Poweful quake rattles northwest Mexico
By EFE,
Mexico City : A powerful earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale rattled northwestern Mexico Monday, but there was no report of any casualty, officials said.
The quake struck at 1:00 p.m. (1800 GMT) with its epicentre between the islands of Angel de la Guarda and Tiburon, Mexico's National Seismological Service chief Carlos Valdes said.
The quake was also felt in the states of Baja California and Sonora, the seismological service said, adding that several after shocks were also registered in the area.
UN votes against US blockade on Cuba – again
By DPA
New York : The UN General Assembly has voted overwhelmingly to once again oppose Washington's economic embargo on Cuba - an annual, symbolic act, since votes on the issue in past years have failed to have any effect on the US.
The 192-nation assembly voted 184 against four (the US, Israel, Marshall Islands and Palau), with a sole country abstaining, Micronesia. Last year, Micronesia opposed the vote.
Doubts over French bank’s version of multi-billion euro scam
By DPA
Paris : Analysts have expressed doubts over Societe Generale's declaration that a single rogue trader was responsible for the fraud that cost it 4.9 billion euros ($7.1 billion).
"If you know the control procedures very well, then it is possible to elude them for a few days, maybe a few weeks. But it's hard to believe that he did this for a year," economist Elie Cohen told France-Info radio Friday.
If the man identified as 31-year-old Jerome Kerviel did manage it alone, it represents "an enormous breakdown" by France's second-largest bank, Cohen said.
Chinese court jails Rio Tinto employees
By IANS,
Beijing : A court in China Monday gave jail terms to four people, including an Australian, in the Rio Tinto case for bribery and stealing commercial secrets.
The Intermediate People's Court in Shanghai gave jail terms ranging from seven to 14 years to the four defendants, including Australian Stern Hu, in the case, court sources said.
On July 5, 2009, four employees of Rio Tinto, a multinational mining and resources group with its headquarters in London and Melbourne, were arrested in Shanghai for corruption and espionage.
Government comes to distressed Indian’s aid in Saudi Arabia
New Delhi : The government will extend all help to an Indian man working in Saudi Arabia without being paid his salary for the...
At least 23 killed in Colombia bus accident
By IANS,
Bogota : At least 23 people have been killed and 21 injured when a bus they were travelling in slid into a 500-metre deep ravine in southwestern Colombia, EFE news agency reported Wednesday citing the police.
The accident occurred Tuesday on the highway connecting the cities of Pasto and Puerto Asis in Narino province bordernig Ecuador, provincial highway police chief General Luis Alberto Moore said.
Among the dead were two children, Moore said and added that nine of the injured were in serious condition.
Cultural fests in India, China in 2010
By IANS,
Beijing : A Festival of India will be held in China and a reciprocal Festival of China in India in 2010 with the aim "to promote mutual awareness and understanding of the rich cultural heritage of each country".
The memorandum of understanding for holding the two cultural events was signed here Thursday by Indian Ambassador Nirupama Rao and China's Vice Minister Zhao Shao Hua.
The decision to hold the festivals was taken during Chinese President Hu Jintao's visit to India in November 2006.
Hong Kong police warn parents after online pimp jailed
By DPA,
Hong Kong : Hong Kong police have issued a warning to parents to be on their guard against prostitution rings recruiting teenage girls online after a man was jailed for one year for operating an online brothel, a news report said Thursday.
The 25-year-old man had posted pictures and contact details of girls online and transported them to meet clients, charging them a commission of $60 per client from their earnings.
He appeared in court Wednesday, charged with living off the earnings of a prostitute and controlling people for the purpose of prostitution.
Over 30 militants killed in Chechnya this year
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : The Russian Joint Group of Forces in the North Caucasus killed 32 militants in Chechnya this year as of April 27, the group's commander Gen. Nikolai Sivak said Tuesday.
"Unfortunately, we did not see a decrease in the number of losses, and this year 17 federal troops were killed as of April 27, against 15 [in the same period] last year," the group commander added.
400,000 polluting cars to go off Beijing roads
By IANS,
Beijing : The government plans to remove by 2015 as many as 400,000 polluting cars from the roads of Beijing, a city that already has nearly 5 million cars.
AirAsia QZ8501: 21 divers deployed for search
Jakarta : The Indonesian National Search and Rescue Agency Tuesday deployed 21 divers to join in the search operation for the missing AirAsia flight...
Strong quake hits Japan
By IANS,
Tokyo : An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.3 on the Richter scale hit Japan's northernmost Hokkaido island at 11.23 a.m. Friday, Xinhua quoted the Japan Meteorological Agency as saying.
Mother Teresa to be canonised on September 4: Pope
Vatican city: The Pope during consistory of cardinals on Tuesday announced September 4 as the date for Mother Teresa's canonisation, the media reported.
After months...
Western Greece may be under water by 2100, scientists say
By DPA
Athens : Scientists have warned that the western Greek city of Patras could be under water by the end of the century if sea levels continue to rise at the current rate, reports said Friday.
According to a report published in the Greek daily Kathimerini, scientists insist the Peloponnese city could be 1.6 metres under water by 2100, and that much of the country's western coastline is at risk.
Maoists, government begin number game after strike fails
By IANS,
Kathmandu : After their six-day general strike failed to oust the ruling coalition of Nepal, the opposition Maoists have begun a number game in a renewed effort to take power while the embattled government is also doing the same to outwit the former guerrillas.
The Maoists, who emerged as the biggest party in parliament after a historic election in 2008, hold almost 38 percent of the seats in the house.
Terror buck stops with me: Obama
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : As a White House review found chinks galore in US intelligence armour leading up to the botched Dec 25 terror bombing of a US-bound jetliner, President Barack Obama issued a stern warning to government agencies to shape up fast.
"I will hold my staff, our agencies and the people in them accountable when they fail to perform their responsibilities at the highest levels," Obama said at the White House Thursday outlining a series of major reforms. But "ultimately, the buck stops with me."
Russian pianist held in Thailand for child abuse
By DPA,
Bangkok : Thai police arrested a well-known Russian pianist at a beach resort for alleged child abuse, before releasing him on bail, officials said Wednesday.
Mikhail Pletnjow, 53, a pianist and composer, was arrested Monday in Pattaya on charges of raping a 14-year-old Thai boy.
"The boy has agreed to testify against him so we'll proceed with the case," said Police Lieutenant Omsing Sukgankha, of the women and children's rights protection division.
Military uniforms to protect from mosquito bites
By IANS,
Washington : Uniforms issued to US military personnel are now being treated to repel mosquitoes, thanks to a new method developed by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS).
