Dam burst kills 50 in Indonesia
ICRC suspends work in LTTE zone’s entry/exit point
Teacher throws sandal at Colombian presidential candidate
Six killed in Peru plane crash
Abducted Italian journalists freed in Syria
Chinese hospitals banned from carrying out organ transplants for foreigners without permission
By Xinhua
Beijing : Chinese medical institutes are banned from carrying out human organ transplants for foreigners without permission from health authorities, according to a statement issued on Tuesday by the Ministry of Health.
Mainland hospitals will also have to report to provincial health authorities before offering Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan patients organ transplants and the request will be submitted to the Ministry of Health, said the statement.
Xi meets Sushma, upbeat about growth of India-China ties
Dutch cameraman killed by Russian cluster bomb: Report
US imposes curfew on troops in southern Japan
13 policemen killed in Turkey bomb attack
Oil-eating bacteria cleaning China oil spill
Russian trade union seeks return of sailors stranded in Vietnam
Sri Lanka attempts to weaken funding networks of LTTE
Ukraine president offers temporary autonomy to rebel-held areas
Tollgate Pile-up Leaves Four Dead, Seven Injured In Northwest China
Mugabe threatens to expel US envoy
Rescuers find 255 survivors in Indonesian ferry boat disaster
New Russian spacecraft reusable for up to five flights
New NASA mission to reveal moon’s evolution
Washington : NASA will launch a new mission that will peer deep inside the moon to reveal its anatomy and history, announced Alan Stern, the agency's Associate Administrator for Science, in a press release on Tuesday.
The name of the new moon mission is "Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory," or GRAIL. It will cost 375 million U.S. dollars and is scheduled to launch in 2011, according to the announcement.
Small plane crashes in Alaska, killing at least 6
Obama’s star power fading as healthcare tempers flare
Prachanda poised to be Nepal’s 1st Maoist PM
Sharon Osbourne had a crush on Barlow
18,500 bottles of fake vodka destroyed in China
47 Croatian school kids injured in accident
1800 B.C. artefacts found in Syria
Beijing Olympics against backdrop of politics and pollution
International rights bodies urge the Indian govt to release G.N. Saibaba on humanitarian grounds
36 Asian migrants rescued from slavery in Costa Rica
Floods in western Africa claim 377 lives: UN
Sri Lanka opposition protests court martial of former army chief
EU threatens Mugabe with new sanctions
China to spend $158 bn in agriculture, rural development
Mexican massacre policemen go missing
Biggest ozone hole over Antarctica in “one or two weeks”
Key UN climate change summit opens
Colombo train blast kills eight, leaves 73 injured
Developed countries declarations on climate change ‘make no sense’: India
Russia, US plan new military cooperation deals
Nepal police arrest 70 Tibetan protestors
Putin answers 85 questions in almost five hours
NASA’s Cassini clicks Saturn’s moon in best-ever resolution
One killed, three injured in plane explosion in Kazakhstan
World’s biggest Bible factory opens in China
Sri Lanka’s Air Force base attacked, four killed
ANC gets two-thirds of vote in South Africa elections
Former US president Jimmy Carter hospitalized
Birds of a flock work together
US industrial production drops
Obama urges action as White House sees continuing recession
Venezuela president threatens US with oil embargo
Inspired by India, Mexico to set up knowledge commission
Civil servants’ strike cripples government services in Nepal
By IANS
Kathmandu : Civil servants across the country went on strike in Nepal Tuesday, demanding security, especially in the turbulent Terai plains in the south, bringing the work of the government to a halt.
Three unions of civil servants called a "pen down" strike in Nepal Tuesday, affecting government offices, ministries, courts and other government establishments.
Italy to pay dlrs five billion compensation to Libya
Surface water often contaminated with salmonella
Israel opens two Gaza crossings
North Korea expels 11 South Korean officials
Nepal parties form panel to resolve deadlock
Ex-vice mayor shot dead in Phillipines
Bush, Merkel discuss Russia-Georgia relations
Ugandan president threatens to quell election demos with army
EU-US summit opens in Slovenia with packed agenda
23 killed in Bangladesh stampede
US to double funds for Lebanon PM murder trial tribunal
Russia to become Europe’s largest internet market
Mbeki faces ouster as ANC head at party conference
Obese claimants claim 10 mn pounds in Britain
British Muslims deplore jizya on Sikh and demolition of their properties
Colombia to ratify tax treaty with India by year-end
Japan PM’s residence ‘not haunted’: Government
Americans think healthcare system needs radical overhaul
UN peacekeeping chief calls for law, order in Kosovo
Malaysian Tamils protest Madurai bullfight ban
Bolivian president enacts new constitution
32 terror groups busted in China
11 killed in Russian plane crash
2,700-year-old human skeletons found in Mexico
Germany boosts assistance, relief measures for Iraq
CHOGM will dispel pessimism about Copenhagen: Trinidad PM
Second temblor rocks Indonesia
Berlin hails Georgian poll as “step towards democratic society”
Jamaica to reward Olympic athletes
Kamala Harris wins nomination in California attorney general race
US stocks extend monthly gains
Southern Thai drug ring busted, leader detained in Malaysia
Seven killed in China landslide
Man on motorised wheelchair fined for speeding
Let pandas die out: conservationist
Uganda to host OIC Business Forum in June
Uma Thurman’s stalker held guilty
Bush immigration plan gets off to a slow start
By Arun Kumar
IANSWashington : President George Bush's controversial plan to give millions of unlawful immigrants, including some 300,000 Indians, legal status in the United States cleared its first hurdle with the Senate taking up the issue for debate amid widespread opposition.
