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Earth more sensitive to CO2 than estimated

By IANS, London : The earth's temperature may be 30 to 50 percent more sensitive to atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) than has previously been estimated, says a new study. The results show that components of the earth's climate system that vary over long timescales - such as land-ice and vegetation - have an important effect on this temperature sensitivity, but these factors are often neglected in current climate models.

Hundreds of Nepal King supporters rally in Kathmandu

By IRNA New Delhi : Hundreds of supporters of Nepalese King Gyanendra waved flags and chanted slogans in the capital Katmandu on Monday to protest against plans to abolish the Himalayan nation's centuries-old Monarchy. It was the first such public demonstration in support of the largely unpopular King since 2006, when he was stripped of his powers and forced to give up his authoritarian rule and restore democracy, Zeenews portal reported here.

Sweden’s IKEA gives $48 mn to help India’s poor

By IANS, United Nations : The United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) initiatives supporting some of the poorest people in India, particularly women and children, are set to receive a $48 million boost from Swedish retail giant IKEA. The donation from the IKEA Social Initiative will go towards projects aimed at improving the health and survival of millions of women and children in some of India's most deprived areas, the agency announced Monday, coinciding with the day of International Corporate Philanthropy.

100 inmates cause riot in Russian prison

Moscow : Around 100 prisoners staged a riot in Russia's Chelyabinsk detention centre Monday night, a report said Tuesday. Riots broke out after a convict...

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

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

Two Japanese ministers defy PM, visit shrine

By IANS, Tokyo : Two Japanese cabinet ministers defied the prime minister Wednesday to visit the Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo on the 67th anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender.

Sunita back home as Atlantis lands safely

By Arun Kumar, IANS

Washington : India American astronaut Sunita Williams finally returned after a 195-day record space odyssey with six fellow astronauts as the Atlantis space shuttle roared safely back to Earth.

Goldstone rejects Israeli allegations of bias Gaza report

By DPA, Jerusalem : The head of the UN fact-finding mission into last winter's Gaza war vehemently rejected Wednesday Israel's allegations against the report he wrote about the three weeks of fighting. Israel has reacted sharply to the critical report by South African justice Richard Goldstone, charging among others that the mission's mandate had been one-sided and its conclusions predetermined.

Burqa ban in Europe – Arresting cultural freedom?

By A. Mirsab, TwoCircles.net, The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has upheld France's controversial law of banning face-covering Muslim veils or burqa from the...

Rights abuse reports surface on Nepal’s festival of lights

By IANS, Kathmandu: As Nepal Friday began celebrating its five-day festival of lights, the merry-making was marred by human rights groups resurrecting tales of unpunished killings and torture and accusing the coalition government of failing to provide justice.

High prices of food, fuel threatening the poor: World Bank

By IANS, Washington : Volatile food and fuel prices are threatening the world's poor, World Bank President Robert Zoellick said Thursday.

South Africa concerned over Suu Kyi’s arrest, urges her release

By IANS, Pretoria : The South African government has urged Myanmar to free National League for Democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi who has been under house arrest for about six years. Suu Kyi, 63, was recently arrested and put on trial for allowing a US national to visit her prison home without permission from the authorities and breaking the terms of her ongoing detention. She was shifted to the Insein Prison in Yangon for the trial. If convicted she may face a fresh jail term. Her previous detention term was due to expire May 27.

NATO to assess implications of missile shield

By Xinhua

Brussels : North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) defence ministers agreed here Thursday to assess the political implications of the US plan to deploy a missile defence shield in Eastern Europe.

Nepal PM begins China visit

By IANS, Kathmandu: Accompanied by three ministers, Nepal's Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal Saturday left for his first official visit to China, pledging it would create a new high in economic ties. During the five-day trip, Nepal will meet Chinese President Hu Jintao, his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao and senior officials of the Communist Party of China. He will also speak on Sino-Nepali relations at Tsinghua University and tour Lhasa, Xian and Shanghai cities.

One killed, several injured in Nepal pre-poll violence

By DPA Kathmandu : One person was killed and several hurt in escalating pre-election violence in Nepal between rival political parties, media reports said Wednesday. A Maoist cadre was killed after clashing with Nepali Congress party activists in Solukhumbhu district, 200 km northeast of the Nepalese capital Kathmandu. The clash erupted after the two rival parties gathered at the same venue to hold election campaign rallies, the independent Kantipur Television reported. At least 25 people, including a senior Nepali Congress leader and Maoist supporters, were injured in the clash.

Japan, Germany express concern on oil market

By DPA, Berlin : Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have expressed concern over the current oil price and called for greater transparency in the oil market. Fukuda, who met the German chancellor in Berlin Sunday, said the rapid rise in oil prices had to be taken seriously and that market signals had to be heeded. There was a need for more investment in exploiting crude reserves and increased efforts to save energy.

Walking speed may reveal old people’s life span

By IANS New York : The speed of walking may reveal how long an elderly person will survive, says a new study by scientists in the US. Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh analysed data of 492 adults aged 65 and older for a decade and found that faster walkers are substantially more likely to outlive the slower ones. The study adjusted for gender, race, age, chronic illness and hospitalisation and found that walking speed appeared to be an independent predictor of longevity.

Greek Communist Supports Cuba

By Prensa Latina, Havana : Greek solidarity with the Cuban people, despite conservative pressure, was ratified Tuesday in statements published here in "Granma" newspaper by communist leader Aleka Papariga, who is visiting this country. The general secretary of the Greek Communist Party, third political force in her country, also stated that Cuba has had historic meaning for Greek activists. Papariga said her compatriots "have continuous fought policies affecting the Cuban people."

Russian state oil firm to buy back shares worth $2 bn

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia's largest state-controlled oil company Rosneft will purchase 68.3 billion rubles ($2 billion) worth of shares from its minority shareholders.

UN commends Sri Lanka on human rights

By DPA, Geneva : The United Nations Human Rights Council adopted Wednesday a resolution which praised the government of Sri Lanka for its commitment to human rights, while condemning the Tamil Tiger rebels. The resolution, tabled by Sri Lanka itself and other nations, including China, Cuba and Egypt, also allows the government to let aid agencies' have access to camps for the internally displaced "as may be appropriate". A bloc of Western nations, whose counter proposal was defeated, wanted full access for aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross and UN agencies.

