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Sri Lanka says US and Norway helped Fonseka, they deny

By IANS, New Delhi: Sri Lanka's former army chief Sarath Fonseka is to face early court martial for treason, Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa said in remarks published Thursday, while accusing the US and Norway of aiding the defeated presidential candidate during the election. The accusation triggered quick denials from both countries, which were closely involved in overseeing the peace process in Sri Lanka before the military crushed the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) last year.

Cuba to highlight volunteers’ efforts on AIDS Day

By Prensa Latina Havana : Cuba will launch a campaign on the World AIDS Day Dec 1 to highlight the work of volunteers and social activists in the prevention of the scourge. Gloria Pausada, a specialist working with the AIDS prevention and control programme, said the volunteer movement on the island country, grew through participation of patients themselves, who spent part of their time visiting workplaces, schools and other institutions to increase public awareness about AIDS.

Four policemen killed in Pakistan gun attack

Islamabad: Four policemen were killed on Thursday when unidentified assailants opened fire on a police mobile in Pakistan's Balochistan province. The incident took place in...

Nepal’s TV stations cut broadcasts as power outages increase

By DPA, Kathmandu : Private television stations in Nepal have announced several hours of cuts to regular broadcasts, citing growing power outages. Television Broadcasters' Nepal, an umbrella body of five private stations, said Thursday they would no longer be able to keep up round-the-clock broadcasts due to power outages. The government-owned Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) earlier Thursday announced 12 hours of power cuts across the country, saying it was unable to meet demand.

Global airfreight, passenger volume drop sharply: aviation body

By DPA, Kuala Lumpu : International demand for air cargo recorded a severe dip of 25 per cent for the first two months of 2009, compared to the corresponding period last year, following a crisis in world trade activities, the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines, or AAPA, said Wednesday. Asia Pacific airlines also suffered a drop in passenger volume for the first two months, recording a total of 22.6 million passengers or a plunge of 10.5 percent compared to last year.

OECD meeting on tax havens begins in Paris

By DPA, Paris : Ministers and representatives from 18 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) began meeting in Paris Tuesday to tackle international tax havens. Convened by France and Germany, the participants will attempt to force tax havens to open their accounts to investigators looking for depositors who avoid paying taxes on their incomes. The issue has been made more pressing because of the global finance crisis.

Sole survivor of Russian plane crash regains consciousness

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : The only survivor of a plane crash in Russia that killed almost an entire ice hockey team has regained consciousness in hospital, an official said Tuesday.

19 killed in China as truck runs into crowd

By IANS, Beijing : At least 19 people were killed when a truck ran into a crowd in northern China's Hebei province, police said Friday. The accident happened at around 8.30 p.m. Thursday in Zhaozhuangzi village when the truck hit another vehicle and then went into the crowd, Xinhua reported. As many as 32 people were hospitalised. The driver and the owner of the truck were arrested.

40 Indians trapped at Everest Camp I, II

By Sayan Mukherjee and Sandip Sikdar, New Delhi : At least 40 Indian mountaineers remained trapped on Monday at Everest Camp I and II, cut...

Spain, US sign accord to deploy anti-missile shield

By IANS/EFE, Brussels : Spain and the US Wednesday signed an agreement at NATO headquarters here that will allow the deployment of an anti-missile shield at Spain's Rota naval base.

Chinese premier encourages renovation to boost industry in country’s Muslim region

By Xinhua, YINCHUAN : Premier Wen Jiabao encouraged local workers and farmers to work harder to boost industrial and agricultural development of the landlocked Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region in northwest China. During a recent inspection tour to this largest Muslim region of the country, the premier visited major industrial projects and enterprises, commodity grain, vegetable production and other farming bases.

Bush seeks doubling of AIDS, malaria funding for Africa

By DPA Washington : US President George W. Bush called upon the Congress to double the money going to a programme combating HIV/AIDS and malaria in Africa. Bush proposed a $30 billion programme over five years to combat the diseases ahead of a planned trip to the continent next month. Bush first launched his five-year, $15 billion Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief in 2003, and said that the programme had so far helped change behaviour and treated 1.4 million people.

Amnesty blasts Myanmar Ambassador’s claims

By Mumtaz Alam Falahi, TwoCircles.net,

Tropical storm Gustav kills 60 in Haiti

By Xinhua, Mexico City : Tropical storm Gustav has killed 60 people and injured 22 others in Haiti, authorities in the Caribbean country said Friday. Seven people has been missing since the storm pounded the country Tuesday, civil protection director Alta Jean-Baptiste told a news conference, according to reports from Port-au-Prince. Flooding caused by heavy rain inundated farmland, houses and highways, she said, adding that most of the victims were killed in floods and mudslides. In the neighbouring Dominican Republic, Gustav claimed eight lives, including six children.

ANC only true hope for most South Africans: Zuma

Cape Town: The ruling African National Congress (ANC) "remains the only true hope for majority of our people, particularly the poor and the working...

One hurt in minor blast at main rail station in Sri Lanka capital

By SPA Colombo : One person was injured in a minor explosion caused by a parcel bomb at the main railway station in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo on Friday, police said, according to dpa. The blast at the Fort Railway station in the heart of the city occurred during peak travel time Friday evening. All railway services from the station were suspended. Police said damage had been caused to a staircase where the parcel bomb had been placed. A time device or remote control is believed to have been used to trigger the explosion.

Cuban parliament to elect Castro”s successor

KUWAIT, Feb 24 (KUNA) -- Cuba's parliament will meet later on Sunday to elect a new president who will succeed Fidel Castro.

