Home International

International

International

Sri Lanka denies UN charges on civilian killings

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lanka Saturday rejected the charges by the United Nations that 2,800 civilians had been killed in the island's northern war-zone in recent weeks, saying the figures by the world body were "unsubstantiated". "We are very disappointed and dismayed about this statement. The (UN) statement relies heavily on so-called reliable sources and puts down unsubstantiated figures in respect of civilian killings and injuries (in the war-zone)," Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe told reporters here Saturday.

ITC seeks option to Nepal’s troubled Terai

By IANS, Kathmandu : Frustrated by the continuous turbulence in Nepal's Terai plains and threats by over 100 armed groups, Indian tobacco major ITC is seeking a backup for its tobacco factory where production can continue unhindered. Twenty-three years ago, ITC set up its India-Nepal-Britain venture in Nepal, Surya Nepal Private Ltd, with a state of the art tobacco factory in Simra town on the India-Nepal border.

Exiled 1989 democracy leaders still hope for reform in China

By Bill Smith, DPA, Beijing : As China's Communist Party kept dissidents and rights activists under tight control for Thursday's 20th anniversary of the crushing of the 1989 democracy movement, exiled leaders of the protests continued to speak out and remained optimistic that political change will come eventually.

Moral victory for India in British parliament’s Kashmir debate

London: The British government Thursday condemned terrorism and violence and rejected mediation in the dispute between India and Pakistan on Kashmir in a parliamentary...

IAEA set to approve North Korea nuclear verification

By DPA

Vienna : The International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) board Monday began a meeting to formally approve sending personnel to North Korea to verify the shutdown of the country's nuclear weapons programme.

Plane with four aboard missing in Panama

By IANS Panama City : A small plane with four people aboard was reported missing in western Panama, according to the local civil aviation authority, Spain's EFE news agency reported Tuesday. The Cessna 172 aircraft, piloted by a Panamanian, disappeared Sunday between Isla Seca in the Pacific and Volcan in the western province of Chiriqui, said Victor de la Hoz, spokesman for Panama's Civil Aviation Authority. The passengers were three US citizens, a man and his two children, who were travelling to Volcan, which is located in a forested and inaccessible area.

Karunanidhi reiterates demand for ceasefire in Sri Lanka

By IANS, Chennai : Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi Tuesday once again called for a ceasefire in Sri Lanka despite most of the opposition parties boycotting an all-party meet called to discuss the plight of minority Tamils in Sri Lanka. "We will continue to demand the declaration of a ceasefire in Sri Lanka and start of political negotiations between the island's government and the Tamil minority there... (but) will not embarrass the centre through mass resignations of our MPs or withdrawal of support to the United Progressive Alliance government," Karunanidhi told reporters.

Myanmar media calls on ‘Aunty Suu’ to make concessions

By DPA Yangon : In the wake of increased sanctions against the regime, Myanmar's state-run media Sunday called upon detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, belittling her as "Aunty Suu," to make concessions that could lead towards a political dialogue. "No dialogue can achieve success without sacrifices and concessions," said an open letter that appeared in The New Light of Myanmar Sunday and was repeated in other state-run media.

Georgia laughs off reports of upcoming military action in Abkhazia

By RIA Novosti, Tbilisi : Georgia's Foreign Ministry has responded with a sense of humor to Russian media reports concerning an imminent Georgian military operation in its breakaway republic of Abkhazia. "The Georgian leadership advises the anonymous representatives of the Russian security agencies...to take a few drops of valerian [a traditional herbal sedative]. However, Georgian doctors believe that valerian will not be potent enough...and they would be better off taking Valium," Georgia's acting foreign minister, Grigol Vashadze, was quoted as saying by a ministry spokesman.

Venezuela’s Coca-Cola bottler reaches truce with ex-employees

By IANS Caracas : Venezuela's Coca-Cola Femsa , the leading bottling unit of Latin America, has announced that it has reached a truce with the former employees who had been blockading part of its installations since Feb 5 demanding reinstatement. "Operations will return to normal soon following the truce, which was the only way to solve the crisis," Rodrigo Anzola, the legal chief of the company, said Friday at a press conference here, Spain's EFE news agency reported Saturday.

US stocks climb on bank forecasts, oil price rise

By DPA, New York : A rise in oil prices helped drive US stocks higher Wednesday together with improved forecasts for some of the country's top banks. Crude oil jumped 4.1 percent to $68.81 per barrel in New York, spurring a rally in energy companies including Exxon Mobil and Chevron. Financial stocks gained as some analysts recommended buying the shares of prominent banks, including Goldman Sachs, which could be granted approval to pay back government loans as soon as next week.

North Korea releases photograph of heir apparent

By DPA, Seoul : North Korea Thursday released a photograph of leader Kim Jong Il's son and likely successor for the first time, a news report said.

China to create 400,000 jobs for ethnic minorities

By IANS, Beijing : China will create 400,000 jobs this year for ethnic minorities in the country's western Xinjiang Uyghur region, the government said Thursday.

Russia to explore Cuban oil, lends $150 million

By Xinhua, Havana : Russia has provided a $150-million loan to Cuba and signed pacts with the Caribbean nation for oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico, a media report said. The money will be provided in instalments over two years, the Itar-Tass news agency reported. The agreements signed between Cuba's state-owned firm Cubapetroleo and Russia's Zarubezhneft company will allow the firms to jointly explore crude oil off the coast of Cuba. Russian Vice President Igor Sechin and Cuban Vice President Ricardo Cabrisas participated in the signing ceremony.

McCain vows to close Guantanamo Bay prison

By IANS, Toronto : US Senator and Republican presidential candidate John McCain has said he will close the Guantanamo Bay prison if he is elected to the White House in November. Addressing the Economic Club of Canada in Ottawa Friday, McCain said he agreed with the public opinion in Canada against the treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay prison. "Many Canadians have objected to the policies of the United States in dealing with terrorists and enemy combatants held at the Guantanamo prison.

Russia sends humanitarian aid to cyclone-hit Myanmar

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Two Russian Il-76 airplanes are to deliver 60 metric tons of humanitarian aid to Myanmar on Thursday, as the Southeast Asian country attempts to recover from a cyclone that has left some 100,000 people dead and thousands homeless, an emergencies spokesperson said. Cyclone Nargis hit Myanmar on Saturday, devastating large parts of the country. The death toll is likely to rise further as rescue workers struggle to reach remote settlements, while the nationwide number of displaced people could reach millions.

