Russian jet makes emergency landing
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : A passenger plane was forced to return to an airport in northern Russia Friday after the aircraft lost cabin pressure.
Nepal quake hits eight million, says UN
By Anil Giri,
Kathmandu : The earthquake in Nepal has impacted eight million people in 39 districts, of which over two million live in 11...
LTTE aircraft attack Sri Lankan capital
By P. Karunakharan, IANS,
Colombo : Tamil Tiger rebels carried out air strikes Tuesday night targeting a power plant in the Sri Lankan capital and military detachments in northwestern Mannar district, defence sources here said Wednesday.
Six Mexicans held for trying to swap child for property
By EFE,
Mexico City : Six Mexicans were arrested for allegedly trying to exchange a two-year-old child for a plot of land, authorities said.
Four months ago Alejandra Resendiz Ramos and husband Elias Vega Hernandez, who have four children, met Jose Guadalupe Rocha and his wife, America de Alba Bravo.
Rocha had promised his sister-in-law, Elba de Alba Bravo, married but childless, to get a youngster for her.
BBC funding ‘obsolete and unfair,’ says report
By IRNA,
London : Britain’s current model for broadcast regulation is “exhausted” and reform should start with the BBC and the scrapping of its public licence fee, according to a leading right-wing think-tank.
In a new report published Monday, the Adam Smith Institute argued that hostility to the state-funded broadcaster from its competitors was “justified” and that continuing the licence fee will lead to its “contraction and decline.”
EU regulators approve use of mobile phones during flights
By SPA
Brussels, Belgium : European Union regulators have approved the use of mobile phones on airplanes throughout Europe, the Associated Press reported.
The European Commission says the new regulation, which takes affect Monday, sets a common Europe-wide standard by which passengers can safely use their mobile phones during flights.
The new rules will pave the way for airlines to launch onboard mobile services later this year.
Vivianne Reding, the EU's telecommunications commissioner, is warning operators to keep the cost of calls made on aircraft at a reasonable level.
Hostages freed by Nigerian militants ‘feeling well’ – embassy
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Six sailors including two Russians, abducted from a chemical tanker on July 4 in Nigeria and freed on July 21, are in good health, the Russian ambassador to Nigeria, Alexander Polyakov said on Wednesday.
The Sichem Peace was attacked by the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) some 18 miles from Escravos in Nigeria. The militants seized six of the 19 crew members on board the ship.
Earlier it was reported two Russians had been freed.
Ten die in Angolan plane crash
By SPA
Lisbon : A light aircraft crashed into a mountain near the Angolan city of Huambo on Saturday killing all ten people on board, Portugal's Lusa news agency said on Saturday, according to Reuters.
Lusa cited a source close to the Angolan government as saying two of the victims were Portuguese. The head of Angola's national aviation centre, Celso Rosas, told Lusa that bad
weather may have caused the airplane to crash.
The airplane belonged to a company that operates chartered flights in Angola, a former Portuguese colony in southwest Africa.
Thai Army Chief Optimistic Successful Talks Help Ease Border Tension
By Bernama,
Bangkok : Thailand's Army Commander-in-Chief Gen. Anupong Paochinda Tuesday expressed optimism that the successful Thai and Cambodian foreign ministerial talks could help ease the border tension in the disputed area near the Preah Vihear temple, Thai News Agency (TNA) reported.
Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong and his newly appointed Thai counterpart Tej Bunnag announced in a joint press conference after talks held in Cambodia's Siem Reap province Monday that both countries would adjust their troop deployments stationed inside and around the temple complex.
China strongly condemns CNN for insulting Chinese people
By Xinhua,
Beijing : The Chinese Foreign Ministry lodged a solemn representation with the Beijing office of Cable News Network (CNN) here on Wednesday evening, condemning the network as "without any professional reputation."
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao, who is also the Director-General of the Ministry's Information Department, said that a statement issued by CNN on Tuesday failed to apologize for its host Jack Cafferty's remarks, which maliciously attacked the Chinese people and seriously violated the professional ethics of journalism.
UN chief regrets climate official’s resignation
By DPA,
New York : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon Thursday regretfully accepted the resignation of the top official for the UN programme on fighting climate change and has begun the search for a replacement, a UN spokesperson said.
Yvo de Boer, the executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), announced his resignation from his headquarters in Bonn after informing Ban only Tuesday.
De Boer led UN negotiations for a new Kyoto Protocol in the past three years. But the climate change summit in Copenhagen in December failed to reach an agreement.
Pascal Lamy in China to revive Doha round
By Xinhua
Beijing : Director-General of the World Trade Organization (WTO) Pascal Lamy arrived in Beijing Sunday in a bid to revive the stalled Doha trade talks.
US senate set to produce a president after 50 years
By IANS
Washington : Almost 50 members of the US senate entered the race for president since Senator John F. Kennedy's successful bid in 1961 but failed. That losing streak is about to end.
Bot h the Democratic hopefuls left in the tight race are senators - Hillary Clinton (New York) and Barack Obama (Illinois). John Edwards, who withdrew his candidacy in favour of Obama, too, is a senator from Massachusetts.
Prabhakaran critically injured last year: Sri Lanka air chief
By P.K. Balachandran, IANS
Colombo : Tamil Tiger chief Velupillai Prabhakaran was "critically injured" in an air raid on Nov 26, 2007, said Air Marshal Roshan Goonetilleke, commander of the Sri Lankan Air Force (SLAF).
However, B. Nadesan, head of the political wing of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), said the claim was baseless.
On Friday, Goonetilleke told the state-owned television network ITN that Prabhakaran's presence in the targeted site was evident in the volume of anti-aircraft fire that the raiders faced.
India will not fire the first bullet, Rajnath tells Pakistan Rangers
New Delhi: India will not fire the first bullet across the border, Home Minister Rajnath Singh said on Friday during his meeting with a...