New Sobhraj battle from Oct 29

By IANS, Kathmandu : Nepal's Supreme Court said it will start hearing from Oct 29 yesteryear's 'Serpent' Charles Sobhraj's appeal in a nearly 30-year-old murder case that, for the first time in a crime career spanning two decades and several continents, found him guilty and put him behind bars with a life term. It is the last chance for the 65-year-old -- who during his six-year imprisonment in Nepal has soaked up more of the local law than many criminal lawyers -- to prove his innocence or remain in prison till his jail term ends.

US Sikh files racial discrimination case against company

By Lalit K. Jha, IANS, Jersey City (New Jersey) : A Sikh youth in the US who was allegedly asked to shave off his facial hair to get a job has filed a discrimination charge against the company. The case against Tri-County Lexus - based in Little Falls, New Jersey - was filed last week, said Sikh Coalition, a NGO that filed the case on behalf of Gurpreet Singh. Sikh Coalition said Singh had applied for an automotive sales position with Tri-County Lexus in February.

Financial stability has improved but new challenges ahead: IMF

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : The global economy is at last emerging out of the crisis with financial markets rebounding after the collapse of Wall Street investment firm Lehman Brothers in 2008, but extraordinary challenges remain, says the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Alex Reid learning about Islam

By IANS, London : Former glamour model Katie Price's husband cage-fighter Alex Reid is taking lessons in Islam. Reid is currently working on a project to help get underprivileged children involved in kickboxing, and is learning about the lives of Muslim communities and their religion at the same time. "I've been volunteering for a scheme to get underprivileged kids into kickboxing. We visit communities and try to get the kids to integrate more through the coaching sessions," contactmusic.com quoted him as saying.

10 US schools locked down after gun battle: report

By IANS, Washington: Ten schools were locked down Friday after police exchanged fire with a suspect in the US state of South Carolina, local media reported.

Russian parliament votes for Putin’s moratorium on arms treaty

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Russia's lower house of parliament has voted Wednesday in favour of President Putin's bill to impose a moratorium on the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty. President Vladimir Putin signed a decree to suspend the 1990 CFE Treaty in mid-July, citing security concerns and the moratorium, now passed by the legislature is to take effect from Dec 12. The amended version of the Soviet-era treaty was signed in 1999, and has not been ratified by any NATO countries.

Venezuela to hold referendum on Chavez term Feb 15

By IANS, Caracas : Venezuela will hold a referendum Feb 15 to decide whether to remove limits on the re-election of President Hugo Chavez and other elected officials, EFE news agency reported Saturday, citing officials. The head of Venezuela's CNE elections council, Tibisay Lucena, made the announcement a day after lawmakers approved the amendment proposal brought by Chavez supporters.

Four weeks after massacre, graduation at Virginia Tech

By DPA

Washington : Four weeks after the bloody massacre at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, nearly 5,000 students received their degrees in a solemn yet joyful ceremony that memorialised the 32 people killed by a student gunmen.

Romney wins Michigan primary to breath new life into campaign

By RIA Novosti Washington : Mitt Romney has won the Michigan state primary, breathing life into his flagging candidacy and further complicating the race for the Republican nomination for U.S. president. Romney took some 39% of the vote, with Senator John McCain in second place with 30% and Mike Huckabee in third with 16%. The mayor of New York, Rudi Giuliani, took 3% and finished fourth. Romney, who was beaten on January 3 in Iowa and in New Hampshire five days later, desperately needed a victory in his native Michigan to keep his campaign on track.

Russia to launch two European satellites

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia will launch two European satellites Nov 2 from the Plesetsk space center in northwest Russia, a report said Tuesday. The dry run of the launch began early October at the space center as per schedule. "The launch is scheduled for Nov 2. A deal to launch Rockot with the SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) spacecraft [primary payload] and the Proba-2 mini-satellite was concluded between the ESA (European Space Agency) and Eurockot Launch Services GmbH (a joint venture of the Khrunichev center and EADS Astrium)," a Khrunichev center report said.

Peacekeepers in Abkhazia set up additional posts

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Collective peacekeeping forces in the zone of the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict have set up additional observation posts, an aide to the peacekeeping force commander said on Saturday. "That was done to defuse tension that developed following an incident the day before, when three Abkhaz police were injured in a roadside bomb attack," Alexander Diordiyev said. Some media reports said Georgian commandos were responsible for the attack. But Georgia denied any involvement.

British government ‘working urgently’ to free Iraqi captives

By DPA London:British Prime Minister Tony Blair has said his government will do "everything we possibly can" to secure the release of five British men kidnapped from a ministry building in Baghdad. While Blair was speaking during a trip to Libya late Tuesday, British embassy officials in the Iraqi capital were "urgently working" to find out where the men had been taken and who was holding them, officials said Wednesday.

NBA fines coach Jackson $25,000 for criticism

By Xinhua, Washington : Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson was fined $25,000 by the National Basketball Association (NBA) for criticising referees after game four of the NBA Western Conference finals. The Lakers organisation was also fined $25,000, the day after a 120-101 loss to the Denver Nuggets that evened the series. Jackson was angry with the free throw discrepancy, with Denver's 49 attempts, 14 more than the Lakers. He also hit out at the Nuggets' Dahntay Jones who apparently pulled off a dirty play to trip Kobe Bryant.

US backs OSCE decision not to monitor Russian poll

By RIA Novosti Washington : US has supported the decision by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to cancel plans to act as observers during the Dec 2 parliamentary elections in Russia. The OSCE's election monitoring arm, the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), Friday said that its monitors had been "continuously denied entry visas into Russia".

SAARC pledges coordinated anti-terror action

By IANS, New Delhi: India Saturday pitched for "fullest cooperation" among the SAARC countries to combat terror coordinated action that could include real-time intelligence sharing. The meeting of the interior ministers of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) also decided to consider Pakistan’s proposal for creating SAARCPOL, an institution on the lines of Interpol.

