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Russia ratifies maritime border treaty with Norway

By RIA Novosti Moscow : The State Duma, Russia's lower house of parliament, ratified on Friday a maritime border treaty with Norway. The treaty on the delineation of a disputed section of the border in the Varanger fjord area of the Barents Sea was signed in July 2007 and submitted to the Duma by Russian President Vladimir Putin. The previous agreement on the Varanger fjord, signed in 1957, applied to the inner part of the fjord, while the new agreement delimits the outer part.

Body parts found at US plane crash site in Kyrgyzstan

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Bishkek : Parts of the pilots' bodies have been discovered at the site of Friday's US military plane crash in Kyrgyzstan, the Kyrgyz emergencies ministry said.

Two killed in New York explosion

New York : At least two people were killed and over a dozen injured in a massive explosion that rocked East Harlem here Wednesday...

Ousted Nepal king eyes comeback chance?

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Domestic travellers flying to the pilgrim city of Janakpur in southern Nepal Wednesday were amazed to find themselves sharing the cabin with deposed king Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah who travelled like a commoner to attend a Hindu religious festival and got a rousing welcome. On his arrival at the Janakpur airport, the 63-year-old last king of Nepal, who gambled away his legacy by trying to seize absolute power and rule the country himself, was garlanded by loyalists who raised slogans for the restoration of monarchy.

Port-of-Spain readies to welcome Commonwealth leaders

By Paras Ramoutar, IANS, Port-of-Spain : Hundreds of billboards and welcome signs have sprung up in this capital city as Trinidad and Tobago prepares to welcome Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and 51 other leaders at the opening Nov 27 of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting(CHOGM) at an $80 million conference centre built by a Chinese firm. The government has also announced a special drainage project to ensure that no flooding takes place in the city.

Germany warms up to Sarkozy’s Mediterranean Union plans

By IRNA Berlin : Germany is apparently giving up its stiff opposition to plans by French President Nicolas Sarkozy to press ahead with the creation of the Mediterranean Union. Deputy government spokesman Thomas Steg said in remarks to the press in Berlin that all European Union states agreed that the so-called 'Barcelona process' needed a "new impetus." Pointing out that the 'Barcelona process' referred to the EU's institutional cooperation with surrounding Mediterranean countries, Steg called for "reviving the 'Barcelona process'.

Discussion on merits of Islamic banking to be organised at Oxford on Feb 18

By TCN News, Oxford, UK: The Oxford Union and the Oxford Islamic Banking and Finance Society will be hosting a panel discussion by Harris Irfan and Tarek el-Diwany on February on how Islamic finance can or cannot fit into the spectrum of solutions with which to deal with the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis.

IAEA chief sets out nuke-free vision, cites Obama

By BERNAMA, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed ElBaradei attends a session at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos in this January 29, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Christian HartmannVIENNA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - The U.N. nuclear watchdog chief called for a huge cut in U.S. and Russian atom bomb stocks in setting out a world vision he said drew momentum from new U.S. President Barack Obama.

Blast threat halts search for missing miners in Siberia

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Mezhdurechensk (Russia) : The search for 24 missing miners in a coalmine in West Siberia was Thursday temporarily halted due to threat of more explosions, officials said. At least 66 miners were killed when two blasts ripped through the Raspadskaya coalmine last week. Twenty-four workers are still missing. "Search work has been suspended. Our goal is to extinguish fires and lower gas concentration levels, and only then can we send people in," said Pavel Plat, chief military expert of the Emergency Situations Ministry.

China’s manufacturing sector performs poorly, raises slowdown alarm

By Xinhua, Beijing : The declining performance of China's manufacturing sector has raised worries of further economic slowdow. According to the report of China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing (CFLP) the sector's monthly purchase management index (PMI), which is a package of indices of economic performance, dropped to 44.6 percent in October, down 6.6 percentage points from the previous month. A fall below 50 percent in the PMI is generally taken as an alarming sign of slowdown.

`BRICS bank expected to improve cooperation’

By IANS, Addis Ababa : Establishing a Development Bank of BRICS will enhance cooperation, Brazilian ambassador to Ethiopia Isabel Christina Heyvaert has said.

UN food aid agency staffer killed in Somalia

By DPA, Mogadishu : A senior official of the UN food aid agency, the World Food Programme (WFP), has been gunned down by an unidentified assailant in Somalia, witnesses said Saturday. Abdi Naser Aden Musse was attacked while he was coming out a mosque in the southern Somali town of Merka late Friday, Mumin Abdirahman, a local resident told DPA. Merka is about 100 km from the capital Mogadishu. The WFP official sustained several bullet wounds in the chest and head in the attack, he said.

Click people, not places, for memorable photos

By IANS, Washington: The most unforgettable photos are those that depict people, not static indoor scenes or landscapes, however beautiful or appealing they might be, a study suggests.

Nepal government gets king’s crown, palace but not throne

By IANS, Kathmandu : Before he made his final exit from the Narayanhity palace here as a commoner, Nepal's last king Gyanendra handed over his crown, sceptre and other heirlooms to the government. But he didn't part with the dynasty's spectacular snake throne, cleverly crafted to nurture the image that the king was a divine incarnation.

Body of Argentine actors’ missing son found at morgue

By IANS/EFE, Buenos Aires : The body of Lucas Rebolini, who had been reported missing by his parents, Argentine actors Antonio Grimau and Leonor Manso, was discovered at the Buenos Aires morgue, prosecutors said. Rebolini's body was found Tuesday, a day after his parents spoke of his disappearance in public. Rebolini, 36, was arrested Feb 6 after a resident of the Buenos Aires neighbourhood of Palermo reported that the man - apparently in a state of agitation - was walking down the street naked and throwing himself on top of cars.

Vatican security doubled over possible terror attack

Vatican City: Security around St Peter's Square in Vatican City has been doubled due to concerns about possible terrorist attacks targeting Pope Francis or...

Nigerian government inks deal with Boko Haram for girls’ release

Abuja: Nigerian military Friday said it has agreed a ceasefire with Islamist militants Boko Haram and the schoolgirls abducted by the group will be...

