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Strategic junction ahead of last LTTE stronghold captured: Sri Lanka

By IANS, Colombo : Advancing Sri Lankan troops captured a strategically important junction lying ahead of the last stronghold of the Tamil Tiger rebels, the defence ministry said Tuesday. Troops engaged "in the final phase of military offensive to free entire country from LTTE have marked a decisive milestone" by reaching the Irunapalai junction, a strategically vital junction in Puthukkudiyiruppu built-up area in the north-eastern Mullaitivu district," it said.

Vatican praises ‘The Simpsons’ for religion!

By IANS, New York : Television's most dysfunctional family "The Simpsons" have received the heavenly seal of approval, as the Roman Catholic Church has praised the animated series for its dealings with religion. The Vatican's newspaper L'Osservatore Romano published an article on Dec 22 lauding the long running US animated show insisting "many today wouldn't know how to laugh", if the series hadn't been aired, reports huffingtonpost.com.

Tata Africa expands scholarships to third S African university

By Fakir Hassen IANS, Durban : The University of KwaZulu Natal (UKZN) has become the third major academic institution in South Africa to receive scholarships for post-graduate studies from Tata Africa. At a function following the launch of the Gandhi-Luthuli Chair of Peace Studies at UKZN on Thursday, Indian Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma joined the Vice-Chancellor of UKZN, Prof Malegapuru Makgoba, and the Managing Director of Tata Africa, Raman Dhawan, to hand over the scholarships to eight students.

Pacific states urged to sign treaty to end cluster bombs

By Xinhua, Wellington : One month before world governments go to Oslo, Norway to sign the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM), Pacific governments have been urged to show greater commitment to victims of the cluster munitions by initialing the convention, according to Pacnews regional news agency Friday. Leading the campaign is the Suva-based Pacific Concerns Resource Center (PCRC), which launched its region wide lobby on Thursday night to mark Global Week for Action on cluster bombs, the news agency said.

Sri Lanka condemns attack on its cricketers

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lanka Tuesday described as "appalling" the terror attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Pakistan's Lahore city. "It is appalling that anybody should have targeted a sporting team in such a brutal manner. The attitude of targeting sportsmen must change," Sri Lankan Foreign Secretary P. Kohona said Tuesday. He added that the players would be back on the first available commercial flight.

Japan quake toll rises to six

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

Obama condemns ‘outrageous murders’ of Muslim students

Washington : US President Barack Obama condemned the "brutal and outrageous murders" of three Muslim students in the state of North Carolina earlier this...

Man fined $2,800 for feeding monkeys

By DPA Singapore : A cook was fined 4,000 Singapore dollars ($2,800) for feeding monkeys in a nature reserve, the steepest fine ever handed out for the offence in the city-state, news reports said Thursday. Panneerselvam Arunasalam admitted that he had fed the animals bread on Aug 5 last year. Feeding monkeys endangers both the animals and humans, National Parks Board prosecutor M. Maniam told the court, according to The Straits Times.

Chinese bomber to be executed for deadly blast

By IANS, Beijing : A court in central China's Hunan province Thursday ordered the execution of a man who set off explosives at a tax office last year, killing four people and injuring 17.

UN gives $8 million for quake relief in China

By Xinhua, Beijing : The UN Wednesday cleared a grant of $8 million to support earthquake relief efforts in China. Khalid Malik, resident coordinator of the UN in the country, handed over the cheque to the government. Meanwhile, the United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) has provided 400 tents to be distributed in Sichuan province, which was worst hit in the quake. It was the first batch of material aid provided by a UN agency. Unicef also pledged 20,000 quilts and 60,000 study items worth $430,000 to the quake hit areas.

Sri Lanka removes over 860,000 mines and booby traps

By IANS, Colombo : The Sri Lankan Army Sunday said that over 860,000 mines and booby traps have been removed since the end of the war with the Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009.

Maoists to continue anti-poll stir if talks fail

By Sudeshna Sarkar Kathmandu, Sep 28 (IANS) As Nepal's ruling parties get ready for a key round of talks with the Maoists that will determine the fate of the crucial November election, the rebels have warned that they would continue their anti-poll agitation if the negotiations failed. On the eve of the talks Friday, there was wariness in the rebel camp despite the public assurance by a senior ruling party leader that the guerrillas were "positive" towards the polls.

Obama against McCain Machinery in US Primaries

Washington, Feb 5 (Prensa Latina) The primary elections in the United States on Tuesday might answer the question of who has the best Democratic option to defeat Republic favorite John McCain. The Super Tuesday elections will also test the consolidation of the so-called "Obamania" against the surprising resurrection of the Arizona senator, according to analysts. Six months ago, McCain seemed to be at the end of his presidential race when he went through a serious financial crisis and several political advisors quit his campaign for the White House.

Obama signs defence bill

By IANS, Washington : US President Barack Obama has signed a $633 billion defence bill for the next year, the White House said Thursday.

US, Japan urge G8 to censure North Korea

By DPA

Heiligendamm : The US and Japan called on the Group of Eight (G8) leaders to send a "convincing message" to North Korea to shut down its nuclear weapons programme.

Probe clears Obama team in governor scandal

By DPA, Washington : President-elect Barack Obama's team had no "inappropriate" discussions with scandal-plagued Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich about naming a successor to the Senate, according to a report on an internal inquiry released Tuesday. The long-awaited report by Obama's legal team said that chief of staff Rahm Emanuel was the only person who had direct contact with the embattled governor, who was arrested earlier this month for widespread public corruption.

E-readers motivate less-enthusiastic kids

By IANS, Washington: Electronic readers like Kindle motivate children to read by making them interact with texts in ways they don't interact with the printed word, an expert says. Lotta Larson, Kansas-State University (KSU) assistant professor of elementary education, has been using the Amazon Kindle in her work with a pair of second-graders since 2009. The e-reader has features that make the text audible, increase or decrease font size and let readers make notes about the book. "It's interesting to see the kinds of things these kids have been able to do," Larson said.

Sushma Swaraj arrives in Nepal for donors conference

Kathmandu : External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj arrived here on Wednesday evening to participate in Thursday's international donors' conference on Nepal's post-earthquake reconstruction. "As I...

