Home International

International

International

Nanoscale changes in protein reveal bone health

By IANS, Washington: Using an atomic force microscope that details images of nano-structures, researchers have discovered changes in the collagen component of bone that indicate its health - a step which could lead to new methods of diagnosing osteoporosis. Collagen, the most common protein in the mammalian body, is present in bones, teeth, tendons, skin and arteries, making up to 35 percent of the body's protein. Bone is a composite material made up of a flexible collagen matrix impregnated with and surrounded by a stiffer, stronger mineral component.

PTI’s New York correspondent dead

By IANS, New York : Dharam Shourie, PTI correspondent in New York who covered the United Nations for two decades, died here following a brief illness. He was 72. Shourie was editor of the Press Trust of India (PTI) before being posted to the United Nations as its correspondent in 1989. Family members said Shourie was ill for the last two months and was in a hospital for over a fortnight. He died Wednesday evening due to multiple complications in the last few days.

Ukrainians vote to elect new president

Kiev : Voting started in Ukraine Sunday to elect a new president after months of unrest in the country following ouster of president Viktor...

Toxic copper waste contaminates Chinese river

By IANS, Beijing: Toxic waste from a copper mine in China has contaminated a river, causing the death of millions of fish, authorities said Monday. About 1.89 million kg of dead fish were found lying in the Mianhuatan reservoir in China's Fujian province, after being poisoned from copper waste released by the Zijinshan copper mine, Xinhua reported. The mine is owned by a Hong Kong-listed company. The foul odour of dead fish can be smelt from even 10 km from the reservoir, villagers complained.

India conveys concern, Sri Lanka assures safety of Tamils

New Delhi/Chennai, Oct 26 (IANS) India Sunday told Sri Lanka that it needs to take utmost care to protect civilians caught in the dragging ethnic conflict but made it clear that it had no intention of forcing a truce in the campaign against the Tamil Tigers. External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee conveyed the message to Basil Rajapaksa, a senior advisor to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, in New Delhi. The president's special envoy also held talks with National Security Advisor M.K. Narayanan and Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon.

Quake rocks Bay of Plenty in New Zealand’s North Island

By Xinhua, Wellington : An earthquake measuring 5.4 on the Richter scale rattled parts of the Bay of Plenty on Friday morning, GNS Science said. The quake, at 9:06 a.m. local time (21:06 GMT Thursday), was centered 10 km southwest of White Island at a depth of 5 km. No casualties or damage have been reported so far. It was felt throughout the Bay of Plenty. In Tauranga, workers in multistory buildings described it as a slow and rolling quake. On Thursday afternoon, a magnitude 3.7 earthquake also struck the Gisborne region in North Island.

Protests over austerity measures in Italy

By IANS, Rome: Some 150,000 people have converged here from across Italy to protest against the government's tax hikes and welfare cuts.

Moscow court upholds guilty verdict for Russian tycoon

By RIA Novosti Moscow : A city court here has upheld a lower court's verdict sentencing tycoon Boris Berezovsky to six years in jail for embezzling more than $9 million from Russian flagship air carrier Aeroflot. Lawyers for Berezovsky, who lives in Britain, had appealed the verdict handed down by Moscow's Savyolovsky district court Nov 29, 2007, saying there was "no evidence of wrongdoing." Berezovsky has been granted political asylum in Britain. Russia has issued multiple arrest warrants on him and has repeatedly demanded that Britain extradite him.

British PM rents out his Notting Hill home

By IANS, London : British Prime Minister David Cameron and his wife Samantha are pocketing up to 6,000 pounds a month by renting out their London home while they live in 10 Downing Street, a media report said Saturday. In 10 Downing Street and the official country retreat of Chequers, the prime minister has the use of two grace-and favour properties. But the couple have now decided to cash in on the luxury London property market by letting their 2.7-million pound house in Notting Hill, Daily Mail reported on its website.

4,800 Chinese died in road accidents in July

By IANS, Beijing : At least 4,853 people died in road accidents in China in July, the ministry of public security said Friday. Around 30,000 people were injured in 17,000 accidents across the country. The accidents caused an economic loss of about 70 million yuan ($10.3 million), Xinhua reported. The ministry warned of increased traffic snarls as students return to school for the autumn semester.

More than 100 governments agree to ban cluster bombs

By DPA, Dublin : More than 100 governments Wednesday agreed on a draft convention to ban the use of cluster bombs, in a commitment to remove the weapons from national arsenals within eight years. The agreement would ban the munitions, which drop hundreds of tennis-ball sized smaller explosives known as "bomblets," which then scatter and detonate across the battlefield. Many bomblets fail to explode and for years after a conflict has ended can continue to pose a threat to civilians, especially children who often mistake the munitions for toys.

5.6 magnitude quake hits Philippines

By IANS, Manila: An earthquake of 5.6 magnitude on the Richter scale hit Mindanao in Philippines Saturday, Xinhua reported quoting the US Geological Survey. window.onload =...

China builds museum on Confucius

By IANS, Beijing : China is building a museum to display over 100,000 cultural relics related to ancient philosopher Confucius.

Three killed as New Zealand air force helicopter crashes

By IANS, Wellington : At least three people were killed and one seriously injured after a helicopter of the New Zealand air force crashed, officials said Sunday. The Iroquois helicopter of the Royal New Zealand Air Force crashed while enroute from Ohakea to Anzac Day commemorations in Wellington. Police and ambulance services said they were called to the scene on farmland near the Paekakariki Hill Rd, 40km north east of Wellington about 6.45am.

Father’s death made Paltrow health conscious

By IANS, Los Angeles: Actress Gwyneth Paltrow says she changed her lifestyle after she lost her father, filmmaker Bruce Paltrow, to cancer a decade ago.

