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Russia, Japan not to link peace treaty signing to other issues

By RIA Novosti, Singapore : Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama have agreed to decide on signing a peace treaty without links to other issues, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Sunday. Medvedev and Hatoyama held a meeting on Sunday at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Singapore.

Gorbachev blasts Bush on missile defence issue

By DPA

Washington : Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev weighed in on the tense Russia-US situation, blasting the US president for provoking another arms race with plans to station anti-missile silos and a radar system in Poland and the Czech Republic.

‘Million-man’ rally to kick off amid tension in Kenya

By DPA Nairobi : Defeated Kenyan presidential candidate Raila Odinga vowed to defy a police ban on a "million-man" rally and was set to meet his supporters Thursday at a downtown Nairobi park to inaugurate himself as president, charging that President Mwai Kibaki stole the win from him. A large security detail were deployed in Uhuru Park, where Odinga's party, the Orange Democratic Movement, said a million people would rally behind its candidate.

Indonesian president arrives in Kuala Lumpur for D8 Summit

By Xinhua, Kuala Lumpur : Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono arrived in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday to attend the 6th Summit of the Developing 8 countries (D8). Susilo is the first head of state to arrive here for the one-day summit, which will be held here on Tuesday. He was greeted by Malaysian Foreign Minister Rais Yatim at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport. Susilo, accompanied by his wife Ani Bambang Yudhoyono, is leading a 50-member delegation comprising senior officials and corporate figures.

Higher education ministry signs agreements

By SPA London : The ministry of higher education has signed a number of contracts with the institute of higher education policies and the institute of higher education in Britain in the presence of minister of higher education Dr Khalid al-Anqari, who is currently visiting Britain. The agreements aim at exchange of expertise with the British scientific institutions as well as development of the Saudi universities.

Asian maids labour hard for little returns

By DPA Hong Kong : Loretta works at least 15 hours a day, six days a week. She lives with her employer, sleeping on a sofa in the bedroom of his six-year-old son. She has no privacy, eats the leftovers from the meals she cooks for her employer and has just one day off a week. In the West, her working conditions would be deemed almost slave labour. But in Hong Kong and other Asian countries, they are not unusual for a maid. "I have lots of friends who live like this," said the 38-year-old Filipino who has been working as a maid in Hong Kong for 12 years.

Powerful earthquake strikes Indonesia

By Xinhua Jakarta : A powerful earthquake struck the western coast off Indonesia's Sumatra island early Sunday morning, but there were immediate report of casualties and structural damages. According to the country's Meteorological agency, the quake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale rocked Mukomuko district in Bengkulu province on Sumatra island at 09:52 a.m. local time.

Ukrainian president pardons jailed ex-minister

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Kiev: Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych has pardoned jailed ex-interior minister Yuriy Lutsenko, the president's website reported Sunday.

Pakistani ambassador’s letter requires no action: UN

By IANS, Islamabad : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon does not have a "specific response" to a letter from Pakistan's UN Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon on the Mumbai terror attacks as it did not call for any action from the world body, his spokesperson said. "It is a general letter addressed to the secretary-general and to all member states," Dawn Friday quoted spokesperson Michele Montas as saying while responding to a question at a briefing. "No action was required in the letter," she added.

Thai social minister resigns

By Xinhua, Bangkok : Thailand's Social Development and Human Security Minister Sutha Chansaeng has submitted his resignation, which took effect immediately, Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej confirmed here on Thursday. Secretary of Sutha, Anake Hutankabodi, said Sutha resigned because of bad health, adding that doctors told the minister to rest a lot because he stands a chance of being paralyzed. Sutha's health condition raised concern when he passed out at a public occasion late last month and admitted to a hospital for a check up.

Obama, Lee press N. Korea on nuclear ambitions

By NNN-Kyodo, Seoul : US President Barack Obama and South Korean President Lee Myung Bak reasserted their call for North Korea on Thursday to scrap its nuclear programs, with Obama unveiling a plan to send his top North Korea policy envoy to the North in December. Lee said at a joint news conference with Obama after their talks in Seoul the two reconfirmed a solid bilateral security posture, including the US policy of keeping South Korea under its nuclear umbrella.

China quake toll rises to 33, over 500 injured

By Xinhua, Panzhihua (China) : The death toll in the 6.1-magnitude quake that struck China's southwestern provinces of Sichuan and Yunnan Saturday has risen to 33, the civil affairs ministry said Monday. Most of the casualties were in Sichuans's worst-hit county of Huili, where 22 out of the 27 deaths in the province were reported. Another five deaths occurred in Yunnan province, the ministry said, adding that more than 500 people were also injured in the disaster.

China’s oil, gas output goes up

By IANS, Beijing : China's crude oil and natural gas output both marked year-on-year rises in January, new data from the country's top economic planner shows.

UN food convoy for war displaced people enters LTTE-held areas

Colombo, Oct 2 (IANS) A 50-truck UN food convoy for civilians, displaced due to the escalation of clashes between the advancing government troops and the Tamil Tiger rebels, has entered the rebel-held areas in the north Thursday, the UN office here said. It said that the convoy would transport and distribute food to four locations to the east of Kilinochchi, where the majority of displaced civilians "are thought to have concentrated".

US stocks down despite interest rate cut

By DPA, New York : Key Wall Street stock indices slipped Wednesday despite the Federal Reserve's decision to slash the benchmark interest rate to its lowest level in more than four years. The Federal Reserve announced the second rate cut this month in an effort to make loans cheaper and stimulate the struggling economy, but it did not encourage investors, one day after the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average scored its second-largest point gain in history.

Taiwan ready to buy 60 warplanes from US: official

By DPA, Taipei : Taiwan is ready to buy 60 F-16C/D warplanes from the US and will pass the budget for the purchase as soon as Washignton approves the sale, a lawmaker said Sunday. Lin Yu-fang, a member of the parliament's defence committee, made the remark in response to a newspaper report that a US official will come to Taiwan later this month to persuade incoming President Ma Ying-jeou to approve the purchase.

