Cuba overhauls communications, IT sectors
By IASN/EFE,
Havana: The government has launched an overhaul of Cuba's communications and information technology sectors, the Communist Party daily Granma said.
Nigerian terror suspect described as loner by friends
By DPA,
Nairobi/Abuja : Friends of Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian man who allegedly tried to blow up a passenger jet in Detroit Dec 25, described him as a pious loner, but not one who had ever showed an interest in political violence, reported a Nigerian newspaper Monday.
Abdulmutallab was religious, but focussed more on daily situations or moral questions, not politics, a childhood friend told the Daily Trust newspaper. He never came across as a religious extremist, the friend told the newspaper.
Pentagon extends tanker deadline to accommodate EADS
By DPA,
Washington : The US Defence Department said Wednesday it was willing to issue a 60-day extension of the deadline for bids on a lucrative contract to build the next generation of aerial refuellers.
The decision would push the May 10 deadline to July 9, allowing the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS) more time to come up with a proposal after its US partner, Northrop Grumman, dropped out earlier this month.
Pope Benedict XVI gives strong support to UN
By DPA,
New York : Pope Benedict XVI gave Friday a resounding support to the UN, drawing on similarities between the missions of the Catholic Church and the world body in their responsibility to protect and help the people attain basic freedoms.
The real nature and depth of the German-born pope and leader of church dogma came forth in his lengthy address to the UN General Assembly, packed with representatives from 192 countries, urging the organisation to realise its mission.
Somali pirates demand $1 mn ransom for Japanese ship
By Xinhua
Nairobi : Somali pirates, who seized a Japanese chemical tanker six weeks ago, are demanding $1 million as ransom, a regional maritime official said here Monday.
Andrew Mwangura, coordinator of the Seafarers Assistance Program (SAP), said the pirates have also threatened to kill the 23-man crew unless the ransom is paid.
"The pirates are demanding $1 million ransom and I am not certain whether the tanker's owners would pay the money," Mwangura told Xinhua by telephone from Mombasa.
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.
Egypt pushes for ending Gaza ‘inhumane’ blockade
Cairo: Egypt is continuing its efforts to put an end to the "inhumane blockade" imposed by Israel on the Gaza strip, Egypt's foreign ministry...
11 Russian sailors drown on rescue bid in the Arctic
By DPA,
Moscow : Eleven Russian sailors drowned in the Arctic after their rescue vessel went down in stormy seas on a mission to try to help a fishing boat in distress, it was reported Saturday.
The Moscow daily Komsomolskaya Pravda reported that the Alexey Kulakowski sank in the early hours of Friday in the Laptev Sea, around 35 km outside the port of Tiksi.
The 30-year-old captain of the ship, and two mechanics, aged around 19 and 20 years, from the sinking vessel were rescued.
Chinese women now initiate majority of divorces
By IANS,
Beijing: Women in China are now taking the lead in filing for divorce, with 70 percent of cases initiated by wives in 2010.
Lebanon due to receive 150 million euros of aid from France
By NNN-KUNA
Beirut : Lebanon will receive 150 million euros from France soon in line with Paris' pledge to assist the country during the "Paris-three" conference that was hosted by the French capital on January 25 of last year.
The ministry of finance said in a report released on Saturday that the mentioned sum would be part of 375 million euros, to be allocated by France for aiding the country. French authorities had approved granting this sum to Beirut.
Consortium may still buy ABN Amro, even without LaSalle
By DPA
Amsterdam : The banking consortium of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), Fortis NV and Santander might be interested in taking over Dutch bank ABN Amro even if its US subsidiary LaSalle is not included in the deal, a report said Wednesday.
South African MPs really receive strange gifts
By Fakir Hassen, IANS,
Cape Town : A miniature Korean nuclear power station, a handmade Libyan pistol, African antelopes, six boxes of raw fish and a suit of clothes are among the strange gifts received by South African parliamentarians in the latest list that has been opened to public scrutiny here.
Report: 21 people killed in China road crash
By SPA,
Beijing : At least 21 people were killed and a dozen others hurt Tuesday when a bus and coal truck collided in China's northwest Xinjiang region, a state-run news agency
reported.
The head-on collision happened on a highway in a remote area, the Xinhua News Agency said.
Two vehicles were damaged and three of the 12 injured were in serious condition, Xinhua said.
Modi US visit: Three Indian cities to be named for smart cities project
Washington/New Delhi : Three Indian cities are in line to be adopted for the government's "smart cities" project by way of technology and infrastructure...
Bush targets US worries over Iraq, economy
WASHINGTON (AFP) - President George W. Bush told a wary global audience Monday that the US economy was not headed for recession and that US forces in Iraq will face "tough fighting" in 2008 -- but are winning the war.
The unpopular president, in excerpts of what the White House billed as his final State of the Union speech, also vowed to "confront" Iran if necessary to protect US soldiers or Washington's vital interests in the Gulf.
Stiletto-wearing sexy British minister booted from cabinet
By IANS,
London : A British woman minister who once posed for a magazine photo shoot in a provocative pose wearing a short red dress has quit, complaining the prime minister treated women as "female window dressing".
"You have a two-tier government, your inner circle and then the remainder of cabinet," Europe Minister Caroline Flint said in a letter to British premier Gordon Brown, hours after he ignored her for promotion Friday.
Mass rally in Nepal reaffirms support to key polls
By DPA
Kathmandu : Tens of thousands of people took part in a rally in Nepal's capital Monday organized by seven ruling parties to express their commitment to hold key elections, scheduled for April 10.
Thousands of people, many from outlying areas of Kathmandu, rallied through the city before assembling into a mass gathering.
Addressing the gathering, top leaders repeatedly stressed that they would not postpone the elections to choose a constituent assembly. The polls have already been postponed three times since June 2007.
Taxi Gang Busted In China For Fleecing Foreigners
By Bernama
Beijing : Police in China's biggest commercial hub have detained eight members of a taxi gang for allegedly ripping off foreign passengers, Xinhua news agency reported Friday.
A total of 10 suspects were accused of blackmailing 13 passengers in less than two months and stealing 50,000 yuan (about US$7,022) in cash or goods, the traffic law-enforcement team under the Shanghai Municipal Communication Bureau said.
Over 200 missing as boat sinks in western Indonesia
By DPA,
Jakarta : A ferry carrying some 250 people on board sank in rough waters off the western Indonesian province of West Sulawesi early Sunday, leaving more than 200 missing, officials and media reports said.