Clinton in strong position for Democrats — U.S. presidential analysts

By Ronald Baygents, KUNA Washington : A five-member panel of experienced political analysts almost unanimously agreed that Hillary Clinton is in the best position to win the Democratic nomination for U.S. president this year, but were divided on the question of which Republican will prevail. In a wide-ranging discussion at the Columbus Club, the panelists were asked who currently has the "best hand" in the race for the presidency among the Democrats. Four said Clinton, while one said it was a "coin flip" between Clinton and Illinois Senator Barack Obama.

Winter storm warnings across central, northeastern U.S.

PITTSBURGH, Dec 16, SPA -- Winter storm warnings and watches were in effect Sunday across the central and northeastern U.S. a day after heavy snowfall snarled traffic and left at least two people dead, reported ap. In Chicago, snow forced airport officials to cancel more than 200 flights Saturday at O'Hare International Airport, one of the nation's busiest, said Chicago Department of Aviation spokesman Gregg Cunningham.

US-India, Pakistan-China alliance visible after Mumbai: Nepal Maoists

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : The ruling Maoist party of Nepal has warned that the Mumbai terror attacks would escalate greater tensions in South Asia pitting a strengthening India-US alliance against Pakistan, the alleged home of the terrorists, and its ally China. "After the Mumbai attack and tensions escalating between India and Pakistan, the South Asian region is again becoming a hotspot in world politics," warned the Maoist-affiliated Red Star fortnightly that hit the stands this week.

US, South Korea begin naval manoeuvres in tense region

By DPA, Seoul : The US and South Korea Sunday began major naval manoeuvres in the Yellow Sea, five days after North Korea's attack on a South Korean island escalated tensions in the region.

Uncertainty over North Korea nuclear talks

By IANS

Tokyo : Japanese government officials said Friday that they were uncertain whether North Korea would unconditionally return to six-nation talks to end its nuclear programme even after frozen North Korean funds were transferred from a Macau bank and South Korea warned that progress would only get tougher from here.

Detainees exchanged through mediation of Council of Europe Commissioner

By KUNA, Paris : Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Thomas Hammarberg, affirmed here Monday that he sensed during his recent mission to the areas affected by the South Ossetian conflict that among the most "pressing" human rights concerns pertaining to the conflict was the return from both sides of the persons detained.

Hong Kong people biggest optimists for 2008

By DPA Hong Kong : People in Hong Kong are the most optimistic in the world about the prospects for 2008 while those in Taiwan are the region's gloomiest, according to a survey Tuesday. Seventy-one percent of people in Hong Kong believe 2008 will be better than 2007, the highest percentage among 54 countries and regions surveyed worldwide by market research groups TNS and Gallup.

Bush applauds McCain decision to have Palin as running mate

By DPA, Washington : US President George W. Bush Friday applauded John McCain's "exciting decision" of picking Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate, and described her as "a working mother with a track record of getting things done". "Governor Palin is a proven reformer who is a wise steward of taxpayer dollars and champion for accountability in government," Bush said in a statement, adding that her "success is due to her dedication to principle and her roll-up-your-sleeves work ethic, and serves as a wonderful example of the spirit of America".

Hu calls for further mainland-Taiwan cooperation

By Xinhua Boao, Hainan : The economic and trade exchanges and cooperation between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan was facing a historical opportunity and needed joint efforts from both sides for further progress, Hu Jintao, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, said on Saturday. Hu made the remarks while meeting with Vincent C. Siew, chairman of the Taiwan-based Cross-Straits Common Market Foundation at the Boao Forum for Asia.

70 students suffer from food poisoning in China

By IANS, Beijing : Seventy students fell ill after they had a meal at a primary school in south China, an official spokesman said. The students suffered from fever, stomach aches and diarrhoea Wednesday after having food at Yingcai Primary School in Yulin City of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, Xinhua quoted spokesman with the regional public security bureau Qin Yongjun as saying Thursday.

Nepal sets to elect its first President today

By IRNA, New Delhi : Nepal is going to elect its first president on Saturday. Three candidates, Ram Raja Prasad Singh of CPN (Maoist), Dr. Ram Baran Yadav of Nepali Congress and Ramprit Paswan of CPN(UML) are in the fray. According to reports the contest is likely to be tough. Madhesh Janadhikar Forum (MJF) has decided to support the Maoist candidate Ram Raja Prasad Singh for the post of President and nominated Parmanand Jha as its candidate for the Vice-President.

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.

Croatia’s former PM arrested in Austria

By DPA, Vienna : Croatia's fugitive former premier Ivo Sanader was arrested Friday in Austria, a day after fleeing his country, the interior ministries in Vienna and Zagreb confirmed.

Informal Six-Party talks kick off in Singapore

By Xinhua, Singapore : The first informal meeting of the Foreign Ministers of the Six-Party Talks on the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue was held here Wednesday on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Ministerial Meeting.

Canadian PM congratulates Modi, praises Indian democracy

Ottawa: Congratulating India's prime minister-elect over his victory, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he is looking forward "to working with Mr. Modi and...

World’s tallest woman dies in US

By DPA, Washington : Sandy Allen, the tallest woman in the world according to the Guinness Book of World Records, died in the US state of Indiana. The 2.31-metre tall woman died at the age of 53 at a nursing home in Shelbyville, Indiana, said a publication Wednesday. Allen had been ill for a few months, a friend was quoted as saying in the Indianapolis Star. The cause of death was not known, but she suffered from blood infections, respiratory problems and diabetes.

Hurricane Emma expected to continue — German Meteorological Service

By KUNA Berlin : Hurricane Emma which has hit Europe yesterday killing 11 among them four in Bavaria south of Germany is expected to continue, the German Meteorological Service (Deutscher Wetterdienst) in Offenbach said on Sunday. Helmut Malewski from Wetterdienst said in television statements that the powerful storm with winds exceeding more than 120 kilometers an hour has also caused major material damage estimated to be worth millions of euros.

