‘Dr Death’ Jayant Patel arrives in Australia to face charges
By Neena Bhandari, IANS,
Sydney : Families and former patients of "Dr Death" Jayant Patel heaved a sigh of relief as he arrived in Brisbane Monday after being extradited from the US to face charges for 13 offences, including manslaughter, causing grievous bodily harm and fraud.
The offences relate to his employment as director of surgery at the Bundaberg Base Hospital in Queensland between 2003 and 2005.
Nepal to hold fourth round of PM poll Thursday
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : Uncertain of being able to elect a new prime minister Monday in the third round of an unprecedented, protracted battle for power, Nepal's major parties have agreed to hold a fourth round of election Thursday.
Trial of Austrian incest suspect to start in mid-March
By DPA,
Vienna : An Austrian court is set to try Josef Fritzl from March 16 on charges that he incarcerated his daughter for 24 years and murdered one of the seven children she bore him, the prosecution office at the court in Sankt Poelten confirmed Thursday.
In April 2008, the case came to light when Fritzl's daughter Elisabeth, 42, managed to bring one of her daughters to a hospital.
The suspect had kept his daughter and her children locked up in a dungeon built beneath his house in Amstetten in the province of Lower Austria.
US blacklists new alias of Al Qaeda-linked outfit
By IANS,
Washington: The US State Department has blacklisted the outfit Ansar al-Shari'a, which it said was a "new alias" of the Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
Canadian soldier killed in Afghan bomb blast
By DPA,
Kabul : A female Canadian soldier serving with NATO forces was killed and four others were wounded by a roadside bomb in the volatile southern region, officials said Tuesday.
Trooper Karine Blais was killed and four of her comrades were wounded when their armoured vehicle was blown up in Shah Walikot district of southern Kandahar province Monday afternoon, the Canadian defence ministry said in a statement.
India will support Palestine cause, engage with Israel: Mukherjee
By Arvind Padmanabhan
Amman : India will continue to support separate statehood for Palestine while also engaging with Israel to forge an independent...
Yahoo names new CEO
By IANS,
Washington : Yahoo has named Scott Thompson, former president of online payment service PayPal, as its new chief executive officer.
Prabhakaran alive, claims pro-LTTE website
By IANS,
Colombo : Tamil Tigers chief Velupillai Prabhakaran is "alive and safe", a website sympathetic to the rebels claimed Tuesday.
The Sri Lankan military Monday said that Prabhakaran was shot dead while fleeing the battle zone in the island's north.
Prabhakaran, the feared leader of Sri Lanka's ruthless Tamil Tigers, was killed Monday with two top aides, ending one of the world's longest running insurgencies that bled the island nation for over a quarter century, the military declared.
Global warming threatens more than just coral
By Xinhua
Wellington : Rising sea level from global warming will threaten the livelihoods and homes of more than 200,000 people who live on coral atolls, the PACNEWS reported Monday.
The warning came from Marshall Weisler, Australia's University of Queensland archaeologist and expert on the prehistoric use of coral atolls.
Weisler said the Central Pacific islands of Kiribati, Tuvalu and the Marshall Islands as well as the Maldives in the Indian Ocean are most at risk.
US election campaign enters final stretch
By IRNA,
New York : "It is time to stop spending $10 billion a month in Iraq while the Iraqi government sits on a huge surplus," Obama said.
"As president, I will end this war by asking the Iraqi government to step up, and finally finish the fight against bin Laden and the al- Qaeda terrorists who attacked us on 9/11."
Obama at times seemed to vacillate between preparing the crowd for his presidency -- "It's not going to be easy, it's not going to be quick" to turn things around, he said -- and worrying about overconfidence among his supporters.
China unveils new advanced acrobatic jets
By IANS,
Beijing: Advanced fighters, which will also be China's new acrobatic aircraft, were unveiled by the air force of the country's People's Liberation Army (PLA) during an air demonstration held Sunday.
Four J-10 multi-role jet fighters painted in steel gray rolled, flipped and twisted above hundreds of spectators during the demonstration held to celebrate the 60th founding anniversary of the PLA Air Force.
Sri Lanka to launch its first satellite in 2015
By IANS,
Colombo : China will help Sri Lanka launch its first satellite by 2015, officials said.
Nepal’s SAARC Summit row ends after PM says sorry
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : The sword hanging over Nepal's caretaker Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala's participation at the 15th SAARC Summit in Sri Lankan capital Colombo was lifted Wednesday after the 83-year-old apologised to other major political parties for not having consulting them about the trip.
"We decided to allow Koirala to attend the summit after he expressed regrets for not consulting the parties," said Communist Party of Nepal Unified Marxist Leninist (UML) leader Amrit Bohora.
Earthquake near Reykjavik causes damage to buildings
By SPA,
Reykjavik : An earthquake measuring 6.1 on the Richter scale shook the town of Selfoss, 50 kilometres south-east of Reykjavik, Thursday, causing severe damage to buildings, according to DPA.
Police said that nobody had been killed or injured in the earthquake.
However, it caused a great deal of damages to buildings in the area near the epicentre.
Reykjavik residents reported feeling houses shake in the city even though the epicentre was 50 kilometres away and 10 kilometres beneath the earth's surface.
Smokers face high fines in Hong Kong
By DPA
Hong Kong : Legislators on the city's health services panel Friday approved a proposal to impose a 1,500 Hong Kong dollar ($191) fixed fine for anyone who breaches tough new anti-smoking laws.
Terrorist escapes, massive manhunt in Singapore
By DPA
Singapore : Thousands of police and soldiers searched Thursday for an accused terrorist who escaped from a detention centre where he was being held for allegedly planning to crash a hijacked plane into Singapore's Changi Airport, authorities said.
Mas Selamat Kastari, 47, fled Wednesday afternoon from the Internal Security Department's Whitley Road centre despite armed guards, high fences topped with barbed wire and closed circuit television cameras along the perimeter.
He was not believed to be armed, said the Ministry of Home Affairs.
Four government troops killed in clash in Philippines
By SPA,
Davao City, Philippines : Four government troops were killed and three wounded in a clash with communist rebels in a southern Philippine province, police said Sunday.
The clash occurred Saturday afternoon in the town of Monkayo in Compostela Valley province, 945 kilometers south of Manila, DPA reported.
Superintendent Ronald dela Rosa, provincial police chief, said that government soldiers and militia members were on combat patrol when they encountered a group of rebels.
