UN considers peacekeeping deployment to Somalia
By DPA,
New York : The UN Security Council decided Thursday to send a political mission to Somalia in advance of a peacekeeping operation in the Horn of Africa nation.
South Africa and other African governments have called for peacekeeping troops in Somalia, torn by decades of tribal fighting that had prevented the establishment of a stable government and economic development.
Britain’s home minister fined for mobile use while driving
By Prasun Sonwalkar, IANS
London : Britain's Home Minister Liam Bryne, who earlier held the police portfolio in the department, was Friday penalised for talking on his mobile phone while driving in Birmingham.
Bryne, currently is in charge of immigration issues in the department and interacts with Indian groups campaigning for issues such as the Highly Skilled Migrants Permit, was stopped on July 6 on Birmingham's Tyburn Road.
Boston airport evacuates terminal for suspect bags
By DPA,
Washington : A Boston bomb squad Tuesday was checking out two duffel bags at a cargo terminal at Logan Airport after K-9 units trained to sniff out explosives raised alarm.
Russia-Ukraine gas monitoring deal done: EU
By DPA,
Brussels : Russia and Ukraine have agreed on the details of a monitoring mission designed to ensure that Russian gas destined for the European Union is not siphoned off as it travels through Ukrainian pipelines, officials in Brussels said Friday.
"There is now agreement on the details of the monitoring mission," the European Commission said in a statement.
"It is now imperative that the gas starts to flow to the European Union without any further delay," the EU's executive arm said.
Chinese Premier vows “no casualty” during Tangjiashan quake lake inspection
By Xinhua,
Mianyang, Sichuan : Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao went to oversee the safety of the Tangjiashan quake-formed lake by helicopter on Thursday afternoon.
"Now it's a critical moment for the Tangjiashan quake lake, and the most important thing is to ensure there is no casualty of the people," Wen said.
British Muslim delegation to participate in World Islamic Economic Forum
By NNN-APP,
London : For the sixth consecutive year, the Business and Economics Committee (BEC) of the Muslim Council of Britain will be drawing together a high-powered delegation of leading professionals, thought leaders and community representatives to the World Islamic Economic Forum (the WIEF) to be held next year in Malaysia, it was announced Tuesday.
The WIEF is an annual conference that acts as an international business platform where the business sectors of the Muslim world meet.
US Navy tests laser to shoot down drones
By IANS,
London : Laser beams have been used for the first time in naval warfare to shoot down aircraft.
The weapon, mounted on a warship’s missile, shot down four unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) in secret testing carried out off the California coast, The Daily Telegraph has learnt.
In a joint enterprise between US Navy and Raytheon Missile Systems the technology has now got to the stage where lasers will be deployed on warships as part of their short-range defence.
Russia Paves Way to Caspian Sea Gas Pipe
By Prensa Latina
Moscow : The Russian government approved a cooperation agreement with Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan to build a gas pipe to supply hydrocarbons to Europe from Central Asia through Russia, government sources said on Tuesday.
The gas pipe, which will hug the coast of the Caspian Sea, has been approved by the cabinet of ministers, Cabinet Vice President Sergei Narishkin pointed out.
For his part, Russian President Vladimir Putin asked the members of the executive to boost the project during Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev's upcoming working visit.
Montek on UN climate change financing group
By IANS,
United Nations : Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of India's Planning Commission, is among the 19 members of the high-level advisory group set up by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon seeking to mobilise financing to help developing countries combat climate change.
Police detain seven pro-Tibet protestors near Olympic Village
By DPA,
Beijing : Chinese police has detained seven pro-Tibet protestors who unfurled banners and spoke out about China's human rights abuses in Tibet near the Olympic Village, a Tibetan rights group said.
Five of the protestors, wearing T-shirts that said "Free Tibet" went there on bicycles Monday and two of them chained themselves to the main gate of the China Ethnic Culture Park, said Kate Woznow, campaign director for the New York-based group Students for a Free Tibet.
Thailand holds special parliament session to defuse crisis
By DPA,
Bangkok : Thailand launched a special parliamentary session Sunday to defuse a spiraling political crisis caused by the occupation of Government House - the government's administrative headquarters - by thousands of protesters for the past week.
Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej agreed to a special joint session of both the lower and upper houses of parliament after police failed to oust thousands of anti-government demonstrators from the seat of government Friday.
Militants take hostate 44 peacekeepers in Golan
United Nations: At least 44 peacekeepers have been taken hostage by the militnts in the Golan Heights, a UN spokesperson said Friday.
"The United Nations...
12 killed in China landslide
Beijing: At least 12 people were confirmed dead after their bodies were retrieved from the debris of a landslide that hit China's Yunnan...
Medvedev doubts NATO’s ability to protect Europe
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia's president said on Wednesday that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization is ill-equipped to address the security problems facing Europe.
Tensions between Russia and the Western military bloc have been on the rise in recent years, with Moscow's opposition to NATO's ongoing expansion and U.S. plans to deploy a missile shield in Central Europe.
Myanmar court extends Suu Kyi’s trial by a day
By DPA,
Yangon: A court in Yangon's Insein Prison Monday extended by a day the trial of opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, her two aides and a US national who swam to her lakeside home three months ago.
Defence and prosecution lawyers presented their final arguments Monday in the case against Suu Kyi's two housekeepers, Khin Win and Win Ma Ma, and John William Yettaw, who swam to Suu Kyi's house-cum-prison May 3 and stayed there until May 5.
U.S. promises cannot be trusted – Gorbachev
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Promises made by U.S. leaders cannot be trusted, former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev said in an interview with The Daily Telegraph published on Wednesday.
"The Americans promised that NATO wouldn't move beyond the boundaries of Germany after the Cold War, but now half of central and eastern Europe are members, so what happened to their promises? It shows they cannot be trusted," he said in Paris.
Progress needed in North Korean nuclear talks: ministers
By DPA
Seoul/Jeju : The foreign ministers of China, Japan and South Korea said Sunday that the stalemate in negotiations on North Korea's nuclear programme had to be overcome urgently.
Oil price hike shuts down 100,000 Mexican firms
By Xinhua,
Mexico City : At least 100,000 small companies have been shut down in Mexico due to the soaring oil prices and new tax laws, the Latin American Organization of Small and Medium Companies (Alampyme) has said.