U.S. freezes civilian nuclear deal with Russia over Georgia

By RIA Novosti, Washington : U.S. President George Bush has frozen a civilian nuclear cooperation deal with Russia amid the current Georgia crisis. The news was announced on Monday in a statement by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice that read: "The president has notified Congress that he has today rescinded his prior determination regarding the U.S.-Russia agreement for peaceful nuclear cooperation." "We make this decision with regret. Unfortunately, given the current environment, the time is not right for this agreement," the statement went on.

Bush, Sarkozy call for an int”l effort to deal with financial crisis

By KUNA, Washington : US President George W. Bush and his rival French President Nicolas Sarkozy called on Saturday for more international collective efforts to address the current financial crisis. Bush said along with Sarkozy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso after arriving to the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland that the US will host a summit of world leaders "in the near future" to discuss the global financial crisis.

Ruins of two 4,000-year-old cities found in China

By IANS, Beijing: Chinese archaeologists have unearthed the ruins of two ancient cities dating back 4,000 years.

New planet spotted after discovery of Neptune

By IANS, Washington : In 2006, astronomer Alice Quillen predicted a planet of a specific size and orbit must lie within the dust of a nearby star. That planet has now been photographed by the Hubble Space Telescope, making it only the second planet ever imaged after an accurate prediction. The only other planet seen after an accurate prediction was Neptune, more than 160 years ago. "It's remarkable," said Eugene Chiang, associate professor of astronomy at the University of California Berkeley (UC-B), and part of the team that imaged the new planet.

US firm denied permission to hunt treasure in Spanish galleon

By EFE, Mexico City : Mexican authorities have rejected a request by a US-based firm to comb the wreck of a Spanish galleon that sank in 1631 in the Gulf of Mexico. The National Anthropology and History Institute (INAH) said in a communique that the two requests presented by Odyssey Marine Exploration in 2006 and 2008 "do not meet the requirements that regulations establish for archaeological investigation in Mexico".

British Muslims deplore jizya on Sikh and demolition of their properties

By TwoCircles.net news desk, New Delhi: Council of Indian Muslims—UK (CIM) has strongly condemned the imposition of the so called Jizya on Sikh community and demolition of their houses in Pakistan's Aurakzai tribal region as “un-Islamic and shameful”. A press statement issued by the CIM quotes its religious affairs advisor and London based renowned religious scholar Maulana Atiqur-Rehman Sambhali as saying, “Such an action is highly deplorable, unacceptable and un-Islamic. “

Uproar in Britain over 19mn pounds bill for Euro history museum

By IANS, London : Taxpayers in Britain will have to share the burden of a spiralling bill for a European history museum that will see them shelling out a whopping 19 million pounds.

BRICS but not yet a Building

By Amit Kapoor, The recently concluded BRICS annual summit held in Brazil resulted in the important Fortaleza Declaration and Action Plan from the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. The joint declaration has some important points that highlight the importance of this year’s summit.

Strong quake jolts Japan’s east coast

By Xinhua, Tokyo : An earthquake measuring 6.1 on the Richter scale hit Japan's east coastal areas Thursday, the Japanese Meteorological Agency said. The epicentre of the quake, which occurred at around 8.17 a.m.( 2317 GMT), was about 10 km under the sea at Sariku Oki off the coast of Miyagi prefecture, the agency said. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage to property. No tsunami warning was issued.

Sri Lanka’s Air Force base attacked, four killed

By Xinhua Colombo : Four soldiers were killed and eight injured in a predawn air and ground attack launched by guerrillas of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on Sri Lanka's north central Anuradhapura Air Force Base Monday, defence officials said. Ajantha De Silva, the Air Force spokesman, said a group of Tamil Tiger rebels attacked the air base, about 200 km north of the capital Colombo, around 3.20 a.m. Two LTTE aircraft also dropped bombs at the air base, he said.

NATO forces free 20 hostages from Somali pirates: Report

By Xinhua, Mogadishu : NATO forces Saturday freed 20 people taken hostage by Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden last week, a media report said. A Dutch warship in a NATO anti-piracy mission freed 20 Yemeni hostages from a vessel that was captured by the pirates last week, the report quoted a NATO spokesperson as saying. Seven Somali pirates were captured in the operation, it said. Of late, attacks on ships by Somali pirates have increased in the Gulf of Aden. Several countries have sent their warships to the region to protect the shipping lanes.

Russia welcomes move on Kosovo

By DPA

Moscow : Russia has welcomed as "logical" the decision at the United Nations (UN) in New York to refer the Kosovo independence issue to a six-nation contact group.

"This is a logical consequence of our active policy. We want to lay the foundations for a continuation of the dialogue with the aim of reaching an agreement between Pristina and Belgrade," a Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman said late Friday, according to Interfax.

Leicester lustre leads Diwali celebrations in Britain

By IANS, Leicester : People braved near-zero temperatures at several places in Britain to celebrate Diwali, with all eyes on the city of Leicester for its breathtaking display of dazzling fireworks. Cutting across communities, they gathered in public parks in various cities and towns for a cultural evening organised by local Indian organisations, the festivities culminating in a final play of light and sound in the skies.

Neil Armstrong turns 80

By DPA, Washington : In the four decades since the world watched his "one giant leap for mankind", Neil Armstrong hasn't had much use for the limelight. So as, the first man on the moon celebrates his 80th birthday Thursday no large party is expected. Last year, he took part in celebrations for the 30th anniversary of his famous moon landing July 20, 1969, but with seemingly less enthusiasm than his publicity-hungry colleague Buzz Aldrin.

South Korea’s jobless rate drops in October

By IANS, Seoul : South Korea's jobless rate dropped to 2.9 percent in October as the number of people employed grew at the fastest pace in 17 months, a government report showed Wednesday.

Blame convenience stores for obesity among kids

By IANS, Toronto: Kids living closer to convenience stores are more likely to be obese, a new study says. ''Access to convenience stores seems more relevant in obesity than access to fast food restaurants,'' says senior researcher Tracie Ann Barnett, professor in social and preventive medicine at the University of Montreal. Barnett suggests that schools should establish zones that are free of convenience stores and work harder to compete against fast food chains.

