in other public spaces in the United States. "We are disappointed by the ruling," said Anuttama Dasa, a spokesperson of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) Monday, commenting on the California Supreme Court ruling upholding the airport ban.

Release all political prisoners, end curbs on freedom of expression in Kashmir: Amnesty India

TCN News Amnesty International India on Thursday called for the immediate release of all political prisoners marking the first anniversary of abrogation of Article 370...

Sarkozy’s parliamentary majority smaller than expected

By DPA

Paris : Official results Monday gave French President Nicolas Sarkozy a majority in the parliamentary election run-off but it was not as large as he had hoped for or the polls had predicted.

Britain to sack nearly 100 air force trainee pilots

By IANS, London : Britain's Royal Air Force (RAF) will sack up to 100 trainee pilots in a cost-cutting measure - a move that may leave the armed forces without enough airmen, a media report said.

Gaddafi defends Somalia pirates: report

By DPA, Nairobi : Libyan leader and new head of the African Union (AU), Moammer Gaddafi has defended the actions of Somalian pirates as an act of self-defence against "greedy" Western nations, the Kenyan newspaper Daily Nation reported Friday. The paper, reporting on Gaddafi's courtesy call on AU headquarters in Addis Ababa, quoted him as saying: "It is not piracy, it is self defence. It is defending the Somalian children's food.

Death toll of China earthquake to exceed 80,000

By KUNA, Tokyo : The death toll of the May's 8.0-magnitude earthquake in southwest China's Sichuan Province is expected to exceed 80,000, Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu said on Tuesday. As of Monday noon, the death toll of the May 12 earthquake stood at 69,181, with 374,171 people injured and 18,498 people reported missing, state-run Xinhua News Agency quoted Hui as saying in Beijing. More than 13,000 aftershocks were reported after the devastating quake, with the strongest measuring 6.4 on the Richter scale, by Monday, according to the news agency.

Italians continue voting for second day for parliamentary elections

By KUNA, Roma : Italian voters continued casting their ballots here for the second and last day on Monday for early parliamentary elections. The polls are mainly pitting the political heavyweight, former 72-year-old prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, against the 52-year-old centre-left leader, Walter Veltroni, amid great anticipation after voters decreased yesterday.

The Republicans: Flag bearers of American conservatism

(US Election 2012: The Parties) By Arun Kumar, IANS,

Bird flu kills four endangered civets in Vietnam

By DPA Hanoi : Bird flu has killed four endangered civets in northern Vietnam in the first confirmed cases of H5N1 virus infection in the species, officials said Tuesday. Four Owston's palm civets, a catlike carnivorous species that the International Union for the Conservation of Nature lists as endangered, died between Feb 7 and 18 at Cuc Phuong National Park, 120 km south of Hanoi, said Truong Quang Bich, director of the park.

Australia may ban plastic shopping bag

By DPA Sydney : Australia may ban plastic shopping bags in the near future, Environment Minister Peter Garrett said Thursday. "We would like to see the phase out implemented by 2008," Garrett told reporters. "We think it's absolutely critical that we get cracking on it." Australia, the world's second biggest per capita polluter after the US, has mulled plans to get by without single-use plastic bags for at least a decade. A voluntary programme brought in five years ago has failed to put a dent in the four billion bags used each year.

American astronomer chasing his 50th solar eclipse

By Richa Sharma, IANS, New Delhi : He has not missed any major eclipse in five decades. Jay Pasachoff, a 66-year-old American astronomer, travels across the globe chasing the best views of solar eclipses. Sure enough, he is in India to capture on camera the annual solar eclipse Friday - it will be his 50th. "When I came to know that India is one of the best places to get a clear view of the 'Ring of Fire' during the eclipse, I chose it as my 50th destination for eclipse viewing," Pasachoff, a professor of Astronomy at Williams College in Massachusetts (US), told IANS here.

First female four-star U.S. Army general nominated

By SPA, Washington : America's first female four-star general has been nominated, the Pentagon announced Monday. U.S. President George W. Bush nominated Lt. Gen. Ann E. Dunwoody to serve as head of the Army's supply arm, CNN reported. By law women are excluded from combat jobs, the typical path to four-star rank in the military.

‘War is ending’ in Iraq: Obama

By DPA, Washington : US President Barack Obama used his weekly radio address to tout the end of the US combat mission in Iraq, which officially closes Tuesday, more than seven years after US-led forces toppled Saddam Hussein. "As a candidate for this office, I pledged I would end this war. As president, that is what I am doing," he said in taped remarks broadcast Saturday. "We have brought home more than 90,000 troops since I took office."

