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UK admits 3,000 blank passports, visas stolen

By KUNA, London : About 3,000 blank passports and visas have been stolen while being transported from Manchester, northern England, to London, it was announced here Tuesday. The documents were in a van which was targeted yesterday morning. The British Foreign Office admitted a serious breach of security over the loss of the passports and visa stickers, which were being sent to embassies overseas. However, the passport service said the stolen documents could not be used by thieves because of their hi-tech embedded chip security features.

World powers to meet again on North Korea issue

By Xinhua, New York : The five permanent members (P5) of the UN Security Council and Japan are scheduled to meet Tuesday afternoon on North Korea's missile launch, Japan's envoy to the UN Yukio Takasu said here Monday. The Japanese diplomat made the statement after closed-door meeting of the UN Security Council here Monday afternoon. "We have a tentative time but it depends on how quickly get instructions (from capitals) but probably in the course of tomorrow afternoon," Takasu said.

Moore defends decision to take sick US workers to Cuba

By IANS

New York : Acclaimed director Michael Moore has defended his decision to take the sick 9/11 rescue workers to Cuba because he wanted to prove that Al Qaeda detainees were receiving better healthcare facilities there.

Afghan civilians killed in NATO airstrike

By DPA, Kabul : Around 30 people, including "a big number" of civilians and several Taliban militants, were killed in a clash with international forces in western Afghanistan, a provincial governor said Tuesday. The violence erupted Monday afternoon when Taliban militants attacked police posts in Shiwan and Gunj Abad, two villages in Bala Bulok district of the western province of Farah, provincial Governor Ruh-ul-Amin said.

US stocks slide over European summit doubts

By IANS, New York : The US stocks traded lower Thursday as investors doubted what European leaders can achieve at Sunday's summit, Xinhua reported.

Cambodia Will Not Boycott Asean Summit Despite Border Clash

By Bernama, Phnom Penh : The bilateral armed clash at the border area in October will not stop Cambodia from attending the upcoming ASEAN Summit in Thailand, Chinese news agency XINHUA quoted an official as saying. "We will not boycott the summit in December, even as we have border dispute," Phay Siphan, secretary of state of the Cambodian Council of Ministers told a seminar here. The clash in October killed two Cambodian soldiers and wounded two others, after Thai troops entered the disputed area over sovereignty claim.

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.

Italy to help Russia destroy chemical weapons

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Italy has pledged 360 million euros ($565 million) to help Russia destroy its stockpiles of chemical weapons by 2012, a Russian senator said Wednesday. Russia signed the Chemical Weapons Convention, which bans the development, production, stockpiling, transfer, and use of chemical weapons, in 1993 and ratified it in 1997. The country is to destroy all its declared arsenal of 40,000 metric tons of chemical weapons by 2012.

NGO denounces G8 move to go back on AIDS treatment promise

By IANS, London : The draft of the communique expected at the end of the G8 summit in Japan next week reportedly goes back on the promise to provide universal access to AIDS treatment and prevention by 2010, a move denounced by international NGO ActionAid here Tuesday. The NGO has also denounced the reported backtracking on the G8's 2005 commitment to increase development aid to Africa by $25 billion a year.

Protest in Boston against arbitrary arrest of human rights defenders in India

By TCN News: Boston, MA, US: Over 50 people assembled at Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to protest against the arbitrary arrests of human rights defenders...

U.S. promises cannot be trusted – Gorbachev

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Promises made by U.S. leaders cannot be trusted, former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev said in an interview with The Daily Telegraph published on Wednesday. "The Americans promised that NATO wouldn't move beyond the boundaries of Germany after the Cold War, but now half of central and eastern Europe are members, so what happened to their promises? It shows they cannot be trusted," he said in Paris.

Woman crushed to death by elevator

By IANS, London : A woman in the US was crushed to death while trying to climb out of an elevator that was stuck between floors.

Gates foundation marks $1.5 billion for mothers

By DPA, Washington : The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has said it would invest $1.5 billion in developing countries to support the health of pregnant mothers and their children and aid family planning and nutrition. "The world must come together to save women's and children's lives," Melinda Gates said in a press statement Monday.

Nepal’s ex-princess takes up pen again

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : For more than two centuries, Nepal's royal family endured its joy and grief in the privacy of its mansions. But now, with the tide of fortune reducing its members to commoners, one former princess is ready to break the wall of silence. Sheeba Shivangini Singh's family married her off to a dashing pilot in the Nepal Army when she was only 19. Her husband, Lt Col Bikash Bikram Shah`, is a nephew of Gyanendra Shah, the last king of Nepal.

China to recruit 100,000 graduates at grassroots level

By IANS, Beijing : China is planning to recruit 100,000 graduates by 2015 to work in grassroots units.

Poland calls for united EU diplomacy towards Russia

By Xinhua Berlin : Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk called for the European Union to speak with one voice in its diplomatic dealings with Russia, local reports said. "The sooner all the countries in the union realise that a united voice in foreign policy is important, the better the relations of the individual countries and of the union as a whole with our neighbour in the east would develop," Tusk wrote in a guest column in the German daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Monday.

Hong Kong brought to standstill by tropical storm

By DPA, Hong Kong : Flights and other transport services were suspended and offices and businesses, including government departments and the stock exchange, were closed for much of Wednesday as tropical storm Kammuri battered the territory. Cathay Pacific Airways suspended all Hong Kong operations for four hours as a result of the strong winds caused by the storm. All ferry services to Macau, southern China and Hong Kong's outlying islands were also halted. Most bus and tram services were also halted as people stayed home.