Other factors that contributed to the closer of the small firms included disloyal competition and underground and unfair trade practice, the Alampyme said at a press conference here Thursday.
Sri Lankan workers injured in Indian ship fire
By Xinhua
Colombo : An accidental fire Sunday on an Indian merchant vessel berthed in the Colombo dockyard injured 13 Sri Lankan technical staff, officials said.
U.S. beetle smugglers arrested in Australia
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Two U.S. citizens in their sixties have been arrested in the Australian city of Perth on charges of attempting to smuggle 1,350 beetles out of the country, the West Australian newspaper said on Thursday.
The discovery followed an anonymous phone call to a customs hotline.
Customs officers in Perth International Airport found some 1,000 tiger beetles, a regulated native species banned from export without a permit, in the luggage of a 62 year-old U.S. tourist. The insects were packed in glass vials hidden inside yoghurt containers.
Obama as president will build ‘close strategic ties’ with India
By Parveen Chopra, IANS
New York : Senator Barack Obama, the frontrunner for the Democratic Party's nomination for presidential elections in November, has pledged to "build a close strategic partnership" between US and India if elected.
In an article he has written for India Abroad, the Illinois senator has also committed that he will encourage the active engagement and partnership of the Indian American community in "making the change we seek" in US.
Sri Lanka launches air raid after LTTE attack
By P. Karunakharan, IANS,
Colombo : Sri Lankan jets Wednesday pounded a suspected Tamil Tiger base in the island's north, barely hours after the rebels launched a sea-borne attack on a naval detachment in the north-western island of Mannar leaving killing nine combatants.
The defence ministry said that the air sorties were launched around 7.10 a.m. after observing "intensified activities" by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the Muhamalai forward defence line (FDL) in Jaffna peninsula.
But the damage caused to the rebels was not immediately known.
One killed as violence mars Nepal polls
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS
Kathmandu : One person was killed as violence erupted in several places within hours after polling began in Nepal Thursday to elect a constituent assembly, which is expected to restore peace in a nation racked by a decade-old Maoist insurgency.
A man was run over by the car of a ruling party contestant when he was trying to flee a polling booth in Mahottari district in Nepal's turbulent Terai plains after gunmen began firing indiscriminately, a private TV station said.
Fonseka’s arrest aimed to suppress war crimes: Tamil Canadians
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto : Calling the arrest of former Sri Lankan army chief Sarath Fonseka "the murder of dissent'' by Colombo, Sri Lankan Tamils in Canada have sought immediate international trial of President Mahinda Rajapaksa for war crimes.
"If Rajapaksa can do this to his former chief, what can Tamils expect from his government? These four brothers (President Rajapaksha and his three brothers) will never give anything to Tamils,'' said Canadian Tamil Congress spokesman David Popalapillai here Monday.
World Bank gives $50 mn loan for training minority youth
New Delhi : The World Bank on Friday signed a credit agreement of $50 million with India for education and skill training for minorities...
US stocks rise ahead of monthly unemployment report
By DPA,
New York : US stocks posted modest gains Thursday on the eve of the government's release of its highly anticipated monthly jobs report.
Improve human rights situation, athletes to China
By IANS,
Dharamsala : As many as 127 athletes have appealed to China's President Hu Jintao to find a peaceful solution to the issue of Tibet and improve human rights situation in China.
The athletes, including Croatian high jumper Blanka Vlasic and 110m hurdles world record holder Dayron Robles of Cuba, have urged Hu "to protect the freedom of expression, freedom of religion and the freedom of opinion in your country, including Tibet", an official website of the Tibetan government-in-exile here said Thursday.
China to approve new short-haul aircraft
By IANS,
Beijing : A new generation of short-haul aircraft will be granted production approval soon and enter the market in 2014, a media report said Friday.
Corals evolving to fend off effects of climate change
By IANS,
Sydney : Corals living on the fringes may hold a key clue to the survival of their ecosystems that are facing intensifying pressure from human activities and climate change.
John Pandolfi of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and Ann Budd of the University of Iowa, both professors, have released new evidence showing that the evolutionary action on coral reefs is not in their 'hot spots' - but out on the fringes, where corals struggle to survive.
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...
German FM warns of new Cold War over Georgian conflict
By IRNA,
Berlin : The ongoing Georgian crisis may trigger a new Cold War between the US and Russia, German Foreign Minister Frank- Walter Steinmeier warned in a interview with Saturday's edition of the Duesseldorf-based Rheinischen Post newspaper.
The objective must be to turn the "very fragile ceasefire into a lasting truce," said Steinmeier.
However, there was a still a long way ahead to reach such a durable ceasefire, he added.
The German government warned earlier this week against US-led efforts to isolate Russia over its military action in Georgia.
Gates Foundation, Asian group win UN population prize
By DPA,
New York : The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD) were selected Tuesday winners of the 2010 UN Population Award.
The award has been given out annually to individuals or groups for their outstanding work in population and in improving the health of individuals.
Police: 8 killed in Armenian protests over election results
By SPA
Yerevan, Armenia : Armenian police says eight people were killed and 33 officers injured in clashes between police and protesters angry over alleged election fraud.
According to AP, Police spokesman Sayat Shirinian announced the deaths in a statement Sunday. He did not say whether the eight killed were protesters or police, or give other details.
The president declared a 20-day state of emergency late Saturday following a day of violence between police and some 15,000 demonstrators.
OPEC crude price continues record-breaking climb
By DPA,
Vienna : The price for crude oil produced by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) started the week with a new record high of $108.93, OPEC said Tuesday.
One barrel of crude from OPEC's 13-brand reference basket stood at $108.93 Monday, up $1.18 from Friday, the Vienna-based OPEC secretariat said.
OPEC officials maintain that there are adequate crude supplies and that the current price rally is decoupled from market fundamentals. Hiking up production quotas was not necessary.
Copter crash kills 24 in Freetown
By DPA
Freetown (Sierra Leone) : The crash of a helicopter at Lungi International Airport in Freetown killed all 24 people on board, a local newspaper reported on its website.
Four years on, Russia remembers Beslan school tragedy
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia Monday marked the fourth anniversary of the Beslan school tragedy in which 331 people, including 186 schoolchildren, were killed by separatist militants of Chechnya.