The Teratai Prima Kosong ferry left Pare-pare harbour Saturday evening en route to Samarinda in the eastern Kalimantan province on the Indonesian portion of Borneo Island, said Suhardi, an official at the Search and Rescue (SAR) agency in Makassar, the capital of South Sulwesi.
Nepal government to probe Chinese bribe scandal
By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS,
Kathmandu : Ahead of the seventh round of vote Tuesday to elect new premier, Nepal's caretaker government said it would form a committee to investigate the scandal about the opposition Maoist party allegedly seeking millions of rupees from a "friend" in China to buy MPs’ votes.
Ex-US vice president Cheney has heart transplant
By IANS,
Washington : Former US vice president Dick Cheney had a heart transplant surgery, his office said Saturday.
Bill Clinton to address IIT summit in Chicago
By IANS,
New York : Former American President Bill Clinton will be among many top leaders to address the seventh Pan-IIT Global Conference being held in Chicago in October.
Kapil Sibal, Indian minister for human resource development; Sam Pitroda, Indian Knowledge Commission chairman; Aneesh Chopra, America's chief technology officer; and Meera Shankar, Indian ambassador in the US, will be among other keynote speakers at the Pan-IIT Global Conference to be held in Chicago from Oct 9-11.
Helicopter crash kills 8, injures 1 in Louisiana
By SPA,
Houma, Louisiana : A helicopter bound for U.S. offshore oil fields crashed in marshlands southwest of New Orleans, killing eight people and leaving a ninth with
critical injuries, officials said, according to AP.
The helicopter, operated by PHI Inc., crashed shortly after taking off Sunday afternoon from PHI's base in Amelia, Louisiana, company spokesman Richard Rovinelli
said. The cause of the crash was not clear. Rovinelli did not know the type of helicopter or its exact destination.
German jailed for eight months for racist attack on Indians
By DPA
Oschatz (Germany) : A 23-year-old man has been jailed for eight months for leading a racist mob that beat up and chased eight Indian men in the eastern German town of Muegeln last summer.
The court in the town of Oschatz Tuesday rejected a proposal by prosecutors to suspend the term, saying Frank D. must go to prison as a "deterrent" to others and there were no legal grounds for leniency.
NATO chief, Russian envoy hold informal meeting
By RIA Novosti,
Brussels : NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer held an informal meeting on Friday with Russia's envoy to the alliance, Dmitry Rogozin, a spokesman for the Russian mission to NATO said.
He said the diplomats met for lunch in a restaurant in Brussels, without giving any details of their conversation.
NATO foreign ministers agreed on December 2 at a meeting in Brussels to gradually resume contacts with Moscow, suspended after Russia's armed conflict with Georgia in August.
Release of Cuban 5 Urged in Spain
By Prensa Latina,
Madrid : The Spanish Communist Party (PCE) said fighting for the release of the Five Cuban anti-terrorists held in US prisons since 1998 means defending dignity and a real fight against terrorism.
The PCE condemned last the Wednesday's ruling of the 11th Circuit US Court of Appeals against Gerardo Hernandez, Fernando Gonzalez, Antonio Guerrero, Rene Gonzalez and Ramon Labanino.
This verdict proves US Justice has been politicized and biased, so only pressure on the US government may finally make justice be served, Spanish communists claimed.
Violent incidents mar Australian election campaign
By DPA,
Sydney : Two violent incidents have marred the start of the Australian election campaign.
Police have charged two men in Adelaide after a Liberal Party candidate was allegedly punched during an argument over the treatment of asylum-seekers.
Jassmine Wood told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that two men approached her and an assistant as they campaigned at a shopping centre. She said they criticised her party's border protection policy before throwing punches.
Situation in Kosovo calm, German general says
By SPA
Hamburg : The situation in Kosovo was calm on Saturday, DPA quoted a German general serving with NATO in the southern Serbian province as saying ahead of Sunday's expected declaration of independence.
General Robert Bund, head of the German contingent in the UN- mandated Kosovo force KFOR, told German radio there was "no sign of tension in any form."
Bund said he expected the NATO-led multinational force to remain in Kosovo for a long period because of the time it would take for the territory to support itself.
Rhino, lion carcasses found in South Africa’s diplomatic quarter
By DPA,
Johannesburg : South African police have arrested a man after discovering the carcasses of lions and rhinoceroses strewn around a house in the capital, Pretoria, a media report said Wednesday.
Police were tipped off by the Society for the Protection of Cruelty to Animals after an inspector stumbled across the bones at the residence in the upmarket Waterkloof suburb, the South African Press Association reported.
Many diplomatic residences and an air force base are located in Waterkloof.
Photos taken at the scene showed carcasses and skulls strewn around the ground.
Eric Clapton’s watch sold for 2.3 mn pounds
By IANS,
London: Singer Eric Clapton's watch has been bought by a collector for 2.3 million pounds at an auction.
Jacob Zuma sworn in as South African president
By DPA,
Pretoria : Jacob Zuma was sworn in as South Africa's new president here Saturday.
Zuma becomes fourth democratically-elected president of the country since the end of apartheid in 1994.
His African National Congress party won a resounding victory in April 22 general elections.
Taking the oath of office administered by Chief Justice Pius Langa, Zuma, 67 - who was elected president by parliament Wednesday - promised to "obey, observe, uphold and maintain the constitution and all other laws of the republic."
China reopens Tibet to foreign tourists
By RIA Novosti,
Beijing : China has allowed foreign tourists to visit Tibet for the first time since violent anti-government rallies in March in the restless autonomous region, the China Daily newspaper reported on Thursday.
The unrest in early March in Tibet, which started when Buddhist monks took to the streets to mark the 49th anniversary of a failed uprising against Chinese rule, left 19 people dead and 623 injured, according to official Chinese reports.
The situation in the region has stabilized since then and the first foreign reporters were allowed in the region on June 20.
Five Filipino soldiers killed in clash with rebels
By DPA
Manila : Five soldiers were killed Wednesday in a clash with communist rebels in a remote town in the southern Philippines, an army spokesman said.
Colonel Benito De Leon said six soldiers were also wounded in the fighting in Cateel town in Davao Oriental province, 990 km south of Manila.
"We lost five soldiers and six were wounded," he said. "The report is still sketchy, we are not sure if it was an ambush or an encounter."
De Leon said the army has not received reports of rebel casualties.