Spiking Sri Lanka peace pact will have ‘consequences’: Norway

By M.R. Narayan Swamy, IANS New Delhi : Sri Lanka's decision to scrap its ceasefire agreement (CFA) with the Tamil Tigers will have "negative consequences" and only spark more violence, warned a Norwegian minister who helped broker the truce in 2002. Minister of International Development Erik Solheim, who for years was Norway's Special Envoy to Sri Lanka and continues to oversee the now shattered peace process, added that Colombo's move was "not totally unexpected".

50 Syrian soldiers join rebels

By IANS/AKI, Rome: At least 50 Syrian soldiers have deserted the army and joined rebel forces, Syrian activists said.

US removes North Korea from terror list

By Xinhua, Washington : The US Saturday removed North Korea from its list of state sponsors of terrorism, the State Department announced. "The secretary of state has rescinded the designation of North Korea as a state terror sponsor," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said at a briefing. The announcement was made after the US and Pyongyang reached an agreement on a series of verification measures of North Korean nuclear facilities. McCormack said North Korea would resume disablement of its nuclear facilities.

Rate of crime in Russian army down considerably 2007

By IRNA-Itar-Tass Moscow : The rate of crimes committed in the Russian armed forces went down considerably last year, Russia's Deputy Prosecutor-General, Chief Military Prosecutor Sergei Fridinsky told the Russian army daily Krasnaya Zvezda. "The levels of crime were down in all arms and services by 20 percent (Civil Defense troops excluded)," Fridinsky said, adding that was largely a result of joint efforts by prosecutors and military commanders.

Georgian opposition to form alternative parliamentary committees

By RIA Novosti, Tbilisi : Georgia's United Opposition has begun forming committees of an 'alternative parliament', saying it will refuse to recognize the results of the recent parliamentary election, an opposition member said on Tuesday. President Mikheil Saakashvili's United National Movement won about 120 of 150 seats in parliament in the May 21 parliamentary polls. The United Opposition bloc, which received just 16 seats, has demanded that the president acknowledge the elections were rigged, and has called for the results to be annulled.

Taiwanese boats enter Japanese waters to protest ship collision

By DPA, Tokyo : Ten Taiwanese ships entered Japanese territorial waters in the East China Sea Monday near Diaoyu Islands to protest Japan's handling of a ship collision last week. The Japanese coast guard warned the Taiwanese vessels with 12 activists and 30 journalists onboard to leave the area, while patrol boats were sent to monitor the ships. A few hours after the warning, the ships left the waters, according to media reports. The sea protest came after a Japanese coast guard vessel sank a Taiwanese boat near the Diaoyus Tuesday.

Russia UN envoy says no ‘clear support’ for Kosovo independence

By RIA Novosti United Nations : Russia's envoy to the UN said that Thursday's security council meeting failed to reach a consensus on independence for Serbia's breakaway province of Kosovo, with those states in favor in the minority. Vitaly Churkin said, after a closed emergency session of the UN Security Council, there was no "clear cut support" for independence in Kosovo with only five of the 15 members backing unilateral sovereignty for the Albanian-dominated province.

US, Russia complete massive spy swap

By DPA, New York/Washington/Moscow : The US and Russia have completed arrangements for one of the largest spy swaps in history as 10 Russian spy suspects and four prisoners in Russian custody pleaded guilty to charges against them. In New York, the 10 Russian spies, who included a Peruvian-born US citizen, pleaded guilty in federal court to lesser charges of acting as illegal agents of a foreign government, US justice officials confirmed Thursday. They were to be deported quickly.

Bush urges Congress to pass defence bill

By DPA

Washington : US President George W. Bush Friday urged Congress to put politics aside and move forward on a defence spending bill to ensure US troops in Iraq are funded.

Bush faulted the Democratic controlled Congress for engaging in political theatrics rather than addressing the needs of the troops.

"The Democratic leaders chose to have a political debate on a precipitous withdrawal of our troops from Iraq," Bush said at the White House.

Glasgow airport evacuated after suspicious package found

By IANS, London : Parts of Scotland's Glasgow airport were evacuated after a suspicious package was found, a media report said.

Pentagon to replace 30 percent of its soldiery with robots

By IANS, Washington : Pentagon is planning to replace by 2020 some 30 percent of its soldiery with robots, which are quietly transiting from the realm of science fiction to the actual battlefield. Robots are increasingly taking over from soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. For example, there are unmanned aerial vehicles and ground robots for explosives detection. A report by Erin Fults quoted Doug Few and Bill Smart of Washington University, who are leading this cutting edge innovation, as saying that machines still need the human touch.

North Korea to refuse contacts with Japan at nuclear talks

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : North Korea said on Saturday that it would no longer consider Japan a party to the international talks on the North's nuclear disarmament, citing Tokyo's refusal to meet its obligations under a six-nation deal. "We will neither treat Japan as a party to the talks nor deal with it even if it impudently appears in the conference room," a North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman was quoted as saying by Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency. Japan "has not done anything to fulfill its commitment, and is still refusing to do so," the spokesman said.

ASEAN slammed for its ‘abysmal human rights record’

By DPA Singapore : Civil society groups blasted the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) Monday for its "abysmal human rights record" at a forum in Singapore marking the organisation's accomplishments two days before its 40th anniversary. Seventy-five delegates from the 10 countries belonging to ASEAN were attending the two-day Think Tank Forum co-organised by the Singapore Institute of International Affairs and the Institute of Policy Studies.

38 people die in Philippine evacuation centres

By Xinhua, Talayan (Philippines) : At least 38 homeless people, including ten children, have died due to health problems in various evacuation centres, witnesses said Monday. The deaths took place at the evacuation centres amid the ongoing fighting between government troops and rebels in the southern Philippines. In a small marketplace where 1,257 families set up their makeshift dwellings in the township of Talayan in Maguindanao Province, 24 displaced people - six of whom are children - have died since August last year, said Hassan Kalupa, a leader of the evacuees.

Vietnam Denies Rice Shortage

By Prensa Latina, Hanoi : Vietnam will export some 3.2 million tons of rice by September and plans good crops to continue guaranteeing domestic and foreign supplies, official sources in Hanoi said on Tuesday. According to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, concerns about an alleged lack of grain in Vietnam are unfounded, and such rumors have caused the price of domestic rice to shoot up last week. The rice market will return to stability soon, said Deputy Industry and Trade Minister Nguyen Cam Tu, predicting good rice crops for May and June.

British ship found after 157 years in Canada

By DPA, Washington : Canadian scientists said Thursday that they have rediscovered the HMS Investigator, a famous British rescue ship that got trapped in Arctic ice 157 years ago while trying to track the fate of another Arctic expedition. Archaeologists located the well-preserved hull of the Investigator 11 metres below sea surface in Mercy Bay on Banks Island. Using sonar equipment, they found the remains of the ship along with three corpses within 15 minutes of searching, they said.