Nepal PM to quit
By IANS,
Kathmandu : After resisting a year-long fierce battle by the Maoists to topple his coalition government, Nepal's embattled Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal is finally ready to quit so that the new session of parliament can start next week without obstruction by the former guerrillas.
The 57-year-old soft-spoken but tough-willed communist leader will announce his resignation at 6 p.m. Wednesday, his office said.
Thai Court Rules Thai-Cambodian Communique In Breach Of Charter
By Bernama,
Bangkok : Thailand's Constitution Court ruled Tuesday that Foreign Minister Noppadon Pattama violated the Constitution by signing a joint communique with Cambodia concerning Preah Vihear temple without parliamentary endorsement.
A nine-judge panel voted 8-1 to rule that the Thai-Cambodian Joint Communique regarding Preah Vihear is regarded as an international treaty under the charter's Article 190 and needed parliamentary endorsement prior to any signing.
Obama’s ‘Slurpee summit’ has convenience store salivating
By DPA,
Washington : Barack Obama seems to have a thing for naming summits after drinks. The makers of those beverages couldn't be happier.
Over 100 teenage girls abducted in Nigeria
Abuja : More than 100 teenage girls were abducted Monday in northeastern Nigeria by suspected Boko Haram members, local sources and police said.
The victims...
German railways, drivers’ union in confrontation mode
By DPA
Berlin : Deutsche Bahn (DB), Germany's state-owned railway, has prepared itself for an all-out strike by the main train drivers' union, a railway board member said in an interview published Sunday.
DB would do all in its power to resolve the eight-month dispute by Jan 7, when the union says it intends to call its 15,000 drivers out on an indefinite strike, Georg Brunnhuber told the Sunday edition of the mass-circulation Bild newspaper.
NC, CPN-UML reach understanding on appointment of Nepali president
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : Nepali Congress and the Communist Party Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) Saturday reached an understanding regarding the formation of new government and election of the first president, local media reported.
According to a leading website, nepalnews.com report, in a discussion between the two parties held at Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala's residence in Kathmandu Saturday, they agreed for two-third majority to unseat the president. However, the two parties agreed that a simple majority can change the prime minister.
Prabhakaran wants world to stop aiding Sri Lanka
By IANS
New Delhi : Tamil Tigers leader Velupillai Prabhakaran Tuesday asked the international community to stop aiding Sri Lanka and instead "take a new approach" regarding the Tamil separatist campaign.
Blaming the world for Colombo's war on the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), Prabhakaran said in his annual speech that it was his hope that other countries would end their military and economic aid to the Sri Lankan state.
South African president meets Hillary Clinton in Durban
By Xinhua,
Johannesburg: South Africa's President Jacob Zuma met the visiting US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Saturday in the port city of Durban.
"In both countries there are two new administrations which are taking the relationship a level higher. That is what we are trying to do," Zuma said after the 45-minute long meeting.
"He (Zuma) gave his views on regional issues from Zimbabwe, Somalia and Sudan. His advice on these issues was extremely helpful," Clinton said a media briefing.
Six Ecuadorian soldiers killed in plane crash
By IANS,
Quito : Six soldiers were killed when the Ecuadorian military plane they were travelling in crashed, according to army sources.
The crash, which occurred Wednesday at around 130 km southeast of Quito, was the third air mishap in three months in the country, a Xinhua report said.
The previous two crashes did not cause any casualties.
Researchers unravel missing link in spider evolution
By IANS,
Washington : Researchers have unravelled an ancient missing link between today's spiders and their long-extinct ancestors, and that may help explain how spiders came to weave webs.
The research by scientists at the University of Kansas (KU) and Virginia's Hampden-Sydney College focuses on fossil animals called Attercopus fimbriunguis. While modern spiders make silk threads with modified appendages called spinnerets, the fossil animals wove broad sheets of silk from spigots on plates attached to the underside of their bodies. Unlike spiders, they had long tails.
Tamil Tigers shell church, killing six soldiers
By IANS
Colombo : Six soldiers were killed and 10 injured when Tamil Tiger guerrillas fired artillery shells at a church in northwestern Sri Lanka.
The incident took place Tuesday when the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fired 130 mm artillery shells at soldiers doing 'shramadana' or voluntary cleaning work in St. Sabastian's church at Thalladi in the northwestern part of the island, a defence ministry spokesperson said.
The assembly hall of the church was reduced to rubble.
Farmer wants ousted Nepal king’s cash cows
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : Even after losing his crown and being turned out of the palace, Nepal's dethroned king Gyanendra continues to face demands for more.
Now, a Nepali farmer is laying claim to the dozens of cows herded in the former Narayanhity royal palace, saying they were promised to him.
Less than two weeks of being officially proclaimed a republic, Nepal is discovering new things about the former palace that was once prohibited land for the government, let alone common people.
US denies pulling punches with China on Tibet issue
By Arun Kumar, IANS
Washington : The US has repeated its call to Beijing to engage in a dialogue with the Dalai Lama, denying suggestions it was pulling punches so as not to jeopardise President W. George Bush's visit to China.
"We are very concerned about the situation in Tibet," State Department spokesman Tom Casey said Monday drawing attention to Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice's call Saturday to Beijing to urge restraint in its response to protesters against Chinese rule in Tibet.
New hope for cancer patients; Canadian scientists test viral vaccine
By IANS,
Toronto : Spelling new hope for cancer patients, Canadian scientists have successfully tested a viral vaccine to improve immune response to the deadly disease.
The scientists at the local Princess Margaret Hospital and the University of Toronto, in collaboration with international researchers, have discovered how to trigger an improved immune response to cancer. They say their discovery could be included in new clinical trials that use a patient's own cells to destroy tumours.