Four killed, 200 houses torched in C.A.R. violence
By IANS,
Bangui: At least four people were killed and seven went missing following an attack in a Central African Repubic (CAR) town, a source...
North Korea to suspend nuclear activity
By IANS,
Washington: North Korea has said it will suspend nuclear tests, long-range missile launches, and uranium enrichment activity as agreed with the US in last week's bilateral talks.
Brazil donates $500,000 to quake-hit Japan
By IANS,
Rio de Janeiro : Brazil has said it would donate $500,000 to help in relief measures in Japan that has been hit by a devastating earthquake and tsunami.
German minister in plagiarism row to resign: Report
By DPA,
Berlin : German Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, who has been embroiled in a plagiarism scandal, will resign Tuesday, Bild newspaper reported.
US slaps visa ban on 20 Ukrainians over violence
By IANS,
Washington : The US slapped visa ban on 20 senior Ukrainian officials and other people it accused of being behind a violent crackdown...
Race to rescue 153 trapped Chinese miners
By IANS,
Beijing : As many as 1,600 rescue workers have been pressed into service since the past two days to save the 153 miners trapped in a flooded mine in China's Shanxi province.
The rescuers were busy Monday night pumping out water from more than 600 metres underground at the Wangjialing coal mine in Xiangning county, in what is being termed as one of the deadliest coal mine accidents in the country since two mines flooded in Shandong province in August 2007, killing 181 people.
US tested mustard gas on its own soldiers during WWII
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto : Americans tested mustard gas on thousands of their own soldiers during World War II to know which race was more vulnerable to it, according to a Canadian historian.
Susan Smith of Alberta University said Monday that the misguided race-specific mustard gas tests by the American military were carried out on White, African-American, Japanese-American and Puerto Rican soldiers to know its effectiveness against different races.
Indian-origin MPs in Britain stand by India, flay ‘cowardly attack’
By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS,
London : Leading politicians representing Britain's large Indian-origin population Thursday strongly condemned the terrorist attacks in Mumbai, saying the two countries are even more determined to protect their vibrant and resilient democracies.
As British television news channels rolled out round-the-clock coverage of the attacks, a string of MPs telephoned IANS Wednesday night to speak of their shock and sense of outrage.
India should back democracy demands in Myanmar, says leader
By M.R. Narayan Swamy
New Delhi, Oct 10 (IANS) A Myanmar opposition leader living in India in exile after being sentenced to 25 years in jail in absentia wants New Delhi to actively support pro-democracy forces in his country.
Tint Swe of the National League for Democracy (NLD) said that Myanmar rulers were cleverly playing the Sino-Indian card to their advantage and that India's economic and military aid to the junta was of no benefit to the people at large.
Former US embassy employee held for cheating
By IANS,
New Delhi : A former employee of the US embassy here has been arrested for duping people by promising them jobs with the mission with forged appointment letters, police said.
Somya Ranjan Dass was arrested Friday after Arvind Kumar complained to police that Dass had assured him of a job in the embassy but was only cheating him since July 2006, police said.
Kumar said Dass took Rs.150,000 from him in instalments and gave him an appointment letter on the letterhead of the embassy bearing signatures of the embassy officials.
India offers to spur green revolution in drought-hit Tanzania
By IANS,
New Delhi : With East Africa reeling under a severe drought, India offered all possible help and assistance in spurring a green revolution in Tanzania.
Tanzanian Prime Minister Mizengo K. Pinda, who is on a four-day visit to India, held wide-ranging discussions with the External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna Tuesday, where the issue of agricultural cooperation was discussed in detail.
Tanzania has offered to lease land to Indian private companies for a period of 99 years, as it pitched for increased investment in the agricultural sector.
Unions join protest against UK deaths in custody
London, Oct 25, IRNA ,Britain's trade unions are joining calls to demand that the government account for hundreds of deaths in police custody.
The Trades Union Congress (TUC) expressed support at the remembrance procession to the prime minister's office Saturday which has been held annually by the United Friends and Families Campaign (UFFC) for the past 10 years.
"The TUC believes that the state has a duty of care towards the people it takes into custody, and a responsibility to be open and accountable when deaths occur," said TUC general secretary Brendan Barber.
Five deputy PMs in Thailand’s royally-endorsed cabinet
Bangkok : A royal command appointing Thailand's interim cabinet headed by Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha was announced Sunday, with five deputy prime ministers included...
German, China stress return to normalized ties
By IRNA
Berlin : German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and his Chinese counterpart Yang Jiechi have expressed their interest in a "good and close partnership", declaring an official end to the dispute over the Dalai Lama's meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin last September.
Speaking at a joint news conference with Steinmeier at the foreign ministry in Berlin on Tuesday, Yang said Beijing was interested in promoting bilateral ties based on "mutual respect and non-interference."
Nepali PM calls for women’s participation in polls
By Xinhua
Kathmandu : Nepal's Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala has, in his International Women's Day message, urged women to take a defining role in politics and make the April 10 constituent assembly (CA) elections successful, The Rising Nepal daily reported Saturday.
Koirala said women should cooperate and participate actively in the democratic exercise, as it is an historical opportunity associated with the prosperity and future of the country.
Indo-Canadian couple held for importing ‘gutka’
By IANS,
Toronto: Canadian custom officials have seized an illegal consignment of 'gutka' (chewing tobacco) from an Indian shopkeeper in the city of Winnipeg.
Gutka as well as many ayurvedic medicines from India are banned in Canada. The illegal consignment of gutka, weighing 150 kg, was brought into Canada from the US, the authorities said Monday.
Fifty-year-old Yog Rahi Gupta, who owns the Indian Spice House in the city, and his 53-year-old wife have been charged for bringing the contraband into Canada.
Britain to build Europe’s largest bio-research centre
By IANS,
London : Britain plans to build Europe's largest medical research centre where thousand of scientists can work together on different projects.
The 1.4-hectare complex worth 600 million pound will have separate research laboratories for everything from stem cells to influenza when it opens in 2015.
The UK Centre for Medical Research and Innovation (UKCMRI) is being funded by a range of government and charitable organisations including the Medical Research Council (MRC), Cancer Research UK, the Wellcome Trust and University College London.
Female ants give up sex for greater good
By IANS,
Washington: The fungus-gardening ant is the only species of its kind to have dispensed with sex or males, says a new study.
Most social insects, wasps, ants and bees are used to life without males. Their colonies are well run by swarms of sterile sisters lorded over by an egg-laying queen.