"Two soldiers and two militiamen were killed in the 30-minute gun battle," he said.
IAEA board rejects “political interference”
By Abdelwaheb El-Gueyed, KUNA,
Vienna : Taous Ferroukhi, chairperson of the IAEA Board of Governors, categorically rejected "political interference" in the nuclear watchdog's activities.
Speaking to Kuwait News Agency (KUNA), Ferroukhi, who is the Algerian ambassador to Austria, said this interference could undermine the international agency's main task of promoting nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.
The remarks came after the IAEA Board of Governors wrapped up its two-day meeting last week.
Putin says U.S. should improve relations with Russia
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia's prime minister said in an interview with French Le Figaro on Saturday that the U.S. should improve relations with Russia marred by the Russian-Georgian conflict over South Ossetia last month.
Vladimir Putin said that "in conditions of global crises mutual interests prevail over some contradictions."
He also said that the U.S. should display initiative and make the necessary steps first: "I wait for the relations to improve. They (the U.S.) marred them, and they should improve them."
Gates To Discuss Spending On US Military Presence In S. Korea
By Bernama,
Tokyo : Pentagon chief Robert Gates will discuss the problems of sharing the financial burden connected with the United States military presence in South Korea early next week, Russia's Itar-Tass news agency quoted South Korean Defence Ministry sources as saying Thursday.
Asean countries, neighbours vow joint efforts on financial crisis
By DPA,
Beijing : Leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) and its three neighbours have promised joint efforts to combat the global financial crisis and maintain regional economic stability.
Chinese premier Wen Jiabao chaired the meeting of leaders of the 10-member Asean plus China, Japan and South Korea, often called Asean plus three.
The 13 Asian leaders held an open discussion on "issues of common concern, especially the financial crisis and its influence on East Asia," host nation China said.
Ban to set up investigation team of war on Gaza, to be headed by...
By KUNA,
UNITED NATIONS : Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is about to announce the establishment of an independent investigation in the Israeli aggression against the UNRWA compound in Gaza last month, a UN official told KUNA on Monday.
Ban is going to announce it either in the next hour during a briefing of the Security Council on his latest trip to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where he attended the African Summit, Pakistan, India, Afghanistan and Iraq, or tomorrow morning during a scheduled press conference, the official said.
Chinese arts at the crossroads
By Gong Yidong, Xinhua,
Beijing : For the 51-year-old director of the National Theatre Company of China (NTCC), Wang Xiaoying, the impulse to examine the human soul has been his primary driving force since the early 1980s.
Born into a family of traditional opera performers in 1957, Wang got exposure to the arts at a very young age. After four years with a local performing arts troupe in eastern Anhui province, he left the Anhui Institute of Technology in preference to the Central Academy of Drama (CAD) in 1979. "My intuition told me that my life would be devoted to the arts."
Globalisation in reverse gear as oil prices soar: Canadian report
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto : Trade liberalisation and technology may have flattened the world, but rising transport prices will once again make it rounder, says a report by a major Canadian bank.
In its study - "Will Soaring Transport Costs Reverse Globalization?", the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) says soaring oil prices are driving transport costs to such levels that businesses will be forced to seek supplies locally, rather than importing at huge costs from China and India.
Monet’s masterpiece to be star of Sotheby’s show
By Uma Nair
IANSLondon : Claude Monet's 1904 masterpiece "Nymphéas" will be the star of Sotheby's auction here next week and is estimated to fetch upto 15 million pounds.
ASEAN+3 Holds Nuclear Energy Workshop In Bangkok
By Bernama,
Bangkok : Energy experts from the 10-member countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) plus China, South Korea and Japan will meet in the Thai capital next month, to discuss nuclear energy and bio-fuels.
Thai Energy Minister Poonpirom Liptapanlop said Saturday that the ASEAN+3 Forum on Nuclear Energy Safety workshop will be held June 16-17 while the East Asia Summit (EAS) Workshop on bio-fuels will be held June 18-20.
‘US warned China of military action over space missiles’
By IANS,
London : The US threatened to take military action against China over its space missile tests, according to secret diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks.
In England, four children die every week from abuse or neglect
By IANS,
London : Up to four children die each week in England from abuse or neglect, according to an official report.
The report by the Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted), published Wednesday, found that 282 vulnerable children - many of them already known to social services - died in the 17-month period to the end of August.
Another 136 suffered serious harm or injury and two-thirds of those killed or hurt were babies less than a year old, it said.
Sri Lanka to discuss South African reconciliation model
By IANS,
Colombo : A Sri Lankan delegation will head to South Africa this week to learn and discuss about the South African Truth and...
Kathmandu valley paralysed as transporters go on warpath
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala's tottering government faced a new crisis Sunday as transporters called an indefinite strike to protest the state's refusal to let them raise fares despite a substantial hike in fuel prices.
Kathmandu valley was paralysed as public buses went off the road and bus owners blocked major roads and held demonstrations.
Taxis also joined the protesters, condemning the murder of a cabbie in the capital last week and demanded security.
Iran parliament approves law to implement n-deal
Tehran: Iran's parliament on Tuesday approved a legislation which asks the government to implement the recent nuclear deal reached between Tehran and the...
EU leaders support bank rescue plan
By KUNA,
Brussels : Leaders of the 27-member European Union have expressed support to the action plan adopted by the Eurogroup on Sunday in Paris.
"Europe as a whole without exception, supports the concerted action plan adopted in Paris on Sunday. We are faced with an unprecedented crisis and the 27 member states have a single united response," Nicolas Sarkozy, French President and President-in-office of the EU Council, said at a news conference here late Wednesday night, following the first day of a meeting of EU leaders.
Russian bear paws seized at China border
By IANS/RIA Bovosti,
Vladivostok (Russia) : Russian border guards in the Far East seized five kg of bear paws which poachers tried to transport to China, authorities said Tuesday.
No truce, no talks with LTTE until it disarms: Sri Lanka
By IANS,
Colombo : The Sri Lankan government Monday dismissed the Tamil Tigers' readiness to agree to a fresh ceasefire, insisting that the rebels needed to first give up their weapons.