China concerned over Kosovo declaration of independence

By IRNA Beijing : China is deeply concerned about the declaration of independence by Kosovo, Foreign Ministry said Monday. China, a UN Security Council member, is worried that the move will harm peace and stability in the Balkan region and undermine moves to create a multiethnic society there, Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

20 killed in Lanka, 8 rebel bodies found

By IRNA-PTI Colombo : Eight bodies of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) cadres were found by Sri Lankan troops in the Vavuniya region, even as 20 militants were killed in the embattled northern Sri Lanka, Army said here Sunday. "Dead bodies of eight militants were recovered by Armytroops who conducted a search operation in Periyathampane today. Six bodies were handed over to the Vavuniya hospital but the other two were decomposed," the Defence ministry said in a statement.

Aguilera steps forward for Hatit relief effort

By IANS, London : Singer Christina Aguilera, ambassador for the UN World Food Programme (WFP), is supporting victims of the Haiti earthquake. "A child dies every six seconds of hunger, which is a huge statistic for me. After having my own child, I just had to be part of it and do something about it and help change that situation," contactmusic.com quoted her as saying. "I want to check on the situation and help deliver food. I want to visit orphanages and schools there and try to do my part in helping," she added.

Helicopter blades kill two

By DPA, Jakarta : Two mechanics were killed by rotor blades Thursday when the helicopter they were servicing tilted on its side, an official said. The pilot and mechanics were making last-minute checks on the aircraft before take-off when the accident happened at a military airport about 30 km southwest of the Indonesian capital Jakarta, said transport ministry spokesman Bambang Ervan. The spinning blades killed the two mechanics instantly while the pilot and another technician in the cockpit were injured, he said.

Air Canada to axe 345 flight attendants

By Gurmukh Singh, IANS, Toronto : Air Canada, the world's eleventh largest airline, is laying off 345 more flight attendants to cut its operating losses. According to reports here, the retrenchment will come into force in March, making one less flight attendant available on flights to and from Europe. Canada's national carrier has a total staff of about 24,000 worldwide.

Suspicious envelope ignites in US post office

By DPA, Washington : An envelope circulating through the US postal system ignited Friday in a Washington post office, CNN reported.

Association of Cuban Residents in Russia Created

By Prensa Latina, Moscow : The fight against the US blockade and for the release of five Cuban anti-terrorists imprisoned in that country are permanent tasks of the Association of Cuban Residents established in Russia. Addressing about one hundred people at the Cuban embassy in Moscow, Ambassador Jorge Marti highlighted that the defense of the country is the first duty of those morally and spiritually committed to the homeland. He denounced the aggressive police unsuccessfully maintained by US governments for nearly 50 years, and reinforced by the Bush administration.

Indian Social Forum to hold Independence Day celebrations in Kuwait

By TCN News: Indian Social Forum (ISF), a socio cultural organization of Indians in Kuwait will organize a Grand Independence Day Celebration to commemorate 72nd...

China celebrates traditional Lantern Festival with lamps, flowers

By ANTARA, Beijing : Traditionally an occasion for family reunion, the Lantern Festival on Monday was celebrated widely by Chinese people in different ways. In a Siheyuan, or walled quadrangle residence, in the Dongcheng district of Beijing, some foreigners were learning to make yuanxiao, a kind of snack like glue pudding which was made especially for the festival. "Put the stuffing inside...that`s right," a granny surnamed Li said while demonstrating the procedure herself.

Dalai Lama expresses concern over plight of Tibet’s people

By IANS, Dharamsala: The spiritual head of the Tibetan community, the Dalai Lama, Sunday once again expressed concern over the plight of people living in Tibet and asked them to put in more efforts in studying Buddhism. Presiding over the special prayer sessions at the hilltop Tsuglagkhang temple at McLeodganj near here to mark Losar (Tibetan New Year), the Dalai Lama offered greetings to the Tibetans - both living inside and outside Tibet. According to the Tibetan lunar calendar, Losar is the first day of the year and traditionally celebrated in a big way.

Boycotting Olympics would only invite humiliation: China

By Xinhua Beijing : China said Tuesday if any foreign officials boycott the Beijing Olympics, they will undermine a grand event that belongs to the people of the whole world and will only invite humiliation on them. "If any one wants to take the world people's grand event as a stage for political show, he or she has found a wrong place, and will only ask for an insult," China's foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a press conference here while responding to a US senior official's comments about a possible boycott of the Olympics.