Toll in Russian nightclub fire rises to 128

By RIA Novosti, Nizhny Novgorod (Russia) : The toll in Saturday's nightclub fire in the Russian Urals city of Perm has reached 128, authorities said Thursday. "The number of fire victims has reached 128. In addition, 103 people remain in hospitals... and another five are receiving out-patient treatment," the regional emergency authorities said. The fire engulfed the Lame Horse nightclub in the west Urals city in the early hours of Saturday after an indoor fireworks display went awry.

Threats against Sarkozy”s son confirmed by French police

By KUNA Paris : Phone threats against Louis Sarkozy, the youngest son of the French president, were confirmed by Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie Tuesday, but she suggested the threats were the work of unbalanced persons. Two individuals are due to appear in court next month for having threatened the 10-year-old son of the president over a period dating from last summer and ending in early January, French weekly "Le Point" reported.

BRICS central banks sign operating agreement on currency reserve pool

Moscow : The chiefs of BRICS central banks have signed an operating agreement on the currency reserve pool, Russia’s central bank said on Tuesday. The...

Tamil MP alleges ‘threat to life’, may flee Sri Lanka

By IANS Colombo : A Tamil human rights activist and member of Sri Lankan parliament Mano Ganeshan said Saturday he was planning to flee the country in a couple of days because of the ever present threat to his life. Ganesan, who heads the Western Province Peoples' Front and the Civil Monitoring Commission (CMC), told IANS that following the drastic reduction in police security since Dec 19, the stage had been set for his "assassination". "I plan to leave the country in two or three days," he said, but declined to give his destination.

Nepali parties file nomination for prime minister

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : Chairman Prachanda of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (CPN-M) was nominated on Thursday to compete for the post of first prime minister of the federal republic of Nepal, local media reported. According to local FM radio station Kantipur, former prime minister Sher Bahadur Deuba from the Nepali Congress (NC) was also filed as another nominee for the prime minister post of the world's youngest republic.

Off to Timbuktu in chocolate-powered lorry

By DPA London : Two British environmentalists have started an adventurous journey to Timbuktu in a lorry powered by bio-fuel made from renewable resources, including recycled chocolate. After starting their journey Friday, engineer Andy Pag and electrician John Grimshaw will drive their Ford lorry through France and Spain. Then they plan to drive across the Sahara, aiming to reach the remote city of Timbuktu, in the west African state of Mali, as their final destination.

Whale songs heard for first time around New York

By IANS, New York : Scientists have, for the first time, recorded the beckoning calls of endangered fin, humpback and North Atlantic right whales in the waters around this US city. "This is an exciting time for New Yorkers. Just think, just miles from the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State building, Carnegie Hall and Times Square, the great whales are singing," said Chris Clark, director of the Bioacoustics research programme at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

Snakes, turtles saved from China’s restaurant tables

By DPA Hong Kong : Police in Hong Kong Wednesday said that they had seized 320 snakes and three crates of snapping turtles bound for restaurant tables in China. The reptiles were found on board a speedboat intercepted in Hong Kong waters early Tuesday near the China Sea boundary. Two men were arrested for smuggling. The boat contained 20 boxes of common rat snakes, an endangered species worth an estimated $13,500. It was the biggest seizure of snakes in Hong Kong in the last two years, a police spokesman said.

Two Russian aid planes to leave for China Monday

By RIA Novosti, Beijing : Another two Russian aircraft will deliver humanitarian aid to southwest China, which was devastated by an earthquake May 12, the Russian Emergencies Ministry said on Monday. The quake, measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale, affected eight provinces, with Sichuan suffering the bulk of the devastation. Around 34,000 people have been confirmed dead, with over 245,000 injured and a further 71,000 unaccounted for.

Bus crash kills 19 in South Africa

By IANS, Johannesburg : At least 19 people were killed and more than 50 others injured Monday when a bus crashed from a bridge in South Africa, media reports said.

Police arrest three over armed robbery

By DPA, Johannesburg/Beijing : South African police said Thursday they had made three arrests in connection with an armed robbery Wednesday at the hotel of foreign journalists covering the World Cup. The journalists - two Portuguese and one from Spain - were held up at gunpoint in a room at a lodge in Magaliesburg, north-west of Johannesburg. The Portuguese team is staying nearby. Nobody was injured during the robbery, but the journalists had cameras, laptops, cell phones, passports and items of clothing stolen.

39 dead, 76 rescued after boat capsizes in central Philippines

By Xinhua, Manila : Thirty-nine people, including three infants, died and 76 others were rescued after a passenger boat capsized Tuesday afternoon in the central Philippines, the police said. The MV Don Dexter Kathleen, with 119 passengers on board, capsized off the country's central province of Masbate when a sudden gust of wind hit the vessel at 1 p.m. local time (0300 GMT),said Reuben Sindac, police director of the province. But it is not clear there are how many crew members on the boat. At least four people are still missing.

White crosses placed on road in Brazil to remember murder victims

By Xinhua, Brasilia : Some 2,000 white crosses were displayed on the streets of Rio de Janeiro Saturday to pay respect to the victims murdered in the northeastern Brazilian state. The crosses, placed on one of the most crowded stretches of the Aterro de Flamengo road, drew attention of many drivers and passersby. "We are in the middle of a social tragedy. The society needs to take action in order to avoid massacre," said Antonio Carlos Costa, president of the non-governmental Rio de Paz (Rio for Peace) organization, which planned the activity.

Canada extends control over oil-rich Arctic region

By IANS, Toronto : With the rapidly disappearing Arctic Ocean ice raising prospects of a scramble for rich seabed resources among neighbouring nations, Canada is flexing its muscle, extending its jurisdiction over the region from 100 nautical miles to 200. Until now, the Arctic Ocean ice bed melted only during summer months, opening the so-called Northwest Passage (from the Pacific to the Atlantic) for shipping activities. But with the Arctic ice-bed melting fast due to global warming, the Northwest Passage could remain open and thus navigable year-long for international shipping.

English Premier League standings

London : Following are the English Premier League standings after Saturday's matches (tabulated under matches played, won, drawn, lost, goals for, goals against,...

Haiti cholera toll rises to 500

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Buenos Aires : At least 500 people have died of cholera in Haiti, the health ministry said.