My view on Gordon Brown was coloured: Cherie Blair

By IANS, New Delhi : Cherie Blair has admitted that being the wife of Tony Blair "coloured" her views about Gordon Brown who succeeded her husband as prime minister of Britain last year. Cherie, a high-profile lawyer, has written a book, "Speaking For Myself", about her life. The book, in which Brown also finds mention, created much controversy in Britain and has also found its way into the bestseller's list in the country and elsewhere.

Job surge in Australia: Positive uptick or rogue figures?

By DPA, Sydney : Shocked Australian economists didn't know whether to jeer or cheer Thursday when official figures showed unemployment falling to 5.4 percent in April from 5.7 percent in March. Most had been tipping a sharp rise, pointing to plunging job ads and a slew of big lay-offs in the mining industry as harbingers of more economic misery. Full-time positions surged by a whopping 49,100, balanced by a slide in part-time employment of 21,800.

China’s private sector work force now 200 million

By Xinhua Beijing : Nearly 200 million Chinese, out of a total population of 1.3 billion, are working in private business enterprises, said a report issued by the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce here Friday. China registered about 5.39 million private companies by September last year, 8.2 percent more than at the end of 2006, the report said. They have contributed to 60 percent of the country's GDP.

Mike Tyson to write memoir

By IANS, London: Boxer-turned-actor Mike Tyson is to pen a tell-all memoir after signing a deal with publisher Blue Rider Press.

Australia and China spar over the Dalai Lama

By DPA

Sydney : China must respect Australia's democratic system and accept that exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama can visit whenever he wants, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Wednesday.

Chinese President Hu Jintao meets Taiwan’s vice president-elect

By DPA Beijing : Chinese President Hu Jintao and Taiwan's vice president-elect Vincent Siew Saturday held landmark talks that were expected to set the tone for future Taipei-Beijing ties. The meeting was the highest-ranking contact between the two countries since both split at the end of a civil war in 1949. The 20-minute meeting was "very frank, friendly and achieved results", Siew said in a brief statement after the talks on southern island resort of Hainan. Taipei's position was that the two sides should "face reality, envision the future and put aside differences", Siew said.

New British Air Terminal Chaotic

By Prensa Latina London : Another 54 flights of British Airways (BA) were cancelled Saturday due to the crisis at Heathrow airport's new Terminal Five, since it began operations three days ago. Those cancellations add to another 100 on Thursday and Friday, and 37 others predicted for Sunday. Resulting from the poor running of the terminal, officially inaugurated two weeks ago by Queen Elizabeth II, thousands of passengers could not travel Friday, or had to wait long hours to do it.

5.4 million Chinese mourn for deceased

By IANS, Beijing : Over 5.4 million Chinese visited 150 major memorial sites or cemeteries to mourn the deceased on the first day of the tomb-sweeping festival.

Radiation over legal level at Japanese nuclear plant

By DPA, Tokyo : Radiation levels have surpassed legal limits at a quake-damaged nuclear power plant in northeastern Japan, officials said Sunday, raising concerns over radiation leaks.

Cambodian courts to unveil public information boards

By Xinhua, Phnom Penh : Cambodian courts this week will unveil public information boards designed to improve the accessibility and transparency of the country's legal system, local media reported Wednesday. The information boards, installed in sets of three, make details of court rules and procedures available to the public, the Mekong Times newspaper said.

Cardinals meet ahead of papal conclave

By IANS/EFE, Vatican City : Cardinals met Monday for the last time to prepare the conclave at which they will elect the successor of Pope Benedict XVI.

Bolivia expels another US diplomat

By EFE, La Paz : Bolivia has expelled another US diplomat accusing him of conspiring against the government of President Evo Morales. Morales said Monday that he ordered the expulsion of Francisco Martinez, second secretary at US embassy in La Paz, for having links with the country's right-wing opposition and conspiring against his government. "Martinez was in contact with opposition groups during the entire conspiracy stage," the president said, referring to weeks of violent protests mounted last September by provincial governments in eastern Bolivia.

Absconding serial blast mastermind wins Nepal poll

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : A man wanted for a string of blasts in Nepal's capital Kathmandu last year has been elected from a Terai constituency in the country's historic constituent assembly election. Babban Singh, who has been on the run since September when three explosions in crowded public places, including a bus, killed two students and a housewife, was Monday declared winner from a constituency in Rautahat district along the Indo-Nepal border.

Rice says Taiwanese referendum to join UN ‘provocative’

By DPA Washington : Taiwan's plan to hold a referendum next year on whether it should join the United Nations is a "provocative policy" that will raise tensions with China, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said. Rice Friday said the US opposes any attempt by Taiwan to alter cross strait relations with China and will not support formal independence from Beijing. "We think that Taiwan's referendum to apply to the United Nations under the name Taiwan is a provocative policy," Rice said in her final press conference of the year.

Russian, Norwegian foreign ministers to visit border towns

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The foreign ministers of Russia and Norway will visit border towns and discuss cross-border and fishing cooperation on June 9-10, the Russian Foreign Ministry said on Monday. Jonas Gahr Stoere and Russia's Sergei Lavrov are to make a two-day trip to Murmansk, and the Norwegian town of Kirkenes, 250 kilometres away. The ministers are expected to exchange ratifications of the Varangerfjord maritime delimitation agreement, meet with local Russian and Norwegian authorities and businessmen, and inspect border crossings.

CPC elects younger delegates to national congress

By IANS, Beijing : The Communist Party of China (CPC) has elected younger and more grassroots-level delegates to attend its upcoming national congress, a senior party official said here Tuesday.

4 killed during football game in Mexican city

By IANS/EFE, Ciudad Juarez (Mexico) : Four people, including two minors, were shot dead and another was wounded while playing soccer in this Mexican city, authorities said.

