Russia may opt out of WTO accession talks, prime minister
By IRNA,
Moscow : Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Monday that Russia may opt out of the World Trade Organization accession talks in protest at the US sabotaging the process.
Also Monday, President Dmitry Medvedev warned that Russia might cut its ties with NATO.
Putin said at a regular meeting of his Presidium that it was "sensible" to abandon some of the commitments Russia made during the WTO accession talks.
"We don't see or feel advantages from the membership, if they exist at all, but we are carrying the burden," he said according to Itar-Tass.
Kind but not chummy, Spanish king tells son how to reign
By Sinikka Tarvainen, DPA
Madrid : What are the secrets of successfully exercising the time-honoured yet precarious office of king in modern times? Spain's King Juan Carlos lets his son and heir Felipe in on the secrets in 10 confidential letters that have just been published for the first time.
"You need to appear animated even when you are tired, kind even when you don't feel like it, attentive even when you are not interested, helpful even when it takes an effort."
China plans to launch unmanned space module next year
By IANS,
Beijing : China plans to launch an unmanned space module in 2011. It is expected to complete the country's first space docking which is regarded as an essential step toward building a space station, an official said Wednesday.
Tiangong-1, or the Heavenly Palace, would be later converted into a manned space lab after experimental dockings with three Shenzhou spacecraft. The spacecraft are expected to be put into space within two years following the module's launch, said Qi Faren, former chief designer of Shenzhou spaceships.
Hindu prayer in senate of Mormon dominated US state
By IANS
New York : Utah, a state dominated by Mormons, created a religious milestone when its senate opened with a Hindu prayer with the chanting of Sanskrit mantras for the first time.
Rajan Zed, a prominent Hindu chaplain who has earlier read Hindu prayers in the US senate and state senates, read the opening prayer Wednesday from ancient Hindu scriptures before the Utah senate in Salt Lake City. After first delivering the prayer in Sanskrit, he read its English translation.
Satellite images show mangroves shrinking
By IANS,
Washington : New satellite imagery shows an alarming shrinkage in mangrove forests worldwide.
The imagery reveals that approximately 137,760 sq km of mangroves exist, which is 12.3 percent less than previous estimates.
Mangrove forests are among the most productive and biologically important ecosystems of the world, including trees, palms and shrubs, reports the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography.
UN Secretary-General: Migrants affected by financial turmoil
By Xinhua,
Manila : The current financial crisis is increasingly affecting migrants all over the world and immigration has become a political issue in many countries, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said here on Wednesday.
The world today is facing a financial crisis from which no country can be insulated, Ban said at the 2nd Global Forum on Migration and Development held in Manila.
Vietnam returns enriched uranium to Russia
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Vietnam has returned about four kilograms of highly enriched uranium to Russia, nuclear power agency Rosatom said Monday.
"An operation to return 3.9 kg of highly enriched nuclear fuel (enriched to 36 percent U-235) from a research reactor in the city of Dalat, Vietnam, has been completed," the agency said in a press release.
Earthquake rocks China
By Xinhua,
Guiyang (China) : An earthquake rocked China's Guizhou province late Sunday. No casualties were reported, authorities said.
The earthquake measuring 4.7 on the Richter Scale jolted Weining Yi Hui and Miao Autonomous County at 8.48 p.m. Sunday, according to China's seismological network.
No casualties had been reported, Wang Bingrong, party chief of Weining County, said by phone.
A few farmhouses cracked or collapsed in the quake, said county chief Wu Xuejun, who went to the epicenter to coordinate rescue efforts.
Top leaders rapped as Nepal fails key constitution milestone
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : The panel of lawmakers entrusted with drafting the new constitution of Nepal Friday rapped three of the top political leaders on their knuckles, accusing them of not being serious about the statute as the nascent republic failed to keep a major date with destiny.
The Constitutional Committee, which has been mandated to write a new pro-people constitution by May, Friday ordered the chiefs of the three biggest political parties to be present at its next meeting scheduled Sunday without fail.
China willing to resume human rights dialogue
By Xinhua
Beijing : China is willing to increase imports from the United States and resume human rights dialogue with Washington, Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said here Wednesday.
"China is ready to hold human rights dialogue with the US side on the basis of equality and mutual respect," Yang said at a press conference on the sidelines of the country's parliamentary session.
Yang's remark came in the wake of a US government annual report on human rights across the world, which is critical of China.
Most Chinese parents support sex education
By IANS,
Beijing : Over 90 percent of parents in China support educating minors about sex, and incorporating it into school education, the Beijing News reported Monday citing a survey.
Britain disappointed at failure of US-Russia talks on Ukraine
London: British Foreign Secretary William Hague expressed his deep disappointment at the failure of US-Russia talks on solving the Ukraine crisis.
"It is deeply disappointing...
Asian policewoman in Britain complains of racism
By IANS,
London : The London Metropolitan Police (Met) may face a racism charge once again, this time from a senior Asian woman officer who is claiming she is the target of racist bullying and victimisation.
The case of Yasmin Rehman comes close on the heels of two recent cases of race discrimination filed by senior Asian officers Shabir Husain and Tarique Ghaffur. The employment tribunal dismissed Husain's case while police chief Ian Blair suspended Ghaffur even as his case is yet to come for hearing.
800 armed police start rescue operation in quake-hit SW China
By Xinhua,
Beijing : By 8 a.m. Wednesday, more than 800 armed police had arrived at Wenchuan and started rescue operation in southwest China's Sichuan Province that was hit by a massive earthquake Monday afternoon.
Wednesday morning, two helicopters with relief supplies flied over the Yingxiu Town of Wenchuan County and three more are standing by to await orders at the Fenghuanshang airport, according to the Chengdu Military Command.
68 die in plane crash in Kyrgyzstan
By IRNA,
Bishkek : A passenger plane crashed on Sunday shortly after take-off from Bishkek airport, killing 68 out of the 90 passengers and crew.
There were many foreigners on board, including Iranians and Canadians.
The Itek Air Boeing 737 took off bound for Iran, but turned round some 10 minutes later.
An airport spokeswoman said the crew had reported a technical problem, and the plane crashed not far from the airport and caught fire.
Slow start to Irish vote over EU Lisbon Treaty
By DPA,
Dublin : Voting got off to a slow start Friday as Ireland went to the polls to decide -- for the second time -- on the European Union's Lisbon Treaty.
Several polling stations in Sligo in the north-west of the country were reporting "a very slow start" to voting with very low numbers turning out so far.
Just 14 people out of 650 had voted in one booth by 9 a.m. in Tubbercurry.
In Dublin city there was an average voter turnout of 4.4 percent by around 10 a.m.
Turnout in the south-western city of Cork was estimated at around 5 percent by 10 a.m.
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.