Canadian sawmill offers new jobs to Sikhs opposing hat policy

By IANS Vancouver : A sawmill company, against which its two Sikh employees have moved the provincial British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal for its mandatory hard-hats policy at work site, has offered them alternative jobs. However, the petitioners and the Sikh leaders, who don't want to set a bad precedent, met at a city gurudwara to carry their fight to conclusion.

Salahis named ‘The Reliable Source Persons of the Year’

By IANS, Washington: The White House gate-crashing caper has won a celebrity chasing couple who strolled uninvited into President Barack Obama's state dinner for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh "Persons of the Year" title from a leading US daily. "The Reliable Source Persons of the Year" title for Michaele and Tareq Salahi though comes from the gossip column of the Washington Post's Style section.

‘Moscow not isolated, can bring own sanctions into play’

By DPA, Moscow : Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has threatened to hit back if the European Union (EU) imposes sanctions against his country over Georgia, Interfax news agency reported Sunday. Medvedev's comments come a day before a scheduled EU emergency summit to discuss the union's response to the Russian invasion of Georgia. Sanctions against the EU's largest neighbour may be one outcome of the meeting. "I am not a supporter of sanctions but at a push we can take these kinds of measures," Medvedev said at the Black Sea resort of Sochi.

UN to probe sexual abuse claims in Cote d’Ivoire

By Xinhua

Abidjan : The United Nations (UN) peacekeeping mission in Cote d'Ivoire has said the UN would send an inspection team to the country next week to investigate cases of sexual abuse concerning some Moroccan soldiers.

Spokesperson of the UN peacekeeping mission, Hamadoun Toure, said Thursday that the inspection team, composed of UN and Moroccan experts, would release the results of the investigation as soon as possible.

Toure reaffirmed the UN's "zero tolerance policy" towards sexual exploitation and abuse.

Israel frees three out of five Lebanese detainees

Jerusalem: The Israel army has released three out of the five people they had kidnapped Thursday near the Blue Line border with Lebanon. The Israel...

Indian taxi driver’s assailant identified

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Melbourne : The passenger who abused and assaulted Indian taxi driver Lakhbir Singh over the weekend in the St Kilda suburb of Melbourne has been identified by the police as authorities gear to stop further attacks on cabbies. "The occupant of the taxi has been identified and is assisting the police with enquiries. The matter is now with investigators," a spokesperson for the Victoria Police told IANS.

China’s quake-hit county may move to new site

By Xinhua, Mianyang (China) : Beichuan, the worst-hit county in the May 12 earthquake in southwestern China, will be rebuilt on a new site in neighbouring Anxian county, according to a preliminary plan. The exact location is yet to be decided, but it is likely to be on the flat land of Anxian county, some 20 km from the devastated area, said an official of the Sichuan provincial government who added that the plan was awaiting official approval.

Dinosaur skeleton on sale

By DPA Paris : An authentic dinosaur is on sale in Paris where Christie's has put a more than 65-million-year-old triceratops skeleton up for auction, reports said Saturday. More than 70 percent of the 7.5-metre-long skeleton is authentic, the auction house says. The missing parts were substituted with resin. The two-tonne fossil is expected to fetch around 500,000 euros ($770,000) at the auction April 16.

Anger escalates in Japan over alleged marine rape case

By KUNA Tokyo : Residents of the southern Japanese prefecture of Okinawa on Wednesday continued to express their anger over the alleged rape of a 14-year-old schoolgirl by a US Marine, while the US ambassador to Japan traveled to the island to ease tension. Earlier in the day, two city councils in Okinawa unanimously adopted a protest resolution and a statement against the US and Japanese governments, calling for measures to prevent a recurrence, an apology, and compensation for the victim. "The incident is extremely heinous and unforgivable," their statement said.

Tainted Maoists lose Nepal PM’s poll

By Sudeshna Sarkar,IANS, Kathmandu : Dogged by allegations of trying to buy MPs and fighting a leaked tape that purportedly caught a senior aide seeking NRS 500 million from a "friend" in China, Maoist chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda crashed out of Nepal's prime ministerial race Sunday, ending the former rebels' hope of recapturing power through parliament.

EU looks at future of Nepal with great hope

By EuAsiaNews, Brussels : European Union foreign policy chief , Javeir Solana, met here Thursday evening with Foreign Minister of Nepal, Upendra Yadav, and discussed EU-Nepal ties and the situation in Nepal and the region. It was a "courtesy call and a short meeting," sources in Solana’s office told EuAsiaNews. Yadav informed his EU interlocutor that the drafting of the new constitution in Nepal was in the process of completion and Solana described this as "very good news", said the sources speaking on condition of anonymity.

Identifying Brazil crash victims will take month or more

By DPA

Sao Paulo : Efforts to identify the victims of Brazil's deadliest plane crash that killed an estimated 200 people will take at least 30 days, forensic authorities said.

Most of the bodies recovered from the Sao Paulo wreckage were badly burned as the plane rammed a petrol station and two other buildings after skidding off a wet runway at the city's Congonhas airport Tuesday night, setting off a huge blaze.

Modi arrives in US

New York : Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived here Friday on a five-day visit to the US. During his visit, he will address the...

Global slowdown may impact China’s growth rate

By Xinhua, Beijing : Narrowing overseas demand in the wake of global economic slowdown could have a negative impact on the growth prospects of exports-dependent China, country's top banker said Sunday. "Our economy is highly reliant on overseas demand. Slacking exports resulted from the global economic slowdown would have a negative impact on the economy," governor of the country's central bank Zhou Xiaochuan told Chinese parliament, the National People's Congress (NPC).

Late school times good for your kid’s sleep

By IANS, London : Teens slept more and better at night after classes were rescheduled to commence 30 minutes later than usual timings, which also minimised their chances of auto-accidents. Their sleep averaged from 12 minutes (grade nine) to 30 minutes (grade 12). The percentage who got at least eight hours of sleep per weeknight increased significantly from 35.7 percent to 50 percent.