Cameron due in Rome for talks with Berlusconi
By KUNA,
London : British Prime Minister David Cameron was visiting Rome Wednesday for talks with Italian counterpart Silvio Berlusconi, Downing Street confirmed.
The prime ministers are to have a "working dinner" in the capital later on Wednesday.
However, there are fears that an expected press conference afterwards could be dominated by questions about Berlusconi's private life, commentators here said. Berlusconi is also facing pressure politically after a split with the co-founder of his People of Freedom (PDL) party, which is threatening to undermine his parliamentary majority.
Lanka asks ministers to limit foreign trips
By P. Karunakharan, IANS,
Colombo : Sri Lanka Tuesday asked its ministers to curtail foreign trips and slashed the monthly monetary allocations to all the ministries by 50 percent.
According to a statement from the government information department, Media Minister Laxman Yapa Abeyawardena said the "monthly monetary allocations to all ministries will be reduced by 50 percent as an austerity drive but the budgetary allocations for the year 2008 will remain intact".
McCain, Clinton dominate “Super Tuesday,” but rivals stay competitive
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6 (KUNA) -- John McCain remained the front-running Republican, while Hillary Clinton held onto a shaky lead among Democrats in US presidential contests in two dozen states on "Super Tuesday." But, the results were mixed enough to keep alive the candidacies of key rivals, particularly that of Democrat Barack Obama who is surging in the money game and in perceived voter enthusiasm.
The biggest surprise of the day was the revival of the campaign of Republican Mike Huckabee, while the biggest loser was Republican Mitt Romney.
Nepal Supreme Court to decide Sobhraj’s fate Jan 13
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : After a six-year dogged legal battle, Nepal's Supreme Court Sunday announced that the fate of alleged serial killer Charles Sobhraj, now is jail here, will be decided Jan 13.
It was an anxious day for the 64-year-old, his lawyers and Nepali fiancée Nihita Biswas, as it initially seemed the critical final arguments by his lawyers would be postponed a record seventh time Sunday due to lack of time.
Teenagers employed to mark SAT papers in Britain
By IANS,
London : The fate of British students who took this year's Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) is in jeopardy with revelations that teenagers who themselves are yet to pass their examinations have been employed to mark the answer papers.
Barry Sheerman, the Labour chairman of the Commons Schools Committee, has disclosed that he had been given evidence that the company entrusted with the marking of SAT answer sheets was employing pre-university students to mark papers, the Telegraph reported Thursday.
Malaysian Bar Council calls off rights march
By IANS
Kuala Lumpur : Malaysia's Bar Council has called off its annual human rights march for Sunday following disagreements within the body.
The lawyer-members argued the pros and cons of the march, with one faction insisting the march should go on without a police permit while another wanted a permit to be obtained, the New Straits Times reported Wednesday.
Bar Council chairman Ambiga Sreenevasan said that yet another group felt the walk should be cancelled altogether.
"Our decision to not hold the walk was a majority decision, not a unanimous one," she said.
Nepal protests palace bounty for sacked king
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : Cutting across party lines, Nepalis have begun protesting against the government's decision to allow deposed king Gyanendra to move into a summer mansion from the Narayanhity palace, saying it smacked of privileges and went against the spirit of the newly declared republic.
Closing down Guantanamo prison quickly is a challenge: Obama
By Xinhua,
Washington : US president-elect Barack Obama Sunday said that it is challenging to close down the Guantanamo prison in Cuba soon after his inauguration Jan 20.
"I think it's going to take sometime. Our legal teams are working in consultation with our national security apparatus as we speak to help design exactly what we need to do," Obama said in an interview with ABC News.
When asked if he would manage to close the camp within his first 100 days as president, Obama said: "That's a challenge".
Kofi Annan due in Kenya to mediate election crisis
By SPA
Nairobi, Kenya : Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was due in Kenya on Tuesday to mediate a dispute over the country's presidential election, which triggered riots and ethnic fighting that killed more than 600 people, according to a report of the Associated Press.
The Dec. 27 election returned President Mwai Kibaki to power for a second five-year term, with official results putting opposition leader Raila Odinga second in the closest presidential race in Kenya's history.
Colourful European parakeets, a newly evolved species
DPA
Brussels, Nov 5 (DPA) As debate rages in Europe over genetically modified maize and "Frankenstein's potatoes", the continent is quietly moving towards a different new species: the Euro-parrot.
"Ring-necked parakeets in Europe are isolated from the native population, so they will develop along their own evolutionary path. Given enough time, that should lead to the development of separate species," said Graham Madge of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB).
Pelosi support boosts chances of quick approval of n-deal
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : Top US Congressional leaders have backed the India-US civil nuclear deal to brighten the prospects for the landmark agreement to be approved before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visits Washington Sep 25.
US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi joined the Senate majority leader Harry Reid Thursday in indicating early approval of the agreement saying it "does have support in the House."
Beijing to clamp new emission norms in January
By Xinhua
Beijing : Beijing will introduce tougher auto emission standards at the beginning of next year, as air pollution has become a major concern for the city in the preparation for the 2008 Olympic Games.
It is expected that the new standards will reduce the sulphur dioxide emissions by 1,840 tonnes every year, said Feng Yuqiao, an official with the Beijing environment protection bureau.
Automobile distributors in Beijing are preparing for the new China IV standards that are equivalent to the Euro IV standards in the European Union, the official added.
Hundreds of Tibetan rioters in Sichuan surrender to police
By KUNA
Tokyo : A total of 381 people involved in the riots in Aba county in the Tibetan-inhabited areas in Sichuan Province, northwest China, have surrendered themselves to the police as of Monday noon, China's official news agency Xinhua reported Tuesday.
Law enforcement authorities of Aba county issued a notice on March 19, urging those who had taken part in the riots on March 16 to submit themselves within ten days.