Kidnapped South Korean freed in southern Philippines

By Xinhua, Manila : Unidentified kidnappers have freed without ransom a 30-year-old South Korean and a Filipino businessman kidnapped in March in a mountainous area in Mindanao, southern Philippines, police said on Saturday. Senior Superintendent Adap Panares, provincial police chief of Lanao del Sur province in Mindanao, said 10 heavily armed men released Tae Jung, a South Korean who ventured on chromite mining, and his Filipino business contact Victor Macasieras Friday near Kapai town, Lanao del Sur.

Lockheed Martin F-35 wraps up testing at Edwards base

By IANS, Edwards Air Force Base (California) : The first Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II fighter has finished all planned testing here, demonstrating that the aircraft, the support crews, and contractor and military service personnel are ready for the dramatically expanded flight testing on the programme's horizon, the manufacturer said. "This initial round of testing at Edwards is just the beginning," Doug Pearson, Lockheed Martin vice president of the F-35 Integrated Test Force, said in a statement.

US Navy monitoring hijacked oil tanker’s movement

By DPA, Nairobi : The US Navy is monitoring the path of a hijacked Saudi oil tanker as it makes its way to anchorage off the coast of Somalia but does not plan any action to recover the ship, a US navy official said Tuesday. The tanker Sirius Star, which was sailing under a Liberian flag, was seized by Somali pirates on 450 nautical miles south-east of the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa.

South Korea to open gold trading market

Seoul: South Korea's financial regulator said Sunday that market will start trading gold on spot next week to disclose gold transactions, which were blamed...

North Korean leader gives son high party posts

By DPA, Seoul : North Korean leader Kim Jong Il Wednesday named his youngest son and potential successor to important ruling party posts, state media reported.

New hope for cancer patients; Canadian scientists test viral vaccine

By IANS, Toronto : Spelling new hope for cancer patients, Canadian scientists have successfully tested a viral vaccine to improve immune response to the deadly disease. The scientists at the local Princess Margaret Hospital and the University of Toronto, in collaboration with international researchers, have discovered how to trigger an improved immune response to cancer. They say their discovery could be included in new clinical trials that use a patient's own cells to destroy tumours.

Veteran of Obama cabinet favours normalising US-Cuba ties

Madrid : Former US interior secretary Ken Salazar has said he favours "normalising" relations between his country and Cuba, and expressed optimism at the...

I’d rather be a really good one-term president: Obama

By DPA, Washington : US President Barack Obama has said in a broadcast interview that he would hold firm to his initiatives, such as reforming the health care system, even if it costs him re-election in 2012. "I'd rather be a really good one-term president than a mediocre two-term president," he said in an interview on ABC News aired late Monday.

Businessmen Confident Of Market Opportunities In Tibet After Violence

By Bernama Lhasa : The Lhasa violence that erupted last month has not dampened businessmen's confidence in the potential of the market, a Tibet Autonomous Region industrial and commercial authority official has said. China's Xinhua news agency reported Friday that after the March 14 violence, 15 new private companies were registered at the regional bureau of industry and commerce with registered capital totaling 59.4 million yuan (US$8.49 million), according to bureau of statistics.

Russia terms anti-Iran US sanctions as ‘illegitimate’

By IANS, Moscow : Russia Tuesday dismissed the US sanctions against Iran as "illegitimate", Xinhua reported. The unilateral sanctions have no legal ground and will destroy...

70 per cent Czechs favour NATO membership: poll

Prague: About 70 per cent of the Czech people support their country's NATO membership, results of a poll released by the Prague Centre for...

UK bank collapses

By IRNA, London : London Scottish Bank (LSB) announced Monday it was going into administration after regulators stopped the lenders, which specializes in customers with poor credit histories group, from accepting customer deposits. In the six months to April 2008, the bank unveiled losses of Pnds 7.4 million (Dlrs 11 m). Its shares were also suspended at 2.62 pence, having lost almost all of their value amid its financial problems over the past year.

G20 labour ministers pledge to work against jobless recovery

By DPA, Washington : Labour ministers from the world's 20 leading economies pledged to avoid the prospect of a jobless recovery in the coming years after their first-ever summit meeting ended Wednesday. In a joint statement, the Group of 20 (G20) bloc promised measures to "accelerate job creation" in their own countries, boost job training and education programmes. The G20 labour ministers held a two-day gathering in Washington as most industrial nations are grappling with high unemployment rates, even as their economies emerge from a two-year recession.

Sikh woman in New York fights harassment, wins

By IANS, New York : After a legal battle lasting more than three years, a Sikh woman here, who faced racial, religious and sexual harassment at her workplace, has forced her employer to not only pay her compensation, but also make changes in its employment policies. "The settlement reached between Sukhbir Kaur and her employer, National Wholesale Liquidators (NWL), sends a strong message to private employers that discrimination against Sikhs is illegal and will be harshly punished," non-profit organisation Sikh Coalition, said in a statement Wednesday.

‘Attacks on journalists in Russia a concern’

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Strasbourg (France) : Council of Europe Human Rights Commissioner Thomas Hammarberg has expressed concern over attacks on journalists in Russia.

Sri Lankan army claims to kill 24 LTTE cadres

By IRNA New Delhi : Twenty-four cadres of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were killed in separate encounters in Jaffna, Mannar and Vavuniya districts Wednesday, claimed Sri Lankan military. The fighting took place at Pulmudai, Mullikulam and Thampane areas, All India Radio (AIR) reported here quoting spokesman for Sri Lankan National Security. Quoting intercepted wireless communications of the LTTE, the spokesman said many Tamil Tigers were also injured during the hostilities.

Saudi King invites Abbas to Muslim summit with Trump

Riyadh, (IANS/AKI): Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has received an invitation to attend an upcoming summit in Riyadh between Muslim leaders and US President...

Haiti school building collapse toll rises to 90

By ANS, Port-au-Prince : The death toll from the school building collapse in Petionville, in the eastern outskirts of the Haitian capital, has risen to 90, EFE news agency reported Monday, citing officials. Legislator Steven Benoit, who represents Petionville, told reporters Sunday that Rescue officials have recovered at least 90 bodies so far, adding that there was little chance of finding any more survivors three days after the school's collapse.