Facebook, Twitter should be monitored: ex-British spy

By IANS, London : Social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter should be monitored to prevent their misuse by paedophiles and terrorists, a former British spy chief has said.

India will be ‘top priority’ in my presidency: Barack Obama

By Ashok Easwaran, IANS, Chicago : A stronger relationship with India and a close strategic partnership will be a "top priority" of a Barack Obama administration, says the Democratic presidential candidate. "The US should be working with India on a range of critical issues from preventing terrorism to promoting peace and stability in Asia," Senator Obama said in an exclusive interview with IANS, the first with a South Asian journalist after his nomination for the presidency by the Democratic party.

French right-wing party wins majority in parliament

By Xinhua

Paris : French President Nicolas Sarkozy's right-wing party won an absolute majority in parliament Sunday, results published by the Interior Ministry showed.

    The second round of France's parliamentary elections ended at 8:00 p.m. (1800 GMT), with the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) party taking 314 seats in the 577-seat National Assembly.

    The main opposition Socialist Party won 185 seats.

Brown meets bank chiefs to discuss credit crunch

By IRNA, London : Prime Minister Gordon Brown held breakfast talks Tuesday with the heads of Britain's top banks on credit crunch and the world's economic crisis. After the meeting, Brown said that 'a range of measures' to get confidence back in the housing market were discussed in a 90-minute summit. He said that he recognized people's concerns in trying to get a mortgage but insisted that he would not be diverted from taking 'unpopular' decisions to ensure Britain gets through the global credit crunch.

French defence firm Nexter offers India 21st century artillery

By Sahil Makkar, IANS, Paris : French defence major Nexter hopes to interest the Indian Army in its Caesar truck-mounted howitzer that it is projecting as the "artillery gun of the 21st century". The forward-facing 155mm/52 calibre gun is mounted on a 4x4 or 6x6 truck chassis depending on the terrain it has to be deployed in and is superior to the self-propelled or towed variety of the weapon for which the Indian Army has floated a global tender earlier this year, its manufacturer says.

Sri Lanka rebels attack air base, eight planes lost

By DPA Colombo : Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayke Wednesday disclosed that eight aircraft were destroyed by Tamil rebels in a ground and air attack on a military base in north central Sri Lanka two days ago. But the opposition is claiming as many as 18 aircraft were destroyed, costing the island nation more than $50 million.

European Commission congratulates Obama

By KUNA, Brussels : The European Commission congratulated Wednesday Barack Obama on being elected US president. In a statement on this occasion, President of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso said this was "a time for renewed commitment between the European Union and the United States." He said the two sides needed to "change the current crisis into a new opportunity and would strike a new deal for a new world."

Small plane crash in US kills two

By Xinhua

Washington : Two people were killed when a small plane crashed into a house in Conway in the southern US state of Arkansas, media reported.

Israel forces on alert after Palestinian teen dies

Jerusalem: Israeli security forces have been put on high alert after a Palestinian teenager, who was critically wounded during a protest in east Jerusalem...

Endeavour shuttle returns from mission to ISS

By RIA Novosti Washington : U.S. space shuttle Endeavour touched down in Florida after a 16-day trip to deliver part of a Japanese research lab and a Canadian robot to the International Space Station. NASA said the shuttle landed at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 8:39 p.m. EDT on Wednesday (00:39 GMT Thursday) just after sunset, "bringing the STS-123 mission to a flawless end." The landing was slightly delayed due to cloud cover over Florida, and the shuttle made an additional orbit of the Earth before entering the atmosphere.

Falling OPEC crude price nears $120 mark

By DPA, Vienna : The price for crude oil produced by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) fell by almost a dollar Wednesday but stayed above $120 a barrel, OPEC said Thursday. One barrel (159 litres) of OPEC-produced crude stood at $120.88 Wednesday, $0.85 less than $121.73 on the previous day. OPEC calculates an average basket price based on 13 important brands produced by cartel members.

Australian cops hunt Asians for bashing youth

By IANS, Melbourne : Australian police are hunting a gang of thugs of Asian appearance for beating up three youths in this city. A 20-year-old was taken to hospital and treated for serious cranial fractures after he was punched and kicked in his head following a verbal stoush outside a carpark Sunday. The Pascoe Vale man had just left the multi-level carpark with three friends around 12.15 a.m. when they got into an argument with a group of six, five of whom looked Asian, The Age reported Thursday.

Russia to obtain air bases around world: Defence chief

Moscow: Russia looks forward to expand it military presence in the world's key areas, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said Wednesday. "We are going to expand...

From Bush to Obama, traditions anchor inaugural ceremony

By DPA, Washington : His campaign promised change and his election as America's first black president broke historical barriers, yet when Democrat Barack Obama moves into the White House Tuesday, tradition guides every step of the ceremonial day. Republican President George W. Bush will hand over power to Obama according to symbolism and rules that have evolved during the country's 220-year history and 56 inaugural ceremonies.

Magnitude-6.8 quake hits Japan

Tokyo: A powerful quake measuring 6.8 on the Richter scale jolted Fukushima prefecture in the northeast Japan early Saturday, Xinhua reported. There was no...

Immigration Reform Fails at US Senate

Washington, Dec 29 (Prensa Latina) The failure of immigration law reform at the Senate was one of the worst legislative events in US, in 2007, commented Washington Hispanic daily. After the attempt of the Senate to approve a migration reform fell through, an anti immigrant current has increased in most of the nation, noted the newspaper in the capital. According to the source the fiasco of the initiative was mainly due to the reaction of Xenophobe minorities, among them the so-called Minuteman that swamped the Congress' lines by calls and e-mails.

Sanctions against Iran to continue: EU’s Solana

By DPA Rome : European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana said his talks with Iranian negotiators were "constructive" but sanctions against Iran would continue until an agreement to resolve the dispute over Tehran's nuclear programme was reached. Solana made the remarks during a joint news conference here Tuesday with Iran's outgoing chief nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, and his recently announced replacement, Saied Jalili. Larijani said "discussions were clear and transparent" and progress had been made.