But, eventually, all social insect species have the ability to produce a crop of males who go forth to fertilise new queens and propagate their species.
New Zealand, China to sign free trade agreement in April
By Xinhua
Wellington : New Zealand and China plan to sign a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) in early April, New Zealand Trade Minister Phil Goff announced Tuesday.
"Being the first developed country to negotiate a comprehensive FTA with China will present New Zealand with a unique platform for profiling our businesses in China and for strengthening commercial relationships," he said in a press release.
"Finalising this FTA will be a significant achievement for New Zealand. We must make sure we take full advantage of the opportunities it will open up in China," he added.
Michelle Obama to feature on Vogue cover
By IANS,
New York : US first lady and new style icon Michelle Obama will feature on the cover of Vogue magazine's March issue and will appear in an eight-page spread that includes clothes from her own wardrobe.
While nearly every first lady - beginning with Herbert Hoover's wife, Lou, in 1929 - has been photographed for the fashion magazine, only Hillary Clinton was featured on the cover, in December 1998, said Patrick O'Connell, Vogue spokesperson.
China to cut fuel prices
By IANS,
Beijing: China will cut the prices of gasoline and diesel from Friday.
Vietnam To Introduce 3G Technology In 2009
By Bernama,
Hanoi : Telecommunications industry insiders are predicting that 3G (third generation) technology will be introduced in Vietnam this year, the Vietnam news agency (VNA) reported.
With 3G technology, mobile providers in Vietnam will be able to provide more value-added services for their mobile users such as videophone, on-line video streaming and high-speed internet and music download.
Colombian guerrillas seduce girls to recruit them: Unicef
By IANS
Bogotá : Colombia's left-wing guerrillas and extreme-right paramilitaries seduce young girls to recruit them for the armed organisations, a Unicef official has said.
"The situation of the girls and the sexual use to which they are subjected is alarming, even in the case of the girlfriend or partner of a commander of illegal armed groups," Eduardo Gallardo, Unicef's child protection official for Colombia, told Radio Caracol Monday.
Four arrested for alleged links to Paris gunman
Paris: French police have arrested four people, including a policewoman, suspected of being linked to the gunman who killed four people in a Jewish...
China releases report on human rights
By AINS,
Beijing: China Thursday released a report that said the country has fulfilled all targets of its national human rights action plan.
Russian minister shot dead
By RIA Novosti,
Makhachkala (Russia) : The interior minister of the southern Russian republic of Daghestan was shot dead Friday afternoon at a wedding reception here.
"Daghestani Interior Minister Adilgerei Magomedtagirov died of gunshot wounds on the way to the hospital," an interior ministry spokesman said.
A police source said the minister was shot by a sniper from the rooftop of a neighbouring building when he and several other high-level officials walked out of a restaurant at around 1.00 p.m.
World’s biggest Bible factory opens in China
By DPA
Nanjing : It is a country where people caught smuggling religious texts or organising illicit services can face years in jail. Yet China is about to become home to the world's biggest Bible factory, producing a staggering one million copies a month.
The aircraft hangar-sized plant in an industrial park outside the eastern city of Nanjing will be capable of producing more than one Bible every second and is expected to supply one quarter of all the world's Bibles by 2009.
BBC yet to commit to 2010 Commonwealth Games
By IANS,
London : The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) says it has yet to reach an agreement to broadcast the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi despite the claims of chairman of Organising Committee Suresh Kalmadi that they have struck "good deals with broadcasters in Australia and Britain".
Kalmadi last month had said that they had earned 37.5 million pounds -- 12.5 milion pounds more than the original target.
Australian broadcasters' Network Ten and Foxtel announced two years ago that they had secured TV rights for Delhi in a shared deal.
Three Chinese engineers arrested in Balco chimney crash case
By IANS,
Raipur : Chhattisgarh police Monday arrested three Chinese engineers in the case of the under-construction chimney crash at Vedanta Resources Plc-controlled Bharat Aluminium Company Limited (Balco) that killed 41 workers Sep 23 last year.
The engineers were employed with the Chinese construction major, Shandong Electric Power Construction Corporation (SEPCO) that was building Balco's 1200-MW thermal power plant in Korba town, about 240 km from state capital Raipur.
Slain crown prince’s love hits Nepal poll trail
By Sudeshna Sarkar
Kathmandu, March 25 (IANS) Six years after she was catapulted into media headlines worldwide following the mysterious massacre of Nepal's royal family in the tightly guarded palace in Kathmandu, the dead crown prince's love, Devyani Rana, is making waves again.
The svelte, beautiful Devyani, who last year exorcised her links with ill-fated crown prince Dipendra by marrying into Indian aristocracy, is now back in her homeland to hit the campaign trail for the crucial April election.
Vietnamese president to pay state visit to Japan
Hanoi: Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang will pay a state visit to Japan between March 16-19, Vietnamese foreign ministry announced Sunday.
He will visit the...
Russia’s Medvedev sets off for Latin American tour
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russian President Dmitry Medvedev Friday began a seven-day tour of Portugal and four Latin American countries, during which he will attend a summit meeting of the Asia-Pacific economic council (Apec), a presidential aide said.
Medvedev will discuss his initiative to sign a pan-European security treaty and measures to fight the consequences of the global financial crisis with his Portuguese counterpart Anibal Cavaco Silva and Prime Minister Jose Socrates Friday, Sergei Prikhodko said.
Bush seeks German, Indian cooperation on Doha
By Arun Kumar
Washington, Nov 11 (IANS) President George W. Bush wants Germany, Europe and the US to work closely together with emerging economies like India and Brazil to advance the Doha Round of world trade talks.
"We had a very good discussion on Doha," he said Saturday at a joint press conference with visiting German Chancellor Angela Merkel at Bush's Texas ranch without outlining his proposal on how to move forward the stalled talks
Protesters Target G8 Summit in Japan
By Prensa Latina,
Tokyo : Thousands of people demonstrated Saturday in the northern Japanese city of Hokkaido in advance of next week's summit of the eigth most developed nations (G8).
Farmers, students, trade union representatives, activists and pacifist took over the streets under the slogan “Stop G-8 Summit that only creates poverty,”
Protesters were carrying messages for G8 leaders asking them to take action on a number of issues, including soaring food prices.
Farmers, students, trade union representatives, activists and pacifist took over the streets under the slogan “Stop G-8 Summit that only creates poverty,”
Protesters were carrying messages for G8 leaders asking them to take action on a number of issues, including soaring food prices.