Since 1991, treatment of military uniforms with the insecticide permethrin has been available to help protect troops from mosquitoes that transmit malaria and dengue.
This method is a valuable addition to the protection provided by insect repellents, but it is a challenge to be sure that the many kinds of fabrics and uniforms are adequately treated.
Fire in German building kills nine
By DPA
Ludwigshafen (Germany) : At least nine people were killed and some 60 injured when a fire broke out in a four-storey building in the southwestern German city of Ludwigshafen, the police said Monday.
Among the dead in the fire, which broke out Sunday afternoon, were five children, the police said.
Rescue services found eight bodies when they arrived, and another person died later in hospital, the officials said, adding that some of the injured were in very critical condition.
Belgium shaken as nationalists win polls
By DPA,
Brussels : Belgians awoke Monday to confirmation of the news that the Dutch-speaking nationalist party N-VA has won a crushing victory in snap elections, raising fears that months of political instability will follow.
N-VA's victory in the northern province of Flanders was matched by sweeping gains by the Socialist Party (PS) in the southern, French-speaking province of Wallonia.
Conflict over power-sharing between the two provinces had brought down the last government in April, a year before its term.
Meerut tense after violence, curfew imposed
By IANS,
Meerut: The situation in Uttar Pradesh's Meerut district where two groups clashed and indulged in arson and vandalism, leaving 15 people injured Tuesday, was tense but under control Wednesday as curfew was imposed in some parts, police said.
The areas under the four police stations Brahmpuri, Lisari Gate, Delhi Gate and Kotwali, where the curfew was imposed late Tuesday night, remained out of bounds.
When 50 taxi drivers in China helped an ailing colleague
By IANS,
Beijing: A group of 50 taxi drivers in east China's Zhejiang province are selflessly driving an ailing co-worker's cab to help his family fight poverty and disease.
Japan toll is 11,620
By IANS,
Tokyo : The death toll in Japan's earthquake and tsunami of March has climbed to 11,620 people with 16,464 people still missing, Xinhua reported Friday.
Thief lynched in Dominican Republic
By EFE,
Santo Domingo : A mob killed a man suspected of robbing a Santo Domingo residence by pelting him with stones and bottles and stabbing him, the Dominican National Police said.
The killing occurred Sunday when the unidentified man was surprised by a group of people while he was allegedly stealing goods from a house in the Dominican Republic's capital.
The mob chased the man through the streets, caught him and killed him.
The cause of death was injury to various parts of the body and puncture wounds from knives, the National Police said.
Roeder quits as Newcastle boss
By DPA
London : Glenn Roeder resigned as manager of Newcastle United after being called to an emergency board meeting, fuelling speculation that the former Bolton manager Sam Allardyce could be installed as his successor.
Al Qaeda calls Obama treacherous, bloodthirsty in new video
By IANS,
Washington: Al Qaeda has posted a new video on Islamist websites where a spokesman of the militant outfit calls US President Barack Obama "snakelike" and a "treacherous, bloodthirsty and narrow-minded American war president".
In the video posted Sunday, American-origin Al Qaeda spokesman Adam Gadahn criticises the US' "aggression and interference" in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, the CNN reported.
Gadahn speaks in English and the video features Arabic subtitles.
Thailand postpones Asean summit amid political chaos
By DPA,
Bangkok : Thailand's outgoing cabinet Tuesday agreed to postpone the 14th summit of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean), scheduled for mid-December in Chiang Mai, to an unspecified date next year.
"It has definitely been postponed, but until when, will require consultations with the other Asean members," foreign ministry spokesman Tharit Charungvat said.
"March is an option," he added.
The Thai cabinet met in Chiang Mai, 550 km north of Bangkok, Tuesday morning and decided to postpone hosting the summit, just hours before they lost their posts.
Fitch maintains Brazil’s investment rating at BBB
By IANS,
Rio De Janeiro : Fitch Ratings said it had decided to maintain Brazil's BBB investment grade credit rating and predicted the outlook for the South American country would remain stable.
German Social Democratic Party hits all-time low: poll
By IRNA
Berlin : Germany's co-governing Social Democratic Party (SPD) dropped to a historic low in approval ratings in the wake of the controversy over a rapprochement with the radical leftist the Left (Linke) party.
According to an opinion poll, released jointly Monday by the weekly stern news magazine and the private RTL television network, the SPD fell to 23 percent, down a percentage point from the previous week.
The Christian Democratic Union of Chancellor Angela Merkel still heads the poll with 38 percent.
Sirisena officially declared Sri Lanka’s new president
Colombo : Election Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya Friday afternoon officially declared Maithripala Sirisena the new president of Sri Lanka.
Making the announcement, Deshapriya said the joint...
Space Shuttle Discovery lands in Florida
By DPA
Washington : The Space Shuttle Discovery touched down at the Kennedy Space Centre in Cape Canaveral, Florida after a 15-day mission that focussed on construction of the International Space Station.
Discovery, with a seven-member crew led by Pamela Melroy, the second woman to command a shuttle, landed at 18:01 GMT Wednesday.
"Well hello there, it's nice to be back in Florida," Melroy, who steered the craft to the runway, said over the radio after the safe landing.
Bomb explodes in Thai complex when prime minister present there
By Xinhua,
Bangkok : A small bomb exploded Thursday inside Thailand's Government House complex while Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was chairing a meeting of senior security officers. No casualty was reported.
The bomb was hidden inside a pipe behind the Thai Kufah Building where Vejjajiva was chairing the meeting. Officials were clearing the compound to make preparations for Children's Day celebration when the bomb went off, The Nation newspaper's website reported Thursday.
Obama victory would be a dream come true for French blacks
By Siegfried Mortkowitz, IANS,
Paris : When French historian Pap Ndiaye was asked recently what Barack Obama's election as US president would mean to him personally, his voice grew soft: "I will be very moved. The most powerful man in the world will be a black man. This is incredible."
But Ndiaye - the author most recently of "The Black Condition: An Essay on a French Minority" - was quick to add that he also expected Obama's election to bring about certain changes in French society.
Obama and McCain make final pitch amid massive early turnout
By DPA,
Washington : As US presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama geared up for a final weekend of campaigning, volunteering and television advertisements, voters turned out in droves to cast their ballots early in states across the country.
Both campaigns claimed an edge in the early voting stakes in key battlegrounds including Florida, Nevada, New Mexico and North Carolina, as well as absentee ballots cast in other states.