Cruise ship with 280 aboard runs aground in Aegean

By DPA Athens : Greek coast guard officials were conducting a major rescue operation after a cruise ship carrying 280 passengers ran aground off the Greek Aegean island of Poros Thursday. Three rescue helicopters and three coast guard vessels were reportedly in the area to assist in the evacuation of the "Giorgos", which ran aground three nautical miles off Poros in the Saronic Gulf. The Merchant Marine Ministry said the ship ran aground near the rocky islet of Platia and that weather conditions in the area were good, and there was no immediate danger.

European Tunnel Closed after Fire

By Prensa Latina, Paris : The fire in the European Tunnel located under the English Channel was controlled Friday but the traffic will remain held up while necessary security measures are taken to reestablish the service. According to Eurostar Company, in charge of the corridor, traffic resumption could not be exactly estimated although passenger flow was not affected, declared Home Ministry Michelle Alliot-Marie. The fire began Thursday afternoon, 6.8 miles from the French coast, in a truck moved by a train coming from the United Kingdom, causing the closing of both routes.

240,000 tourists stranded in Thailand: tourism minister

By Xinhua, Bangkok : Thailand's Tourism Minister Weerasak Kowsurat said on Monday that the number of stranded foreign tourists in Thailand have risen to 240,000. Weerasak is due to hold a foreign press conference at BITEC exhibition hall in Bangkok, which opened on Monday as the international flight check-in for the U-Ta Pao airport although the later is some 200 kilometers from Bangkok. Weerasak said he would do everything to send news to the world that Thailand is doing its best to send stranded travelers home.

Chinese Communist Party to promote political restructuring

By IANS, Beijing : The ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) Monday vowed to make vigorous efforts to promote political restructuring and said great impetus would be given to economic reforms.

Writer donates 1675 edition of ‘Don Quixote’ to Argentine city

By EFE, Buenos Aires : British writer Julian Barnes has donated to the Argentine city of Azul a copy of the first edition of "Don Quixote" translated into English and dating back to 1675. Azul has been dubbed "Cervantes City" two years ago for actively promoting the works of Miguel de Cervantes. The vice president of the Spanish Mutual Aid Society of Azul, Carlos Filipetti, said that the copy, which he described as a "real gem", is in "impeccable condition".

‘Rushdie sought money from police for protecting him’

By IANS, London : If British police detectives who guarded Salman Rushdie during the fatwa days are to be believed, the "Satanic Verses" author used to demand money from them for protecting him. At least that is what ex-Special Branch detective Ron Evans claims in his recently released autobiography "On her Majesty's Service", The Telegraph reported. Evans guarded Rushdie for three years in London in 1989, at the height of the threats on his life following a fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran.

Nepal seeks extension of UN peace mission

By SPA, Kathmandu : Nepal said on Wednesday it will request the United Nations to extend by six months its peace mission while the issue of rehabilitating thousands of former Maoist fighters, crucial to stability, gets resolved. The integration of more than 19,000 former rebels, housed in U.N. supervised camps, with the regular army is key to capping a 2006 peace deal that ended a civil war and brought the rebels to the political mainstream, Reuters reported.

Government official urges Dalai Lama to respond with sincerity after recent contact

By Xinhua, Beijing : It's the time for the Dalai Lama to respond with sincerity and prove it by deeds after the Chinese central government had communicated goodwill to him during the meeting with his private representatives, a spokesman of the United Front Work Department of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee said on Sunday.

Thirteen killed in Nepal bus accident

By SPA, Kathmandu : At least 13 people were killed and dozens of others were missing after an overcrowded bus plunged off a mountain highway in western Nepal on Monday, police and media reports said. Police said the bus plunged into the fast-flowing Rapti River in Dang district, about 400 kilometers west of the Nepalese capital Kathmandu, after skidding off the highway on Monday morning, DPA reported. Police confirmed at least 13 bodies were recovered from the river and said more than 40 others remained missing.

Door edges open at Myanmar pledging conference

By DPA, Yangon : Most donor nations Sunday stopped short of making new pledges for relief for victims of Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar as they were awaiting more details on access and accountability, but observers described the meeting as a step forward. "It was a reasonable success," Frederich Hamburger, European Union (EU) envoy to Myanmar and Thailand, said of a United Nations-ASEAN sponsored pledging conference held in Yangon Sunday, almost three weeks after Cyclone Nargis smacked into the country's central coast leaving at least 133,000 people dead or missing.

Plane crash kills one in the US

By Xinhua, Los Angeles : One person onboard a plane was killed Tuesday when the aircraft crashed on a freeway in the US state of California, the officials said. The accident occurred at 8.05 a.m. The US Federal Aviation Administration spokesman, Ian Gregor, said the plane tried to land on the westbound Interstate 40, some 15 km west of Needles city near the California-Arizona border. The aircraft also hit a car. The official, however, did not reveal whether the victim was a pilot or a passenger. The condition of the car's occupants was not immediately known.

First Muslim elected to UK’s shadow cabinet

By IRNA, London : Former Transport minister Sadiq Khan has become the first ethnic-minority MP to be elected to Labour’s shadow cabinet after winning the vote of 128 of his colleagues.

‘Harry Potter And The Deathly…’ highest global grosser

By IANS, London : "Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 1" has become the highest international grosser of "Harry Potter" franchise.

Bolivian president resumes talks with Bolivian opposition over autonomy

By IANS, La Paz (Bolivia) : Bolivia's President Evo Morales opened talks Monday with the opposition after days of violent clashes between government supporters and protestors in the country's energy-rich eastern provinces. At the same time, Morales ordered the arrest of the governor of Pando region, Leopoldo Fernandez, a leading opposition member, saying he must be put away for 30 years. Fernandez allegedly orchestrated a "massacre" in Pando Thursday, in which hired killers from Peru and Brazil killed dozens of government supporters, Deputy President Alvaro Garcia Linera said.

North Korea unlikely to stop nuclear reactor before late July

By RIA Novosti

Tokyo : Following the visit of a senior International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) official to North Korea, Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso said Friday the country's five nuclear facilities were unlikely to be shut down before late July.

Former prime minister returns to Thailand

Bangkok : Former Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who is facing legal allegations in her country, has returned to Thailand from her vacation, media...

Australia considering joining US missile shield

By Xinhua Canberra : Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said here Sunday his government was considering joining a limited US missile defence system because it may help to protect Australian troops in the field. But Smith said Australia would not rush into taking any decision. Speaking to the Australian television network Channel Nine, Smith said the technology of missile defence had improved and may be of use in settings such as war zones or areas where Australians were involved in peacekeeping missions.