During the memorial, flowers and floral wreaths were laid and candles lit in memory of the deceased. The proceedings started with the ringing of the school bell to mark the exact time when the school was seized.
China warns of Valentine’s Day computer viruses
By Xinhua
Tianjin (China) : China's anti-virus authorities have warned computer users to guard against Valentine's Day computer viruses.
Valentine's Day computer viruses especially "Vbs_Valentin.A" spread chiefly through e-mails or online chat systems such as MSN and QQ, the experts from Tianjin-based China National Computer Virus Emergency Response Centre warned.
Other viruses like "Worm-blebla.B" and "VBS-ILoveyou" infect computers if users open e-mails or attachments disguised as Valentine's Day greetings.
New Rail Service To China To Launch On New Year’s Day
By Bernama,
Hanoi : A railway service from Hanoi to Nanning province of China will be launched on January 1, 2009, according to an announcement by the Vietnam Railway Corporation.
Nguyen Huu Tuyen, Head of the corporation's Transport Business Department, said the train used for the route will have six air-conditioned carriages, each with 40 hard beds and 30 soft beds.
All of these first-class carriages have been provided by China, Vietnam News Agency (VNA) quoted Nguyen as saying.
China quake toll rises to 69,225
By Xinhua,
Beijing : The death toll in the May 12 earthquake in southeast China's Sichuan province and its neighbouring region has risen to 69,225, the State Council information office said Monday.
The number of people missing and injured reached 17,939 and 374,640 respectively, the statement said.
The government has so far spend about $9.4 billion in relief and reconstruction, it said.
The killer quake affected some 24 million people and wreaked havoc over an area of 44,000 square km..
India promises level playing field to US varsities
By Arun Kumar,IANS,
Washington : India has promised a level playing field to top US institutions in a bid to encourage foreign investment in the education sector as New Delhi seeks partnerships with global institutions to provide quality education at home.
"With the expansion of the higher education sector and the needs of Indian students, we need not just to allow education providers in India to grow, but we also need to provide for foreign investment in the education sector," India's Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal said at a press conference here Friday.
One killed, five injured in bomb explosion in Paris
By Xinhua
Paris : At least one person was killed and five others were injured in a parcel bomb explosion in a central Paris building Thursday, the Interior Ministry said.
The explosion took place at a lawyer's office in a building on Boulevard des Malesherbes in the west of the capital Paris, said a ministry statement.
Russian Navy develops mini submarines
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Langkawai (Malaysia) : Russian shipbuilders are developing new "super mini" submarines, the United Shipbuilding Corporation (USC) state holding company said Friday.
Indo-Canadian MP in steamy controversy
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto : Young Indian Canadian MP Ruby Dhalla, listed third on the list of sexiest women politicians in the world by Maxim magazine, is in the centre of a steamy controversy.
Dhalla, who is the MP from the Brampton-Springdale constituency on the outskirts of Toronto, is in a legal battle to stop distribution of DVDs of a Bollywood movie she acted in in 2003 before her election to parliament.
In the film "Kyon Kis Liye", Dhalla is shown in some steamy scenes with the film's producer and co-star Charanjit Sihra.
CPN-M chairman says new Nepali gov’t under his leadership
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : The Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (CPN-M) Chairman Prachanda said Saturday that the new Nepali government will be formed under his leadership.
Speaking at a program in the capital organized by the party to express gratitude to the voters of Kathmandu district constituency-10 where Prachanda was elected for the Constituent Assembly (CA), the CPN-M leader said he will address the masses with new development plans after the government is formed under his leadership.
US identifies citizens fighting for Islamic State
Washington: US intelligence and law enforcement agencies have identified around a dozen of its citizens, who have traveled to the Middle East to join...
Toyota, Mercedes-Benz post record sales in Canada
By IANS,
Toronto : At a time when auto sales are slipping around the world, sales of Toyota and Mercedes-Benz vehicles in Canada are registering a huge jump this year.
Toyota Canada Inc. (TCI) has surpassed its 2007 record sales for the month of October, selling 15,843 Toyota and Lexus cars and trucks - a jump of 9.4 percent over last year's figures.
The Japanese car giant has also already surpassed the record 2007 sales of 201,326 by selling 201,614 cars, with two months still to go this year.
Guru Nair connects Austrians to phone company
By Mehru Jaffer, IANS,
Vienna : When 33-year-old Ramesh Nair talks, Austrians listen, because the choreographer and actor and new mascot of Telering has the answer to all their problems.
Whether on the golf course or at a supermarket, when in doubt Austrians are told to ask the Indian for a solution in all Telering advertisements playing on the radio and television round the clock these days.
US House introduces resolution on India’s Independence Day
Washington : Ami Bera, Co-chair of Congressional Caucus on India and Indian-Americans, has introduced a resolution to recognize India's Independence Day and the significance...
Israeli forces kill Palestinian activist in Jenin
By KUNA,
RAMALLAH : Israeli special forces killed Thursday morning an activist affiliated with Islamic Jihad Movement in Jenin.
Israeli special forces, not in uniform, opened fire on Alaa' Abu Rab's house after surrounding it, witnesses told KUNA, adding that Israeli forces prevented Abu Rab's family from taking him to hospital as he bled to death.
They added that Israeli forces attacked the house with grenades, opened fire, and forced the family out.
Politicisation of Nepal passport deal regrettable: India
By IANS,
Kathmandu: Two days after Nepal's government was compelled to cancel a deal with India to print new Nepali passports, India Tuesday said it was a matter of regret that the issue had been politicised in Nepal and confidential communication from the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu leaked.
"The government of India remains committed to strengthening India-Nepal relations, which have withstood the test of time," a statement issued by the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu said.
Bush promises ‘complete cooperation’ to Obama
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : Embracing Barack Obama's message of change, President George W. Bush promised to give his administration's "complete cooperation" as his successor makes his transition to becoming the commander-in-chief in 76 days.
In brief remarks from the White House Wednesday, Bush said he would keep Obama informed on all his decisions between now and Jan 20 when Obama would take over as the country's 44th president.
How do we fight the stagnation among Muslims?
By Farheen Sultana for Twocircles.net
Muslims get excited whenever they hear words such as 'Subhan Allah' and 'Masha Allah' from politicians and actors. 'Oh...
Eight killed in Venezuela nightclub shooting
By IANS,
Caracas : At least eight people were killed and one seriously wounded in a shooting spree at a nightclub in western Venezuela, local media reported.