No midterm climate goals to come from G8 summit: Japan

By DPA, Tokyo : Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda Tuesday quashed expectations that leaders at July's Group of Eight (G8) summit would reach agreement on medium-term goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The G8, which consists of seven of the world's leading economies and Russia, is "no forum" to decide such an issue, Fukuda said in Tokyo in an interview with the largest news agencies from the G8 countries. An agreement on midterm emissions cuts was instead the "main challenge" for UN-organized climate talks that are set to wrap up at the end of next year, he said.

News of the World publisher pays phone-hacking victims

By IANS, London: Dozens of celebrities and politicians have settled damages claims over the News of the World phone-hacking scandal, the Telegraph reported Thursday.

Unemployment rate hit record high in Greece

By IANS, Athens : The jobless rate in Greece hit a record high of 21.9 percent in March, official data showed.

Malaysian plane’s search may expand to Indian Ocean: US

Washington: Search for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 might be expanding to the Indian Ocean based on new but inconclusive information about the...

Israel opens one crossing in Gaza

By KUNA, GAZA : Israel exceptionally opened on Friday one of the crossing to Gaza to allow the entry of trucks carrying assistance and material. Head of the committee supervising the entry of supplies into Gaza, Raed Fattouh, told local radio that the Israeli authorities opened the southern Gaza Kerem Shalom Crossing to allow the entry of 85 trucks loaded with aid from the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) and international organizations.

Australia eases visa laws for Indian, Chinese students

By Paritosh Parasher Melbourne: In a significant reform of the immigration laws affecting international students, Australia has eased the financial requirements for the visa...

Britain to probe identity leak of Indian visa seekers

By Prasun Sonwalkar

IANS

London : A Channel 4 report that personal data of Indian citizens applying for British visa in India may have been compromised due to flaws in the online application system there has prompted an investigation here.

Bush taps ex-trade negotiator Zoellick for World Bank

By DPA

Washington : President George W Bush on Wednesday nominated former US trade negotiator Robert Zoellick to head the World Bank, tapping a seasoned diplomat to lead the anti-poverty agency out of bitter divisions over Paul Wolfowitz's leadership.

China’s small units seek government help

By Xinhua, Beijing : China's small and medium enterprises (SMEs) have called for greater government assistance to help them tide over the current financial crisis and expressed fears that the credit crunch would hurt them the most. "The global financial crisis is set to affect the world economy, including the Chinese economy, and small and medium-size enterprises will bear the brunt," chief of the association of the SMEs, Li Zibin said.

Peru Congress Objects US Military Base

By Prensa Latina, Lima : The Congress of Peru will object a US military base in its territory should an official request is submitted, said Parliament Chairman Javier Velasquez. The statement is owed to news of US search to relocate the base it is to close in Ecuador following orders by President Rafael Correa. "Peru has democratic relations with all the countries in the hemisphere but we defend our sovereignty," said Velasquez.

Chinese journalists provide free lunch

By IANS, Beijing : A charity programme initiated by a group of journalists through the internet has been providing free lunch to 15,000 children from needy families across China.

Proposed changes to UK immigration rules not lawful: MPs

By IRNA London : The government's proposed changes to the immigration rules for highly skilled migrant workers are unfair and unlawful and should be remitted to parliament to be changed, the Joint Committee on Human Rights said Thursday. The all-party group of MPs and peers criticized planned amendments to the government's Highly Skilled Migrant Programme (HSMP) which contain retrospective changes to the rules that affect people who have already made the UK their main home.

NYK explosion: mid-life crisis of ageing US infrastructure?

By Parveen Chopra, IANS

New York : It was not a terrorist act but the explosion of an ageing steam pipe in mid-Manhattan generated fears of asbestos contamination and public ire about the "mid-life crisis" of infrastructure in much of the US.

One 57-year-old woman died of cardiac arrest as she was fleeing the area of the explosion Wednesday evening and 40 others, including three fire fighters and one police officer, were injured.

Russia test-fires new ICBM

By RIA Novosti, Plesetsk (Russia) : Russia Sunday test-fired the Topol intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) from its Plesetsk space centre in the northern part of the country. The missile was launched at 11.24 a.m. (0724 GMT) by Russia's Strategic Missile Force. The Topol (SS-25 Sickle) is a single-warhead intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), with approximately the same size and shape as the US Minuteman ICBM.

Indian-origin man in Canada gets life term for killing wife

Toronto: An Indian-origin man in Canadas' Alberta province has been sentenced to life in prison for dragging his wife from a moving vehicle and...