British car sales down, but Tata’s Jaguar up

By IANS, London : Sales of new cars in Britain fell by 23 percent in October - the steepest fall for 17 years - but Tata-owned Jaguar bucked the trend, industry figures show. Figures released by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) showed a total of 128,352 new car registrations in October, down 23 percent from a year ago. The SMMT said 1.92 million new cars had been sold in Britain so far this year, down 8.7 percent on the same period in 2007.

Rice, Bush Urge Talks with Dalai Lama, Seek Consulate in Tibet

By SPA Washington : U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Wednesday said that the United States would like to set up a consulate in Tibet, as U.S. President George W. Bush urged for dialogue between China and exiled Tibetan leader, the Dalai Lama. Rice said that it is seeking to set up the consulate in Tibet, where China allows for limited and insufficient access to U.S. diplomats. Rice told the Senate Appropriations Committee that United States “pressed for consular access for diplomats into Tibet. We got some limited access, but frankly it wasn’t good enough.”

India hopes Annapolis summit will lead to independent Palestine

By Arun Kumar, IANS Washington : India has expressed the hope that a US sponsored Middle East conference here Tuesday will lead to the creation of an independent state of Palestine living side by side at peace with Israel. Minister for Science and Technology Kapil Sibal, who is representing India at the 40-nation conference in Annapolis, Maryland, about 50 km from Washington, outlined India's views at several bilateral meetings in the US capital Monday.

In the face of recall petition, Jindal vetoes legislative pay raise

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Faced with a recall petition, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal vetoed a bill that would have doubled legislators' salaries but said lawmakers have "a right to be angry" with him for breaking his promise. Republican Jindal, 37, the first Indian American governor of a US state, said he should not have promised lawmakers that he'd withhold his veto pen. "Today I am correcting my mistake," he said Monday in the state capital of Baton Rouge.

Daily Mail sweeps British journalism awards

By IANS, London : Britain's Daily Mail newspaper has swept the honours at the prestigious annual Press Awards - the Oscars of British journalism.

Does cosmic turbulence trigger birth of massive stars?

By IANS, Washington : The constellation of Orion the Hunter swaddles a cluster of newborn stars called the Trapezium, each of them as dazzling as 100,000 suns and with 15 to 30 times the sun's mass. Where did the Trapezium stars originate? New data from the Submillimeter Array (SMA), a joint project of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, is helping answer this question.

IS video shows beheading of 21 Egyptians in Libya

Tripoli: The Islamic State (IS) militant group claimed in a video Sunday to have executed 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians abducted in Libya. Some Libyan affiliates...

Bank chiefs become first casualties of financial crisis in UK

By IRNA, London : Sir Fred Goodwin, chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), has become the first major casualty of the financial crisis in the UK, after paying the ultimate professional price for by agreeing to leave the company 10 years after joining. His decision, along with chairman Sir Tom McKillop, who will also step down, comes as the British government was forced to bail out the bank, taking up to 57 per cent of its shares in the biggest nationalization of a bank in Europe.

Eight die in Indonesia bridge collapse

By DPA, Jakarta : At least eight people were killed and four were missing after a bridge collapsed in Indonesia's Aceh province, media reports said Monday. The accident occurred Sunday when around 30 people were on the wooden-plank suspension bridge that broke in Gayo Luwes district, sending several of them into a river that swept them away, police said. Police suspected overloading caused one of the bridge's ropes break, detik.com online news reported.

Britain faces another election if no deal by May 25

By IANS, London : Britain's major political parties have time only till May 25 to clobber together a deal for the formation of the next government. In the event that does not happen, the country faces the prospect of another general election following a new set of guidelines set in place. Prime Minister and Labour leader Gordon Brown, Leader of the Conservatives David Cameron and Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg have to display that they have the confidence of the House of Commons until the day of the Queen's Speech May 25, The Telegraph reported.

Fidel Castro happy with Betancourt’s liberation, decries FARC action

By IANS, Havana : Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro has expressed his happiness over the rescue of former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt and 14 other people held hostage by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) insurgents and decried hostage-taking as unjustifiable. "Out of a basic sense of humanity, we were pleased to hear the news that Ingrid Betancourt, three American citizens and other captives had been freed," EFE reported Saturday quoting Castro in an article released Thursday on the government web page Cubadebate.

Erdogan sworn in as Turkish president

Ankara : Recep Tayyip Erdogan was sworn in as president of Turkey at the Parliamentary General Assembly here Thursday. Representatives of some 90 countries from...

Some 200 rescuers buried after Chinese landslides

By RIA Novosti, Bejing : Some 200 relief workers have been buried in landslides over the past three days in China's quake-hit province of Sichuan, the Xinhua news agency reported on Monday. The region suffered a massive earthquake May 12 and since then has been plagued by a heavy rain and a series of aftershocks. The workers were believed to be repairing roads when the mudslide struck. Earlier, a total of 21 quake-triggered landslides blocked rivers and lakes in the Sichuan province, creating a major risk of flooding and threatening people in downstream areas.

Miliband steps up criticism of Israel

By IRNA, London : David Miliband, the front-runner to be Britain’s next Labour leader, has stepped up criticism of Israel after being no longer confined to the diplomatic-speak of when he was foreign secretary. The attack by the Israeli defence forces on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla is the “latest in a series of self-defeating and deadly moves by successive Israeli Governments in Gaza,” Miliband said.

Georgia pays part of UN dues, regains voting rights

By RIA Novosti

United Nations : Georgia has paid off a portion of its United Nations dues, allowing it to be removed from a "blacklist" of nations in arrears of their financial obligations to the organization, the UN press service said.

Bonus projections leave some long faces on Wall Street

By DPA New York : With six weeks to go for Christmas, bankers and stockbrokers at Wall Street are already worried about their annual bonuses. This year, the legendary cheques written at the end of the year, ostensibly linked to performance, could be disappointing for many after 2007's collapse of the sub-prime mortgage market and a credit-market contraction. The range of Wall Street bonuses is expected to be one of the widest ever. Will it be enough for a luxury apartment or a Ferrari? The answer depends on where the banker or broker works and in what sector.

Hillary Clinton visits Haiti

By DPA, Port-au-Prince/Washington : US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with Haitian President Rene Preval Saturday at the Port-au-Prince airport to discuss US aid, which is already flowing into the earthquake-ravaged country. She landed but did not travel beyond the airport to avoid using vehicles and other resources needed to deliver desperately needed water, food and other relief supplies. Her own plane was loaded with food, water and other goods.