‘Russia will reciprocate if US drops missile shield plan’
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia may abandon its plans to place short-range missiles in the Kaliningrad region along the Polish border if the new US administration reverses its decision to deploy a missile shield in Central Europe.
As a response to the proposed US missile shield, President Dmitry Medvedev announced last week the possible deployment of Iskander-M short-range missile systems in the Kaliningrad exclave, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic Sea.
Nepal PM’s partymen ask him to quit
By IANS,
Kathmandu : Nepal's embattled Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal found himself caught in a tightening vice Sunday as his own partymen began a campaign for his ouster even as the opposition Maoist party began an indefinite general strike nationwide to press for his resignation.
Sixty office-bearers and senior leaders of the ruling Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (UML), including Sahana Pradhan, former foreign minister, submitted a memorandum to the party chief, Jhalanath Khanal, asking him to quit the coalition government.
My dream is to win an Oscar: Perry
By IANS,
Los Angeles: Singer Katy Perry says it will be a dream-come-true moment for her if she wins an Oscar award.
Norway mulling alternative energy — Petroleum Minister
By KUNA
Oslo : The Norwegian government is seriously considering use of alternative energy resources to reduce reliance on oil, revealed Petroleum Minister Aslaug Haga in an interview with a paper here Wednesday.
The minister told the widely popular daily, "Aftenposten," the ministry is very keen on implementation of environment safety measures throughout oil production. However, Haga stressed this is not the sole source of CO2 emissions and an overall strict environment safety system is the world's best means to bring about improvement in environment conditions.
Russian prosecutors refuse to extradite Lugovoi
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Russia's prosecutors Thursday formally refused to extradite businessman Andrei Lugovoi, accused by Britain of murdering former Russian security officer Alexander Litvinenko.
‘Rocket Singh’ going great guns in US
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington: Bollywood's latest offering "Rocket Singh - Salesman Of The Year" is going great guns in the US with its review currently the number one most read movie story on the New York Times site.
The Times review, beating stories on the Golden Globe nominations and reviews of all US films, calls "Rocket Singh: Salesman of the Year," with Ranbir Kapoor "a smart, focused Bollywood movie".
China readies next generation rockets
By IANS,
Beijing : China is planning to launch is next generation Long March-5 carrier rocket in 2014.
World’s oldest rocks discovered in Canada
By IANS,
Toronto : Canadian researchers have discovered the world's oldest rocks in the country's Quebec province that could shed more light on our planet's mysterious beginnings.
Estimated to be 4.28 billion years old, the rocks were discovered along the Hudson's Bay coast in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone belt.
The new discovery by researchers at McGill University in Montreal pushes back the age of most ancient rocks by 300 million years, they said in a study published in the journal Science Friday.
Milestones in the life and presidency of Obama
By IANS,
Washington : Milestones in the life and presidency of US President Barack Obama who will be in India Nov 6-9:
American Chandrayaan scientist to remain in jail
By IANS,
Washington: An American scientist credited with helping find water on the Moon on India's Chandrayaan mission has been ordered to remain in jail on a charge of spying for the Israeli government for a payment of $11,000.
US Magistrate Judge Deborah A. Robinson Tuesday ordered Stewart D. Nozette, 52, arrested Monday afternoon after a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) sting operation, detained until a preliminary hearing Oct 29.
Third minister steps down from Brown’s government
By DPA,
London : A third British minister resigned from Prime Minister Gordon Brown's government late Thursday and called on the leader to step down.
Work and Pensions Secretary James Purnell announced his resignation in a letter to Brown sent to several newspapers after polls had closed in European and local elections.
Purnell wrote that Brown should quit his position for the good of the Labour Party and that his leadership made a victory by the opposition Conservatives likely in the next election.
US calls for end to violence in Zimbabwe
By DPA,
Washington : The US called for an immediate end to political violence in Zimbabwe on Sunday, following an announcement by the African country's opposition that its was withdrawing from upcoming runoff elections.
In a statement from the White House, the US blamed Zimbabwe's ruling party for the violence.
All parties should have the right to take part in the elections and not be targeted by government intimidation, armed militias and so-called "war veterans", the statement added.
ElBaradei not to seek another term as IAEA chief
By DPA,
Vienna : Mohamed ElBaradei will not seek a fourth term as head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), an agency spokesman confirmed in Vienna Thursday.
Last week, IAEA Board members were informed about the decision by Director General ElBaradei, whose term in office runs out in November 2009.
The 66-year-old Egyptian diplomat, who has led the UN nuclear agency since 1997, received the Nobel Peace Prize jointly with the IAEA in 2005.
Over 60 percent of Germans say Koehler is not good president: poll
By IRNA,
Berlin : More than 60 percent of Germans voiced dissatisfaction with the performance of German President Horst Koehler amid earlier press reports that he was seeking a second presidential term, according to a survey released Tuesday by the private Sat.1 television news network.
Asked whether Koehler who holds a largely ceremonial post in German politics, was a good president, some 60.1 percent replied 'no', while 39.3 percent said 'yes' and 0.6 percent did not know how to assess his presidency.
UN spotlight puts Maoist child soldier in peril
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu: After rubbing shoulders with top UN officials in New York and basking in limelight, former Maoist child soldier Sita Tamang has to now pay the penalty for the indiscretion with her former comrades threatening her.
UK sets up first low emissions zone to cover London
By IRNA
London : The most heavily polluting lorries from Monday faced charges of Pnds 200 (Dlrs 400) a day to enter Greater London as Britain's first low emission zone (LEZ) came into force.
The scheme, which cost Pnds 49 m to set up and is aimed at improving the capital's air quality, uses cameras to check all lorries over 12-tons entering the zone against a database of vehicles certified to meet EU exhaust limits.
In July, it is being extended to cover buses and coaches and by 2010, some vans and smaller lorries. Cars and motorcycles so far are being made exempt.
A Britsh queen stops Australia from being great: Former PM
By IANS,
London: Queen Elizabeth II is stopping Australia from becoming a great country, former Australian prime minister Paul Keating has said.
California Supreme Court overturns gay marriage ban
By DPA,
San Francisco : In a landmark decision the California Supreme Court Thursday overturned a state ban on gay marriage, making same-sex unions legal in the most populous state in the US.
The 4-3 decision is likely to thrust gay marriage back into the political spotlight and potentially make it an important issue in the November general election.
The ruling found that domestic partnerships were not an adequate alternative to marriage.
Sarkozy leaves to head EU delegation in Russia and Georgia
By KUNA,
Paris : French President Nicolas Sarkozy, in his capacity as rotating president of the European Union (EU), left Paris Monday morning for Moscow and Tbilisi to meet their leaders to try to broker a settlement in their conflict, diplomats confirmed.
Sarkozy is expected in the Russian capital around midday local time and he will immediately undertake talks with Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev at his residence outside Moscow.
The French leader is accompanied by President of the EU Commission Jose-Manuel Barosso and Foreign Policy chief Javier Solana.