Former Tamil rebels wed in Sri Lanka

By DPA, Colombo : Fifty-three former Tamil rebel couples in northern Sri Lanka were wed in a mass ceremony Sunday, an official said. Most of the couples had met when they were members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam fighting against government troops, before the movement was militarily crushed in May last year. The ceremony was attended by Indian Bollywood star Vivek Oberoi and President Mahinda Rajapaksa's son Namal, in Vavuniya, 254 km north of the capital, a government official said.

Russian teen’s death: Consulate rejects police’s accident theory

By Mayabhushan Nagvenkar, IANS, Panaji : In a major blow to the credibility of the Goa Police, Russian authorities have refused to accept their contention that 19-year-old Elena Sukhova's death was accidental. In a letter to Chief Minister Digambar Kamat, Russian consul general Alexander Mantytsky asked him to take "personal control" of the police investigation since "the accident theory doesn't seem conclusive".

US, S Korea Drills to Doom Talks

By Prensa Latina Beijing : The US and South Korea will carry out joint military exercises in March, official sources informed on Friday, in a display of power that will darken the six-way talks on denuclearization in Beijing. The Key Resolve exercise will be held March 2-7 to test the South Korean army's capability to command operations in times of war from April 2012 on, according to a release by the US-South Korean Command.

Myanmar may use force to curb riots

By IANS, Yangon: Myanmar President U Thein Sein has warned of using force as a last resort to suppress the current rioting in the country and protect people.

Sri Lanka Merchant Ships Attacked

By Prensa Latina, Colombo : The separatist group Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) claimed responsibility for Wednesday's suicide attack on two merchant ships transporting essential supplies for the civil population in the north of the country, affirmed the Sri Lankan government. The Sri Lanka Navy's spokesman Commander D.K.P. Dassanayake reported the three suicide boats from the so-called Black Tigers of the Sea attacked Ruhuna and Nimalawa ships at 05:00 local hour, damaging the second. The action took place near Kankasanthurai port in Jaffna peninsula.

Sri Lanka’s ex-army chief leaves US without facing questioning

By DPA, Colombo : General Sarath Fonseka, who was Sri Lanka's army commander when it defeated Tamil rebels in May, left the US without being questioned by US authorities about the final phase of military operations against the guerrillas, the foreign ministry said Wednesday. It was believed the expected questioning concerned suspected human rights abuses committed during the final campaign against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Gaga reduces drinking

By IANS, Los Angeles: Singer Lady Gaga has decided she will now consume less alcohol as she no longer feels "depressed".

Last king attends prayers to restore Nepal as Hindu state

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : The last Hindu king of the country, Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah, made news Monday by turning up at a ritual prayer called by a self-styled Hindu godman to seek the restoration of Hinduism as the state religion. Only 81 days are left for the promulgation of a new constitution that will consolidate Nepal as a secular republic.

50 migrants found dead in ship near Libya

Rome: The bodies of at least 50 migrants have been found in the hold of a craft off the Libyan coast, the Italian coast...

88 killed in North Korea floods

By IANS, Beijing : Floods triggered by torrential downpour have killed 88 people in North Korea, the official KCNA news agency reported.

Heavy fighting erupts in Sri Lanka’s north

By IANS, Colombo : Heavy fighting broke out in Sri Lanka's north as Tamil Tigers gave fierce resistance to government troops trying to reach a highway that cuts across rebel territory, authorities said Friday. The ministry of defence said long hours of fighting Thursday close to Panikkankulam left scores of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) cadres dead. Many guerrillas were also reported missing.

Asian scientists call for equitable solutions for energy, environmental issues

By Xinhua

Ginowan : Sustainable development and solution of energy and environmental issues should be achieved through an equitable manner, Asian scientists agreed in a statement at the conclusion of a regional science conference here on Saturday.

Obama to campaign in states favoring U.S. Republicans

By Xinhua, Washington : U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama would campaign in states taken by Republicans in the 2004 presidential elections with an aim at influencing local elections, said a political website report on Wednesday. Citing Obama's deputy campaign manager Steve Hildebrand, the Politico report said that apart from the 15 states the Illinois Senator thought he could win in the November general elections, he would also devote some resources in campaigning largely in the 14 states that George W. Bush won during his re-election.

New Zealand downgrades tsunami alert as three quakes shake Pacific

By DPA, Wellington : New Zealand civil defence authorities downgraded an initial tsunami warning after three big quakes hit the South Pacific Thursday, saying there was no confirmation that a tsunami had been created. Any tsunami was unlikely to be destructive for New Zealand, they said. But officials issued a warning that people should stay away from beaches on part of the coastline.

Paris court dismisses Sarkozy ‘voodoo doll’ suit

By DPA, Paris : A Paris court Wednesday dismissed a suit by French President Nicolas Sarkozy to force a French publisher to stop selling a voodoo doll in his image, French media reported. In their ruling, the judges found that the Sarkozy voodoo doll did "not represent an offence to his human dignity or a personal attack". Instead, its creation and sale were permitted by the publisher's right to freedom of expression and its "right to express humour". The publisher, K&B Editions, put 20,000 Sarkozy voodoo dolls on sale on Oct 9.

US War Vet Joins Vietnam Victims

By Prensa Latina Hanoi : US war veteran Larry Vetter affiliated to the Vietnamese Association of Agent Orange Victims, sources from the organization informed Friday from the central province of Da Nang. Vetter, former soldier also affected by the effects of the dioxin known as Agent Orange, said he is willing to work in support of the millions of Vietnamese children, women, and men with severe after-effects caused by the dioxin several generations after the war.