Eight miners rescued from gold mine in Colombia

By IANS/EFE, Bogota : Eight miners, who were trapped inside a gold mine in Segovia town in Colombia, have been rescued. The miners were found Saturday by rescue teams and were in good condition despite a lack of fresh air, John Fredy Rendon Roldan, director of Colombia's Antioquia Provincial Disaster Response Department, said Sunday. The miners were trapped when an electric transformer exploded Friday at the mine. At least 32 people were working at the mine at the time of the blast, of whom 24 were rescued by emergency workers.

Suspected terrorist cell busted in Australia

By DPA, Sydney : Police swooped on a suspected Islamic terrorist cell Tuesday in Melbourne to forestall a possible suicide attack on an Australian Army barracks, authorities said. More than 400 police raided 19 homes and picked up people from the country's 16,000-member Somali refugee community in the biggest anti-terrorism operation in three years. "We believe these men were affiliated with a group called al-Shabaab in Somalia," acting Federal Police Chief Commissioner Tony Negus said.

Obama arrives in Gulf as top-kill effort continues

By DPA, Washington : US President Barack Obama arrived in Louisiana Friday to tour what has become the worst-ever US oil disaster, as energy company BP's critical top-kill operation to cap the ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico entered its third day. Obama's visit - his second to the region since the April 20 Deepwater Horizon rig explosion - comes amid growing local anger and frustration over the government's response to the disaster and BP's inability to cap the oil well.

Scribe’s murder forces Nepal PM to cancel junket

By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS, Kathmandu : Under growing fire from journalists' organisations in Nepal and the international community for the brutal murder of a woman reporter in the turbulent southern plains, Maoist Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda Thursday called off his controversial foreign junket scheduled this week.

Parrot fossil found in Scandinavia

By IANS, Washington : The discovery of a parrot fossil in Scandinavia dating back some 55 million years, indicates that they were once common in colder climes like Norway and Denmark. Parrots today live only in the tropics and the southern hemisphere, but this new research suggests that they first evolved in the north, much earlier than had been suspected.

Cambodia, Thailand vow peaceful solution to border dispute

By Xinhua, Siem Reap, Cambodia : Cambodia and Thailand said that they were committed to a peaceful solution to the nearly two-week bilateral military standoff in the border area near the Preah Vihear Temple, after foreign ministers of the two countries ended their one-day meeting here on Monday evening without any resolution.

India rejects blame as Nepal floods affect 50,000

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : As a breach in a river barrage turned over 50,000 people homeless in southern Nepal and threatened thousands more in neighbouring India, the Indian government rejected allegations that its negligence had caused the disaster, putting the blame squarely back on Nepal.

Spain detains 32 Chinese for music piracy

By DPA, Madrid : Spanish police have detained 32 Chinese in their biggest swoop against music and movie piracy so far, press reports said Thursday. Most of the detainees were undocumented immigrants working in slave-like conditions in four clandestine production centres in the Madrid region. The factories, which ran day and night, were capable of copying 150,000 CDs or DVDs daily. That number of copies fetched 600,000 euros ($923,000) on the market. Police seized 300,000 copies and half a million virgin discs.

Myanmar designates three days of mourning for cyclone victims

By Xinhua, Yangon : Myanmar designated on Monday three days of mourning for cyclone disaster starting from Tuesday to Thursday, according to an announcement of the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) aired by the state radio in the evening. The announcement, signed by First Secretary of the SPDC Lieutenant-General Thiha Thura Tin Aung Myint Oo, sets the mourning activities to start on Tuesday at 9 a.m. (local time) with the state flag to fly half-mast.

Bombardier to open unit in Morocco

By IANS, Rabat: Canadian aircraft builder Bombardier will start a manufacturing unit in Morocco with a $200 million investment next year, the Moroccan trade minister said.

At least two dead in B-52 bomber crash near Guam

By ANTARA News, Washington : A US B-52 bomber crashed Monday near Guam, killing two members of a crew who were about to participate in a ceremony celebrating the island's independence, the Air Force said. The Stratofortress bomber was operating out of Andersen Air Force and went missing about 50 kilometres off Guam's north-west coast, a statement issued by the base was quoted by DPA as saying. Search efforts were continuing for the other four crew members. The plane was not carrying weapons. B-52s have been in service since 1955.

22 convicted in Honduras prison massacre

By IANS, Tegucigalpa (Honduras) : A Honduras court has convicted 22 security officials for their alleged involvement in a jail massacre, which killed 68 people, Spain's EFE news agency reported Thursday. The massacre took place at the El Porvenir prison farm in the eastern part of the country in April 2003 following a clash among inmates. Among the 34 accused, 20 were police officers, who were joined in the dock by a soldier, a retired cop, prison guards and inmates. The court acquitted 12 accused for want of evidence.