Obama bars daughters from Facebook

By IANS, London: US President Barack Obama has barred his daughters from using Facebook because he doesn't want "strangers knowing our business", a media report said.

Venezuelans rally against constitutional reform

By IANS Caracas : Tens of thousands of Venezuelans have participated in a huge opposition rally against the constitutional reforms pushed by President Hugo Chavez, Spanish news agency EFE reported Friday. The opposition leaders at the rally held here Thursday called on the people to vote against the constitutional reform in the referendum slated for Sunday. They also urged people not to initiate or participate in any sort of violence or disturbance during the referendum.

Russia could claim treasure from WW II shipwreck: Experts

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia could have the right to file a claim for part of treasure worth billions of dollars on board a British cargo ship sunk by a German submarine during World War II, experts said. The British cargo ship, torpedoed in June 1942 while carrying precious metals to the US to help pay for the Allied war effort under the Lend-Lease Act, was recently discovered by the Sub Sea Research company off Guyana.

Wife searches for missing Iranian mountaineer’s body in Nepal

By IANS, Kathmandu : Six months after an Iranian doctor went missing while attempting to climb a Himalayan peak in northern Nepal, his wife has returned to the Himalayan republic in a bid to find his body. Saed Bahaeloo Horeh, a doctor, had been part of an Iranian team attempting to summit the Tilicho, a 7135-metre high peak in northern Manang district last autumn. He went missing Oct 28 and his companions feared he could have fallen into a crevasse.

Sweden says holds three suspected of terror plot

By SPA Stockholm : Swedish security services took three Swedish citizens into custody on Thursday on suspicion of planning acts of terror and of financing terrorism, according to Reuters. "Three people have been taken into custody," said Maria Martinsson, spokeswoman for the Swedish Security Service. "They are suspected of preparing terrorist activity and of financing terrorism." She said the three men detained at various addresses in the Stockholm area.

Ship loaded with sulphuric acid sinks off Sri Lanka

By DPA, Colombo : A Turkish ship transporting sulphuric acid sank off Sri Lanka's north-eastern coast Thursday, three days after attempts to repair a leak in the vessel failed, a navy spokesman said. The ship had sailed from Tuticorin in India. Sulphuric acid is widely used for lead-acid batteries for vehicles. The ship's 19-member crew was rescued by the Sri Lankan Navy after the MT Granba reported a leak off the Trincomalee area Monday and attempts were made to carry out the repairs.

America’s worst environmental nightmare far from over

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : The gushing oil from BP's ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico may have stopped for now, but America's worst environmental disaster caused by the April 20 blowout on the rig is far from over. The well isn't dead yet, and it may be back in a flash, officials said as BP began a 48-hour "integrity test" on the well's new sealing cap after 87 days of futile efforts to kill the well by pumping mud into it and putting a top hat on the broken pipe.

Ruling party wins parliamentary polls in Sri Lanka

By DPA, Colombo : The ruling party in Sri Lanka, led by President Mahinda Rajapaksa, won the first parliamentary elections held since last year's defeat of Tamil separatist rebels and the end of the country's 26-year civil war, election officials said Friday. With some votes yet to be counted from Thursday's elections, Rajapaksa's United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) had taken 117 seats, already a majority in the 225-member Parliament, the officials said.

1,300 homes destroyed in Texas wildfire

By IANS, Washington : Over 1,300 houses were destroyed in a wildfire in the US state of Texas, Xinhua reported Thursday.

Petrol In Australia Set To Hit A$1.50 A Litre

MELBOURNE, Jan 3 (Bernama) -- Australian motorists have been warned to expect to pay A$1.50 a litre for petrol as crude oil hits US$100 (US$1=RM3.28) a barrel. Motoring group, National Roads and Motorists' Association (NRMA), predicted average petrol prices would top A$1.50 (A$1.00 = RM2.89) a litre within the week as international factors prompted the spike in crude oil prices, which had jumped more than 50 percent in a year. According to the NRMA website, some Sydney motorists were already paying more than A$1.50 a litre.

O.J. Simpson sentenced to 15 years in jail for kidnapping

By DPA, Los Angeles : Former American football star O.J. Simpson was sentenced to 15 years in jail Friday for his part in an armed robbery and kidnapping case in Las Vegas last year. Lawyers for Simpson, who was controversially acquitted of the 1994 murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, said they would appeal. Simpson, 61, was convicted in October of 12 charges stemming from the incident in which he and his cohorts used guns to force two sports memorabilia dealers to hand over a number of items that Simpson believed to have been stolen from him.

Obama says US welcomes China’s peaceful rise

By IANS, Washington : US President Barack Obama has said cooperation between America and China is good for both countries as well as the world.

Britain to raise marriage-visa age from Nov 27

By IANS, London : The age at which someone can apply for a marriage visa to join their spouse in Britain will increase from 18 to 21 from the end of November, the government announced. From Nov 27 both parties in a marriage will have to be 21 before a marriage visa can be issued, the home ministry said Tuesday in what it described as part of efforts to crack down on forced marriage and on “those who attempt to abuse the marriage visa route”.

Home alone, Obama has a bachelor party

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Home alone, President Barack Obama has been enjoying what some have jokingly referred to as a bachelor's weekend with friends - golfing, playing basketball and grilling out on the White House South Lawn. The festivities are all part of a belated birthday celebration of sorts for the president, who turned 49 Wednesday.

India’s cautious approach on Tibet understandable: Dalai Lama

By IANS New Delhi : Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama says India's "cautious" approach to the Tibet issue is "understandable". "I always looked out of (sic) India from a holistic view. Then there is some incidence, here and there, being a little overcautious doesn't matter," he told TV news channel NDTV in an interview to be telecast Friday.