Strong quake jolts Solomon Islands
By Xinhua,
Wellington : An earthquake measuring 6.1 on the Richter scale Tuesday jolted the South Pacific nation of Solomon Islands, The US Geological Survey said.
The quake occurred at 9.40 a.m. (New Zealand time). There were no reports of damage or causality so far, it said.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii did not issue an alert for the region.
In April last year, an earthquake measuring 8.0 on the Richter scale jolted the western Solomons which triggered a tsunami, killing at least 50 people and displaced thousands in the aftermath.
McCain to overcome ‘partisan rancour’, ‘change’ Washington
By IANS,
Washington : Vietnam War veteran John McCain became the new flag bearer of the Republican Party in the race for the White House with a promise to overcome "partisan rancour" and narrow self interest to bring "change" in Washington.
Accepting the party's presidential nomination Thursday at the end of a four-day convention in St Paul, Minnesota, marked by blistering attacks on Barack Obama, McCain said he respected and admired his Democratic rival but it was he who would bring real change.
Venezuela steps up demand for extradition of Posada
By Prensa Latina
Caracas : Venezuela has stepped up its demand for the extradition from the US of Luis Posada Carriles, reported to be involved in anti-Cuba terror acts, and asked the the Organization of American States (OAS) to rally in its support.
US-Israel alliance will never waver: Clinton
By IANS,
Washington: US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton Monday said her government was committed to Israel's security and the alliance between the two countries will "never waver".
"For President Obama, for me, and for this entire administration, our commitment to Israel's security and Israel's future is rock solid," Clinton told the annual policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), an influential pro-Israel lobby in the US.
Report: Russian-donated MIG-29 to Lebanon “unsafe”
By Xinhua,
BEIRUT : A well-informed source Saturday advised the Lebanese government to "wait" before accepting the Russian-donated MIG-29 jet fighters that are possibly "unsafe", Lebanese daily Al-Nahar report.
A report in Russian Kommersant business daily quoted military sources as saying that "one third of the MIG-29 should be written off as obsolete because they are too rusty to take off without crashing."
A pilot was killed during a MIG-29 fighter crash in southern Siberia on Dec. 5 and another MIG-29 crashed in October last year, the report added.
Cambosdia’s Ruling Party CPP wins 58 pct votes in election
By NNN-Bernama,
Phnom Penh : The major ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP) won around 58.11 percent of the votes in the fourth general election, according to the preliminary official balloting results declared by the National Election Committee (NEC) here Saturday.
In the general election which was held on July 4, 3.4 million voters casts their votes for CPP.
The total voters voted in the general election records a sum of 6.01 million.
Canada hints LTTE behind human-smuggling ship
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Vancouver : As a ship carrying nearly 500 Sri Lankan Tamils landed here Thursday, the Canadian public safety minister hinted that the Tamil Tigers were behind smuggling these people into Canada.
After a three-month voyage, the Thai ship 'MV Sun Sea' with 490 Tamils on board was escorted by naval vessels into Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt on Vancouver Island Thursday morning. The asylum seekers would be given medical treatment, photographed and fingerprinted before being sent to detention facilities, officials of the Canadian Border Security Agency said.
Serb FM lashes out at US foreign policy vis-@-vis Kosovo
By KUNA
United Nations : Serbia's Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic late Monday lashed out at the countries which recognized Kosovo's independence, mainly the US, warning that their diplomatic relations will obviously suffer in the future.
He told reporters following a Security Council open meeting on the issue that the Serb envoys in the countries which recognized this "illegal act" of secession have been withdrawn to Belgrade for consultation.
Secret Service counts 91 White House security breaches
By IANS,
Washington: Long before a pair of gatecrashers penetrated the White House state dinner for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the Secret Service had counted 91 instances of security breaches since 1980 at the executive mansion, the Washington Post reported Monday.
The Secret service had detailed for its internal use a lengthy list of security breaches dating to the Carter administration - including significant failures in the agency's protection of the president in a secret 2003 report, the influential daily said.
UN seeks $1.5 bn in revised quake relief for Haiti
By DPA,
New York : The UN Thursday nearly tripled its original appeal for humanitarian assistance in Haiti, calling for a total of $1.5 billion to help 3 million Haitians affected by the devastating January earthquake.
The $1.5 billion would include the earlier flash appeal of $577 million issued immediately after the magnitude-7 earthquake that hit Port-au-Prince Jan 12, killing more than 230,000 people and destroying large parts of the city.
VP: Earthquake relief shows Party’s strength
By Xinhua,
Chengdu : The current earthquake relief and rebuilding work have further displayed the nature and capabilities of the Communist Party of China (CPC), said Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping Sunday in a tour to quake-hit areas of Sichuan Province.
The mainstay role played by Party organizations at different levels, Party members and officials in the anti-quake campaign shows that the recent years' efforts to Party building have been "very fruitful," said Xi, also member of the Standing Committee ofthe CPC Central Committee Political Bureau.
Five killed in South Korea fire
Seoul: Fire broke out near a bus terminal in Goyang, a city just north of South Korea's capital Seoul, leaving fived dead and three...
Clinton wins Puerto Rico primary
By Xinhua,
Washington : Former first lady and New York Senator Hillary Clinton was projected by major US TV networks to have won Democratic presidential primary Sunday in Puerto Rico.
Based on exit polls, Clinton is likely to beat her rival Barrack Obama at a ratio of two to one in a clean sweep across all demographic groups in the island.
However, the victory is largely symbolic as Obama is well ahead of her in the tally of delegates going to the August national convention.
Going to the Puerto Rico primary, Obama has some 2,050 delegates and Hillary Rodham Clinton has 1,877.
Norway’s mass murderer Breivik sues government
Oslo : Norway's mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik has sued the government for violating his human rights by exposing him to extreme isolation in...
US voices doubts about free polls in eastern Sri Lanka
By P.K. Balachandran, IANS
Colombo : US ambassador Robert O. Blake Wednesday expressed doubts if the upcoming local elections in Sri Lanka's eastern Tamil-speaking district of Batticaloa would be free and fair.
"The US does not believe that free and fair elections can be held if some (political) parties are armed," Blake said in Batticaloa at a function organised by USAID.
He further said that if "paramilitary" groups carrying arms illegally were allowed to intimidate others, it would hamper private investment that is so much needed to develop war-affected Batticaloa.
Monitoring AIDS treatment by regular physical examination is nearly as effective as advanced laboratory...
By IRNA,
Vienna : When millions of HIV-infected people in poor countries began receiving advanced drug therapies, critics worried that patient care would suffer because few high tech laboratories were available to guide treatments.