China’s drops aid from helicopters as quake toll touches 15,000
By DPA,
Beijing : Military helicopters flew aid Wednesday to settlements cut off near the epicentre of a devastating earthquake in southwestern China as the confirmed death toll rose to about 15,000 with tens of thousands of others missing and feared dead.
Heavy rain had initially prevented the helicopters from flying emergency aid to Wenchuan county in Sichuan province while troops were still trying to restore the badly damaged main road to the county.
EU brings common visa code for Schengen zone travellers
By IANS,
Brussels : Majority of European Union countries have put in place a common visa rule for their citizens travelling across the Schengen zone.
The new visa code implemented since Monday will provide visa to the citizens of 22 countries through common easy procedure, EU's Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said.
The EU member states will now have the same verification and entry procedures to grant permit for those travelling within the region for a maximum period of ninety days, Prensa Latina reported.
Tibetologist: 14th Dalai Lama political figure bent on “Tibet independence”
By Xinhua,
New York : The 14th Dalai Lama, described as a "spiritual leader" by some Western media outlets, is actually a political figure who has never given up "Tibet independence," a Tibetologist said here Friday.
"Painting him as a 'spiritual leader' is totally misleading," said Renzhen Luose, an ethnic Tibetan native of Yajiang County, Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan Province who once served as director of the province's Institute of Tibetan Studies.
China urges Obama to cancel meeting with Dalai Lama
By IANS,
Beijing : China Friday urged the US to immediately cancel the planned meeting between President Barack Obama and the Dalai Lama, warning it...
Nepal PM meets Madhesi leaders
By NNN-NepalNews
Kathmandu : A day after the government’s invitation to Madhesi groups for talks, Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala met some Madhesi leaders at Baluwatar Friday afternoon.
Though there was no concrete understating at the meeting, Prime Minister Koirala is learnt to have assured that he would respond to the demands of the Madhesi parties, after discussing with the coalition partner, by this evening.
The Madhesi leaders had met Koirala, seeking the government's commitment to address the demands raised by the Madhesi people.
Cuba reports first swine flu deaths
By IANS,
Havana : Three pregnant women have succumbed to swine flu in Cuba, becoming the first reported casualties of the disease in the country, reports EFE news agency.
Cuban authorities said 621 cases of swine flu have been confirmed. Luis Estruch, deputy minister of hygiene, epidemiology and microbiology, said 177 of the patients were children.
Mideast peace deal still possible this year: US
By DPA,
Tel Aviv/Ramallah : A peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians is still possible by the end of the year, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Sunday after further talks with the two sides.
Expanding Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which affected confidence-building between Israel and the Palestinian Authority remained "problematic", she said.
Rice was speaking in Ramallah after talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas - a meeting which in turn had followed talks she had with Israeli leaders late Saturday and early Sunday.
David Cameron leading in Britain’s polls
London : Britain's Conservative Party headed by Prime Minister David Cameron is leading in the general elections held on Thursday, winning 292 out of...
Mass casualties in New Zealand factory explosion
By DPA
Wellington : Six firefighters were seriously injured and several reported missing after a series of explosions set off a massive blaze at a factory near Hamilton, in New Zealand's North Island, Saturday, news reports said.
Hamilton Hospital said it had received mass casualties and appealed for assistance from outside the city, channel TV3 reported.
It showed film of a huge blaze said to be out of control at the Icepak Coolstores factory, which is next door to a school, and spreading to other parts of the suburb of Tamahere, about 10 km south of the city.
Russia builds floating nuclear power plant
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : In a couple of years, a new kind of vessel will appear on the sea - the floating nuclear power plant (FNPP). The Academician Lomonosov, currently under construction in Russia, is only one project of the several FNPP being developed.
The formal keel laying ceremony took place in April 2007 at the Sevmash shipyard of the Russian State Centre for Nuclear Shipbuilding in Severodvinsk. After about a year and a half, the state-owned corporation Rosatom revoked the general contract, handing it over to the Baltiysky Zavod (Baltic Plant) Shipyard in St. Petersburg.
Russia denounces U.S. statement on Russia-Georgia conflict
By Xinhua,
Moscow : Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday slammed the statement made by U.S. President George W. Bush on the conflict between Russia and Georgia, saying facts mentioned in the speech are untrue, Russian news agencies reported.
"I listened to George Bush's statement -- and was surprised -- the facts he cited are untrue," Lavrov was quoted by the RIA Novosti news agency as saying. He flatly denied the claims of the U.S. president that Russian troops had blocked Georgia's Black Seaport of Poti.
Putin proposes termination of Black Sea Fleet agreements
Moscow : Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday submitted to the State Duma, the lower house of parliament, a proposal to terminate agreements with Ukraine...
Anaconda to convert wave energy into cheap power
By IANS,
London : Anaconda, an innovative wave energy concept, holds the key to cheaper energy from the sea waves.
Named after the snake because of its long thin tubular shape, Anaconda is closed at both ends, filled with water. It will be submerged below sea level, with one end facing the oncoming waves.
A wave hitting the end squeezes it and causes a 'bulge wave' to form inside the tube. As the bulge wave runs through the tube, the sea wave that caused it runs along outside the tube, squeezing the tube more and more, causing the bulge wave to get bigger.
Sri Lankan Army celebrates 63rd anniversary
By IANS,
Colombo : The Sri Lankan Army Wednesday celebrated its 63rd anniversary by staging a parade and several other events, an official said.
More than 130 die in landslides in Indonesia
By DPA
Jakarta : More than 130 people have died or have been missing in landslides and flash floods in the wake of torrential rain that swept through densely populated Central and East Java provinces of Indonesia, police and media said Monday.
More than 1,600 homes were destroyed or heavily damaged, an official at the National Disaster Management Agency said.
Nepal to ease visa regime for Chinese nationals
By IANS,
Kathmandu : The government of Nepal plans to ease visas for Nepal-bound Chinese tourists, officials said Thursday.
