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Another Ebola death in Nigeria

Abuja : An Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) official has died of the Ebola virus disease in Nigeria, the West African regional...

4 dead in Tokyo’s midday stabbing spree

By SPA, Tokyo : Kyodo News says the death toll from a midday stabbing spree in Tokyo has risen to four. The attack at lunchtime Sunday in the Akihabara district also injured 13 others, paralyzing shoppers with fear. Police said they arrested Tomohiro Kato, 25, on the spot. Local reports said the attacker grunted and roared as he slashed and stabbed at his victims at random on a street crowded with shoppers. The electronics and video game district, known as Electric Town, is wildly popular with Japan's cyber-wise youth.

Include Pakistan’s input in Afghan policy, US urged

By IANS, Islamabad : Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani Friday urged the US to fully share the contours of its road map on Afghanistan and incorporate Islamabad's input in it. He made the remarks while speaking to US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) director Leon E. Panetta, who was on a two-day unscheduled visit here that concluded Friday.

A new EU constitution – a matter of the right packaging?

By Gaby Mahlberg

DPA

Cork (Ireland) : When the European Union celebrated its 50th anniversary in March, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she intended to present a roadmap setting out how Europe should go forward before Portugal took over the EU presidency this summer.

Obama, Huckabee win Iowa caucuses

By Xinhua Des Moines, United States : Two leading candidates posing as "Washington outsiders" are declared winners of the Iowa caucuses for both major political parties, according to preliminary results of the first battle of the 2008 presidential race held here Thursday night. Senator Barack Obama and former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee have emerged the victors in Iowa Thursday, winning the presidential caucuses.

50 LTTE militants killed in Sri Lanka

By IRNA, New Delhi : At least 52 LTTE militants were killed in pitched battles with the Sri Lankan security forces which overran rebel forward defence lines in the Jaffna peninsula and captured a Tamil Tigers' airstrip in nearby Kilinochchi.

Tagore statue unveiled in Cuba on birth anniversary

By Prensa Latina

Havana : Indian Ambassador Mitra Vasisht called Rabindranath Tagore "an icon of humankind" at the unveiling of a statue of the acclaimed poet in the Cuban capital to commemorate his 146th birth anniversary Wednesday.

New UN sports envoy sees Tibet as priority

By DPA Berlin : The new United Nations special sports envoy Willi Lemke is to focus his attention on the conflict in Tibet ahead of the Olympic Games in Beijing in August. The former Werder Bremen general manager said in Berlin Wednesday there should be neither talk at present of a boycott of the Games nor should one be "completely ruled out". The issue had to be viewed in all its various aspects, he said. Sport was to be regarded as a positive influence on conflicts and conflict regions.

NATO to hold emergency talks on Ukraine Tuesday

Brussels : The 28-member NATO will hold emergency talks on Ukraine Tuesday, the bloc announced Monday. The upcoming meeting of the North Atlantic Council, which...

Oil spill off Argentina under control

By IANS Buenos Aires : The mysterious oil spill detected last week off the coast of Argentina's southern Patagonia, which killed hundreds of water birds, has been brought under control, officials in southern Chubut province have said. A thick black oil slick, which was detected by officials last Thursday, covered an area of 24 square kilometres in the Atlantic Ocean near the city of Caleta Cordova. Over 500 waterfowls died in the slick.

Washington mulls sanctions on North Korea

By IANS, Seoul : There would be "more developments in the days ahead" in Washington's push to punish North Korea for its rocket launch, said a top US diplomat Wednesday.

Brazil trade minister to arrive in Tehran Monday

By IANS, Tehran: A 100-member business delegation from Brazil led by Trade Minister Miguel Joao Jorge Filho will arrive here Monday to explore business opportunities in Iran, state-run IRNA news agency reported. The Brazilian minister will meet his Iranian counterpart Ali-Akbar Mehrabian on his two-day trip to the Islamic republic. This will be the biggest ever Brazilian delegation to the Islamic republic, the report said. They are scheduled to meet officials and representatives of Iranian companies.

Obama more popular than his policies: Poll

By IANS, Washington : A new national poll suggests that President Barack Obama is personally more popular than his policies. The CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll released Monday, two days before Obama marks 100 days in the White House, indicates that three in four Americans feel Obama has the personal qualities a president should have. But when asked if Obama agrees with the respondent on the issues, that number drops to 57 percent.

Global warming brings tropical birds to Hong Kong

By DPA, Hong Kong : The sighting of two rarely seen tropical birds in Hong Kong could be due to climate change, bird experts here have said. The birds - a great frigate and the white-tailed tropic-bird - were both spotted around Po Toi, Hong Kong's southern most island, over the last month. It was the first time the white-tailed tropic has ever been spotted in Hong Kong and only the fourth sighting of the frigate. Both birds are usually seen in more tropical climates such as the Pacific and Indian Oceans.

Teaching of Indian languages gets a boost in Singapore

By DPA Singapore : The teaching of Indian languages, other than Tamil, will receive a $1.5 million (US$9.8 million) boost next year from the government. Community groups organised by the Hindi Society have been running weekend classes in five non-Tamil languages in 20 schools. Mainstream schools do not offer the classes. In recognition of the effort, languages such as Bengali, Hindi, Gujarati, Punjabi and Urdu will benefit. The funding will go toward teacher training and development of teaching materials, the society told The Straits Times.

Thai airline crash toll 90, probe started

Bangkok, Sep 17 (DPA) Thai Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont is to inspect the One-Two-Go budget airline crash that claimed at least 90 lives, leaving 40 injured, officials said Monday. One-Two-Go flight OG 269 skidded off the runway Sunday afternoon after landing at Phuket Airport, 640 km south of Bangkok, and crashed into trees and an embankment, splitting in two and bursting into flames. The McDonell Douglas MD-82 aircraft was manned by a crew of five with two pilots and was carrying 123 passengers, about 80 of them foreign nationals.