EU stresses significance of int’l coordination on Kosovo

By Xinhua, Luxembourg : The European Union (EU) stressed on Monday the significance of international coordination on Kosovo, in particular during the transition period. At a meeting of the EU Troika with the delegation of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Slovenian Foreign Minister Dimitrij Rupel, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, said the OSCE mission should continue to work and cooperate with the EU police and justice mission EULEX, as well as the special EU representative to be deployed to Kosovo by the EU.

Election panel debars Kasyanov from Russian presidential poll

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Russia's Central Election Commission (CEC) Sunday officially barred Kremlin opponent Mikhail Kasyanov from the presidential elections scheduled for March 2. After examining signatures in favour of former premier Kasyanov's candidacy for the presidential race, the Central Election Commission invalidated 13.38 percent of them, well over the five percent limit beyond which a candidate's registration is denied. Under Russian law, a presidential candidate has to collect at least two million signatures in his or her support.

UNHCR launches global drive to end statelessness

Geneva: The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has launched a 10-year global campaign aimed at ending the statelessness which affects...

12 inmates escape as attackers bust Mexican prison

By IANS/EFE, Mexico City : A dozen inmates escaped from a prison in Mexico's northern state of Chihuahua after armed men rammed a vehicle through a security fence, authorities said.

Gamblers seek help only when it comes to the crunch

By IANS, Sydney : Gamblers are motivated to seek help only in a crisis involving financial loss or hardship, often accompanied by psychological distress, according to a two-year research project. The study, which examined 300 people and was conducted by Maria Bellringer of Auckland University of Technology (AUT) New Zealand, also found that the main barriers to seeking help were feelings of pride, shame and problem denial, according to lead researcher Maria Bellringer.

1.1 million HIV infections in children prevented: UNICEF

United Nations : An estimated 1.1 million human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections among children under the age of 15 have been prevented between 2005...

WHO chief sees food safety as a ‘big challenge’

By Xinhua

Geneva : Food safety is a big challenge for the whole world, which must be tackled through better regulation, Director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO) Margaret Chan has said.

"I have to say that food safety is a big problem for both developed and developing countries," Chan told a news briefing in Geneva Tuesday.

She said with a world population of 6.4 billion, a huge amount of food is consumed daily, so ensuring food safety is a big challenge.

Putin tests every meal before eating: Former chef

By IANS, London : Vladimir Putin is so paranoid about being poisoned that he has his every meal tested by qualified food tasters, a former chef of the Russian president has claimed.

Haiti’s underbelly seethes after earthquake

By Anindita Ramaswamy, DPA, Port-au-Prince : To comprehend the deathly power of a machete you only need to see it raised in the air, attached to an arm, and then in fierce, rapid movements designed to kill, watch as it unflinchingly comes down on a human body.

Pyongyang warns it could build nuclear plant

By DPA, Seoul : North Korea Tuesday said it could build a light-water nuclear plant and produce its own fuel as a reaction to Washington and Seoul allegedly adopting a strategy of waiting for the collapse of the Stalinist regime. "The DPRK will witness the appearance of a light-water reactor power plant relying on its own nuclear fuel in the near future in the 2010s," the North's official Korean Central News Agency said, referring to North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Germans view Bush as greater danger to global peace

By IRNA, Berlin : Germans see American President George W. Bush as a greater danger to global peace, the Super Illu magazine cited Sunday an opinion poll released by the Leipzig Institute for Market Research. Some 40 percent of those questioned said Bush is either a great or very great danger for peace in the world, compared to only 30 percent who think Putin is a big or very big threat to global peace.

US rejects Venezuela’s accusations of military assault

By DPA Washington : The United States has rejected accusations by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez that it was plotting a military occupation of the country with the Colombian government. "Our focus in the region is on a positive agenda that features things like free trade and economic development, not on any kind of wild conspiracy theories," State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey said Tuesday.

Russia to conduct surveillance flight over US

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: Russian military inspectors will begin a survey flight this week above the US under the international Open Skies Treaty, according to Russian defence ministry.

South Africa: Resumed Zimbabwe talks going well

By Xinhua, Johannesburg : Power-sharing talks between Zimbabwe's rival political parties were going smoothly Monday, a South African official said. Mukoni Ratshitanga, spokesman for mediator President Thabo Mbeki, said the talks resumed Sunday and were continuing at an undisclosed location in the South African administrative capital Pretoria to try to end Zimbabwe's political and economic crisis, according to the South African Press Association.

Michael Jackson, Arab sheikh reach settlement

By DPA, London : US singer Michael Jackson has settled a legal dispute over claims that he breached a music contract brought by an Arab sheikh ahead of a scheduled court appearance in London Monday, his spokesman said. The singer, 50, will now not appear at the High Court in London Monday to give evidence in the case, involving 4.7 million pounds ($7 million). A spokesman for the singer confirmed that the two parties had made an agreement in principle over the claim by Sheikh Abdulla Bin Hamad Bin Isa al-Khalifa of Bahrain that Jackson reneged on a music contract.

What warming? Climate change slips down global priorities

By Chris Cermak, DPA, Washington : You might call it the fourth crisis. While collapsing financial institutions plunge wealthy nations into recession and developing countries grapple with surging food and energy costs, the once urgent need to fight global warming seems to have taken a back seat. Just last year, nearly every global and regional summit put climate change at the top of its agenda. Now it seems to have become an afterthought.

Spain’s new cabinet sworn in

By IRNA, Madrid : Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero was sworn in for a second term heading a cabinet composed of nine woman and eight man ministers. He was inaugurated by King Juan Carlos during a ceremony at the Zarzuela palace near Madrid. It is the first time that women outnumber men in a Spanish cabinet, in which Zapatero named former Housing Minister Carme Chacon as Spain's first female defense minister, and 31-year-old Bibiana Aido as Spain's first equality minister, the youngest cabinet member in Spain's history.