Over 400,000 Nepalis leave for jobs overseas

By IANS, Kathmandu : More than 400,000 Nepali youths have left the country in 10 months of the current fiscal year in search of jobs, a media report said.

Global warming threat to tropical rainforests exaggerated

By IANS, London : The threat to tropical rainforests from global warming may have been exaggerated, says a new study.

South has role to play in changing world order: Anand Sharma

By Fakir Hassen, IANS, Johannesburg : One of the major challenges for India and South Africa as the world moves to a multipolar society is for them to play a role in changing the order for a quality transformation of the global regime so that the countries of the South take their rightful place, Indian Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma said here Tuesday.

British man dies of suspected Ebola infection

Skppje: A British man with Ebola symptoms died Thursday at a health clinic in Macedonia. It is not confirmed yet if the unnamed British man...

Maoist Party Easy Nepal Winner

By Prensa Latina, Katmandu : After a vote count in 163 electoral districts the Nepal Maoist Communist Party (CPN-M) won 89 of them and is headed toward an overwhelming victory in the constituent assembly elections, which are considered fair by international observers. The other two relevant groups, the Nepali Congress Party (NC) and the Marxist Leninist Unified Communist Party (CPN-UML) are going very far in second and third place with 28 and 23 seats, respectively.

Nepal to probe ex-royals’ assets at home, abroad

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Nepal's new government Thursday tabled its policies and programmes in parliament, pledging to investigate the properties and assets owned by the former royal family. As the Maoist siege of the house ended after two months, their arch enemy President Ram Baran Yadav tabled the new policies and programme of the communist-led government that gave priority to ferreting out the properties of its former King Gyanendra and his family members in Nepal and abroad and bring them under state control.

Security Council to act on North Korea missile launch

By DPA, New York : Held back from stronger steps by China and Russia, the UN Security Council was preparing later Monday to consider chastising North Korea for its rocket launch earlier this month. China and Russia, which have veto power on the council, had objected to a harsher reaction in the form of more sanctions as suggested by Japan and the United States, citing their concern that it would undermine the six-party talks aimed at getting Pyongyang to dismantle its nuclear programme.

Tsunami threat: People evacuated from Russian islands

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Russia) : Residents of Kuril Islands in Russia's Far East were being evacuated due to the threat of tsunami roused by a quake in Chile, an official said. The expected height of waves to hit the regional coast is some 2 metres, spokesman for the local administration said. "The inland of the North Kuril Islands is not subjected to the threat," he said. An 8.8-magnitude earthquake hit Chile in the early hours of Saturday killing at least 300 people.

China home to 383,000 super rich in 2010

By IANS, Beijing: Thanks to the booming capital and property markets, the number of super rich in China is expected to rise by 16 percent to 383,000 this year, a media report said.

More than 10,000 Burmese people die in cyclone disaster

By IRNA, New York : More than 10,000 people were killed in a devastating cyclone that hit western Burma, Foreign Minister Nyan Win said on state TV Monday night. He said his government was ready to accept international assistance. Thousands of survivors of Cyclone Nargis are lacking shelter, drinking water, power and communications. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon expressed his sadness at the scale of the disaster. He said that UN officials were meeting Burmese government representatives to discuss how to help.

Bolt strikes first Commonwealth gold

Glasgow: Six-time Olympic champion Usain Bolt anchored Jamaica to the men's 4X100m title at the Commonwealth Games at Hampden Park here Saturday. The Jamaican quartet...

Tibetans protest Chinese foreign minister’s visit

New Delhi : Tibetan emigres Sunday staged a protest in Delhi against Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi's visit to India. With banners that read "Prime...

Patients suffering from low availability of essential medicines: WHO study

By IRNA, Geneva : An alarming lack of availability of essential medicines in the public sector drives patients to pay higher prices in the private sector or go without, according to a World Health Organization study reported in today's online edition of The Lancet. The results confirm that governments must do more to improve access to essential medicines as part of their efforts to make national health systems more efficient and equitable.

Tokyo High Court Oks Retrial Of 2 Convicts Over 1967 Murder-robbery

By Bernama, Tokyo : The Tokyo High Court decided Monday to reopen a 1967 murder-robbery case in Tone, Ibaraki Prefecture, citing ''serious'' doubts about the witness accounts and the initial confessions of the two convicted men, Kyodo news reported. "There remain serious doubts over the defendants' confessions and witness accounts, casting reasonable doubt on the guilty ruling," Presiding Judge Hiroshi Kadono said, approving the retrial sought by the two men -- Shoji Sakurai and Takao Sugiyama, both 61, who were sentenced to life imprisonment.

Sri Lanka presidential elections underway amid tight security

By IRNA, New Delhi : The polling for the sixth Presidential election in Sri Lanka has been more or less peaceful so far. Election monitors say minor election related incidents have been reported in some areas including Jaffna and Gampaha. The Centre for Free and Fair Elections (CAFFE) said that there were more than 6 minor incidents reported early Tuesday morning, All India Radio (AIR) reported. A grenade exploded near the Jaffna mayor’s office in Nallur although no injuries were reported. Some of the party functionaries were also attacked and fired at.

Sarkozy ready to revisit Russia, Georgia-French PM

By SPA, Paris : President Nicolas Sarkozy is ready to revisit Moscow and Tbilisi to help resolve the Russian-Georgian conflict, REUTERS quoted French Prime Minister Francois Fillon as saying on Monday. Fillon told French radio Sarkozy would put forward proposals at a summit of European Union leaders called to discuss the crisis later on Monday, but he said the question of possible sanctions against Russia was not on the agenda. "The French president will propose to his European counterparts a number of initiatives which we will see in a few days," he told Europe 1 radio.