UN calls for calm over Kosovo
By RIA Novosti
New York : UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon called for calm in the aftermath of Sunday's declaration of independence by Kosovo as Western powers prepared to recognize the sovereignty of the world's 'newest state'.
Kosovo declared independence on Sunday after an emergency session of parliament, with Prime Minister Hashim Thaci saying the new state would be "proud, independent and free."
The U.S and a large number of European countries are expected to recognize Kosovo's sovereignty later on Monday.
Lessons to learn from Sino-Indian border management: Chinese daily
Beijing : The lessons learnt from China-India land border dispute management can help settle the maritime dispute between China and Japan and the disputes...
Thailand’s referendum endorses army-backed charter
By DPA
Bangkok : Thailand's first-ever referendum has endorsed the country's 18th constitution that promises to weaken the political party system and strengthen the hand of the bureaucracy and military, initial results showed Monday.
A count of 93 percent of the ballots cast in Sunday's plebiscite, found that 58.3 percent voted yes, 41.7 percent no and the remainder were invalid, said Election Commission secretary general Sittipol Paveechaikorn.
About 25 million out of 45.6 million eligible voters, or about 55 percent, participated in the referendum.
El Salvador president apologises to civil war victims
By IANS/EFE,
San Salvador : Salvadoran President Mauricio Funes made a formal apology to the victims of the 1980-1992 civil war and acknowledged that state security forces "committed serious human rights violations and abuses of power".
"I apologise in the name of the Salvadoran state," the leftist leader Saturday said in his address at an act of celebration for the peace pact signed 18 years ago.
Nepal surges 20 places in world press freedom index
By NNN-Nepal News
Kathmandu : Nepal has surged more than 20 places to be placed at 137th position in the ranking of the world press freedom index owing to revival of basic freedoms after the end of war, according to a report published by Paris based Reporters Sans Frontiers Tuesday.
“The end of war and return to democratic rule resulted in a revival of basic freedoms and created new space for the media, stated the RSF in its annual report, adding, “But ethnic violence in the south of the country has exposed journalists to new dangers,” the RSF added.
UN peacekeepers killed in Haiti chopper crash
By DPA,
New York : A UN surveillance plane crashed in Haiti Friday, killing all 11 people on board, the UN said.
The dead included the crew members and peacekeepers from Uruguay and Jordan, the UN said. There was no breakdown on the death toll from each of the countries. There was no information about the cause of the crash.
The military plane belonging to the Uruguayan contingent of the UN mission in Haiti was monitoring the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic, the UN said.
Russia, U.S. to jointly prepare for 2010 nuclear security summit
By RIA Novosti,
Pittsburgh : Russia and the United States have agreed to jointly participate in the preparation of the nuclear security summit in Washington in 2010, the Russian president said on Saturday.
"There is an agreement that we will be participating in the preparation of the summit on the nuclear security, which will be held in Washington [D.C.] in 2010," President Dmitry Medvedev said at a news conference following the G20 summit in Pittsburgh.
Woman beats daughter to death for not reciting poem
By IANS,
Beijing : A Chinese woman is suspected of beating her three-year-old daughter to death for not being able to recite a poem, a media report said Wednesday.
The woman told the police in Jiashan, Zhejiang province, March 30 that her daughter died from a fall the night before. However, a medical examination revealed injuries on the girl's face and hands, China Daily reported.
She later confessed to investigators that she had beaten up her daughter for failing to recite the poem "Thoughts on a Still Night" by ancient Chinese poet Li Bai.
Mummy found abandoned in Peru’s capital
By IANS/EFE,
Lima : A mummy, apparently of a young woman, was abandoned on a Lima street along with ancient ceramic artifacts, a forensic expert told Peruvian media.
Flat seized from Italian mafia to become kids’ home
By IANS,
By AKI,
Rome: Authorities in the Italian capital are converting an apartment that belonged to a mafia boss into a shelter for vulnerable children, officials said.
British supermarket launches dental service
By Venkata Vemuri, IANS,
London : Mary Gilfoyle's teeth were troubling her and her NHS dentist wouldn't see her for another two days. She braved the pain and went shopping, where she had a surprise in store.
A freshly enclosed section of the Sainsbury's supermarket in Greater Manchester drew her attention. She went inside and entered Britain's first ever supermarket dentistry. By the time she checked out, the 51-year-old's toothache was gone and she had to pay much less than at her NHS surgery.
Russia terms anti-Iran US sanctions as ‘illegitimate’
By IANS,
Moscow : Russia Tuesday dismissed the US sanctions against Iran as "illegitimate", Xinhua reported.
The unilateral sanctions have no legal ground and will destroy...
Myth: Video games sharpen brain
By IANS,
Washington: That playing video games makes the brain smarter and improves concentration might be a myth fostered by a host of studies.
Macpherson panned for advocating rhino remedy
By IANS,
Melbourne : Australian model Elle Macpherson has been criticised by animal rights groups for advocating the use of powdered rhino horn, a traditional Chinese medicine remedy which is banned worldwide by the Convention on Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
Asked in an interview why Macpherson takes powdered rhino horn, she replied, "Put it this way, (it) works for me".
She went on to say that the rhino horn tasted "a little bit like crushed bone and fungus in a capsule…" but it "does the job though".
US places India, China on IPR watch list
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : The US has placed India, China and 10 others on its Priority Watch List of trading partners that do not provide an adequate level of intellectual property rights (IPR) protection or enforcement.
Besides India and China, Russia, Algeria, Argentina, Canada, Chile, Indonesia, Israel, Pakistan, Thailand, and Venezuela have been placed on the Priority Watch List and "will be the subject of particularly intense engagement through bilateral discussion during the coming year".
Environment comes lowest in Chinese ‘comfort’ survey
By Xinhua
Beijing : Environment is one aspect of life the average Chinese is most unsatisfied with for the third year running, according to a "comfort survey" conducted by a state-run magazine.
Respondents gave 56.6 out of 100 points to the environment, grading it the lowest of the 11-point "xiaokang or moderate prosperity index".
Happiness with 79.6 points has been graded highest on a scale, which marks 60 as the minimum satisfaction level.
DPRK Warns of US-RoK Complicity
By Prensa Latina,
Pyongyang : The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) warned on Wednesday of the complicity between the United States and the Republic of Korea against it.
Rodong Sinmun, the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of the DPRK, cited a US project approved by Congress in September to strengthen defense cooperation with Seoul in the field.
According to the paper, the Washington's proposal hides the sinister intention to complete preparations for the second Korean war and strengthen the military alliance with South Korea.