According to reports, three unknown persons burst into the club, located in the municipality of Independencia in Tachira province bordering Colombia, and opened fire indiscriminately, EFE news agency reported Sunday.
The Friday night shooting left eight people dead on the spot, most of the them were reportedly workers at the nightspot, a TV channel reported quoting police accounts.
Kenya government urges rights panel to be non-partisan
By Xinhua
Nairobi : The Kenyan government Wednesday urged the state-funded Kenya National Human Rights Commission (KNHRC) to be non-partisan in its work to avoid further polarizing the country.
With the current crisis afflicting the country, the commission should not take sides but discourage the culture of impunity, by sticking to the truth, Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka said during a meeting with KNHRC officials in his office.
Musyoka said there is need to find a solution that will be uniquely Kenyan in the on-going talks since the country has the capacity to rise and shine.
300 kg synthetic drugs seized in Mexico
By IANS/EFE,
Mexico City : More than 300 kg of synthetic drugs valued at $7.8 million have been seized by Mexican army troops in Tijuana city, near the border with San Diego, the defence secretariat said.
The quantity of drugs was sufficient to produce nearly 942,000 doses, it said.
The drugs were found packed in 276 plastic bags in a house near the US border, it said, adding that a vehicle was also seized during the operation.
140 dead in China’s ethnic clashes
By Xinhua,
Urumqi (China) : The toll in the ethnic clashes in Urumqi, capital of China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, has risen to 140, authorities said Monday.
Fifty-seven people died at the spot and the others died later in hospital, a spokesman of the regional government said at a press conference Monday.
He said the death toll could climb further.
The clashes took place between Uyghurs and members of China's Han community.
Unesco to help restore Haitian cultural heritage
By IANS,
Port-au-Prince : The UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) will set up a committee to help restore the Haitian cultural heritage damaged in a devastating earthquake in the Caribbean nation.
Unesco director-general Irina Bukova said this at the end of her two-day visit to Haiti Wednesday.
Bukova said the Haitian cultural heritage is in danger due to vandalism, pillage and trafficking of artworks in the wake of the quake and her organisation will work hard to protect them.
We were luckier than most people in Kathmandu: Quake survivor
By Anil Giri,
Kathmandu : In the aftermath of the massive 7.9 earthquake that hit Nepal on Saturday, there were many, many stories of hardship...
Chinese vessels sinks in northern Philippines; 26 rescued,2 missing
By SPA
Manila : A Japanese oil tanker rescued 26 crewmen of a Chinese vessel that sank in the northern Philippines while two other members of the crew remained missing, AP quoted the sources of the coast guard as saying Monday.
The M/V Jinshan developed problems and sank late Sunday off the Philippine province of Ilocos Norte, coast guard spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Armand Balilo said. Chinese authorities asked for help from the Philippines, which sent a helicopter to the area, he said.
North Korea snapping military hotline not constructive: US
By IANS,
Washington : The US has said that the snapping of military communications hotline by North Korea was "not constructive."
Former governor Jerry Brown aims to replace Schwarzenegger
By DPA,
San Francisco : California's former governor Jerry Brown has announced that he wants his old job back when Arnold Schwarzegger steps down at the end of his term in November.
Brown, 71, is currently California attorney general and is not expected to face a serious opposition to become the Democratic candidate to take the top job in the most populous and most economically important state in the US.
Brown previously served two terms as governor, succeeding Ronald Reagan from 1975-83, as well as running for the presidency three times.
Chinese charity takes care of jailed parents’ kids
By IANS,
Beijing : A charity organisation in China's Henan province has started a unique programme - it takes care of children of convicted people.
The children of convicts not only receive education and healthcare at the Xinxiang Sun Village, a charity set up in 2004, but also psychological counselling and job training.
Nepal quake toll reaches 8,151
Kathmandu : The toll in the April 25 devastating earthquake in Nepal rose to 8,151 on Monday, police said.
As per latest updates from the...
North Korea threatens nuclear test
By IANS,
Pyongyang : North Korea said Thursday it plans a new nuclear test and more rocket launches.
Sweden most innovative European Union country
By Xinhua
Brussels : Sweden is the most innovative country in the European Union (EU), according to a study.
Sweden's innovation performance was way above the US, Canada and Japan, according to the European Innovation Scoreboard 2007, a study commissioned by the European Commission, whose results were released Thursday.
The overall innovation performance is calculated on the basis of 25 indicators covering five dimensions of innovation.
Vietnam court sentences 12 drug traffickers to death
By Xinhua
Hanoi : A Vietnam court Friday sentenced 12 people to death in a drug trafficking case involving a trans-national ring, Vietnam News Agency reported.
At the end of a five-day trial, the People's Court of the northern province of Quang Ninh also handed down life sentences to eight people and jail terms to nine others.
The trafficking ring was led Can Viet Phuong, now in custody, and operated from the Ha Tay province. He was involved in the shipment of 50.4 kg of heroin that was illegally brought to the country.
IMF chief to attend G20 meet in Mexico
By IANS,
Washington: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief, Christine Lagarde, will attend the Group of Twenty (G20) meet to be held on the weekend in Mexico, Xinhua reported.
Russia, China see nuclear power as a priority in economic ties
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia and China consider cooperation in nuclear power to be a priority of bilateral economic ties, a communique rounding off President Dmitry Medvedev's two-day visit to the country said on Saturday.
"The heads of state consider cooperation in nuclear power to be a priority area of economic cooperation, and express their satisfaction with the success that has been achieved in this sphere, and the readiness of the two countries to continue mutually beneficial cooperation," the document said.
Sri Lanka seeks expulsion of some Unicef staff
By Xinhua
Colombo : The Sri Lankan government said Friday that it has called for the withdrawal of certain staff of the United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef).
A Foreign Ministry statement said that it has expressed serious concern to the Unicef country representative over the participation of its staff at a recent demonstration in Colombo.
The ministry said the international and local staff who took part in the demonstration violated its mandate, but it failed to give details of the demonstration.
3,600 crocodiles rescued in China
By IANS,
Beijing: Around 3,600 smuggled Siamese crocodiles have been saved by police from being served as exotic dishes in China's Guangxi Zhuang region, Xinhua reported Saturday.