Former Trinidad PM Basdeo Panday to face retrial

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

Russian official dismisses NATO call to tone down rhetoric

By Xinhua Brussels : Russia's ambassador to NATO dismissed on Friday NATO's call for Russian President Vladimir Putin to avoid "unhelpful rhetoric" at next week's NATO summit. In an interview with the Financial Times published on Friday, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said he hoped the Russian leader would refrain from making anti-West comments.

Woman whose baby died in washing machine admits previous killing

By DPA, Berlin : A German woman whose baby was found dead in a washing machine last year admitted Tuesday to killing another of her children. In October her partner had found the newborn girl dead in the washing machine of their apartment, north west of Leipzig in the state of Saxony-Anhalt. At the time, the 27-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, reportedly told her partner she had suffered a miscarriage and the dead baby had fallen into the toilet. In actual fact the child had been alive.

Kyrgyz violence attempt at ethnic cleansing: Security group

By DPA, Vienna : The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) issued a statement Tuesday that labelled the violent clashes in Kyrgyzstan as an attempt at ethnic cleansing. The wording was contained in a report by OSCE minorities High Commissioner Knut Vollebaek, who also said that the interim government of Roza Otunbayeva was no longer in control, despite her good intentions.

UN mission chief found dead in Haiti

By DPA, New York : The chief of the UN mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), missing since Tuesday's devastating earthquake flattened the mission's headquarters in Port-au-Prince, has been confirmed dead, UN officials announced late Saturday in New York. Hedi Annabi, the Algerian civilian head of MINUSTAH, was found in the rubble. The bodies of his deputy, Luiz Carlos da Costa, and Doug Coates, who served as chief of the UN police force in Haiti, were also recovered from the toppled Christopher Hotel, where the mission was headquartered, the UN said.

30 jailed over Lhasa violence

By Xinhua, Lhasa : A Chinese court here Tuesday sentenced 30 people to jail terms ranging from three years to life for involvement in the March 14 riot in the Tibetan capital. The Intermediate People's Court of the region gave the verdict during an open court session. Two accused, Soi'nam Norbu, a driver with a Lhasa real estate company, and Basang, a monk, were sentenced to life. Soi'nam Norbu, 20, was involved in arson and assault on the police and fire-fighting personnel near the Johkang Monastery March 14, the court said in a release.

Wrap: Medvedev cruises to victory in Russian presidential elections

By RIA Novosti Moscow : With some 70% of the ballots counted in Russia's presidential elections, Kremlin-backed Dmitry Medvedev has gained 69.22%, enough to give him victory in the first round of voting. His nearest rival, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, was on 18.26%. Nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky had 9.96% of the vote and the leader of the tiny, pro-Western Democratic Party, Andrey Bogdanov, - 1.29%, according to Central Election Commission figures. 'DIRECT CONTINUATION' OF PUTIN ERA AHEAD

Suspicious substance in letter for Obama: Secret Service

By IANS, Washington : A US Secret Service spokesman Wednesday said a letter addressed to President Barack Obama contained "suspicious substance", reported Xinhua.

Putin’s daughter not to wed South Korean diplomat’s son

By IANS, Moscow: Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's youngest daughter is not marrying a South Korean diplomat's son, his spokesman has said in response to a recent newspaper report.

NATO chief says membership door open for Georgia, Ukraine

By KUNA Brussels : NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer has said that the summit of the 26-member Alliance in Bucharest this week will not discuss membership of NATO for Ukraine and Georgia. "We are discussing their possible entry in the so-called Membership Action Plan, but the principle of NATO's open door is a sacred principle. NATO's door is open, including for Ukraine and Georgia, if they so wish," he told the Euronews TV here Monday night. Russia is expressing strong opposition to NATO membership of the two former Soviet Republics.

US markets propose stop-trade circuit breaker when stocks dive

By DPA, New York : The major US equity markets want to try a new system that would temporarily halt trading in individual stocks that swing more than 10 percent in value, reports said Tuesday. A six-month pilot programme is being proposed to regulators intended to guard against events like the May 6 "flash crash" that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average suddenly plunge 1,000 points, or about 10 percent, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people close to the matter. An announcement by regulators could come later Tuesday.

Nepal parties call for probe into Maoist bribe tape

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Nepal's largest ruling party is asking for an investigation into a taped telephone conversation that purportedly records a prominent Maoist leader seeking NRS 500 million from a Chinese "friend" to buy MPs ahead of Sunday's prime ministerial election. The ex-rebels say they would conduct a probe themselves.

US Admits Top Secret Guantanamo Jail

By Prensa Latina Washington : For the first time Thursday, the US admitted there is a top secret maximum security jail within Guantanamo base, which is in Cuban territory against the will of its people and authorities. Guantanamo Prison commander Mark Buzby declared the facility Camp 7 is used to isolate alleged leaders of Al-Qaeda and the Afghan resistance. Camp 7 holds 15 people rated as "highly valuable captives," 14 of whom were directly transferred from secret CIA prisons, Buzby told Associated Press.

Nepal Maoists ‘arrest’ five Tibetans for ‘anti-China’ activities

By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS, Kathmandu : Cadres of Nepal's ruling Maoist party have caught five Tibetans and handed them over to local police for allegedly crossing into Nepal illegally in a bid to take part in the "Free Tibet" campaign against the Chinese government. The group, including two Tibetan women, were caught by members of the Young Communist League (YCL), the controversial strong arm of the Maoists that has been frequently known to take the law into its own hands.

NATO a tension-maker: Russian minister

Moscow : Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said that the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) would create tensions with Moscow even if there...

Commemorations in London, Verdun mark World War I anniversary

By DPA, London/Paris : Commemorations to mark Armistice Day, the day guns fell silent at the end of World War I 90 years ago, were held in Britain and France Tuesday. In London, Prime Minister Gordon Brown attended the solemn ceremony and two-minute silence which were led by the three remaining survivors of the Great War, now all well over 100 years old. In France, ceremonies held at Verdun, the major Franco-German battlefield, were led by President Nicolas Sarkozy and attended by Britain's Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall.

Philippine: 32 Passengers On Sunken Ferry Rescued

By Bernama, Manila : At least 32 passengers on the sunken Philippine ferry "MV Princess of the Stars" have been rescued, local police said Monday. Superintendent Eduardo Somera of Quezon Provincial Police Office said so far, five people are confirmed death following another unidentified dead body was washed ashore. It is believed that survivors were on rubber boats, and are bing sent to nearby hospitals to receive treatment, Somera told China's Xinhua news agency on Monday. All the 32 survivors are adults, said Quezon disater relief officials.