US jobless rate down, private sector weak
By DPA,
Washington : The US jobless rate fell to 9.7 percent as the economy added 431,000 jobs in May, but the vast majority were temporary government hires and the private sector remains extremely weak, according to Labour Department figures released Friday.
The private sector added just 41,000 jobs in May, the department said in a report that disappointed markets. The government accounted for 390,000 net jobs, with staffing for the census, a population count that takes place every 10 years, adding 411,000 people.
Jaguar Land Rover gets 170-mn pound loan from GE Capital
By IANS,
London: GE Capital Monday signed an agreement with Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), the UK-based subsidiary of India's Tata Motors, to provide a working capital facility of up to 170 million pounds (over Rs.1,300 crore) for a five-year term.
In a statement, GE said the facility represented "an innovative structure" to finance JLR finished vehicle stocks between the points of production and onward sale to dealers on a revolving basis.
NY marks 66th anniversary of Pearl Harbor attack
By Xinhua
New York : New York City marked the 66th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii with a flyover of the Statue of Liberty and dropping of 66 roses on Friday.
The Skytypers of New York, the Antique Airplane Club and the Bayport Aerodrome Society took off in vintage aircraft from Republic Airport in Farmingdale at noon and flew to New York Harbor, where they dropped 66 roses over the Statue of Liberty at 12:55 p.m. (1755 GMT) -- the time the attack started, eastern standard time.
Multitaskers can drive well and chat on phone
By IANS,
Washington : A minority of people with an extraordinary ability to multitask can drive safely while chatting on their mobile phone,
unlike the other 97.5 percent, says a new study.
These individuals - described by the researchers as "supertaskers" - constitute only 2.5 percent of the population.
They are so named because they can handle two things simultaneously, chat on their mobile phone while operating a driving simulator without noticeable impairment.
Dozens of US Communities in Danger
By Prensa Latina,
Washington : Dozens of communities in the US Middle West are still in danger of flooding, because of the overflows of the Mississippi River and affluents due to the rains of the last two weeks.
The overflows of the Mississippi River left 24 dead and forced the authorities to evacuate 35,000 people, as much as the waters started to rise and threatened to cover several towns in the states of Illinois, Iowa and Missouri.
Thousands of families were forced to leave their homes and found their dwellings destroyed when they came back, together with their belongings.
10 killed in Chile prison blaze
By EFE,
Santiago : At least 10 people have died in a massive fire at a prison in Chile, officials said.
The incident took place in the Colina II prison Sunday, some 35 km north of Santiago.
The police said the fire broke out after a stove was knocked over during a brawl between two groups of inmates. Several inmates were also injured in the incident.
The prison houses about 3,000 inmates.
Firefighters rushed to the prison after the incident.
SADC says Zimbabwe impasse over, MDC calls claims malicious
By DPA,
Pretoria/Brussels : Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) Tuesday blasted as "malicious" assurances given by southern African leaders at the end of a 12-hour summit that the party had agreed to join President Robert Mugabe in a power-sharing government.
"It's completely malicious," a spokesman for MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai told DPA after South African President Kgalema Motlanthe told reporters that Zimbabwe's four-month-long political impasse had been resolved.
Death toll rises to 24 in Colombia goldmine collapse
Bogota, (DPA) The death toll in the collapse of a pit where miners were digging for gold was up to 24, Colombian authorities said.
Another 28 miners were reported injured in the rockslide Saturday at the illegal gold mine near Suarez in southwestern Colombia.
Rescue crews digging with heavy equipment through tons of debris had recovered 21 bodies by Sunday evening, with three more miners missing and presumed dead.
Indonesia backs Sharia law, poll shows
By IINA,
Jakarta : A majority of Indonesians would like to see Sharia law implemented in their country, a new poll shows. The poll of 8,000 people in the world's most populous Muslim country, home to 200 million Muslims, found that 52 per cent favored some form of Islamic legal code, such as religious arbitration in family disputes. Asked if women should be made to wear a head scarf 45 per cent said yes, while 40 per cent favored chopping off the hands of thieves.
Poland, US sign missile shield pact
By Xinhua,
Warsaw : US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her Polish counterpart Radoslaw Sikorski Wednesday signed an agreement to deploy a global missile shield in this East European country.
The Polish and US negotiators reached the deal last Thursday. Both sides negotiated the deal for the past 18 months.
According to the plan, the US would place 10 interceptor missiles in northern Poland by 2011-2013 to protect the US and Europe from possible future attacks from what it calls "rogue" states such as Iran.
N. Korea to discuss sale of unused nuclear rods to S. Korea
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : For the first time since South Korea's conservative government came to power, an official delegation will visit North Korea to discuss the sale of unspent nuclear fuel rods, Yonhap reported on Tuesday.
The visit is part of talks involving six countries - the two Koreas, the U.S., Russia, China and Japan - under a deal providing fuel and economic incentives to North Korea in exchange for Pyongyang giving details of its nuclear program and disabling its atomic facilities. The process recently came to a halt amid diplomatic wrangling.
About 13 mn women have abortion every year in China
By Xinhua,
Beijing : There are about 13 million abortions performed every year in China and inadequate knowledge about contraception among women is blamed for this high rate of pregnancy terminations, the China Daily reported Thursday.
Nearly half of the women who had abortions had not used any form of contraception, Wu Shangchun, divisional director of China's National Population and Family Planning Commission's technology research centre, was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Cancer-causing chemical in China chili products
By IANS,
Beijing: A cancer-causing industrial dye has been found in chili paste and red chili powder products in China, a trade watchdog has said.
‘Politics hampers economic cooperation in South Asia’
By Indo-Asian News Service
Dhaka: India has welcomed the growing opportunities of economic cooperation among South Asian nations and hopes these would help depart from "sterile patterns" of relationships hampered by "political factors."
For this to accelerate and succeed, it was necessary that political parties resolve their problems mutually by dialogue and discussion rather than allow "external intervention or pressure", India's Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon said here Wednesday.
OAS expresses support for Bolivia’s territorial integrity
By IANS,
Washington : The Organization of American States (OAS) has expressed support for Bolivia's territorial integrity and called for a dialogue in the deeply divided nation ahead of an autonomy referendum this weekend in the eastern province of Santa Cruz.
The OAS, which adopted a resolution late Friday after seven hours of intense talks, however, did not denounce the holding of the referendum as Bolivian President Evo Morales had demanded, EFE news agency reported Sunday.
11 killed in US floods
By DPA,
Washington : At least 11 people were killed in the US state of Tennessee over the weekend after torrential rains led to heavy flooding, broadcaster CNN reported Monday.