Shuttle launch cancelled due to gas leak
By DPA,
Washington : The launch of the space shuttle Discovery planned for Wednesday was abruptly cancelled just hours ahead of blast off.
NASA called off the launch after it discovered a leak in a hydrogen vent line between the shuttle and its external fuel tank. The US space agency made the decision ahead of a planned 9.20 p.m. launch.
Technicians had been filling the tank with fuel and would now have to completely drain it. A new launch time was set for 8.54 p.m. Thursday, depending on what repairs were deemed necessary. Officials were to meet to discuss the problem.
Somali pirates release Vietnamese ship
By IANS,
Nairobi : Somali pirates have released a hijacked Vietnam-owned bulk carrier with 24 crew members on board, a regional maritime official said.
Two killed in mosque attack, Muslims shut down east Nepal
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS
Kathmandu : Life in eastern Nepal came to a halt Sunday as enraged Muslims called a shutdown in three major districts to protest the killing of two people in a mosque Saturday night, ignoring Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala's call for restraint.
Jhapa, Morang and Sunsari districts in eastern Nepal, adjoining the border with India, saw transport halted and shops and markets closed as the minority Muslim community, which has a sizeable presence in the Terai plains, called for justice for the slain men.
‘Six planned suicide attacks in Spain’s Barcelona’
Madrid, Jan 25 (IANS) Spanish authorities have said that six of the 14 people arrested last week were planning to attack Barcelona's public transport system, EFE news agency reported Friday.
The police Jan 18 arrested 14 people - 12 Pakistanis and two Indians - in the Barcelona neighbourhood of El Raval, on a tip off that they had links with Islamist terror groups.
Airplane Crashes Off Venezuela
By SPA
Washington : A private airplane disappeared on Friday off the coast of Venezuela with 14 people on board, including eight Italians, rescue officials and the Italian government said.
The Czech-made LET L-410 airplane was flying to the Los Roques archipelago from Caracas but never arrived at its destination, rescue workers said.
41 die in China bus fire
By IANS,
Beijing : Forty-one people died and six were injured after an overcrowded bus caught fire early Friday in central China, a media report said.
Chad urges quick deployment of EU peacekeepers
By Xinhua
Paris : Chadian President Idriss Deby Itno Thursday made a "solemn appeal" to the European Union (EU) to quickly deploy its long-awaited peacekeeping mission in Chad and the Central African Republic, called EUFOR, to protect refugees from the Sudanese province of Darfur.
"I solemnly appeal to the European Union and the initiator of the idea, France, to ensure that the force is put on the ground as quickly as possible in order to alleviate the heavy burden that we are carrying today," said Deby while speaking on France's Europe 1 radio.
New violence, deaths reported in Tibetan area of China
By ANTARA News/DPA
Beijing : New violence that erupted in a Tibetan area of south-western China left up to 15 people dead after police opened fire on protesters, US-based Radio Free Asia reported on Saturday.
The broadcaster listed 11 Tibetans identified by local sources as having died during a clash on Thursday night in the Kardze, or Garze, area of Sichuan province.
China`s official Xinhua news agency quoted a local official as saying police had fired "warnings shots" to stop a violent protest but had "exercised restraint" in quelling the "riot" outside government offices.
Bolivian president protests FIFA altitude rules, plays at 6,000 metres
By DPA
La Paz : Bolivian President Evo Morales played football at an altitude of 6,000 metres to protest FIFA rules banning matches above 2,500 metres.
Fidel Castro Greets Mandela on Birthday
By Prensa Latina,
Havana : Cuban Revolution leader Fidel Castro sent a congratulation message to former South African President and Nobel peace prize winner Nelson Mandela on his 90th birthday.
Glory to you, Nelson, who defended human dignity during 25 years of solitary imprisonment! Slander and hatred proved useless against your steely resistancere, Fidel Castro wrote in a message published Sunday by the Juventud Rebelde newspaper.
You manage to resist, and without knowing or looking for it, you became a symbol of mankind's nobility, stresses the message dated July 18.
Illegal immigrants face growing backlash across US
By DPA
Nashua (New Hampshire) : Bustling around his tiny Mexican restaurant, Jesus Hernandez briefly pauses during his 10-hour workday to complain about Americans who say illegal immigrants steal US jobs.
Indonesia reports 127th case of bird flu
By RIA Novosti
Jakarta : Indonesia's health ministry confirmed that a 14 year-old girl from west Jakarta has contracted bird flu, the nation's 127th case of the disease, the national ANTARA news agency said on Wednesday.
Tests revealed that the girl was infected by the deadly H5N1 virus and is currently in intensive care. The girl's mother, who is also infected with bird flu, is also in hospital, but her condition is said to be improving.
China criticises US report on human rights
By IANS,
Beijing : China Thursday criticised a US report involving the country, and urged the US to stop issuing such "groundless remarks" against it, Xinhua reported.
Sri Lanka to set up community villages for ex-rebels
By IANS,
Colombo: The Sri Lankan government said Saturday it will set up community villages to rehabilitate former Tamil Tiger rebels.
Over 11,000 former cadres of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) are now sheltered in 18 state-run rehabilitation centers. The majority of them surrendered to the military during the last stages of the battle in May last year and the rest were arrested.
17 die as Cambodian ferry capsizes
By Xinhua,
Phnom Penh : At least 17 people, including 14 women, died when an overloaded ferry capsized in Cambodia's Kratie province, an official said Sunday.
Local official Nhim Vanda said the accident took place late Saturday and the bodies were found Sunday. Kratie province is over 300 km northeast of Phnom Penh.
Iran seeks to improve relations with U.S. – envoy
MOSCOW, February 6 (RIA Novosti) - Iran is interested in cooperation with the U.S. and hopes for better ties with the country it has often referred to as the "Great Satan," the Islamic republic's ambassador to Russia said on Friday.
"We're interested in building cooperation with the United States and hope that this will help clear up previous misunderstandings between our two countries," Mahmoud Reza Sajadi told a news conference hosted by RIA Novosti.
Smoking, hypertension the biggest killers in Japan
By IANS,
Tokyo: Even though the Japanese have the world's highest life expectancy, smoking and high blood pressure (BP) still remain the biggest health hazards, reveals a study.
Black British PM is possible, says book
By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS,
London : A "deepening tide of tolerance" over half a century has created the grounds for Britain to elect its first black prime minister, according to a new book tracking public attitudes in Britain and the US.
Unfortunately for the aspiring British Obama, the authors don't see it happening anytime soon.
Strong quake jolts Mexico
By IANS,
Mexico City : Strong tremors were felt in Mexico City and prompted residents to flee in panic from swaying buildings Tuesday as a powerful magnitude-7.4 earthquake jolted Mexico.