Gunmen free 23 inmates at Mexican detention centre

By EFE, Monterrey (Mexico): A group of gunmen attacked a detention centre in the northern Mexican state of Nuevo Leon, freeing 23 inmates and killing two federal agents guarding the facility. State police said a group of more than 20 gunmen Friday attacked the detention center in Escobedo, part of the Monterrey metropolitan area, and killed federal agents Roberto Gonzalez Barco, 33, and Ricardo Mota, 42.

Chinese astronauts return to Earth

By IANS, Beijing: Three astronauts who completed China's first manned space docking safely returned to Earth Friday morning.

China train accident blamed on overspeeding

By Xinhua, Zhoucun (China) : Overspeeding was responsible for Monday's deadly train collision in east China that killed 70 people and injured 416 others, the investigation panel set up by the State Council said Tuesday. A high-speed train from Beijing to Qingdao, coded T195, veered off the rails in the city of Zibo at about 4:40 a.m. Monday. The derailed coaches smashed into another train, coded 5034, which was coming from the opposite direction on the adjacent track.

Georgian climbers erect 9/11 memorial plaque on Mt. Kazbek

Tbilisi : Eleven amateur and professional climbers from Georgia reached the summit of Mount Kazbek in northern Georgia as a memorial service for the...

Post Paris – Let some of us stand apart

Dr Syed Zafar Mahmood, The unfortunate attack on Charlie Hebdo magazine of Paris in January 2015 has brought to the fore a man-made cataclysm that has been threatening to shape up in the world for over two decades blatantly defying the existential necessity of 'maintaining an inter-community relationship balance' that's needed for the welfare of humanity and everything else in the multiverse. Like a clap it needs two hands.

Flat seized from Italian mafia to become kids’ home

By IANS, By AKI, Rome: Authorities in the Italian capital are converting an apartment that belonged to a mafia boss into a shelter for vulnerable children, officials said.

German state objects to reprinting of Nazi newspapers

By DPA, Munich : The German state of Bavaria demanded Friday that a British publishing company stop reprinting Nazi-period newspapers. The educational reprints of the newspapers have become best sellers in Germany where most people under 80 have never seen Nazi propaganda in the raw and those over 80 do not want to talk about it. Albertas Ltd hired German historians to annotate the facsimiles and underline the methods of Nazi propaganda. The new weekly series, using papers from the 1930s and 1940s, is aimed at the general public and schools.

Will Dhondy’s Sobhraj prophecy come true?

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : As he awaits a critical hearing on his sensational murder trial in Kathmandu's apex court Sunday, Charles Sobhraj says he is unperturbed by the dark prophecy made in a new book based on his life and crimes by a former acquaintance.

10 die in Russian plane crash

By IANS, Moscow : Ten people were killed Wednesday when their plane crashed in Russia's far eastern Kamchatka Peninsula, officials said.

Turmoil deepens in US air industry

By IRNA New York : The turmoil in the US airline industry deepened as the fourth US low-cost carrier in less than a month filed for bankruptcy, and American Airlines cancelled nearly 600 additional US flights for inspections. In all, American has canceled more than 3,000 flights this week, in a wave that began Tuesday. The actions, coupled with earlier cancellations at other airlines, have left passengers stranded coast to coast, disrupted businesses and tapped a deep well of ire against the airlines.

Strike calls disrupt normal life in Nepal

By Sudeshna Sarkar Kathmandu, Sep 28 (IANS) Nepal's Maoists, who left the coalition government earlier this month, called a two-day general strike in Mithilanchal, Nepal's Terai region, Friday to protest against the murder of their leader, Birendra Prasad Yadav, who was killed Monday. This fresh disruption of normal life comes less than a fortnight after violence engulfed the Terai region resulting in the death of 33 people and causing thousands to flee their homes. Sarlahi, Mahottari, Dhanusha, Siraha and Saptari districts were affected by the Maoist's shutdown call.

Ex-Tamil rebel supporters back ex-army leader in presidential race

By DPA, Colombo: A former pro-rebel Tamil political party Wednesday officially announced its support of former army commander Sarath Fonseka in Sri Lanka's Jan 26 presidential election. The Tamil National Alliance (TNA), Sri Lanka's most prominent Tamil party with 22 members in the 225-seat parliament, called on minority Tamils to support General Fonseka, the opposition candidate, who is running against incumbent Mahinda Rajapaksa. "We feel that he understands the problems of the minorities much better than his opponent," TNA leader R. Sampanthan said in Colombo.

Japan to be bridge on nuclear, climate, economic issues: Hatoyama

By DPA, New York : Japan's new Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said Thursday his government will act as a bridge between nuclear and non-nuclear states because Japan has suffered the devastation of atomic bombs in 1945. Hatoyama also said Japan will play the same role in economic fora, where the formulation of regulations dealing with financial markets are needed, including summits of the world's 20 richest economies (G20).

Russia braces for wave of Georgian terrorism

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russian police are preparing to thwart plans by Georgian terrorists to unleash attacks in major Russian cities in retaliation against Moscow's recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, a Russian daily said on Thursday. Izvestia published the texts of two alert notices sent to police stations nationwide, which said terrorists from Georgian radical movements had been preparing a series of attacks in cities including Moscow, St. Petersburg and the Black Sea resort of Sochi.

EU-India summit on November 30

By IANS

Brussels : Portugal, which takes over the six-month rotating Presidency of the European Union July 1, has planned summit-level meetings with all the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China), with the 8th EU-India summit scheduled for November 30 in New Delhi.

EU urged to help end Guantanamo ‘scandal’

By Nicholas Rigillo, DPA, Brussels : Sherif el-Mashad, a 32-year-old Egyptian with a knack for carpentry, moved to Italy in 1997 in search of a better life. Having obtained the necessary permits, he began working in a restaurant before setting up a small business near Lake Como. In July 2001, two months before the Sep 11 terrorist attacks against the US, he bought a round-trip ticket to Afghanistan, where he said he intended to spend some time doing charity work.