Dalai Lama reiterates call for greater autonomy for Tibet

BY DPA, Bochum (Germany) : The Dalai Lama repeated his desire Friday for reconciliation with China and insisted he does not want independence for his homeland Tibet. "We are not looking for independence," the Tibetan spiritual leader said on the second day of his visit to Germany. All he wanted for Tibet was more autonomy within China, he said. The Dalai Lama said he hoped for concrete results from the talks between his representatives and the Chinese government held in the aftermath of the Tibet freedom demonstrations in March.

After firing of rockets, Israeli war jets strike Gaza

Gaza: Israeli war jets early Thursday struck with air-to-ground missiles at military facilities in the Gaza Strip in response to earlier rockets fired from...

Croatian publisher killed in blast

By DPA, Zagreb, Oct 24 (DPA) Croatian publisher Ivo Pukanic and another person were killed in a blast in central Zagreb Thursday evening, the national television HTV reported. Several other sources said Pukanic, the president of the NCL Media Group, was killed at 6:15 pm alongside an unnamed, younger reporter. The police, however, have not confirmed those reports. Pukanic, 47, was the founder and the long-time editor of the investigative weekly Nacional.

Rafendi Djamin elected Indonesia representative in ASEAN Human Rights Commission

By NNN-Antara, Jakarta : The Indonesian government has appointed human rights activist Rafendi Djamin to represent it in the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR), a foreign ministry spokesman said. Director of ASEAN Political and Security Affairs Ade Sukendar made the remarks here on Friday.

Third plane with Russian humanitarian aid lands in Serbia

By RIA Novosti Belgrade : A third IL-76 cargo plane of the Russian Emergencies Ministry carrying 40 tons of humanitarian aid, mostly rice, to ethnic Serbs in Kosovo landed at a Belgrade airport on Tuesday. A fourth and final shipment of aid including medicines and sugar is to arrive on April 10.

Aftershock from Indonesian quake prompts new tsunami warning

By DPA Jakarta : Indonesian officials issued a second tsunami warning Wednesday night following an aftershock from a massive 8.2-magnitude earthquake off Indonesia's Sumatra Island. The Meteorology and Geophysics Agency in Jakarta issued the warning, the second in less than four hours, following a 6.6-magnitude earthquake around 9:40 pm (1540 GMT). The aftershock was located close to the initial earthquake's epicentre, Sriwuri, an agency official told DPA.

China solves 278,000 criminal cases in 2010

By IANS, Beijing : China has cracked 278,000 criminal cases and busted around 1,650 mafia gangs since it launched a nationwide campaign to maintain public security in 2010. Around 256,000 suspects have been arrested since January, according to a national working group on maintaining public security, China Daily reported Wednesday. The group consists of officials from government departments, including the Central Commission for Political and Legal Affairs of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the ministry of public security.

Nepal capital fears violence as government clamps ban orders

By IANS, Kathmandu : After a series of peaceful street protests by the former Maoist guerrillas against the communist-led government of Nepal, violence could erupt Thursday in the capital following the ruling alliance's decision to clamp prohibitory orders on large tracts of area around Singha Durbar, the bastion of the government.

Killer of former Colombian president’s sister nabbed

By IANS/EFE, Bogota : Authorities here have arrested a leftist rebel on charges of kidnapping and murdering a sister of former Colombian president Cesar Gaviria, officials said. A team of the Attorney General's office and the army has arrested Beatriz Villalba Betancourt of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the country's largest leftist guerrilla group, according to officials Saturday. Liliana Gaviria, sister of the ex-president, was killed in a failed kidnapping attempt in April 2006. Cesar Gaviria governed the country from 1990 to 1994.

Four officials sacked as 18 kids die in accident

By IANS, Beijing : Four officials were sacked in China after 18 kindergarten children were killed in an accident.

Dozens of flights cancelled at German airport as pilots stage new warning strike

By IRNA, Berlin : Dozens of flights were either delayed or cancelled Tuesday morning as a new warning strike by pilots crippled air traffic at numerous German airports, according to media reports. Pilots, belonging to Lufthansa's sister company CityLine, staged the morning labor walkout over better pay at airports in Berlin, Munich, Duesseldorf, Stuttgart, Cologne, Nuremberg and Dresden. The strike ended reportedly at 8 a.m. local time. Pilots have earlier threatened to hold an unlimited strike.

US calls on North Korea to release journalists

By DPA, Washington : The US called on North Korea to release the two American journalists who are facing criminal charges in the Stalinist state. "We continue to call on the North Koreans to release the two Americans so they can be returned to their families," State Department acting spokesman Robert Wood said. North Korea announced Friday the two journalists, Korean-American Euna Lee and Chinese-American Laura Ling, will face charges of "hostile acts", including illegally entering the country across the Chinese border.

Aliens hunting livestock on earth, experts claim

By IANS, London: Experts are probing mysterious disappearance and death of animals after reportedly being attacked by aliens or unidentified flying objects (UFOs) with harmful rays and other advanced weapons. Farmers complain that they wake up to find their animals dead after seemingly being "experimented on". A group of UFO hunters investigating such incidents link the mutilations - including the removal of sheep brains and eyes - to sightings of mysterious reddish orange lights in the sky.

Kenyan premier calls for African Union troops in Zimbabwe

By DPA, Nairobi : Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga has called on the African Union to deploy troops in Zimbabwe to take control from President Robert Mugabe, reports said Sunday. "Mugabe is a shame to Africa and the African Union should take its soldiers to Zimbabwe to free the people in that country," The Sunday Nation quoted Odinga as saying in a speech in a rural constituency. The Kenyan premier, who has been one of Mugabe's fiercest critics, said that his nation would not recognize the results of Friday's run-off presidential election, in which Mugabe was the sole candidate.

Californians hoping to rebuild face ashes, paperwork

By DPA San Diego : "This was a black Mercedes," says Robert Buckenmeyer, pointing to a burned out car wreck covered with a layer of white ash. Hardly anything is left of his $2.5 million villa in Rancho Bernado after devastating fires swept through southern California this week. "We were hoping to dig and see what survived, maybe a computer or pictures, but you can't even go in there and dig. It's nothing but twisted metal," said Robert, who was on vacation in Hawaii with his wife, Maggie, when the destruction happened.