Nepal, China to enhance trade relations, economic ties
By IANS,
Kathmandu : Nepal and China Sunday agreed to enhance trade relations and economic ties between them.
Putin To Visit Beijing For Talks With Chinese Leaders
By Bernama,
Moscow : Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin will visit Beijing on August 8-9, to "hold full-scale talks with Chinese leaders", a sources in the Russian government told Itar-Tass on Wednesday.
Putin's visit is timed with the opening of the Olympic Games.
"Despite unprecedented engagement of Chinese authorities in the organisation of the Olympiad, the Chinese leaders have allocated special time for meeting with the Russian prime minister.
Five major developing nations call for joint efforts to ensure food, energy security
By Xinhua,
Sapporo, Japan : Leaders of China, Brazil, India, Mexico and South Africa on Tuesday called for a shared responsibility to address the world's food security and an overall cooperation by the international community to boost energy development and utilization.
"We call upon the international community to devise better ways and means of producing and distributing food," said a joint declaration signed by Chinese President Hu Jintao and the leaders from Brazil, India, Mexico and South Africa after a group meeting on the sidelines of the Group of Eight Summit.
Ukraine-Russia border ‘wall’ may be completed Sep 30
Moscow : Ukraine plans to complete the first stage of "Project Wall" construction by Sep 30, as part of reinforcing its border with Russia,...
Man jailed for trafficking heroin in Russia
By IANS,
Moscow: A court in Russia has sentenced a foreigner to six years in a high security prison for trafficking 14.5 kg of heroin in the country, RIA Novosti reported.
US magazine’s Hindu god illustrations upset Hindus
By IANS
New York : The June issue of a popular US magazine that allegedly depicts Hindu god Ganesha holding an alcoholic beverage in each hand and deity Hanuman in an obscene pose has drawn the ire of many Hindus in the country.
Germany releases former terrorist Christian Klar
By DPA,
Karlsruhe (Germany) : Christian Klar, 56, a former leader of the Red Army Faction urban terrorist movement in Germany in the 1970s and 1980s, was released from jail Friday, his lawyer said.
Klar, who was a co-leader of the "second generation" of the so-called Baader-Meinhof Gang, was granted parole by judges several weeks ago after he had spent 26 years in jail.
His actual release from Bruchsal Prison in southwestern Germany was delayed until he had served out the minimum term by the turn of the year. Only one other member of the group is still in custody.
China declares mourning period as quake toll rises
By AFP,
Jiangyou, China : China on Sunday declared three days of mourning and suspended the Olympic torch relay nearly a week after a massive quake struck the country's southwest, as the death toll continued to mount.
The announcements came after a powerful aftershock rattled devastated Sichuan province, killing at least three people and hampering China's efforts to help nearly five million homeless facing the threats of disease and floods.
No media honeymoon as Obama’s spokesman steps to podium
By DPA,
Washington : More than 100 journalists crammed into the White House's tiny press room - formerly an indoor pool - to hurl questions at US President Barack Obama's new press secretary Robert Gibbs for his first briefing.
Gibbs strolled into the room 10 minutes late Thursday for his first moment in the media glare, flanked by an eight-member entourage from the new president's communications staff.
"How are you all?" a smiling Gibbs asked as he surveyed the crowd of reporters gathered staring back at him. "I'm great."
Former Indonesian president Suharto dies
By Xinhua
Jakarta : Former Indonesian president Suharto, 86, has died in a hospital following organ failure, a senior police official told reporters Sunday at the hospital where he was being treated.
Ukraine, Gazprom hold last-ditch talks to avoid gas cutoff
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Ukrainian and Russian energy companies will hold talks on Monday aimed at resolving their latest gas debt row that has prompted Gazprom to threaten a supply cutoff on February 12.
The Russian gas monopoly said on Friday it would halt natural gas supplies to the ex-Soviet country if it fails to pay its outstanding bill, currently at $1.5 billion and rising.
Ukraine's national oil and gas company Naftogaz denied it has any debts to Russia, and Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko blamed an intermediary firm supplying gas for the debt.
Russia blocks UN statement on Georgia missile incident
By RIA Novosti
United Nations : Russia has blocked a move for a UN Security Council vote condemning Moscow for an alleged violation of Georgian airspace, calling it premature.
Georgia accused Russia last week of violating its airspace and dropping a missile at a radar station near the border with breakaway South Ossetia. Russia has denied the charges and called them provocations to disrupt peace efforts in the conflict zone, where its peacekeepers are deployed.
China, US hold energy efficiency forum
By IANS,
Beijing : Business representatives of China and the US met here Wednesday to discuss energy efficiency.
Singapore couples offered bigger perks for more babies
By DPA,
Singapore : In a desperate attempt to convince couples to have more babies, Singapore's government is offering a bonanza of tax benefits, leaves and other perks starting January.
The 1.6-billion-Singapore-dollar ($1.1 billion) package outlined in the media Thursday will benefit all parents.
Encouraging more births has been a national priority since Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong focussed on the escalating problem of low birth rates in 2004. The current fertility rate of 1.29 is far from the replacement level of 2.1.
The monk who inspired a hundred books
By Vishal Gulati, IANS,
Dharamsala : It is perhaps natural that the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader who is revered as a spiritual guru, should inspire writers from the Orient and the West. Despite there being over 100 biographies and other books on the monk, writers continue to queue for an audience with him.
Officials of the Tibetan government-in-exile, which is based in this northern Indian hill station, say that more biographies have been written on their spiritual guru than on any other spiritual leader in the world.
Three killed as Polish plane crashes in Germany
By DPA,
Bielefeld (Germany) : A Polish light plane crashed Monday in Germany, killing three occupants and leaving the fourth critically hurt, German police said.
The dead were two men and a woman. The surviving occupant, who was resuscitated in an area hospital, was a woman. Police said they did not yet know why the plane crashed. It came down in woods just 150 metres from a housing estate.
It was close to Windelsbleiche airfield near the north-western city of Bielefeld at the time of the crash.
British police seize over $400,000 suspected funds for IS
London: British police have confiscated 250,000 pounds (about 401,713 dollars) of suspected funds for the Islamic State (IS), the anti-terror authorities said Monday.
Most of...
Moldova fails to elect president, crisis deepens
By DPA,
Chisinau (Moldova): Moldova's parliament Monday failed to elect a new president in a critical showdown vote, intensifying a political crisis in the former Soviet republic.
A total of 53 MPs in Moldova's 101-seat legislature voted in favour of candidate Marian Lupu, put forward by the country's pro-Europe ruling coalition.
But 48 MPs loyal to Moldova's Communist Party abstained from voting and left the parliament shortly before the poll. They left Lupu eight votes short of a 61-member majority necessary for a presidential candidate's election under Moldovan law.
New York to observe seventh anniversary of 9/11 attacks
By DPA,
New York : Seven years after the Sep 11 terrorist strikes, New Yorkers Thursday will remember the attacks that killed more than 2,700 people with the destruction of the World Trade Center's twin towers.