Jayant Patel released on bail, requests privacy

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Sydney : India-born US citizen Jayant Patel appealed for privacy Tuesday evening as he was released on bail after providing the required cash surety of A$20,000.

US House passes media shield bill by huge margin

Washington,(Xinhua) The US House of Representatives has overwhelmingly passed a bill to protect reporters from disclosing identities of their sources despite the White House threat to veto on it. The bill that would forbid prosecutors from forcing reporters to reveal confidential sources was Tuesday passed by a vote of 398 to 21 at the House and sent to the Senate. "Freedom of the press is fundamental to our democracy and is fundamental to our security," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Greenspan blasts spendthrift Bush in new book

By DPA Washington : Former US Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has slammed US President George W Bush in his upcoming memoir, accusing the president of failing to curb runaway government spending. Although Bush's election in 2000 had been a moment of high expectation, the president had been unwilling to veto out-of-control spending and turned an unprecedented surplus in the budget into a large deficit during his administration, wrote Greenspan, also a Republican.

Peace? Sri Lanka is still at war — within (Book Review)

By M.R. Narayan Swamy, Title: This Divided Island: Stories from the Sri Lankan War; Author: Samanth Subramanian; Publisher: Hamish Hamilton (Penguin); Pages: 320; Price: Rs.499.

Libyan security forces training scandal widens in Germany: press

By IRNA Berlin : The scandal surrounding the illegal training mission of German police experts in Libya has widened, news reports said Saturday. Germany's foreign BND intelligence agency and the German embassy in Libya were privied to the coaching of Libyan security forces between 2005 and 2007, according to the press. The German secret service played an "advisory" role in the Libyan training program, the daily Berliner Zeitung quoted security circles as saying.

Panties from Canadian women to frighten Myanmar junta

By Gurmukh Singh, IANS, Toronto : Canadian women Tuesday launched a Panties for Peace! campaign to send their undergarments to the Myanmar military junta to frighten it into ending suppression. At a press conference in Montreal, feminists and civil groups, working under the Rights & Democracy Student Network and the Quebec Women's Federation, urged Canadian women to inundate the Myanmar embassy in Ottawa with panties to unsettle the military rulers in the south-east Asian nation.

Japan PM cancels European tour, but will visit Russia Apr. 25

By RIA Novosti, Tokyo : Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda has canceled his European tour planned for this month over tensions with the opposition-dominated upper house of parliament, but will visit Russia on April 25, an official said on Wednesday. Fukuda planned to visit Britain, France and Germany ahead of the Group of Eight summit to be hosted by Japan in July.

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

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

Sudan’s president to visit Egypt despite arrest warrant

By DPA, Cairo : Sudan President Omar al-Bashir will visit Egypt Wednesday despite an arrest warrant issued against him by the International Criminal Court (ICC), an Egyptian official said. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told DPA that al-Bashir will meet Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to discuss developments after the ICC decision. Wednesday's visit will be al-Bashir's second trip abroad since the arrest warrant was issued, after his brief visit to Eritrea Monday.

Russia ‘ready’ for better relations with Obama: Medvedev

By DPA, Moscow : President Dmitry Medvedev said Thursday Russia was ready for better relations with US president-elect Barack Obama, one day after a speech that seemed to be a direct challenge to the next US leader. The comments came after Medvedev said in his first-state-of-the-nation that he would deploy Iskander missiles in Russia's European enclave of Kaliningrad to "neutralize" US missile shield plans.

China summons CNN bosses over ‘goons’ comment

By DPA, Beijing : China's foreign ministry summoned CNN executives to lodge a protest as it seeks an apology from the US news network for statements made by a commentator. CNN said Jack Cafferty was referring to China's leadership and not China's people April 9 when he said "I think they're basically the same bunch of goons and thugs they've been for the last 50 years".

Benigno Aquino III sworn in as Philippines’ president

By DPA, Manila : Benigno Aquino III was sworn in Wednesday as the Philippines' 15th president before hundreds of thousands of cheering supporters. Aquino, 50, took his oath of office shortly before noon (0400 GMT) at Rizal Park in central Manila after leading Filipinos in bidding farewell to his predecessor Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. He is to serve the Philippines as president for a term of six years during which he has vowed to fight corruption and poverty.

Top Pakistani leaders knew about Osama’s presence: Ex-minister

New Delhi: The top Pakistani leadership knew about the presence of Osama bin Laden, the world's most wanted terrorist, in their country long before...

Petrobras, Mitsui form bio-fuels venture

By IANS Rio de Janeiro : Brazilian state oil company Petrobras has said that it has formed a 50:50 joint venture with Japan's Mitsui Group to produce bio-fuels, with a focus on supplying ethanol to the Japanese market. The documents sealing the deal were signed Wednesday for formation of the venture in Brazil, Petrobras said in a statement, Spain's EFE news agency reported Friday.

Tunisian army chief resigns after soldiers’ deaths

Tunis : The Tunisian Army chief,Mohamed Salah Hamdi , has stepped down from his post as the highest commander, the defence ministry confirmed Wednesday. Hamdi...

Turkey detains spy for helping British girls join IS

Ankara: Turkey said on Thursday that it has detained an intelligence agent suspected of helping three British schoolgirls escape to Syria through Turkey, to...

UN secretary general ‘most concerned’ by Sri Lanka fighting

By DPA, Brussels : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is "most concerned" by the recent upsurge of fighting in Sri Lanka, he told journalists in Brussels Thursday. "I am most concerned at the rapidly deteriorating security situation in Sri Lanka," Ban said on the sidelines of a conference dedicated to the piracy crisis in Somalia. "I would like to take this opportunity to strongly urge all the parties concerned to respect the call of the UN Security Council, made yesterday, in full and without further delay: too many lives are at stake," he said.

Australia greets back-from-the-dead minister

By DPA, Sydney : Victoria state Tourism Minister Tim Holding was found alive Tuesday after spending two days lost in sub-zero temperatures in Australia's high country north of Melbourne. The 37-year-old went missing Sunday after setting off on a solo overnight hike to the summit of Mt Feathertop, in Victoria's alpine region. There were grave fears before a rescue helicopter spotted him alive and apparently well near the summit of Victoria's second-highest mountain.