U.S. Welcomes Kenya Power-Sharing Deal

By SPA Washington : The United States welcomed a power-sharing agreement signed by rival Kenyan leaders on Thursday that seeks to end post-election violence that killed 1,000 people, but said much depends on the deal’s implementation. “That’s an important and very positive step forward,” State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey said of the deal signed by Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga.

First ASEAN global dialogue kicks off in Cambodia

By IANS, Phnom Penh : The first-ever ASEAN global dialogue was held here Tuesday, focusing on global challenges, particularly economic and financial issues.

British Sikh police criticize Irish ban on turbans

By DPA Dublin : Sikh police officers from Britain have criticized a decision by the Irish police force to ban a Sikh recruit from wearing a turban on the job, according to reports in the Irish press Tuesday. The Sikh Association of London's Metropolitan Police, which has allowed Sikhs to wear official police turbans since the 1970s, said An Garda Siochana (the Irish police force) was engaging in "racial discrimination," The Irish Times reported. Ireland's police decided to ban the wearing of turban last week, saying all police officers must wear standard uniforms.

Pope prays, talks to survivors at Ground Zero

By DPA, New York : Pope Benedict XVI Sunday prayed at Ground Zero with survivors of the 2001 terrorist attacks that took 3,000 lives, and asked for god's intercession in the hate which drove the hijackers to kill so many. Dressed in a plain white robe, Benedict knelt at a small altar on a yellow carpet at Ground Zero and prayed silently for several minutes before lighting a single candle. The brief ceremony came on the sixth and last day of the pontiff's tour of the US, where his quest for reconciliation over the child sex abuse scandals within the church have dominated his sojourn.

China ups spending, deficit at six-decade high

By Xinhua, Beijing : China Thursday announced a fiscal deficit budget of 950 billion yuan ($139 billion) for 2009, the highest in six decades, as the country boosts spending to cushion the impact of the global financial crisis. The total deficit accounts for less than 3 percent of China's gross domestic product (GDP), said Prime Minister Wen Jiabao at the opening of parliament's annual session.

Kings Cup: Harmeet ends fourth, Gangjee slips to sixth

By IANS, Khon Kaen (Thailand): Indian golfer Harmeet Kahlon shot a scorching six-under 66 to finish tied fourth while Rahil Gangjee dropped three bogeys on the back nine and lost what might have been a great chance to pull of his second career win in a play-off at the Kings Cup here Sunday. Gangjee was in shared lead at the turn after a fine three-under 33 on the front stretch. But then tension got the better of him and he dropped three shots on the 14th, 15th and 17th and the birdie on 18th was nothing mere than a consolation.

New York man kills fellow commuter over train seat

By DPA, New York: A New York man has been charged with stabbing to death a fellow commuter on a train after the they got into an argument over a seat, according to a report Sunday. The 37-year-old suspect had demanded that a reportedly homeless 36-year-old man move a bag from the seat where he wanted to sit on the train he boarded at the city's Rockerfeller Center, the New York Daily News reported. The newspaper said that after the man refused and assaulted him, the suspect drew a steak knife.

Bush defends use of harsh interrogation measures

By DPA Washington : US President George W. Bush Friday defended the use of harsh interrogation measures by US security officials, saying they helped the government "better protect the American people". In remarks to reporters in the Oval Office at the White House, Bush said "highly trained professionals" carried out the questioning of "these extremists and terrorists". The agents are "trained in this kind of work ... to get information" that has helped protect the American people, Bush said.

London stock market rebounds after relief measures

By DPA, London : The London stock market rebounded in early trading Thursday, which saw the Financial Times Share Index rise by 3 percent while banking shares were up again sharply. The recovery was led by banks expected to tap the government for new capital pledged in a 50-billion-pound ($87 billion) package Wednesday, and boosted by gains on Far Eastern markets as well as the global interest rate cuts. Shares in Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) were up nearly 30 percent Thursday, while Royal Bank of Scotland shares rose by 16 percent.

Reluctance to use seat belt kills 5,000 teens every year in US

By IANS, Washington : Motor vehicle crashes claim nearly 5,000 teenagers every year in the US, because of their refusal to wear seat belts either as drivers or passengers. The study comprised over 12,000 African-American, white, and Hispanic public and private high school students aged 16 or older who participated in the 2001 and 2003 National Youth Risk Behaviour Surveys.

Pyongyang sends delegation for South Korea ex-president’s funeral

By DPA, Seoul : A delegation sent by North Korean leader Kim Jong Il arrived Friday in Seoul to pay respects to the late South Korean president Kim Dae Jung, who won the 2000 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to reconcile the two Koreas. The visit was the first to South Korea by high-ranking North Korean functionaries since the inauguration of conservative South Korean President Lee Myung Bak in February last year.

Berlin to send helicopters for battling Greek wild fires

By IRNA Berlin : Germany will send three CH-53 transport helicopters to Greece to combat the wild fires in that south European country, foreign ministry spokesman Martin Jaeger told journalists here Sunday. According to the deputy spokesperson of the German Defense Ministry, Michael Berndsen, the helicopters will be put into operation in Greece on Tuesday. An advance commando was due to depart Germany for Greece to prepare logistically for the transfer of the helicopters, Berndsen added.

Sri Lanka’s opposition concerned about Rajapaksa’s security

Colombo: Sri Lanka's main opposition party on Wednesday raised concerns regarding the security of former president Mahinda Rajapaksa and urged the government to address...

Liberals back Keith Vaz over ethnic shortlists for British MPs

By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS London : An attempt by Britain's longest-serving Asian MP to bring more ethnic minority politicians into the British parliament has won approval from the opposition Liberal Democrats and the author of a Labour-sponsored study.

Nepal’s first bishop appointed officially

By IANS

Kathmandu : Nepal began celebrating the official appointment of its first bishop by the Vatican with the incumbent, Bishop Anthony Francis Sharma, pledging greater participation by Christians for the development of the nation.

Lohan plans quite New Year

By IANS, Los Angeles: Actress Lindsay Lohan is reportedly planning to have a quite New Year unlike her usual preferences.