20,000 phone lines cut in New Jersey

By IANS, New York : Over 20,000 government telephones in New Jersey have been disconnected after an audit found they were lying useless and costing the economy over $3 million. Telecommunications authorities disconnected the phones that "no one was using", after the audit report was released. New Jersey State Comptroller Matthew Boxer said the Office of Information Technology will "generate periodic reports of lines with zero usage to ensure agencies are disconnecting their unused lines", Fox News reported.

Food poisoning kills 11 in China

By IANS, Beijing : Eleven people have died due to food poisoning in northwest China, authorities said Sunday.

15 rebels, seven soldiers killed in Sri Lanka fighting

By DPA, Colombo : At least 15 Tamil rebels and seven soldiers were killed in fighting in northern Sri Lanka during a military offensive on rebel strongholds, military officials said Tuesday. Two soldiers were killed in each of three separate incidents in the Mullaitivu district and another soldier was killed in Kilinochchi district, 320 km north of the capital Colombo. Among the rebels, six were killed in a Kilinochchi and one in Vavuniya and eight others were killed in fighting with government troops in Weloya, officials said.

Bush exempts Navy from environmental law

By DPA Washington : US President George W. Bush has exempted the Navy from an environmental law regulating the use of sonar off the California coast, the White House said. Bush is determined that the Navy needs to use the mid-frequency sonar to effectively train for anti-submarine warfare "in support of worldwide operational and combat activities, which are essential to national security". The law is designed to protect marine life from what environmentalists believe are the harmful effects of sonar that can be lethal or cause whales to beach themselves.

40 Haitian immigrants drown off Cuban coast

By IANS, Santo Domingo : At least 40 Haitian illegal immigrants have drowned when their ship sank off the Cuban coast, Xinhua reported Sunday.

Bomb exploides at PAD rally site inside Thailand’s Government House compound

By NNN-TNA, Bangkok : A bomb exploded inside Thailand's Government House compound Saturday morning, held by anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) protesters since late August, wounding a PAD volunteer guard. No other casualties were reported. The witnesses said a bomb exploded at the PAD security guard's tent outside the Santi Maitree building inside the Government House compound. Wounded in the incident was security volunteer Methee U-thong who suffered injuries on his face, neck and head. He was sent to Vajira Hospital for treatment.

Secular budget triggers unholy row in Nepal

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Riot police were called to restore order as violence, arson and looting erupted Saturday at the heart of the capital as its Newar community went on the rampage, protesting the secular budget unveiled Friday that slashed allocations for religious festivals.

At least 20 killed on Russian nuke sub-marine for India

By NNN-PTI, Moscow : At least 20 people including four sailors were killed and 21 injured in a gas leak accident on board a brand new nuclear-powered Nerpa submarine to be leased to India during a sea trial in the Pacific Ocean. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has ordered a high level probe into the major accident, the worst since the 2000 Kursk mishap.

Nepal quake toll rises to over 2,300

Kathmandu : The toll in the massive earthquake that devastated Nepal rose to over 2,300 on Sunday, the government said. Nepal's ministry of home affairs...

Russia launches freighter rocket

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: Russia Wednesday launched a freight rocket to the International Space Atation from Kazakhstan's Baikonur space centre.

‘US willing to negotiate new nuke verification regime’

By RIA Novosti Washington : The US has agreed to negotiate a legally binding nuclear warheads verification regime after the Cold War era Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty-I (START-I) expires, a Republican senator has said. Richard Lugar made this comment Wednesday at a conference on weapons of mass destruction entitled "Defence in Depth Against WMD Threats: Preparedness at Home and Abroad," in Chantilly, Virginia.

Russian ship seized off Somalia

By RIA Novosti Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Far East) : Russia has informed the NATO fleet that a Russian ship was seized by pirates off the coast of Somalia, the Russian Far Eastern rescue center said on Sunday. "The ship was seized by pirates near Somalia on February 1 at 1:17 p.m. Greenwich Time," the center said. According to the center, the ship, Svitser Korsakov, had six people on its board: two Brits and four Russians.

Two Russian pilots killed in crash

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : A Russian MiG-31 fighter jet crashed in the Urals Tuesday, killing both pilots, officials said.

Use of preventive antibiotics reduces deaths in ICUs: Study

By IANS, London : Administering antibiotics to intensive care unit or ICU patients as a preventive measure reduces chances of death, according to a study. The study involved nearly 6,000 Dutch patients in 13 hospitals. Researchers compared the effect of two kinds of antibiotic treatments with the standard ICU care. They divided into three groups nearly 6,000 patients hospitalised in ICUs between 2004 and 2006. The patients in question were expected to be on a ventilator for at least two days and/or to be admitted to the ICU for at least three days.

Obama changes location for party’s national convention

By Xinhua, Washington : U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama would receive his nomination at a grand stadium in Denver, Colorado, instead of a hall as originally planned, according to a TV report on Monday. The Illinois senator was expected to receive his moment as the party's presidential nominee on Aug. 28 at the 75,000-seat INVESCO Field at Mile High that could hold much larger audience, the Democratic national convention organizers told CNN. The convention was originally scheduled at the Pepsi Center, where there are about 20,000 seats.

Half of Indonesian political parties fail verification tests for election

By Xinhua, Jakarta : About 50 percent of Indonesian political parties that registered with the General Election Commission (KPU) for participation in the 2009 polls failed to pass verification tests, KPU chairman Hafiz Ansyari said on Monday. The results of the verification tests would be announced Monday night, but it was already certain that about half of them had failed, Antara news agency quoted Hafiz as saying at the launch of a 2009 general election familiarization campaign in Banjarmasin, South Kalimantan.

Private military firms may appear in Russia: Minister

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: The Russian government's Military Industrial Commission may consider creating private military companies in the country, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said.