Nepal president extends deadline to nominate new PM
By IANS,
Kathmandu : President Ram Baran Yadav Friday granted six more days to the political parties to pick a new consensus prime minister.
Clashes kill 12 in northern Sri Lanka
By Xinhua
Colombo : Ten Tamil Tiger rebels and two soldiers were killed in a fierce battle in the north Saturday, Sri Lankan military said.
Army officials said troops who mobilised artillery guns and armour tanks destroyed a Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) bunker line and captured four rebel bunkers to the north of Manthai in Mannar district.
The air force also participated in the mission using MI-24 gunship during the mission, the officials said.
More people riding bicycles tend to have less accidents
By IANS,
Sydney : The more the people ride bicycles, the less likely are they to be injured in traffic accidents, according to a study.
International research reveals that a cyclist is far less likely to collide with a motor vehicle or suffer injury and death - and what's true for cyclists is true for pedestrians.
"It's a virtuous cycle," said Julie Hatfield, an injury expert from University of North South Wales (UNSW) who addressed a cycling safety seminar in Sydney Sep 5.
Roman sex artefacts on show at Germany’s Trier museum
By DPA
Trier (Germany) : Erotic carvings and excavated Roman artefacts connected to sex will go on display Saturday in Germany's best-preserved ancient Roman city Trier.
The temporary exhibition, 100,000 Years of Sex, comprises 250 items, mainly archaeological.
They date back to the Stone Age and show how our ancestors experienced lust and procreation, said Mechthild Neyses-Eiden, deputy director of the museum.
18 killed in Peru road accidents
By IANS,
Lima : At least 18 people died and many were injured in four separate road accidents in Peru, police said.
Britain “should not rule out talking to Qaeda” — police chief
By KUNA,
London : The UK should not rule out talking to Al-Qaeda in a strategy to end its campaign of violence, according to one of the country's most senior policemen Friday.
Police Service of Northern Ireland Chief, Sir Hugh Orde, told The Guardian newspaper that talking to Al-Qaeda was not unthinkable but "a question of timing." He said 30 years tackling the Irish Republican Army (IRA) had taught him that policing alone was not enough to defeat terrorism.
The British government had already rejected suggestions it negotiate with Al-Qaeda.
German Hypo Real Estate bail-out collapses
By DPA,
Munich : Hypo Real Estate (HRE), the German company caught up in the wave of western bank failures, said Saturday a government-backed bail-out it was seeking had collapsed.
The mortgage lender said assurances of loans from several other financial institutions had expired.
Newspaper reports said leading German banks had discovered that HRE's troubles were more serious than first thought.
HRE, which mainly lends to commercial projects and to build public facilities, is the first German casualty of the crisis that has spread from New York in the past month.
State honours for China’s spacewalk astronauts
By Xinhua,
Beijing : Chinese President Hu Jintao Friday presented medals and certificates to astronauts Jing Haipeng, Liu Boming and the country's first space walker Zhai Zhigang for their historic performance even as the government decided to decorate them with state honours.
The government said Zhai would be conferred with the title of Space Flight Hero while Liu and Jing would be decorated with the title of Heroic Astronaut.
Now carry-on bags banned on flights from Canada
By IANS,
Toronto : Carry-on bags were also banned on the US-bound flights from Canada Monday even as tighter security measures threw departures into chaos.
The new security measures came into force at the weekend following Friday's failed attempt by an al-Qaeda-linked Nigerian man to blow up a Northwest Airlines flight at Detroit.
Initially, the authorities banned only extra carry-on bags, apart from introducing physical searches at the airplane boarding gates.
Nepal hands over bodies of 13 plane crash victims
By IANS,
Kathmandu : The Nepal government Tuesday afternoon handed over the bodies of 13 people who were killed in Sunday's plane crash to the...
New clashes in Sri Lanka kill 30
By SPA,
Colombo : Sri Lankan soldiers attacked Tamil Tiger rebel bunkers along the northern front lines, triggering separate gunbattles that killed 27 guerrillas and three soldiers, the military said Monday.
Fighting has escalated in recent months on the Indian Ocean island, with the military capturing a series of rebel bases and large chunks of territory. Officials have pledged to crush the guerrillas by the end of the year, according to a report of Associated Press.
No one should be dying from TB – Ban
By IRNA,
Tehran : UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in his message on World Tuberculosis Day, March 24, 2010, said in this day and age, no one should be dying from TB.
According to a press release issued by the UN Information Center (UNIC) here on Thursday, in his message, Ban referred to the goal set by the international community to prevent and treat all forms of TB, in adults and children, and among people living with HIV.
The full text of his message reads:
Russia’s Medvedev wants greater energy ties through SCO
By RIA Novosti,
Beijing : New spheres of cooperation should be developed through the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), particularly the sphere of energy, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told Chinese students on Saturday.
The president, on the second day of his official visit to Beijing, told students at Peking University: "Within the framework of this organization we are able to agree on new directions of cooperation, including on the energy issue."
Ten years of Gujarat violence to be recognized in the US Congress
By TCN News
Washington, DC: Keith Ellison, member of the US House of Representative has introduced a resolution marking the tenth anniversary of Gujarat violence in 2002.
India privileged to be Mongolia’s spiritual neighbour: Modi
Ulan Bator : Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday told his Mongolian counterpart Chimed Saikhanbileg that India is privileged to be considered as Mongolia's...
Israeli forces kill Palestinian activist in Jenin
By KUNA,
RAMALLAH : Israeli special forces killed Thursday morning an activist affiliated with Islamic Jihad Movement in Jenin.
Israeli special forces, not in uniform, opened fire on Alaa' Abu Rab's house after surrounding it, witnesses told KUNA, adding that Israeli forces prevented Abu Rab's family from taking him to hospital as he bled to death.