Human Rights closes its office in Angola

By KUNA, Geneva : The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) announced Friday that it will cease its activities in Angola in the next few weeks. The Angolan authorities had informed the Office of the High Commissioner that Angola will not sign a comprehensive agreement for human-rights promotion and protection activities in Angola.

North Korea releases seized Russian cargo ship

By RIA Novosti Vladivostok (Russia) : North Korean authorities Wednesday released a Russian cargo ship seized Saturday in the Sea of Japan, a regional rescue service official said Wednesday. He said the ship, with a crew of 25, was released Wednesday morning and was now on its way to Vladivostok. It was expected to reach the largest port in Far East Thursday evening. "All 25 crew members are alive and well," said the official.

Nigerian court asks cabinet to decide ill president’s future

By DPA, Nairobi/Abuja: Nigeria's Federal High Court Friday gave a two-week deadline to the West African nation's cabinet to decide whether President Umaru Yar'Adua is fit to continue as leader. Yar'Adua has been in a Saudi hospital since November with a heart problem. His absence has angered many in Nigeria and raised fears of a power vacuum in Africa's most populous nation.

Bluefin-21 resumes MH370 search

Canberra : Deep-sea underwater search vehicle Bluefin-21 has resumed its search for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 after an eight-day hiatus, the joint...

Most Brazilian workers now in formal employment

By IANS/EFE, Rio de Janeiro: The proportion of working Brazilians with employment contracts increased from 45.3 percent in 2001 to 56 percent last year, a statistics agency said Wednesday.

France looking to revive glory of former Bengal colony

By IANS, Kolkata: The French government is looking into various areas to develop the tourism potential and revive the rich heritage of its former colony Chandannagar in West Bengal's Hooghly district. "West Bengal Governor Gopalkrishna Gandhi requested us to visit Chandannagar almost two years ago. We visited the place in April this year and identified four areas which can be developed with joint participation," Ambassador of France Jerome Bonnafont told IANS on the sidelines of an event here Tuesday.

Bird flu case found in South Korea

By IANS Seoul : South Korean officials have detected the H7 strain of avian influenza virus at a duck farm in the country's sixth largest city Gwangju and stepped up efforts to prevent it from spreading. The metropolitan health department culled about 16,000 ducks at the farm and three other nearby farms in the city some 330 km south of the capital, WAM news agency reported Sunday. While the H7 strain is not highly contagious for humans, there is a possibility that it could mutate into a more virulent form.

Peruvian police rescue 10 kids from guerrillas

By IANS/EFE, Lima: Police rescued 10 children who had been forcibly recruited by a guerrilla group in southern Peru, President Ollanta Humala said Friday.

Chinese vice-president meets US president

By IANS, Washington : Chinese Vice-President Xi Jinping called on US President Barack Obama at the White House Tuesday and delivered a letter from Chinese President Hu Jintao.

China issues white paper on judicial reform

By IANS, Beijing : China Tuesday issued a white paper on judicial reform.

Fidel Castro still wielding power in Cuba: Bush

By DPA Washington : Retired Cuban leader Fidel Castro continues to quietly wield power, and Washington will not alter its tough policies on the communist island until democratic reforms are introduced, US President George W. Bush has said. "So far, all Cuba has done is replacing one dictator with another. And the former ruler is still influencing events from behind the scenes," Bush said Friday during meeting with a group of Cuban dissidents at the White House.

Russia to freeze cooperation with NATO: Report

By DPA, Oslo : Russia has decided to freeze and cancel all military cooperation with Norway and other NATO members, the online edition of Oslo daily Aftenposetn reported Wednesday. The newspaper, citing Norwegian foreign ministry sources, said Moscow was due to send a diplomatic note to that affect to Norway and other NATO members. The move comes the day after NATO foreign ministers met in Brussels and strongly criticised Russia's actions in the ongoing conflict in Georgia and breakaway region of South Ossetia.

Immediate steps needed to mitigate climate change impact: Obama

Washington : US President Barack Obama said on Wednesday that climate change "can no longer be denied" and immediate measures are needed to mitigate...

Conservative party wins Morocco polls

By RIA Novosti Cairo : The conservative pro-government Istilqal Party has prevailed in Morocco's parliamentary elections, depriving a leading Islamic party of an expected victory, the interior minister said. Istilqal won 52 out of 352 parliamentary seats, despite widespread expectations that hardline Justice and Development (PJD) party would come out on top. In the elections, PJD won just 47 seats in the lower house of parliament in Friday's voting, Chakib Benmussa said.

Indian diaspora upset over Trinidad and Tobago awards

By Paras Ramoutar,IANS, Port-of-Spain : The Indian diaspora here is unhappy as only three people of Indian origin have received the Trinidad and Tobago National Awards this year out of a total 20 recipients. Basdeo Panday, leader of the opposition, said that the National Awards have lost their importance and citizens do not have respect for them anymore. "The present system is based on patronage. We need to overhaul the system," he said.

Canadian PM inaugurates Hindu temple

By IANS

Toronto : Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper inaugurated a Hindu temple here and praised the $40 million architectural marvel, saying that it represented the spiritual and ethnic pluralism of India and Canada.

The Bochasanwasi Shri Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Sanstha's (BAPS) Swaminarayan Mandir opened Sunday after 18 months of construction.

Missiles not meteorites on US-Russia agenda

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: The US plans to collaborate with Russia on missile issues and Afghanistan, but not planetary defence from space threats, a US diplomat said.

1 in 3 Americans would deny illegal immigrants social services

By Arun Kumar, IANS Washington : One-third of Americans want to deny the country's estimated over 12 million illegal immigrants, including some 300,000 Indians, social services like public schooling and emergency room healthcare, a new poll has found. Still a strong bipartisan majority -- 60 percent-favours allowing illegal immigrants, who have not committed crimes to become citizens if they pay fines, learn English and meet other requirements, the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll noted.