US rejects claims of falsified climate science
By DPA,
Washington : US environmental regulators Thursday rejected a series of challenges to the science behind climate change, reaffirming that global warming is real and the result of man-made pollution.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ruling was welcomed by US climate groups and comes after a number of recent controversies over the workings of climate scientists provided fodder for sceptics around the world.
Swedish energy giant to cut 2,500 jobs
By IANS,
Stockholm : The Swedish energy giant Vattenfall has announced that the company was going to cut around 2,500 jobs before the end of next year.
G20 endorses India’s concerns about black money
Brisbane: G20 leaders Sunday endorsed India's concerns over black money and tax avoidance, and promised to modernize global tax rules and begin automatic exchange...
Zimbabwean VP pays tribute to Cuban martyrs
By NNN-ACN
Havana : Zimbabwean vice-President, Joyce Teurai Ropa Mujuru, paid tribute on Tuesday in this capital to the Cuban combatants who fell in action in the struggles for liberation in the island and abroad.
Teurai Ropa Mujuru visited Havana’s Colon cemetery to lay a wreath on the monument to the fallen, and paid special honor to the Cuban fighters who died fighting for the independence of the African people.
Rice arrives in quake-hit China region
By Xinhua,
Chengdu (China) : US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice Sunday arrived in this capital of southeast China's quake-devastated Sichuan province.
"Rice will express condolences on behalf of the American people for the disaster," said State Department spokesman Tom Casey before Rice's departure.
She is the highest-ranking US official to visit the area ravaged by an 8.0-magnitude earthquake May 12 that killed some 70,000 people.
During her 4-hour stay in this southwestern province, Rice will travel to Dujiangyan, one of the worst-hit cities in the massive quake.
Russian cargo spacecraft docks with ISS
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Russian cargo spacecraft Progress M-62 has docked with the International Space Station (ISS) with Christmas gifts, Russia's mission control said Wednesday.
Progress M-62, piggybacked on a Soyuz-U carrier rocket, lifted off from the Baikonur space centre in Kazakhstan Sunday.
It has delivered 1.26 tonnes of food and water for the crew, as well as fuel to maintain the ISS's orbit, and other cargo and research equipment, including Christmas presents for the crew.
Mother jailed for 99 years for assaulting daughter
By IANS,
Washington: A US mother has been sentenced to 99 years in prison for cruelly beating her two-year-old daughter and gluing her hands to a wall, Xinhua reported.
Fiji ministers to be sworn in Wednesday
Suva : Fiji's new cabinet ministers are scheduled to be sworn in Wednesday by President Ratu Epeli Nailatikau.
The swearing-in ceremony is scheduled to be...
After 25 years, cornered LTTE faces deathly crisis
By M.R. Narayan Swamy, IANS,
New Delhi : Over a quarter century after Tamil militancy erupted in Sri Lanka, the once formidable Tamil Tigers are in dire straits, vanquished but not crushed by a rampaging military.
Less than seven years ago, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and its founder leader Velupillai Prabhakaran looked like the masters of Sri Lanka's northeast after virtually bringing Colombo to its knees.
S.Ossetia concerned over Georgian police numbers near border
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : South Ossetia's acting interior minister expressed his concern on Thursday over the build up of Georgian police in buffer zones close to the region's border following the withdrawal of Russian peacekeepers.
The withdrawal of troops from buffer zones adjacent to breakaway Abkhazia and South Ossetia following a five-day armed conflict between Russia and Georgia in August was completed on Wednesday, two days ahead of a deadline agreed by the Russian and French presidents in September. Russia handed control of the zones to an EU monitoring mission.
Peru’s Fujimori Gets 25 Years Prison For Massacres
By BERNAMA,
LIMA : Former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori was convicted of human rights crimes and sentenced to 25 years in prison on Tuesday, the first time a democratically elected Latin American president has been found guilty in his own country of such offenses.
A three-judge panel convicted him of ordering a military death squad to carry out two massacres that killed 25 people during his 1990-2000 rule, when he was battling communist guerrillas. Nearly 70,000 people died in two decades of conflict in the Andean country.
War of words over fight against Islamic State
Washington: Call it war, fight, battle or what you may -- the Barack Obama administration seems to be warring within over what to call...
President can contest third term: Sri Lankan PM
Colombo : Sri Lankan Prime Minister D.M. Jayaratne said President Mahinda Rajapaksa would be able to contest the upcoming presidential elections despite the opposition...
Poll bells start ringing in Canada
By IANS,
Toronto : The deadlocked Canadian parliament will be dissolved Sunday, paving the way for a snap poll Oct 14.
Reports say Prime Minister Stephen Harper will meet Governor General Michaelle Jean Sunday to request her to dissolve the House of Commons.
The prime minister, who is heading the minority Conservative Party government, is seeking a fresh mandate on the grounds that the current hung parliament is not letting him carry out his party's agenda.
Half of Italians have extramarital affairs
By IANS/AKI,
Rome : Half of married Italians have had affairs and the number is growing, according to a survey by the Italian Association of Family lawyers.
42 British youth held every day over drug crimes
By IANS,
London : At least 42 young Britons - aged 10 to 17 years - are arrested every day for drug offences, The Sun reported.
Sobhraj rakes up fresh controversy in Nepal
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : His effort to don a new role and spruce up his image has landed yesteryear's crime maestro "Serpent" Charles Sobhraj in a new controversy in Nepal with the lawyers fighting to keep him behind bars accusing him of violating prison regulations to influence the judges.
Ironically, the new controversy was fuelled after the 64-year-old, serving a life term in Kathmandu's central jail for the murder of an American tourist in 1975, tried to play Good Samaritan and wrote to a local daily, volunteering to help out a young Nepali woman in distress.
Singapore man gets 24-year jail for raping daughter
By DPA,
Singapore: A Singapore court Monday sentenced a man to 24 years in prison for raping his daughter over several years, a media report said.
The 57-year-old security guard, who was not named to protect the victim's identity, began abusing the girl in 2002 when she was 8 years old.
The attacks stopped in 2008 after the girl's mother found out about it, the online edition of Straits Times newspaper reported.
The couple also has four sons.
According to Singapore law, the man will not be caned because he is above the age of 50.