Palin to take center stage of third night of Republican Convention

By Xinhua, St. Paul, the United States : Alaska governor Sarah Palin will accept the Republican vice presidential nomination Wednesday night in St. Paul, Minn., at the third night of the Republican National Convention. Earlier in the morning, the 44-year old first-term female governor took tour of the stage at the convention, and stood at the lectern where she'll deliver her first major speech as presumptive Republican presidential candidate John McCain's running mate. Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani was set to deliver the night's keynote address.

Britain’s flood emergency to get worse, warns government

By DPA

London : Britain's already dramatic "summer floods" which have paralysed parts of the country are far from over and further flooding is "very likely," Environment Secretary Hilary Benn said Monday.

"We believe that up to 10,000 homes have been or could be flooded," Benn told parliament in an update on the emergency which has hit central and south-west Britain.

With further rainfalls being forecast, the Environment Agency (EA) said that crisis point could be reached in some areas.

Pacific tit-for-tat on cards after Fiji expels diplomats

By DPA, Wellington : Relations between Fiji's military government and its biggest South Pacific neighbours Australia and New Zealand were poised to worsen Wednesday after the island state expelled their senior diplomats. New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully said his government was considering a tit-for-tat expulsion of Fijian diplomats and warning its citizens about travelling to the island nation, which has been under military rule for nearly three years following a coup.

US approves Lupin’s anti-depressant drug

By IANS, Mumbai : The US drug administration has approved an anti-depressant drug manufactured by the $694 million pharma major Lupin Ltd for marketing in that country, the company said Monday. In a regulatory intimation, Lupin said the green-signal for its anti-depressant Escitalopram Oxalate tablets was given to its US subsidiary Lupin Pharmaceuticals. The market for the drug is valued at $2.6 billion. Mumbai-based Lupin manufactures Escitalopram tablets, administered during treatment of major depressive disorders, under the Lexapro brand name.

Colombia has enough oil for eight years

By IANS/EFE, Bogota : Colombia only has enough oil to last another eight years and must urgently step up exploration efforts to locate more reserves, Finance Minister Mauricio Cardenas said.

China, Russia to make joint efforts for Syria

By IANS, Beijing : China and Russia have pledged to make joint efforts to seek a political solution to the ongoing Syrian turbulence as the two countries' foreign ministers held talks in Beijing.

Death toll in Ukraine mine blast reaches 72

By RIA Novosti Donetsk(Ukraine) : Local prosecutors opened Monday a criminal investigation into a mine blast in east Ukraine's Donetsk region as the death toll rose to 72, with 28 miners still missing. The Zasyadko coalmine was hit by a methane explosion early Sunday, causing a fire in the mine. At the time of the blast, 457 miners were underground. A total of 357 miners have since been brought overground.

Myanmar junta accepts diplomatic mission to oversee cyclone-hit areas

By Xinhua, Yangon : In a marked departure from its earlier stance, Myanmar's junta has agreed to send a foreign diplomatic mission to oversee the status of the deadly cyclone-hit areas, diplomatic sources said Saturday. It is the first time that the government made such move to allow foreigners to inspect the cyclone-hit areas in the aftermath of the disaster. The diplomatic mission includes officials of resident UN and foreign diplomats in Myanmar.

Italy declares state of emergency over immigration

By DPA, Rome : The Italian government announced Saturday a nationwide state of emergency in reaction to a phenomenal increase in illegal immigration to the country's south. The Silvio Berlusconi government's move is to provide local authorities with greater means to deal with the rising tide of illegals arriving by boat. Interior Minister Roberto Maroni plans to build new intake centres throughout the country, the daily La Repubblica reported.

Controversial Serbian minister quits after record time in office

By DPA, Belgrade : The longest-serving member of the Serbian government and one of the most controversial Health Minister Tomica Milosavljevic, announced his resignation Friday.

Kelly Osbourne awarded Style Icon award

By IANS, London: Singer Kelly Osbourne has been awarded as the Style Icon award at the Cosmopolitan Ultimate Women of The Year Awards 2012.

Canada’s first Sikh MP denies supporting Tamil Tigers

By Gurmukh Singh, IANS, Toronto : Even as Canadians continue to protest the arrival last week in Vancouver of a ship carrying about 500 Sri Lankan Tamil asylum seekers, Canada's first Sikh MP Gurbax Singh Malhi has been dragged into the divisive issue for his alleged support for the Tamil Tigers. The six-times MP is angry after a columnist in the Toronto Sun named him for his alleged support for the Tamil Tigers.

Media Lashes at McCain’s Drive Vs Obama

By Prensa Latina, Washington : The team of Republican Presidential Candidate John McCain tries to defame his rival Barack Obama with tactics used by President George W. Bush. The New York Times says McCain's new strategy shows tactics of ex pupils of Karl Rove, ex aide of Bush that resigned amid scandal for manipulation and misuse of intelligence. The paper says McCain promised he would not use unlawful attacks but forgot his promises when the possibilities to loose were pretty narrow.

Six-nation ministerial talks on North Korea July 23

By RIA Novosti Beijing : Foreign ministers of the six countries negotiating North Korea's nuclear disarmament will meet in Singapore July 23, South Korea's Yonhap agency said Friday. The six countries involved in the talks - Russia, the United States, China, Japan and the two Koreas - have never yet sent their top diplomats to the negotiations, which have been running since 2003.

Goldman Sachs could be sued for helping hide Greece’s debts: Report

Athens : If Greece follows the advice of a former Goldman Sachs banker, the global investment banking firm could face legal action for...

Citing economic crisis, Argentine president wants early polls

By EFE, Buenos Aires : Argentine President Cristina Fernandez has proposed to hold Congressional elections four months earlier than scheduled to allow the government focus more on fighting the economic crisis. But analysts and opponents have called it a political gimick. "We cannot be in elections (mode) until October, in a permanent debate when the world is falling to pieces and the pieces are falling on us: it would be suicide," Fernandez said at a public event Friday.