Senior minister and ruling Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) leader Maithripala Sirisena made the observation in parliament while responding to questions from opposition MPs regarding the offer from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Senior Zimbabwe army officer tells troops to vote for Mugabe
By DPA,
Johannesburg/Harare : A senior army officer has told soldiers in Zimbabwe's 35,000-strong army that they have to vote for President Mugabe in next month's run-off in presidential elections, according to the state-controlled Herald Saturday.
It quoted Major-General Martin Chedondo as saying that voting for Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change, would be to "sell out to the British and American imperialists".
Japan launches space probe to Venus
By IANS,
Tokyo : Japan launched a climate orbiter "Akatsuki" on a two-year mission to Venus, from the country's Tanegashima island Friday.
The H-2A rocket, which will study the climate and surface of Venus, lifted off at 6.58 a.m. local time (2158 GMT Thursday) from the Tanegashima Space Centre in Kagoshima Prefecture, Xinhua reported citing a Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency statement.
The rocket carrying the probe was originally scheduled to blast off Tuesday but had to be postponed due to bad weather.
Canadian lawmaker to be deported from Sri Lanka
By DPA,
Colombo : A Canadian parliamentarian is to be deported from Sri Lanka on the grounds that he was a sympathiser of the Tamil rebel movement, senior government officials said Wednesday.
Bob Rae, who arrived from the Indian city of Chennai, was detained at Sri Lanka's Bandaranaike International Airport in Colombo, before the government decided the Ontario politician should be sent back to Chennai.
CPN-M leaders stress on reviewing ties with India
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : Senior leaders of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (CPN-M), the ruling party, said Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal "Prachanda", may review ties between Nepal and India, local newspaper The Rising Nepal reported on Sunday.
Mohan Baidhya known as "Kiran", chief of the CPN-M organizational department, said the government had all rights to sign in the bilateral and multilateral treaties, as it is the elected body.
However, he also said the present government, like previous ones, would not sign in any agreement without doing proper homework.
IS accepts Boko Haram’s pledge of allegiance
Washington: The Islamic State (IS) terrorist group has announced that its leader and self-proclaimed caliph of the Muslim world, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, has accepted...
German students seek online nod to kill sheep
By IANS,
Brussels : Two arts students in Germany have triggered online outrage by seeking, in a poll, from people whether or not a sheep should be beheaded as part of their project work.
BBC sting exposes massive illegal Indian immigrant network in London
By Venkata Vemuri, IANS,
London : In an undercover investigation the BBC has exposed a London-based criminal network that used fake passports, identity documents and human carriers to bring in illegal migrants, mostly from Punjab, into Britain. These immigrants were settled in around 40 safe houses in Southall, home to a large concentration of immigrants from India. Nearly all of the illegal migrants - called "faujis" in criminal parlance - are said to be from Punjab.
Evacuation of Chinese nationals from Vietnam begins
Beijing : Four ships tasked with evacuating Chinese nationals from anti-China riot-hit Vietnam arrived at the central Vung Ang port Monday.
The ship Wuzhishan, sailed...
Bush lifts ban on offshore oil drilling
By DPA,
Washington : US President George W. Bush Monday lifted a ban on offshore oil drilling in an effort to relax record high gasoline prices.
But exploration and drilling cannot proceed until Congress repeals legislation that prohibits offshore production because of the risk of oil spills and other environmental hazards. The Democratic majority has refused to end the moratorium.
"Democrats on Capitol Hill have rejected virtually every proposal. And now Americans are paying at the pump," Bush said.
Kenya earmarks 6.5 Billion Shillings for dams to fight floods
By Catherine Atundi, NNN-KBC
Nairobi : The Kenyan government has earmarked 6.5 billion (about 97 million USD) to build three dams as part of its strategy of finding a permanent solution to the problem of floods in Budalangi constituency.
Programmes Minister John Munyes says the funds will also be used to create waterways, construct dykes and canals in order to control the flow of water into the River Nzoia.
Putin urges deadline for foreign troops’ presence in Iraq
By Xinhua
Moscow : Russian President Vladimir Putin Thursday urged foreign troops to withdraw from Iraq and called for a deadline for an end to the foreign troops' presence in the country.
He made the remarks at an annual question and answer programme on the country's main TV channels and radio stations.
Unless a date for pulling out is set, Putin said, "the Iraqi leadership, feeling (safe) under the reliable American umbrella, will not hurry to develop its own armed and law enforcement forces."
China tightens security, detains reporters after Xinjiang attack
By DPA,
Beijing : Police in northwestern China's Xinjiang region Tuesday stepped up security following a deadly attack against paramilitary police which authorities suspected to be a terrorist plot by ethnic minority Uighurs.
A Washington-based association of exiled Uighur Muslims from China Tuesday called for independent accounts of the attack, saying details remain unclear.
The attack Monday against a group of armed police while they were jogging outside their barracks in Kashgar city left 16 officers dead and 16 others injured, according to the official Xinhua news agency.
Crime against Indian community unacceptable: Victoria’s premier
By IANS,
Melbourne : Violence against Victoria's Indian community is "completely unacceptable and should not be tolerated", Premier of Australia's Victoria state John Brumby said Friday after discussing the spate of attacks on Indian students with the High Commissioner of India.
Brumby met High Commissioner Sujatha Singh and Consul General of India Anita Nayar to discuss safety and security of the Indian community in Victoria, the province of which Melbourne is the capital.
Israeli Army arrests seven Palestinian fishermen
By KUNA,
GAZA : Israeli forces arrested seven Palestinians who were fishing near the coasts of Gaza Strip Tuesday morning.
Israeli military boats seized a number of Palestinian fishing boats near the coasts of Bait Lahya town, in the northern parts of Gaza Strip, and arrested seven fishermen who were on board, local radio stations said Tuesday.
The arrested fishermen were Isaaq Al-Sultan, Hafeedh Al-Sultan, Ahmad Al-Sultan, Ramiz Al-Sultan, Rasim Al-Sultan, Riffat Zayid, and Nashaat Zayid, they added.
Berlusconi to stay in hospital
By IANS/AKI,
Milan: Former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi will stay in hospital for a few more days after suffering from an eye infection and "continuing hypertension", his doctor said.
Power station successfully traps CO2 emission
By IANS,
Sydney : In a pilot project that has far-reaching implications, an Australian power station has used a “carbon capturing” plant to trap a bulk of its CO2 emissions.
The “post-combustion-capture (PCC) pilot plant” at the Loy Yang Power Station in Victoria's Latrobe Valley trapped up to 85 percent of its CO2 emissions.