Cool, lol, smiley faces – the language of terrorist

By IANS, London : A London court has been hearing how two suspected terrorists messaged each other on the internet, employing the chatty and informal language of teenagers while planning deadly attacks on targets in London and Glasgow. The prosecution told Woolwich Crown Court Kafeel Ahmed, an Indian PhD student in Britain, and Iraqi-born doctor Bilal Abdulla had discussed via internet messaging how they would "start experiments sometime soon" months before the June 2007 attacks.

Japan to seek peace treaty with Russia

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Japan plans to establish cooperation with the new Russian president in all spheres, including work on a peace treaty, a Japanese diplomat said. "No substantial progress has yet been made on the territorial issue, but the two countries' governments continue to make active moves to solve it, and we would like to establish comprehensive cooperation, with a view to signing a peace treaty with Russia's new leadership," said Akira Imamura at the Japanese embassy in Moscow Wednesday.

Pakistan PM forms cabinet committee on Rohingya relief efforts

Islamabad: Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has constituted a federal cabinet committee to suggest measures and relief efforts that Islamabad can undertake for Myanmar's...

Berlin preparing bill to eavesdrop on MPs, lawyers and clerics

By IRNA Berlin : The German government here Wednesday confirmed media reports that it was preparing a legislation which would allow the Federal Crime Office (BKA) to wiretap legislators, lawyers and clerics in specific cases. The spokesman of the German Interior Ministry Stefan Paris said an expert draft has been finalized, however "no decision" has yet been made. The German cabinet has to agree on the final version of the draft, he added. A date for a cabinet meeting to discuss the proposal has not been scheduled yet, according to Paris.

Two dead, hundreds displaced by flooding in Nepal

By DPA, Kathmandu : Incessant monsoon rain across Nepal has left at least two people dead and displaced hundreds, media reports said Saturday. At least five districts in western and southern Nepal were hard hit by flooding following days of heavy rain, Himalayan Times newspaper reported. Two people were swept away in the Jyamire river after heavy monsoon rain caused flash floods in Dailekh district, about 350 km west of the capital Kathmandu, the newspaper said. Hundreds of people have been affected by flash floods and landslides in other parts of the country.

Albanese US Lobby Supports McCain

By Prensa Latina Washington : A US-Albanese lobby named Albanese-US Civic League gave US Republican candidate for president John McCain a million dollars for his support to the independence of Kosovo, said digital website www.serbianna.com on Thursday. "We support McCain because he did everything we asked him to do to support the Kosovo Liberation Army," said Joe DioGuardi, a member of the Albanese-US Civic League.

Indonesia to host UNCAC Conference in Bali

By SPA Jakarta : Indonesia will host the 2nd Conference of Parties to the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) in Bali on January 28-February 1, ANTARA reported. "President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is slated to open the conference," Director for Legal Affairs and International Agreement of the Foreign Ministry Eddy Pratomo said on Friday. He said more than 1,000 representatives from 140 countries consisting of 104 parties and 36 signatories as well as from international institutions and non-governmental organizations would attend the meeting.

Ozone layer recovery to take 40 years: Experts

By IANS, Geneva: The ozone layer outside the Polar regions will take 40 years to recover to its pre-1980 levels, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said Friday.

Three inmates killed in attempted Sri Lanka jailbreak

By IANS, Colombo : At least three prison inmates in Sri Lanka were shot dead by prison guards when they attempted to escape from a jail Friday, police said. According to police spokesman S.S.P. Ranjth Gunasekera, the three victims attempted the jailbreak after stabbing one of the prison guards at a jail in the southern Galle district Friday afternoon. Galle is located 116 km south of capital Colombo. “The wounded prison guard was rushed to the Galle district hospital and the situation has been brought under control,” Gunasekara said.

Maoists shut down ITC’s tobacco factory in Nepal

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : Indian tobacco giant ITC has had little cause for cheer on the 59th Indian Republic Day in Nepal as trade unions backed by the Maoists shut down its tobacco factory in south Nepal, the second such disruption in three months. Surya Nepal, ITC's majority-held joint venture that is also one of Nepal's largest revenue earners, has its tobacco factory in Simra town in frontier district Bara closed since Wednesday with its Maoist-affiliated trade union raising a fresh 15-point demand.

Mexico’s tourism policy threatening environment

By IANS/EFE, Mexico City : Mexico's tourism policy, which promotes development of enormous hotels in remote areas, produces an over-exploitation of natural resources and a "collapse" of the ecosystem, a leading environmentalist has said. The tourism model applied in Mexico "over the last few decades consists of choosing a site and developing it until all the natural resources are gone, so that for years afterwards these areas are basically in a state of collapse," oceanographer Octavio Aburto, who works with US-based Scripps Research Institute, said Tuesday.

South Africa opens Freedom Park for public

By IANS Pretoria : The South African government has opened to visitors a unique Freedom Park that has two heritage themes based on the wall inscriptions of heroes who fought eight great wars and a monument for spiritual enrichment. The Wall of Names is a series of inter-connecting walls inscribed with the names of men and women who died during the eight conflicts that shaped South Africa, BuaNews reported.

At least three dead in high sea collision

By DPA, Tokyo : At least three people were reported killed and 13 missing after a freighter collided with a fishing boat off southern Japan, newspaper report said Sunday. Rescue teams were searching for the missing crewmen after a Hong Kong freighter and a Chinese fishing boat collided Friday on the East China Sea, the Japan Times said. The report said the fishing boat sank immediately after the collision and two members of its crew were rescued.

Indonesia To Host Asia-Pacific Defence Chiefs’ Meeting

By Bernama Jakarta : Indonesia will host an annual meeting of the Chiefs of Defence (CHOD) of Asia-Pacific countries in the tourist resort island of Bali in November 2008, Antara news agency quoted the Indonesian Defence Forces (TNI) spokesman N Rear Marshal Sagom Tamboen as saying here. The annual meeting will discuss various issues relating to military cooperation in Asia-Pacific countries, he said following a meeting between TNI Commander General Djoko Santoso and the chief of the United States Pacific Command (PACOM), Admiral Timothy J Keating, here on Thursday.