They added that Israeli forces attacked the house with grenades, opened fire, and forced the family out.
Russia to supply oil to China via Kazakhstan
By RIA Novosti
Astana (Kazakhstan) : Russia will start supplying up to five million tonnes (36.7 million barrels) of oil a year to China via Kazakhstan from 2008, the industry and energy minister said Monday.
"Following bilateral talks, the parties signed a protocol on Kazakhstan and Russia's oil transit in 2008. Under the protocol, Russia will for the first time start supplying five million tonnes of oil per year to China via Kazakhstan," Viktor Khristenko said.
Citigroup rescue plan close at hand, Pandit’s fate unclear
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : The US government is close to finalising a rescue plan for Citigroup, whose stocks have been battered in recent days over worries about its financial health, but the fate of its Indian American CEO Vikram Pandit and other executives remains unclear, media reports said Monday.
Protesters shoot arrows at Ulan Bator’s Government House
By IANS,
Ulan Bator (Mongolia) : About 50 protesters on horseback encircled the Government House here Friday and shot arrows at it to protest the lack of a referendum on parliamentary elections.
Quake survivors spend night in Haitian streets
By IANS/EFE,
Port-au-Prince : Bodies of victims started swelling in the heat as thousands of survivors spent the second night in the streets of Haiti's capital which was devastated by a high-intensity earthquake.
"Some bodies are starting to swell in the heat," Radio Metropole reported on its website, adding that "the majority of service stations are out of fuel".
Haitians have taken to sleeping in the streets since the temblor struck Tuesday. Some residents wander amid rotting corpses, while the injured wait for assistance and those trapped in the rubble cry for help.
Russia to retaliate against US missile system
By Xinhua
Moscow : President Vladimir Putin has warned that Russia would take retaliatory measures against the deployment of a US missile defense system in Central Europe, Itar-Tass news agency reported Monday.
Mekong countries fighting against human traffickers
By NNN-KPL,
Vietiane : The six great Mekong sub-region (GMS) countries gathered here Wednesday to discuss on cooperation to fight against human trafficking that currently poses a threat to the region.
The six Mekong sub-region countries made up Cambodia, China, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam attended the 6th Senior Officials Meeting (SOM) on Coordinated Mekong Ministerial Initiative against Trafficking (COMMIT) at Don Chan Palace Hotel, Vientiane which will run till Friday.
Dutch ING Group to cut 7,000 jobs
By DPA,
Amsterdam : Dutch banking and insurance group ING Monday announced it plans to cut 7,000 jobs and that its chief executive Michel Tilmant is to step down.
ING, in a statement, said the job cuts should save 1 billion euros ($1.287 billion). The financial giant is expecting a loss of 0.4 billion euros for 2008.
The group's banking division retained a net profit of 0.5 billion euros but its insurance division is expected to post a 0.9-billion-euro loss, according to the statement.
Sri Lanka extends emergency to deal with Tamil Tiger remnants
BY DPA,
Colombo: Sri Lanka's parliament Tuesday extended the state of emergency in the country to deal with the "remnants" of the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) that was defeated in a major military offensive last month, Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayake said.
The extension of the state of emergency by one month was supported by 102 lawmakers, mostly from the government parties, while seven MPs abstained and some others in the 225-seat parliament were not present at the time of voting.
We won’t trot out Osama photos as trophies: Obama
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : US President Barack Obama has decided not to release photos of killed Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden's body saying, "We don't trot out this stuff as trophies".
Georgia slams Russia for lifting sanctions on Abkhazia
By RIA Novosti
Tbilisi (Georgia) : Georgia has denounced Russia's decision to lift sanctions from Georgia's breakaway republic of Abkhazia as illegal.
"This is an immoral and illegal decision. A serious provocation aimed at destabilising the situation in the Caucasus that will lead to an unpredictable development of events," President Mikheil Saakashvili said Friday.
Fiji parliament to hold first sitting Oct 6
Suva : Fiji, home to a large ethnic Indian population, is likely to hold its first sitting of parliament Oct 6, media reported.
"Fiji is...
Asia-Pacific ministers warn economic crisis not over
By DPA,
Singapore : Ministers of the Asia-Pacific economies Wednesday warned that the global economic crisis was not yet over, saying the situation was still fragile despite the current upturn.
"The consensus is that this (crisis) is by no means over," said Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo after hosting a meeting with foreign and trade ministers at the summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum.
"The upturn that we now have is a respite," Yeo said.
"The situation is still fragile, and we should still address the root causes of the problem," he added.
Two Indians detained over Bangkok blast
Bangkok: Two Indians suspected to be involved in last month's deadly Bangkok shrine bombing that killed 20 people have been detained, media reported on...
Obama to host Myanmar president at White House
By IANS,
Washington : US President Barack Obama will meet his Myanmarese counterpart Thein Sein here May 20 and discuss democracy building in the Southeast Asian nation, the White House said.
CIA website hacked
By IANS,
Washington : Hacker group Anonymous Friday night took down the website of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), media reports said Saturday.
Nepal army, Maoist fighters begin fresh sabre-rattling
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : Four years after a peace agreement ended the decade-old Maoist insurgency in Nepal, the army is locked in a fresh dispute with the former guerrillas with both sides vowing to recruit new blood. The UN warned that the move would violate the peace pact.
The Nepal Army triggered the new row by beginning a process this week to hire nearly 3,500 additional personnel, saying it was necessitated by retirements, resignations and casualties.
‘China violently crushing protests by Tibetan nomads’
New Delhi: China has been "violently crushing" all peaceful protests by Tibetan nomads demanding return of their pastoral land and their nomadic way of...
Russian citizens to become freelance policemen
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia citizens will soon be engaged as freelancers to help policemen in their duties, a new bill has said.