Thousands of people had to flee their homes, while hotels and nursing homes were evacuated.
Rapidly moving water washed over roads and parking lots, leading to the shutdown of several highway stretches. Some drivers had to be rescued by firefighters after rising water trapped them in their cars.
Over 100 injured in violent clashes in S Korea over U.S. beef imports
By Xinhua,
Seoul : Thousands of protesters, who opposed U.S. beef imports into South Korea, clashed violently with riot police in downtown Seoul until early Sunday morning, leaving over 100 people injured.
In the first weekend rally after Seoul implemented its agreement with Washington to resume U.S. beef imports, about 15,000 protesters gathered around Seoul City Hall Saturday night and marched towards the presidential office, Yonhap news agency reported.
Global warming likely to impact rainfall patterns
By IANS,
Washington: Climate models project that the global average temperature will rise about 1 degree C by mid-century, if we continue with business as usual and emit greenhouse gases.
The global average, though, does not tell us anything about what will happen to regional climates.
Pro-Russian protesters occupy TV station in Ukraine
Kiev ; Hundreds of pro-Russian protesters stormed and occupied a regional television station building in Ukraine's eastern city of Donetsk Sunday afternoon, the media...
Hope amid the ruins of China’s quake disaster
By Zhou Yan, Xinhua,
Beijing : President Hu Jintao flew to quake-ravaged Sichuan Province early on Friday, more than 80 hours after the most destructive earthquake in new China killed nearly 20,000 people there.
This shows China's top leadership has not given up hope, although the "golden 72 hours" for survival defined by many experts is over.
"If only there is the slightest hope, we will spare no effort; if only there is one survivor in the debris, we will never give up," Premier Wen Jiabao said over the debris of a collapsed school building where hundreds were buried.
Tata-owned Corus to axe 400 jobs
By IANS,
London : Corus, owned by the Tata Steel Group, has announced plans to cut 400 jobs at its distribution arm, saying it had been operating in a "volatile and fluctuating" market.
The proposed job losses will be spread across Britain, including 100 in the West Midlands, nearly 100 in North Wales, 50 in South Wales and 50 in Leeds, the steel giant said Thursday.
Dragonflies may provide alert system for water pollution
By DPA,
Singapore : Dragonfly young could soon be the aquatic version of the canary in a coalmine, a researcher said in a published report Sunday.
Just as the singing birds were used by miners to warn them of toxic air, young dragonflies that live in reservoirs and ponds hold the potential of alerting humans to water pollution, The Straits Times said.
Tunis museum attack: Moroccan accused demands house arrest
Milan: Lawyers for Abdelmajid Touil, who was arrested in Italy over the March 18 attack on the Bardo Museum in Tunisia, have asked for...
Tibet to maintain opening- Up strategy
By Xinhua,
Lhasa : Tibet will continue to open to the world, an official of the southwest China autonomous region said.
"Tibet will maintain the opening-up policy as usual. Organizations and individuals from all over the world are always welcome to invest and carry out cooperation here if they have goodwill and sincerity," Ju Jianhua, director with the region's foreign affairs office, told a symposium on Friday.
"But we resolutely oppose activities running counter to the claimed purposes of charity and public welfare under the disguise of joint cooperation," he stressed.
Japan, China agree to promote bilateral ties, resolve dispute
By KUNA,
Tokyo : Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao vowed Wednesday to promote bilateral strategic, mutually beneficial relations, with holding regular summits and either of the two countries' leaders visiting the other country every year.
During their summit meeting here, the two leaders also agreed to resolve a long-running dispute over energy rights in the East China Sea and to make the sea "a sea of peace, cooperation and friendship," according to a joint statement issued after the talks.
Hillary Clinton’s confirmation as top US diplomat delayed
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : Hours after Barack Obama's inauguration, the Senate swiftly approved six members of the new president's cabinet, but the confirmation of Hillary Clinton as secretary of state was delayed by a day on a senator's objection.
The Senate confirmed all six with a single voice vote a little more than three hours after Obama was sworn in to give his administration a head start, but a vote on Hillary Clinton was put off with Republican John Cornyn objecting to the unanimous vote.
Penelope, Javier to rebuild schools in Haiti
By IANS,
London : Hollywood couple Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem are digging deep to help the victims of earthquake-ravaged Haiti. They've each promised to donate $50,000-a-year until 2015 to rebuild the country's schools.
The Spanish stars joined British writer-director Paul Haggis at his Los Angeles home, Sunday, when he hosted a celebrity brunch for his charitable organisation Artists for Peace and Justice to raise funds for Haiti, reported hollywood.com.
EU’s new anti-terror programme to focus on Afghanistan, Pakistan
By IANS,
Brussels : The European Commission Friday announced a new three-year programme to fight terrorism, drug trafficking and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction in Southeast Asia and Africa.
Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Sahel region in Africa will be the priority areas for the European Union's (EU) 2009-2011 anti-terrorism programme, the EuAsiaNews reported.
Blair gives ‘full support’ to Brown in Britain’s leadership change
By DPA
London : Outgoing British Prime Minister Tony Blair Friday gave his "full support" to Gordon Brown, his likely successor, saying he was certain that Brown would make a "great prime minister."
Approval rating for Fukuda Cabinet rises
By Xinhua,
Tokyo : The approval rating for Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda's Cabinet rose sharply to 31.5 percent following the Cabinet reshuffle, an opinion poll conducted by Kyodo News on Friday and Saturday showed.
In the major Japanese news organization's last such poll in July, the rate was 26.8 percent.
Japanese media said the rise in support rate showed the public's recognition of the new lineup as well as Fukuda's decision to make a change.
Foreign journalists kidnapped in Somalia: Reports
By DPA,
Nairobi : A Canadian journalist and an Australian photographer are believed to have been kidnapped in conflict-ridden Somalia after failing to return to their hotel in the capital city Mogadishu.
Hotel officials told the BBC that the pair - identified as Australian Nigel Brennan and Canadian Amanda Lindhout - were due to return to the hotel by midday Saturday but did not show up.
"It is (clear) that they were kidnapped because their schedule was to come back to the hotel before 12 noon and we don't have their whereabouts," hotel owner Abdifatah Ajos Sanura told the BBC.
Schoolchildren tell Latvian government how to tackle crisis
By DPA,
Riga : Latvia's government is not short of advice, with criticism coming from such heavyweight institutions as the IMF and EU - but also from the country's own kids.
One hundred schoolchildren were asked their political opinions by the Fazer bakery company Wednesday, and the results were not flattering for those in power.