Obama, McCain Demand More From Wall St Rescue Deal
By AFP,
Charlotte, North Carolina : The White House rivals Saturday gave qualified welcomes to a huge government bailout of Wall Street, driving home their own ideas to bring relief to both busted financiers and "Main Street."
After the US government said it wanted a green light from Congress to buy 700 billion dollars in distressed mortgage assets, Barack Obama and John McCain both said they would study the deal and work across the political aisle.
Russian tanks remain as Bush, Medvedev trade barbs over Georgia
By DPA,
Tbilisi : Russian armoured forces were showing little inclination to quit Georgia Saturday, in the wake of an exchange of barbs between the Presidents of Russia and the US over the South Ossetia war.
Russian marines, tank and helicopter forces were occupying the Georgian port city Poti, and 100 vehicle-armoured column had reportedly moved into the city Senaki, 30 km inland.
Mexican government urged to protect journalist
By IANS/EFE,
Mexico City : Amnesty International has asked the Mexican government to guarantee the security of a journalist who has received death threats.
Tunisian ex-president’s trial postponed
By IANS,
Tunis : The trial of Tunisia's ousted president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali has been postponed following a request from his lawyers, a media report said.
China to build museum to preserve Quran copy
By IANS,
Beijing : A county in northwest China will spend four million yuan (around $635,000) to build a museum for the preservation of a 1,000-year-old copy of the Quran.
Agriculture’s neglect in Asia leaves millions in poverty :UN report
By APP
United Nations : Chronic neglect of agriculture in Asia and the Pacific has left over 200 million people in extreme poverty amid rising prices for foodstuffs and despite robust growth in other sectors, according to a U.N. report released Thursday.
The Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2008, produced by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), says that 218 million people - a third of the region’s poor, largely living in rural areas could be lifted out of poverty by raising agricultural productivity.
Hanna leaves 61 dead in Haiti as more storms brew in Atlantic
By AFP,
Port-Au-Prince : At least 61 people have died in Haiti as Tropical Storm Hanna triggered widespread floods in several cities, the civil protection agency said Wednesday.
At least 37 people were found dead in northern Haiti, including 21 in the flooded city of Gonaives, civil protection said. The rest were found dead in other parts of the country.
Call for equal pay for migrant workers in Australia
By Neena Bhandari, IANS,
Sydney : Trade unions in Australia are seeking guarantees for migrant workers on the 457 visa to get the same pay and benefits as local workers as some say the temporary skilled migration programme has become a source of getting cheap labour from India, China and the Philippines.
Sri Lanka tops in petrol price in South Asia
By IANS,
Colombo : Although the global petroleum costs have dropped by $100 a barrel, Sri Lanka's retail price of petrol remains the highest in South Asia, a media report said Sunday.
This is despite the fact that the government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa has slashed the price of (90 octane) petrol by Rs.35 per litre in the past two months.
Toronto Hindus oppose Muslim prayers at school
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto : Friday namaz at a school in the Toronto suburb of North York has angered Hindu advocacy groups here, who want it stopped.
Colgate Palmolive sale row still on in Nepal
By IANS,
Kathmandu : Three weeks after oral care giant Colgate Palmolive India sold its Nepal arm to local company Everest Hygiene Products, the new owner has not been able to restart the factory due to continued protests by the employees.
Local media Thursday reported Madan Neupane, leader of the labour union at the factory of former Colgate Palmolive Nepal in Hetauda town in central Nepal's Makwanpur district, had said the workers were waiting for the Indian company to send a representative to discuss their grievances.
Russia, Japan to Talk Peace Treaty
By Prensa Latina,
Moscow : Japan expects to move towards the signing of a peace treaty during the current visit to Russia of Mahasaiko Komura, minister of Foreign Affairs, diplomatic sources informed.
The press secretary of the Japanese foreign ministry, Kazuo Kodama, affirmed that during talks with Komuras counterpart, Serguei Lavrof, new opportunities are expected for an arrangement that dates back to 1945.
Moscow and Tokyo had not signed a formal peace treaty after the Second World War regarding discrepancies over the Kuril Islands, under Kremlin sovereignty.
Bush admits slowdown as Americans lose 63,000 jobs
By Arun Kumar, IANS
Washington : President George Bush acknowledged "our economy has slowed" as American employers slashed 63,000 jobs in February, the most in last five years, but claimed a stimulus package could help stem the tide.
"Losing a job is painful and I know Americans are concerned about our economy. So am I," Bush said. "I know this is a difficult time for our economy. But we recognised the problem early and we provided the economy with a booster shot."
700 die as China reels under worst floods in decade
By IANS,
Beijing : Floods triggered by torrential rains have claimed the lives of 701 people and left 347 missing in China, the government said Wednesday.
About 18 million people in 27 provinces and municipalities had been relocated since the flooding started in April, the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters and the Ministry of Civil Affairs said.
Over seven million hectares of farmland were affected and 645,000 houses were destroyed in the worst floods in a decade. Direct economic losses estimated at about 142 billion yuan (about $20 billion), Xinhua reported.
New website helps understand what teenagers are saying
By Venkata Vemuri, IANS,
London : A British charity has launched a website on 'teenglish' to make parents understand the jargon their children use in normal conversations.
The jargon-buster website, Gotateenager.org.uk, contains almost a hundred definitions for words commonly used by teenagers but until now incomprehensible to their parents.
It is one way to make way for better communication between parents and their teenage children, according to British charity Parentline Plus.
Nepali major parties accord over Madhesi issues
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : Major political parties in Nepali Constituent Assembly (CA) and agitating Madhes-based parties on Sunday reached an agreement to introduce a new supplementary amendment bill to the Interim Constitution.
Quake kills 27 in Myanmar, one in Thailand
By DPA,
Yangon/Bangkok : A magnitude-6.8 earthquake killed at least 27 people in northeast Myanmar and one in Thailand, officials said Friday.
Caffeine tied to low birth weight babies
By IANS,
Stockholm: Caffeine, the primary constituent of coffee has been found to be associated with low birth weight babies and may also prolong pregnancy, says a Swedish study.
Four million Italians living abroad: Report
By IANS/AKI,
Rome : Almost four million Italians are living abroad, according to a new report released Thursday.
The Migrantes Foundation said that there were 3.91 million Italian citizens living outside the country - in Europe, the Americas, Asia, Africa and Oceania. In 2008, the number was 3.73 million.