Armenian state officials ‘planned post-election coup’

By DPA Yerevan : Several high state officials loyal to former president Levon Ter-Petrosian planned a coup in Armenia after the defeat of the opposition there in last week's presidential election, the state leadership was quoted as saying Sunday. The police detained deputy prosecutor-general Gagik Jangiryan, his brother and two justice officials, Interfax news agency reported from Yerevan. Besides, President Robert Kocharian dismissed the deputy foreign minister and three ambassadors who had backed the opposition, the report said.

Russia warns Poland of US missile defence plans

By SPA Moscow : Russia will aim to convince Poland of the strategic threat posed by US missile defence plans in the first direct talks over the controversial system, the Foreign Ministry said Wednesday, according to dpa. Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Kislyak is to meet his Polish counterparts in Warsaw on Thursday marking recently improved relations between the two countries.

Tributes pour in for APJ Kalam

By TCN News, Various organisations – Indian and of NRIs – have offered glorifying tributes to former Indian President APJ Abdul Kalam, who died at...

Europe needs 18,000 teachers by 2015: expert

By IANS, Chandigarh : At the present primary pupil-teacher ratio, there will be a requirement of another 18,000 primary school teachers by 2015 in Europe, an expert said here Tuesday. David Day, head of Life Long Learning, London said at a seminar on "Career for a teacher in Europe" here that British schools and colleges desperately need teachers with modern skills to enrich their curriculum and there are estimated 15-20 percent vacancies for teachers in London.

17 killed in China bus accident

By IANS, Beijing : At least 17 people died in China early Wednesday when the bus in which they were travelling plunged into a ravine.

Colombian troops free Betancourt, 14 others from leftist rebels

By DPA, Bogota : Former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, three US contractors and 11 other hostages held by leftist Colombian rebels were rescued Wednesday by Colombian military forces, Defence Minister Juan Manuel Santos said here. Betancourt, 46, had been kidnapped by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) on Feb 23, 2002. She holds dual French-Colombian citizenship and was the most high-profile hostage held by FARC.

Alleged Detroit plotters were ex-Guantanamo inmates: Report

By DPA, Washington : Two former detainees of the Guantanamo Bay detention facility are believed to have plotted the Christmas Day attempt to blow up a US airliner over Detroit, television network ABC reported Tuesday, citing US officials and documents from the defence department. Muhamad Attik al-Harbi and Said Ali Shari were sent to Saudi Arabia in November 2007 and later released. They are among four suspected terrorists in Yemen that may have helped organise Friday's failed plot, according to US officials. Al-Harbi has since changed his name to Muhamad al-Awfi.

Su-27 Flanker fighter crashes in Russia’s Far East, 1 pilot dead

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : A Russian Su-27 Flanker air superiority fighter crashed on Tuesday in the Primorye Territory in Russia's Far East, killing one pilot, an Air Force spokesman said. The $35-mln combat aircraft crashed at 11.30 Moscow time (07.30 GMT) while conducting a routine training flight near an airfield 12 kilometers (7 miles) north of Ussuriisk. "One of the pilots was killed, and the other survived the crash," Lt. Colonel Vladimir Drik said, adding that no casualties or damage on the ground had been reported.

Govt predicts flight ban to Europe lifted in March

By ANTARA News, Padang, W Sumatra : Transportation Minister Jusman Syafii Djamal predicted that the flight ban on Indonesian airline companies imposed by the European Union (EU) to fly to destinations in Europe, might be lifted in March 2009. "In March 2009 there will be another meeting to discuss the matter, and the government therefore hoped the meeting would decide to lift the EU ban," he said here Sunday night after opening the fourth national consultative meeting of the Land Transportation Operators Organization (Organda).

Thai military transfers 24 officials to inactive positions

Bangkok : The Thai military announced the transfer of 24 more officials to inactive positions and also set out the eight-point plan for national...

NY governor caught with woman in his closet: Report

By IANS, New York : After his predecessor Eliot Spitzer quit when his $1,000-an-hour romps with call girl Ashley Dupre became public two years ago, current New York Governor David Paterson too is facing rumours of sexacapades. The state's first African-American governor, who is also legally blind, said to have been found in close encounter with many pretty women, including one in the closet of his mansion, the New York Post reported.

Bomb scare on China-bound plane

By Xinhua, Urumqi (China): An Afghan plane scheduled for Urumqi in northwest China's Xinjiang region was threatened by a bomb Sunday, police sources in Xinjiang said. The sources had previously said the plane was hijacked. The Urumqi airport has received orders from aviation authorities to not allow the plane to land in the city. Armed police and emergency vehicles have rushed to the airport for emergency response.

UN Security Council Concerned of Humanitarian Crisis in Somalia

By SPA United Nations : The United Nations Security Council yesterday addressed its concerns on the humanitarian crisis in the region and agreed to delay an open debate on Somalia until U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon releases a report on the situation in early March, Security Council President Ricardo Alberto Arias told S.P.A. on Friday. Somalia “is becoming one of the most serious if not the most serious humanitarian crises we have around the world,” Arias said.

Avalanche kills five in Kyrgyzstan

By RIA Novosti Bishkek : An avalanche in the Issyk-Kul district in northern Kyrgyzstan, has left five people dead, the Central Asian state's emergencies ministry said on Friday. The tragedy occurred on Thursday evening near the mountainous resort of Lake Issyk Kul. Rescuers have managed to recover three of the bodies while the search is continuing for the others, a spokesman said. Kyrgyz authorities recently issued an avalanche warning in a number of regions after the Kara-kuldzha - Alaiku highway was blocked by snow.

UN: Use of Force Govt, Not Private

By Prensa Latina United Nations : The UN Working Group on the Use of Mercenaries noted with concern Monday that private security companies are taking over functions, such as legitimate use of force, which are considered exclusively governmental. In a report presented before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Spanish attorney and chair of the working group Jose Gomez del Prado said it has been verified that this kind of enterprise is flourishing and starting to absorb mercenaries on global scale for different security and protection tasks.

Fact sheet for London’s ‘Little India’ by-poll

By IANSLondon : Following is a fact-file on the Ealing Southall by-election:Candidates:* Virendra Kumar Sharma, Labour Party* Nigel Bakhai, Liberal Democrats* Tony Lit, Conservative...