Charleston bloodshed: Dodging the real questions?

It is truly appalling to see that a tragedy so conspicuously painted in racial terms reduced and represented as a show of hostility against...

मुजफ्फरनगर में दहाड़े ओवैसी “खैरात नही अब हक़ लेंगे”

<strong विशेष संवाददाता।Twocircles.net https://youtu.be/S3ERAo6SjSU उत्तर प्रदेश चुनाव क़रीब आने के साथ ही यूपी में राजनीति की गरमा-गरमी बढ़ती जा रही हैं। आज किसान यूनियन के...

Madonna turns journo for Israeli newspaper

By IANS, London: Pop diva Madonna has turned reporter for Israel's biggest-selling newspaper Yediot Ahronot. The superstar, an avid follower of the Kabbalah faith, has joined the editorial team of the Israeli publication for a one-off special piece on her religious beliefs, reports contactmusic.com. The "Music" hitmaker's byline appeared on the front page of the newspaper Wednesday, along with an excerpt from her article, "How My Life Changed", which is due to be published in full Friday.

European shares slump

By DPA, Frankfurt : European shares slumped more than two percent in opening trading Wednesday, picking up on a downbeat end to Wall Street and steep falls in Asia. As renewed concerns emerged about the outlook for the global economy and profits, Europe's blue-chip Stoxx 50 began the trading day down 2.5 percent at 2,286 points. The fall was mirrored across key national European markets with shares in London, Frankfurt, Paris and Zurich all sliding by more than two percent.

Ban on Nepal women migrants denounced

By IANS, New York : The Nepali government should revoke its new ban on women under the age of 30 from working in Gulf countries, Human Rights Watch said Tuesday.

Mafia boss caught while vacationing with family

By DPA, Rome : Italian Police Tuesday arrested a fugitive mafia boss while he was on holiday with his wife and daughters in the Sicilian seaside resort of Taormina, media reports said. The 33-year-old Paolo Rosario De Stefano was picked up during a morning raid on a rented holiday home in the northeastern Sicilian town. An alleged boss of the Ndrangheta Calabrian mafia, De Stefano had been on the run since 2005 and appears on the list of Italy's 30 most-wanted fugitives, compiled by the interior ministry.

Even after king’s ouster, torture thrives in Nepal: report

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS

Kathmandu : Though King Gyanendra's 15-month regime, marked by violation of human rights, arbitrary arrests and a media gag ended more than a year ago, torture still continues in Nepal with the Maoist guerrillas outdoing the army, a report said.

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.

Asian origin candidates in Ealing Southall bypoll

By IANS London : Following is a fact-file on the Ealing Southall by-election: Candidates: * Virendra Kumar Sharma, Labour Party * Nigel Bakhai, Liberal Democrats * Tony Lit, Conservative Party * John Sydney Cartwright, The Official Monster Raving Loony Party * Sati Chaggar, English Democrats * Salvinder Singh Dhillon, Respect * Sarah Janet Edwards, Green Party * Kuldeep Singh Grewal, Independent * Yakub Masih, Christian Party * Jasdev Singh Rai, Independent * K.T. Rajan, UK Independence Party * Gulbash Singh, Independent * * * * * The constituency's vital statistics:

1 in 3 Americans would deny illegal immigrants social services

By Arun Kumar, IANS Washington : One-third of Americans want to deny the country's estimated over 12 million illegal immigrants, including some 300,000 Indians, social services like public schooling and emergency room healthcare, a new poll has found. Still a strong bipartisan majority -- 60 percent-favours allowing illegal immigrants, who have not committed crimes to become citizens if they pay fines, learn English and meet other requirements, the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll noted.

Myanmar airlines suspend some international flights again

By Xinhua, Yangon : The Myanmar Airways International (MAI) has temporarily suspended again its international flights to Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur since its last flights to the two destinations in the past week, the leading local news journal Myanmar Times reported in this week's issue. The suspension will last until the end of next month when the air routes would probably be resumed with new aircraft to replace the old one, the airline's marketing department was quoted as saying.

Failing memory in early age points to Alzheimer’s later

By IANS, Washington : Failing memory in early age could be symptomatic of Alzheimer's disease later in life, suggests a new study. Accordingly, clinicians may be able to train such people to remember valuable information better. This research suggests the potential for improved memory training. For example, if you went to the grocery store but left your shopping list at home, you would at least want to remember the milk and bread, if not the jam. Or, when packing for a trip, you would want to remember your wallet and tickets more than your slippers or belt.

Asian man found ‘strapped with bombs’

By IANS, London : British police have rescued an Asian-origin man who was found trapped in a car Sunday, gagged and with gas canisters strapped to him. The man, a reported kidnap victim, was found in a terrified state inside a tiny two-door car in the city of Birmingham. Hostage negotiators tried to make contact with the man throughout the day before he was freed by police. Chief Superintendent Tom Coughlan said that there was a "criminal motive intended to frighten the man," who was bound and had gas canisters the size of beer cans strapped to his abdomen.

Outrage across US as policeman kills black man

Washington: The shooting and killing of an unarmed black man by a white police officer in the US state of South Carolina has sparked...

Russian food aid arrives in DPRK

By Xinhua, Pyongyang : Russia's promised food aid to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) has been shipped to a border city in the DPRK, the official KCNA news agency reported Wednesday. The aid, whose quantity was unspecified in the report, arrived at Sinuiju in the DPRK's northern Phyongan Province Monday. Distributed through the World Food Program at the DPRK, the aid represented the friendship between Russia and the DPRK and was an " encouragement" to the DPRK people, the report said.

World powers to meet again on North Korea issue

By Xinhua, New York : The five permanent members (P5) of the UN Security Council and Japan are scheduled to meet Tuesday afternoon on North Korea's missile launch, Japan's envoy to the UN Yukio Takasu said here Monday. The Japanese diplomat made the statement after closed-door meeting of the UN Security Council here Monday afternoon. "We have a tentative time but it depends on how quickly get instructions (from capitals) but probably in the course of tomorrow afternoon," Takasu said.