The bill said police officers while performing their duties have the right to engage citizens for freelance service and establish cooperation with those interested in cooperation with police.
It also said police can pay the citizens for their assistance.
World leaders gather in Canada ahead of G8, G20 summits
By DPA,
Toronto : World leaders descended on Toronto Thursday for three days of summits among the Group of Eight (G8) leading industrialised nations and the Group of 20 (G20) top world economies.
The G8 summit Friday and Saturday is expected to focus on development and security issues. The G20 summit, Saturday evening and Sunday, is to deal with economic and financial reform.
Bush gets his way on Iraq war funding
By DPA
Washington : Bowing to President George W. Bush, Congress gave up on US troop withdrawal and approved $70 billion in war spending on Iraq and Afghanistan for 2008.
The 272-142 vote in the House of Representatives Wednesday marked the end of a year that often saw Democratic lawmakers frustrated by Bush's veto power and their slim majority in both chambers.
Obama wins commanding victory over Clinton in South Carolina
By IRNA
New York : Senator Barack Obama claimed a significant victory in the South Carolina Democratic primary on Saturday.
The Illinois senator earned more than twice the vote that rival Senator Hillary Clinton did, 55 percent to 27 percent, unofficial returns showed.
Former Sen. John Edwards was third with 18 percent.
"Tonight, the cynics who believed that what began in the snows of Iowa was just an illusion were told a different story by the good people of South Carolina," Obama said to supporters Saturday.
Indian-origin girl dies after falling off ski lift
By IANS,
London: A 13-year-old girl of Indian-origin plunged to her death from a ski lift during a school trip to the Alps a media report said Saturday.
US Fed tightens lending for first time since recession
By DPA,
Washington : The Federal Reserve tightened monetary policy Thursday for the first time in more than a year, raising by 0.25 percentage points the discount interest rate at which the US central bank lends directly to commercial banks.
The Fed's discount rate was hiked from 0.5 percent to 0.75 percent. The action was taken "in light of continued improvement in financial market conditions," a statement said.
Bush gives Congress 90 days to pass Colombia trade deal
By DPA
Washington : US President George W. Bush Monday gave Congress until September to approve a free-trade agreement with Colombia, telling Democrats who oppose the deal that it is vital for the US economy and national security interests.
Democratic Party leaders immediately attacked Bush for abusing his "fast-track" authority, which forces a straight "yes" or "no" vote in Congress on trade deals without allowing legislators to make amendments.
Clinton to be at forefront of election battle: Obama
By ANTARA News,
Washington : Democratic White House hopeful Barack Obama said Saturday he was honored to have won the endorsement of Hillary Clinton and vowed she would be at the forefront of the party`s November election battle.
"No one knows better than Senator Clinton how desperately America and the American people need change, and I know she will continue to be in the forefront of that battle this fall and for years to come," Obama said in a statement, quoted by AFP.
Freed of African coup charge, British mercenary back home
By IANS,
London : A private school-educated mercenary arrived back in Britain Wednesday after being freed by the government of Equatorial Guinea for trying to mount an armed coup that he says was backed by the son of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher among others.
Simon Mann said before leaving Equatorial Guinea that he would help British police prosecute a possible case against Sir Mark Thatcher and Ely Calil, a Lebanese-born businessman working in Britain, for the 2004 coup attempt.
Build with tree roots, watch your home grow
By IANS,
London : A shelter made from living tree roots could protect one from earthquakes, or even help grow entire homes, thanks to eco-architecture, a concept being developed by Tel Aviv University.
The idea of moulding trees into useful objects, known as arbour sculpture, will be used as a platform to roll out these structures worldwide.
Pilot projects now underway in the US, Australia and Israel include park benches for hospitals, playground structures, street lamps and gates.
10 killed in Ghana plane crash
By IANS,
Accra : A cargo plane crashed into a minibus near the international airport in Accra Saturday, killing at least 10 people, authorities said.
Oath of Nepali CA members set for May 27
By Xinhua,
Kathmandu : Members of Nepali Constituent Assembly (CA) will be sworn in on May 27, a day before the first CA meeting, The Himalayan Times reported on Friday.
According to the daily, a meeting of the taskforce comprising representatives of 13 major parties elected to the CA took this decision Thursday to ease up formal agenda of the first meeting of the CA on May 28, which will implement the republican agenda in the country.
The meeting also discussed the preliminary 12-point draft prepared by Parliament Secretariat on conducting the first CA meeting.
Maoists bite dust as Nepal elects first president
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS,
Kathmandu : There was much dancing and slogan-shouting Monday as Ram Baran Yadav of the Nepali Congress made history by becoming the first president of the new Himalayan republic, defeating the Maoists' candidate.
This brought to an end the long standoff over the presidential election between Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala's Nepali Congress and the Maoists.
Yadav, a 61-year-old former minister with Indian roots, garnered 308 votes and will replace ousted king Gyanendra as head of state.
Ukraine ruling bloc confronts president over ties with opposition
By RIA Novosti,
Kiev : Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko's bloc accused the president on Wednesday of siding with the opposition, and set an ultimatum, saying he must either work with the cabinet or dismiss it
Johansson designs bag to raise funds for Haiti
By IANS,
London : After auctioning a date with her to raise funds for the Haiti relief fund, actress Scarlett Johansson has designed an exclusive handbag to raise money for the earthquake devastated nation.
The bag is emblazoned with an ancient map of the Caribbean country, with the message "Supporting the people of Haiti" written and signed by the "Lost In Translation" star, reported dailystar.co.uk
It will be available through Mango fashion stores across the world with all profits benefiting Oxfam's relief fund for Haiti, which was hit by a massive tremor Jan 12.
Taiwan taking pains to make Dalai Lama’s visit non-political
By DPA,
Taipei : Taiwan's government is trying to keep the Dalai Lama's activities non-political during his visit next week to avoid angering China with which it has recently enjoyed warming ties.