The 10.5 metre-high pilot plant is designed to capture up to 1,000 tonnes of CO2 annually from the power station's exhaust-gas flues. Future trials will involve the use of a range of different CO2-capture liquids.
PM: Terrorist elements in Mogadishu totally defeated
By NNN-ENA,
Addis Ababa : The Prime Minister of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) of Somalia, Ali Mohammed Ghedi, says the war is over and terrorist elements in Mogadishu have been totally defeated.
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in a report monitored here quoted Ghedi as saying that the situation in Mogadishu was very calm and the displaced families were going back to their houses in Mogadishu over the past few days.
Cambridge University cricket club to play matches in India
By IANS,
New Delhi: Cambridge University Cricket Club, where the legendary Ranjitsinhji played during his university days, is touring India for the first time and are set to play a number of matches in Delhi and Mumbai beginning Jan 10.
They will play matches at Roshanara Gardens ground in Delhi and Bombay Gymkhana stadium in Mumbai.
Nearly one in two births in China caesarean: Survey
By IANS,
Beijing : Nearly one in two births in China are caesarean, said the latest survey by the World Health Organisation as a professor pointed out that many hospitals are motivated by financial incentives to encourage unnecessary caesarean operations.
China Daily Thursday quoted experts as saying that in recent years, a growing number of women in the country have chosen C-sections over natural birth as some want to avoid the pain of labour and some want to choose an auspicious day for the baby's birth.
EU wants ship dismantling in safe facilities
By IANS,
Brussels: European Union environment ministers meeting in Luxembourg Wednesday adopted a Strategy on ship recycling with the objective that all ships are recycled in safe and environmentally sound facilities worldwide.
"This shows that the EU is taking the issue very seriously and that methods that are safe for the environment and for workers can be promoted," EuAsiaNews quoted Sweden's Minister for the Environment Andreas Carlgren as saying.
Carlgren chaired the ministerial meeting as Sweden holds the current EU presidency.
Bush gets his way on Iraq war funding
By DPA
Washington : Bowing to President George W. Bush, Congress gave up on US troop withdrawal and approved $70 billion in war spending on Iraq and Afghanistan for 2008.
The 272-142 vote in the House of Representatives Wednesday marked the end of a year that often saw Democratic lawmakers frustrated by Bush's veto power and their slim majority in both chambers.
Russia may free 45,000 prisoners of second world war
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia could release 45,000 people imprisoned in the country since the second world war and grant amnesty to 300,000 convicts to mark the 65th anniversary of its Victory Day May 9, Russian Association of Lawyers said.
The amnesty, to be declared by the Russian parliament, would come into effect May 9, when the country celebrates the 65th anniversary of its victory over Nazi Germany in the World War II, said Pavel Krasheninnikov, co-chair of the Russian Association of Lawyers.
Nigeria Fire kills 40
By Prensa Latina
Abuja : At least 40 persons died in a fire in a Nigerian oil pipeline provoked by looters in the southern state of Lagos, a police source reported on Wednesday.
Nearly 34 corpses, among them children and women, have been rescued from the place where the blast took place on Tuesday.
The deflagration occurred when a group of hooligans made a hole on the pipeline of a state oil company established in that region.
Sri Lanka trade deficit grows
By IANS,
Colombo : Sri Lanka's trade deficit grew by 2.6 percent to $761 million in April from $741.7 million in the same month last year, the central bank said Tuesday.
Berlin calls on Serbs to vote for path to EU in presidential election
By IRNA
Berlin : The German government here Monday stressed its support for Serbia's path to the European Union less than a day after ultra-national leader Tomislav Nikolic won the first round of the Serbian elections against President Boris Tadic.
Addressing a press conference, German Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Jaeger said, "We believe that the future of Serbia lies in the European Union. We will support Serbia on this path. The choice whether they want or not want to go this path lies with the citizens of Serbia."
Colombian rebels set to release four hostages
By DPA
Caracas : Two helicopters identified with Red Cross symbols left Venezuela Wednesday and were heading for Colombia, to pick up four hostages set to be released by the Colombian guerrilla group.
Venezuelan television reported that the helicopters took off from Santo Domingo, in the Venezuelan state of Tachira - bordering Colombia. Venezuelan Interior Minister Ramon Rodriguez Chacin and Colombian Senator Piedad Cordoba were part of the delegation, the TV channel Globovision said.
Train hits mine near military base in Georgia
By RIA Novosti,
Tbilisi : A train hit a mine on Sunday morning near the Georgian city of Gori, a Georgian Interior Ministry official said, adding that there were so far no reports of casualties.
The incident took place next to an abandoned Georgian military base occupied by Russian troops during recent fighting over breakaway South Ossetia.
"The explosion occurred when a goods train carrying heating fuel was passing the military base. We have no exact information at the moment, but preliminary reports suggest the track was mined," said Shota Utiashvili.
No Victorian era if new immigrant rule imposed back then?
By Venkata Vemuri, IANS,
London : Imagine what would have happened if the latest British immigration rule requiring the spouse of a British citizen to know English to enter the country was in vogue only a couple of centuries ago? There just might not have been a Victorian era!
Commenting on the rule announced by Home Secretary Theresa May earlier this week, The Telegraph pointed out that Queen Victoria's mother knew no English when she came to Britain as the bride of the Duke of Kent who apparently knew more French.
Maldives opts for presidential system
Male, Aug 19 (IANS) The island nation of the Maldives Sunday opted for a presidential form of government in a historic referendum held as a run-up to multiparty elections next year.
With less than 50 of the 433 ballot boxes remaining to be opened, results showed that 93,042 votes or more than 60 percent of the total votes polled supported a presidential system of government as against 57,109 votes for a Westminster-style multiparty parliamentary democracy.
Four Tibetans held during sombre Dalai Lama birthday in Nepal
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Australian found guilty of killing three Indian siblings
By IANS,
Melbourne: A 42-year-old Australian faces up to 45 years in jail after a jury Tuesday found him guilty of murdering three siblings of an Indian-origin family in Brisbane in 2003.
Ireland: Rejects New European Treaty
By Prensa Latina,
Dublín : Ireland could repeat its rejection to the Treaty of Lisbon if a new referendum on the document led to reform the European Union institutions is carried out, said a poll by consulting firm Red C Sunday.