Killed Somali pirates were ‘untrained’ teenagers: Gates

By Xinhua, Washington : US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has said the three Somali pirates who were killed by the Navy's Seals to end a hostage crisis were "untrained" teenagers. Addressing an audience at the Marine Corps War College in Quantico, Virginia, Gates said Monday that the slain pirates, aged at between 17 and 19, were heavily armed but inexperienced. They were shot dead Sunday at the end of a five-day standoff with the US military after they attacked a US-flagged cargo ship about 400 km from Somali coast and held the ship's American captain as hostage.

A fit McCain set to audition Jindal, 2 others as running mate

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Presumptive Republican nominee John McCain was declared in "excellent physical and mental health" as he prepared to meet three potential running mates including Bobby Jindal, who could balance concerns over his age. "We can find nothing in his medical history that would preclude him from serving as president of the United States with vigour," Dr. John Eckstein, who serves as McCain's primary care physician at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Arizona, told reporters Friday.

Hackers claim to have defaced 500 Chinese websites

By IANS, London : Hacker group Anonymous has claimed to have defaced around 500 websites in China to protest against the Chinese government's strict control of its citizens, BBC reported.

Australian leader meets the Dalai Lama amid Chinese ‘concern’

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Sydney : Acting Prime Minister Chris Evans met the Dalai Lama Friday following a warning from Beijing Thursday night to heed its "grave concerns" that the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader should not be allowed to engage in "separatist activities" while in Australia.

China, Nigeria vow to further bilateral co-op

By Xinhua Beijing : China and Nigeria on Thursday vowed to expand cooperation from fields such as energy and telecommunications to agriculture, infrastructure and manufacturing. The two sides issued a joint press communique after talks between Chinese President Hu Jintao and visiting Nigerian counterpart Umaru Yar'Adua, pledging to continue to promote the growth of relations. During the talks, the heads of the state expressed satisfaction at the evolving strategic partnership between their two countries.

Berlusconi suffers injuries in vicious attack, hospitalised

By IANS/AKI, Milan : Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was savagely attacked Sunday at the end of a political rally in the centre of the city. He suffered two damaged teeth, a broken nose, cuts to his lips and other facial injuries. The prime minister's spokesman and undersecretary to the Cabinet, Paolo Bonaiuti, said the prime minister had a bad headache throughout the night but had asked to read the newspapers as soon as he woke up Monday. Berlusconi was struck in the face by a man holding a small replica of Milan's landmark cathedral.

Why do Muslims sacrifice animals on Eid?

Every year on the occasion of Eid-ul-Adha, Muslims across the world sacrifice animals to mark the sacrifice made by Prophet Ibrahim (PBUH). The article...

Melting Himalayas imperil Asia

By Joydeep Gupta, IANS, Copenhagen: Around 1.3 billion people in India, the rest of South Asia and China are at imminent risk of water shortage due to climate change, according to the UN. The Kathmandu-based UN organisation International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) has found that "global warming is having a serious impact on the amount of snow and ice" in the Himalayas, "which has serious implications for downstream water availability as up to 50 percent of the average annual flows in the rivers are contributed by snow and glacial melting".

Police probing shooting of Sri Lankan journalist

By IANS, Colombo : The Sri Lankan police Saturday launched investigations into the shooting of a journalist attached to a leading independent newspaper, reported Xinhua.

US extends Myanmar sanctions

By IANS, Washington : The US has extended its sanctions on Myanmar for another year, the White House said. "Because the actions and policies of the government of Burma (Myanmar) continues to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the US," the sanctions imposed on Burma will continue in effect beyond May 20, it said in a statement Friday. The US accuses Myanmar of committing "large-scale repression of the democratic opposition". The sanctions included prohibition on new investment, Xinhua reported.

Top official dead, minister hurt in Congo plane crash

By IANS, Kinshasa : An adviser to the Democratic Republic of Congo's president was killed and the finance minister injured in a plane crash Sunday, Xinhua reported.

Russian police detain 2,100 to prevent ethnic clash

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russian police have detained more than 2,100 protesters in and around Moscow to prevent clash between ultra-nationalists and migrants.

We were luckier than most people in Kathmandu: Quake survivor

By Anil Giri, Kathmandu : In the aftermath of the massive 7.9 earthquake that hit Nepal on Saturday, there were many, many stories of hardship...

Farmers around the world upbeat about GM food crops

By IANS London : Buoyed by the prospects of bumper, high-quality harvests at lower costs, farmers are feeling upbeat about GM food, according to a new study. The study, funded by Britain's Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and conducted by an Open University team, has taken the first systematic look at what large-scale, commodity farmers think about genetically modified crops. Lead researcher Andy Lane and colleagues found that both farmers who have been involved in GM crop trials and those who have not regard GM as an extension of established plant breeding techniques.

CIS leaders to discuss migration, economics at Moscow summit

By RIA Novosti Moscow : CIS leaders will discuss economic trade and migration policies at an informal summit to be held in Moscow on Friday, a Kremlin source said. The drawing up of a document, Strategy for the Commonwealth's Economic Development, will also be discussed at the summit. The document should provide a set of measures aimed at boosting economic cooperation, raising competitiveness of the CIS member states and fostering social and economic development.

Clintons to drop ball on New Year’s Eve at Times Square

By DPA, New York : Former US President Bill Clinton and his wife, Senator Hillary Clinton, have been given the honour to push the button to drop the crystal ball ushering in the New Year at Times Square, news reports said Tuesday. The traditional New Year's Eve celebrations at the landmark square will take place Thursday night under a forecast of very cold weather with snow showers that may dampen the hopes of hundreds of thousands of revellers seeking a good time.

UN General Assembly adopts arms trade treaty

By IANS/RIA Novosti, New York: The UN General Assembly has approved the first global treaty to regulate international trade in conventional weapons, the UN News Centre said.