Ferry with over 200 people sinks in Indonesia

By DPA, Jakarta : A ferry with 213 people on board sank off Indonesia's Riau islands Sunday after being battered by bad weather, killing at least one person, police said. Search teams are looking for survivors from the Dumai Express 10 which was sailing from Batam near Singapore to Dumai island in Riau when it ran into massive waves, Riau police chief Puji Hartanto. Hartanto told MetroTv that survivors were spotted floating in the sea.

Demand to rebuild Tamil schools in Malaysia

By IANS, Kuala Lumpur : The Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) has demanded that 60 percent of the 523 Tamil schools in the country be rebuilt by 2011 under a financial package allotted to promote better education among the two million-plus ethnic Indians. MIC President S. Samy Vellu urged the government to set up a committee to coordinate rebuilding and refurbishing of the schools, for which a RM 50 million ($23 million approx.) stimulus package has been planned.

Huge blast in Colombo

By IANS, Colombo : A huge bomb exploded in the heart of the Sri Lankan capital Friday, residents said. The blast occurred in the city's commercial district, apparently targeted at a police bus. Casualties were evacuated to a hospital, witnesses said.

Ten die in Russia road accident

By IANS, Moscow: Ten people died in Russia Sunday when a minibus collided head on with a truck, authorities said.

Over 50,000 pregnant women affected in quake: UN

Kathmandu : Some 50,000 pregnant women were likely affected by the devastating earthquake in Nepal, a UN agency said on Tuesday. Initial estimates by the...

UN chief concerned about political deadlock in Lebanon

By Xinhua United Nations : U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on Lebanon's political leaders on Wednesday to find a solution to their tense stand-off over the election of a new president. In a statement released by his spokesperson, Ban said he was extremely concerned about the continuing delay in the election of a president to succeed Emile Lahoud, noting that the postponement has now extended well past the constitutional timeframe.

EU parliament hosts conference on cultural heritage of Kashmir

By EuAsiaNews, Brussels : An international conference on cultural heritage of the people of Kashmir ended here Thursday night stressing that irrespective of their location, "all people of the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir share a unique and ancient heritage."

Bangladesh confers Liberation War Award on Vajpayee

Dhaka: Former Indian prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was on Sunday conferred the Bangladesh Liberation War award for his contribution to the South Asian...

Sacked Nepal Army chief likely to move court

By IANS, Kathmandu : Nepal's tough army chief Gen Rookmangud Katawal, who was relieved of his responsibilities by the ruling Maoist party Sunday, is likely to challenge the decision in court, former army officers predicted. The 61-year-old, who received his marching orders just three months before he is due to retire, is expected to knock at Nepal's Supreme Court to stay the Maoists' hand. "It is a routine procedure," said a Nepal Army brigadier-general who had served for 33 years.

Flawed corporate methods fuelled current economic meltdown

By IANS, Washington : Archaic corporate systems failing to unearth risky business deals helped fuel the country's deepest financial meltdown since the Great Depression, a University of Illinois business law expert said. Larry E. Ribstein, a law professor, argued that the traditional, corporate-run firms that dominate the nation's Fortune 500 are ill equipped to prevent sleazy management decisions that have choked credit markets, sparking a massive, taxpayer-financed Wall Street bailout.

Google rejects German criticism of Street View

By DPA, Berlin: US internet giant Google Tuesday defended its Street View application - a compendium of photographed city streets - from privacy concerns in Germany, where criticism of the company has mounted. Minister Ilse Aigner, who is responsible for consumer affairs, again accused the US company of privacy invasion by photographing Germans' homes without asking each householder in advance for permission.

Jordan, Russia to sign n-reactor deal

Amman: Jordan said Friday that it will sign a deal with Russia next month to start studies on the country 's first nuclear reactor,...

Suspected car bomb found in Times Square

By DPA, New York : Police evacuated part of Times Square after finding a suspected car bomb in the busy midtown Manhattan district Saturday night, media reports said. Officials said it was not considered to be a terrorist threat, and New York City police reportedly asked federal authorities to stand down. The New York Times quoted an explosives' expert saying it was an improvised device using propane cylinders and powder, but the ignition source "failed to function the main charge".

Coal mine flooding kills five in China

Beijing: Five miners were killed and two others remain trapped in a flooded coal mine in China's Anhui province, local authorities said Saturday. The accident...

Sri Lanka arrests 26 Indian fishermen

By IANS, Colombo: The navy Saturday arrested 26 Indian fishermen who were in Sri Lankan waters, a navy spokesman said.

Menon to meet Obama team next week

By IANS, New Delhi : India will make its first high-level contact with the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama when Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon goes to the US next week to meet key figures of the transition team. Menon is likely to meet influential figures in the transition team that includes Wendy Sherman, the co-chair of the state department's Agency Review Team, which is tasked with preparing policy and personnel for the soon-to-be-named secretaries.

100 kids fall ill after lunch in Mauritius school

By IANS, Port Louis (Mauritius): More than 100 primary school students fell ill Thursday after having lunch at their school in the Indian Ocean island nation of Mauritius, officials said.

G8 ministers urge reduction of carbon emissions

By DPA, Tokyo : Environmental ministers from seven of the world's largest economies and Russia urged their leaders to set a long-term target and halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The ministers closed a three-day meeting in the western Japanese city of Kobe by also urging the Group of Eight (G8) nations to set medium-term reduction targets at their July summit in Tokyo in northern Japan.

‘Russia’s next-generation warplane to fly this year’

By RIA Novosti, Astrakhan (Russia) : Russia's first fifth-generation warplane, being developed in collaboration with India, will make its maiden flight before the end of this year, the deputy prime minister in charge of arms procurement has said. "We expect the plane to take to the skies no later than the end of this year," Sergei Ivanov told a news conference after a meeting of the Military-Industrial Commission.