Credit crunch slowing down global peace efforts: Ahtisaari

By DPA, London : The credit crunch is slowing down peacemaking in the world's conflict zones by undermining the economic development of war-torn countries, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Martti Ahtisaari said here Friday. "It will not help us solve conflict with no economic development in those countries. We are avoiding taking the tough decisions that are needed," the former Finnish president told foreign journalists. However, the 71-year-old said he basically remained optimistic about the future of world peace.

Strike at US ports continues for sixth day

By IANS, Los Angeles: Workers' strike over pay hike in America's busiest ports in Los Angeles and Long Beach has lasted for sixth day Sunday without a solution.

Hamas warns of war with Israel if reconstruction obstructed

Gaza: The armed wing of Islamic Hamas movement warned Thursday of another war with Israel, in case the process of reconstruction in the Gaza...

Russia will not talk withdrawal at CFE: Lavrov

By RIA Novosti

Moscow : Russia will not raise the issue of its withdrawal from the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty at a conference in Vienna in mid-June, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday.

Powerful earthquake kills three in Japan

By DPA, Tokyo : A 7.2-magnitude earthquake shook north-eastern Japan early Saturday, killing at lest three people and injuring more than 80. Michitaka Ishii, 55, was found dead in the ocean in Fukushima province. He was reportedly pushed into the water by a landslide while fishing at the time of the earthquake, according to police. No tsunami warnings were issued. Tomozo Chiba, 60, died after being hit by a truck in Iwate province as he left the house during the earthquake. Masahiko Chiba, 48, died in a hospital after he was hit by rolling rocks and fell unconscious.

Mixing drugs, herb remedies can damage health

By IANS, Washington: Herbal, dietary, energy or nutritional supplements may be good for one's well being, but if combined with common drugs they can damage health.

Venezuela denies torture allegations

Caracas : German Saltron, Venezuela's human rights representative to the Inter-American Commission for Human Rights (IACHR), has said that the accusations of human rights...

150,000 people protest closure of Mexican power firm

By EFE, Mexico City : About 150,000 union members, university students and leftists took part in a protest here against the Mexican government's decision to shut down a state-run electricity company, the police said. The demonstrators - many of them former employees of Luz y Fuerza del Centro, which was dissolved Sunday by President Felipe Calderon - marched down Reforma avenue Thursday to the Zocalo, Mexico City's massive main square.

Photographer of drowned Syrian toddler was ‘petrified’

Ankara: The photographer who shot the heart-wrenching picture showing a Syrian toddler’s lifeless body washed ashore Turkey`s Aegean coast said she was "petrified", the...

Myanmar junta appoints liaison minister for Suu Kyi talks

By DPA Yangon : In keeping with a request by United Nations special envoy Ibrahim Gambari, Myanmar's ruling junta has appointed a "minister for relations" between the military and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, state media confirmed Tuesday. The New Light of Myanmar newspaper, a government mouthpiece, reported that when Gambari visited Sep 29 to Oct 2, he had recommended that the regime appoint a liaison officer to build relations with Suu Kyi, the country's democracy icon and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.

After Buddha, Nepal stung by terror claims about last king

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : After the controversy over Bollywood kungfu comedy "Chandni Chowk to China", which wrongly claimed the Buddha was born in Nepal, the Himalayan republic has been stung anew by Indian media reports that a suspended Indian soldier was allegedly involved in a terror plot to establish a Hindu state with help from Nepal's last king Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah. "We are not surprised that Indian intelligence agencies and media have been propagating groundless reports about Nepal," Nepali weekly Jana Aastha Wednesday said.

No need for European Super League, says Chelsea boss

By DPA London : Chelsea's CEO Peter Kenyon has ruled out any need for a European Super League. Speaking at the Soccerex 08 forum in London, the former Manchester United official said that leading European clubs had no desire to replace the Champions League with a European Super League. "There is no appetite from any clubs for a league. We have one already called the Champions League," he said. Real Madrid General Commercial Director Begona Sanz admitted that there had been times when Europe's governing body UEFA had responded quite slowly to the demands of the clubs.

Putin calls for closer economic ties with China

By IANS, Beijing : Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin Tuesday gave a call for closer economic ties with China, saying the two countries share a lot of common interests, Xinhua reported.

Russian oil tanker sinks in Black Sea, spilling 1,000 tons of fuel

By Xinhua

Moscow : A Russian oil tanker split in half in a fierce storm in the Kerch Strait leading to the Black Sea on Sunday, spilling at least 2,000 tons of fuel oil, Interfax reported.

Thai opposition Democrat Party seeks impeachment of PM, minister

By Xinhua, Bangkok : Thailand's opposition Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva said Wednesday his party plans to seek impeachment proceedings against Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej and Chusak Sirinil, Minister attached to the Prime Minister's Office. Abhisit said the chairman of the opposition whips and legal experts from the Democrat Party had been assigned to study the details on filing impeachment proceedings against the duo.

Case for keeping residential areas free of liquor shops

By IANS, Toronto : Setting up liquor shops in residential neighbourhoods is not a good idea - so says a Canadian study that has sought to link a spurt in sales in such outlets to increased violence. As part of the study, the researchers identified 3,212 people aged over 13 who had been hospitalised over a 32-month period because of a serious assault. They compared the volume of alcohol sold at the liquor store closest to the victim's home the day before the assault with the volume sold at the same store a week earlier.

UK House of Commons disallows Hindu prayer

By IANS New York : The UK House of Commons has denied a request for reading the opening prayer by Rajan Zed, the Hindu chaplain who came to attention for reading the first Hindu prayer in the US Senate in July.

‘Iron supplements can reduce infant mortality’

By IANS, Sydney : Iron supplements given during pregnancy are known to prevent deaths in newborns, which has been validated by studies in China. "After comparing our results with other studies in Indonesia, India, the US and Bangladesh, it appeared the reduction in neonatal mortality was related to the increased duration of pregnancy from the iron in the supplements," said Michael Dibley of the University of Sydney, who was associated with the study.

Four US soldiers killed in Iraq suicide bombing

By ANTARA, Baghdad : Four American soldiers and an interpreter were killed in a suicide car bombing in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul on Monday, in the deadliest attack since last May, the US military said. It said three soldiers were killed on the spot while a fourth and the interpreter died later of their wounds when the suicide bomber's car exploded near their vehicle.

Tadic wins Serbian presidential elections

By KUNA Sarajevo : The central elections committee in Serbia Monday officially announced victory of Boris Tadic in the presidential elections conducted yesterday, bringing a sense of ease to the EU as the post is to be held by a pro-western figure. The committee stated opponent Tomislav Nikolic conceded defeat in a brief statement after the result announcement.