China, France resolve to maintain strategic ties

By Xinhua, Beijing : China and France have agreed to "cherish and maintain" a comprehensive strategic partnership after relations were strained following recent disturbances during the Paris leg of the Olympic torch relay. A five-point consensus was reached between the two countries during talks Chinese State Councillor Dai Bingguo held here with Jean-David Levitte, diplomatic adviser of French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Saturday, a foreign ministry statement said.

One injured in shooting outside US court

By IANS, Washington: A county employee was shot and injured by two unidentified men Thursday outside a court building in the US state of Texas, Xinhua reported.

Hitler’s ‘gift’ kicks up row in Nepal

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : A vintage Mercedes rusting with disuse in Nepal's former palace that hit the spotlight after reports that it was a gift from Adolf Hitler may go back to the scrap heap after a blue-blooded family's claim that the present was in fact a Daimler Benz - and it had been in India for decades. The controversy started after Nepal's official media reported earlier this month that a car gathering dust in the Narayanhity royal palace was a priceless 1939 Mercedes Benz, gifted to deposed king Gyanendra's grandfather Tribhuvan by the German leader.

Philippine Rebels Kill 3 Soldiers

By Prensa Latina, Manila : A contingent of Philippine rebels attacked government army troops in northern Cotabato province, killing three soldiers and wounding 13 others, military spokesmen reported. According to the dispatch the event happened early in the morning on a road about 621 miles southeast ofáManila. According to sources the rebels from the New People's Army (NPA) exploded a mine while two military tracks were passing and opened fire against the soldiers.

Obama seeks passage of finance reform bill

By DPA, Washington: US President Barack Obama urged the Senate Thursday to pass a massive financial reform bill that would place new regulations on Wall Street designed to prevent the risky practices that sparked a worldwide economic downturn two years ago. Speaking in New York near Wall Street, Obama warned that the failure to shore up the financial system could open the door to another economic meltdown just as the US and global economy are showing signs of recovery.

Japan, US to hold first joint missile drill

By RIA Novosti

Tokyo : Japan and the US are planning to conduct their first joint exercises on countering a potential missile attack in January 2008, a Japanese newspaper said Thursday.

Typhoon Kalmaegi leaves at least 15 dead in Taiwan

By SPA, Taipei : Typhoon Kalmaegi has left at least 15 dead, 10 missing and eight injured in Taiwan, a government report said Saturday. The typhoon has also created 310 million Taiwan dollars (10.2 million US dollars) in agricultural damage, the National Disasters Prevention and Protection Commission said in a report on its website. At least five low-lying areas in central and southern Taiwan were still inundated by floods brought by torrential rains caused by the typhoon, the Commission was quoted as saying by DPA.

Microsoft, Yahoo meet for merger talks

By DPA San Francisco : Senior executives from Microsoft and Yahoo met for the first time this week to discuss Microsoft's takeover offer for the internet company, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday. The meeting reportedly took place Monday near Yahoo's headquarters in Silicon Valley and was the first face-to-face talks between the two companies since Microsoft tabled its unsolicited bid for Yahoo on Jan 31.

India’s envoy to Belgium holds get-to-know reception

By IANS, Brussels: The new Indian ambassador to the European Union and Belgium, Dinkar Khullar, has held a get-to-know reception for the Indian community here.

At least 87,000 feared dead in China’s May 12 quake

By Xinhua, Beijing : At least 87,000 people are feared to have perished in the deadly May 12 earthquake in the southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan, an expert said Thursday in a revised estimate. "The toll in the quake had topped 69,000 by mid July, with another 18,000 missing," Shi Peijun with the National Wenchuan Earthquake Expert Committee told a press conference here. "Given that it has been three months since the deadly earthquake struck, the hope of survival for the missing is very slim," Shi said.

‘No stimulus package can stop recession in US, Canada’

By Gurmukh Singh,IANS, Toronto : No fiscal stimulus by governments in the US and Canada will stop their economies from recession in 2009, said an independent Canadian think- tank Wednesday. Proposed tax cuts and government spending on infrastructure are no recipe for stopping contraction of the two economies, the Conference Board of Canada said in its two-report. In 'Canadian Outlook: Winter 2009,' the board said the US-led global recession will cause the Canadian economy to contract in the first two quarters of the year.

Both Bush to miss Obama inauguration

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Washington: Former US president George W. Bush will skip Barack Obama's inauguration Monday citing health problems of his father, ex-president George H.W. Bush.

300,000 people evacuated due to floods in China

By IANS, Beijing : Floods in southwest China's Sichuan province forced more than 300,000 people to be evacuated, authorities said Monday.

Hong Kong to cut tax amid record high revenue surplus

By Xinhua Hong Kong : Hong Kong's top financial official Wednesday proposed a list of measures aimed at returning wealth to people, including tax cuts and concessions, against the backdrop of a record high revenue surplus. The package of initiatives and concessions aims at helping the disadvantaged, enhance Hong Kong's competitiveness and ensure sustainable development, said John Tsang, financial secretary of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government, while delivering his budget speech at the Hong Kong Legislative Council.

Nearly 200,000 people evacuated to safe ground as planned in SW China

By Xinhua, Mianyang, Sichuan : A total of 197,477 people were evacuated to safe ground as of 8 a.m. Saturday in line with an emergency plan, an official with the quake relief headquarters of Mianyang City in southwest China said. The plan was drawn up for the contingency of one third of the volume of quake-formed Tangjiashan lake burst out. Up to 1.3 million people in southwest China's Sichuan Province have been ordered to evacuate to higher grounds for fear of a major quake lake burst as a result of flooding and strong aftershocks.

North Korea Exposes Japanese War Plans

By Prensa Latina Pyongyang : The Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea denounced on Wednesday that, under the guise of preserving world peace, Japan plans military expansion to assume a leading role in northeast Asia as its diplomatic priority for 2008. The official newspaper Rodong Sinmun warned that the plans are disguised as a contribution to world peace and Japan is accelerating the plan through altering its pacifist Constitution and legalizing an army.