2 bombs blast in Nepali capital Kathmandu

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : Two bombs blasted in Nepali capital Kathmandu on Monday afternoon, local media said. window.onload = function() {var...

Indonesian air force plane crashes, 24 killed

By DPA, Jakarta : An aircraft belonging to the Indonesian Air Force crashed Monday afternoon in West Java capital of Bandung, killing all 24 people on board, news reports and officials said. The Fokker airplane was carrying 17 officers from the Indonesian Air Force's special force and seven crew when it crashed at about 12.30 p.m. (0530 GMT) at Bandung's Hussein Sastranegara airport, said air force spokesman Bambang Sulistyo.

Canadian honour for M.S. Swaminathan

By Gurmukh Singh,IANS, Vancouver : M.S. Swaminathan, one of the pioneers of the Green Revolution in India, will receive an honorary doctorate from Canada's University of Alberta for his contribution to food security in the world. The Edmonton-based university, which has forged strong relationship with India thanks to its Sri Lankan-born president Indira Samarasekera, said the world-renowned Indian agriculture scientist will receive the honorary degree Oct 7.

US plane crash kills four

By Xinhua Washington : At least four people have been killed when their small plane crashed in Florida's Martin County region, the police said. According to officials, three of the dead are from the Florida Atlantic University. The fourth victim was the pilot. After reports of the crash came in at 9.04 a.m. Thursday, fire-fighters were rushed to the scene, who found a Cessna Skyhawk aircraft lying upside down near a stand of trees, with four bodies inside.

Missing US diplomat in Cyprus found dead

By DPA

Nicosia : A US embassy staff member who had been missing in Cyprus for four days was found dead by police near the village of Lefka Monday, media reported.

Russia blames US for “immoral, rude” policies in Kosovo

MOSCOW, Feb 24 (KUNA) -- Russia Sunday blamed Washington for its "immoral and rude" policies in Kosovo. The American policy vis-a-vis Kosovo is "rude" and Washington has humiliated the Serbians by siding with the "Albanian minority," and neglected fate of tens of thousands of Serbs in Kosovo, official spokesman Mikhail Kamynin said in a statement. Kamynin was reacting to the US secretary of state's assistant for political affairs Nicholar Burns who said the Russian position over Kosovo was "reckless.

Bernanke Says Little Chance of Return to 1970s Stagflation

By SPA Washington : U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress on Thursday that the country is not “anywhere near” the dangerous stagflation situation the United States experienced in the 1970s. With U.S. economic growth slowing and inflation rising, concerns have grown that the country could be headed toward the two problems of stagnant growth and rising prices known as “stagflation.”

Thai police circulate arrest warrants for Thaksin and Pojaman

By Xinhua, Bangkok : The Royal Thai Police on Thursday started distributing two arrest warrants for former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his wife Pojaman, according to a report of local news network The Nation. The warrant for Thaksin has a time limit of 15 years and the one for Pojaman is enforced for 10 years, said the report. The Supreme Court issued the warrants on Monday after Thaksin and Pojaman jumped bails and failed to report themselves on the Ratchadapisek land case.

Two LTTE rebel women killed in Sri Lanka

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

Spain, Cuba Step up Solidarity

By Victor M. Carriba, Prensa Latina, Seville, Spain : The 10th Meeting of Solidarity with Cuba in Spain is discussing Saturday several aspects of the work carried by that movement, comprised of over one hundred groups in this country. The gathering started Friday in this Spanish city and is analyzing in commissions everything related to the Cuba in the current world, including cooperation, the blockade and media manipulation regarding the Revolution.

Rice in Prague to sign missile defense shield agreement

By KUNA, Prague : US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived here Tuesday amidst heavy security measures, to sign the controversial agreement for stationing an American missile defense radar in the Czech Republic. Prior to Rice's arrival, thousands of people protested against the missile shield in front of the US Embassy and the Presidential Palace. The visit coincides with the conference hosted by Prague on the missile defense shield, slated July 8-11.

Darfur rebels agree to a joint front for peace talks

By DPA Nairobi/Arusha : A three-day meeting meant to unite fractured rebel groups from Darfur ended Monday, with representatives vowing to negotiate on a joint platform with the Sudanese government to stop the conflict in the embattled region. The United Nations and African Union (AU) mediated the talks in the northern Tanzanian town of Arusha, which saw the eight rebel factions agree to present a common position when negotiating with Khartoum and recommended peace talks to begin in two or three months.

16 killed in clashes in Bolivia

By DPA, La Paz : The Bolivian government confirmed Sunday at least 16 deaths in clashes in the Amazonian province of Pando as the army attempted to impose martial law. Local leaders said Sunday that the death toll could be as high as 25, though this was not immediately confirmed by authorities. Luis Adolfo Mayar, a leader of the Single Federation of Peasant Workers in Pando, was quoted by the television network Erbol as saying that 25 people were killed, a further 25 injured and 106 remained missing after the clashes in the municipalities of Filadelfia and El Porvenir.

Media to monitor government functioning: Bhutan PM

By IANS, Thimphu : Bhutanese Prime Minister Lyonchhen Jigme Y. Thinley has said the media and people of the Himalayan kingdom would play the role of a watchdog to monitor the performance of the government in the absence of a formidable opposition in parliament. "Our government would be transparent and accountable, and the media would play an important role to provide check and balance to the government," the prime minister said while addressing the first joint session of parliament here. "Media's role would be important and we'll support and promote media."

Teenaged terrorist jailed in Russia

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : A 19-year-old Russian has been sentenced to jail for nine years for starting a terrorist cell while still underage.

Zelaya’s expulsion illegal, says Obama

By Xinhua, Guadalajara (Mexico) : US President Barack Obama has said the expulsion of Honduran president from office was illegal. Obama made the remarks at a press conference after the two-day Fifth North American Leaders' Summit that ended here in western Mexico Monday. Mexican President Felipe Calderon said his country would continue to push for restoration of the democratically elected Honduras President Manuel Zelaya. Zelaya earlier said the US pressure on the post-coup government has been "lukewarm".