The city will observe the anniversary with renewed calls for vigilance against the constant threats of new terrorist attacks. Names of the dead will be read yet again.
The presidential nominees of both US major parties, Republican senator John McCain and his rival, Democratic senator Barack Obama, plan to attend ceremonies at Ground Zero, site of the destroyed towers.
Trinidad and Tobago PM chief guest at Pravasi Bharatiya Divas
By Paras Ramoutar, IANS,
Curfew in Nepal town as maoists-UML cadres clash, 24 injured
By NNN-PTI,
Kathmandu : Indefinite curfew was clamped in an eastern Nepal town today, after some two dozen people were injured in police firing, following a violent clash between youth activists of country's two main political parties.
The police opened fire to control the situation as the activists of CPN-Maoist affiliated Young Communist League and the Youth Force of CPN-UML clashed over the issue of fund raising in Dhankuta town, police said.
Nearly two dozen activists from both of the groups injured during the incident, the police said.
Mark Twain to tell all – 100 years after death
By IANS,
London : Mark Twain's autobiography is finally to be published later this year, and a section is on his scandalous relationship with a woman who became his secretary after his wife died.
The writer, who created Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, had instructed that his autobiography should not to be published till 100 years after his death.
Mark Twain died April 21, 1910. He left behind nearly 5,000 unedited pages of memoirs along with handwritten notes that said he didn't want them to be published for at least a century.
Ecologists fear satellite debris could be spread across Russia
MOSCOW, February 13 (RIA Novosti) - Ecologists have expressed fears that remnants of the U.S. and Russian satellites that collided on Tuesday could pollute a large portion of Russia, a federal environmental official said on Friday.
Konstantin Tsybko of the Federal Service for Supervision of Natural Resources said that a number of large ecological organizations had approached him since a U.S. Iridium satellite and the defunct Russian Cosmos-2251 collided approximately 800 kilometers (500 miles) above Siberia. This was the first time such an incident has occurred.
Miliband praises Pranab Mukherjee
By IANS,
London : British Foreign Secretary David Miliband paid handsome tributes to his opposite number Pranab Mukherjee Monday three months after raising eyebrows in New Delhi with a statement about Kashmir.
Miliband made opportunistic use of a London Book Fair event to praise Mukherjee's "breadth of vision" following the Indian external affairs minister's call for an immediate cessation of hostilities in Sri Lanka.
During a much-publicised visit to India in January Miliband was reported to have addressed Mukherjee - the senior of the two - by his first name.
Nine firefighters killed in US chopper crash
By DPA,
San Francisco : Nine firefighters were killed when a helicopter carrying them to help control a wildfire in northern California crashed and burned in a remote forest area, the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) has said.
Four other people aboard the Sikorsky S-61 helicopter suffered severe burns.
The FAA said Wednesday the helicopter crashed under "unknown circumstances" as it was being used to ferry firefighters to tackle the blaze in the Trinity-Shasta National Forest.
Air France replacing airspeed sensors on Airbus fleet: Report
By DPA,
Paris/Sao Paulo : Air France has replaced two of three airspeed sensors on its entire fleet of Airbus A330 and A340 jets, according to a media report Wednesday.
The carrier replaced two out of three Pitot tubes on each of the planes early Wednesday after a trade union urged pilots not to fly the planes until the changes had been carried out, the La Tribune newspaper reported.
Tamil rebels make conflicting claims over Prabhakaran’s death
By DPA,
Colombo : Tamil rebels have made conflicting claims over the reported death of their leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, with one saying he was still alive and another confirming his death.
A day after Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the head of the department of international relations of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), issued a statement confirming Prabhakaran's death in fighting in northern Sri Lanka last Monday, another powerful group within the rebel movement contradicted the claim.
Regional centres for green technology spread mooted
By Joydeep Gupta, IANS,
Copenhagen : As the stormy Dec 7-18 climate summit headed for a climax, it has readied deals on how to pay countries to stop deforestation and to set up regional centres for transfer of green technology to developing countries, a senior UN official said.
The setting up of the regional centres was an idea mooted by India during an international meet in New Delhi this October. An Indian official said here Thursday night that the country could host one of the hubs, which are meant to spread green technologies quickly among developing countries.
Biggest loss for Canadian markets in 20 years
By IANS,
Toronto : The Toronto stock exchange (TSX) plunged more than nine percent Monday, registering the second biggest single-day loss in its history.
The markets had suffered the biggest loss of 11 percent in October 1987.
As the markets opened, the composite index fell by 864.41 points or 9.32 percent to end the first day of the week at 8,406.21.
Monday's decline eclipsed the record of Nov 20 this year when the TSX composite dived 765.80 points to close the day at 7,724.80. On that day, the index was pushed below the 8,000-mark for the first time in five years.
EU leaders to sign historic “Lisbon treaty”
BRUSSELS, Dec 13 (KUNA) -- European Union (EU) leaders are meeting in the Portuguese capital, Lisbon, Thursday to sign a landmark treaty to ease the smooth functioning of the enlarged 27-member European bloc. The Lisbon treaty creates the post of a foreign policy chief to play a more effective global role and assigns a long-term EU president.
Currently the EU Presidency is rotated among member states every six months.
The treaty gives greater powers to the European Parliament and reduces the size of the European commission, the EU's executive body.
Endeavour astronauts prepare for Sunday landing
By DPA,
Washington : The seven astronauts on space shuttle Endeavour were to complete their mission to the International Space Station (ISS) with landing scheduled at NASA's Kennedy Space Centre in Florida Sunday.
The shuttle undocked from the ISS at 9.47 a.m. (1447 GMT) Friday, and was expected to land at the Kennedy Space Centre at 1.19 p.m. (1819 GMT Sunday.
On Saturday, US space agency NASA was closely monitoring a cold front, which might bring rain, thunderstorms and cross-winds, and could affect Sunday's entry and landing at the Kennedy Space Centre.
Obama’s extended family at home in White House
By IANS,
Washington : Along with Barack Obama's mother-in-law Marian Robinson, a group of about 50 people from Chicago, forming the president's extended family, have visited him at the White House and more friends and in-laws plan such trips.
About 50 of Obama's friends and in-laws arrived at the White House just after midnight Jan 20, the Inauguration Day, for what they called a "housewarming party", the Washington Post reported Sunday.
Top EU official points to possible Olympic boycott of Beijing Games
By IRNA
Berlin : The commissioner for European Union foreign policy, Benita Ferrero-Waldner on Saturday pointed to a possible boycott of this summer's Olympic Games in China.
Speaking with the Sunday daily Bild am Sonntag, Ferrero-Waldner stressed that the Olympic Games should take place in an environment, "reflecting the Olympic spirit."