Colombian rebels release former provincial governor

By IANS, Villavicencio (Colombia) : Leftist rebel guerrillas in Colombia have released a former provincial governor they had held hostage for more than seven years, EFE news agency reported Wednesday. Alan Jara, former governor of the central Colombian province of Meta, was brought to Villavicencio, a city near capital Bogota, in a Brazilian helicopter Tuesday hours after Yves Heller, spokesman of Red Cross Colombia, announced Jara's release.

Indian origin man tipped to be South Africa’s finance minister

By Fakir Hassen,IANS, Johannesburg : Indian origin Pravin Gordhan, who has won international acclaim for transforming South Africa's revenue services, is likely to be inducted as the new finance minister in President-elect Jacob Zuma's government. The Afrikaans weekly Rapport quoted highly-placed sources within the re-elected African National Congress (ANC) government as saying that Zuma is set to appoint Gordhan as the new minister of finance.

Urumqi crawls towards normalcy as China stresses stability

By DPA, Beijing : More traffic and shoppers returned to the streets of China's riot-hit city of Urumqi Thursday as thousands of paramilitary police patrolled. Markets and car parks were busier than Wednesday as the government appealed for calm and stressed after ethnic-related violence there that life in Urumqi was "returning to normal". China State Television broadcast footage of scores of people walking around major shopping areas Thursday morning in the capital of the far western region of Xinjiang but avoided showing the police and troops on the streets.

Press freedom watchdog calls on Cuba to free reporters

By IANS, Paris : Press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has called on the Cuban government to release 23 imprisoned journalists in response to the lifting of European Union (EU)'s diplomatic sanction on the island country, EFE reported Thursday.

Microsoft calls on Seinfeld to boost Windows

By DPA, San Francisco : Microsoft is to pay comedian Jerry Seinfeld $10 million to star in a $300-million advertising campaign for its Windows Vista operating system. The campaign, which is one of the largest ever undertaken by the software giant, is aimed at establishing a cachet for the computer operating system and will feature Seinfeld along with Microsoft chairman Bill Gates. The theme of the campaign will be "Windows not Walls," the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday and will focus on "breaking down barriers that prevent people and ideas from connecting".

Social media can be used to monitor HIV risk, drug use

New York: Real-time social media like Twitter could be used to track HIV incidence and drug-related behaviours with the aim of detecting and potentially...

Ban to visit quake-hit Haiti Sunday

By DPA, New York, Jan 16 (DPA) UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon plans to visit Haiti Sunday to show his solidarity with the earthquake-ravaged Haitian people and United Nations staff. The UN office announced Friday that Ban will use the opportunity to assess the destruction and international efforts to assist the Caribbean nation, which was devastated by Tuesday's magnitude-7 earthquake. The death toll is expected to be in tens of thousands.

India won’t tolerate intolerance, says Modi

London: India will never tolerate intolerance as it is the land of Lord Buddha and Mahatma Gandhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said here on...

Philippines offers reward for coup bid suspects’ arrests

Manila (DPA) : The Philippine government has offered a cash reward for information leading to the arrest of a Marine captain and other suspects involved in a failed attempt to oust President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, officials said Sunday. Captain Nicanor Faeldon was one of dozens of renegade soldiers who took over the Peninsula Hotel in Manila's financial district of Makati City Nov 29 in a bid to overthrow Arroyo. The standoff ended in just seven hours, with government troops storming the hotel and arresting the rebel soldiers and their civilian supporters.

IAEA team to visit Iran’s nuclear reactor next week

By Xinhua

Vienna : A team from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will inspect the site of a heavy-water nuclear reactor in Arak, Iran early next week, the UN nuclear watchdog has said.

The announcement was made after Olli Heinonen, deputy director general of the IAEA, held talks with Iran's deputy national security chief Javad Vaeidi here Tuesday.

The talks aimed at working out a plan "on clarifying the open issues associated with the scope and content of Iran's (uranium) enrichment programme".

Indian Americans applaud Bush signing n-deal into law

By IANS, New York : Indian American community leaders and businessmen have applauded President George W. Bush for signing a historic law on the India-US civil nuclear deal Wednesday that will help India meet its energy demands while giving the US access to a growing market for nuclear technology and material. Indian Americans constituted more than half of the 250 prominent people present at the White House reception that followed the bill signing by the president.