On June 12, 53.4 percent of the participants in the referendum was against the Treaty of Lisbon, an agreement signed in December 2007.
Now, 62 out of each 100 questioned people about the Treaty of Lisbon could be against the document.
Just thirty-two percent of the questioned people would support the document this time.
Sri Lanka to consider Prabhakaran’s extradition issue ‘positively’
By IANS,
New Delhi : A day before Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon heads to Colombo, Sri Lanka Wednesday said it will look at any Indian request for extradition of LTTE chief V. Prabhakaran "positively".
"The government's stand is that if there is a request, certainly that will have to be looked at very seriously - I would say even positively," Sri Lanka's High Commissioner to India C.R. Jayasinghe told the Times Now news channel.
Obama signs trade pacts into law
By IANS,
Washington : President Barack Obama Friday signed into law free-trade pacts with Colombia, South Korea and Panama, ending a long-stalled process aimed at boosting US exports.
Ending conflicts must remain priority for UN and African Union
By IRNA,
Tehran : Preventing and resolving conflicts peacefully must remain high on the shared agenda of the United Nations and the African Union, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told a Security Council meeting at UN Headquarters, calling for deeper cooperation between the two institutions.
In a speech to a meeting on peace and security in Africa, attended by many heads of State and other high-level figures, Mr. Ban said he would "spare no effort" in making the partnership between the UN and the AU complementary, effective and inclusive.
Thirteen killed in Nepal bus accident
By SPA,
Kathmandu : At least 13 people were killed and dozens of others were missing after an overcrowded bus plunged off a mountain highway in western Nepal on Monday, police and media reports said.
Police said the bus plunged into the fast-flowing Rapti River in Dang district, about 400 kilometers west of the Nepalese capital Kathmandu, after skidding off the highway on Monday morning, DPA reported.
Police confirmed at least 13 bodies were recovered from the river and said more than 40 others remained missing.
Niqab ban gets unanimous support in Canada
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto : Canadians have unanimously supported the niqab ban announced by French-speaking Quebec province this week. After France, the Canadian province is the first in North America to ban the niqab, a top-to-toe dress worn by Muslim women.
The ban, triggered by an Egyptian immigrant woman's refusal to remove her niqab in her French classes in Montreal, will disallow access to government services, schools and colleges and health care to those who don't remove the face veil.
Mass grave found in Kosovo
By DPA
Pristina : Kosovo authorities Thursday started retrieving human remains from a suspected mass grave from the 1999 conflict in the province.
9,000-year-old rhino remains found in Russia
By RIA Novosti,
Yekaterinburg (Russia) : Archaeologists in the Sverdlovsk region in Russia's Urals have discovered 9,000-year-old bones of a rhinoceros, a local museum worker said Monday.
The excavations during which the bones were discovered were carried out at a site on the bank of the Lobva River, said Nikolai Yerokhin from the Russian Academy of Sciences' Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology department.
It was generally assumed that rhinoceros last wandered the Urals some 15,000 to 20,000 years ago.
Colombian volcano erupts in shower of hot ash
By SPA,
Bogota, Colombia : Colombia's Nevado del Huila volcano is erupting in a shower of hot ash.
Authorities have declared a state of alert and hundreds of people are being evacuated, the Associated Press reported.
The Colombian Institute of Geology and Mining said Monday night that the volcano was in the process of erupting.
There have been no reports of damage so far.
Germany stockpiled hundreds of atomic weapons: report
By IRNA,
Berlin : Germany stockpiled around 700 atomic bombs which the US had provided to Germany, the online site of the Munich-based weekly Focus news magazine quoted German historian Detlef Bald as saying Sunday.
The Germans could have detonated the nuclear bombs at any time, if they had chosen to do so, according to Bald who cited various archives and documents.
"The atomic bombs were supposed to be ignited in case of a military attack on Germany. They were planned for a nuclear first-strike," he added.
California bans trans fats in restaurants
By DPA,
San Francisco : The governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger has signed a law banning trans fats in restaurants. The measure will make California the only state in the US with such a tough ban.
The measure signed Friday is likely to lead many of the country's fast food chains to change their menus to comply with California's restrictions on the heart-damaging fat.
Truck accident leaves 19 dead in Mexico
By IANS
Mexico City : At least 19 people have been killed and 34 others injured when a truck carrying some 100 passengers plunged into a ditch on a hilly road in east-central Mexico.
According to authorities, the accident occurred Sunday evening when the overloaded truck fell into a five-metre-deep ditch on a road bordering Veracruz and Puebla provinces, Spain's EFE news agency reported Tuesday.
Police were still trying to determine the cause of the accident, said Ranulfo Marquez, a senior public safety official in the Gulf state of Veracruz.
Women rally in support of Rousseff in Brasilia
Rio de Janeiro : Hundreds of women rallied in front of the Planalto Palace, the government headquarters, in Brasilia in support of Brazilian President...
UN warns Africa’s credibility at stake in Zimbabwe
By DPA,
New York : African nations have called for strengthening the African Union's (AU) peacekeeping capability during a special UN Security Council session, but were warned the continent's credibility must be backed by democracy, particularly in Zimbabwe.
While UN members were unanimous that the AU should receive the means to carry out its peacekeeping mandate, the unresolved presidential election in Zimbabwe came up during the debate Wednesday.
Anupam Kher supports UN Women’s work on gender equality
New York : Veteran actor Anupam Kher is happy to be appointed as the 50/50 champion for gender equality to support UN Women's work.
In...
Sri Lankan TV staff hold minister hostage
By IANS
Colombo : Employees of the Sri Lanka government-owned television station Rupavahini Thursday held Labour Minister Mervyn Silva hostage after he allegedly assaulted the director of news for not featuring him in a telecast.
Silva, a non-cabinet minister, turned violent after he was blanked out of a programme on President Mahinda Rajapaksa's tsunami anniversary function held in Matara in southern Sri Lanka Wednesday, the employees said.
Silva has been a long-standing political bigwig in Matara district and had given a speech at the function.
Spain to offer movies to US libraries, universities
By IANS/EFE,
Miami : Spain will provide its films to US libraries and educational institutions to promote teaching of the language.
No plot against Sikh woman MP: Canadian minister
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto : Canadian Immigration Minister Jason Kenney denied Sunday any political plot against Sikh woman MP Ruby Dhalla who has been accused of mistreatment by her three former nannies.