Russian Soyuz spacecraft docks with ISS

By RIA Novosti Moscow : The Russian Soyuz-FG carrier spacecraft carrying two Russian crewmembers and the first South Korean astronaut has successfully docked with the International Space Station (ISS), Russia's Mission Control said Thursday. The Soyuz TMA-12 vehicle carried commander Sergei Volkov and flight engineer Oleg Kononenko, both from Russia, along with South Korea's Yi So-yeon, a spaceflight participant to the ISS on the 17th expedition.

Thai military junta threatens to prosecute offenders

Bangkok: The Thai military junta Sunday threatened to use a martial court to prosecute offenders as the protests against the coup are escalating in...

Canadian PM buys time to save his government

By Gurmukh Singh,IANS, Toronto : Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper Thursday managed to buy time for his government which faces ouster by a combined opposition in a vote of confidence. Harper managed to convince Governor-General Michaelle Jean to prorogue parliament till Jan 26, enabling his Conservative Party government to avoid a defeat in a vote of confidence next week.

EU estimates 150,000 potential refugees in Georgia conflict

By DPA, Brussels : The European Commission appealed Thursday to all sides in the Georgia-Russia conflict to ensure the safe access of humanitarian aid to the region, with latest estimates out of Brussels suggesting some 150,000 potential refugees could be affected by the fighting. Of these, 45,000 were to be found in the separatist Georgian region of South Ossetia and 60,000 in and around the Georgian town of Gori. A further 45,000 ethnic-Georgian refugees were believed to be in Abkhazia, Georgia's other predominantly Russian region.

Bush off to Beijing with a Myanmar mission

By DPA, Bangkok : US President George W. Bush Thursday chided China for its human rights record and called on the communist country to help pressure Myanmar's military leaders before departing Bangkok Thursday for Beijing. Bush, on a two-day visit in Thailand, lunched with Myanmar dissidents before departing for the Chinese capital, where he is to attend Friday's opening ceremony of the Olympic Games.

World doesn’t end, Russian doomsday sect members to head home

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The members of a doomsday sect who quit on Friday the dugout in central Russia where they had been waiting for the end of the world for around six months are to pack their bags and leave for home with the planet still intact. "Documents are being prepared by immigration officials to allow those [three] sect members who are from Belarus to return to their homeland," said Alexander Provotorov, the head of the Bekov District in the Penza Region.

UN millennium campaign creates Guinness record

By IANS, New Delhi: The UN millennium campaign, which has been rallying behind world leaders reminding them about the fulfilment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015, has created a world record by mobilising the maximum support that any campaign ever has, officials said Thursday. According to Minar Pimple, deputy director and head of Asia Pacific, UN Millennium Campaign, more than 173 million people gathered around the world in over 3,000 events spread across 120 countries to call for the fulfilment of the MDGs.

Pilot killed as car crashes into plane on highway

By DPA, Los Angeles : The pilot of a home-built aircraft was killed Tuesday when a car crashed into his plane as he was trying to take off after making an emergency landing on a southern California highway, the police said. The pilot managed to make an emergency landing on the busy road. As he attempted to take off, the car slammed into the plane, ejecting the pilot. He died instantaneously. The incident occurred on Interstate 40 in San Bernadino country, said Sheriff's spokeswoman Jodi Miller. Three occupants in the car suffered minor injuries from a broken windscreen.

Facing Obama veto, Senate halts F-22 expansion

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : In the face of a veto threat by President Barack Obama, the US Senate has voted to block expansion of one of America's most controversial and expensive defence programmes, production of the F-22 fighter jet.

Tibetan who died to be cremated in Dharamsala

By IANS, Dharamsala : A 27-year-old Tibetan who burnt himself in Delhi demanding freedom for Tibet will be cremated here Friday, the hub of the Tibetan government-in-exile.

Russia denies violating Georgian airspace

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Russia denied Tuesday that its two military aircraft had violated airspace and dropped a bomb in a Georgian village. "Russian aircraft did not fly over Georgian territory either Monday evening or Tuesday morning," said Colonel Alexander Drobyshevsky, a spokesman for the Russian Air Force. "They (the aircraft) did not violate Georgian airspace."

North Korean defectors to be tried in Myanmar

By DPA, Seoul : Nineteen North Korean defectors, who were arrested Dec 2 in Myanmar, are going to be tried this week for illegal entry, a local newspaper reported Monday. The North Korean group, which includes four children, was arrested in Tachilek, a town on the Myanmar-Thai border about 550 km northeast of Yangon after they were forced to shift their boat route from Thailand to Myanmar, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported. After their departure from China's southern province of Yunnan, they set out towards Thailand, travelling south along the Myanmar-Thai border, the paper said.

Glaciers in southern Alps shrinking at alarming rate

By IANS, Sydney : Glaciers in the southern Alps have lost 2.2 billion tonnes of permanent ice in a year since April 2007, the fourth highest annual loss since monitoring began. For the past 32 years, the New Zealand based National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA) has been surveying 50 glaciers in the southern Alps, using a small fixed wing aircraft, to record the height of the snow line at the end of summer

UN stresses need to invest in disaster mitigation measures

By IRNA, Tehran : The UN General Assembly Wednesday debated mitigation steps such as building safer schools, hospitals and cities to reduce the terrible toll resulted from natural disasters.

Pope Urges US Catholics to Reconciliation

By Prensa Latina, Washington : Pope Benedict XVI has urged US Catholics to "foster healing and reconciliation" in the wake of the child-abuse scandal involving priests. In a sermon during a mass he celebrated at the new Washington Nationals baseball stadium before nearly 45,000 people on Thursday, the Pope said to have seen obvious signs of polarization in the US society and referred to the child-abuse scandal involving the Catholic Church in this country.

Earth-like planet found

By IANS, London : American astronomers have confirmed the existence of an earth-like planet, dubbed Kepler 22-b, in the "habitable zone" around a star similar to the sun.