EU commissioner “deeply shocked”over Israeli shelling of UN compound

Berlin, Jan 16, IRNA -- The European Union's Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Louis Michel strongly criticized Israel for its shelling of the main UN compound in Gaza, branding it "not acceptable." "I am deeply shocked and dismayed over the incident," Michel was quoted saying in a statement in Brussels on Thursday. The safety of the personnel working for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine (UNRWA) has to be ensured in their bid to help the Palestinian population, he added. The EU Commission was the largest donor of UNRWA in 2008 with 113 million euros.

Earthquakes blamed for China village landslide

By IANS, Beijing: The landslide which killed 46 villagers in China's Yunnan province Friday could have been caused due to last year's earthquakes in the same province, a Chinese expert has said.

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.

US economy up 2.2 percent in third quarter

By DPA, Washington: The US economy grew slower than expected 2.2 percent in the third quarter of 2009, revised government figures showed Tuesday. The rise in gross domestic product (GDP) was weaker than earlier estimates had shown, but was still the first positive growth period after the year-long recession that has plagued the world's largest economy.

Questions for the candidates

By IRNA, Paris : There has been unusual interest throughout the world in the US presidential race. Skeptics, of whom there are quite a few, say the campaign is just a marathon show that has little to do with real policymaking. Even if there's a grain of truth in that, in an interdependent world the statements of the contenders for the White House are more than just rhetoric addressed to American voters. Major policy problems today cannot be solved without America - and America cannot solve them alone, International Herald Tribune said.

Typhoon Hagupit leaves 26 dead in Vietnam

By Xinhua, Hanoi : Landslides and flooding caused by Typhoon Hagupit has claimed 26 lives in Vietnam, the Vietnam News reported on Saturday, citing figures from the National Committee for Flood and Storm Control. A landslide in northern province of Son La killed 13 people and left one missing. The storm killed ten people in northern Bac Giang province, and another three in northern Lang Son province. The rescue workers have been trying to evacuate residents in landslide areas but it met difficulties with continuous flooding.

Jets pound LTTE camp in Mullaitivu: Sri Lanka

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lankan Air Force jets Wednesday bombed "a transit camp" of Tamil Tigers in the northeastern Mullaitivu district, where ground troops were fighting fierce battles with the rebels tying to defend their last bastions, defence authorities here said. The Media Centre for National Security (MCNS) said the jets bombed "an LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) transit camp located at Piramanathankulam area" in Mullaitivu around 4.45 p.m.

Stop ‘intimidation’ through executions, EU tells Iran

By DPA, Brussels : Iran should immediately halt all judicial executions, especially those which are being used to "intimidate" anti-government protestors, the European Union's (EU) foreign-policy director said Friday. Iran has carried out a series of executions of dissidents following sporadic anti-government protests in the second half of 2009. Nine more demonstrators were sentenced to death Tuesday. The latest announcement "is part of a disturbing trend to intimidate opposition protestors", the EU's new foreign policy director Catherine Ashton said in a statement.

Seoul pledges $20m food aid to Pyongyang

By RIA Novosti

Tokyo : South Korea could deliver food aid worth $20 million to Pyongyang through the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the country's unification minister said Thursday.

‘Fight against violent extremism does not equate fight against Islam’

Washington : US President Barack Obama said that the fight against violent extremism did not mean it was a fight against Islam and the...

US-India defence ties causing regional imbalance: Aziz

Islamabad:The US defence cooperation with India was enhancing imbalance in South Asia, said Pakistan's National Security and Foreign Affairs Advisor Sartaj Aziz on Thursday,...

EU looks to boost oil security amidst soaring prices

By DPA, Brussels : European Union (EU) states should improve their strategic oil reserves policy amid concerns over soaring energy prices, its executive arm the European Commission (EC) said Tuesday. "The risk of supply disruptions is increasing. Supply is more and more concentrated in a handful of countries, many of which are exposed to high geopolitical risks," the EC wrote in a paper asking EU member states, non-governmental organizations and industry representatives to suggest how the bloc should deal with energy reserves in the future.

India contributes $1 mn to tsunami trust fund

Bangkok: India Friday donated $1 million to the UN tsunami preparedness fund to strengthen early warning systems for natural disasters in Indian Ocean and...

One killed in Myanmar bomb blast

By Xinhua Yangon : A bus conductor was killed when a bomb exploded in Myanmar's Bago division, the official newspaper New Light of Myanmar reported Thursday. The bomb went off inside the bus while it was being parked for the passengers to have a break at a restaurant in Pyinpongyi on the Yangon-Mandalay highway, nearly 108 km north of Yangon, the report said. The bus was on its way from Kyaukkyi to Yangon, it said, adding that an investigation was underway.

As Beijing parties, London gets a hangover

By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS, London : A day after Bejing hosted what was hailed as the greatest Olympic opening ever, the response in London - the next hosts - has been a slightly bemused, 'cripes, what are we going to do now?' If nothing else, said the Times newspaper, the jaw-dropping opening at the Bird's Nest Stadium "has raised the bar dauntingly high for the organisers of London 2012". But British Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell said London can match Beijing in 2012.

Indian Americans in mad rush to wed on July 7

By IANS

New York : Wedding planners and marriage venues have reported a marked increase in the number of Indian Americans, especially in Las Vegas, who want to get married on July 7 in the belief that the date - 7-7-07 - has good luck written all over it.