Japanese Premier Fukuda vows to lead world in environmental issues

By DPA Tokyo : Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda pledged Friday to make Japan a "low-carbon society" and set up a financial system to help developing nations tackle environmental problems. With a mind to host the Group of Eight summit meeting in July, Fukuda addressed lawmakers on the first day of the regular Diet session that he planned to develop innovative technologies to cut greenhouse gas emissions and create a financial mechanism to join the effort to fight global warming.

Britain to withdraw from Iraq in a year: report

By Xinhua

London : The British military is planning to pull its troops out of Iraq in a year or so as to strengthen its combat capability in Afghanistan, the Sunday Telegraph reported citing a senior military official.

23 killed, 80 injured in Sri Lanka carnage

By IANS, Colombo : At least 23 people were killed and about 80 injured Friday as suspected Tamil Tigers bombed two buses in strife-torn Sri Lanka, triggering a furious response from President Mahinda Rajapaksa. A deafening blast triggered by remote control early in the morning killed 21 people and injured 60 near a university in Moratuwa town, south of Colombo. And just before 4 p.m., another bomb went off inside a bus in Kandy district, killing two people and wounding over 20.

Muslims in the US – assimilated but apprehensive

By DPA

Washington : Muslims living in the US are better integrated and have higher living standards than their counterparts in Europe, yet most have doubts about American intentions in the war on terrorism and have become more fearful since Sep 11, pollsters have found.

Vatican names inspectors for Irish church sex scandal

By DPA, Vatican City : The Vatican Monday announced that it will dispatch four senior clerics to Ireland in September as inspectors chosen by Pope Benedict XVI to investigate the handling of sex abuse cases involving priests there. Benedict first referred to the probe, or apostolic visitation, in a March 19 letter to Irish Catholics in which he apologised to those who suffered molestations when they were children.

China, Britain in trade talks amid rights protests

By IANS, London : The British government was braced Monday for more protests against China's human rights record even as Prime Minister Gordon Brown told visiting Chinese premier Wen Jiabao he wanted to double British exports to China. After talks with Wen at Downing Street, Brown announced a new two-year programme to help British companies market their products in China, saying he wanted to increase British exports to China from $5 billion in 2008 to $10 billion in 2010.

Protests as China refuses Hong Kong democracy by 2012

By DPA Hong Kong : Hundreds of pro-democracy protestors gathered in central Hong Kong Saturday in response to the news that Beijing had rejected calls for full democracy by 2012. The group of around 800 marched to the convention centre where mainland officials were to brief community representatives on the decision by China National People's Congress (NPC) ruling out the direct election of Hong Kong's leader until 2017 and of lawmakers until 2020.

Rebels claim killing 43 Sri Lankan soldiers

By SPA, Colombo, Sri Lanka : A pro-rebel Web site reports that the Tamil Tiger insurgents have killed 43 Sri Lankan soldiers in a single fierce clash in the island's north. Pro-rebel TamilNet Web site quotes unnamed rebel officials as saying that the soldiers were killed Sunday in a clash in Nalloor village of the rebel-held Kilinochchi district, according to a report of Associated Press. Lakshman Hulugalle, the chief of the government's security information center, declined to comment, saying that the government would not react to pro-rebel news reports.

Amnesty International denounces abuses by Mexican army

By EFE, Mexico City : Amnesty International (AI) says that in the past two years there has been an increase in human rights abuses by Mexican military personnel assigned to law enforcement activities, including torture and extrajudicial executions. AI spokesman Alberto Herrera presented here a report containing five "emblematic" cases that the watchdog group considers to be "only the tip of the iceberg". The military courts' investigations of alleged abuses do not comply with "basic international human rights standards", Herrera said.

Philippines approves German hostage rescue bid

Manila: Philippine authorities have given the green light to the police and the army to attempt the rescue of two German tourists being held...

Victims’ kins protest mosque plan at 9/11 site

By IANS, New York : A community board has approved the construction of a mosque at the site of New York's World Trade Centre, which was destroyed in the September 11 terrorist attack, triggering protests by the victims' relatives in the city. Relatives of 9/11 victims clashed with supporters of the proposed mosque near "Ground Zero", soon after members of Manhattan Community Board 1 approved the project with 29-1 votes. Nine members abstained the voting which concluded after four hours of debate.

North Korea rocket launch fails

By IANS, Pyongyang : A North Korean satellite, which South Korea calls a "ballistic missile", failed to enter orbit after its launch Friday morning, the official KCNA news agency reported.

18 civilians injured in a bus blast in Sri Lanka

By IRNA New Delhi : At least 18 people, including an eight months old infant were injured in the bus blast at Mt. Lavinia, near national capital of Sri Lanka, Colombo Saturday. The explosion occurred in a private passenger bus that was plying from Moratuwa in the south to Colombo, All India Radio (AIR) reported here quoting Spokesman at the Media Center for Sri Lankan National Security. All the injured have been admitted to the hospital. 'However condition of none of them is serious'.

Economy will suffer if spending cuts take effect: Obama

By IANS/EFE, Newport News (Virginia) : President Barack Obama said Tuesday that the US economy and national security will suffer if a set of automatic spending cuts takes effect later this week.

Zimbabwe’s ruling party, opposition call for end to violence

By Xinhua, Harare : Negotiators from Zimbabwe's ruling party ZANU-PF and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) have jointly condemned political violence in the country and urged their party men to stop it. In the joint statement issued Wednesday, both sides denounced the violence that engulfed the country following the controversial presidential election, and said violence should never be used as a political tool, state-controlled The Herald newspaper reported Thursday.

Heathrow airport may open to flights for a while Tuesday

By IANS, New Delhi : London's Heathrow Airport is expected to operate for some hours from Tuesday night, five days after an ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano spread to Europe and disrupted flights, the government said Tuesday. "Indications have been received that Heathrow Airport may get operational for limited hours from tonight (Tuesday), in which case, Air India will start Europe operations depending upon the availability of slots there," the civil aviation ministry said in a statement.

20 dead in Mogadishu fighting

By DPA, Mogadishu/Nairobi : Heavy fighting between government troops and radical Islamist rebels have left at least 20 dead and dozens injured in fighting since Friday night in the Somali capital of Mogadishu, Radio Garowe reported Saturday. Troops loyal to the central government came under mortar fire in the south of Mogadishu, reported the broadcaster. Witnesses said most of the dead were troops, but at least five civilians also died in the fighting.