Germany-Israel -Peres/WRD Peres acknowledges Germans’ critical view of Israel

By IRNA Berlin : Shimon Peres, president of Israeli regime, said while the German government has always been Israeli staunch supporter, Germans at large remain very critical of the regime's policies. Speaking with the German pro-Israel daily Welt newspaper, Peres added, "We have best relations with the government in Germany, however among the people there are strong reservations." He acknowledged that it was a "problem" that many European countries regard Israel as a troublemaker.

Mercedes to get $700 mn from Brazilian bank

By IANS/EFE, Rio de Janeiro: German automaker Mercedes-Benz will get a loan of 1.2 billion reais ($700 million) from Brazilian state development bank to expand production in Brazil. The funds will allow Mercedes-Benz, a division of Daimler AG, to increase production capacity at its plant in Sao Bernardo do Campo, an industrial city in Sao Paulo, the BNDES bank said in a statement.

UN fails to reach consensus on North Korea sanctions

By DPA, New York : The United Nations Security Council failed to agree on a resolution against North Korea's claimed satellite launch over the weekend, even as Japan demanded a swift and decisive response. Ambassadors of the US, Russia, China, France and Britain have been in negotiation sessions with Japan since Sunday, but the discussions have yielded no results. Tokyo requested the emergency Security Council sessions after Pyonyang fired a missile over Japanese territory that fell into the Pacific Ocean, according to US and Japanese officials.

German dentist refuses to treat boy named Jihad

By DPA, Donaueschingen (Germany) : A German dentist refused to treat a 16-year-old boy this week because his first name means Jihad, the youth's father said Friday. The family in Donaueschingen may ask police to charge the woman with discrimination over the alleged incident, which happened Tuesday. The teenager went to the orthodontist to have his dental brace adjusted - but she reportedly said she considered his name a declaration of war on non-Muslims and sent him away.

Mexican government to raise taxes, cut spending

By EFE, Mexico City : The Mexican government has proposed a 2010 budget that includes deep cuts in public spending and increased taxes on income and consumption to cover an expected revenue shortfall of $35.9 billion. President Felipe Calderon's administration is forecasting economic growth of 3 percent next year and an inflation rate of 3.3 percent, according to the bill presented to Congress Tuesday.

Sri Lankan government troops take control of strategic rebel town

By DPA, Colombo : Government troops have taken control a strategic town in northern Sri Lanka after weeks of heavy fighting around the area as the army continues its advance into rebel-held areas, military officials said Wednesday. Paranthan a town located 385 km north of the capital, was taken by troops Wednesday evening as Mi 24 helicopters provided air support to advancing troops. There were no details of any rebel casualties.

McCain wins Georgia, projections show

By DPA, Washington : Republican John McCain has defeated Democrat Barack Obama in the state of Georgia, according to projections by the television networks Fox News and MSNBC Tuesday. The projections for the battleground state with 15 electoral votes were based on exit polls and early returns in balloting Tuesday. Obama campaign strongly in Georgia in an effort to steal the state which is solid Republican ground, but McCain managed to keep it in his camp.

Obama supporters add Hussein to their names

By IANS, New York : Many US supporters of Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama are adopting the middle name Hussein in a symbolic act of solidarity against his political opponents' slur that he is a Muslim, or even a terrorist. Emily Nordling, a 19-year-old student from Fort Thomas, Kentucky, who on Facebook has become "Emily Hussein Nordling", is one of the growing number of admirers of Senator Obama, the presumptive Democratic nominee, who are informally adopting his middle name, the New York Times reported Sunday.

Olympic dragon: Beijing opens world’s largest air terminal

By DPA Beijing : A dragon is rising in the Olympic city of Beijing as the world's largest airport terminal is about to open for business at the end of February. "Everything's going fine and the building will be opened according to plan," an airport spokesman says. From the air, the 3.5-km-long terminal looks like a giant sleeping dragon lying outside the gates of the Chinese capital. The dragon shape with its characteristic spiky ridges on the golden brown roof was designed by British architect Sir Norman Foster.

Thailand slams Russia, Germany for giving visa to ex-PM Thaksin

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Bangkok : The Thai foreign minister has criticised the Russian and German governments for granting visas to the country's fugitive former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, Bangkok Post reported Tuesday. "Everyone is washing their hands but he is a bloody terrorist," Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya said in Washington, where he will attend the Nuclear Security Summit.

Cambodia establishes first life insurance firm

By IANS, Phnom Penh : The Cambodian government has joined hands with four foreign companies to establish the country's first ever life insurance firm.

Gaddafi Challenges West on Human Rights

By Prensa Latina Paris : Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's controversial visit to France changed its tone on Wednesday, when the visitor challenged the West on human rights matters. During his meetings with intellectuals and at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, the Libyan president asked the developed countries if they really considered themselves unimpeachable regarding their respect for human rights. Some leaders of the conservative government of President Nicolas Sarkozy and the opposition questioned Gaddafi's presence here and criticized his career.

Obama highlights Muslims’ contribution at Iftar dinner

By Manik Mehta, NNN-Bernama, Washington : At Tuesday's iftar dinner -- the meal to break fast during the month of Ramadan -- hosted at the White House, President Barack Obama paid a glowing tribute to the contributions of American Muslims before a group of foreign ambassadors, high-ranking United States officials and congressmen. The congressmen included the first two Muslim representatives, Keith Ellison and Andre Carson.

Malaysia: GE sees incresing interest in renewable energy in Asia

By NNN-Bernama Kuala Lumpur : Global technology powerhouse General Electric (GE) sees a lot of interest in renewable energy in Asia with high oil prices and concerns about the environment. Its president for Southeast Asia, Stuart L. Dean, emphasised that while thermal fuel sources like oil, gas and coal will remain dominant for a very long time, the energy market is moving towards increased use of renewables.

Sri Lanka slams German comments at slain editor’s funeral

By DPA, Colombo : The Sri Lankan government sharply criticised German Ambassador Jurgen Weerth for his comments at the funeral of a slain newspaper editor, a foreign ministry official said Wednesday. Foreign Secretary Palitha Kohona Tuesday summoned Weerth to express the government's "displeasure", the official said on condition of anonymity.