Prachanda and Gyanendra become friends – on Facebook

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Once, politics used to create strange bed fellows. Now social networking website Facebook is bringing together even more diverse people. Nepal's last king Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah, who lost his two-century-old crown last year, thanks to a dogged anti-monarchy civil war by the Maoist guerrillas, is now friends with the chief of the former rebels, Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda. That is, on Facebook. The deposed king has five different pages on Facebook run by different people, whose identities remain unknown.

Narcissistic people most likely to emerge as leaders

By IANS, Washington : Highly self-centred and overconfident people, who exaggerate their talents and abilities and lack empathy for others, also tend to take control of leaderless groups. Collectively these traits have been described as narcissism. "Not only did narcissists rate themselves as leaders, which you would expect, but other group members also saw them as the people who really run the group," said Amy Brunell, co-author of the study and assistant professor of psychology at Ohio State University at Newark.

Senior police officer killed in North Caucasus

By RIA Novosti Nalchik : Unidentified attackers have killed a senior police officer in Russia's North Caucasus republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, the regional prosecutor's office said on Sunday. Anatoly Kyarov, who led the fight against organized crime in Kabardino-Balkaria, was killed along with another police officer, and a third officer was wounded when the armed gunmen attacked the car they were travelling late on Saturday in the republic's capital of Nalchik, the prosecutors said. Efforts are under way to find the attackers, the prosecutors said.

Sri Lanka pulls out of truce pact with LTTE

By IANS Colombo : The Sri Lankan government Wednesday said it has pulled out of the Norway-sponsored 2002 ceasefire agreement it signed with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

UN Security Council expansion move gets new impetus

By Arul Louis, United Nations : General Assembly (UNGA) President Sam Kahamba Kutesa and several nations called Wednesday for the creation of a negotiating document...

Recession to hit Britain this year: European Commission

By IANS, London : Recession will hit Britain with its economy expected to shrink in the second half of this year, the European Commission (EC) has warned. If true, the country will be experiencing recession for the first time since the 1990s and will join the ranks of the worst-performing economies of Europe. The Commission has also cut growth forecasts for other European countries like Spain and Germany. However, Britain is ranked among the hardest-hit economies, with an expected fall in output in the third and fourth quarters of the year.

EU summit reignites $150 bn climate row

By DPA, Brussels : The European Union reignited a $150 billion row over the use of greenhouse gas emission credits at a summit in Brussels Thursday, a week after environment ministers had taken the issue off the table. The row further complicates the summit's bid to agree on how EU states should share the cost of fighting global warming, weeks before UN talks on fighting climate change in Copenhagen.

Portuguese travellers drive to China for Shanghai expo

By IANS, Beijing : A group of Portuguese travellers has embarked on a car journey to the 2010 Shanghai World Expo in an effort to promote eco-friendly technology. The four travellers started Saturday from Portugal's Leiria city on a 16,000-km-long journey across 13 countries. The theme of their journey is "So far but so close", Global Times reported Monday. Riding in two sport utility vehicles (SUV) filled with daily necessities, the four travellers will drive along the route taken by Italian traveller Marco Polo during his journey to China in the 13th century.

Colombian navy kills senior rebel leader

By IANS Bogota : The Colombian security forces have killed a senior member of the country's largest insurgency group in a joint operation in Meta province, EFE reported Thursday. Isidro Cardenas Moreno, a senior member of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) was gunned down in Filo Gallineto village in Meta province, the navy said Wednesday. Cardenas was the head of the finance operations of the group's 53rd front. The government constituted a taskforce called Omega to launch joint military offensives against the FARC's central command in the province.

El Salvador records more than 1,000 new HIV cases

By Prensa Latina San Salvador : El Salvador has reported 1,135 new cases of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection or full blown AIDS in the first half of 2007, according to the Latin American chapter of the UN Joint AIDS Programme (UNAIDS). The pandemic since late 20th century has somewhat stabilized in the territory after affecting 0.8 percent of the population, according to UNAIDS representative Herbert Betancourt.

US Congress commends Gandhi’s role in India’s formation

By IANS, Washington: The US Congress has acknowledged Mahatma Gandhi's unique role in the establishment of India and described him as a "man of all times and places". A resolution unanimously passed by the US House of Representatives Thursday congratulates the visionary leadership of Mahatma Gandhi and commends his "unique and lasting role in the establishment of the state of India and its democratic institutions, which will be revered for generations to come".

UN chief to attend n-security summit

United Nations: UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will travel over the weekend to The Hague to attend the 2014 Nuclear Security Summit, a UN spokesperson...

Britain names Gurkha killed in Afghanistan

By IANS, London : The first Gurkha British Army soldier killed in Afghanistan has been named as Yubraj Rai. Rifleman Rai from the 2nd battalion of the Royal Gurkha Rifles was shot by enemy fire near Musa Qala in Helmand province Tuesday. Rai, 28, came from Khotang district in eastern Nepal and joined the British Army in 1999 in the footsteps of his uncle as the family's main earner. The death has evoked a strong response in Britain, where veteran Gurkhas are fighting to be accorded the same settlement rights as other retired soldiers.

Arms exhibit organizer targeted in Santa Claus protest

By IRNA, London : A seasonal protest was being staged in London by the Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT) against one of Britain's biggest exhibition organizers that recently purchased five arms fairs. Demonstrators dressed as Santa Claus and elves carried sacks of dummy weapons instead of presents at the opening of a "Spirit of Christmas Fair" at London's Olympia Centre, owned by Clarion Events.

Police told to protect belongings of Sri Lankan war-displaced

By IANS, Colombo : The Sri Lankan police have been ordered to protect the belongings of thousands of war-displaced civilians who escaped fighting between the troops and Tamil Tigers in the island's north and are now housed in refugee camps, a media report said here Sunday. According to government statistics, nearly 200,000 people have fled the war-zone and come to the government-held areas since the beginning of this year. They have been temporarily housed at refugee camps and welfare centres in the northern Vavuniya town.

NRI groups ask Sonal Shah to clarify VHP ‘links’

By IANS, New York : A group of non-resident organizations and individuals have launched a campaign against Sonal Shah, the only Indian-American in the transition team of the US president-elect Barack Obama, for her alleged links with the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) in India and have asked her to clarify her position. This is the same group of NRI organizations and individuals which had successfully campaigned against the issue of US visa to Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi. His visa was later revoked and has been reported to have been denied on the second application.