Two Madrid airport bombing suspects arrested in France

By Xinhua Madrid : Spain's Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba has said that the two men suspected of involvement in the 2006 Madrid airport bombing have been arrested by the police. Rubalcaba Saturday confirmed that the Spanish and French police have arrested three suspected members of the Basque separatist group ETA Friday in southern France, two of who are suspects of the Madrid bombing. The deadly bombing Dec 30, 2006, at the Madrid airport destroyed a multi-storey parking garage and killed two people.

ISI behind Afghanistan war, says Afghan vice president

Kabul : Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) is behind the fighting across war-raged Afghanistan, says Afghan Vice-President Abdul Rashid Dostum, the media reported. "The war not...

Call for action at key UN climate change summit

By DPA, Copenhagen : Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen was to kick-start a mammoth UN conference in Copenhagen Monday aimed at halting global warming. The conference's opening ceremony was preceded by a joint leader article, published by 56 newspapers in 45 countries, calling on world leaders to place "decisive action" ahead of mutual recrimination. Without action, "climate change will ravage our planet, and, with it, our prosperity and security", the article said, citing record warm years, the melting Arctic ice cap "and last year's inflamed oil and food prices".

US Senate recommends studying Syria no-fly zone

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Washington: The US Senate has recommended that President Barack Obama study the possibility of imposing a no-fly zone over Syria.

Large protest outside Madison Square Garden ask Modi to end repression of minorities; erosion...

By TCN News, New York, NY: They came in large numbers, represented different faiths and ideological persuasions, and from across the United States. Protesters outside the Madison Square Garden event today in New York City, came to stand up for seclarism, and to convey some firm and simple demands to visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, under the banner of "Alliance for Justice and Accountability."

Garbage island rises from the sea

By IANS, Singapore : Once there was a dirty bit of sea next to the world's busiest port here. Today it is an island where birds nest and people play, though the entire island is made of rubbish. You wouldn't know unless you were told. There's no sight or smell at Semakau landfill to indicate it is the last depository of Singapore's garbage. The corals and all the animals of the beach have been fooled too - they think it's a natural island, and they have grown in droves around it.

China confirms bird flu outbreak

By Xinhua, Beijing : China Tuesday confirmed an outbreak of bird flu in the southern province of Guangdong but said it was under control. Laboratory tests of dead ducks at Yashan village recently detected the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus, the agriculture ministry said in a brief statement, without saying when the outbreak took place. It said some 17,127 ducks were culled. Emergency measures have been taken and the epidemic has been brought under control, the ministry said. The country has reported seven bird flu outbreaks since the beginning of 2008.

Serbs go to polls in crucial parliamentary elections

By RIA Novosti, Belgrade : Serbs are voting on Sunday in a key parliamentary election expected to decide the country's future. A pro-Western alliance led by President Boris Tadic is running against the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party in a closely contested early parliamentary vote. The Radicals want to put Serbia's EU membership on hold and continue to lay claim to Serbia's former province of Kosovo that unilaterally declared independence in February while the Democrats push for the country's integration with Europe.

Argentina swine flu toll rises to 465

By EFE, Buenos Aires : The number of people to die of swine flu in Argentina has risen to 465, the health ministry said in a report. Till date, 8,240 people have been infected with the influenza A (H1N1) virus, also called swine flu, in the country, the report said Friday. Earlier in July, the health authorities had put restrictions on business and public activities in the country due to the swine flu outbreak. The fatalities from the disease have decreased since June 26 and the most recent death was reported Aug 20, the report said.

Report Card: Obama gets C+, Biden C, Clinton B-

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : Americans think Barack Obama's overall performance as president deserves a grade of C+ or just about average, according to a new national poll. He was graded C+ on foreign affairs too. The CNN/Opinion Research Corporation survey, released Thursday as the president approaches 200 days in the White House, asked respondents to use a grading scale of A, B, C, D, and F, where A is excellent and F is very poor.

Sukhoi superjet engines have flaws: Report

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Engines for Russia's new Superjet-100 airliner have failed to receive certification as they have several significant flaws, a business daily said Tuesday. The Superjet-100 project is a family of medium-haul passenger aircraft developed by the Sukhoi aircraft maker in cooperation with the US and European aviation corporations, including Boeing, Snecma, Thales, Messier Dowty, Liebherr Aerospace and Honeywell.

Sri Lanka offering overseas jobs to Tamil rebels

By Xinhua Colombo : The Sri Lankan government said Monday it was contemplating offering overseas jobs to Tamil Tiger rebels who surrendered to the authorities. Keheliya Rambukwella, defence spokesman and minister of foreign employment told reporters that he had discussed the issue with the International Organization for Migration. He said some 47 Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) members who had surrendered in the northern Jaffna peninsula were being rehabilitated in two centres.

Dalai Lama again under attack as envoys are due in China

By DPA, Beijing : With envoys of the Dalai Lama due in China for talks with the government on the crisis in Tibet, the Chinese media Saturday again hit out at the Tibetan spiritual leader. The Dalai Lama was once more branded a "criminal" by Xizang Ribao newspaper, which accused the "Dalai clique" of urging Tibetans to take part in the violent March 14 protests in Tibet and other Tibetan inhabited regions in neighbouring provinces.

175 killed in southwest China quake

Beijing: As many as 175 people were killed and more than 1,400 injured after a 6.5-magnitude earthquake jolted southwest China Sunday. The strong quake hit at...

Russia to join NATO-led naval exercise for the first time

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The Russian Navy will participate in a large-scale submarine rescue exercise conducted by the NATO, a navy spokesman said. The Bold Monarch 2008 exercise will be staged near the Norwegian coast from May 26 to June 7. The Russian Navy is participating for the first time in a NATO-led naval exercise. Support personnel and equipment from Canada, France, Germany, Greece, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Turkey, Ukraine, Britain and the US will be engaged "to solve complex rescue and medical problems in a variety of scenarios".

Tibetan medicine popular among Chinese too: Dalai Lama

By IANS, New Delhi: Tibetan medicine is sought after the world over now and even officials in Communist China are keen followers of the system of treatment, Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama said here Saturday. "There is a lot of interest in Tibetan medicine all over the world... even Communist officials in China have shown interest, and many even take treatment," the Dalai Lama said at the launch of the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Institute and Cancer Centre at Max Healthcare hospital in Saket, south Delhi.