"This includes respecting human rights as well as unrestricted freedom of opinion and press. We should monitor closely how Beijing behaves over the next weeks and then decide about boycott measures," the EU official said.
Iran to launch two satellites with Russia in 2010
By IANS,
Tehran : Iran is working on a plan to launch two communication satellites with Russia by the end of this year.
During the Moscow visit of Iran's Minister of Telecommunication Reza Taqipour in April, a memorandum of understanding was signed between Taqipour and his Russian counterpart Igor Shchegolev for broader cooperation in the field of telecommunication.
Mohammad Hosseinpour, a senior advisor to Taqipour, told Mehr News Agency Monday that if everything went according to the plan, the two telecommunication satellites would be launched by year-end, Press TV reported.
Larijani: Others pay for US wrong mistakes
By IRNA,
Vienna : Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani said on Monday that countries of the world pay for the US wrong economic policies.
Larijani made the remarks in his keynote address to the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) meeting in Geneva on Monday.
There is no doubt that some part of the problems refer to economic infrastructure of other countries who claim a global management but are not able even to be accountable for their wrong mismanagement and are not ready to compensate for their mistakes, he said.
Tamil prisoners on hunger strike in Sri Lanka
By IANS,
Colombo : A total of 234 Tamil prisoners in Sri Lanka, most of them former Tamil Tiger rebels, are on a hunger strike the past five days here, said officials Monday.
Singapore to use CCTV to curb illegal parking
By IANS,
Singapore : In a novel approach to controlling illegal roadside parking in Singapore, authorities here are going to set up CCTV cameras along roads on a trial basis.
South African wins case against racist landlord
By Fakir Hassen, IANS
Durban : A South African whose husband is of Indian origin Wednesday won a case at the Equality Court here against a landlord who reserved his block of apartments for use by members of the white community only.
The owner of the Dunmarsh Apartments in the seaside town of Amanzimtoti and lessee Bronwyn Ellen Gerber reached a settlement that was made an order of the court in terms of which the owner, S.T. Evenwel, will pay Gerber 10,000 rands (about $1,500).
UK needs cut armed forces to 140,000, think-tank warns
By IRNA,
London : Britain will be forced to reduce the strength of its armed forces by 15 per cent due to the economic recession, a leading military think-tank warned Wednesday.
Cuts to the budget combined with growing costs would also mean that the country’s military capabilities in terms of ships, aircraft and tanks would also be reduced by a similar amount in the next six year, according to a report by the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI).
Bush urges reconciliation in Kenyan election dispute
Washington, January 04, SPA -- U.S.President George W. Bush on Thursday urged Kenyans to refrain from further violence and called on Kenya’s president and opposition leader to work together to resolve an election dispute that has sparked deadly violence.
“It’s very important for the people of Kenya to not resort to violence,” Bush told Reuters in an interview at the White House.
‘1987 Indo-Sri Lanka pact only solution to Tamil problem’
By IANS,
Chennai : Tamil Nadu Congress president K.V. Thangkabalu Sunday said that the Tamil minority's problems in the neighbouring island can only be resolved by applying the terms of an accord signed between India and Sri Lanka in 1987.
"The only solution to the long-pending Lankan Tamil people's issues can be through the application of the accord signed between (former Indian) prime minister Rajiv Gandhi and (former Sri Lankan) president J.R. Jayewardene in 1987. And this will be possible (only) after the warring sides cease fighting," Thangkabalu said.
Court sentences serial predator and rapist to 42 years
By DPA,
Singapore : A Singapore court sentenced a serial predator and rapist to 42 years in jail Tuesday, the longest prison sentence handed down to a sexual offender in the city state so far, a news report said.
Bala Kuppusamy was also ordered to be caned the maximum fine of 24 strokes.
Between April and June, the 48-year-old man robbed and sexually assaulted seven women who were walking alone at night, the online edition of Straits Times newspaper reported.
Police arrest 20 after Barcelona victory party riots
By DPA,
Barcelona : Spanish police Thursday arrested more than 20 people as rioters disrupted more than 100,000 football fans celebrating FC Barcelona's Champions League victory in Barcelona's city centre.
A group of violent fans threw beer cans and bottles at police and journalists on Barcelona's Las Ramblas boulevard, police said.
The attacks were mainly aimed against a team of Spanish state television TVE that covered the victory party.
UPS to move Asian hub from Philippines to China
By DPA,
Manila : US freight and logistics firm United Parcel Service (UPS) said Wednesday it is relocating its Asian hub from the Philippines to China in the next three years.
Andy Connelly, UPS senior vice president for South Asia Pacific, said the new intra-Asia hub in Shenzhen, China will be operational by 2010.
The new facility, with a total land area of 89,000 sq mts, will launch 100 flights per week and employ 400 people. It has the capacity to process 18,000 packages an hour, Connelly said.
Russia, Ukraine to revive An-70 joint project – defense minister
By RIA Novosti
Kiev : Russia will resume a joint project with Ukraine to build An-70 military transport aircraft after an almost 2-year delay in setting up the program, the Ukrainian defense minister said on Friday.
Russia withdrew from the program in May 2006 to build the giant plane, which was launched in 1984, on the grounds that it was outdated.
"Russia has confirmed that it will continue this work, and we will jointly construct the An-70. This was personally disclosed to me by my Russian counterpart Anatoly Serdyukov," Yuriy Yekhanurov said.
UK ‘planning to cut embassies’ due to fall in pound’s value
By IRNA,
London : The British government was accused Thursday of drawing up a secret hit list of embassies to be closed as a result of the sharp fall in the value of the pound.
Conservative shadow foreign minister David Lidington claimed an internal Foreign Office memorandum ordered officials to work out plans for substantial cuts "which could be implemented soon after the election," due in May.
The memo stated that further cuts "should not be achieved by salami-slicing but instead by stopping activity, closing posts and reducing staff numbers", according to Lidington.
Man who took a woman hostage at airport detained
By Xinhua,
Chengdu (China) : A man who used a sport's starting pistol to take hostage a woman at China's Chengdu airport has been detained, the police said Friday.
The incident took place near the security counter, when the man fired two shots into the air with the starting pistol and grabbed the woman and rushed to the security channel.
Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport police and security guards quickly overpowered the man and freed the woman, who wasn't injured.
Protest bacchanalia ends in rowdyism, paralyse London Tube
By IANS,
London : Police arrested 17 people and closed six London Underground stations after thousands of revellers organised a non-stop drinks party late Saturday night to protest a ban on tippling in the city's most popular mass transit system.
Four train drivers and three Underground staff were assaulted, one police vehicle was damaged and two officers assaulted and another was injured in the chaotic revelry that paralysed the underground transport system, a Guardian online report said Sunday.
Colombo-KL to jointly plug terrorist financing
By P.Vijian, NNN-Bernama
New Delhi : The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam (LTTE) will soon find itself short-changed by banks when Malaysia and Sri Lanka jointly combat cross-border money-laundering and terrorist financing.