Sunita returns home after 195-day space odyssey

By Arun Kumar, IANS

Washington : Indian American astronaut Sunita Williams returned home after a 195-day record space odyssey with Space shuttle Atlantis making a smooth landing at Edwards Air Force Base, California.

Gazprom invited to join oil and gas survey in Moldova

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Moldova invited Russian energy giant Gazprom to take part in its oil and gas survey on Wednesday, Russian Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov said after talks in Moscow with his Moldovan counterpart. Zubkov and Moldova's Prime Minister Vasile Tarlev met earlier in the day to discuss steps to boost bilateral economic contacts. "There are good opportunities for prospecting Moldova's oil and gas reserves, and Gazprom will accept the invitation to visit Moldova later this month to continue work in the field," the Russian premier said.

British government criticised for lowering GCSE exam standards

By IANS, London : Britain's Conservative party has hit out at the Labour government, claiming the standard of questions for the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) examination was being lowered merely to inflate the pass rate as part of the government's drive to meet its education targets. A question from the sample papers for this year's GCSE science examination, which is equivalent to Class 10 in India, asks: The female nurse leaves the room while the x-ray is being taken. Why must she leave the room? Choose any one answer from the following:

Angry Britons put dog excrement in Clegg’s letterbox

By IANS, London: British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has said voters angry about government spending cuts put dog excrement in his letterbox.

Smuggled elephant tusks hidden under snail shells

By DPA, Hanoi : Vietnamese customs inspectors have discovered more than two tonnes of elephant tusks hidden in a shipping container full of snail shells from Kenya, an official said Monday. Bui Hoang Duong, head of the customs inspection department at the northern port of Haiphong, said inspectors opened the container Friday as part of enhanced scrutiny of shipping from Tanzania, due to recent cases of ivory smuggling. The container's waybill said it had been loaded by a Vietnamese carrier, Vinashin Mariner, in the Tanzanian port of Zanjiba.

UK supermarkets cut food prices, but Indian groceries remain dearer

By Venkata Vemuri, IANS, London : British supermarkets have launched a food price war, announcing cuts in fresh and frozen food items to woo back customers already grappling with rising fuel and energy bills. However, Indian food items, including fresh vegetables, are so far out of the purview of the reductions. Top supermarket Tesco has announced it will cut prices of 3,000 items from Monday. Rival Asda lost no time announcing that it will sell 10 staple items, including eggs, bread and butter, for only 50 pence, from Friday till Sunday, reports The Times.

Bush urges Russia not to recognize Georgian rebel regions

By RIA Novosti, Washington : U.S. President George W. Bush has urged Russia not to recognize Georgia's two breakaway regions as independent, and has sent his deputy Dick Cheney to Georgia in a show of U.S. support. Both houses of Russia's parliament voted unanimously on Monday in favor of a resolution asking President Dmitry Medvedev to recognize the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, following requests from the leaders of both breakaway republics.

Sobhraj verdict on July 14

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu: A sensational murder in Nepal in 1975, that police blame on yesteryear's international crime maestro Charles Sobhraj, could be finally laid to rest next month with judges Wednesday announcing they would deliver the verdict July 14. In three weeks' time, the Frenchman, sent behind bars for 20 years for the murder of American backpacker Connie Jo Bronzich, will either walk out a free man or pin his hopes on yet another long legal battle.

Russia losing space race: Poll

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia is losing its position as the leader of the space race and needs to invest more in the space industry, a new poll has said.

Carter expresses doubts about Maoists’ poll plans

By IANS Kathmandu : Former US president Jimmy Carter, who had urged his government to establish communications with Nepal's Maoist guerrillas though they are still on Washington's watch list of terror organisations, has expressed doubts about the rebels' intentions towards the election. Carter, who arrived in Kathmandu Wednesday on his second peace mission to Nepal, met Maoist supremo Prachanda to ask him if the rebels intended to take part in the constituent assembly election that will for the first time give citizens the right to write their own constitution.

German Jewish peace group condemns Israeli massacres in Gaza

Berlin, Jan 16, IRNA -- Members of a German Jewish peace organization rallied outside the Israeli embassy in Berlin on Thursday to condemn Israeli atrocities in Gaza. Calling themselves 'European Jews for a Just Peace Germany', the German Jewish protesters urged western countries to step up pressure on Israel to "stop immediately its military aggression" in Gaza. The group called also for imposing international sanctions on Israel for its war against the Palestinians. This was the first anti-Israel demo by a group of German Jews since the start of the Gaza war on December 27.

‘Indian students seldom breach Australian visa rules’

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Sydney : Indian overseas students are the second largest cohort of international students in Australia and they seldom breach immigration rules. Only 16 out of 63,500 Indian overseas students enrolled in Australian education institutions had in the past three years breached student visa rules and spent some time in a detention centre.

Plane slides off runway on Thai holiday island

By DPA, Bangkok : Several passengers were injured Tuesday when a plane slid off a runway when landing at the popular Thai tourist island of Samui, an airline spokeswoman said. The Bangkok Airways plane on a flight from Krabi to Samui Island slid off the runway at 2.30 p.m. at Samui airport, Nanwipa Gayjanun, a spokeswoman of the airline, confirmed. She did not provide any further details on the number of injured passengers. Heavy rain during landing is believed to have caused the accident.

Taiwan should learn from Georgia conflict: Analyst

By DPA, Taipei : Taiwan should learn a lesson from the ongoing conflict in the Caucasus and beware of a similar situation with China, a Taiwanese political analyst said Friday. "Georgia's tragedy is a warning for Taiwan. Georgia sees a Russia which wants to regain its past power. Taiwan sees a China which has already risen," political analyst Antonio Chiang said in his column in the Apple Daily. "Every now and then, thug leaders pick out a weakling and knock his head against the wall, to remind others who is in charge," he wrote in an article entitled, A Small but Smart War.