Russia opens new facility to dispose of chemical weapons

By DPA, Moscow : Russia opened a new centre Tuesday to speed the dismantling of its chemical weapons arsenal in an effort to abolish its massive stockpiles by 2012. The plant in the Penza region, about 550 km southeast of Moscow, is the sixth built in the last ten years to neutralize Russia's chemical weapons store, the largest in the world. As part of a series of non-proliferation agreements after the end of the Cold War, Russia and its one time foe the US agreed to destroy all their stockpiles.

Wall Street infected by swine-flu worries

By DPA, New York : Major US stock indices fell Monday amid the widening global swine-flu scare, with energy and the travel and hospitality sectors hardest hit. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 51.29 points, or 0.64 percent, to 8,025. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 Index dropped 8.72 points, or 1.01 percent, to 857.51. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index fell 14.88 points, or 0.88 percent, to 1,679.41.

Aid flights to take off for Myanmar

By IRNA, Kuala Lumpur : The World Food Program planes sat on runways in Bangladesh, the United Arab Emirates and Thailand as the organization awaited permission to land from Myanmar's government, said Paul Risley, a spokesman for the organization in Bangkok, Thailand on Thursday. A fourth aircraft sat on the tarmac in Italy, awaiting clearance to deliver 20 tons of relief five days after Cyclone Nargis spawned widespread death and desperation in Myanmar, which was formerly known as Burma.

Roadside stall to meeting Obama – Delhi man goes a long way

By IANS, New Delhi : It's a rags-to-riches story. Sirajuddin Qureshi, who had an humble beginning running a roadside stall in the capital, rose to such heights that he has been invited to meet US President Barack Obama at an entrepreneurship summit this month. Chairman of the Hind Group of Companies and president of the India Islamic Cultural Centre, Qureshi will attend the presidential summit April 26-27 in Washington, an official statement said here Friday.

Sri Lankan president renews call for rebels to surrender

By XINHUA, COLOMBO : Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse on Sunday renewed his call for Tamil Tiger rebels to surrender, the state radio announced here on Sunday. The Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation said Rajapakse told a political rally on Sunday at the central town of Hanguranketha that all facilities would be made available for Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) cadres who want to surrender to government troops. "The whole country has united against terrorism and no one will be able to stop the forward march of the troops," the radio quoted the president as saying.

‘Little time for Bush to get nuclear pact approved’

By IANS, New Delhi : The Bush administration will have very little time to get the bilateral agreement for civil nuclear cooperation with India approved, even if the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) okays nuclear commerce with the country, the head of a prominent American think tank said here Thursday. Speaking at the conference on US-India ties in the Asian context, Edwin Feulner, president of the Heritage Foundation, said the timeline was “tight” for the US administration to approve the bilateral agreement.

100 times more Americans killed in gun violence then by terrorism

By Arun Kumar Washington : Gun violence in America has claimed hundred times more lives than Americans killed through terrorist attacks in a decade,...

3,000 endangered antelopes dead

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Astana : Some 3,200 saiga antelopes have died of unknown causes in Kazakhstan, the emergencies ministry said Saturday. "As of Friday evening it was established that 3,200 saiga antelopes had died in an area of 4,500 hectares," a ministry statement said. It said there was no indication of an outbreak of any disease in the area. The first dead saiga antelopes were discovered May 18. The saiga antelope, listed as an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, inhabits in southern Russia, Kazakhstan and parts of Mongolia.

Would-be immigrants to Britain need hefty bank balances

By IANS, London : British Home Office guidelines for the new points-based immigration system to be introduced from Nov 27 say that prospective immigrants will have to show hefty bank balances up to three months before even applying for their visas. The funds in their banks should be such as to afford expenses for themselves and their families for their first month in Britain. Also, the funds should be in banks for a minimum of three months before applying for visas.

Geologists name new mineral after Kazakh president

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Astana : Kazakh scientists have discovered a new mineral and named it in honour of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, the government said Thursday.

Kenyan president signs new constitution into law

By DPA, Nairobi : Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki Friday signed into law a long-awaited new constitution, weeks after it was passed in a national referendum. A massive crowd gathered to watch the president sign the document, which is part of a reform process aimed at preventing a repeat of the violence that followed disputed presidential elections in December 2007, at a ceremony in the city centre Uhuru Park.

51 interpreters at Seoul summit

By IANS, Seoul : As many as 51 interpreters, including one who speaks Hindi, have been hired to handle the gaggle of languages at the two-day Seoul nuclear summit, a media report said.

US healthcare reform timeline

By IANS, Washington : With the passage of a Senate bill for healthcare reform Thursday, President Barack Obama is hoping to sign his top domestic priority into law before his Jan 21 State of the Union address. Congressional debate on the complicated issue of healthcare reform began in spring and continued into the summer and autumn. Here's how the legislation wended its way through the Congress:

Israeli foreign minister seeks coalition after PM’s resignation

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni held late-night talks with the defense minister as she sought to build a new governing coalition following the prime minister's resignation, national media reported on Monday. Ehud Olmert, 62, resigned on Sunday amid corruption allegations. Livni, aiming to become Israel's first female prime minister since the 1970s, is expected to be asked by President Shimon Peres to form a new government later on Monday, and will have 42 days to do so and avoid early parliamentary elections.

African national critical after freak accident

By IANS, New Delhi : A Nigerian, seriously injured in a freak accident when iron rods jutting out of a truck pierced his body, continued to be in a critical condition Tuesday, doctors said. His friend who was with him at the time is "comparatively stable". "The condition of one of the two victims who was in the driver's seat during the accident is still critical. It was a complicated operation and he had already lost a lot of blood while being rescued. The other victim is comparatively stable," a doctor at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) said.

Social-intelligence video game helps reduce stress

By IANS Montreal : Researchers at a Canadian University have found that playing a social intelligence video game may help reduce stress. The video game 'Matrix' designed by researchers at McGill University at Montreal helped people shift the way they processed social information. The new findings have been published in the October edition of the American Psychological Association's Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. The researchers also conducted several studies and found that it reduced the stress hormone 'cortisol' by 17 percent.

Two Philippine soldiers hurt in clash with communist rebels

By SPA Manila : Two government soldiers were wounded in a clash with communist rebels during a sweep of an eastern Philippine village, an Army spokesman said Friday, according to DPA. The soldiers were on combat operations in Sariaya town in Quezon province, 120 kilometres south of Manila, when they encountered a group of guerrillas. Army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Ernesto Torres said the soldiers were scouring the village of Mamala to make sure that rebels had not re-established a base there after a clash last month.