Putin to attend engineering forum, meet with Yemeni president
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin will on Wednesday attend an international engineering forum in the town of Zhukovsky near Moscow, where he will meet with world leaders and executives.
Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh and Siemens CEO Peter Loescher are expected to attend Engineering Technologies 2010.
The forum will run from June 30 to July 4. It will show the capabilities and prospects of the Russian machine-building industry.
Some 25 conferences and round tables involving over 1,500 delegates from Russian and foreign companies will be held.
Putin confirmed Russian prime minister
By DPA,
Moscow : Vladimir Putin was confirmed prime minister Thursday in a near unanimous parliamentary vote that underscored his continued power, one day after passing the Kremlin to his protege Dmitry Medvedev.
A total of 396 of the 450 State Duma (lower house of Russian parliament) members voted in favour of Putin's nomination Thursday.
By making the transition from president to premier, Putin ensures he remains a central figure.
Many believe he will carry more weight than Medvedev, who owes his presidency solely to Putin's support.
Preschoolers can be taught reading skills, how to get along
By IANS,
Washington : Preschoolers can be taught reading skills for later school success, and imparted socials skills for making friends and avoiding conflicts, according to a new study.
The findings address long standing concerns on whether preschool education programmes should emphasise academic achievement or social and emotional development.
Pakistan violates Kashmir ceasefire
Jammu: The Pakistan Army resorted to unprovoked firing at Indian positions on the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir, triggering gun battles,...
Texas oilman in UN oil-for-food scandal goes on trial
By RIA Novosti
New York : The trial of a high-profile Texas businessman, charged with paying some $4 million in kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's regime as part of the oil-for-food programme, has started in Manhattan's federal court.
Oscar Wyatt, 83, faces over 70 years in prison if found guilty of secretly providing funds and equipment to the Iraqi government in exchange for contracts under the controversial UN oil-for-food programme, which ran 1996 through 2003.
Indian American group denounces Obama’s campaign
By IANS
Washington : The US India Political Action Committee (USINPAC), a political awareness group of Indian Americans, Saturday rapped US Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama's campaign for its "anti-Indian American stereotyping".
Obama urges China to free Nobel laureate Liu
By IANS,
London: US President Barack Obama has called on China to free Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, a media report said Saturday.
Nepal royal family ‘shifts’ to Nagarjun palace
By NNN-Nepal News
Kathmandu : A day after the government decided to nationalise seven royal palaces including the Narayanhiti palace, King Gyanendra moved to Nagarjun palace with his family on Friday.
A royal palace source however claimed that King Gyanendra and his family moved to Nagarjun palace as part of their vacation plan set weeks earlier and that their departure from Narayanhiti has nothing to do with Thursday's cabinet decision to bring the seven palaces under government ownership.
PACE voices alarm over rights violations in Chechnya
By RIA Novosti,
Strasbourg : Alleged human rights violations by security forces in Chechnya and other parts of Russia's North Caucasus, including torture and executions, have come under harsh criticism from the Council of Europe.
A committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) released an 'introductory memorandum' on Tuesday calling the situation in the region "by far the most alarming" in all 47 Council of Europe member states, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said.
China pledges action to control offshore pollution
By Xinhua
Changsha (China): China will go all out this year to check ever worsening damage to offshore ecology caused by the discharge of land-borne pollutants, director of China's State Oceanic Administration (SOA) has said.
Sun Zhihui made the pledge while addressing an ongoing annual conference in Changsha, capital of central China's Hunan Province.
Russia, US to cooperate despite disagreements
By RIA Novosti,
Lima : The Russia and US have agreed to continue cooperation despite existing disagreements, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Sunday.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and his US counterpart George W. Bush met in the Peruvian capital Saturday as part of a two-day summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum.
UN pledges $3 mn to help Nepal’s rural communities
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : The UN has allocated $3 million to assist rural communities in Nepal, the global organisation announced Thursday.
The rural communities are constantly threatened by food insecurity due to depleting stocks and rapidly increasing prices, the UN said in a statement. The situation deteriorated due to the recent floods and long-standing political unrest in the country.
More coffee or tea keeps diabetes at bay
By IANS,
Sydney: Drinking more than four cups of a favourite beverage daily can cut the risk of developing type-2 diabetes by up to 40 percent, says a new study.
People who consumed three to four cups of coffee a day had one-quarter lower risk of developing diabetes compared to non-coffee drinkers, said study leader Rachel Huxley, associate professor at The George Institute.
"The reduction in risk of developing diabetes was even greater, up to 40 percent, in those drinking more than six cups per day," she said.
100 kids injured in China school stampede
By IANS,
Beijing : Nearly 100 children were injured Monday in a stampede at a primary school in Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region in northwest China, officials said.
Strict Security for Spanish Vote
By Prensa Latina
Madrid : Over 87,000 troops from different security bodies are part of the operations created in this country for the March 9 elections in Spain, official sources reported Saturday.
According to the Interior Ministry's assistant secretary Justo Zambrana, the deployment is comprised of members from the National Guard and Federal Police, as well as agents from the local police and autonomous communities.
Chile quake toll rises to 795
By IANS,
Santiago : The toll from Chile's devastating earthquake has risen to 795, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet has said.
The national emergency office said two million people were affected in last Saturday's 8.8-magnitude quake.
Bachelet revealed the latest figure to reporters Tuesday during a visit to Curico, one of the worst affected areas, Xinhua reported.
The emergency office said most of the fatalities occurred in the Maule region, with at least 554 people dead. In Santiago, 38 people were killed. The rest of the fatalities occurred in other areas.
Nepalese At Risk Of Starvation:WFP
By Bernama,
Kathmandu : Hundreds of thousands of Nepalese in desperate need of food aid, particularly those suffering from severe drought in the Himalayan state's far-west, are at risk of starvation, according to a report by Press Trust of India (PTI).
Quoting the United Nations World Food Programme (W.F.P.), it said strikes and shutdowns in the country has limited its ability to provide vital humanitarian assistance to hundreds of thousands of Nepalis in desperate need of food aid. It has resulted in suspension of its food deliveries to the needy.
British police officer suspended for membership of far-right party
By IANS,
London : A British police officer has been taken off duty after his name figured in a list of the far-right British National Party (BNP) that was put up anonymously on the Internet.
Steve Bettley of the Merseyside Police in northwest England was among the 12,000 people whose names were published on the Internet earlier this week. Policemen are barred from membership of the BNP.