UK police back ban on anti-Muslim march

By IRNA, London : Police chiefs are calling on Home Secretary, Theresa May to ban the latest anti-Muslim march by the far right English Defence League (EDL) that is due to take place in Bradford, northern England, later this month. West Yorkshire chief constable Sir Norman Bettison said police would be backing a campaign to ban the march on August 28 because of the "understandable concerns of the community" in the city, which has the second highest ethnic-minority population in the UK.

CIA tapes show 9/11 suspects in secret prisons

By DPA, Washington : The US Central Intelligence Agency has videotapes made at a secret prison in Morocco showing the interrogation of a conspirator in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, CNN reported Tuesday. The tapes were reportedly found three years ago under a desk at the CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, and may offer insights into the controversial role that some foreign countries played during former president George W Bush's war against terrorism.

Earthquake Shakes Russia’s Sea Of Okhotsk

By Bernama, Moscow : A 6.9- magnitude earthquake jolted the region of the Sea of Okhotsk in southeast Russia on Saturday, the Itar-Tass news agency reported. The tremor occurred at 06:13 Moscow time (0213 GMT), the Kamchatka office of the geophysics service of the Russian Academy of Sciences said. According to seismologists, the epicenter was at a depth of about 600 km under the seabed, 400 km west of the Kamchatka territorial center.

Climate summit adjourns as India-prepared accord comes under fire

By Joydeep Gupta, IANS, Copenhagen: The Copenhagen climate summit was adjourned on its scheduled final night as a host of countries attacked the accord that India had prepared with four other nations. In the early hours of Saturday, Tuvalu, Venezuela, Bolivia, Cuba and Nicaragua led the attack on the accord, calling it undemocratic because it had been prepared by India in consultation with the US, China, Brazil and South Africa.

Gunmen seize buildings in Ukraine’s eastern towns

Kiev: Pro-Russia militants took over a police headquarters in Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk, BBC reported Saturday citing local media and witnesses. This followed a gun...

US launches major rescue package for financial sector

By DPA, Washington : The US Friday unveiled part of a massive, comprehensive plan to help resolve the US financial crisis and prevent a rush of new bank failures in the coming weeks. The US Treasury announced a $50 billion guarantee programme for the money-market mutual fund industry, the first in a series of moves that could come Friday after overnight talks with congressional leaders. The US media reported the entire rescue package could cost as much as $500 billion.

Ex-Georgian leader’s son released on bail

By RIA Novosti, Tbilisi : The son of Georgia's first post-Soviet president, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, arrested on suspicion of spying for Russia in September, has been released on bail, Georgia's Imedi television company said on Tuesday. Tsotne Gamsakhurdia was arrested at Tbilisi Airport on September 3 and charged with spying for Russia, an attempted coup, and grievous bodily harm. He had earlier been on hunger strike in protest against his arrest.

Jordan, France’s Areva discuss plans to build nuclear plant

By Xinhua, Amman : Energy-thirsty Jordan on Sunday discussed with French nuclear giant Areva plans to join hands to build a nuclear plant in the kingdom. Talks between Jordan's Prime Minister Nader Dahabi and visiting Areva CEO Anne Lauvergeon covered a timetable for the project, Areva's key role in helping Jordan raise sufficient funds for construction, and operation of the nuclear power facility.

Bhutanese unsure of democracy’s outcome, but feel change is good

By Murali Krishnan, IANS, Thimpu : Having relished their country's isolation for years, not many Bhutanese are sure if the historic poll held in March, which transformed their quaint Himalayan nation from a kingdom to a democracy, is going to make a qualitative change in their lives. The century-old rule by the hugely popular Wangchuk dynasty ended as the world's newest democracy, nestled spectacularly in the Himalayas between giant neighbours India and China, elected 47 members to the national assembly.

US Senate passes biggest-ever defence spending bill

By DPA, Washington : The US Senate Saturday approved the Obama administration's record $626 billion defence spending bill for the current fiscal. The vote was 88 to 10. With the House of Representatives having already approved the bill, all that remains is President Barack Obama's signature for it to take effect for the fiscal year that began Oct 1. The bill foresees spending of $128.3 billion for the operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Civilians arriving at Colombo from north to be registered

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lanka Thursday made it obligatory for civilians from the war-ravaged northern districts and living in capital Colombo and its suburbs for the past five years, to register themselves with the police, a police spokesman here said.

Powerful quake jolts Costa Rica

By IANS, San Jose : A powerful earthquake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale rocked northern Costa Rica Thursday, but there were no reports of any casualty, EFE news agency reported Friday. The epicentre of the quake was near Poas volcano in Alajuela province, about 60 km northwest of San Jose, said Juan Segura, the head of Costa Rica's Ovisicori Seismology Institute. The quake struck at around 1:19 p.m. and was felt throughout the country, Segura said and added that the tremor was followed by a number of aftershocks which will continue "for up to months".