Over 2,000 Germans volunteer to help battle Ebola

Addia Ababa : Over 2,000 Germans have heeded the government's call to register as volunteers for deployment to fight the Ebola virus disease outbreak...

US Sikhs protest army ban on turban, long hair

By IANS, New York : Sikh organisations in America are launching protests and a signature campaign in favour of two Sikh military trainees who have been asked to remove their turbans and cut their hair to become eligible for active duty in the US Army.

US firm to invest $700 mn in Guatemala power plant

By IANS/EFE, Guatemala City : Jaguar Energy Guatemala, a subsidiary of Houston-based Ashmore Energy International (AEI), plans to invest a total of $700 million to build a power plant along Guatemala's south-central coast, a minister said. The 300 MW plant, to be fed by coal and other solid fuels, will be located in the town of Masagua, Escuintla province and is slated to come online in 2013, the local press cited Guatemalan Energy Minister Carlos Meany as saying. China Machine New Energy Corporation will build the facility.

Eastern Europe seeks NATO security reassurance

By DPA, Prague : Eastern European members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization want the alliance to provide them with a security reassurance at a time when the organization seeks ways to reinvent relations with Russia, officials said Tuesday. Ex-Soviet satellites that joined NATO in the years after Communism fell in Europe in 1989 want the alliance to make a renewed commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty's Article 5 in its new Strategic Concept, a NATO document that outlines key security goals.

CIS states to send experts to probe Sudan plane crashes

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Experts from the Interstate Aviation Committee (IAC), a civil aviation body for ex-Soviet states, will take part in a probe into recent crashes of Soviet-made transport planes in Sudan, the IAC said on Monday. "We have not received an official request from Sudan, but when we do, our experts, in line with international agreements, will fly to crash sites [in Sudan] to participate in the investigation," the spokesman said.

Bandaranaike wants to see women in peacekeeping role

By IANS

Brussels : Former Sri Lankan president Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga called for women to play an active role in crisis management and peacekeeping around the globe.

British Airways employees go on new five-day strike

By RIA Novosti, London : Cabin crews of U.K.'s largest air carrier, British Airways (BA), will go on another five-day strike on Saturday. Tensions between BA and the Unite trade union began in 2009, when the company said it would reduce cabin crew for long-haul flights from 15 to 14, making 1,000 full-time cabin crew staff redundant. It also announced that 3,000 other employees will switch to part, while salary growth would be frozen through 2010. The trade union has since held a number of walkouts, the latest held on May 30- June 3.

G7 to Analyze World Economic Challenges

By Prensa Latina Tokyo : The world's economic situation is more challenging and uncertain than in 2007, according to the draft of a communique that the Group of Seven (G7) will release on Saturday, after a meeting in this capital. The world economy is going through difficult times but its foundations are still solid, said the document, released to the press and in which the terms of the exchange markets have not been defined yet.

Bhutan’s royal astrologers plan for 2008 elections

By Syed Zarir Hussain

IANS

Thimphu : Yeshey Rinchen looks like any other maroon-robed Buddhist monk chanting hymns at the famous Tashichhodzong monastery, the summer residence of the head abbot of the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan.

Woman Gets 10 Years For Buying Bullets In East China

By Bernama Hanghou : A woman named Li Yangliu was given 10 years in prison for buying 688 bullets from thieves in eastern China's Zhejiang Province, China's Xinhua news agency quoted officials as saying here on Friday. The 37-year-old ran a salvage station with her husband, Chen De, in Wencheng Town. Li paid 460 yuan (about US$64.8) for the bullets as a bag of waste brass that had been stolen by two thieves, Lu Ping and Luo Hu, officials said. The two stole the bag of brass from a home in Wenzhou City in Zhejiang in September.

Polish PM dissolves cabinet ahead of new elections

By IRNA Berlin : Polish Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski dissolved the government coalition on Monday, only two days after declaring new parliamentary elections in fall, news reports said. All ministers of Kaczynski's junior coalition partners - the Samoobrona (Self-Defense) populist farmers' party and the right-wing Catholic nationalist League of Polish Families (LPR) were removed from their cabinet posts earlier in the day. "The work of the coalition has ended," Kaczynski was quoted as saying.

Bhutan’s constitution case: High Court verdict upheld

By NNN-KUENSEL, Thimphu : Bhutan's Supreme Court has upheld the verdict of the High Court on the first constitutional case which goes against the government.

Ecuatorial Guinea President Ends Cuba Visit

By Prensa Latina Havana : Ecuatorial Guinea President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo winds up Sunday an over 48-hour visit to Cuba, in which he inked two accords and met with First Vice President Raul Castro. "We and our peoples are greater friends, and we help each other," Raul Castro told press after signing two agreements between both governments. They were the reciprocal lifting of visa requirement in diplomatic, official and service passports, and cooperation between the foreign affairs ministries of Cuba and Equatorial Guinea.

‘Russia will respond pragmatically to NATO expansion’

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Russia will respond pragmatically to NATO's possible eastward expansion, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday. Lavrov's comment came after US President George W. Bush earlier Wednesday urged his European allies in the Romanian capital Bucharest to meet the request of Ukraine and Georgia to initiate procedure to admit them as members of the alliance.

Evacuation at Charles de Gaulle Airport over “suspicious” bag

By Sherouq Sadeqi, KUNA, Paris : The evacuation earlier in the day at Charles de Gaulle International Airport was over a suspicious bag left unattended, airport security sources told KUNA. The sources said this was a precautionary measure and the bag turned out to belong to a passenger who chose to abandon her bag to avoid paying for excessive luggage. The precautionary measure in such scenario is to examine the bag or item through special equipment to determine if destroying it is advisable, they noted.