This follows the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) by the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka and its counterpart in Bank Negara last Saturday.
CBSL was represented by its deputy governor Dr Ranee Jayamaha while Zamani Abdul Ghani appeared for Bank Negara.
Ukraine issues arrest warrant for ousted president
By IANS,
Kiev : Ukraine's acting government Monday issued an arrest warrant for ousted president Viktor Yanukovych on charges of mass crimes against protestors in...
Britain to step up sanctions against Myanmarese junta
By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS
London : British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has promised to "step up" sanctions on Myanmar by blocking trade in items such as timber if the regime there does not show signs of change.
"The Burmese regime is a repressive, illegal and undemocratic regime. Unless they change we will step up sanctions...our strategy is not only to push the regime to change but to offer to a new government support for economic development," Brown told the British parliament Wednesday.
Convert Jinnah House into war memorial: BJP legislator
Mumbai : BJP legislator from South Mumbai M.P. Lodha on Tuesday urged the central goverment to convert Jinnah House, the house built by Pakistan...
E. coli bacterium model of super industrial efficiency
By IANS,
Washington : E. coli bacterium, one of the best-studied single-celled organisms around, is a master of industrial efficiency. This bacterium can be thought of as a factory with just one product - itself.
It exists to make copies of itself and its business plan is to make them at the lowest possible cost, with the greatest possible efficiency. Efficiency, in the case of a bacterium, can be defined by the energy and resources it uses to maintain its plant and produce new cells versus the time it expends on the task.
Poroshenko wins Ukrainian presidential election
Kiev : Ukraine's chocolate king Petro Poroshenko has won the presidential election in the first round with 54.7 percent of the vote, the country's...
Americans threatened more by IS than Russia, Iran: Poll
Washington: Americans see the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group as a bigger threat to the US than Iran, Russia or other countries, according to...
Ukraine-Russia gas talks delayed until Wednesday
By RIA Novosti
Kiev : Ukraine and Russia have put off talks on their long-running natural gas dispute by one day until Wednesday, Ukraine's oil and gas company Naftogaz said on Tuesday.
The former Soviet allies partially resolved their dispute last Thursday, agreeing that Ukraine would pay off about a $1 billion of its debt and that talks would continue on a supply scheme for 2008, after Russian gas monopoly Gazprom restored supplies, which were cut by 50% early last week.
Coalmine blast kills at least 17 in Ukraine
By Xinhua
Kiev : A coal mine blast killed at least 17 miners Sunday in eastern Ukraine while 14 were still missing, the Interfax news agency reported.
The explosion took place around 3 a.m. local time in the Zasiagyko coalmine in the eastern region of Donetsk, the Emergency Situations Ministry said.
There were 457 miners working underground when the blast occurred. As many as 31 miners were in the area of the blast while others managed to climb to safety.
The toll could rise as rescuers were working at the site to retrieve survivors, Interfax-Ukraine said.
Four India-born Americans honoured in US
New York: Four India-born Americans were recognised for their contributions to the US along with 36 other people in the annual Great Immigrants tribute...
NASA concludes Mars lander programme
By RIA Novosti,
Washington : US space agency NASA said Tuesday its Phoenix Mars Lander had ceased communications after operating for more than five months on the red planet, and announced the termination of the successful space exploration project.
Launched Aug 4, 2007, Phoenix landed on the Martian surface May 25, 2008. The $420-million mission lasted much longer than the planned three months, and verified the presence of water-ice in the Martian subsurface, among other important scientific findings.
EU Parliament denies entry to Kirpan-wearing Sikhs
By EuAsiaNews,
Brussels : A British Member of the European Parliament (EP), Liz Lynne, invited a delegation of Sikhs to EP Monday as part of the launch of a new interest group.
But she said the EP authorities had ruled the Kirpan dagger worn by some of them to be a security threat and denied the Sikhs entry, 'The Parliament.com ', published in the UK by Dods, reported on its website Tuesday.
Russia winning Arctic race: US Coast Guard
By RIA Novosti,
Washington : A top US Coast Guard official has told the Congress that Russia is getting ahead of the United States in the "Arctic race" and the administration must urgently revise its approach to polar exploration.
"I'm concerned we are watching our nation's ice-breaking capabilities decline," Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thad Allen told the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Wednesday.
"It's imperative to obtain the current validating capabilities so our polar operations can be met," he said.
Nepalese media group targets Indian ventures
By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS,
Kathmandu : The smear campaign by a section of Nepal's disgruntled media against Indian joint ventures intensified Sunday with fierce new propaganda that also targeted the Indian embassy in Kathmandu.
Nepal's private media house, the Kantipur Group, began spearheading a campaign asking the Indian embassy to apologise after the group distorted the embassy's concerns regarding Indian investment companies in Nepal as a pressure tactic to force substandard food products on Nepal.
US firms will compete for India nuclear trade: Rice
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is confident that American companies will compete for their share of the nuclear business once the India-US civil nuclear deal is operationalised.
"We have a letter of intent from the Indians that we believe is a very firm set of commitments and a framework for making sure that our businesses can do business in India," Rice told reporters Friday on way to New Delhi following Congressional approval of the deal.
France to not risk stalemate in C.A.R: military official
By IANS,
Paris : Despite a difficult situation in Bangui, France has ruled out any eventual stalemate in the Central African Republic (CAR) where its...
Taiwan to Hold Legislative Elections
By Prensa Latina
Taipei : Taiwanese voters will elect the 113 members of their Legislative Assembly on Saturday to decide the future of the island, which current President Chen Shui-bian wants to push toward independence.
Chen and his Progressive Democratic Party and the Kuomintang Nationalist Party are the main contenders in this campaign, in which every kind of accusation and insult are used.
Airliner with 46 on board crashes in Venezuela
By DPA
Buenos Aires/Caracas : A Venezuelan airliner with 46 people on board crashed late Thursday in northern Venezuela, Union Radio reported citing civil defence regional chief Gerardo Rojas.
Rescue crews were racing to the poorly accessible crash site in the Andes Mountains at an altitude of 4,750 metres in Paramo Piedra, where the wreckage was spotted from the air after a search for the missing Santa Barbara Airlines ATR-42, Venezuelan officials said.
There was no immediate word about the fate of the passengers and crew.
US Senate approves $650 bn defence budget for 2008
By RIA Novosti
Washington : The US Senate has approved a defence bill of $648.8 billion, which includes $225 million -- 27 percent less than requested -- for the deployment of missile defence systems in Central Europe.
President George W. Bush had originally requested $310.4 million for the deployment of an anti-missile shield in the Czech Republic and Poland, but the sum was cut by $85 million until negotiations have been completed with the host countries.