China-Myanmar oil pipeline still under discussion

By KUNA Tokyo : Construction of the oil pipeline from Myanmar to southwest China's Yunnan Province is still under discussion, the state-run news agency Xinhua reported Monday, citing a top provincial official. The long-awaited pipeline is expected to provide an alternative route for China's crude imports from the Middle East and Africa and ease the country's worries of its over-dependence on energy transportation through the Strait of Malacca.

Three Muslims killed in Thai south

By ANTARA News/AFP Narathiwat, Thailand : Suspected separatist rebels have shot dead three Muslim men in separate attacks across the insurgency-hit south of Thailand, police said Sunday. Two unidentified men on a motorcycle shot dead a 28-year-old villager in front of his house in Narathiwat province late on Saturday. Hours later in nearby Yala province, the son of a local politician was killed by gunmen, while a third Muslim was shot dead elsewhere in the same province as he returned home from the local mosque, police reported.

Pandit says Citi now ‘fundamentally different’, much healthier

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Citigroup's Indian American CEO Vikram Pandit says the troubled banking giant is today "fundamentally different" and far healthier than when he took over thanks to an over $45 billion government bailout. "I am pleased to say we are in a far different and much healthier position," Pandit said in testimony before the Congressional Oversight Panel Thursday. The independent watchdog group oversees the $700 billion financial bailout. The bank had returned to being a bank, not "a financial supermarket", he said.

Thai Rebels Attack Military Patrol

By Prensa Latina Bangkok : Insurgency in the convulsive southern province of Narathiwat attacked an army patrol on Monday, killing eight, the ANT Thai news agency said. The rebels detonated an explosive device and opened fire on a government unit on the road to Rudop village, in Chanae district, ANT reported. The soldiers were patrolling the area when a 20 man contingent detonated the bomb with its vehicle. Over 2600 people in that Thai southern region have died violent deaths since the separatist movement resumed the armed struggle on January 2004.

Indian Muslims in America mourn Mukul Sinha’s demise

By TCN News, Washington DC: Indian Muslims in America have expressed “profound sadness” on passing away yesterday of the very courageous human rights...

Sri Lanka’s war-displaced yearn to return home

By P. Karunakharan,IANS, Vavuniya (Sri Lanka) : Having lost his father to long-range fire, 23-year-old Aruldasan and a group of 40 other war-displaced people recently succeeded in escaping from Mullaitivu after 20 gruelling days. He was working for an international aid agency when the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) forced him to undergo 10 days of "civil defence training", which was compulsory for everybody in the age group between 18 and 60 in the Tiger-held territory.

Community campaigns for UN authorisation for strikes at Pakistan terror camps

By Lalit K Jha, IANS, New York : The Indian American community has launched a petition campaign all over the country urging the US to support a resolution in the UN Security Council that would permit strikes against terrorists camps inside Pakistan. Thousands of people have signed this petition, which is being kept outside for signatures, at the scores of condolence meetings and candle light vigil in memory of the victims of Mumbai terrorist attacks, being held across the US in the past week.

Zimbabwe’s President Mugabe halts relief operations

By DPA, Harare : President Robert Mugabe's government has suspended the operations of CARE International, the United States-based relief organization, alleging involvement in "political activity," the organization said in a statement Wednesday. The government's action has affected aid delivery to 500,000 people, CARE said. The organization's 300 Zimbabwean employees were "currently at home, pending further notice from the government." The statement said that last year in the "lean period" between crop harvests, 920,000 Zimbabweans were fed by CARE.

Putin praises Russia-Japan political contacts

By Xinhua, Moscow : Russian President Vladimir Putin told Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda at talks near Moscow on Saturday that he is satisfied with the level of political contacts between Russia and Japan. "We are maintaining permanent contacts on the political level. Ministers and prime ministers hold meetings. The president takes part in activities, aimed at promoting the development of our relations," Putin said. Meanwhile, the outgoing president believed that there are ways to resolve the existing problems between the two sides, despite some difficulties.

At least 7 killed, 7 injured in south China mine blast

By RIA Novosti, Beijing : At least seven people were killed Friday and another seven injured in a coal mine gas blast in southern China, the Xinhua news agency reported. The agency quoted a local safety official as saying that the accident happened in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region on Friday morning when around 100 miners were underground. Eighty-four people have been safely brought to the surface.