China’s Valentine’s Day: Over 4,200 couples get married

By IANS, Beijing : As many as 4,251 couples registered their marriage here Saturday on China's Valentine's Day, authorities said.

Nepal quake toll is 7,652

Kathmandu : The death toll in the deadly Nepal earthquake has touched 7,652 while 16,390 people have been injured, the home ministry said on...

Women rally in support of Rousseff in Brasilia

Rio de Janeiro : Hundreds of women rallied in front of the Planalto Palace, the government headquarters, in Brasilia in support of Brazilian President...

UN official killed in Pakistan: Reports

By IANS, Islamabad : Baloch insurgents Monday claimed to have executed a UN official held captive for about three weeks in Pakistan's southwestern province of Balochistan, media reports said. John Solecki, a US national who led the UN refugee agency's regional office, was kidnapped Feb 2 by gunmen in the provincial capital Quetta, while he was on his way to work in a car carrying the UN emblem and registration plates. His Pakistani driver was shot dead in the ambush.

US issues travel alert ahead of 9/11 anniversary

By IANS, Washington : The US has issued a worldwide travel alert for American nationals ahead of the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks.

Modi reaches Tokyo

Tokyo : Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived here Sunday on the second leg of his five-day visit to Japan. Modi reached the Japanese capital after...

UN hopes Libya’s new parliament to help end violence

United Nations: The UN mission in Libya hopes that the newly-elected parliament can lead efforts to end surging violence and promote political process, a...

Shia symposium in Berlin promotes “friendship among religions”

By IRNA, Berlin : An international one-day Shia conference here Friday stressed the need to promote "friendship among religions." "The core message of this conference is friendship among religions," said Iran's Ambassador to Germany Ali Reza Sheikh Attar in his opening address to the symposium. Sheikh Attar's remarks were echoed by the Cultural Attache of the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran Homayoun Hemmati who urged "cooperation among all followers of religions." He added the Shia school of thought emphasized "the unity of all followers of religions."

IAEA inspectors in North Korea to discuss reactor shutdown

Pyongyang, June 26 (Xinhua) A delegation from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) arrived here Tuesday to discuss the shutdown of North Korea's nuclear facilities at Yongbyon. It is the UN watchdog's first visit to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) since late 2002. This visit came after US nuclear envoy Christopher Hill paid a productive visit to the country last Friday. Olli Heinonen, head of the delegation and IAEA deputy director general, said he was optimistic about the talks with his North Korean counterpart.

10 killed in heavy rains in France

By DPA, Paris : At least 10 people have died and four were missing Wednesday after heavy rains lashed parts of southern France, French media reported. All of the fatalities occurred in the south-eastern region of Var, where some 200,000 households were without electricity early Wednesday. According to France Info radio, more than 400 people had to be rescued by helicopter from their homes. In addition, travellers were stranded in railway stations and roads were littered with abandoned automobiles due to the swiftly rising floodwaters.

`North Korea on way to miniaturizing n-weapons’

By IANS, Seoul : North Korea is believed to be on its way to miniaturizing nuclear weapons, the South Korean defence ministry said Friday.

US trade deficit drops to lowest in nine years

By Xinhua, Washington : The US trade deficit fell by 28.3 percent in February to $25.97 billion, the lowest since November 1999, the commerce department reported Thursday. This marked a record seventh straight month of trade deficit decline in the country. Analysts had been expecting the trade imbalance to narrow to $36.4 billion. US exports of goods and services unexpectedly increased by 1.6 percent in February to $126.76 billion, the first increase after six straight monthly declines.

Stem cells may be made to build new organs

By IANS, Washington : Patients needing organ transplants may not need donated organs any more. A kind of 'instructor' molecule that tells blood vessel cells to organise themselves in tubes and not in layers could be an important step towards programming stem cells into building new organs instead.

Obama or McCain – it does not matter: Chomsky

By IANS, New York : While the world is debating the merits of Barack Obama and John McCain, leading public intellectual Noam Chomsky is not impressed with all the "rhetoric" and says the US essentially has only one party: business party. When the German news magazine Der Spiegel asked him if he was fired up with the Democratic candidate's slogan of "Change", Chomsky said: "Not in the least. The European reaction to Obama is a European delusion.

Obama accepts Nobel Peace Prize as a call to action

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington: A "surprised and deeply humbled" President Barack Obama said Friday he would accept the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize "as a call to action". "I am both surprised and deeply humbled" by the decision of the Norwegian Nobel Committee to award him the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize, a beaming Obama said in brief remarks in the White House Rose Garden.

Under pressure to retract statement, says Pakistani Hindu scribe

By Aadil Mir New Delhi/Karachi : A Dalit Hindu reporter working with Pakistan's state-run news agency says he has slipped into depression after facing discrimination...

US stocks gain as surprising earnings overshadow GDP report

By DPA, New York : US stocks posted strong gains Wednesday as most companies that reported profits for the first quarter beat estimates on the day, drowning out reports of a sharp contraction in the US economy over the first three months. Time Warner, Goodyear Tire & Rubber, DreamWorks Animation SKG and Hess Corp all beat analysts' expectations, offering some hope that the worst may be over and driving all major US stock indices up by more than 2 percent.

Britain revokes visa for former Thai premier

By DPA, Bangkok : Britain has revoked tourist visas for fugitive former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his wife Pojaman, media reports here said Saturday. Thai newspapers claimed a cancellation notification was sent to various airlines by the UK Border Agency at a time when the former first couple were travelling outside London, where they have been living in self-exile. "Airlines are advised not to carry these passengers to the UK," said the e-mail message to airlines, signed by Bangkok-based immigration liaison manager Andy Gray.