UN SC holds consultations about Sahara issue
By NNN-MAP
New York (United Nations) : The United Nations Security Council held, on Friday, consultations about the Sahara issue, opposing Morocco to the Algerian-backed separatist movement Polisario.
Held in the presence of UN personal envoy, Peter Van Walsum, these consultations were marked by widespread support for the negotiations process in a respect to the "letter and substance" of the 1754 resolution, except for an isolated, hostile, and counter-productive attitude of South Africa's representative.
North, South Ossetia hold day of mourning for terror victims
By RIA Novosti,
Vladikavkaz : The disputed Georgian region of South Ossetia joined North Ossetia on Saturday in a day of mourning for the victims of Thursday's terrorist attack in the capital of the Russian North Caucasus republic.
Twelve people, including a female suicide bomber, were killed and around 40 wounded in Thursday's blast at a bus stop in Vladikavkaz. The bomb was set off as passengers got out of a public minibus.
"On the day of mourning in North Ossetia, the funerals of 10 victims of the explosion will be held," a government official said.
UN special envoy ends second Myanmar mission
By Xinhua
Yangon : UN Special Envoy Ibrahim Gambari left here Thursday afternoon winding up his six-day Myanmar mission, the second for him, said the UN Information Center here.
During the visit, Gambari, who is UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's Special Adviser on Myanmar, met Prime Minister General Thein Sein and Aung San Suu Kyi, detained leader of the National League for Democracy (NLD), and government officials.
Phone notifications kill concentration: Study
New York, July 13 (IANS) Mobile phone notifications can ruin your focus even if you do not actually pick up the phone to respond...
19 killed in Syria bombing, missile attack
Beirut: At least 19 people were killed in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo in regime bombing and rebel rocket attacks, the Syrian Observatory...
N-talks at ‘difficult’ stage as Iran insists on red lines
Tehran : Nuclear talks between Iran and the world powers to tackle the obstacles in the way of reaching a final deal are at...
Woman doctor held for selling newborn in Russia
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow: A woman doctor at a maternity clinic in Russia was detained by police when he tried to sell a newborn baby for one million rubles (around $32,000), police said.
Spain hands down 1,000-year terms to bombers
By IANS/EFE,
Madrid : Spain's National Court has handed down sentences of more than 1,000 years each to three members of a terrorist group found responsible for a 2006 bombing that left two people dead.
The tribunal also ordered the three ETA terrorists - Igor Portu, Mattin Sarasola and Mikel San Sebastian - to pay 500,000 euros ($620,000) in compensation to the family of Carlos Alonso Palate and 700,000 euros ($870,000) to that of Diego Armando Estacio.
Man arrested for arson on Islamic Community Centre in US city
Washington: A homeless man has been arrested and charged with arson for a fire that destroyed an Islamic community centre in the US city...
Former Thai premier to leave country after court hearing
By Xinhua
Bangkok : Thailand's ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra said Thursday he would request the country's Supreme Court to grant him permission to visit Britain after the first hearing of his case March 12.
The online portal of the Bangkok Post quoted Thaksin as saying that he has to go back to Britain to take care of his Manchester City business.
He said he would travel to Britain March 13, a day after he is scheduled to appear at the court to attend the first hearing.
Civilian killed in Pakistan shelling in Jammu
Jammu: One person was killed and another injured on Tuesday due to heavy shelling by Pakistan Rangers in Jammu and Kashmir, police said.
They also...
Ukrainian official says admission to NATO MAP unlikely this year
By RIA Novosti,
Kiev : The head of the Ukrainian presidential administration has said that Ukraine is unlikely to join NATO's Membership Action Plan (MAP) this year.
"I believe this issue is off the agenda, and we all understand we will not join MAP," Viktor Baloha said in an interview with Ukraine's ICTV channel broadcast on Sunday.
NATO refused at its summit in April to let Georgia and Ukraine into MAP, a key step for membership to the 26-nation alliance, but pledged to review the decision in December. The countries had received strong U.S. backing for their bids.
Toll in Ukraine mine blast rises to 80
By RIA Novosti
Donetsk (Ukraine) : The toll in methane explosion in a mine in eastern Ukraine has risen to 80.
"Eighty people died, and the fate of another 20 is not known. Sixty-six bodies have been retrieved, and 42 of them identified," Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister Andriy Klyuyev said Monday.
The explosion early Sunday in the Zasyadko coalmine in the Donetsk Region caused a fire that raged through the mine. A total of 457 miners were underground at that time, and 357 have since been brought to safety.
Chinese stocks plunge as rate cut fails to materialise
By Xinhua,
Beijing : China's benchmark stock index finished 3.67 percent lower Monday, declining for a third straight day after an expected lending rate cut failed to materialize over the weekend.
The key Shanghai Composite Index opened 0.42 percent lower before briefly entering positive territory minutes into the morning trade. But weak buying interest and profit-taking drove it to close 72.33 points lower at 1,897.06.
The smaller Shenzhen Component Index dropped 245.15 points, or 3.65 percent, to 6,466.19.
South Korean spy plane crashes, pilots survive
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Two pilots safely ejected as a South Korean military plane crashed on Monday during a routine patrol flight near the border with North Korea, the Xinhua news agency reported.
The agency said citing the South Korean military that an RF-4C fighter crashed early Monday in mountainous Gangwon Province, 25 minutes after taking off from an airbase south of Seoul.
The military said there were no reports of casualties on the ground and a team of investigators had been dispatched to the scene to determine the cause of the accident.
Nepal celebrates second anniversary of king’s ouster
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : A Hindu kingdom till two years ago and ruled by an iron-fisted king who believed he was an incarnation of god, Nepal will celebrate Wednesday the second year of overthrowing the shackles of a feudal regime with sweeping changes that includes a new government to be headed by its former hunted-down guerrillas.
Some commitments to Africa not fulfilled quickly: Modi
New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday said that India had not fulfilled some commitments to Africa as quickly as it should have...
Power-starved Nepal government calls for a dim Diwali
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : As Nepal began celebrating its Hindu festival of Diwali with five days' festivities, the Himalayan republic's power-strapped government is appealing to the nation to go slow on lights, one of the main accessories of the festival.
Currently reeling under a three to five hours' power outage daily and the closure of nearly 200 small to medium-scale industries due to the power crisis, the state-run Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) has issued an appeal to consumers not to light electric lamps as these would further pressure the reeling power supply.
Host of stars to perform at Obama inauguration
By RIA Novosti,
WASHINGTON : The queen of soul, Aretha Franklin, will be among a star studded line up performing at U.S. president-elect Barack Obama's inauguration on January 20 in Washington.
The press service of the joint congressional committee on inaugural ceremonies announced the line up on Wednesday, which includes violinist Itzhak Perlman, cellist Yo-Yo-Ma, pianist Gabriela Montero and poet Elizabeth Alexander, which will take place in the U.S. capital.