Death toll in Greece wildfires crosses 50
By DPA
Athens : Raging wildfires in Greece have killed over 50 people and destroyed hundreds of houses as firemen were largely forced to wait for sunrise Sunday before renewing the battle against the massive blazes.
Residents of the Peloponnese peninsula, in southern Greece and on Euboea island hunkered down for another night of horror Saturday as an early loss of daylight caused firemen to shut down helicopters and planes working to contain the blazes.
Russian senator quits over Israeli citizenship allegations
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow: A Russian senator handed in his resignation following allegations that he has Israeli citizenship and undeclared foreign real estate, a parliamentary official said.
North, South Korea for Military Talks
By Prensa Latina
Seoul : North and South Korea will hold general military talks from December 12 to 14 in Panmunjom, in the demarcation line of parallel 38, according to an official announcement.
Major General Kim Yong Chul from North Korea and the Major General Lee Hong-Kee from South Korea will preside over the talks.
The Defense Ministry explained in its note that the two parts will discuss cooperation projects between the two Koreas.
PFCs weaken immune response to vaccine shots in childhood
By IANS,
Washington: Perfluorinated compounds (PFCs), widely used in non-stick cookware, waterproof clothing and fast-food packaging, seem to lower immune response to vaccination in children.
Skiing beckons in the Andes when summer reigns in Europe
By DPA
Las Lenas (Argentina) : While many holidaymakers lounge on Europe's beaches during the summer, others hanker for snow and skiing.
For some, no distance is too far - the Andes Mountains in Argentina and Chile, for instance, have become a popular "alternative destination".
Las Lenas (Argentina) : While many holidaymakers lounge on Europe's beaches during the summer, others hanker for snow and skiing.
For some, no distance is too far - the Andes Mountains in Argentina and Chile, for instance, have become a popular "alternative destination".
Russian Duma VP Nix US anti-Cuba Drive
By Odalys Buscaron Ochoa, Prensa Latina,
Moscow : Russian Duma Vice President Ivan Melnikov called the US anti-Cuba actions political and Psychological attacks.
Melnikov, vice president of the Russian Federation Communist Party, defined on going drive and maneuvers as continuity of the White House policy to increase hostility against the Cuban government and people.
The Russian legislator defined the above as continuity of the line imposed after the collapse of the socialism in Europe and the Soviet Union towards the ex Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq.
Gang that cloned credit cards busted in Mexico
By IANS/EFE,
Cancun (Mexico) : Four Venezuelans who allegedly cloned credit cards in the Riviera Maya, a resort area on Mexico's Caribbean coast, have been arrested, police said.
The suspects were stopped for speeding in Playa del Carmen, a tourist town located some 90 km from Cancun.
The Venezuelans did not obey a police order to stop, setting off a chase that ended quickly when three police vehicles blocked the road.
Police found 36 credit cards, 25 receipts and 142,570 pesos (about $7,859) in cash inside the suspects' SUV.
Constitution can only be changed in next government term: Myanmar speaker
Yangon : Myanmar's constitution can only be amended in the next government term and the upcoming 2015 general elections will be held under the...
Japan upgrades nuclear accident intensity
By IANS,
Tokyo : Japan Friday raised from level four to five on an international scale the measure of the nuclear accident at its earthquake-ravaged Fukushima nuclear power plant.
Sri Lanka ends combat operations
By Xinhua,
Colombo : The Sri Lankan government Monday said it was ending its combat operations against Tamil Tiger guerrillas.
An official statement said the security forces would end the use of heavy calibre guns, combat aircraft and aerial weapons that could cause civilian casualties.
Obama congratulates Papandreou on Greek polls
By DPA,
Washington : US President Barack Obama called up Greece's next prime minister, George Papandreou, to congratulate him on his success in Sunday's elections, the White House said.
Obama "wished all Greeks well who participated in the democratic process. The president reiterated the importance of the US-Greece relationship and said he looks forward to working with Mr Papandreou", according to a statement released by the White House.
Closing down Guantanamo prison quickly is a challenge: Obama
By Xinhua,
Washington : US president-elect Barack Obama Sunday said that it is challenging to close down the Guantanamo prison in Cuba soon after his inauguration Jan 20.
"I think it's going to take sometime. Our legal teams are working in consultation with our national security apparatus as we speak to help design exactly what we need to do," Obama said in an interview with ABC News.
When asked if he would manage to close the camp within his first 100 days as president, Obama said: "That's a challenge".
39,000 South Sudanese flee to Kenya: UN
Nairobi : The number of new arrivals from South Sudan since mid-December 2013 when fighting broke out between pro-government and rebel forces in Juba...
‘Town’ of illegal migrants found in Moscow
By IANS,
Moscow: Law enforcers in the Russian capital have discovered "a whole town" of makeshift cabins in Moscow, where about 2,000 illegal migrant labourers live, RIA Novosti reported.
Brazil police kill 11 in raid on Rio slums
By ANTARA News/Reuters
Rio de Janeiro : Brazilian police backed by helicopters and armored cars killed at least 11 suspected drug gang members on Thursday in a raid on two Rio de Janeiro`s slums, a police official said.
About 150 police entered the slums in the west of the city in an attempt to arrest the suspected leader of a drug gang controlling the area, according to precinct police chief Rodrigo Oliveira.
"We came under fire after circling the communities," he said. "We believe the trafficker escaped."
China, US celebrate 30 years of their diplomatic ties
By Xinhua,
Beijing : China and the US Monday kicked off a series of events to mark the 30th year of the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries.
"Like a scroll of vivid historic scenes, these pictures showcased significant progresses in the 30-year of China-US relations and deeply inspired us," Chinese President Hu Jintao said while inaugurating a photo exhibition organised here to mark the 30 years of China-US relations.
Power Surge Causes Outages Across Florida
By SPA
Washington : A malfunction in Florida’s electrical cut caused sporadic power outages to nearly 3 million people in the state on Tuesday, and caused a nuclear plant to automatically shut down.
The outages were mostly brief, and no threat was posed by the nuclear plant, authorities said.
The problem, as yet unidentified, occurred in a substation near Miami and disabled two power distribution lines, Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman Kenneth Clark said.
NATO-Russia Council should resolve differences – Scheffer
By RIA Novosti
Bucharest : NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said Friday he hoped the NATO-Russia Council session in Bucharest, Romania, would help to overcome existing disagreements between Moscow and the alliance.