No threat from Russian submarines off US coast: Pentagon

By DPA, Washington : Two Russian submarines patrolling off the Atlantic coast of the United States do not pose a threat, the Pentagon said Wednesday. The US was monitoring the attack subs more than 300 km off the US eastern seaboard, where they are operating legally in international waters, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said. "The largest question is, is it of concern to us? And the answer to that is no," Morrell said, acknowledging that such patrols have been rare since the end of the Cold War.

Chavez seeks apology from Spanish king

By IANS Paris : Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has said Spanish King Juan Carlos made "a mistake" when he told him to shut up during a recent summit in Chile, but added that the matter "would be settled" if the monarch apologised. "What the king - who is a serious man - has to do now is apologise and admit that he blew his top," Chavez told mediapersons here Tuesday after talks in Paris with French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Chavez added that the king had disrespected a head of state, reported Spanish news agency EFE.

President Hu visits Hainan to attend int’l economic forum

By Xinhua Beijing : Chinese President Hu Jintao inspected the southern province of Hainan before attending the annual meeting of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) opening on Saturday. The forum, April 11-13, is a platform for high-level interaction between leaders from Asia and the world. Boao has been the permanent venue of the annual regional economic forum since 2001.

‘Life of Pi’ wins best original score Golden Globe

By IANS, Los Angeles: Composer Mychael Danna won the best original score motion picture award for "Life of Pi" at the 70th edition of the prestigious annual Golden Globe awards here.

US issues fresh moratorium on offshore drilling

By DPA, Washington : The US government Monday issued a revised ban on deepwater oil drilling that could allow operations to resume if companies demonstrate they do so safely. The revised ban, aimed at preventing another explosion like the April 20 BP well rupture in the Gulf of Mexico, also lifted prior restrictions based on depth. US Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar issued a revision of a disputed May 27 moratorium that had been aimed at enacting a six-month freeze on offshore deepwater drilling.

Radio: 9 killed, 42 injured in demonstrations in Myanmar’s biggest city

By Xinhua Yangon : Eight men protesters were killed and 42 others injured by shots fired by security forces against demonstrations in Myanmar's biggest city of Yangon Thursday afternoon, the state-run Radio Myanmar confirmed in a night broadcast. The 42 injured include 31 security forces and 11 protesters -- 10 men and one woman. In addition, the report said, one Japanese man was hit and killed among crowds during the demonstration when the security forces fired shots on demonstrators on the day when he was covering news on the event.

12 arrested for grenade attack in Colombo

By Xinhua, Colombo : Twelve people have been arrested over Saturday's grenade attack in the Sri Lankan capital that killed two civilians, the police said Sunday. The blast in Wellawatta killed two civilians and injured 10. The motive behind the blast could not be immediately known, the police said. The 12 arrested were of Tamil decent. A bus bound for the eastern town of Batticaloa was parked near the site of the attack. "We are investigating if someone had hurled the grenade," police spokesman Ranjith Gunasekera told reporters.

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.

Magnitude 7.4 quake hits Indonesia

By IANS, Jakarta: A powerful earthquake measuring 7.4 on the Richter scale hit Indonesia around Tuesday midnight. However, no tsunami warning was issued, authorities here said.

Gorbachev slams NATO’s east European expansion

By IANS, Brussels : Former president of the erstwhile Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev has criticised NATO for its expansion to the east of Europe, Prensa Latina reported Friday. "Government leaders of Germany, the US and other western countries promised right after the fall of the Wall of Berlin in 1989, that NATO would not move a single centimetre in the direction to the then called Soviet Union," Gorbachev said in Berlin Thursday.

Austrian adventurer’s skydive bid called off

By IANS, London: Austrian adventurer Felix Baumgartner who was to make the highest ever skydive was left frustrated Tuesday after his attempt had to be called off due to unfavourable winds.

Nepal central bank governor axed for graft

By IANSKathmandu : The chief of Nepal's central bank has been charged with fraud in collusion with an American and a Sri Lankan company...

Influx of more than 230 new faces in British parliament

London, May 8, IRNA – The record 149 MPs standing down from parliament has led to the influx of more than a third of the House of Commons being new faces. But the composition remains more socially exclusive and other-represented by prominent Jewish members, despite a record 27 ethnic minorities being elected, according to an analysis carried out by IRNA. In all, 231 of the 649 parliamentary members elected are new MPs and include the first three Muslim women, the first Conservative Muslims, the first Iraqi Kurd and first Bengali.

At least 11 killed in police raid on Rio de Janeiro slum

By DPA Rio de Janeiro : At least 11 people died Thursday in Brazil during a police raid on a slum on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. The operation led by the civilian police was aimed at a drug gang that worked within the Coreia slum, known as a favela, in the Senador Camara neighbourhood, according to preliminary official reports. The authorities did not immediately give details of the raid and did not say whether any police officers or passers-by were among those killed.

Mexico initiates guns for goods

By NNN-PRENSA LATINA Mexico : In an effort to reduce violence in Mexico, the public security office began a project in the Federal District Friday to buy unregistered weapons According to a first report on the implementation of the measure, 611 powerful weapons and 116 revolvers were recovered, including high-power automatic rifles and even some grenades. Each type of weapon surrendered has a set price, with agents giving vouchers for electrical appliances and other goods in exchange.

Spanish tourism loses $337 mn due to volcano

By IANS/EFE, Madrid : The Spanish tourism sector has lost $252 million euros ($337 million) in the crisis caused by the massive volcanic ash cloud emanating from Iceland, the Exceltur industry body said Wednesday. That figure does not include the losses suffered by the airlines, which are the main businesses affected.

DPRK urges normalization of relations with Japan

By Xinhua, Pyongyang : The normalization of ties between the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) and Japan is in the interests of both countries and peoples, the official news agency KCNA said Monday. The normalization of the DPRK-Japan relationship is part of the six-nation talks agreement, said the KCNA. It blamed the Japanese rightists' attempts to blockade the establishment of the DPRK-Japan relations and warned Japan not to be a "trouble" as the six-party talks are making progress.

EU to finalize plans for cooperation with US

By Xinhua, Marseilles (France) : Foreign ministers of the European Union (EU) members are to gather here Monday, on the eve of the US presidential elections, for an informal meeting to finalize their plans for closer cooperation with the US. The meeting would be chaired by French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner as his country is holding the current EU presidency. Javier Solana, secretary-general of the EU Council and Benita Ferrero-Waldner, the European commissioner for external relations, will also attend the one-day meeting.

Obama’s Nobel win positive, says Fidel Castro

By EFE, Havana : The decision to award the Nobel Peace Prize to US President Barack Obama was "a positive measure and compensates his defeat in Copenhagen when Rio de Janeiro was picked as a site for 2016 Olympic Games", Cuban leader Fidel Castro has said. He added that Obama's Nobel win could be considered a condemnation of the "genocidal policies" of some of the former US presidents.