The BNP’s anti-immigrant stand and whites-only membership policy are criticised by all other British political parties.
China issues white paper on national defence
By IANS,
Beijing : China Thursday issued a white paper on national defence, aiming to enhance its military transparency and boost the world's trust in its commitment to peaceful development.
US, Britain for ‘temporary’ halt in Sri Lanka war
By IANS,
Colombo : The US and Britain have called for a "temporary" truce in Sri Lanka to let civilians trapped by fighting between the Tamil Tigers and the military to leave for safer areas.
A joint statement issued following a meeting between Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and British Foreign Secretary David Miliband in Washington Tuesday expressed "serious concern" about the "deteriorating humanitarian situation in northern Sri Lanka caused by the ongoing hostilities".
Congo plane crash caused by mechanical failure: Lone survivor
By Xinhua
Kinshasa : The plane crash in a crowded residential area in Congo's capital of Kinshasa was caused by a mechanical failure, said Dede Ngamba, the sole survivor of the accident.
The Antonov-26 cargo plane belonging to private airline Africa One lost balance shortly after takeoff Thursday from Kinshasa's N'Djili International Airport and ploughed into houses before bursting into a fireball, the survivor said.
Newark airport on lockdown after security scare
By DPA,
Washington : Newark International Airport in New Jersey was under lockdown after a man reportedly passed through the exit of a security checkpoint without being screened, US media reports said.
The Federal Aviation Administration said on its website that the airport's terminal C had experienced a security breach.
All passengers who had already passed through the security check point were being re-screened and no flights were leaving from the terminal, CNN reported.
Chinese bounty wins fresh Nepal support against Taiwan
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS
Kathmandu : A bounty of 50 million Chinese yuan (over $6.5 million) and promises of more have procured for China fresh diplomatic support from Nepal, with the communist-majority Nepal government stating that it was opposed to Taiwan's bid to join the UN.
Nepal's official media Saturday carried a statement issued by its foreign affairs ministry saying Nepal "firmly opposes attempts by the Taiwan authorities to push for joining the UN under the name Taiwan".
Kathmandu : A bounty of 50 million Chinese yuan (over $6.5 million) and promises of more have procured for China fresh diplomatic support from Nepal, with the communist-majority Nepal government stating that it was opposed to Taiwan's bid to join the UN.
Nepal's official media Saturday carried a statement issued by its foreign affairs ministry saying Nepal "firmly opposes attempts by the Taiwan authorities to push for joining the UN under the name Taiwan".
Obama faces stormy waters as 44th US president
By DPA,
Washington : No US president in recent memory has entered office facing such huge crises or such enormous expectations as Barack Obama.
The Democratic president-elect is to be inaugurated Jan 20 as the country's 44th president, elected with a strong 53 percent majority by voters disillusioned with eight years of Republican George W. Bush.
Teenagers employed to mark SAT papers in Britain
By IANS,
London : The fate of British students who took this year's Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) is in jeopardy with revelations that teenagers who themselves are yet to pass their examinations have been employed to mark the answer papers.
Barry Sheerman, the Labour chairman of the Commons Schools Committee, has disclosed that he had been given evidence that the company entrusted with the marking of SAT answer sheets was employing pre-university students to mark papers, the Telegraph reported Thursday.
‘Ebola crisis to last at least six months’
Geneva: The outbreak of Ebola in West Africa will take at least six months to bring it under control, according to the medical charity...
Chinese buying 300 sq km of land in Iceland
By IANS,
Beijing : A super-rich Chinese is purchasing a mind-boggling 300 sq km of land in Iceland for a tourism project.
EU to give $348 mn in aid to Tunisia
By IANS,
Tunis : The European Union (EU) will provide 258 million euros (about $348 million) in aid to Tunisia to help various developmental projects in the country.
Our helium reserves to run out in 25 years
By IANS,
London : Colourful balloons that float in the air during our birthdays are the only link we have with helium. But the non-renewable gas is being squandered at a rate that it will be gone within 25 years, warn experts.
It would spell disaster for hospitals which use it to cool MRI scanners, reports the Daily Mail.
The world's biggest store of helium, the most commonly used inert gas, lies in a disused airfield in Amarillo, Texas in the US and is being sold off dirt cheap.
Nobel Peace Prize for Finnish statesman Martti Ahtisaari
By IANS,
Oslo : Former Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari, who has played a major role in UN peacekeeping operations for over three decades, was Friday awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for 2008.
In awarding the prize, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said it was in recognition of Ahtisaari's "important efforts on several continents and over more than three decades to resolve international conflicts".
China Runs World’s Largest Hydroelectric Plant
By Prensa Latina
Beijing : China's Three Throats Hydroelectric Plant, built at the world's largest dam, will reach full capacity this year and, among other positives, will rid the area of the deadly floods occurring every ten years.
Manager Li Yongan says the giant project will generate 88.1 billion kW/h upon completion, which is slightly higher than the original design.
Construction began in 1993 with a 22.5 billion dollar budget and involves a reservoir and 26 generators.
New digital map reveals more secrets about Antarctica
By IANS,
Sydney: A new digital map configured by British and Australian scientists has revealed astonishing new geological facts about Antarctica, not known till now.
UN chief hails start of Maoist army verification
By IANS
Kathmandu : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has hailed the start of the operation to weed out child soldiers and illegal recruits from the Maoist guerrilla army, calling it crucial and asking all stakeholders to cooperate.
Britain, Germany, Netherlands to jointly counter Islamic extremism
By DPA,
Berlin : The governments of Germany, Britain and The Netherlands have pledged to increase cooperation on countering Islamic extremism, at the opening of a joint symposium.
The opening event Wednesday was attended by German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, his British counterpart, and a representative of the Dutch interior ministry.
British Interior Minister Jacqui Smith said: "It's clear that we share a common threat that demands a united response, even if the specific nature of that threat differs from country to country."
Bangladesh SC upholds death sentence of two wartime criminals
Dhaka: Bangladesh's Supreme court on Wednesday upheld its previous verdict on the death sentence of two war-crime convicts Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid and Salauddin...
Philadelphia’s Liberty Bell area evacuated
By IANS,
Washington : The area near the famous tourist attraction of Liberty Bell in Philadelphia was evacuated after a suspicious item was found nearby.
Houses and streets around the building that houses the Liberty Bell were evacuated Thursday, after a blue-coloured balloon-like object with a "white powdery substance" over it was found, Xinhua reported.