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.

Kyrgyz president sacks government

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Bishkek : Kyrgyzstan President Almazbek Atambayev signed a decree Friday sacking the government, the state press service said.

Apple’s Steve Jobs to take medical leave

By DPA, San Francisco : Apple's iconic founder and chief executive Steve Jobs said Wednesday that he was taking medical leave from the company, leaving Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook in charge. Jobs, who battled pancreatic cancer in 2004, announced the movie in an email to all Apple employees just a week after he blamed a hormonal imbalance for his gaunt appearance in recent months. Apple's success is closely associated with Jobs' leadership and his decision is expected to have a detrimental effect on the company's performance.

Georgia’s ruling party wins parliamentary election

By Xinhua, Moscow : Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili's United National Movement has won the May 21 parliamentary election with 59.5 percent of the vote, the Central Elections Commission (CEC) announced Friday. According to the latest reports, Saakashvili has pledged to cooperate with other blocs in the new parliament. There are around 3.7 million registered voters and voter turnout in the one-day elections was 55 percent, the CEC said. Some 500 international observers, alongside hundreds of domestic ones, monitored the voting.

UN special envoy meets Myanmar’s Suu Kyi

By DPA, Yangon : UN special envoy Ibrahim Gambari Monday met Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi at a government guest house in Yangon, officials said. The meeting lasted about one hour and 20 minutes, witnesses said. The content of the talks was not immediately revealed but should be disclosed later Monday when Gambari was scheduled to meet members of Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, Myanmar's main opposition party.

Russia begins probe into bogus election videos

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia has launched a probe into fake video clips posted on internet that show ballot stuffing for the March 4 presidential polls, an official said Thursday.

Prachanda to contesr in Constituent Assembly election from Nepali capital

By NNN-Xinhua Kathmandu : The Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (CPN-M) has decided to field party chairman Prachanda in the upcoming elections to Constituent Assembly (CA) from Nepali capital Kathmandu, local media reported Tuesday. The chief of CPN-M foreign department C.P Gajurel said this while talking to reporters in Sindhuli district, some 40 km southeast of Kathmandu. He is now in the district to attend a festival.

Up to 87 percent migrants could stay in US: Study

Washington: Up to 87 percent of undocumented immigrants would be able to remain in the US if the executive action measures on immigration taken...

Dabur Nepal strike continues

By IANS Kathmandu : Two days before the celebration of the 60th year of India's independence, one of its top FMCG (fast moving consumer goods) makers Monday remained shut in a labour dispute in Nepal, incurring a huge loss. Dabur Nepal, Dabur India's wholly owned subsidiary in Nepal and one of the kingdom's biggest exporters, was unable to resume operations at its factory in Birgunj town in southern Nepal after a group of seasonal workers supported by the Maoists went on strike Friday.

Centre-right party wins two-thirds majority in Hungary

By DPA, Budapest : The centre-right party Fidesz secured an unprecedented two-thirds majority in Hungary's Parliament through second-round voting Sunday, according to preliminary data from the National Election Office. Fidesz leader Viktor Orban addressed a jubilant crowd, which filled a large square in the centre of the capital Budapest chanting "Viktor, Viktor!" "We have been able to bring about a great change through democratic means that previously we could only have done with a revolution," Orban said.

Russian Air Force commander backs idea of Abkhazia military base

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The creation of a Russian military base in Georgia's breakaway republic of Abkhazia would increase the security of Russia's borders in the region, Russia's Air Force commander said on Thursday. Abkhaz President Sergei Bagapsh proposed on Wednesday that Russia open a military base on its territory. "If a corresponding political decision is made, it will only be to the benefit of air defense," Colonel-General Alexander Zelin said.

UNSC calls for ‘unhindered humanitarian access’ to Palestinian camp

United Nations: The UN Security Council (UNSC) has called for "unhindered humanitarian access" to the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp near the Syrian capital of...

Not interfering in Pakistan crisis, says US

Islamabad: The US Thursday rejected Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan's comment that Washington was interfering in the country's affairs. The US embassy in Islamabad...

Egypt hardsells itself as leisure, business tourism destination

By IANS, New Delhi : The land of pharaohs and pyramids, Egypt, is hard selling itself in India as a destination for leisure as well as meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions. The northern African country is cheaper and more attractive than destinations in Europe and Africa, director of Egyptian tourism in India Magdi Selim said. "India is the focus market of Egypt this year. We will promote Egyptian culture in cities like Bangalore, Kolkata, Chennai, Pune and Ahmedabad. Egypt is an ideal leisure and business destination," Selim told IANS in the capital.

Plane crash in Libya kills over 100

By DPA, Tripoli/Cairo : More than 100 people died when a Libyan aircraft on its way from South Africa crashed in Tripoli Wednesday, officials said. A nine-year-old Dutch boy was the only survivor of the crash. The Airbus 330 belonging to the state-owned Afriqiyah Airways was on a regular flight from Johannesburg when it crashed on its landing approach to the Libyan capital's international airport. Some 93 passengers and 11 crew were on board the plane, many of them Dutch.

Bharat-Nepal Shiksha Maitri Karyakram launched

By Anil Giri , Kathmandu: In the line with the announcement made by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the first week of August, the...

Over 100 poisoned by oysters in luxury Macau hotels

By DPA, Hong Kong : More than 100 people have been poisoned by tainted oysters at top hotels in the casino resort of Macau, a radio report said Saturday. Fifty nine people were sick after eating the oysters at the Sands Macau Hotel, while another 39 were ill after eating oysters at the Venetian, Hong Kong's government-run radio station RTHK said. Another six people fell ill after eating oysters at the Hotel Golden Dragon. All the oysters are believed to have been supplied by the same Hong Kong company, the radio station reported.

US, South Korea military exercise to snub North Korea

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Seoul : The US and South Korea will hold military exercises in the Yellow Sea next week to send a "strong signal" to North Korea, a media report said Wednesday. The drills, to be held June 8-11, are intended to show North Korea a "firm combined defence posture" of Washington and Seoul, South Korea's Yonhap news agency quoted a defence official as saying on condition of anonymity.