New storms expected to spread across UK

By KUNA London : Britain was bracing itself for a second day of storms Tuesday. As householders cleared up the floods and damage caused by yesterday's gales, forecasters predicted more of the same. The London Weather Centre issued a severe gale warning for much of Britain tonight until tomorrow afternoon. The storms are expected to strike further north than yesterday, with further disruption to transport and power supplies possible.

US missile shield only if it improves Poland’s security

By RIA Novosti, Warsaw : Poland will only allow US to deploy a missile defence base in its territory if it can be shown that this will improve national security, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said. "The American shield will be deployed here only if US modernise the country's armed forces," Tusk said Friday. According to the US plan, 10 missile interceptors will be deployed in Poland and a radar site in neighbouring Czech Republic. "Without damaging relations with the US, we would like to obtain a result that will demonstrably raise our security," Tusk said.

Bird flu cases rise to 31 in Shanghai

By IANS, Beijng: The number of avian flu affected cases reached 31 in Shanghai, with the confirmation of a new case Wednesday, health authorities said.

US politician caught plagiarising Obama speech

By IANS, London : A Republican congressional candidate has been accused of plagiarising US President Barack Obama's speech on "the crossroads of history". Vaughn Ward, a former US Marine Corps officer and CIA operative, was running for the Republican congressional nomination in an election held Tuesday in Idaho. The Telegraph reported Wednesday that Lucas Baumbach, a local party activist, tracked down a YouTube video that showed a strong similarity between Ward's speech in January and Obama's address to the 2004 Democratic National Convention.

North Korea behind cyber attack: South Korea

By IANS, Seoul : The South Korean government Wednesday confirmed that North Korea was behind the March 20 cyber attack that paralyzed computer networks at banks and broadcasters.

Austria gives Bhutan $8 mn for electrification

By IANS, Vienna : Austria has provided a $7.92 million (5.8 million euro) credit to Bhutan for electrification of its villages, the Austrian foreign ministry has said.

Fiji’s neighbours disagree on how to deal with its military regime

By DPA, Wellington : Differences among Fiji's Pacific neighbours over how to deal with the island's military regime emerged Tuesday following top-level talks between New Zealand and Tonga. Tongan Prime Minister Feleti Sevele said at a news conference in Wellington that he favoured giving military strongman Voreqe Bainimarama, whose military regime has ruled Fiji since a coup in December 2006, more time to restore democracy. New Zealand Premier John Key called Bainimarama's pledge not to hold elections before September 2014 unacceptable to New Zealand.

Russia offers NATO strategic missile defence partnership

By RIA Novosti

Brussels : Russia has offered to engage NATO in a strategic partnership to counter possible missile threats, a senior foreign ministry official said here Thursday.

"We are offering (NATO) strategic partnership - an international system to neutralize missile threats," said Anatoly Antonov, director of the foreign ministry security and disarmament department.

North Korea ‘not ready’ to submit full nuclear list: US

By DPA Seoul : The top US negotiator in talks on North Korea's nuclear programme said Tuesday North Korea has indicated it was not prepared to submit a complete declaration on its nuclear programmes, facilities and materials. North Korea had promised to provide the list by the end of last year, and while Christopher Hill said he was "not too concerned about them being a little late," he said his worries lay with whether North Korea would eventually submit a correct and complete declaration.

Over 70 tornadoes kill five in US, eight missing

Washington : More than 70 tornadoes and powerful storms have hit the US over the past 48 hours since Saturday, killing at least five...

French Sikhs bringing turban ban issue to Delhi

By Christine Nayagam, IANS, Paris: A delegation of Sikhs from France will land in New Delhi Thursday for the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (PBD), the annual gathering of the Indian diaspora, to highlight the continuing problem of the ban of Sikh turbans in France. As all their attempts to resolve the issue with the French and European authorities have failed, the Sikhs are now turning to not only the Indian government but also the entire Indian diaspora to help them resolve a problem that threatens their religious identity.

Obama, Hillary unite in White House bid

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, the victor and the vanquished in the Democratic presidential nomination race, came together in a carefully choreographed show aimed at returning Democrats to the White House. Obama, who would be the first black US president and the former first lady, who hoped to be the first woman chief executive, signalled the end of their long and bitter primary struggle Friday in a small town in Hampshire appropriately named Unity.

Record number of foreigners becoming Singapore citizens

Singapore(DPA) : The number of foreigners becoming Singapore citizens or permanent residents will possibly hit a new record this year, a welcome boost as the city-state faces a dwindling population. Faced with sharply falling birth rates and a rapidly ageing population, the city-state has been trying to attract foreigners.

Mahathir calls Samy Vellu ‘racist’ for supporting Hindraf

By IANS, Kuala Lumpur : Former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad has called ethnic Indian leader and his long-time cabinet colleague S. Samy Vellu "racist" for demanding the release of Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) leaders jailed for organising an illegal protest rally last year. Vellu had last week alleged that Mahathir had "let down" the Indian community and had discriminated against it, ignoring cautions and pleas.

Indian woman jailed in Britain for carrying fake documents

By IANS, London : An Indian national, Fatima Gani, has been jailed for possessing fake identity documents at her home in Tooting, London. The 42-year-old woman had illegally stayed back in the country after arriving on a holiday, the police said. Her house was raided on a tip-off. She pleaded guilty to 17 offences of identity fraud at Kingston Crown Court and was sentenced to two years in prison. A large number of documents, including fake and original passports, driving licences and bank documents were seized from her house.

Former Ukrainian PM addresses huge crowd in Kiev

By IANS/EFE, Kiev : Ukrainian former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, freed Saturday from prison by parliamentary vote, arrived here Saturday and addressed a huge crowd...

‘Sovereign wealth funds to invest more in commercial real estate’

By IANS, Dubai : The world's commercial property markets are going to see increased investments from sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) in the next few years, especially from the Gulf, according to a new report. The new global report of the American real estate services giant CB Richard Ellis says that SWFs will potentially invest around $725 billion in the next seven years in the global commercial property markets.

Nepal braces for prime ministerial duel

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : After a 10-year epic battle with the security forces to topple Nepal's monarchy, the former Maoist guerrillas will now duel with Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala Friday for the republic's first prime ministership. The Maoists' alliance with the caretaker prime minister and his Nepali Congress (NC) party, which has been in tatters since the April election, will be cleft as Nepal's constituent assembly holds its first election to choose a new prime minister.