Su-30 fighter crashes in Russia, crew safe

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : A Su-30 fighter jet crashed during a test flight in Russia Tuesday, but both the crew members ejected safely, officials said.

Majority of Chinese admit jumping red lights

By IANS, Beijing : A majority of Chinese - around 67 percent - say they have violated a basic traffic rule, jumping red lights, according to a government-led survey.

Two get death sentence in China milk scandal

By Xinhua, Shijiazhuang (China) : Two men were sentenced to death Thursday by a local court in connection with the China tainted milk scandal in which about 296,000 infants suffered kidney stones and other urinary problems. Zhang Yujun, who produced and sold melamine-laced "protein powder", was convicted of endangering public security and given capital punishment by the Shijiazhuang Intermediate People's Court, while the other man Geng Jinping was convicted of producing and selling toxic food.

Zimbabwe police raid opposition, 60 arrested

By ANTARA News/DPA, Harare/Johannesburg : Riot police in Zimbabwe raided the headquarters of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change on Monday, arresting about 60 people, all of them victims of political violence who had fled their homes, the party said. Most of those arrested were women and children, said party spokesman Nelson Chamisa, adding that police also took computers and furniture.

Sutil close to Force India contract renewal

By DPA, Berlin: Adrian Sutil has reached an agreement in principle to renew his contract at the Force India Formula One team for the next season, the German driver's manager said Monday.

‘Sons of soil’ mark Black Day, shut down Nepal

By Sudeshna Sarkar

IANS

Kathmandu : Condemning June 1 as a 'black day' in the history of Nepal's ethnic communities and flaying the failure of the government to address their grievances even after seven months, over 60 communities united under a common banner to enforce a countrywide shutdown Friday.

UNSC hails release of two abducted diplomats

United Nations: The UN Security Council (UNSC) Saturday welcomed the release of two Algerian diplomats abducted in northern Mali more than two years ago. In...

NATO warship helps Iranian vessel

By IANS, Brussels: A NATO warship rescued an Iranian-flagged vessel over the weekend just days after the vessel was freed from pirates by another NATO ship, the military alliance stated.

Colombia calls Venezuelan president sponsor of terrorism

By IANS Bogota : Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has accused his Venezuelan counterpart Hugo Chavez of sponsoring terrorism, Spain's EFE news agency reported Wednesday. "Colombia proposes to denounce Hugo Chavez, the president of Venezuela, in the International Criminal Court, for sponsoring and financing a genocide," Uribe told reporters Tuesday. Uribe made the remark after visiting Gloria Polanco de Lozada, one of the four hostages turned over to Venezuela last week by Colombian rebels.

UN chief welcomes Paris march against terrorism

United Nations : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon Sunday welcomed the march in Paris, held in memory of the victims of last week's terrorist...

Dubai’s food, rental prices among world’s highest

By IANS, Dubai: Housing and food prices in Dubai is similiar to some of the world's costliest cities like New York and Zurich, a Swiss study revealed Sunday.

Muslim pupil not allowed to pray at German school

By DPA, Berlin : A Berlin pupil does not have the right to perform 'namaz', Islamic prayer rituals, at school, an appeals court in the German capital ruled Thursday. In a decision that overturned a lower court ruling, the appeals court said that a curtailing of the teenager's right to religious freedom was justified as it would protect the constitutional rights of other pupils and their parents. Those rights include freedom of belief and entitlement to a calm educational environment, it said.

Typhoon kills 10 in Philippines

By Xinhua, Manila : At least 10 people have been killed after a typhoon hit the northern Philippine province of Pangasinan, officials said Friday. The Chan-Hom made landfall in the province Thursday night, killing at least 10 people and injuring 10 others, the National Disaster Coordinating Council said. The typhoon weakened into a tropical storm as it exited out of the country Friday, it said.

Hundreds of fossils found outside Argentina’s capital

By IANS/EFE, Buenos Aires : Paleontologists found about 300 well-preserved fossils of pre-historic animals at two quarries outside Buenos Aires, Argentine officials said.

15 dead in Bangkok blast

Bangkok: At least 15 people were killed and 80 wounded when a bomb exploded close to a shrine in the centre of the Thai...

Obama calls on world to confront scourges of hatred

ByDPA, Washington : US President Barack Obama marked Holocaust Remembrance Day Thursday by warning that preventing genocide in the future depends on the world's willingness to confront hatred wherever it arises. "Bearing witness is not the end of our obligation. It's just the beginning. We know that evil has yet to run its course on earth," Obama said. "We've seen it, in this century, in the mass graves and the ashes of villages burned to the ground and children used as soldiers and rape used as a weapon of war."

Sri Lanka to provide highest security for polls in east district

By NNN-Xinhua Colombo : The Sri Lankan government is to undertake the largest ever manpower deployment in the history of local government polls for the eastern Batticaloa district which will hold local council elections on March 10, said the official Daily News. This will be the first local elections in the former rebel-controlled area after a lapse of 14 years.

ASEAN to discuss ways to help Myanmar cyclone victims

By IRNA, Kuala Lumpur : The Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) is due to hold urgent talks to discuss ways of helping Myanmar cyclone victims. Foreign ministers meeting in Singapore hope Myanmar's military junta - which has so far blocked most of the foreign aid - might accept the ASEAN help. Myanmar says some 78,000 people have died since the cyclone hit on May 2. But aid agencies say many more may die without urgent help. the leader of Myanmar junta, General Than Shwe, met the cyclone victims in relief camps near Rangoon for the first time on Sunday.

Obama puts off review of deportations

Washington : US President Barack Obama's decision to postpone the completion of the deportation policy review until August, was received with criticism by activists...