China suspends wild bird sales over avian flu

By IANS, Beijing: Chinese government has ordered suspension of wild bird sales in a bid to prevent spread of the H7N9 bird flu.

Ukraine-Russia gas talks delayed until Wednesday

By RIA Novosti Kiev : Ukraine and Russia have put off talks on their long-running natural gas dispute by one day until Wednesday, Ukraine's oil and gas company Naftogaz said on Tuesday. The former Soviet allies partially resolved their dispute last Thursday, agreeing that Ukraine would pay off about a $1 billion of its debt and that talks would continue on a supply scheme for 2008, after Russian gas monopoly Gazprom restored supplies, which were cut by 50% early last week.

DR Congo rebel leader Laurent Nkunda arrested

By Xinhua, Kinshasa (DR Congo) : Laurent Nkunda, Tutsi rebel leader of the National Council for the Defence of the People (CNDP) of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo), has been arrested, a statement from a joint Rwandan-DR Congo military operation said Friday. The statement said Nkunda was captured Thursday evening when he was fleeing to neighbouring Rwanda. About 1,500 Rwandan troops were reported in DR Congo Tuesday, joining in a long-planned military operation to knock out the rebel Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR).

No place for racism or racist violence: Australian envoy

By IANS, New Delhi: Australia Tuesday stressed that there was "no place for racism or racist violence" and cited the recent sentencing of an Australian youth who had attacked an Indian student as proof of Canberra's zero-tolerance for incidents of this nature. "There is no place in the Australian society for racism or racist violence and the perpetrators of any such acts will face the full force of the law," Australia's High Commissioner to India Peter Varghese said here in a statement.

Brown is Britain’s 52nd PM – moves next door

By Prasun Sonwalkar, IANS

London : Gordon Brown Wednesday became the 52nd individual to take over as Britain's prime minister, entering 10, Downing Street, a residence that has been the setting for some of history's greatest politicians and epochal moments.

Ban Condemns Sri Lanka Attacks, Urges Talks

By SPA United Nations : United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon condemned attacks in Sri Lanka on Wednesday that came as a ceasefire agreement between the government and separatist rebels officially ended. In attacks in Colombo, the country’s capital, included the bombing of a civilian bus. Rebels for the so-called Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam (LTTE) reportedly gunned down victims fleeing the scene. In a statement, Ban said “the only way to stop further violence in Sri Lanka is through dialogue.”

Russian government wants elderly to work beyond retirement

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Encouraging Russians to continue working after retirement can be an alternative to raising the retirement age, according to Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov.

GM shares tumble as US government ponders aid to auto industry

By DPA, New York : As Washington openly debated help for the beleaguered automobile industry, shares of General Motors plunged as much as 31 percent Monday as a Deutsche Bank AG analyst speculated the shares may be worthless in a year. "Even if GM succeeds in averting a bankruptcy, we believe that the company's future path is likely to be bankruptcy-like," Deutsche Bank's Rod Lache was quoted by Bloomberg financial news service as saying.

EU warned biofuel targets damage environment

By IRNA London : The EU should abandon its biofuels targets because they are damaging the environment, an all-party group of British MPs warned Monday. The Environmental Audit Committee said biofuels are ineffective at cutting greenhouse gases and can be expensive. Problematic emissions from cars can be cut more cheaply and with lower environmental risk, it said. "Biofuels can reduce greenhouse gas emissions from road transport - but at present most biofuels have a detrimental impact on the environment overall," committee chairman Tim Yeo said.

Thai elections not before 15 months, says coup leader

Bangkok : Thai coup leader General Prayuth Chan-ocha Friday said elections in the country are expected to be held after at least 15 months...

Australia to help Vietnam fight corruption

By Xinhua, Hanoi : Australia will help train senior members of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) in fighting corruption, Wednesday's Vietnamese newspaper Yong People quoted visiting Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith as saying. Australia would provide up to 500,000 U.S. dollars to support at raining program for Vietnamese senior officials to strengthen Vietnam's corruption prevention, detection and enforcement efforts, he said.

Britons spend ‘million pounds a minute’ in Christmas shopping

By IANS, London : Britons thronged high streets and shopping malls across a nation facing a recession in what commentators said was the busiest Boxing Day sales in living memory. Shoppers began queuing up for bargains at 5 a.m. Friday as major stores slashed prices by up to 90 percent, making light of predictions by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) that the British economy could shrink by more than 2.5 percent next year - the biggest slump since 1946. According to one newspaper, sales were expected to touch an astonishing one million pounds a minute Friday.

Daily life partly resumes in cyclone-hit Myanmar former capital

By Xinhua, Yangon : A minor part of the daily life started to resume in Myanmar's former capital of Yangon Sunday, the first day in the aftermath of the deadly cyclone Nargis strike the country for 10 hours from Saturday night to Saturday noon. Yangon residents began to move about mostly on foot as few number of public buses could run as such huge vehicles find impossible to fight their ways through roads densely blocked by the Nargis-triggered fallen trees and its long and thick branches.

US plane crash kills seven

By DPA, Washington : Seven passengers died when a light aircraft crashed in the state of Minnesota Thursday, US aviation authorities confirmed. The small plane, operated by the East Coast Jet air taxi service, crashed at the end of a runway while trying to land in the city of Owatonna, said Diane Spitaliere, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration. There were reports of severe weather in the region, Spitaliere said. The plane departed from Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Stalin’s grandson dies

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Joseph Alliluyev, Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin's grandson and son of his daughter Svetlana, has died in Moscow. Alliluyev died Sunday, media reported, without specifying the cause of the death. Alliluyev, born in 1945, was the only grandson of Stalin to have met him. He worked as a cardiologist publishing over 150 papers on heart disease and kept a low profile throughout his life, never giving interviews. Svetlana Alliluyeva, aged 82, Stalin's only daughter, defected to the United States in 1967 and is now a US citizen.

Canada’s ex-PM praises China, questions honouring Dalai Lama

By IANS, Toronto : Former Canadian prime minister Jean Chretien has eulogised China as the next superpower and criticised the current government for irking Beijing by honouring Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama. Chretien, who was Canada's prime minister from 1993 to 2003, also said that Prime Minister Stephen Harper had committed a blunder by not attending the Beijing Olympic opening ceremony. Speaking at the Canadian Bar Association in Quebec City Sunday, he said the current government had failed to understand China's importance as the world's biggest economy.