Michael Jackson: Condemned in life, revered in death

By Andy Goldberg, DPA, Los Angeles : He was a man who changed the face of pop music and came to symbolise the excesses of a narcissistic showbiz lifestyle. But in the days after Michael Jackson's death from cardiac arrest in a rented Hollywood mansion, his frailties, shortcomings and alleged child molestations have been largely swept aside.

Inauguration would have been incomplete without India’s presence: Zuma

By Fakir Hassen, IANS, Johannesburg: South African President Jacob Zuma told visiting Indian Vice President Hamid Ansari Saturday that his inauguration would have been incomplete without India's presence, an official said. Zuma's remarks came during a lunch with heads of state from 28 countries after his swearing-in ceremony in Pretoria Saturday. "The meeting between President Zuma and the vice president was a very warm one," Nalin Surie, secretary (West) in India's external affairs ministry, told journalists at a briefing here.

Russia hands over control of Georgian buffer zones to EU

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia has handed control of buffer zones adjacent to Abkhazia and South Ossetia over to an EU monitoring mission in Georgia, a spokesman for the Russian Foreign Ministry said on Thursday. The withdrawal of troops following a five-day armed conflict between Russia and Georgia was completed on Wednesday, two days ahead of a deadline agreed by the Russian and French presidents in September.

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.

Tornadoes injure hundreds in US

By DPA, Washington : Destructive storms spawned tornadoes over south-eastern Virginia, damaging hundreds of buildings and leaving about 200 people injured, according to estimates by state officials. Monday evening's tornado damage was centred around Suffolk, Virginia, about 300 km south of Washington. All but a handful of the injuries were described as minor. There were no immediate reports of fatalities. The storm produced hail and heavy rain, as well as destructive funnel clouds. Power lines were reported downed in much of the storm-damaged area.

China publicises human rights action plan

By IANS, Beijing : China Monday publicized an action plan to protect human rights.

Canadians view Hinduism positively, not Islam and Sikhism

By Gurmukh Singh,IANS, Toronto : Canada may claim itself to be the most multicultural country in the world, but Canadians still harbour prejudices and racial stereotypes, says a survey by the nation's premier magazine. According to the survey by Maclean's weekly, almost half of Canadians believe that Islam promotes violence. More than a quarter of them also view Sikhism as encouraging violence. On the other hand, Hinduism is the most positively viewed religion after Christianity in Canada, according to the survey.

‘Tamil Tigers incapable of counter attacks’

By IANS, Colombo : Karuna Amman, head of a breakaway faction of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), says assaults by the Sri Lankan Army had weakened the Tamil Tigers to such an extent that they are incapable of launching counter attacks. "The LTTE are now only maintaining a defence line. They can't launch any offensive (attacks). They are very weak now," Karuna told the BBC's Sinhala radio service Friday night. He, however, conceded that it would take "some time" for the soldiers to completely defeat the LTTE, which he described as "a brutal terrorist group".

Now probe into competence of Indian doctors in Britain

By Prasun Sonwalkar, IANS London : Indian doctors are among several overseas doctors whose competence to practice in Britain's National Health Service (NHS) is being investigated following an increasing number of complaints registered with the General Medical Council (GMC). The major GMC inquiry comes at a time when overseas doctors are subject to further checks in the wake of the recent attempted car bombs in London and Glasgow. Three overseas-trained doctors, including Sabeel Ahmed from India, were arrested in connection with the blasts.

UN stresses need to invest in disaster mitigation measures

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

World lost 70 mn hectares of forest in 15 years: UN

By Xinhua, Rome : The world has lost more than 70 million hectares of forests between 1990 and 2005, the UN said in a report. The State of the World's Forests report released Monday by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation said most of the deforestation has taken place in South America, Africa and the Caribbean. The global organisation said the pace of deforestation in the developing countries is unlikely to decline in the near future as high food and fuel prices would favour continued forest clearance.

Anti-nuclear demonstrators rally outside German air base

By DPA, Buechel (Germany) : About 2,000 pacifists demonstrated without violence Saturday outside a German Air Force base where they insist 20 US nuclear weapons are stored. They demanded that the weapons be removed from Buechel air base on Germany's western rim and be scrapped. Hundreds of police kept a careful eye on the rally after some demonstrators had threatened to climb the fence and invade the fighter-bomber base.

US House allows transfer of Guantanamo prisoners

By DPA, Washington: The US House of Representatives voted Thursday to allow the transfer of Guantanamo Bay detainees to US soil but only to face trial. The House voted 307-114 in favour of the measure included in the bill for the Homeland Security Department's budget. The vote removes an obstacle to President Barack Obama's plans for closing the controversial prison facility in Cuba. The legislation still must be passed by the Senate before Obama can sign it into law.

Wall Street falls on weak economic data

By Xinhua, New York : Stock prices on the Wall Street fell Thursday on disappointing US economic data and downbeat earnings. The US Labor Department said the number of unemployed workers drawing benefits after claiming an initial week of aid jumped to 4. 087 million in the week ended Nov 22, the highest since December 1982, from 3.998 million the prior week. The Commerce Department said factory orders plunged by 5.1 percent in October, the steepest decline in eight years.

Rajapaksa to discuss political situation with parties

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has invited all Tamil and Muslim political parties, including the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA), for an interaction this week on the prevailing political situation in the island. "The invitation has been sent to all Tamil and Muslim political parties that are represented in parliament at present, and those that have been represented in parliament earlier," the president's office said here Tuesday.

Peruvian police rescue 10 kids from guerrillas

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

Higher social skills uniquely human: study

By Xinhua Washington : Researchers have found that toddlers have more sophisticated social learning skills than their closest primate relatives. This innate proficiency, which is important for learning, allows human children to excel in both physical and social skills as they progress through life. Researchers compared 230 subjects - chimps, orangutans and two-and-a-half-year-old children - using a battery of tests and found all to be about equal in the physical cognitive skills of space, quantities and causality.

Indian Muslims are not terrorists: Farah Pandith

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington: India's 160 million Muslims are not terrorists and are tired of their community being defined as terrorists, asserts a top Indian-American official of the Obama Administration charged with reaching out to the community. "I talk about the bloggers that I meet in India who are tired of Muslims being defined as terrorists," Farah Pandith, US Special Representative to the Muslim Community, said in a web chat Friday.