Despite Kyoto, Bush Says U.S. to Reduce Emissions by 2025

By SPA, Washington : U.S. President George W. Bush on Wednesday called for the end of increasing U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 2025, despite the Kyoto Protocol. Speaking at the White House Rose Garden, Bush declared his “new national goal” to stop greenhouse gas emissions by 2025 by “more rapidly slow[ing] the growth of power-sector greenhouse gas emissions so that they peak within 10 to 15 years, and decline thereafter.”

UN rights chief backs international inquiry in Sri Lanka

New York : The UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) should adopt the recommendation of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay to create...

Indonesia`s presence at G-8 summit in Hokkaido very important

By SPA Tokyo : Japan considers Indonesia`s presence at a G-8 meeting in Hokkaido next July very important as Indonesia is expected to voice the developing countries` views on current international issues, a senior Japanese official said here on Thursday, according to ANTARA. "Indonesia and other ASEAN member countries are invited to offer suggestions in an effort to build constructive discussions in the G-8 meeting," the Japanese official said.

Sri Lanka steps up air raids on LTTE strongholds

By IANS, Colombo : Stepping up air raids on Tamil Tiger bases, Sri Lankan Russian-built MiG-27 jets bombed a suspected rebel position in the northwestern Mannar district early Thursday, the military said. "MiG-27 fighter jets raided an LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) stronghold during a close air support mission launched to assist advancing ground troops in Mannar," the defence ministry said in a statement.

After Kilinochchi, is Rajapaksa awaiting Kalinga?

By M.R. Narayan Swamy, IANS, Even the pictures could not have fully captured the immense joy President Mahinda Rajapaksa may have felt when he victoriously toured Kilinochchi, the once quaint Sri Lankan town the Tamil Tigers had made the hub of a de facto state they thought no one could vanquish. But dreams do sometimes turn into disasters.

Chinese manufacturing continues to expand

By IANS, Beijing: China's manufacturing activity saw an increase for the third straight month in November, official data showed Saturday.

Incentives needed to resolve Myanmar problem: UN envoy

By Xinhua Jakarta : Engagement and incentives, not just pressure and punishment, from the international community will help Myanmar move down the right path, UN special envoy Ibrahim Gambari said Thursday. "The government of Indonesia and the UN are working together closely to engage the authority of Myanmar to change into a peaceful, stable and democratic nation," Gambari told a press conference after meeting Indonesian Foreign Minister Hassan Wirajuda.

Wolfowitz joins Washington think tank

By Xinhua

Washington : Former World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz, who resigned over allegations of favouritism, has joined the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), a Washington think tank, as a visiting scholar.

US, Russia may announce nuclear agreement soon

By Xinhua

Washington : The US and Russia might reach an agreement over enhancing civilian nuclear cooperation and preventing the spread of nuke weapons soon, according to White House officials.

Grenade blast wounds 21 civilians in Sri Lanka

By IANS, Colombo : At least 21 civilians were wounded in a grenade explosion in Sri Lanka's eastern Batticaloa district Monday evening, defence sources said. Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said an unidentified person flung a hand grenade at a group of civilians at a bus stand in the predominantly Muslim village of Kattankudi. "Of the 21 wounded, two are seriously injured," Nanayakkara told IANS. Batticaloa town is located some 300 km east of here. The motive for the attack was not immediately known.

Bush welcomes North Korea’s nuclear declaration

By Xinhua, Washington : The US Thursday hailed the nuclear declaration by North Korea and said it would respond by lifting trade sanctions on the country and take it off the list of "state sponsors of terrorism". "Today is a positive day, it's a positive step forward. There's more work to be done and we've got the process in place to get it done in a verifiable way," President George W. Bush said in a statement in the White House Rose Garden.

New suspect in custody in French bank fraud

By DPA Paris : The French police Friday took into custody a possible accomplice of the trader whose unauthorized transactions cost one of France's largest banks, Societe Generale, losses of more than 4.8 billion euros ($7.1 billion), the web site of the daily Le Monde reported. The man being questioned by financial fraud investigators worked for a Societe Generale subsidiary, Firmat, specializing in the trade of derivatives, and allegedly was aware of the positions the trader, Jerome Kerviel, built up in his transactions.

Sri Lanka’s ruling party wins local council polls

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lanka's ruling party was the overall winner at elections held in three local councils a day earlier, showed official results released Sunday.

One third of Costa Rican children live in poverty

By IANS/EFE, San Jose : One third of Costa Rican children under age 12, almost 300,000 in all, live in poverty, according to government figures published by the media here. Statistics from the "State of the Nation Report for 2009" show that the dire situation among children is more pronounced than among other groups in the country, where about 17 percent of the population lives below the poverty line.

US forewarned Pakistan on supporting India for UNSC

By IANS, Islamabad: The US had forewarned Pakistan about support to India as a permanent member in the UN Security Council ahead of President Barack Obama's visit.

Somali pirates hijack ship with Malta flag

By Xinhua, Nairobi : Somali pirates have hijacked a Malta-flagged ship with 28 Ukrainian crew on board in the Indian Ocean, a maritime official said Saturday. The Malta-flagged MV Ariana was seized late Friday, Andrew Mwangura, East Africa Coordinator of Seafarers Assistance Programme, said. "The vessel was sailing from Brazil to the Middle East" at the time of the incident, Mwangura said. "The crew are all Ukrainian and we believe they are safe."

Sri Lankan govt achieves important victories over rebel -US Ambassador

By NNN-LK News Colombo : The Government of Sri Lanka has achieved some important victories in the last several months. The expulsion of the LTTE from the East and the recent sinking of several LTTE ships carrying arms and other provisions mark important military successes,” said US Ambassador Robert Blake. Ambassador Blake made these remarks at a Seminar held recently on "Sri Lanka: the Way Forward" in Colombo.

NSG meet inconclusive after 16 hours; to continue today

By IANS, Vienna : The extraordinary meeting of the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) will continue on Saturday in an effort to seek consensus on a "clean waiver" to open nuclear commerce with India. At the end of a 16-hour meeting that concluded at 2 a.m., US Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security John Rood told reporters that the long day of discussions to consider allowing civil nuclear trade with India will resume on Saturday at 11 a.m.
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