Migrantes, a Catholic organisation, said that of the total number living abroad, the majority - 2.18 million - lived in Europe, 1.52 million in the Americas, 126,000 in Oceania, 51,000 in Africa and 32,000 in Asia.
Solana to participate in EU-Central Asia ministerial meetings
By KUNA,
Brussels : EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, Javier Solana, will travel later Wednesday to Paris to attend the EU-Central Asia Ministerial Troika meeting.
On Thursday, Solana will participate in the EU-Central Asia Forum that will bring together the Foreign Ministers of the EU Member States with the Foreign Ministers of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan as well as representatives of a number of international organizations.
Visitor tears head off Hitler wax statue
By DPA,
Berlin : A man tore the head off a wax statue of Adolf Hitler in Berlin Saturday, minutes after the new branch of the Madame Tussauds wax-work museum chain opened for the first time to the public.
German police said the man, 41, was detained.
The decision by London-based Madame Tussauds, part of the Merlin Entertainments company, to include Hitler in the 75-figure museum has roused fierce passions in the German capital.
Scientists develop authentic ‘tea shirt’
By IANS,
London : Scientists and fashion designers have developed a new fabric that is grown in a soup of green tea, sugar and other nutrients over the course of several days.
It has been dubbed the authentic "tea shirt" - an item from a range of clothing made from Britain's favourite beverage.
The material with a leathery texture is extremely lightweight and has been used to make shirts, jackets, dresses and even shoes, reports the Telegraph.
Mollie King ‘awful’ at resolutions
By IANS,
London: Singer Mollie King says she always make New year resolutions but never manages to stick to any of them.
Nepal squatters use medieval art for toilets, cowsheds
By Sudeshna Sarkar
IANSKathmandu : Priceless archaeological relics that could date back to the 14th century are being demolished in southern Nepal with unlettered, poor squatters taking over land abounding in such wealth and erecting shanties.
Danish school bans Muslim students from wearing niqab
Copenhagen : An adult education centre in a Copenhagen suburb has told Muslim students that they can no longer attend classes unless they remove...
Vietnam Increases Fighting against Drug Trafficking
By Prensa Latina
Hanoi : The Vietnamese Anti-Drug Police Department (DPD) issued an alert because of the international drug-trafficking attempts to extend its activities in this country.
Starting from this situation, the Anti-Drug Police Department decided to intensify international cooperation in this field, and diversify the methods of investigation.
Pro-Thaksin party wins Thai elections
By Xinhua
Bangkok : Thailand Elections Commission said here Sunday that 80 percent of votes counted show the People Power Party (PPP) supporting deposed prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra has won Thailand's post-coup election but fell short of an absolute majority in parliament.
Thai farmers, the majority of Thailand's 64 million population, gave most of their support to PPP because of Shinawatra's efforts to improve the rural economy during his five-year's term in office, observers commented.
Nepal parties unite against monarchy
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : Representatives of newly elected political parties in Nepal have rejected any kind of sympathy towards the monarchy, the Rising Nepal reported Monday.
The 25 parties poised to declare the country a republic within a couple of weeks met Sunday in a formal sitting for the first time to discuss mainly the Constituent Assembly (CA) procedures and formation of the new government.
Even some small parties recognised widely as pro-king did not voice support to give continuity to any kind to monarchy, the report said.
Russian military has no one left to recruit
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia has no young men of proper age left to recruit for the one-year compulsory service in its armed forces, the chief of the Russia's general staff has said.
Myanmar Says Worst Of Emergency Crisis Is Over
By D. Arul Rajoo, Bernama,
Yangon : Almost two months after the deadly 'Cyclone Nargis' claimed about 140,000 lives, the Myanmar Government says there are several indications that the worst of the emergency crisis may be over.
Myanmar's Deputy Foreign Minister, U Kyaw Thu Thu said the Asean-led Post Nargis Joint Assessment for Response, Recovery and Reconstruction (Ponja) confirmed that no death was reported over the past several weeks.
Myanmar allows banks to handle remittances from abroad
By IANS,
Yangon : The Myanmar government Saturday allowed its banks to handle remittances from Myanmarese living in Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia, the official media reported.
China’s automotive output hits 10 mn mark
By IANS,
Changchun: The China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) has declared that the country's production of automobiles since the beginning of 2009 hit 10 million units Tuesday, Xinhua reported.
China is the third country now after the US and Japan crossing the annual automobile production output of 10 million.
A celebration to mark the event, jointly sponsored by the CAAM and China Society of Automotive Engineering, was held at the First Automobile Works (FAW) Group Corp. headquarters in Changchun, the capital of northeast China's Jilin Province.
Police seize 15 kg of heroin from drug couriers near Moscow
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Police have seized 15 kg of heroin from two drug couriers in the Istra district to the west of Moscow, a police spokesman said on Monday.
Traffic police and officers of the federal anti-drugs service detained a woman on Sunday who was riding as a passenger in a car on the Volokolamsk highway. A second woman was detained while leaving the Moscow Region town of Dedovsk, the spokesman said.
15 dead, 25 injured in fresh clashes in Somalia
By DPA,
Mogadishu : At least 15 civilians died and 25 others were wounded in a heavy fighting in the Somali capital Mogadishu overnight, officials said Saturday.
The clashes are between Islamist insurgents Al-Shabaab, and the weak Western-backed government, backed by African Union peacekeepers.
Fighting this week has already claimed dozens of lives.
"We have so far collected 25 wounded people since last night," Ali Muse Sheikh, head of Mogadishu ambulances told German Press Agency Saturday.
54 Somalis die in boat accident: UN
By DPA,
Geneva : The UN's refugee agency said Thursday that 54 Somalis had drowned while trying to flee their war-torn country for the relative safety of Yemen.
Dalai Lama now Paris citizen
By IANS,
Dharamsala : The Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, has been named an honourary citizen of Paris for his contribution to world peace, the Tibetan government-in-exile said here Tuesday.
"The Paris city council on Monday bestowed the city's honorary citizenhip to his holiness the Dalai Lama, which Mayor Bertand Delanoe called 'a tribute to a champion of peace, a tireless advocate of dialogue between people'," said a spokesman of the government-in-exile, not recognised by any nation.