Boy who crossed LoC handed back

Srinagar : The Indian army has handed back a boy from Pakistani Kashmir who had inadvertently crossed the Line of Control (LoC), a defence...

New EU customs rule requires travellers to declare their cash

By IANS

Brussels : Starting June 15 all travellers entering or leaving the European Union (EU) carrying 10,000 euro or more in cash, must declare themselves to customs authorities at the port of entry or departure.

200 evacuated from North Sea oil platform after gas leak

By SPA, Oslo, Norway : Norwegian news agency NTB reports that about 200 workers are being evacuated from an oil platform in the North Sea after a suspected gas leak. NTB says rescue helicopters were being sent Saturday to the Statfjord A platform to assist with the evacuations. About 40 workers will remain on the platform during the operation.

Ebola outbreak racing out of control, says UN officials

Washington: The Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa is racing ahead of efforts to control it and at least $600 million is needed to...

Australia not to sell uranium to India till it signs NPT

By NNN-PTI, Melbourne : Australian government will not sell uranium to India despite welcoming Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) decision to end the 34-year long embargo on nuclear trade with India, official said. "However, Labor is committed to supplying uranium to only those countries party to the NPT. Australia will therefore not be supplying uranium to India while it is not a member of the NPT," Australian trade Minister Simon Crean was quoted as saying in 'The Australian' newspaper report today.

German WWII artillery found in Russian mountains

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Police in Russia have found five German World War II-era artillery guns along with ammunition in a southern mountainous region.

Landslide kills seven in Indonesia

By DPA, Jakarta : A landslide triggered by hours of heavy downpours buried a family of seven alive in the eastern Indonesian province of Maluku, state media said Thursday. A torrent of mud slammed into a residential area in Nusaniwe district in the provincial capital of Ambon late Wednesday, flattened a house and heavily damaged four others, the state-run Antara news agency reported. The bodies of seven people, including a child, were recovered after rescue workers and locals dug for hours through tons of mud and rocks, the report said.

Helicopter crash kills four soldiers in Colombia

By IANS/EFE, Bogota: Four soldiers died in a helicopter crash in central Colombia that was apparently caused by bad weather, the army said Monday. The accident...

Peruvian government apologizes for 1992 massacre

By IANS Lima : The Peruvian government has apologized for the 1992 La Cantuta killings of nine people by a death squad raised by the then government of president Alberto Fujimori. "In the name of the Peruvian state, we express public apology and (undertake) to make amends to you, who as relatives (of the victims) are seeking that such deeds are never repeated," Justice Minister Maria Zavala said Thursday.

World bank to provide $3 bn in aid for Ukraine

Washington: The World Bank said Monday that it would provide up to $3 billion for Ukraine this year to help the country deliver much-needed...

Greece to hold referendum on debt deal

Athens : Greek Prime Minister Alexia Tsipras on Saturday said the country will hold a referendum on July 5 on the latest debt...

Ten years of Gujarat violence to be recognized in the US Congress

By TCN News Washington, DC: Keith Ellison, member of the US House of Representative has introduced a resolution marking the tenth anniversary of Gujarat violence in 2002.

Bad boy Tomic gets ‘rehabilitation’ chance in Brisbane

By IANS, Brisbane : Controversial Australian teenager Bernard Tomic has been handed a holiday gift by officials at the new Brisbane International event. The tournament has assured the Australian Open junior champion of a place in the main draw of the joint ATP-WTA affair starting next weekend. The opportunity comes with the 16-year-old under probe by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) for quitting a minor match in protest this month over foot faults. But Tomic gets the benefit of the doubt from sympathetic Aussie organisers in Queensland.

Sobhraj plans luxury bath, visit to gurdwara, if freed

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : With Nepal's Supreme Court informing that the final verdict on the more than 30-year-old murder case, that can put Charles Sobhraj behind bars here for life, would be delivered Sunday, the notorious criminal has started planning the things he would do if the judges pronounce him not guilty.

Congo plane crash caused by mechanical failure: Lone survivor

By Xinhua Kinshasa : The plane crash in a crowded residential area in Congo's capital of Kinshasa was caused by a mechanical failure, said Dede Ngamba, the sole survivor of the accident. The Antonov-26 cargo plane belonging to private airline Africa One lost balance shortly after takeoff Thursday from Kinshasa's N'Djili International Airport and ploughed into houses before bursting into a fireball, the survivor said.

Siemens wins China high-speed train order

By DPA, Munich : China has ordered 100 high-speed trains from German engineering giant Siemens and its Chinese partners, the company announced in Munich Friday. Siemens will supply components worth 750 million euros ($1 billion) for the Velaro trains, which will be assembled in China and used on the Beijing-Shanghai route from 2010. The Velaro, a development of Siemen's successful ICE model used in Germany, has a total length of 400 metres, making it world's longest single train used in high-speed transportation.

Wall Street’s rise, weaker yen push Tokyo stocks up

By DPA, Tokyo : Stocks opened higher Monday in Tokya on Wall Street's Friday rises and a weaker yen. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average went up 62.92 points, or 0.76 per cent, to 8,293.07. The broader Topix index of all First Section issues was up 3.04 points, or 0.37 percent, to 820.93. On currency markets at 9 a.m. (0000 GMT), the dollar was quoted at 91.19-24 yen, up from Friday's 5 p.m. quote of 90.29-32 yen. A weaker yen helps boost earnings of Japanese exporters and makes Japanese products cheaper overseas.

Russian missile fails test launch

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : A Yars RS-24 intercontinental ballistic missile has failed a test launch, Russia's Space Forces confirmed Wednesday.

Moderate earthquake hits central Philippines

By Xinhua, Manila : A magnitude-5.3 earthquake hit Mindoro Occidental province in Southern Luzon, the Philippines, before dawn Sunday, without causing damage or casualties, said the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs). The quake was recorded at 04:04 a.m. (2000 GMT Saturday) northwest of Mamburao town in Mindoro Occidental, said Phivolcs. The quake was tectonic in origin and was felt in Lubang Island, central Philippines, and in Puerto Princesa City in Palawan province in southwest Philippines.