Respect is better motivator than pay in Asia: poll

By DPA Singapore : Respect from the boss outranks basic pay as a motivator for getting employees in major Asian economies to do their best, a poll said Monday. The findings of the survey carried out by consulting firm Mercer showed that employees in India and China viewed respect over their pay. The type of work emerged as the top factor in India, with employees putting opportunities for personal growth, promotion prospects and long-term career potential before reimbursement.

Russia gives Poland documents on plane crash probe

By DPA, Moscow : Russian investigators gave Poland 11 volumes of documents from their probe into the April 10 plane crash in Smolensk, Russia, that killed president Lech Kaczynski and 95 others. The materials include witness testimony, photos from the scene of the accident and descriptions of personal objects of victims found at the crash site. Russia and Poland are cooperating on two separate investigations into the crash that killed Kaczynski and dozens of other politicians and military brass.

G20 talks resume in Seoul

By DPA, Seoul : Group of 20 (G20) leaders faced calls to place cooperation above competition as they resumed their talks in Seoul Friday.

China’s first pollution census to focus on industrial sources

By Xinhua Beijing : China will launch its first national census of pollution sources next month, mainly focussing on industries. The survey will cover 39 industries including metallurgy, chemistry, construction, power plants, papermaking, pharmaceuticals and mining, Zhu Jianping, chief of the survey office, said here Thursday. Unofficial estimates suggest that there could be more than 720,000 polluting industrial units across the country. It will also identify sources of agricultural and urban pollution and the number of remedial facilities in operation.

36,000 Chinese graduates to be hired as village officials

By IANS, Beijing : China plans to recruit 36,000 college graduates this year as village officials, authorities said. A notice issued by the Organization Department of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee said that from 2008 to 2012 the country will employ 200,000 students-turned village officials, Xinhua news agency reported. Currently, some 200,000 college graduates are working as grassroots officials. They plan their villages' development and work for local residents' betterment.

Magnitude 6.5 quake jolts central Indonesia

By DPA, Jakarta : An undersea earthquake registering 6.5 on the Richter scale struck off Indonesia's central Sulawesi province Monday, but there were no immediate reports of injury or damage, the Indonesian seismologist agency said. The quake struck at 12.54 p.m. and its epicentre was about 196 km south-west of Tolitoli, Indonesia's National Meteorology and Geophysics Agency said, adding that the quake occurred at about 33 km below sea level.

Britain rattled, but stands by decision to knight Rushdie

By Prasun Sonwalkar, IANS

London : Britain is rattled by the level of anger in Iran and Pakistan at the decision to confer knighthood on noted Mumbai-born writer Salman Rushdie but has refused to reverse the decision or be apologetic about it.

Barack Obama clinches Democratic nomination

Washington, June 4 (DPA) Barack Obama clinched the Democratic presidential nomination Tuesday night after a five-month battle with Hillary Clinton, becoming the first African American to lead a major political party into a general election in the US. Obama captured the majority of delegates needed to win the party's nod, according to unofficial counts by US broadcast networks, on the final day of primaries in the five-month-old battle with Hillary Clinton.

Environmentalists protest US Navy’s exemption from sonar ban

By Xinhua Los Angeles : Environmentalists reacted with anger Wednesday to US President George W. Bush's decision to allow the Navy to use sonar off the coast of Southern California. Bush signed the exemption while he was travelling in the Middle East, claiming the Navy's training was "essential to national security", the White House said earlier Wednesday.

Nude church service called off following threats

By ANTARA News/DPA, Amsterdam : A group of Dutch nudists called off a special church service to be held in a nudist park after receiving threats, a spokesman for the group said Friday. In June, the Christian Gan Eden nudists held their first church service at the Flevo-Natuur nudist park in Zeewolde in the eastern Netherlands and planned to hold a second service. However, the group was hit by numerous emails and phone calls, many of them threatening, the Gan Eden spokesman said. The church service was called off and the group shut its website down.

Biden administration taking a dangerous path with Modi regime

Communal violence escalates in India as the US embraces its source. Pieter Friedrich | TwoCircles.net  Two months ago, Atul Keshap — who was then temporarily serving...

Labour members mull revolt against Brown: BBC

By DPA, London : Leading members of Britains's ruling Labour Party are mulling a possible revolt against Prime Minister Gordon Brown in the wake of the stinging defeat in a by-election in Glasgow, BBC reported Sunday. The report said that among others, former ministers may be pushing for Brown to announce his resignation after the summer holiday break. But Justice Secretary Jack Straw, who has been mentioned as a possible successor to Brown, appealed to the party to stand behind the prime minister. "A plot to topple Brown would be a big mistake," he said.

Eight bodies stuffed in trash bags found in Mexico

By IANS, San Cristobal de las Casas (Mexico) : Police in southern Mexican state of Chiapas have found eight bodies stuffed in plastic garbage bags and dumped on a rural road near Guatemala border, EFE news agency reported Thursday. According to provincial Justice Minister Amador Rodriguez Lozano, five bodies were found Tuesday from a road side in Guadalupe Victoria town and the other three were found in the town of 20 de Noviembre. Though the victims were yet to be identified, police believe they may include Mexicans, Guatemala or Colombians, he said.

Berlin slams Russian MPs for recognizing Georgian separatist regions

By IRNA, Berlin : The German government has lashed out on Monday at the decision of Russia's upper house of parliament to recognize Georgia's breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, according to media reports. Deputy government spokesman Thomas Steg urged the Kremlin not to abide by the declaration of the Russian lawmakers. The demand to recognize Abkhazia and South Ossetia runs counter to the principle of Georgia's territorial integrity, he added.

Amnesty for South Africans surrendering firearms

By IANS, Pretoria : South Africa has announced amnesty for surrendering illegal firearms till the next three months, a move aimed at curbing violent crimes. The firearms amnesty period beginning Monday will end April 11. The dispossession of illegal and unwanted legal firearms during this period will significantly help in the fight against crime, says Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa.

Plasma mystery unlocked!

By IANS, Toronto : Canadian researchers claim to have developed a technique to get clues into the mystery of plasma - the most abundant form of matter in the universe. Unlike general matter in which negatively charged electrons and positively charged protons are bound by electromagnetic force to form a neutral atom, plasma is that state of matter which can have surplus of negative or positive charge. Also called ionized (or charged) gas, plasma can be as common as in fluorescent light bulbs or exotic in the extreme, as a thermonuclear explosion.

Clinton wins finance promise from China

By DPA, Beijing : Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi Saturday promised US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton that his government will keep much of its huge foreign currency reserves in US treasury bonds. Yang also promised Clinton that China would actively cooperate with the US in helping the world to recover from the ongoing financial turmoil. "Our principle of using reserves is to ensure security and liquidity," Yang said of China's estimated $2 trillion worth of net foreign reserves after talks with Clinton.