Terrorism obsessed Bush ignored emergence of India, China: Biden

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : A senior US lawmaker has accused President George Bush of ignoring larger forces shaping the world "like the emergence of China, India, Russia and a united Europe" due to an obsession with the "war on terrorism". History will judge eight years of Bush presidency "less for the mistakes he made than for the opportunities he squandered", Joseph Biden, Democratic chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee, said Tuesday.

Ban Ki-moon applauds UN peacebuilding commission

By IRNA Tehran : Lauding the United Nations Peacebuilding Commission (PBC) on its one-year anniversary and its successes in Sierra Leone and Burundi, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon underscored the advisory body's key role in helping countries emerging from conflict avert a slide back to war. "The Peacebuilding Commission embodies all aspects of the UN's work: peace, development and human rights," Ban said at a PBC retreat he was attending last weekend.

Nepal government faces trouble over violence probe report

By IANS

Kathmandu : Nepal's eight-party government is likely to face fresh trouble next week when it finally makes public a controversial report on the probe into the killing of 25 unarmed protesters during the King Gyanendra regime's last days in power.

Venezuela to buy arms worth $5 bn from Russia

By IANS/EFE, Moscow : Venezuela will buy new arms from Russia valued at more than $5 billion, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has said. "Our delegation has just returned from Venezuela and the total amount of purchases could exceed $5 billion," Putin said Monday at a meeting here on the development of the country's arms industry. This includes the $2.2 billion loan that Russia will provide to Venezuela for the acquisition of new Russian weapons, the premier said.

British rabbi urges “peaceful dismantling of Zionist state”

By IRNA, Berlin : A prominent British-based dissident Jewish rabbi here Monday called for "the peaceful dismantling of the Zionist state." "We are calling for a peaceful dismantlement of the Zionist state and it can be done with the help of the world," said Rabbi Jacob Weisz in an interview with IRNA in Berlin. He stressed that dismantling the Zionist regime would in fact promote "peace and humanity." "To criticize, to condemn and to bring down Zionism is nothing anti-Jewish. On the contrary, it is for peace and humanity," Weisz said.

UK daily found guilty of smearing Muslim parliamentary candidate

By IRNA, London : A right-wing British newspaper has been found guilty of breaching the press code of conduct by smearing a Muslim candidate standing in the country’s general elections in May. “There was a breach of Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code which merited prompt and explicit remedial action on the part of the newspaper,” the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) ruled against the Daily Telegraph and is journalist Andrew Gilligan.

Peru to vaccinate seven mn against swine flu

By EFE, Lima : Some seven million people will be vaccinated against swine flu in Peru, Health Minister Oscar Ugarte has said. The health ministry is in the process of acquiring the vaccine and plans to have it available in November, Ugarte told the official Andina news agency. "The World Health Organization and the pharmaceutical companies are still setting the rules of the game, but we have appropriated funds for buying the vaccine anyway and it will go to groups in the population at risk on a priority basis," the health minister said.

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.

China sets free three Japanese who entered military zone

By IANS, Beijing : China Thursday released three of the four Japanese detained for intruding into Chinese military zone, authorities said.

Sri Lanka provincial polls register high voter turnout

By P. Karunakharan, IANS, Colombo : Voting for two of Sri Lanka's nine provincial councils ended Saturday evening with nearly 70 percent of little over two million eligible voters casting their votes in the relatively violence-free poll, official sources here said. "The voter turn out is roughly about 70 percent. By and large, it is an election free of violence," an official of the Election Secretariat here told IANS Saturday evening.

Putin offers new development strategy for Russia

By RIA Novosti Moscow : President Vladimir Putin Friday envisioned a new development strategy, emphasising greater use of "human potential" as the only way for Russia's progress. Putin, who enjoys widespread popularity in the country, will step down after eight years in office following the March 2 presidential elections. Admitting that Russia had so far failed to get out of an 'inert' dependence on natural resources, the president described what he called "innovative development" as the only alternative to dependence on natural resources.

New Zealand prime minister fights for political life

By DPA Wellington : New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark - after nearly nine years in office one of the longest-surviving leaders in the developed world - is gearing up for the fight of her political life against a greenhorn politician bent on ousting her this election year. If the opinion polls are correct, Clark, 58, a Labour Party member of parliament since 1981, is heading for a humiliating thrashing at the hands of John Key, 46, who became leader of the opposition conservative National Party only 16 months ago.

18th Saarc Summit to focus on peace, prosperity, unity in region: Diplomats

By Anil Giri, Kathmandu : The forthcoming 18th Saarc Summit to be held in Kathmandu will focus on installing durable peace and prosperity among the...

Six die in Colombia’s landslides

By SPA, Bogota : At least six people died and 20 were missing Saturday after landslides in Colombia followed violent rainfalls in Medellin, Colombia's second largest city. Some 20 people were buried under the rubble of their homes, said Medellin mayor Alonso Salazar. The destroyed homes were in a poor neighbourhood on a hillside where 16 people were injured, DPA reported.

High-ranking foreign officials look into Myanmar cyclone relief works

By Xinhua, Yangon : British Foreign Office Minister Lord Malloch Brown and Japanese Deputy Foreign Minister Hitoshi Kimura are currently in Yangon to look into the status of Myanmar's relief and resettlement works in the aftermath of the cyclone disaster, the state-run newspaper New Light of Myanmar reported Monday.

Lives ebb away as Myanmar’s military sidelines vital aid

By Simon Parry, DPA, Myawaddy (Myanmar) : It was supposed to be a moment of hope, a breakthrough in the troubled international aid effort for the hundreds of thousands of Myanmarese victims of Cyclone Nargis. Instead, I watched as the delivery of the first overland aid convoy was received with stark indifference by military officials either ill prepared or uninterested in speeding the aid to those in need.