Russia has been unnerved by NATO's ongoing expansion and Washington's plans to deploy missile defense bases in Central Europe, which it says are needed to deter possible strikes from Iran and other "rogue states."
Bank executives with negative emotions take fewer risks
By IANS,
London: Executives with negative emotions tend to take fewer risks, a study based on a survey of managing directors and general directors of Spanish banks has found.
The study had a response rate of 48.3 percent and comprised questions bearing on emotional traits and demographic characteristics of the executives, reports the British Journal of Management.
The study was conducted by Juan Bautista Delgado García, researcher at Universidad de Burgos, Spain.
Medvedev, Sarkozy talk before summit on Georgian crisis
By DPA,
Moscow : Just hours before a European Union (EU) emergency summit on the crisis in Georgia, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and French President Nicolas Sarkozy discussed the situation on the telephone, the agency Interfax has reported.
The two leaders focussed on the disputed buffer zones held by the Russian Army on Georgian territory along the two breakaway republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, according to the late Sunday report from Interfax, which cited presidium officials in Moscow.
Spanish court acquits four Madrid train bombers
By DPA,
Madrid : Spain's highest court Thursday overturned the guilty verdicts of four of the 21 persons convicted of carrying out the Madrid train bombings that left 191 dead four years ago.
The court acquitted two Syrians, a Moroccan and a Spaniard, who were sentenced to between 5 and 12 years in October 2007 for smuggling explosives and for membership of a terrorist organisation.
Another Spaniard acquitted at the original trial was convicted at the latest hearing and jailed for four years.
Luanda Port Boosts Operations
By Prensa Latina
Luanda : Remodeling jobs will start in the port of Luanda, to double its operational capacity and increase its current 15 piers to 32.
Transportation Minister Luis Brandao said a study was completed and the budget has been approved to turn the port into an economic asset by untangling its crowded container and ship situation and calling importers to help ease the problem.
The Port of Luanda increased operations by 18 percent from 5.4 billion tons in 2006 to 2007 by handling an additional 130,000 tons, to nearly 5.6 million tons in 2007.
Radioactive water from Japan n-plant leaks into Pacific
By IANS,
Tokyo : Radioactive water from the tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear power plant may have leaked into the Pacific Ocean, the plant operator has said.
No more negotiations if nuclear agreement rejected: Ahmadinejad
By DPA,
Tehran : Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warned Wednesday that Iran would no longer negotiate with world powers if they refuse to embrace the latest nuclear agreement.
"If they reject the agreement and start playing new (political) games, then they should know that the doors for negotiations and understandings will be closed," he said in a televised speech.
Ethnic tensions could destroy Russia, warns Putin
By IANS,
Moscow: Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin warned rising nationalism posed a threat to the country's future and called for a clampdown on "disrespectful" internal migrants.
Russia, US, Canada to hold anti-terror exercise
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : The Russian, American and Canadian air forces will hold a joint anti-terrorism exercise Aug 8-11, a top Russian official said Monday.
EU leaders to hold emergency summit on Georgia-Russia conflict
By Xinhua,
Brussels/Moscow : Leaders from the 27 EU member countries will gather for an emergency meeting in Brussels on Monday to discuss relations with Russia in light of the Georgia crisis.
Western countries have denounced Russia's August 26 decision to recognize Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states as "irresponsible."
199 ceasefire violations by Pakistan till June: Parrikar
New Delhi : There have been 199 violations by Pakistan of the bilateral ceasefire with India till June, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar said...
No vuvuzelas, please, we sing in Europe: UEFA
By DPA,
Berlin : The noisy vuvuzela trumpet which featured prominently among fans at the World Cup football in South Africa was Wednesday outlawed by the ruling body UEFA for its events such as Euro 2012 qualifiers, the Champions and Europa League.
UEFA said in a statement it had told its 53 member federations that the vuvuzela "may not be brought into stadiums at matches in UEFA competitions" in an effort "to protect the culture and tradition of football in Europe - singing, chanting etc."
Haiti quake toll could be 300,000: President
By DPA,
Cancun (Mexico) : The death toll in the earthquake that destroyed much of Port-au-Prince and areas surrounding Haiti's capital could reach as high as 300,000, Haitian President Rene Preval has said.
Preval was attending a summit of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) Sunday in Cancun, Mexico, where he offered the latest and highest estimate of fatalities in the 7-magnitude quake, which struck Jan 12.
Thai premier meets protesters, hopes to ease tensions
By DPA,
Bangkok : Thailand's prime minister and the leaders of anti-government protests started face-to-face talks Sunday in an effort to defuse political tensions that turned violent on the weekend.
Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, along with representatives of his government, met with leaders of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD). They greeted each other warmly just before the meeting at 4 p.m. Sunday (0900 GMT) at the King Prajadhipok Institute on the outskirts of Bangkok.
Boat with starving African refugees found off Brazil’s coast
By RIA Novosti
Rio De Janeiro : A barge carrying 13 half-starved African refugees has been found drifting in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Brazil, local police said on Wednesday.
The Africans spent 17 days at sea after their vessel, bound for Trinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean, went off course. All those onboard the boat showed signs of malnutrition and dehydration.
Nepal tightens security along border with Tibet
By DPA
Kathmandu : Nepal tightened security along its border with Tibet in an attempt to prevent influx of Tibetans fleeing the violence, official news agency RSS reported Wednesday.
The government said the security measures were tightened in several districts where it was easy to cross the border from Tibet.
In Mustang district, about 300 km north-west of Kathmandu, local authorities said more security personnel had been mobilized.
The district lies north of the Himalayan mountain range and is geographically a part of the Tibetan plateau.
Indonesia: 11 missing after boat capsizes as strong waves batters coastal areas
By NNN-Antara
Jakarta : Rescue teams searched Friday for 11 missing people after a wooden fishing boat capsized in rough seas off Indonesia's Central Java province earlier this week, an official said.
Brebes district search and rescue team leader Ade Raharjo said rescuers, including navy divers and police, were still searching for survivors after the accident on Wednesday.
"We hope that the weather will be more calm today (Friday) to enable us to keep searching for the missing," he said, adding that bad weather hindered rescue efforts on Thursday.