Rebels enforce indefinite closure in Nepal’s Terai

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : With two months to go for the critical constituent assembly election in Nepal, dissident parties from the southern plains Wednesday began an indefinite closure of the Terai, warning the government that the polls would not be held in the region if their demands were not met.

PPP Victory Ahead in Thai Elections

By Prensa Latina Bangkok : PPP (People´s Power Party) won 233 seats out of the 480 seats of Parliament, although without reaching absolute majority in general voting, Thailand Electoral Commission confirmed Tuesday. In that way, the supporters of deposed Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra widely surpassed their main rival the Democratic Party, which obtained 165 seats in the House of Representatives.

12 killed in violent clashes in Mexico

By DPA, Mexico City : Violent clashes left 12 people - seven police officers and five civilians - dead in the Mexican state of Sinaloa early Tuesday, police said. The police officers were killed as they chased a group of armed men who had killed three young men on a street corner in the city of Culiacan, the authorities said. On Monday, four police officers were found dead near Culiacan. They had been kidnapped on May 1, and their bodies showed signs of having been tortured.

Guiliani expected for Republican presidential nomination

By Xinhua

New York : US Republican leaders are expected this week to endorse former New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani for the Republican presidential nomination.

10 die in Indonesian chopper crash

By IANS, Jakarta : Ten gold mine workers were killed when their helicopter crashed in Indonesia's North Sulawesi province, an official said Thursday.

‘Media magnifying teenage suicides in Russia’

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : The rate of teenage suicides in Russia was declining but excessive media coverage portrays it as a growing trend, experts have said.

Thai pro-government protest leader’s jail term upheld

Bangkok : Thailand's Appeals Court Thursday upheld a suspended six-month jail term for pro-government protest leader Jatuporn Prompan for defaming former prime minister Abhisit...

Nepal house battle to resume as parties remain at loggerheads

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : With Nepal's ruling parties and the Maoists failing to reach an understanding during the 10-day reprieve to their historic battle in parliament, a fresh feud is on the cards when the winter session resumes Thursday. Though former American president Jimmy Carter had flown in to Kathmandu last month to propose a compromise and push the stalled peace process forward, the adversaries have refused to budge from their stands.

Sarkozy calls for Schengen reform

By IANS, Paris : French President Nicolas Sarkozy Sunday said that Europe's border-free Schengen agreement should be rethought and re-founded.

First synthetic tree may facilitate heat transfer, soil technologies

By IANS, Washington : The world's first 'synthetic tree,' created by Abraham Stroock's lab, mimics the process of transpiration that helps move moisture to the highest branches. The researchers' work bolsters the long-standing theory that transpiration in trees and plants through capilliary action, is a purely physical process, requiring no biological energy. It also may lead to new passive heat transfer technologies for cars or buildings, better methods for remediating soil and more effective ways to draw water out of partially dry ground.

Ugandan rebels killed 321 in Congo massacre: Rights group

By DPA, Kampala/Washington : The one-time Ugandan rebel group Lord's Resistance Army killed at least 321 civilians in a four-day rampage in northeastern Congo late in 2009, Human Rights Watch said early Sunday in Kampala. The killings took place between December 14 to 17 in the remote Makombo area of Haute Uele district, but had not been reported previously, Human Rights Watch said in a report. The rights group's investigators documented the killings during a visit to the massacre area in February.

Nine killed in Brazil bus accident

By IANS Sao Paulo : Nine people were killed and 24 injured Thursday in a bus accident in Brazil, EFE news agency reported. The incident occurred on the Via Dutra highway in Sao Paulo state when the driver of the vehicle lost control, Globo TV reported. Seven passengers were pronounced dead at the accident spot while one person died en route to the hospital and one succumbed to his injuries at the hospital. Three passengers were unhurt as they had their seatbelts fastened, police said.

Pirates attack Italian ship with 1,200 onboard

By DPA, Hamburg/Rome : An Italian cruise ship carrying 1,200 passengers was able to fend off a pirate attack off the coast of Somalia, according to media reports Sunday. MS Melody, chartered by the Italian cruise company MSC Crociere S.A., was attacked late Saturday by six pirates wielding Kalashnikov machine guns. Security forces on board returned fire, while the captain tried to out-manoeuvre the attackers, Italian news agency ANSA reported. Initial reports of the attack came from a German passenger, who phoned Spiegel news magazine.

Russian Plane Brings Relief Supplies To China

By Bernama, Moscow : A transport plane of the Russian Emergency Situations Ministry delivered humanitarian aid to the quake-hit China, the Ministry's information department told Itar-Tass on Wednesday. "An Il-76 plane bringing tents, blankets and mattresses, weighing 30 tonnes arrived in the Chinese town of Chengdu at 11:00,Moscow time on Wednesday," an emergency official said. Russia became one of the first countries to provide humanitarian aid to China.

Bus overturns on slippery road, 13 dead in Venezuela

By RIA Novosti, Buenos Aires : A total of 13 people were burned alive in northeast Venezuela when the bus they were travelling in overturned and caught fire, national radio reported on Monday. Some 14 survivors were rushed to hospital with various burn injuries. All the victims were relatives travelling to a local beach. According to police information, the driver lost control of the vehicle following heavy rain.

New round of North Korea nuclear talks opens

By DPA, Beijing : Envoys from North Korea and five other nations began a new round of talks Monday here to persuade North Korea to quit its nuclear weapons programme. Ahead of a meeting of the chief negotiators, delegates from the United States, China, Japan, Russia, North and South Korea started a series of bilateral talks.

ASEAN foreign ministers meet to kick off in Myanmar

Nay Pyi Taw: Foreign ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) gathered in Myanmar capital, Nay Pyi Taw, for the meeting due...