Hurricane Ike claims 39 lives in Haiti
By DPA,
Port-au-Prince : Hurricane Ike, with wind speeds of 215 km an hour, was blamed for the deaths of 39 people in Haiti, the Haiti Press news agency reported.
Heavy rains Saturday and early Sunday were blamed for the death of 39 people who drowned in the town of Cabaret, 35 km north of the capital of Port-au-Prince.
Ike brought the Brettell river to overflowing, flooding the entire city. Many corpses were found in homes, where people sought refuge from rising waters.
A week after, Nepal quake toll hits 7,040
Kathmandu : As search and rescue operations continued for the seventh day, the toll due to the massive earthquake that hit Nepal on April...
Thai-Cambodian border quiet as two sides meet
By DPA,
Bangkok : The Thai government Thursday rebuffed a Cambodian claim that it was an unreliable and biased chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) as the two sides are locked in a bitter border dispute.
Foreign ministry spokesman Tharit Charungvat said other members of the 10-country body would understand Thailand's restraint and probity on the issue.
Britain delays new EU airport security rules over Sikh concerns
By Venkata Vemuri, IANS,
London: Britain has delayed implementation of new European Union (EU) airport security rules for hand searches of passengers after concerns from the Sikh community that this could also mean searches of their religious headgear, officials Thursday said.
Consultations are currently going on with the Sikh community over the issue, a spokesperson of the the British transport department told IANS.
Bird flu kills one man, infects poultry in Vietnam
By SPA
Hanoi : Bird flu has killed a second man in Vietnam this week, infected a child and poultry in two provinces and a health official warned more people would fall sick of the virus, Reuters quoted the government sources and state media as saying on Saturday.
The 27-year-old man died on Thursday night at a Hanoi hospital after he was taken there from the northern province of Ninh Binh on Tuesday with serious pneumonia, the official Vietnam News Agency reported.
Gecko inspires creation of ‘sticky nanotubes’ for industry
By IANS,
Washington : Researchers are trying to harness the gecko's ability to scale walls effortlessly, with a practical bearing on military and industrial uses, by developing 'peel test' norms for nanosized manufacturing.
'Peel tests' are used in industry to determine just how much force is required to pull a material off another. But no tests exist for nanoscale structures, said Arvind Raman of Purdue University.
World’s oldest tree discovered in Sweden
By RIA Novosti
Stockholm : Scientists in northern Sweden believe they have discovered the world's oldest living tree, dating back nearly 8,000 years, local media said on Thursday.
A Norway spruce, which was found growing at a height of 950 meters above sea level, is more than two meters (6.5 feet) tall and about 20 centimeters (8 inches) in width.
Shortly after the discovery, scientists sent samples from the tree to a laboratory in Miami in the U.S., and were amazed to learn that the tree was 7,800 years old.
Canada leads the world in Facebook use
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS
Toronto : Toronto has become the first city in North America to have more than a million Facebook users.
An online survey released Wednesday also showed that seven million Canadians of a total population of 32 million use Facebook as of today.
"Facebook started just over a year ago and has already stormed Canada. It has become a phenomenon here," Brian Singh, managing director of ZINC Research that carried out the survey, told IANS.
He said only London was ahead of Toronto in Facebook use worldwide.
Mexico oil spill could have powered 1,800 ships for year
By IANS,
Washington : If all the oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico had been used for fuel, it could have powered 38,000 cars, 3,400 trucks and 1,800 ships for a full year, says a new report.
It is based on an estimated spill rate of 19,000 barrels of oil per day, according to James J. Corbett, professor of marine policy at the University of Delaware (UD) College of Earth, Ocean and Environment.
Very fat kids will be sent to care, UK parents warned
By IANS,
London : Concern over child obesity in the UK has stretched to a point that parents have been warned of forced separation from extremely over-weight children on grounds of parental neglect.
Such children will be put under charge of carers, local councils have said, in their latest attempt to make parents directly responsible for their children's weight.
The fattest youngsters should be seen as examples of “parental neglect” and handed over to social workers, according to the Local Government Association (LGA).
Rio’s gay pride parade draws 800,000
Rio de Janeiro, (DPA) More than 800,000 people participated in the gay pride parade in Rio de Jainero along the famous Copacabana Beach.
Politicians such as Rio de Janeiro Governor Sergio Cabral and tens of thousands tourists were among the revellers at the 12th annual parade Sunday.
Despite the relatively cool temperatures, many participants were scantily clad as they danced to samba music and waved the rainbow flag.
South Africa’s burning man gives lie to African unity
By Clare Byrne, DPA,
Johannesburg : Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) councillor Innocent Gumbi is careful to attribute all his remarks about African migrants to the residents of Denver men's hostel, a workers' compound in eastern Johannesburg dating to the apartheid era.
"They say foreigners are getting ID books more quickly than the original people of this country," he says, standing in an open corridor on the first floor of the red-brick compound, overlooking a rubbish-strewn courtyard.
Bush seeks ‘common policy’ with Europe on finance crisis
By DPA,
Washington : US President George W. Bush has called for a "common policy" between the United States and Europe to address the financial crisis that has threatened the world's economy.
Bush, meeting with Slovak President Ivan Gasparovic, said Thursday that he discussed "our common desire to work with our European friends to develop a best as possible common policy".
Arctic sea ice thins by 19 percent
By IANS,
Washington : Sea ice in large swathes of Arctic thinned by as much as 19 percent last winter, compared to previous five winters, according to data from European Space Agency's Envisat satellite.
Using Envisat radar altimeter data, scientists from the Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling at University College London (UCL) measured sea ice thickness over the Arctic from 2002 to 2008 and found that it had been fairly constant until the record loss of ice in the summer of 2007.
30,000 people out of China quake zone fearing secondary disasters
By Xinhua,
Chengdu (China) : Authorities are evacuating some 30,000 people from a rural county in southeast China's quake hit province of Sichuan for fear of possible secondary disasters following the killer May 12 earthquake.
The first group of 3,000 farmers from three townships of the Qingchuan county had been relocated in neighbouring areas, said Li Zhi of the disaster relief office Wednesday
"Up to 30,000 people need to move out. Some places are no longer inhabitable," county chief Chen Zhengyong said. But it was not clear where the residents would be resettled.
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AID Boston appeals to join One For India campaign
By TCN News,
Boston (USA): The Association for India’s Development (AID) Boston has appealed Good Samaritans to...