Cyber-spies used social sites to trick Dalai Lama’s office: US expert

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : A Chinese cyber-espionage network used sophisticated social and computer engineering techniques to trick the Dalai Lama's office into downloading malicious software, according to a cyber security expert. Researchers, based at the Munk Center for International Studies at the University of Toronto in Canada, Sunday reported that the spy ring had infiltrated computers and stolen documents from hundreds of government and private offices around the world, including those of the Indian embassy in Washington.

Limited funds for disaster relief in Latin America, Caribbean: UN

By Prensa Latina, United Nations : The UN has said that there are inadequate funds to carry out disaster relief works in Latin America and the Caribbean where thousands of people have died in cyclones this year. Countries such as Mexico, Panama and Cuba, which in the past had not requested for financial aid for disaster relief, have now appealed for help. This shows the seriousness of the situation, the UN office for Coordination of Humanitarian Aid (OCHA) said in a statement Thursday.

Eurozone: Impact of Global Economy Ills

By Prensa Latina Brussels : Jean Claude Juncker, president of the Eurogroup said Thursday at the opening of the European leaders summit that the imminent economic recession in the US has over appreciated the single European currency. Juncker indicated they are closely monitoring the records established by the euro over the past weeks, fact which alarms leaders and businesspeople of the group.

China central bank provides $785 mn for quake-hit areas

By Xinhua, Beijing : People's Bank of China (PBOC) Wednesday announced that it would provide 5.5 billion yuan ($785.86 million) to carry out relief work in the quake-hit areas of Sichuan and Gansu provinces. Sichuan Province will get 3.3 billion yuan and Gansu Province will get 2.2 million yuan.

Oil prices soar above 133 dollars on U.S. supply drop

By Xinhua, New York : Oil prices shattered record highs and soared above 133 U.S. dollars a barrel Wednesday after a report showed an unexpected drop in the U.S. crude stockpiles . Light, sweet crude for July delivery rose 4.19 dollars to settled at 133.17 dollars a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), trading up 4.19 dollars, the largest one-day price advance since March 26. But prices continued to rise as high as 133.82 dollars a barrel in the after-hour electronic trading.

Gyanendra picks up mightier sword – writes his autobiography

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Ousted Nepal king Gyanendra has reportedly exchanged his snake throne for a humble computer chair on which he sits everyday to hammer out his autobiography. Even as Maoist chief Prachanda, the revolutionary responsible for his fall from power, has laid down his gun, the last king of Nepal has metaphorically at least picked up the mightiest sword in the world for a last battle -- though he may not be using a pen. His autobiography will present his experiments with truth, or what is perceived by him to be the truth.

US concerned over new Al Qaeda South Asia wing

By Arun Kumar, Washington : The US has expressed concern over the reported creation of a new Al Qaeda wing in the Indian subcontinent but...

UN tribunal convicts army colonel for Rwandan genocide

Nairobi, Dec 18 (DPA) A UN tribunal Thursday sentenced former Rwandan Army colonel Theoneste Bagosora to life in prison for helping to organise the 1994 genocide in the east African country. Bagosora, who was the Director of Cabinet in the defence ministry at the time of the genocide, faced 12 counts of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Russia, US to talk missile shield next week in Moscow

By RIA Novosti Dakar (Senegal) : Russian and US officials will meet in Moscow next week to discuss Washington's plan to deploy elements of missile shield in Central Europe, an official of the Russian foreign ministry said here Thursday. The meeting to be held March 17-18 would also focus on Russia's unilateral moratorium on the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty and on a new strategic arms reduction treaty to replace START-I, which expires in December 2009, the top ranking official said.

Kidnapped principal beheaded in the Philippines

By DPA, Zamboanga City (The Philippines) : A kidnapped state school principal was beheaded by his abductors on a southern Philippine island, a regional military spokesman said Monday. The head of Gabriel Canizares, 36, was recovered at dawn Monday at a petrol station in Jolo town on Jolo Island, 1,000 km south of Manila, Major Ramon David Hontiveros said. Hontiveros said two motorcycle-riding gunmen, believed to be Abu Sayyaf rebels, allegedly threw a plastic bag containing the victim's head in front of the petrol station.

Voting begins in Indonesia elections

By Xinhua, Jakarta : Indonesians began voting Thursday morning in parliamentary elections, the third since the fall of the Suharto dictatorship in 1998. Voting began at 7 a.m. in Indonesia's easternmost Papua province in the sprawling archipelago nation of more than 17,000 islands spanning three different time zones. There are about 171 million eligible voters, who will elect members of the national parliament, regional representatives and districts parliamentary members from 38 national political parties and six local parties in Aceh province.

Meet highlights Chinese women’s progress

By Xinhua Beijing : Nearly 1,500 people gathered at the Great Hall of the People here Friday to highlight progress of women in Chinese society on the eve of the 98th International Women's Day. Addressing the gathering, Gu Xiulian, president of the All-China Women's Federation, said the past year witnessed fresh developments in the cause of Chinese women. Progress has been made in women's participation in politics, economy, education, health and legal protection, she said.

Over 32,000 people displaced in Brazil floods

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Rio de Janeiro : Over 32,000 people have been displaced in Brazil's Alagoas state due to floods caused by heavy rains, the civil defence service said Sunday. Heavy rains are still continuing for the third week. Residential buildings in 21 localities have been flooded. Meanwhile, 39 towns in Alagoas have sounded an situation due to dengue fever. More than 6,000 people have contracted the disease since the year start, officials said.

Germany received 450,000 refugees so far this year

Berlin: Germany has received 450,000 refugees so far this year, out of 800,000 expected to arrive in 2015, German Vice Chancellor and Minister of...

Thai military junta transfers 24 more officers

Bangkok : The Thai military junta announced the transfer of 24 more officers to inactive positions and also set out an eight-point plan for...

‘App’ named 2010 Word of the Year

By IANS, London : High school English teachers are crying into their textbooks over the American Dialect Society's choice for ‘Word of the Year' - 'App'.

Setback for Merkel’s party in German state polls

By DPA, Berlin : Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative party suffered a stinging setback Sunday in two of three German state assembly elections, with small parties eating into the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) support. Merkel's federal-level ally, the Social Democratic Party (SPD) took comfort from the CDU's losses and from its own future as an indispensable partner in state coalitions. But it failed to take up the slack from the CDU as the Sep 27 national elections loomed. Instead, the notable gains were scored by smaller parties.