Cuba, Ethiopia for Fostering Collaboration

By Prensa Latina, Havana : An Ethiopian government delegation is to start Monday a series of meetings with Cuban counterparts to foster economic, scientific and technical collaboration between both nations. Ethiopian Finance and Economic Development Minister Mekonnen Manyazewal leads his country's delegation that will participate until Thursday in the Fifth session of the Intergovernmental Commission. Manyazewal's agenda here includes meeting with Cuban officials in the capital's Ministry for Foreign Investments and Economic Collaboration.

Therapy improves recovery for depressed mothers

By IANS, London : A therapy developed by Liverpool University and Pakistani scientists will be a boon to millions of depressed women in developing countries. The impact of depression - a major health problem world-wide - is the greatest in developing countries where 80 percent of the population live, according to experts. Atif Rahman of School of Population, Community and Behavioural Sciences, helped develop the programme while working as a Wellcome Trust Career Fellow in Tropical Medicine in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

China set to raise defense budget as Taiwan prepares for polls

By RIA Novosti Beijing : China may raise its defense spending by almost 20% to $58.7 billion in 2008, a National People's Congress (NPC) spokesman said on Tuesday as Taiwan prepared for a crucial vote on its future. "China's State Council will submit a proposal to a NPC session to consider the approval of 417.8 billion yuan in defense spending for the country in 2008," Jiang Enzhu told a news briefing ahead of a NPC legislative session due to start on Wednesday.

Sri Lanka: civilian death toll reaching “appalling levels”

By NNN-IRIN Colombo : The first six weeks of this year have been some of the deadliest for civilians since the fighting between Sri Lankan government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) intensified in December 2005. More than 180 civilians were killed and almost 270 injured in attacks on buses, at the country’s busiest railway station in the capital Colombo and elsewhere during the first 42 days of 2008, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said in a statement.

Athens Anarchists Torch Police Station

By Prensa Latina Athens : Unidentified men attacked a police station with fire bombs in the outskirts of the Greek capital on Saturday. The target of the attack was the police station in Pefki. Four police vehicles and two motorcycles parked in front of the facility were destroyed. No wounded were reported in the incident. Greece ó s Police Chief Anastasios Dimosharis said that ten persons wearing hoods took part in the attack, which was attributed to anarchist groups.

US concerned over journalist’s jail sentence by Iran

By DPA, Washington/Tehran : The US expressed deep concern Saturday over an eight-year prison sentence imposed by the Iranian judiciary on Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi for spying. "I am deeply disappointed," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said. "We will continue to vigorously raise our concerns to the Iranian government." Saberi, 31, a reporter for US National Public Radio, was sentenced on charges of spying for the US after the closed-door trial, her lawyer told reporters in Tehran.

Medvedev named United Russia’s presidential candidate

By RIA Novosti Moscow : The pro-Kremlin United Russia party officially nominated First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev as its candidate to run for the president in the March 2008 elections. Medvedev was nominated at a party convention Monday with 478 delegates voting in favour, and one against, his candidacy. Last week, the United Russia party along with three other pro-Kremlin parties named Medvedev as their candidate to run for the polls. His nomination was backed by President Vladimir Putin.

Three killed in China passenger train collision

By Xinhua, Changsha (China) : At least three people were killed and 60 injured as two passenger trains collided in central China's Hunan province Monday morning. The accident took place at 2.34 a.m. at Chenzhou railway station, 300 km from Changsha, capital of Hunan, according to local railway sources. A train going from Changsha to Shenzhen collided with another train going from Tongren to Shenzhen, causing several cars to derail, according to the sources.

China’s tea output reaches 1.75 mn tonnes

By IANS, Beijing : China's tea output reached 1.75 million tonnes last year, with 310,000 tonnes shipped overseas, an industry association official said Thursday.

US aid worker, Syrian soldiers beheaded by IS

Baghdad: A video has been circulating online purporting to show members of the Islamic State(IS) group beheading several Syrian soldiers and a US aid...

Obama loses popularity amid job losses, health care debate

By DPA, Washington : US President Barack Obama's popularity has dropped to the lowest levels of his young presidency as the country's economy continues to struggle, job losses mount and a critical health reform effort has stalled in Congress. The number of Americans who say they trust Obama fell to 54 percent from 66 percent, according to a poll released Tuesday by the Washington daily Politico.

Kenyan police, opposition brace for second day of demonstrations

By DPA Nairobi : A large police force was on the streets of Nairobi Thursday morning as the opposition planned the second of three days of protests over Kenya's disputed presidential polls. A day after at least three people were killed in the countrywide protests, officers had blocked off central Nairobi's Uhuru Park, where the opposition has tried to demonstrate in vain. Police Wednesday used tear gas to break up demonstrators and said they would also not allow smaller gatherings. The opposition, however, vowed to defy a police ban on rallies.

Obama, Rice, accomplished models of African-American leaders: Study

By IANS, Washington : Race and gender influence how politicians speak, which might not always be to their advantage, according to a psycho-linguistic study. But there are notable exceptions like Barack Obama and Condoleezza Rice, who unlike the past generation of African-American leaders, display self-confidence and serenity and remain calm and composed under stress. The researchers, focusing on Obama's language, found that his presentation of himself is nothing like the traditional black political orator Martin Luther King or Jesse Jackson.

Russian teenager chokes to death in sunflower seeds

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: In a bizarre tragedy, a 15-year-old boy working at a grain tower full of sunflower seeds, fell in and suffocated to death, officials said.

Australia’s Barrier Reef loses half of coral

By IANS, Washington: Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest coral reef system, has lost half of its coral cover in the past 27 years, a study revealed Monday.

Gandhi statue near Boston faces removal

By IANS

New York : A multi-faith retreat centre near Boston that houses a life-size bronze statue of Mahatma Gandhi is facing closure due to lack of state funding.

Britain to spend $260 mn for cooking classes in school

By IANS, London : British secondary school children will embark on a culinary odyssey from 2011 when it will become compulsory for them to learn how to cook as part of a 150 million pounds ($260 million) government plan to inculcate healthy eating habits. To help them mentally prepare to enter the kitchen-classroom, the government has brought out a 32-recipe, student-friendly cook book, listing choice dishes from British, Asian and Mediterranean cuisines.
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