Official: EU may send troops to DRC
By Xinhua,
Marseille, France : The European Union would not rule out the possiblity to send troops to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to help the UN to head off the worsened conflict between rebels and government forces, EU officials said here on Monday.
Gas poisoning kills 12 in China
By Xinhua
Urumqi(China) : At least 12 people were killed and two others rendered sick in a gas poisoning incident in northwestern China.
Authorities said the accident took place Wednesday inside a tent at a forest farm in Bachu county in China's northwestern Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
The victims were workers who were digging licorice root, a medicinal herb used in traditional Chinese medicine for curing ailments such as infection of upper respiratory tract and gastric disorders, authorities said.
UNHCR does not have funds to put refugee children in school
New Delhi : Regretting the fact the children of refugee families are forced to work, UNHCR spokesperson Melissa Fleming said the UN body...
Protests mount as BBC invites anti-immigration leader
By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS,
London : Anti-racist campaigners prepared to stage a demonstration outside the television studios of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Thursday over its controversial plans to host the leader of an anti-immigration party on a popular current affairs show.
Russian nightclub fire toll reaches 110
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow/Perm: The toll in the deadly fire at a nightclub in the Russian Urals city of Perm has risen to 110, authorities said Sunday.
"As of 00:40 a.m. Moscow time, the number of victims of the fire in the Lame Horse club has reached 110," Perm Region emergencies services said on their website.
A list of the dead identified by names and birth dates is published on the website, but one of the victims is identified only by name.
Russia's Health Minister Tatyana Golikova, who returned from Perm to Moscow early Sunday, said there had been 109 deaths.
British Muslims congratulate Obama on election
By IRNA,
London : The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) has sent a congratulatory letter to US Ambassador to London Robert Tuttle, following the victory of Democrat Senator Barack Obama in the country's presidential elections.
"I take this opportunity to congratulate you and your fellow citizens in crossing this historic threshold," MCB secretary general Abdul Bari said.
"The election of Senator Obama to be your country's 44th President has been hugely symbolic and will no doubt be a
cornerstone of inspiration for people well beyond the shores of the USA," Bari said.
Brazilian finance minister upbeat about economy
By IANS,
Rio de Janeiro : The Brazilian economy will resume growth from November, and will end on a positive note this year, said Finance Minister Guido Mantega Wednesday.
Bethlehem names street in Putin’s honour
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Amman (Jordan) : Russian President Vladimir Putin said he was surprised when told that a street in Bethlehem was named in his honour.
China, Japan, South Korea summit to talk global meltdown
By Xinhua,
Fukuoka(Japan) : Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao Saturday met South Korean President Lee Myung-bak ahead of a trilateral summit, which would also see Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso participating, to work out a coordinated strategy against the global financial meltdown.
Wen, who arrived here Saturday morning, said he attached great importance to the trilateral talks exploring how China, Japan and South Korea can work together to overcome the global financial crisis.
Germany grants asylum to 50 Iranian dissidents
By DPA,
Berlin: Germany has granted asylum to 50 Iranian citizens who fled their country after the so-called "Green Revolution" protests that followed last year's presidential elections, the Interior Ministry said Saturday.
A spokesman for the ministry, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed a report in the Spiegel news magazine and said that 12 of the asylum seekers have already arrived in the country. Another 26 have been approved, while the remainder still have to be processed.
5.7-magnitude quake rattles southern Mexico
By SPA
Mexico : A moderate earthquake shook southern Mexico on Thursday, without immediate
reports of significant damage or injuries, AP reported.
The 5.7-magnitude quake struck at 5:01 p.m. local time (2301 GMT) and was centered offshore, 48 miles (78 kilometers) southwest of the city of Mapastepec in Chiapas state, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
A second quake with a magnitude of 4.7 hit the same area about 14 minutes later, the survey said.
Spain’s king pays surprise visit to troops in Afghanistan
Herat (Afghanistan), Jan 1 (IANS) Spain's King Juan Carlos made an unannounced visit to Spanish troops serving in Afghanistan as part of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force, EFE news agency reported Tuesday.
The monarch arrived here Monday aboard a Hercules transport plane from Kuwait, accompanied by Spanish Defence Minister Jose Antonio Alonso and officials of the military.
Officials said the journey was kept secret for security reasons. Juan Carlos will turn 70 on Jan 5.
EU agrees to lift ‘symbolic’ sanctions on Cuba
By DPA,
Brussels : European Union foreign ministers agreed late Thursday to lift sanctions on Cuba, diplomats said.
The sanctions, imposed in 2003 but suspended in 2005, are largely symbolic. They include limits on high-level government visits and the role of EU diplomats in Cuba's cultural events.
But the move is nevertheless expected to place Brussels and Washington on a collision course.
China upbeat about relations with Japan
By Xinhua
Beijing : Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao held talks with his visiting Japanese counterpart Yasuo Fukuda Friday morning with both emphasizing that the two countries have entered into a phase of substantive bilateral relations.
During their talks, Wen and Fukuda touched upon the assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto Thursday and expressed their strong opposition to terrorism.
Embattled Nepal vice president defends himself in language war
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : Unable to attend office for fear of his safety and facing a legal wrangle over taking the oath of office in Hindi, Nepal's Vice President Parmanand Jha has finally defended himself, saying he was a nationalist and had the nation's interests at heart.
New Transneft head against Siberia pipeline project speedup
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : The new head of Transneft, the company managing the construction of an oil pipeline from East Siberia to the Pacific Ocean, is opposed to the speedup of the project, a business daily said on Monday.
Maoists ignore Nepal government’s call for talks, continue stir
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : Nepal's former Maoist guerrillas Friday kept up their siege on the heart of the government in the capital for the second consecutive day, ignoring a plea by beleaguered Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal to call off the stir and open talks.
The coalition government deployed nearly 10,000 Armed Police Force personnel in riot gear to secure Singha Durbar, the seat of the government where the Prime Minister's Office and nearly a dozen major ministries are located.
South Ossetian president sacks PM, dissolves cabinet
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity Tuesday sacked the country's prime minister and dissolved the cabinet, officials said.
South Ossetia's communications ministry cited poor health as the reason for the dismissal of Aslanbek Bulatsev, who has been sick for a long time and repeatedly sought to resign.
He had led the South Ossetian government since October 2008.
Putin praises Russian-German relations
By RIA Novosti
Novo-Ogaryovo : Russia's outgoing president praised Russian-German relations Saturday at a meeting with the German chancellor.