Human migration not a new phenomenon: Researchers

London : Countering common perception that migration at current levels is a new phenomenon, a short animated film commissioned by British historians shows that...

Campaign Against Extremists To Be Stepped Up In Chechnya’s Mosques

By Bernama, Grozny : An ideological campaign against the spread of ideas of terrorism and extremism will be stepped up in the mosques and educational institutions in Chechnya's capital Grozny, says a resolution issued at a meeting that was held in the office of Grozny's mayor Muslim Khuchiyev. Russian news agency, Itar-Tass, reported that Khuchiyev had met with the heads of the city's civilian district administrations, spiritual leaders and chiefs of Interior departments. The city is rebuilding itself, as new schools, hospitals and mosques are being commissioned, Khuchiyev said.

British energy minister resigns

By IANS, London : British Energy Minister Chris Huhne resigned Friday, Xinhua reported.

Indonesian FM challenges Ramos Horta to prove allegation on Reinado

By SPA, New York : The Indonesian government has asked Timor Leste President Jose Ramos Horta to provide evidence to support his allegation that Timor Leste rebel commander Alfredo Reinado had received support from "elements in Indonesia", according to Antara. "If Timor Leste can provide evidence, we will be ready to take follow up action on the allegation," Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Hassan Wirajuda said here on Thursday. "We want the allegation to be supported by substance," Wirajuda said in response to ANTARA`s questions.

Christmas Day plot connects Nigeria, Yemen and Guantanamo

By Pat Reber, DPA, Washington : When the man charged with the most serious terrorist attack on the US in years disappeared some months ago, his Nigerian family tried to track him down. They contacted Nigerian security agencies and "some foreign security agencies" within the last two months, seeking help in bringing Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, 23, back home. "We were hopeful that they would find and return him home," the family said in a statement this week.

Greece Nixes Atlanta Decision on the Five

By Prensa Latina, Athens : Thousands of Greek young people and workers condemned the recent decision taken by Atlanta’s Court of Appeals against the antiterrorists Cuban Five imprisoned in US, local media reports Wednesday. The demonstrators, gathered at US embassy in Athens, expressed their solidarity to the people of Cuba and their indignation before the decision issued by that hearing on June 4.

Fringe US church justifies Canadian’s beheading as ‘God’s gift’

By IANS, Toronto : Calling the killing and later beheading of a young Canadian by a fellow bus passenger last week as "god's gift", an American church group says it will protest at the victim's funeral to highlight his "filthy way of life". Twenty-two-year-old Tim McLean of Winnipeg was stabbed to death and then beheaded and cut into pieces by 40-year-old Chinese immigrant Vincent Li who reportedly also ate parts of his body.

China’s Quake Orphans Face Uncertain Future

By Bernama, Beijing : She held hands of her mum and dad on the way to kindergarten, with no idea that she would soon lose her parents to the 8.0-magnitude earthquake that hit Beichuan County in China's southwest Sichuan Province on May 12. Shielded by the bodies of her parents, three-year-old Song Xinyi survived the catastrophe that claimed more than 50,000 lives and left 5 million homeless.

Russia intensifies attacks on Georgia

By DPA, Moscow/Tbilisi(Georgia) : Russia Sunday intensified airstrikes and a naval blockade against Georgia, as international diplomats were exploring ways to establish a ceasefire in the breakaway Georgian province of South Ossetia. Three Russian air force Su-25 bombers struck an airfield adjacent to a military aircaft factory outside the Georgian capital Tbilisi shortly after dawn, causing damage but inflicting no casualties, a senior Georgian official said.

Hurricane Gustav plows through Cayman Islands

By SPA, George Town, Cayman Islands : Gustav swelled to a Category 2 hurricane early Saturday with winds near 100 mph (161 kph) after plowing through the Cayman Islands toward Cuba, gathering strength on a journey that could take it to the U.S. Gulf Coast as a fearsome Category 3 storm three years after Hurricane Katrina, reported ap. Gustav, which killed 71 people in the Caribbean, hit the Caymans Friday with fierce winds that tore down trees and power lines. It was expected to cross Cuba's cigar country Saturday and head into the Gulf of Mexico by Sunday.

90 percent Chinese unhappy with bureaucracy

Beijing, Feb 18 (Xinhua) About 90 percent of Chinese are sick of bureaucratic muddle, an online survey by a leading newspaper has revealed. The China Youth Daily released Monday a report of its online poll on the efficiency of government officials, saying that more than 90 percent of those surveyed were unsatisfied with the bureaucracy. Beijing resident Liu Yan, who bought an apartment recently, had a bad experience of bureaucracy at the city tax department.

Canada gets new armed froces chief

By IANS, Toronto : Canada, an important ally of the US in its war against terrorism, Friday appointed Lt-Gen Walter Natynczyk as the new chief of its defence forces. He succeeds Gen Rick Hillier who has been outspoken in his views of the country's military mission in Afghanistan. Lt Gen Natynczyk,who has been the vice chief of defence forces since 2006, is reportedly well liked by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Over 150 injured in Belgrade riots

By RIA Novosti Belgrade : Protests against Kosovo's independence, the largest in Serbia's history, turned into running street riots in Belgrade overnight leaving over 150 people injured. Around 250,000 people took to the streets in the Serbian capital on Thursday for a demonstration of national unity in the wake of Kosovo's declaration of independence on Sunday and its subsequent recognition by over a dozen countries.

Amnesty International condemns killing of Israelis

By DPA London : The Amnesty International Friday condemned the shooting of eight Israeli civilians in Jerusalem, but warned against retaliatory action. "We absolutely condemn this deliberate attack on Israeli civilians as a gross abuse of international humanitarian law," said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's director for the Middle East and North Africa. Amnesty demanded that all armed groups immediately stop "targeting of civilians", while calling on Israel to refrain from carrying out attacks that would endanger Palestinian civilians in response to these killings.