Brazil confirms missing plane debris found

By DPA, Rio de Janeiro : Brazilian Defence Minister Nelson Jobim said Tuesday that the authorities are certain they found the remains of the missing Air France passenger plane around midday in the Atlantic Ocean. A Brazilian Air Force (FAB) plane found a "set of fragments" spread over a five-kilometre radius some 640 km off the island Fernando de Noronha, Jobim said. Jobim noted that the objects found were metal pieces and wires, apparently part of the structure of the missing plane.

Kidnapped Belgian tourists in Guatemala released

By DPA Guatemala City : Four Belgian tourists who had been taken hostage in Guatemala have been released, officials said Sunday. A group of farmers and hired rural workers seized the tourists and three Guatemalans Friday to demand the release of one of their leaders who has been jailed for the illegal taking of land, a local radio broadcast reported. The released tourists - two couples from Flanders ranging in age from 59 to 62 - were transported to the Belgian embassy in Costa Rica following a medical examination, said Sergio Morales, the Guatemalan state attorney for human rights.

Shuttle Endeavour docks with ISS on ‘home-improvement’ mission

By RIA Novosti, Washington : The space shuttle Endeavour has docked with the International Space Station at the start of a home-improvement mission due to last almost two weeks, NASA's Mission Control said. The shuttle linked up with the orbiter at 22:01 GMT on Sunday, NASA spokeswoman Nicole Cloutier-Lemasters said.

Brazil’s Embraer to sell 40 jets to US airline

By IANS/EFE, Rio de Janeiro : Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer said Tuesday it reached a deal to sell 40 E175 passenger jets to US airline SkyWest for nearly $1.7 billion.

Twitter may allow app advertisers use video

New York: App ads on Twitter may soon have the option to be video-based, the microblogging site has announced. In a blog post celebrating one...

50 percent Chinese buy luxury items online

By IANS, Beijing: Half of China's urban residents say they prefer buying luxury items online and the major factor for drawing people to internet retailing is favourable prices over franchised stores. The 2009 China Luxury Forecast also said about 78 percent of respondents in a survey said they would continue to maintain consumption of luxury goods in the next 12 months, China Daily reported. Over 1,100 people with an average annual income of 250,000 yuan ($36,890) took part in the survey.

Salary top reason why employees in Asia quit

By DPA, Singapore : The top reason why employees in Asia quit is unhappiness with their pay, a study by a human resources firm said Saturday. It found 70 percent of the best employers see a large connection between improved performance and higher salaries. While Asian employers have "increased investment" in compensation, they are not yet getting the "strategic and financial results", The Business Times quoted Hewitt Associates principal Nishchae Suri as saying.

Past misdeeds return to haunt Nepal army

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : With just a fortnight left for the ouster of Nepal's King Gyanendra, the army that had once been allowed to perpetrate gross human rights violations in the name of combating the Maoist insurgency is now facing a backlash with its past crimes catching up with it.

North Korea asks UN to revoke human rights resolution

Seoul : North Korea has formally asked the UN to revoke its resolution on human rights in the country, arguing that it is based...

Giant fish discovered in the Atlantic

By IANS, Washington : Researchers have discovered a new species of fish, a grouper that grows to more than six feet and weighs almost 500 kg. These Atlantic goliaths are not the same groupers that swim in Pacific waters, though they look identical. "For more than a century, ichthyologists have thought that Pacific and Atlantic goliath grouper were the same species, and the argument was settled before the widespread use of genetic techniques.

Deadly crossing kills thousands of desperate refugees

By DPA, Nairobi : On a beach in Bosaso, northeast Somalia, near the tip of the Horn of Africa, dozens of Somali and Ethiopian refugees perch on rocks or squat in the sand, peering across the Gulf of Aden to the promised land. They are waiting for boats to carry them to Yemen and away from a life of miserable poverty, persecution and a war in Somalia that is threatening to spiral even further out of control. Yet none of the desperate refugees, who cram into boats run by unscrupulous smugglers, can be sure that they are going to survive the journey.

Nepal arrests 100 Tibetan protestors, UN expresses concerns

By DPA Kathmandu : Nepalese police Tuesday arrested over 100 Tibetan demonstrating in front of China's embassy's visa office in the capital Kathmandu amid growing concerns by the United Nations over the detentions. Tuesday's demonstrations were the first by Tibetan exiles in Nepal targeting the Chinese embassy since the start of their campaign against Chinese rule in their homeland nearly two weeks ago. Police said they detained the demonstrators after they refused to move away from the Chinese visa office.
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