"I am pleased to note that we have worked well in the past years - both with the previous government and with yours," Vladimir Putin told Angela Merkel, adding that trade in the last six years grew 250% to reach over $50 billion.
"Political contacts are regular, relations between public organizations are good, humanitarian and cultural relations are constantly developing," he said.
Two killed in airplane crash in Argentina
By IANS
Buenos Aires : A flight instructor and his student were killed when the aircraft in which they were travelling crashed in the Corrientes province for unknown reasons, the EFE news agency reported.
The accident occurred Friday in the town of Mercedes, some 1,000 km north of Buenos Aires, when their aircraft plunged into a field, just meters away from a ranch.
The victims were identified as Reinaldo Gallo, 47, and Mario Valentin de la Rosa, who was accompanying his instructor on a training flight.
Five sailors missing after Chinese boat sinks near Korea -agency
By RIA Novosti
Seoul : Five sailors from a Chinese fishing boat that collided with a South Korean cargo vessel on Saturday morning are missing, Seoul's Yonhap news agency reported.
The agency cited local coast guards as saying two sailors were rescued by the cargo ship after the accident, 370 km (230 miles) southwest of the South Korean island of Mara.
The nationality of the missing sailors has not been announced.
The Korean freighter was on its way to Singapore carrying 6,000 metric tons of steel, the agency said.
Qantas, SIA Seek Removal Of Curfew Hours At Sydney Airport
By Bernama,
Melbourne : Qantas and Singapore Airlines are seeking for the removal of the curfew hours from 11pm to 6am at the Sydney Airport to allow flights throughout the night.
The two airlines are lobbying the Australian government for the change, saying a cap of 80 flights an hour, and the curfew were restricting growth at the airport, the Australian Associated Press reported.
Both argue that quieter planes make it possible to scrap the night curfew, with Qantas saying jets should be allowed to land but not take off.
271,000 Mexicans slip into poverty in US
By IANS/EFE,
Mexico City : About 271,000 Mexican immigrants have slipped into poverty in the US, Spanish banking giant BBVA said in a report.
It said between the fourth quarter of 2008 and the same period last year, "the number of workers of Mexican origin with jobs decreased by approximately 560,000".
For that reason, the number of workers of Mexican origin who are currently unemployed increased to about 1.8 million, "of whom around 51 percent are immigrants", according to the report Saturday.
Iran, US claim progress in latest round of n-talks
Vienna: Iran and six world powers are making progress in the latest round of talks over Iran's long-disputed nuclear programme, said top diplomats of...
UN decries sentencing of Chinese dissident
By DPA,
New York : The human rights commissioner of the UN Friday expressed concern about the 11-year prison term handed down to a prominent Chinese dissident.
"The conviction and extremely harsh sentencing of Liu Xiabo mark a further severe restriction on the scope of freedom of expression in China," UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said in a statement.
Pillay called the sentencing the latest example of a crackdown on human rights in China.
Ukraine concludes peacekeepers rotation in Kosovo
By RIA Novosti,
Kiev : Ukrainian peacekeepers serving as part of a joint Polish-Ukraine battalion in Kosovo will end their tour of duty Monday and will be replaced by a new rotation, the defense ministry said.
Ukrainian peacekeeping units have been in Kosovo since September 1, 1999. At least 180 Ukrainian troops from UkrPolBat of NATO-led KFOR's East multinational tactical group conduct regular rotations every year.
"A Boeing-737 plane with 80 peacekeepers on board flew this morning from Boryspil airport in Kiev to Pristina," the statement said.
I am not working on Kashmir: Holbrooke
By IANS,
Washington: Richard Holbrooke, US Special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, says he is not working on the Kashmir issue even as he keeps India closely informed of his effort in the region where "India is hugely important factor."
"Let me be very clear. I am not working on that problem," he said at an event hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington think tank, when asked by a Pakistani journalist if the Obama administration was serious about appointing an adviser to resolve the Kashmir issue.
‘BBC controlled by white cultural elite’
By Dipankar De Sarkar, IANS,
London : A senior Indian-origin director at the BBC has accused the corporation of packing the television screen with black and Asian faces while reserving positions of “real power” for a white cultural elite.`
Sikhs need not remove turbans at US airports
By Arun Kumar, IANS
Washington : Sikh air passengers will no longer have to remove their turbans at US screening checkpoints if doing so makes them uncomfortable under new guidelines coming into force Oct 27.
The new Transportation Security Administration (TSA) guidelines announced Tuesday give airport screeners the option to pat down headwear at the metal detector if a passenger does not want to remove it for personal reasons.
Medvedev calls for tightened security after Moscow blasts
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
demanded tightened security across the country after the Monday morning bomb blasts in the Moscow subway.
"It is difficult to prevent such terrorist attacks and to provide security on transport," the president said. "It is necessary to tighten what we do, to look at the problem on a national scale, not only relating to a certain populated area but on a national scale. Obviously, what we have done before is not enough."
Angola Grateful to Cuban People
By Prensa Latina
Luanda : Angolan media headlined Wednesday the words of National Assembly President Roberto de Almeida expressing the most sincere thanks to Cuba for all the blood shed in the struggle for the sovereignty and independence of this African country.
During an act organized by the Cuban Embassy in Angola on the eve of the 49th anniversary of the triumph of the revolution, De Almeida declared that the support of Cubans in crucial moments in the history of Angola has been glorious, and expressed deep gratitude to the Caribbean island.
Jobless Indian American kills wife, kids, self
By IANS,
Los Angeles : A 45-year-old Indian American, who lost his hight-profile job to the global financial meltdown, has killed his wife, mother-in-law and three children before taking his own life, the Los Angeles Times reported Tuesday.
Karthik Rajaram, aged 45, shot the five members of his family dead and committed suicide in the gated community of Porter Ranch in the northwest San Fernando Valley, the report quoted police as saying.
China to launch traffic safety campaign
By IANS,
Beijing : China plans to launch a nationwide campaign on traffic safety following a series of fatal accidents in the country.
IAF’s C-130 leaves for Nepal with NDRF team
New Delhi: An IAF C-130 aircraft left for Nepal on Saturday with a team of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and relief material...
Eleven percent Americans still think Obama is a Muslim
By IANS,
Washington : One in 10 Americans still believe US President Barack Obama is a Muslim, a poll conducted by the Pew Research Centre found.
The number is only slightly lower than the results of a poll conducted by Pew last October.
Nineteen percent of white evangelical Protestants and 17 percent Republicans are among the most likely to view Obama as a Muslim, according to the poll. While just seven percent of the Democrats say Obama is a Muslim, Pew said on its website Friday.