UAE funded mobile hospital opens in Sudan

By IANS, Abu Dhabi : A mobile hospital funded by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has started its operations in southern Sudan, WAM new agency reported Sunday. The hospital will serve the people in the region for four months, and provide medical help to tens of thousands of people in South Sudan, said Chairman of the UAE Red Crescent Authority Sheikh Hamdan Bin Zayed Al Nahyan. The hospital will subsequently travel to several parts of the world to deliver humanitarian services, he added.

Key blood component produced from GM rice

By IANS, London : Blood donation may be a thing of the past as scientists have successfully engineered a rice plant to produce a key blood component.

Russia starts parliamentary elections

By Xinhua Moscow : Russia's far eastern region of Kamchatka first kicked off the country's fifth parliamentary election on Saturday, in which 11 political parties are competing for 450 seats in the State Duma -- the lower house of parliament. Russians in the Kamchatka region went to the polls from 8 a.m. local time on Sunday (2000 GMT) to cast their ballots while the other parts of the Russian territory still have to wait for several hours to vote.

New Nepali constitution to be introduced by May 28, 2010

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : A new constitution for the Federal Republic Nepal will be introduced by May 28, 2010, if everything goes as planned, The Kathmandu Post reported on Monday. According to the daily, the working schedule passed by the Constituent Assembly (CA) on Sunday, which includes various procedures to be followed for the next 18 months while roughing out the awaited constitution from Sunday onwards, mentions that the new constitution will be promulgated within the last week of May 2010.

UK Archbishop hosting Christian-Muslim conference on ‘Common Word’

By IRNA, London : Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, announced Tuesday that he is inviting a group of Christian and Muslim leaders and scholars to a conference in October that will mark the first anniversary of the publication of A Common Word. The conference is being held in collaboration with Cambridge University and the archbishop said the scholarly engagement will seek to consider a "program of practical steps to deepen mutual understanding, action and friendships."

Aaghaz-e-Dosti Aman Chaupal between Indian peace activists and Pak students via video conference

By TCN News, The 15th Aman Chaupal of Aaghaz-e-Dosti was conducted via video conferencing for interaction between youth activists from India and Pakistani students...

Olympic flame arrives in Britain

By IANS, London: The Olympic flame arrived in Britain Friday after being flown from Athens, Greece, for the London 2012 torch relay.

New tech improves voice clarity on mobile phones

By IANS, London : A technology that improves voice clarity on mobile phones by filtering out unwanted sounds is on offer. High Definition (HD) Voice claims to reduce the background noise and 'hisses' that often mar mobile phone calls and offer users 'crystal clear' sound. HD Voice, which went live Wednesday, should help those people who frequently make calls from trains and noisy workplaces, reports the Daily Mail. The firm also claims that HD voice is able to 'eliminate the perceived distance between callers making it easier to hear the emotions in people's voices.'

Bush signs $50-billion AIDS package expansion

By IANS, Washington : President George W. Bush Wednesday signed a nearly $50-billion US aid package to combat the spread of HIV/AIDS in the developing world, more than tripling an initiative that was first championed by him at the start of his eight-year term in office. The new funds, spread over five years, are intended to curb AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis epidemics that have struck the African continent and a number of other poor regions.

Mbeki Opens UN Peace Keeping Debate

By Prensa Latina, United Nations : South African President Thabo Mbeki delivered the opening address of the special Security Council Session on conflict settlement, post conflict reconstruction and development promotion. The head of states noted that fund shortage has limited the African Union efforts to meet the goals and prevents Africa from honoring its commitments and settle its own conflicts. In his view, the funds to keep peace-keeping operations is basic to define and make relations between the UN and AU more efficient.

20 injured in China fire

By IANS, Beijing: Twenty people were injured early Saturday in China's Shaanxi province when a fire raged through a high-rise building, authorities said.

Rajapaksa set for easy win, says survey

By IANS, New Delhi : Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa seems set for an easy victory over his rival and former army chief Sarath Fonseka in the Jan 26 presidential poll, according to an opinion survey. Viplav Communications Pvt. Ltd., which has earlier been strategic advisors to numerous Indian politicians and conducted election surveys in India, conducted the survey in Sri Lanka. The findings of the survey were made available to IANS here.

Infectious diseases killed over 1,000 Chinese in January

By IANS, Beijing: A total of 488,271 cases of infectious diseases were reported in the Chinese in January that led to the death of 1,167 people, the health ministry said Thursday.

Australia wants concerted sanctions on Iran

By DPA Sydney : Australia, Japan and the European Union could follow the US in applying new sanctions on Iran if it continues with its nuclear enrichment programme, Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Saturday. Downer was commenting on the announcement this week by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice of more sanctions on Tehran, as well as on Iran's Revolutionary Guard, which the US accuses of supporting terrorism.

Japan quake toll rises to six

By Xinhua, Tokyo : The toll in Japan's 7.2 magnitude earthquake Saturday in the north-eastern part of the country rose to six, officials said. The powerful quake jolted the region at around 8.00 a.m. Two hundred people were injured and 11 people were missing after the quake. The epicentre was located in the southern part of the Iwate Prefecture. The earthquake was felt in many parts of the region, including Honshu Island, Tokyo and Hokkaido, Miyagi and Akita Prefectures. No tsunami warning was issued.

Tears, shock over Kennedy’s brain cancer diagnosis

By Pat Reber, DPA, Washington : Stunned silence swept across the US Congress, observers said. One colleague wept. Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy, left-wing icon and champion of the rights of workers and the poor, had been diagnosed with brain cancer. The announcement Tuesday sent shockwaves throughout Washington's political establishment, with Republican and Democratic leaders alike paying tribute to his achievements and significance in US political life.

British PM returns to Italian cafe to tip waitress

By IANS, London : British Prime Minister David Cameron who is on a holiday in Italy returned to an Italian cafe to make amends for failing to tip a waitress, BBC reported.