Venezuela’s president reshuffles cabinet

By Xinhua Caracas : Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has reshuffled his cabinet and named a new vice president of the country. Ramon Carrizales, the housing minister, will replace Jorge Rodriguez as new vice president, Chavez said in a telephonic interview aired Thursday on state television VTV. He said there have been 12 changes in his new cabinet, but did not give details about this cabinet reshuffle.

Spain partly closes air space due to volcanic ash cloud

By DPA, Madrid/Hamburg: Spanish aviation authorities Saturday closed the air space over northern Spain as a cloud of volcanic ash from Iceland arrived in the region. The airports of Santiago de Compostela, La Coruna, Vigo Asturias, Santander, Burgos, Valladolid, Salamanca and Leon were affected by the closure which was set to last until 2 p.m. (1200 GMT), the aviation authority AENA said. The cloud of ash arrived overnight and is affecting part of Portugal as well.

US pledges $10 mn aid for flood-hit Pakistan

By IANS, Islamabad: The US is sending helicopters, boats, bridges and other supplies to flood-hit Pakistan as part of an initial $10 million aid pledge, a media report said. "Our thoughts and prayers are with all those who have lost loved ones or have been displaced from their homes - and we are taking action to help," Geo TV reported quoting US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Sunday. "Our embassy in Islamabad is coordinating closely with Pakistani authorities to support rescue and relief efforts.

Scientist uncovers secret of nerve cell regeneration

By IANS, Washington: Brain researcher Hiroshi Kawabe has uncovered the secret of nerve (brain) cell regeneration. It is the working of a process that permits nerve cells to grow and form complex networks---something had been completely overlooked until now. The study shows that an enzyme controls the structure of the cytoskeleton (cellular skeleton) and ensures that nerve cells can form the tree-like extensions that are necessary for signal transmission in the brain.

US, Russia pledge to work for nuclear-arms control

By DPA

Washington : The United States and Russia will press ahead with talks on possible new cuts in their nuclear arsenals as the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) heads for expiration in 2009, both governments said Tuesday.

Australian PM fears MH17 bodies will never return

Canberra : Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott Wednesday said that the crash site of downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was still not secure and...

Blair believes he can influence Bush on climate change

By DPA

London : British Prime Minister Tony Blair said Wednesday he believes he can persuade US President George W. Bush to agree for the first time to a global target for a "substantial cut" in greenhouse gas emissions.

Sarkozy calls emergency EU meeting over Georgia

By Xinhua, Paris : French President Nicolas Sarkozy has called for an emergency European Union (EU) meeting Sep 1 to discuss the crisis in Georgia. France currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU. The meeting would take place in the Belgium capital Brussels, Sarkozy's office said in a statement Sunday. "This meeting will be dedicated to the Georgian crisis, mainly the position European Union intends to adopt. Aid for Georgia and future relations with Russia would be discussed," the statement said.

35 rebels, 1 soldier killed in fresh Sri Lanka fighting

By SPA, Colombo, Sri Lanka : Government forces attacked Tamil Tiger rebels along Sri Lanka's northern front lines, triggering a series of gunbattles that killed 35 rebels and one soldier, the military said Saturday. The latest fighting broke out in the Jaffna, Vavuniya, Welioya and Mannar regions bordering the rebels' de facto state in the north on Friday, a defense ministry official was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.

Venezuela’s President Chavez mulls oil bank

By Prensa Latina, Caracas : Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has suggested the creation of an international oil bank aimed at ensuring energy security in the face of uncertain and speculative oil prices. The proposed bank could be formed within the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) or failing a consensus in the cartel, by major non-OPEC nations, he said.

Jindal again downplays VP talk, says he is happy where he is

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Louisiana's Indian American Governor Bobby Jindal has once again discounted speculation that John McCain, the likely Republican presidential nominee, may pick him as his running mate, saying he's currently focused on his current job. "The speculation is flattering. I've talked to the senator several times. We've never talked about the topic," Jindal said Sunday on "Face the Nation" on CBS. He was one of a handful of potential candidates who spent Memorial Day weekend at the Sedona, Arizona home of McCain.

40,000-year-old site found in China

By IANS, Beijing : Chinese archaeologists have found a 40,000-year-old settlement site dating back to Stone Age.

Russia Alert on Poland-US Collusion

By Prensa Latina Moscow : Russia awaits a carefully considered decision by Poland on the deployment of United States anti-missile defense system parts in its territory, warned the Kremlin ambassador to NATO, Dmitri Rogozin. The new Russian Federation representative to NATO expressed the hope that the government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk, carefully consider the consequences of placing 10 intercept missiles on Polish soil.

Dutch mother suspected of killing three babies

By DPA, The Hague : A 25-year-old Dutch woman has been arrested on suspicion of killing three of her babies, police said Friday. The woman was detained in the home of her parents in Nij Beets Thursday evening after police found the corpses hidden in three suitcases. It was unclear how the babies, who were born after 2002, had died. The woman told police she had given up the children for adoption soon after their birth, but was unable to provide evidence to back up her claim.

US Federal Reserve cuts discount rate

By DPA Washington : The US central bank has cut its lending rate to banks by a quarter of a percentage point, in a dramatic bid to help financial institutions get cash and bolster an economy hit hard by defaults on home mortgages and a tightening credit market. The Federal Reserve approved the move unanimously in an emergency weekend meeting Sunday, immediately decreasing the so-called discount rate from 3.5 percent to 3.25 percent. It also announced the creation of a lending facility to make short-term loans to financial institutions.

‘Australia should have close relations with Asia’

By IANS, Sydney : Australia needs to get into the habit of talking with Asia as much as with Washington, Foreign Minister Bob Carr said Friday.

Canadian PM favours aggressive immigration policy

By IANS, Toronto : Scotching fears that proposed immigration changes will reduce annual intake of immigrants, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said his government "favours an aggressive immigration policy". Speaking at a Canada-India Foundation gala dinner here Friday night, Harper cited figures to point out how during his tenure the number of immigrants has gone to record levels. "We are bringing in more immigrants than any previous government. You can see this has been an upward trend in the past four decades.
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