Limit use of Taser stun guns, UK told

By IRNA, London : The British government Tuesday was urged to limit the police use of controversial Taser stun guns in the light of a new report that says nearly 350 people have died in the US in the last seven years after being stunned by one. "The Taser is clearly a dangerous weapon and should only be used in very limited circumstances where strictly necessary to protect life or avoid very serious injuries," said Amnesty International director, Oliver Sprague.

Boston protests against Bhopal Encounter, asks for Shivraj Singh Chouhan to be sacked

By TwoCircles.net staff reporter Boston: A number of people gathered at the historic Boston Common to protest against the recent extrajudicial killings of eight undertrials...

Kojiro Shiojiri named new Japanese ambassador to Indonesia

By ANTARA News Tokyo : The Japanese government on Wednesday announced it has named one of its senior diplomats, Kojiro Shiojiri (59), as its new ambassador to Indonesia. Shiojiri will take over the post of outgoing Shin Ebihara who will assume his new post as Japanese ambassador to Britain. "Shiojiro is one of Japan`s experienced diplomats. He will soon take up his post in Jakarta as Japan`s new ambassador," Japan`s Foreign Ministry`s Press Secretary Tomohiko taniguchi said here on Wednesday.

World’s ‘most wanted’ criminals making Nepal their home

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : The man trying to cross into India through the Kakarbhitta border check post in eastern Nepal's Jhapa district caught the attention of police though he presented a valid passport. it was a Nepali passport, BUT he could not speak a single word in Nepali. the suspicious policemen handed him over to the authorities in neighbouring Sunsari district as his passport showed it had been issued from there.

Winslet dares to shoot atop skyscrapers

By IANS, London : Oscar-winning actress Kate Winslet got a bird's eye-view of New York when she did a photo shoot in her underwear and a pin-striped jacket on a skyscraper rooftop. The 33-year-old also wore a slinky little black dress and stylish four-inch heels for the photo shot and posed for a series of shots for fashion magazine Harper's Bazaar, reminiscent of the famous 'Lunchtime Atop A Skyscraper' photograph of grubby '30s builders eating lunch hundreds of feet above the city streets, reports the Daily Mail online.

Take big bites to lose weight

By IANS, Sydney: The age-old advice to chew your food properly may not always be best for your health. Research shows that taking bigger bites and chewing less was better for people watching their weight. Lincoln's Plant & Food Research scientists have been on a six-year mission to discover what foods make us feel satisfied and how best to eat them. Team leader food structure engineering Marco Morgenstern said taking bigger bites and chewing less was better for people watching their weight as the food was broken down more slowly in the stomach.

Hindu, Buddhist groups growing steadily in US

By IANS, Washington : Hindu and Buddhist groups have grown steadily in the US, being concentrated in Texas, California, the New York Metropolitan Area, Illinois and Georgia, says a new study.

Tiny ants can teach us a thing or two about pesticides

By IANS, Washington : Ants are not only industrious and dedicated, they are quite capable of keeping their gardens pest free, a feat still beyond human agriculturalists. And to cap it all, they have been doing it for more than 50 million years. Leaf-cutter ants put their freshly-cut leaves in gardens where they grow a special fungus that they eat. New material is continuously incorporated into the gardens to grow the fungus and old material is removed by the ants and dumped away from the colony.

Two from Andhra including American missing in Nepal

Hyderabad : An American working for a Christian mission in Andhra Pradesh and a student were missing in earthquake-hit Nepal. Tony B. Suckla and J....

Three dead in Germany rains

By IANS, Berlin: At least three people died and 20 others were injured as violent rainstorms ravaged parts of Germany from Friday night till Saturday morning, Xinhua reported.

Swiss envoy summoned over US ‘abduction’ of Iranian scientist

By IANS, Tehran : Iran has summoned the Swiss ambassador to express objection to the abduction of an Iranian scientist allegedly by US intelligence agencies and called for his immediate release, a media report said. The documents proving abduction of Shahram Amiri, a university researcher working for Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation, were also shown to the Swiss ambassador Tuesday, Mehrnews agency reported. Iran has no diplomatic relations with the United States and the Swiss embassy protects American interests in Tehran.

Eleven US diplomats leave Belarus embassy amid diplomatic row

By DPA, Minsk : Eleven US diplomats have left the country's embassy in Belarus only hours before a Belarusian government order to leave within 72 hours expired, the Interfax news agency cited the US embassy as saying. The staff in the embassy will be at a bare minimum with only four US citizens remaining as relations between Washington and the former Soviet republic hit a new low. Aleksander Lukashenko, Belarus' authoritarian president, declared the US State Department employees "persona non grata" Wednesday.

Tiny devices that can control nuclear reactor are here

Washington : Call it future technology as engineers from University of Utah have fabricated the smallest plasma transistors that can withstand high temperatures and...

Karadzic arrest “decisive step” toward ending impunity, says UN chief

By APP, United Nations : UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has welcomed the arrest of former Bosnian Serb leader and fugitive war crimes suspect Radovan Karadzic, who had evaded capture for over a decade after being indicted by the U.N. tribunal set up to try those responsible for atrocities committed during the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s.

Spain to maintain dialogue with Cuba on human rights

By IANS/EFE, Baku (Azerbaijan) : Spain's foreign minister said here that Madrid will maintain its "dialogue strategy" with Cuba as a way of achieving freedom for its political prisoners and respect for human rights in the Caribbean country. Miguel Angel Moratinos said that the most effective and constructive way to "make progress and get results" is through dialogue, and added that the proof is that many of those prisoners of conscience who were in jail are now free "thanks to that Spanish policy".

Uruguay, China agree to improve ties

By IANS/EFE, Beijing : Uruguay President Jose Mujica and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed Monday to work to strengthen bilateral ties.

Medvedev enjoying PM’s duties

By IANS, By RIA Novosti, Moscow: Dmitry Medvedev has said he was enjoying his duties as Russia's prime minister.
Send this to a friend