28 rescued, over 800 missing in Philippine shipwreck

By DPA, Manila : Twenty-eight passengers and crew members of a ferry that sank in stormy seas in the central Philippines were found alive as rescuers Monday continued to search for more than 800 missing people, a police official said. Senior Superintendent Fidel Posadas said the 28 survivors reached the shores of Mulanay town in Quezon province, 150 km south-east of Manila, aboard an inflatable life raft from the capsized MV Princess of the Stars. Posadas said local authorities were coordinating with Sulpicio Lines, owner of the ill-fated ferry, to turn over the survivors.

Our full solidarity with protesting students of Jamia and AMU, say Indian Americans

By NewsDesk, TwoCircles.net Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC), the largest advocacy organization of Indian Muslims in the United States, strongly condemns the brutal crackdown on students in...

Maldives first South Asian nation to issue e-passports

By IANS Male/New Delhi : Maldives has become the first South Asian nation to issue for its citizens e-passports, compliant with International Civil Aviation Organization specifications. The new passport follows a completely new design, and features the passport holder's facial and fingerprint information as biometric identifiers, according to a statement from the Maldives immigration department. It is designed to enable easier passage for Maldivian nationals when they travel abroad.

Obama eyes the future on visit to childhood home in Indonesia

By DPA, Jakarta: US President Barack Obama Tuesday made a much-anticipated return to Indonesia, a country where he spent part of his childhood.

Maldives president survives knife attack unscathed

By DPA Colombo : Maldivian President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom escaped being stabbed by a young man Tuesday during a visit to one of his country's islands, his government's official website said. The president was in a large crowd that had gathered to welcome him to Hoarafushi, a northern island, when an unidentified youth tried to stab him, the site said. Gayoom was not harmed, but a boy scout was injured, it said. The president has been facing protests from the Maldivian Democratic Party, which is campaigning for democratic reforms.

World’s oldest living person dies at 116 in Ukraine

By RIA Novosti Lvov (Ukraine) : World's oldest living person Grigoriy Nestor, who had witnessed both the World Wars, has died at the age of 116 in western Ukraine. Nestor, who died Sunday, was born March 15, 1891 in a village in Lvov region. The man had reportedly never felt ill or taken any medicine throughout his live. He had also never drunk heavily. Nestor, who worked as a shepherd, used to say that he was able to live so long because he had never been married and had not had his nervous system "undermined on the marital front".

Villagers banish fire crackers to woo winged visitors

By Shweta Srinivasan, IANS, Vettangudi (Madurai) : Perched on the sprawling branches of a partially submerged tree, thousands of White Ibis migratory birds at the Vettangudi Bird Sanctuary here have the villagers to thank for making their winter home a noise-free zone. The local folk have imposed a ban on the bursting of firecrackers in the region to make it conducive for the migratory birds after noticing a decline in their numbers.

Italians vote in general election

By DPA Rome : Polls opened across Italy Sunday morning for the first day of parliamentary elections. Voting in which some 50 million Italians are eligible to cast ballots was scheduled to continue until 10 p.m. (2000 GMT) and again Monday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. (1300 GMT). Preliminary results were expected by Monday evening. Centre-right opposition leader Silvio Berlusconi and former Rome mayor Walter Veltroni of the centre-left Democratic Party are the main contenders in the race, which comes just two years after Italy's last parliamentary poll.

Biggest ozone hole over Antarctica in “one or two weeks”

By IANS, Toronto : A new Canadian study says that cosmic rays, not chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), are the main cause of the depletion of the ozone layer in the earth's atmosphere. The study also predicts that the largest ozone hole - larger than the size of the US and Canada combined - will occur over Antarctica in ``one or two weeks.'' The ozone layer in the earth's atmosphere absorbs the sun's high-frequency ultraviolet rays which are deadly for life on earth and cause diseases such as skin cancer and cataracts.

Monks’ anti-junta protest marches swell in Myanmar

By DPA Yangon : Over 15,000 Buddhist monks and laymen marched through the streets of Yangon Sunday in an escalating protest against Myanmar's military regime, which has thus far refrained from cracking down on the saffron-robed rebellion. More than 3,000 monks, joined for the first time by 300 nuns, from various townships marched to the Shwedagon Pagoda, and then continued to Sule Pagoda and wove their way north, drawing more followers as they proceeded.

Sex query baffles candidates at civil service exam in China

By IANS, Beijing : Candidates taking the public service exam in a Chinese province were stumped by one question: "Are you satisfied with your sex life?"

Bolivia bus accident kills 17

By IANS, La Paz : Seventeen people, including children, have been killed and three others injured in a bus accident near the Bolivian capital, EFE reported Monday. The accident occurred Saturday night on the Naciones Unidas Avenue when the bus veered off the road and fell into a deep ravine, the Bolivian highway patrol said Sunday. At the time of the accident there were heavy showers in the region, officials said. Most of the victims have been identified, the report said.

Former Trinidad PM Basdeo Panday to face retrial

By Paras Ramoutar, IANS Port of Spain : Former Trinidad and Tobago prime minister Basdeo Panday will face retrial on charges of failing to declare financial assets as a public servant. Panday had been convicted in April 2006 on three charges of failing to declare an estimated $320,000 in a London bank account to the country's Integrity Commission. He was sentenced to two years of imprisonment, fined $10,000 and ordered to pay the state $320,000.

Arms Topic at Algeria-Russia Summit

By Prensa Latina Moscow : Energy and technical-military collaboration mark the official 48-hour visit of Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to Russia, sources from the Kremlin said Monday. Advisors from the Algerian government confirmed that Bouteflika is in the Russian capital at the invitation of his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, with whom he will talk Tuesday. Both presidents met in March 2006 during Putin's trip to North Africa, which concluded with signing several strategic cooperation agreements for more than seven billion dollars.

White House gatecrashing undeniable security lapse: probe panel chief

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington: A US Congressional panel Thursday began a probe into how a celebrity couple gatecrashed into President Barack Obama's state dinner for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, noting there were "undeniable planning and execution failures" by the Secret Service apparatus. However, the security service chief said the "mistake" did not pose a risk to the dignitaries.
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