Police evacuated the area after the National Park Service Rangers gave an emergency call.
Ban to visit quake-hit Haiti Sunday
By DPA,
New York, Jan 16 (DPA) UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon plans to visit Haiti Sunday to show his solidarity with the earthquake-ravaged Haitian people and United Nations staff.
The UN office announced Friday that Ban will use the opportunity to assess the destruction and international efforts to assist the Caribbean nation, which was devastated by Tuesday's magnitude-7 earthquake. The death toll is expected to be in tens of thousands.
35 Tamil rebels, 8 Sri Lankan soldiers killed in heavy fighting
By SPA,
Colombo, Sri Lanka : Heavy weekend fighting between government troops and Tamil separatists in Sri Lanka's contested north killed 35 rebels and eight soldiers, the military said Sunday.
The latest battles erupted Saturday along the front lines tin the Mannar and Welioya regions, the military said.
Can you figure out a smarter way of learning?
By IANS,
Washington : Do you aspire to excel in your studies, besides recalling dry and dreary facts more readily?
If the answer is yes, then space your lessons well, but avoid cramming which kills all the joy of learning and is not effective in the long run.
So says the result of a study led by Hal Pashler and John Wixted, professors of psychology at University of California, San Diego (UCSD).
Nearly 12 million illegal immigrants in the US
By IANS,
New York : There are an estimated 11.9 million illegal immigrants in the US constituting four percent of the population, according to a study released Tuesday.
The study by the independent Pew Research Center, which is based on the data collected by the US Census Bureau till March 2008, says their children, both unauthorized immigrants themselves and those born in the US, make up about 6.8 percent of the total enrolment in elementary and secondary schools.
Nepali election commission to speed up for by-polls
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : Election Commission (EC) of Nepal plans to expedite voter re-registration and updating process in six election constituencies where by-elections for Constituent Assembly (CA) are scheduled to be held, local newspaper The Kathmandu Post reported Tuesday.
According to an EC official, the electoral rolls updating process will begin mid-December immediately after the ongoing Legislature-Parliament session amends the Interim Constitution in accordance with the government's decision.
Tiger Woods taking indefinite break from golf
By DPA,
Washington: Tiger Woods, one of the world's most famous athletes, is taking an indefinite break from professional golf to "repair the damage" he's done with marital infidelities, Woods said on his website.
Woods said Friday he had reached the decision "after much soul searching" and he needed to "focus my attention on being a better husband, father and person".
European women’s lobby launches gender balance campaign
By Nicholas Rigillo, DPA,
Brussels : Despite some progress, women remain grossly under-represented in European politics. Slightly fewer than one third of the European Parliament's (EP) 785 seats are occupied by women, while only nine of the EU's 27 commissioners are female.
A group of leading women politicians has recently launched a campaign in Brussels aimed at bridging this gender gap when the composition of the EP and the European Commission come up for renewal next year.
13 killed, over 225,000 displaced in Sri Lanka floods
By P. Karunakharan, IANS,
Colombo : At least 13 people, including two children from a family, have been killed and over 225,000 displaced due to floods and landslides caused by heavy rainfall that has hit several parts of Sri Lanka over the past few days, officials said here Monday.
Motorists blame UK government for record petrol prices
By IRNA,
London : A majority of motorists blame the British government for the record increase in petrol and diesel prices, according to a poll of members of the Automobile Association (AA).
The motoring association found that 49 per cent of its members believed the UK government was the most responsible for the rise, compared with 22 per cent that blamed oil producing countries and 20 per cent saying it was oil companies.
Painting lost in World War II makes fleeting TV appearance
By DPA,
Munich : Bavarian detectives are looking for the owner of a painting stolen at the end of World War II, after the item worth an estimated 100,000 euros ($142,000) appeared on a TV show, police officers said.
The painting by artist Frans Francken the Younger, titled "The Sermon on the Mount" (St Paul in Lystria), was shown on Bavarian state television last November, during a programme which assesses the value of antique items found in viewer's homes.
58 illegal African migrants held in Morrocco
By IANS,
Rabat: A total of 58 African migrants were arrested in Morrocco while trying to enter a Spanish enclave of Melilla from the Moroccan...
Mexico City plans gardens at rooftops
By IANS,
Mexico City : The capital city of Mexico has launched a unique project of greening the rooftops of all big buildings as part of an urban reforestation plan to improve environment and quality of air, EFE news agency reported.
To beging with, city's municipal transit authority will have its building, covering an area of 1,190 square meters, covered with bushes and grass.
The rooftop garden, which was created at a cost of 1.3 million pesos (about $125,000), was inaugurated by Mexico City's environment secretary Martha Delgado.
2007: A year of wasted opportunities for Nepal
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS
Kathmandu : While Nepal created a landmark in 2006 with the major parties uniting with Maoist guerrillas to stage a bloodless revolt that toppled the dictatorial King Gyanendra and ended a 10-year insurgency, 2007 failed to live up to the nation's expectation and was a year of wasted opportunities.
Poised to hold a historic election that would have enabled the people to choose between the king and a republic, this year instead saw the credibility of the Girija Prasad Koirala government plummeting after it failed to hold the election twice.
Tibet adopts statute to protect Potala Palace
Lhasa : A regulation for protecting the 1,300-year-old Potala Palace, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, was adopted by the legislature of southwest China's Tibet...
Nine killed in clashes in Sri Lanka
By DPA
Colombo : Seven Tamil rebels and at least two soldiers were killed in a series of clashes and bombings in northern Sri Lanka, military officials said Tuesday.
One soldier was killed in a roadside claymore mine explosion in Puvarasankulam, Vavuniya, 240 km north of the capital, Tuesday and another soldier was killed when a booby trap went off in Jaffna, 390 km north of the capital, Monday.
Tamil rebels said they attacked an army guard post, killing at least five soldiers in Vavuniya Tuesday, but the military has not confirmed the incident so far.
British seaside bungalow valued at one pound!
By IANS,
London : Any takers for a seaside bungalow in Norfolk costing just a British pound? One note of caution though: the sea is eating away at the earth under it.
A whole new controversy over coastal erosion and the government's reported indifference to the consequences has erupted after a couple was told that their three-bed home on the cliff on the Norfolk coast was valued at just about a loaf of bread.
China used force to quell 2008 Tibet protests: Rights group
Dharamsala: Chinese security forces used machine guns to quell protests in Tibetan capital Lhasa in March 2008, a human rights watchdog here has said.
"A...