Chinese tense as men in khaki swamp Olympic torch relay route

By IANS, New Delhi : A dramatic mock Olympic torch relay run by Tibetans here Tuesday afternoon stunned the authorities even as they promised a Chinese delegation that the real torch relay Thursday will be held under a tight security blanket and pass off peacefully. Fearing a repeat of the disturbances that marred the torch relay in London and Paris, commandos from paramilitary forces and thousands of policemen swarmed the two-kilometre route from the presidential palace to the World War I India Gate monument in the heart of the capital.

Ecuador in talks to buy South African warplanes

By EFE, Quito : Ecuador is in talks to purchase 12 Cheetah C fighter jets from South Africa for the armed forces, a media report said citing Defence Minister Javier Ponce. Ecuador Air Force has recommended the purchase of South African warplanes due to its low cost, the El Universo daily reported. Spain and Chile were also in the contention but their bids exceeded the budget for modernisation of the Ecuadorian fleet, the report said Thursday.

Polish president, wife given emotional farewell

By Surender Bhutani, IANS, Krakow : Millions of Poles glued to television sets and thousand teary-eyed men and women gathered in this historic city Sunday gave an emotive farewell to Polish President Lech Kaczynski and his wife Maria, who died in a horific aircrash in Russia eight days ago. Several world leaders joined Poland in a national mourning not witnessed in the country since 1935, with a Church leader upstaging politicians by calling for reconciliation with Russia.

Greek leaders fail to agree on new PM

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Athens : Talks between Greece's political leaders on a new coalition government ended Wednesday without reaching an agreement on a new prime minister.

Maoists woo Muslims with offer of special commission

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : In a bid to woo Nepal's minority Muslims, Maoist supremo Prachanda has promised the formation of a powerful Muslim Commission to protect the rights of the group after a Maoist-led government is formed. "In the past, Muslims and other sects suffered oppression as Hindu extremism prevailed in Nepal. To compensate for that, our party supports giving Muslims special rights," Prachanda, poised to be the next prime minister of Nepal, said at an event here Tuesday.

EU signs first FTA with an Asian country

By EuAsiaNews, Brussels : The European Union and South Korea signed here Wednesday a landmark Free Trade Agreement (FTA) the first the 27-member bloc has signed with an Asian country.

Chinese police killer sentenced to death

By RIA Novosti, Beijing : A Chinese court sentenced a man to death on Monday for stabbing to death six policemen and injuring four others in Shanghai, the Xinhua news agency said. Yang Jia, 28, an unemployed man from Beijing, attacked a police station in China's most populous city on July 1 last year. Carrying a knife, a hammer, a mask, aerosol spray, and homemade explosives, he first stabbed the guard at the entrance to the Shanghai police station, then started a fire at the gate before bursting inside and attacking the officers.

Netanyahu was smuggled into hospital during polls

London : Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was smuggled into hospital twice during the country's elections earlier this year for secret cancer checks,...

Death toll in Haitian school collapse rises to 92

By Xinhua, Mexico City : At least 92 people have been killed and 150 others injured in the collapse of a church school in the suburbs of Haitian capital Port-au-Prince, media reported Saturday. Search for survivors in the remains of the College La Promesse is still underway, according to reports reaching here from Port-au-Prince. Two girls and two boys aged from three to 13 years were rescued alive from under ruins of the three-storied building Saturday, bringing the number of survivors to 35.

Powerful Quake Hits Eastern Indonesia

By Bernama Jakarta : An earthquake with magnitude of 6.4 rocked Maluku province in eastern parts of Indonesia on Thursday morning with no damage or casualties were reported, the country's meteorology and disaster management agencies said here. The quake struck at 02:10 Jakarta time (1910GMT Wednesday) with epicenter located about 223 kilometers northwest Saumlaki town of the province and 136 kilometers in depth, China's Xinhua news agency quoted an official of the meteorology agency as saying here.

War on Gaza dominates UNSC debate on “Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict”

UNITED NATIONS, Jan 15 (NNN-KUNA) -- The situation in Gaza dominated a Security Council debate on 'Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict' around the world, with the UN top humanitarian coordinator John Holmes reiterating UN calls for an immediate ceasefire. "Only a full and fully respected ceasefire will spare the civilian population from these horrors. And even then, their need for assistance will remain both urgent and overwhelming."

WHO Director-General visits Cuba

By IANS, Havana : Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organisation (WHO) has arrived in Cuba for a four-day visit. Her visit includes a tour of important scientific institutions in the country including the Center of Engineering and Biotechnology, the Center of Molecular Immunology and the Tropical Medicine Institute Pedro Kouri, Cuban news agency Prensa Latina reported Sunday.

UN rights chief warns CAR fighting factions

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

Chasing designer dreams, he goes from Andhra to Scotland

By IANS, New Delhi : Indian designer Raakesh Agarvwal, who ran away from home to chase his designing dreams against the wishes of his family, is now set to showcase his work at a prestigious fashion event in Scotland for the second time. Agarvwal has been selected to participate in the St. Andrews Charity Fashion Feb 28 in Scotland where he will be rubbing shoulders with international designers like Luella, Giorgio Armani and DKNY amongst others.

One person injured in bomb explosion in southern Russia

By RIA Novosti, Rostov-On-On : One person was injured after a home-made bomb went off in the southern Russian republic of Ingushetia, the republic's interior ministry said on Sunday. A roadside bomb exploded early on Sunday in the village of Sagopshi in the Malgobek district in northwest Ingushetia, wounding Bagaudin Tsechoyev, brother of a law enforcement officer, the ministry said. The bomb went off when Tsechoyev was driving in his car not far from his brother's house, the ministry said. Measures are under way to find the attackers, the ministry said.
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