Clues found why H1N1 virus kills

By IANS, Toronto: An international study has found a molecule in H1N1, or swine flu, patients whose levels determine the severity of the illness or even death. Canadian and Spanish scientists have found this molecule called Interleukin 17 (IL-17) to be the first potential immunological clue of why some people develop severe pneumonia when infected by the H1N1 virus. The study was carried in 10 Spanish hospitals during the first pandemic wave in July and August this year.

Sporadic violence marks Maoists’ indefinite Nepal closure

By IANS, Kathmandu : With a constitutional crisis and president's rule threatening Nepal, its former Maoist guerrillas Sunday began an indefinite general strike paralysing the entire nation after talks with the ruling parties failed and embattled Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal refused to quit. While the capital remained largely peaceful, sporadic violence was reported across the nation as protesters clashed with security forces, attacked at least one government office and sought to prevent a major high school examination from being held.

Bush arrives in Romania for NATO summit

By Xinhua Bucharest : Unites States President George W. Bush arrived in Bucharest on Tuesday afternoon, for an official visit in Romania and to attend the NATO summit held in the eastern European country. The NATO summit is to take place in Bucharest on April 2-4, with the enlargement, operations in Afghanistan and Kosovo as its main topics.

Russia puts damage to S.Ossetia after Georgian attack at $1 bln

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin estimated on Monday that the damage to South Ossetia following Georgia's attack on the breakaway republic is around $1 billion. Summing up a report on the situation in the Georgia's self-proclaimed republic, submitted by Regional Development Minister Dmitry Kozak, Putin said: "More than $1 billion. This is the tentative cost of the damage caused by the act of aggression." Georgia attacked South Ossetia on August 8 in an attempt to take back the separatist republic, which split from Georgia in the early 1990s.

Australia’s forest fire toll rises to 166

By DPA, Sydney : The body count reached 166 Tuesday, more than doubling the death toll from Australia's previous worst forest fires in 1983. Authorities in the south coast city of Melbourne warned the death toll would continue to climb as army bulldozers cleared a path for forensic teams to enter hamlets cut off by Saturday's inferno. In tiny Strathewen, which only had a population of 450, at least 26 people were killed when the fire-front raced through. Forest fires, which are common in the torrid southern hemisphere summer, claimed 75 people in 1983.

Nepal’s ex-queen mum to stay in palace, crown goes missing

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : While Nepal's dethroned king Gyanendra has just 72 hours to vacate the royal palace, former queen mother Ratna Shah will stay on. She has wrested permission from the government despite growing public anger against the privileges of the erstwhile royal family. Gyanendra's 80-year-old stepmother, once the most powerful woman in the kingdom and a resident of the Narayanhity royal palace through the reign of four kings in succession, will not have to quit her quarters inside the sprawling palace, Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala's government said.

US envoy set to meet Narendra Modi

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Signalling a major shift in the US stand towards BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi, US Ambassador to India...

Brazilian lawyers propose international court to save Amazonia

By DPA Brasilia : The Brazilian bar association has proposed the creation of an international tribunal to fight deforestation in the Amazon rainforest, Brazilian media reported. "Allowing Amazonia to be devastated, as is happening at great pace, is committing a crime against humanity," the Order of Brazilian Lawyers president Cezar Britto said in a statement issued Friday.

‘Nepal palace massacre linked to princess’ chopper crash death’

By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS, Kathmandu : Nepal's Maoist Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda Friday dropped a new bomb shell, alleging that there was a link between the bloodbath in the royal palace in 2001 that wiped out the king, queen and the entire royal family, and a chopper crash five months later in which the slain queen's youngest sister was killed.

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.

Woman makes large donation for Myanmar cyclone victims

By DPA, Singapore : A woman eager to show her son how donations are made turned over 100,000 Singapore dollars ($74,000) for victims of the cyclone in Myanmar, the Sunday Times said. In her 40s, the woman went to the Red Cross House and asked how she could help. She then took out of her handbag a wad of 1,000-Singapore-dollar ($740) notes, totaling 50,000 Singapore dollars ($37,000), tied together with a rubber band. While the workers were thanking her, the woman took out another wad, saying: "Here's another 50,000."

China colliery accident toll rises to 28

By IANS, Beijing : The toll in a colliery accident in southwest China's Sichuan province Saturday rose to 28 after an injured miner died, authorities said Sunday.

International games return to Wanderers after IPL dispute

By Fakir Hassen, IANS, Johannesburg: Relieved South African cricket fans have welcomed the news that international games will return to the premiere Wanderers Stadium here after Cricket South Africa (CSA) earlier banned games there in the wake of a dispute with the provincial Gauteng Cricket Board (GCB), which controls the venue. The three forthcoming matches against England, which were rescheduled to other stadiums across the country, have been reinstated after the resolution of the dispute following intervention by Sports Minister Makhenkesi Stofile.

British Muslims on trial for ‘execute gays’ leaflets

By IANS, London : Five Muslim men in Britain have been charged with distributing leaflets calling for gay people to be executed.

Grief and joy – only a heartbeat away at Australian wedding

By DPA, Sydney: Oliver Zammit, scheduled to be best man at an Australian wedding next month, expects to hand over the rings in a Sydney church knowing that his son's heart is beating inside the bridegroom beside him, news reports said Wednesday. Zammit's son, Doujon, was 20 when his life support was turned off in an Athens hospital last year. On holiday in Greece, he was critically injured in an assault at a night club.

US to grow 4 percent, unemployment to stay at 9 percent

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington: Battling the worst recession in decades, the US government expects unemployment to stay at or above 9 percent until 2012 even as the economy grows by at least 4 percent in 2011 and 2012. New projections contained in the administration's Mid-Session Budget Review released by the White House Friday, also show the US National Debt doubling between now and 2020 when it's forecast to hit over $26 trillion.

Don’t let frustration paralyse climate talks: UN environment chief

By Joydeep Gupta, IANS, Punta del Este (Uruguay) : People are justified in being disappointed with the last climate summit in Copenhagen, but their leaders must ensure this frustration does not paralyse negotiations for a global climate deal, cautions UN Environment Programme (UNEP) chief Achim Steiner.
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