Australians party as Obama is US president-elect

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Sydney : The euphoria unfolding at Grant Park in Chicago caught on with Australians as they celebrated Democrat Barack Obama’s historic victory as the first African-American president of the United States. Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd congratulated the United States president-elect Obama on his win, saying he has realised Martin Luther King's dream.

Development of Kazakh-Russian ties

By IRNA-Khabar Astana : Nursultan Nazarbayev will visit Moscow. A working visit by Nursultan Nazarbayev will kick off on the 20th of December amid recently published results of Russian-led surveys revealing that Russians think that the President of Kazakhstan is the most trusted leader among all the CIS presidents and feel safest in Kazakhstan. Russia is Kazakhstan's economic partner, second only to the EU, with trade turnover between the states expected to reach 20 billion US dollars in 2008.

Sandy victims to get help from Russia

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: Russia will will dispatch two airplanes worth of necessities to victims of the hurricane Sandy that ravaged the US East Coast.

Sydney residents oppose Buddhist monastery development

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Sydney : A Buddhist society's plans to build a temple in south-western Sydney is facing an outcry from residents, coming as it does close on the heels of the recent furore over a proposed Islamic school in suburban Sydney. A resident of suburban Wedderburn, a 40-minute drive south west of Sydney, has lodged her opposition with the city council against the Da Bao Monastery's plans to expand its four-bedroom meditation retreat, raising concerns about noise, traffic and amenities.

S Korea-EU agrees to crackdown anti-competition

By Xinhua, Seoul : South Korea and the European Union (EU) agreed on expanding cooperation to crackdown cartel and other unfair business activities, South Korea's Fair Trade Commission (FTC) said Wednesday. The agreement is to be signed between FTC and its EU counterpart on Thursday, according to FTC. The new deal obliges both parties to share the results of investigations into anti-competition charges into the other's companies. Moreover, both sides can conduct joint probes into such allegations if needed.

Diaz, Paltrow enjoy wedding show

By IANS, London: Actresses Cameron Diaz and Gwyneth Paltrow reportedly spent a girls' day out as they attended "The Windsor Wedding Show" which was being held in the same hotel they were staying.

Washington Nuclear Security Summit of high importance – IAEA

By NNN-KUNA, Vienna : The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) stressed on Saturday the importance of Washington Nuclear Security Summit in facing nuclear terrorism. Director of Department of Nuclear Safety and Security in IAEA Anita Nilsson said, in a press release, that the Washington Nuclear Summit, set for Monday, would be vital in fighting nuclear terrorism. She also noted the role of the IAEA in supporting these efforts.

52,000 flee rebel-held area as LTTE ignores surrender deadline

By IANS, Colombo : Men, women and children, some sick and some too old to even walk... It was a mass exodus from the Tamil Tigers held area in Sri Lanka's north with an estimated 52,000 people fleeing with whatever they could carry as the rebels failed Tuesday to meet Colombo's 24 hour deadline to surrender and troops forced their way into the no-fire-zone. Television reports showed thousands of civilians fleeing the rebel held area, a mass exodus that began Monday.

China shows strength, vitality as republic turns 60

By Xinhua, Beijing : China staged a grand celebration in Tiananmen Square at the heart of Beijing Thursday, showcasing the strength and vitality of Chinese-style socialism over the past 60 years, a report said. President Hu Jintao and other leaders viewed the two-hour pageant involving about 200,000 servicemen and women and civilians, from atop the square, where Mao Zedong first president of the People's Republic of China (PRC) proclaimed the country's birth in 1949.

Wall Street plunges on Inauguration Day

By Xinhua, New York : Wall Street plunged more than four percent on Inauguration Day Tuesday as bank woes spread while investors failed to find confidence from President Barack Obama's inauguration speech. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down more than 330 points, or four percent, falling below 8,000 for the first time in 2009, while the Standard & Poor's 500 and the Nasdaq indexes dropped more than five percent.

Security Council condemns attack on diplomats in Somalia

United Nations: The UN Security Council has condemned an attack on a humanitarian convoy carrying diplomats from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in Somalia. A...

Over 5,000 Rohingya Muslims settled in Jammu: Sayeed

Srinagar: Over 5,000 Rohingya refugees are living in in many settlement colonies in Jammu and Kashmir's winter capital Jammu after fleeing persecution in Myanmar,...

Wall Street stocks decline as Obama targets banks

By DPA, New York : Major US stock indices were sharply lower Thursday after President Barack Obama unveiled proposals to regulate and reduce risk-taking by banks. Financial listings led the decline. Growing concerns about China's tightening of monetary policy also helped fuel Thursday's selloff. The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted by 213.27 points, or 2.01 percent, to 10,389. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 21.56 points, or 1.89 percent, to 1,116.48. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index lost 25.55 points, or 1.12 percent, to 2,265.7.

MPs alarmed at significant undermanning levels in UK armed fores

By IRNA, London : Britain's Ministry of Defence (MoD) was accused Wednesday of not responding with "sufficient flexibility and imagination" to the problems it faces relating to the recruitment and retention of Armed Forces personnel. The parliamentary Defence Committee expressed alarm that British troops were operating an unprecedented tempo due to the Iraq and Afghan war and their commitments "outstrip the levels for which they are resourced."

Porsche chief steps down as Volkswagen prepares to take over

By DPA, Stuttgart : Wendelin Wiedeking, the chief executive of German carmaker Porsche AG, resigned Thursday after losing a power struggle with Volkswagen, which is set to take over Porsche. Porsche's supervisory board agreed on Wiedeking's departure after a night-long session, making him the first high-calibre victim of the drawn-out takeover battle between Porsche and Volkswagen AG. Early Thursday, the Porsche board approved a plan to raise 5 billion euros ($7.1 billion) in capital that could clear the way for a takeover of the highly indebted sports car maker by Volkswagen.

Indian-American physcians launch research foundation

New York : The American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI), the largest ethnic association of medical professionals in the US, has...

Medvedev meets Chinese Congress chairman, lays wreath at monument

By RIA Novosti, Beijing : Russian President Dmitry Medvedev began the second day of his visit to China by laying a wreath at a monument on Tiananmen Square, and later met with the chairman of the National People's Congress. Medvedev, who assumed office on May 7, arrived in China on Friday on his second foreign visit as president, following a trip to Kazakhstan. On Friday he signed a Russian-Chinese declaration on a range of international issues with his Chinese counterpart, Hu Jintao.

US envoy to meet Dalai Lama in Dharamsala

By Vishal Gulati, IANS, Dharamsala : US Ambassador Timothy J. Roemer is set to meet Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama during a two-day visit to Dharamsala, officials said Wednesday.
Send this to a friend