Some 34 Thai anti-gov’t protestors injured in grenade explosion

By Xinhua, Bangkok : Some 34 Thai anti-government protestors at Government House were injured in a grenade explosion here early on Sunday, local TV reports said. News reports said the grenade landed near the prime minister's offices, which have been occupied by protestors led by the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) since August. The blast occurred near at Government House where thousands of PAD supporters, who are demanding Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawatto step down, were holding a rally.

Swiss police search HSBC’s Geneva office

London: Swiss police searched HSBC bank's office in Geneva as part of an inquiry into alleged money-laundering, a media report said Wednesday. Prosecutors said they...

17-year-old Palestinian killed by Israeli soldiers

Ramallah: A 17-year-old Palestinian youth was shot dead by Israeli soldiers stationed at an army roadblock located between the West Bank city of Ramallah...

Diamonds not only for ever, they led to life

By IANS, Washington : Diamonds could have played an important role in the origin of life on Earth, according to a new study by German scientists. Scientists have long theorised that life on Earth started in a primordial soup of precursor chemicals. But it is unclear how these simple amino acids - the building blocks of life - were assembled into complex polymers needed for the beginning of life.

Two killed, 22 injured in Thailand blast

By IANS, Bangkok : At least two people were killed Sunday and 22 others injured in a blast near an anti-government protest site here, a...

Georgian Foreign Ministry summons Russian ambassador

By RIA Novosti Tbilisi : Russia's Ambassador to Georgia Vyacheslav Kovalenko was summoned on Saturday to the Georgian Foreign Ministry in connection with Moscow's earlier statement on two Georgian breakaway republics. The Russian Foreign Ministry said on Friday that Moscow could be forced to reconsider its relations with two Georgian breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia if Kosovo unilaterally declares independence and it is recognized by other states.

Chinese officials search for missing migratory birds

By Xinhua Beijing : Wildlife officials have started a massive search for about 100,000 migratory birds that disappeared from the Poyang Lake Nature Reserve after the worst winter in 100 years hit southern China. Luo Shengjin, deputy director of the reserve in the eastern Jiangxi province, said about 200,000 wild birds had arrived before the snow and freezing temperatures began last month, but officials could spot only 40,000 after the weather began to ease last week.

30 killed in Indonesian military plane crash

Jakarta: At least 30 people were killed on Tuesday when a Hercules C-130 military cargo aircraft crashed into a residential area in Medan city...

Obama, first lady, set new tone for black families in US

By DPA, Washington : The US civil rights movement of the 1960s opened up economic and social opportunities for African Americans, but it was accompanied by an erosion of the black family that continues to cause debate in the US. On Jan 20, Barack Obama, the nation's first black president, will move into the White House with a traditional nuclear family: First lady Michelle, an accomplished professional; daughters Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7; his mother-in-law Marian Robinson; and even the promise of a first dog.

British government staff work less, earn more

By IANS, London : British government employees spend nine years less at work than their private sector counterparts in their lifetime but earn 30 percent more, a new study has revealed. Workers of public sector firms enjoy better pay than those in the private sector, as well as better pensions, shorter working hours, and earlier retirement, according to the study by Policy Exchange. Over their lifetimes, private sector employees work 23 percent longer - equivalent to an extra nine years and 10 weeks - than those in public sector.

Man stoned to death in Somalia for adultery

By DPA, Mogadishu : Somali insurgent group al-Shabaab has stoned a man to death in the port town of Marka for committing adultery, officials said. "The 33-year-old man Abbas (Hussein Abdurahman) confessed his crime in front of the Islamic court, and today we have implemented his reward in front of the people in accordance with Islamic sharia," al-Shabaab official Sheikh Suldan Aala Mohamed told spectators at the execution late Friday. Al-Shabaab and its ally Hizbul Islam are battling the weak central government and control much of south and central Somalia.

Wildfires rage across southern California

By DPA Los Angeles : Under fiery skies choked with soot and ash, 250,000 San Diego area residents fled their homes as stiff Santa Ana winds spread furious wildfires across southern California in what Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger called a "perfect firestorm". At least one person was killed and 17 were injured in 12 conflagrations that ignited over the weekend, burning thousands of hectares, forcing mass evacuations and threatening to engulf thousands of homes.

17 killed in Sri Lanka clashes: military

By IANS, Colombo : At least 15 Tamil Tiger guerrillas and two soldiers were killed and over 20 wounded as troops fought the rebels in Sri Lanka's northeast, the military here said Monday. The Media Centre for National Security (MCNS) said that seven cadres of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were killed in Vavuniya while another eight were killed in north-western Mannar and north-eastern Weli-Oya regions Sunday. It said one government soldier was killed in LTTE sniper attack at Muhamalai in Jaffna peninsula and another soldier was killed at Puthukamam in Mannar Sunday.

Britain’s most expensive caravan sold for 550,000 pounds

By IANS, London: A caravan equipped with a luxury Italian kitchen, top-of-the range flat screen television and iPhone controlled heating system has been sold for a whopping 550,000 pounds.

Swiss flu medicine firm sees stock rise on back of outbreak

By DPA, Geneva : Swiss pharmaceutical giant Roche, maker of influenza medication Tamiflu, saw its stock price rise 3.8 percent in early trading Monday on the Zurich exchange on the back of the global swine flu outbreak. During the avian flu epidemic the drug was used heavily, particularly in South Asia. Shares in Roche were trading at close to 145 Swiss francs ($126), up over five francs since the opening. Martina Rupp, a spokeswoman for Roche, said Tamiflu was deemed to be effective against the swine variant.

German police name Indian as additional suspect in racist clash

By DPA Muegeln(Germany) : Police investigating a racist mob attack on 12 Indian nationals in Germany last month named one of the fleeing Indians Thursday as an additional suspect. Witnesses had accused the 41-year-old Indian of previously wounding a German with a jagged bottle with its base broken off. Police said the Indian had refused to be questioned, exercising his right to avoid incriminating himself.
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