SADC backs Mugabe over powersharing; to assist Congo Army
By DPA,
Johannesburg : The suffering of Zimbabweans looked set to continue for some time to come after a summit of Southern African leaders Sunday tried but failed to breathe life into Harare's floundering power-sharing agreement.
After more than nine hours of talks among leaders of the 15-nation Southern African Development Community (SADC), Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and prime minister-designate Morgan Tsvangirai remained far apart on how to divide power.
Myanmar lets in teams from ASEAN countries
By IRNA,
Kuala Lumpur : Following an emergency meeting of foreign ministers of Association of South-East Asia Nations in Bangkok to coordinate relief aid assistance to victims of Myanmar cyclone Nargis, Myanmar let in teams from ASEAN countries to assist in the relief effort.
IRNA regional bureau chief said that relief aid workers from Thailand, are already there, along with teams from China and India.
Aid coming from outside ASEAN, Singapore's Mr. Yeo said, will be considered on a "case-by-case basis," much as it is now.
Rajapaksa admits defeat, Modi hails Sirisena win
Colombo : Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa Friday conceded defeat in the presidential election after officials indicated a landslide win for joint opposition candidate...
Marilyn Monroe’s photographs sold for 97,000 pounds
By IANS,
London : A collection of 36 photographs of the late Hollywood actress Marilyn Monroe, which were taken in 1962, was sold at auction house Christie's here for 97,000 pounds.
The images, shot by Bert Stern for American Vogue magazine, are believed to have been the last professional photographs of the star and, following her death later that year, ran in the magazine as a memorial as opposed to the original feature planned, reports vogue.co.uk.
Hostage reveals drama inside Sydney siege
Sydney : Sydney hostage Joel Herat has revealed the drama that unfolded inside the cafe where he and 16 others were held at gunpoint...
America’s historic Marshall Plan marks 60th anniversary
By Frank Brandmaier, DPA
Washington : Former US president Harry S. Truman had no doubt about the gravity of the document that lay before him one spring day in 1948, nor any doubt that what it proposed would be a success.
"Few presidents have had the opportunity to sign legislation of such importance as the Foreign Assistance Act of 1948," said Truman upon signing the law April 3 that year.
"This measure is America's answer to the challenge facing the free world today. It is a measure for reconstruction, stability, and peace."
Russia, NATO fail to overcome gaps
By Zhang bihong, Xinhua
Bucharest : Russia and NATO failed to make headway in overcoming gaps on thorny issues at their first ever Council Summit on Friday, despite a transit deal was forged.
The two traditional foes have had long sharply disagreed on substantial matters such as the military alliance eastward expansion, Kosovo and a Cold War-time arms control treaty.
A U.S. plan of deploying missile defense system, which was endorsed by a NATO summit on Thursday, is another concern of Russia, which has regarded it threat to its security.
US envoy for Tibet to meet with Dalai Lama
By DPA,
Washington : The Dalai Lama and the US envoy for Tibet plan to meet later this month over the unrest in Tibet, the US State Department said Monday.
Undersecretary Paula Dobriansky will sit down with Tibet's spiritual leader April 21 in Michigan to discuss efforts to persuade China to open dialogue with the Dalai Lama aimed at ending the crisis, deputy spokesman Tom Casey said.
Beijing launched a crackdown last month against demonstrations protesting Chinese role of the province. The Bush administration has urged China to meet with the Dalai Lama.
First transgender choir strikes gay rights chord in Nepal
By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS,
Kathmandu : Bhakti Shah faces an uphill struggle to get her job back a year after Nepal's army sacked the physical training instructor for being involved in a lesbian relationship with a trainee.
"I have filed a case in the Supreme Court," says the 24-year-old, who looks like a teenaged boy with her close-cropped hair and wiry frame.
"But the hearing can't start until the army has completed its procedure and the army is deliberately prolonging it."
Punish the war guilty, US tells Sri Lanka
By IANS,
Colombo : A top American official Friday asked Sri Lanka to carry out a credible investigation of "outstanding and serious allegations of human rights violations" and punish the guilty.
Six Mexicans held for trying to swap child for property
By EFE,
Mexico City : Six Mexicans were arrested for allegedly trying to exchange a two-year-old child for a plot of land, authorities said.
Four months ago Alejandra Resendiz Ramos and husband Elias Vega Hernandez, who have four children, met Jose Guadalupe Rocha and his wife, America de Alba Bravo.
Rocha had promised his sister-in-law, Elba de Alba Bravo, married but childless, to get a youngster for her.
Turkey road accident kills 24
By Xinhua
Ankara : At least 24 people were killed in a road accident in central Turkey, media reports said Tuesday.
The accident occurred late Monday when a truck collided with a minibus carrying workers near Kangal town of Sivas province, Anatolia news agency said.
US to revamp export system to strengthen national security
By IANS,
Washington : US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday that the US will revamp its Cold War era export control system to enhance national security.
Gates made the statement to members of Business Executives for National Security at a Washington function. He said the current export control system does not adequately protect crucial US capabilities and makes it nearly impossible to quickly share needed capabilities with allies and partners, Xinhua reported.
Global leaders take a leaf from Manmohan Singh’s book
By Arun Kumar,IANS,
Washington : Outlining a far-reaching action plan to tackle the growing global economic crisis, world leaders have agreed to act urgently upon all the three major issues Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh raised at the G-20 summit here.
Meeting in the historic summit, the presidents and prime ministers from the Group of 20 leading economies called for greater oversight of financial markets and more efforts to bolster national economies even as they agreed to start work on reshaping international financial institutions.
Food assistance reaches over 430,000 Ebola affected: UN
Geneva : The United Nations World Food Program (WFP) Friday said it has provided food assistance to more than 430,000 people affected by the...
Over 100 Chinese kids hospitalised after mysterious lesions
By IANS,
Beijing: Over 100 children from a kindergarten in China's Chongqing municipality were hospitalised after strange spots were noticed on their lower limbs, authorities said Thursday.
430 Nepalese soldiers awarded in Haiti
By Xinhua
Kathmandu : At least 430 Nepalese soldiers based in Mirebalais, in Haiti's Central Region, were awarded United Nations peacekeeping medals for their outstanding performance there, The Kathmandu Post reported on Tuesday.
According to a statement issued by the UN Stabilization Missionin Haiti and made available by UN office in Kathmandu, Secretary-General's Special Representative for Haiti Edmond Mulet presented the medals to them at a function on Aug. 6.