Britain delays new EU airport security rules over Sikh concerns
By Venkata Vemuri, IANS,
London: Britain has delayed implementation of new European Union (EU) airport security rules for hand searches of passengers after concerns from the Sikh community that this could also mean searches of their religious headgear, officials Thursday said.
Consultations are currently going on with the Sikh community over the issue, a spokesperson of the the British transport department told IANS.
Tens of thousands feared dead in Haitian earthquake
By DPA,
Port-au- Prince : Tens of thousands of people are feared to have perished in an earthquake in Haiti as the international community rushed Thursday to help the impoverished Caribbean nation rescue victims whose cries could still be heard from under mountains of rubble.
President Rene Preval issued a worldwide appeal for assistance. He said tens of thousands might have been killed in the magnitude-7 earthquake that rocked the country Tuesday.
The damage was centred around the capital, Port-au-Prince, home to about 1.9 million people.
Dutch cabinet okays new Afghan mission
By DPA,
Amsterdam : The Dutch government Friday agreed on a new mission in Afghanistan to provide training to security forces and help in building up the country's police and justice organs.
Russia to open new nuclear enrichment centre to all
By RIA Novosti
United Nations : Russia has said it will allow any country access to a uranium enrichment centre currently being constructed in east Siberia for peaceful use of nuclear energy within the framework of nuclear control regime, Russia's ambassador to the UN said.
The centre, part of Moscow's non-proliferation initiative to create a network of enrichment centres under the UN nuclear watchdog's supervision, will be based at a chemical plant in Angarsk. The centre will also be responsible for the disposal of nuclear waste.
Traces from old n-tests found in Antarctic moss
By IANS,
Sydney : Nuclear weapons, tested 50 years ago, have left their imprint on living moss shoots in the Antarctica.
Passenger’s death forces plane to return to Madrid
By DPA,
Madrid : The sudden death of a passenger forced an Air Europa plane to return to the Spanish capital 90 minutes after taking off for Cuba, airport sources said Thursday.
A 46-year-old woman suffered a heart attack on board the Boeing 763 Wednesday.
The passengers disembarked while the body was removed from the aircraft. It resumed its flight towards Havana six hours later.
Grenade blast wounds 21 civilians in Sri Lanka
By IANS,
Colombo : At least 21 civilians were wounded in a grenade explosion in Sri Lanka's eastern Batticaloa district Monday evening, defence sources said.
Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said an unidentified person flung a hand grenade at a group of civilians at a bus stand in the predominantly Muslim village of Kattankudi.
"Of the 21 wounded, two are seriously injured," Nanayakkara told IANS.
Batticaloa town is located some 300 km east of here.
The motive for the attack was not immediately known.
Australia appoints first woman governor-general
By DPA,
Sydney : Australia is to have its first woman governor-general, the official representative of Queen Elizabeth, who remains head of state of the former British colony, the government said Sunday.
Quentin Bryce, a mother of five and currently governor of the state of Queensland, will take up Australia's highest official position for a five-year term in September, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced.
Current Governor-General Major General Michael Jeffery, whose term in office expires next month, formally tendered his resignation.
Colombian army helicopter lands in minefield, four dead
Bogota : Four of the 15 soldiers on board a Colombian army Black Hawk helicopter were killed in an explosion after it landed in...
British minister in Sri Lanka to assess refugee resettlement
By DPA,
Colombo : A British cabinet minister began a two-day visit to Sri Lanka Tuesday to assess the government's resettlement plans for an estimated 250,000 people displaced by the country's civil war, officials said.
Mike Foster, British Parliamentary under secretary of state for international development, was scheduled to visit refugee camps in the north, a British-funded child soldier rehabilitation centre in Vavuniya and a demining programme also backed by Britain.
China admits Three Gorges dam can spell ecological disaster
By Xinhua
Wuhan : Chinese officials and experts have admitted the Three Gorges Dam project has caused an array of ecological ills, including more frequent landslides and pollution, and if preventive measures were not taken, there could be an environmental "catastrophe".
While the dam has served as a barrier against seasonal flooding threatening the lower reaches of the Yangtze River and the electricity generated by hydropower has led to a decrease of 100 million tonnes of carbon emissions, the benefits have come at an ecological and environmental cost, officials said.
North Korea to strengthen military
By DPA
Seoul : North Korea vowed in a New Year's message Tuesday to strengthen its military and economy but did not mention its failure to meet a year-end deadline to disable its main nuclear site and provide a declaration of its nuclear facilities, materials and programmes.
It demanded, however, that archrival the US, which is involved in talks with North Korea on its nuclear programme along with four other countries, end its "hostile" policy towards Pyongyang.
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.
China, Iran vow to deepen defence cooperation
Beijing : China and Iran Monday held bilateral talks here aimed at deepening defence cooperation between the two countries, officials said.
Chinese Defence Minister Chang...
Russia successfully tests ballistic missile
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia has successfully test-fired a submarine-launched ballistic missile, a defence ministry spokesperson said.
Looking into eye to track early symptoms of diabetes
By IANS,
London : Aston University scientists are wanting to examine eyes to track early symptoms of diabetes. They are particularly interested in susceptibility differences between the South Asian and Caucasian populations in Birmingham.
Healthy 20-65-year-old volunteers are being sought to take part in a free health check-up. Results could help detect risk or early diabetic changes.
Volunteers will undergo a simple ultrasound test to assess cardiovascular health, an eye test to measure blood flow and blood vessel diameter, and a blood test for glucose and cholesterol levels.
Tamil Tiger aircraft enter Colombo airspace
By IANS,
Colombo : Anti-aircraft fire rang out in this Sri Lankan capital Friday night after two Tamil Tiger planes entered the city's airspace, military officials said.
"Two LTTE aircraft entered Colombo's airspace. We are checking," Air Force spokesperson Wing Commander Janaka Nanayakkara told IANS.
Earlier, a high alert was sounded in Colombo following reports that an aircraft belonging to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was flying towards Colombo.
Lights went off in the Sri Lankan capital, creating anxiety and panic.
Minus money, man walks 34 days to reach home
By Xinhua,
Beijing : A man walked 800 km over 34 days to reach home to join his 70-year-old mother for the Lunar New Year celebrations after his money was stolen, a newspaper reported Tuesday.
Li Haitao, 30, a migrant worker from central China's Henan province, walked from Beijing to Zhengzhou from Feb 3 to March 9 to spend the Spring Festival with his mother, said the Dahe Daily.