Sri Lanka says US and Norway helped Fonseka, they deny
Cuba to highlight volunteers’ efforts on AIDS Day
Four policemen killed in Pakistan gun attack
Nepal’s TV stations cut broadcasts as power outages increase
Global airfreight, passenger volume drop sharply: aviation body
OECD meeting on tax havens begins in Paris
Sole survivor of Russian plane crash regains consciousness
19 killed in China as truck runs into crowd
40 Indians trapped at Everest Camp I, II
Spain, US sign accord to deploy anti-missile shield
Chinese premier encourages renovation to boost industry in country’s Muslim region
Bush seeks doubling of AIDS, malaria funding for Africa
Tropical storm Gustav kills 60 in Haiti
ANC only true hope for most South Africans: Zuma
One hurt in minor blast at main rail station in Sri Lanka capital
Cuban parliament to elect Castro”s successor
New Sobhraj battle from Oct 29
US Sikh files racial discrimination case against company
Financial stability has improved but new challenges ahead: IMF
Alex Reid learning about Islam
10 US schools locked down after gun battle: report
Russian parliament votes for Putin’s moratorium on arms treaty
Venezuela to hold referendum on Chavez term Feb 15
Four weeks after massacre, graduation at Virginia Tech
Washington : Four weeks after the bloody massacre at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, nearly 5,000 students received their degrees in a solemn yet joyful ceremony that memorialised the 32 people killed by a student gunmen.
Romney wins Michigan primary to breath new life into campaign
Russia to launch two European satellites
Peacekeepers in Abkhazia set up additional posts
British government ‘working urgently’ to free Iraqi captives
NBA fines coach Jackson $25,000 for criticism
US backs OSCE decision not to monitor Russian poll
Tibetan refugees ask Nepal to address rights in new constitution
SAARC pledges coordinated anti-terror action
My view on Gordon Brown was coloured: Cherie Blair
Job surge in Australia: Positive uptick or rogue figures?
China’s private sector work force now 200 million
Mike Tyson to write memoir
Australia and China spar over the Dalai Lama
Sydney : China must respect Australia's democratic system and accept that exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama can visit whenever he wants, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Wednesday.
Chinese President Hu Jintao meets Taiwan’s vice president-elect
New British Air Terminal Chaotic
5.4 million Chinese mourn for deceased
Radiation over legal level at Japanese nuclear plant
Cambodian courts to unveil public information boards
Cardinals meet ahead of papal conclave
Bolivia expels another US diplomat
Absconding serial blast mastermind wins Nepal poll
Rice says Taiwanese referendum to join UN ‘provocative’
Russian, Norwegian foreign ministers to visit border towns
CPC elects younger delegates to national congress
4 killed during football game in Mexican city
Gunmen free 23 inmates at Mexican detention centre
Chinese astronauts return to Earth
China train accident blamed on overspeeding
Georgian climbers erect 9/11 memorial plaque on Mt. Kazbek
Post Paris – Let some of us stand apart
Flat seized from Italian mafia to become kids’ home
German state objects to reprinting of Nazi newspapers
Will Dhondy’s Sobhraj prophecy come true?
10 die in Russian plane crash
Turmoil deepens in US air industry
Strike calls disrupt normal life in Nepal
Ex-Tamil rebel supporters back ex-army leader in presidential race
Japan to be bridge on nuclear, climate, economic issues: Hatoyama
Russia braces for wave of Georgian terrorism
EU-India summit on November 30
Brussels : Portugal, which takes over the six-month rotating Presidency of the European Union July 1, has planned summit-level meetings with all the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China), with the 8th EU-India summit scheduled for November 30 in New Delhi.
EU urged to help end Guantanamo ‘scandal’
Over 2,000 Germans volunteer to help battle Ebola
US Sikhs protest army ban on turban, long hair
US firm to invest $700 mn in Guatemala power plant
Eastern Europe seeks NATO security reassurance
CIS states to send experts to probe Sudan plane crashes
Bandaranaike wants to see women in peacekeeping role
Brussels : Former Sri Lankan president Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga called for women to play an active role in crisis management and peacekeeping around the globe.
British Airways employees go on new five-day strike
G7 to Analyze World Economic Challenges
Tokyo : The world's economic situation is more challenging and uncertain than in 2007, according to the draft of a communique that the Group of Seven (G7) will release on Saturday, after a meeting in this capital.
The world economy is going through difficult times but its foundations are still solid, said the document, released to the press and in which the terms of the exchange markets have not been defined yet.
Bhutan’s royal astrologers plan for 2008 elections
By Syed Zarir Hussain
IANSThimphu : Yeshey Rinchen looks like any other maroon-robed Buddhist monk chanting hymns at the famous Tashichhodzong monastery, the summer residence of the head abbot of the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan.
Woman Gets 10 Years For Buying Bullets In East China
Polish PM dissolves cabinet ahead of new elections
Bhutan’s constitution case: High Court verdict upheld
Ecuatorial Guinea President Ends Cuba Visit
‘Russia will respond pragmatically to NATO expansion’
Evacuation at Charles de Gaulle Airport over “suspicious” bag
Su-30 fighter crashes in Russia, crew safe
Majority of Chinese admit jumping red lights
Two get death sentence in China milk scandal
Zimbabwe police raid opposition, 60 arrested
Sutil close to Force India contract renewal
‘Sons of soil’ mark Black Day, shut down Nepal
By Sudeshna Sarkar
IANSKathmandu : Condemning June 1 as a 'black day' in the history of Nepal's ethnic communities and flaying the failure of the government to address their grievances even after seven months, over 60 communities united under a common banner to enforce a countrywide shutdown Friday.
UNSC hails release of two abducted diplomats
NATO warship helps Iranian vessel
Colombia calls Venezuelan president sponsor of terrorism
UN chief welcomes Paris march against terrorism
Dubai’s food, rental prices among world’s highest
Muslim pupil not allowed to pray at German school
Typhoon kills 10 in Philippines
Hundreds of fossils found outside Argentina’s capital
15 dead in Bangkok blast
Obama calls on world to confront scourges of hatred
Sri Lanka to provide highest security for polls in east district
ASEAN to discuss ways to help Myanmar cyclone victims
Obama puts off review of deportations
Terrorism obsessed Bush ignored emergence of India, China: Biden
Ban Ki-moon applauds UN peacebuilding commission
Nepal government faces trouble over violence probe report
Kathmandu : Nepal's eight-party government is likely to face fresh trouble next week when it finally makes public a controversial report on the probe into the killing of 25 unarmed protesters during the King Gyanendra regime's last days in power.