The focus of the trip by the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader is to comfort victims of Typhoon Morakot. His preliminary schedule, released by his Taipei office Friday, showed he would arrive from India Sunday night and leave Friday morning.
Cambodia seeks UN Security Council meeting to resolve territorial dispute with Thailand
By Xinhua,
Phnom Penh : Cambodia has requested an emergency meeting of the United Nations (UN) Security Council to break a military standoff with neighboring Thailand over disputed frontier territory around the Preah Vihear Temple, Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong said here on Tuesday.
Security Council convenes to end war in South Ossetia
By IRNA,
New York : United Nations Security Council convenes on Saturday to end war in South Ossetia as it failed to agree Friday on a statement calling for an immediate truce.
Diplomats said a Belgian-drafted compromise text also urges the warring sides to "show restraint and to refrain from any further acts of violence or force," calls for respect by the parties of past accords and for the provision of humanitarian aid to victims.
Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin insisted on the need for Georgia to agree to a formal renunciation of the use of force by either side.
Three killed in Philippines jail gunfight
By IANS,
London : At least three people were killed and 15 others injured after dozens of gunmen attacked a jail in southern Philippines to free a prisoner, police said Monday.
British policewoman sacked for shoplifting
London: A 46-year-old woman police officer was suspended from duty after she was arrested on suspicion of shoplifting cosmetics from a supermarket, a media report said Saturday.
British minister steps down over party donations
By DPA
London : Veteran British Labour politician Peter Hain resigned from the cabinet Thursday after admitting that he failed to declare more than 100,000 pounds ($196,000) in election campaign donations.
Hain, 58, has been a member of the Labour government since the party ended years of Conservative rule in a landslide victory under former prime minister Tony Blair in 1997.
Hain, a former prominent anti-apartheid campaigner, said he was stepping down from his dual post as Work and Pensions Secretary and Secretary of State for Wales to clear his name in the controversy.
First Iraq-UK passenger flight in 20 years arrives in London
By IRNA,
London : An Iraqi Airways flight has landed at London Gatwick airport, the first commercial between the two countries for 20 years.
Flight IA237, which was reported to have stopped en route in Malmo, Sweden, for unspecified security checks, finally touched down late Sunday night.
It was nearly a year behind the original schedule and due to take off from Baghdad nine days ago, but was grounded by the volcanic ash cloud drifting over Europe.
Russia world’s most educated country: Report
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia has topped a list of the world's most educated countries, according to a new report that analysed education systems all over the globe.
Mexican oil giant takes delivery of two new ships
By IANS/EFE,
Mexico City : Oil giant Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, said it took delivery of two ships from South Korea's SPP Shipbuilding Group.
Gunbattles kill 14 rebels in Sri Lanka
By SPA,
Colombo, Sri Lanka : Government forces and separatist Tamil Tigers fought a series of gun battles in Sri Lanka's North, leaving 14 rebels dead, the military said Sunday.
Separate clashes Saturday in Vavuniya district killed Eight rebels and wounded five soldiers, the defense Ministry said in a statement.
Other battles Saturday in Jaffna and Welioya killed six rebels and wounded 10 soldiers, the statement was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.
Political deadlock prevails among Nepali parties
BY Phanindra Dahal, Zhang Jianhua, Xinhua,
Kathmandu : Nepali political parties still remain in deadlock about the formation of new government, after the abolition of monarchy in the Himalayan nation.
"Unless the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (CPN-M) gathers a consensus and creates an atmosphere to form a new government, the present government will not be dissolved," Ram Chandra Poudel, a senior Minister for Peace and Reconstruction said Sunday, after a multi-party meeting attempting to end the deadlock.
Fiji bars human rights body from investigating complaints
By DPA,
Wellington : Fiji's military regime, which invoked emergency powers last month, has barred the country's Human Rights Commission from investigating complaints, news reports from the capital Suva said Wednesday.
President Ratu Josefa Iloilo - who abolished the constitution April 10 and introduced emergency powers, including media censorship and bans on political meetings - introduced the Human Rights Commission Decree 2009, which prohibits the body from investigating any complaints about the 11 decrees he has issued under the emergency powers.
Dutch ING Group gets $13 bn from government
By DPA,
Amsterdam : Bank and insurance company ING Group is to receive 10 billion euros ($13.4 billion) in government support, the company announced Sunday evening.
Speaking at a press conference, Dutch Finance Minister Wouter Bos, Dutch central bank president Nout Wellink and ING Chairman Michel Tilmant said that in exchange the government will receive securities worth 10 billion euros.
The price of the securities was fixed to be the same as that of ING stock Friday at closing time, at 7.33 euros.
NATO, New Zealand sign cooperation deal
By IANS,
Wellington : New Zealand and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) have signed an agreement to strengthen cooperation.
Canadian MPs vote on controversial immigration bill
By IANS,
Toronto : The process of migrating to Canada is set for drastic changes with the House of Commons finally voting the controversial Bill C-50, which will now go to the Senate before it becomes a law.
A drama of sorts was enacted by the main opposition Liberal party, which has cried itself hoarse in opposing immigration changes, when a large number of its MPs just abstained during the voting, enabling the minority Conservative party government to get the bill okayed by 120-90 votes Monday.
Fiji devalues currency by 20 percent
By DPA,
Wellington : The central bank of Fiji, where the military government rules under emergency powers, devalued its currency by 20 percent Wednesday, warning citizens that the move would increase inflation.
A statement from the Reserve Bank in the capital Suva said a rise of about 20 percent in the Fijian dollar's value over the last year was unsustainable and the devaluation was needed to lift exports and boost tourism.
Both sectors are critical to the Fijian economy which has been hard hit since a military coup overturned the elected government in December 2006.
Two dead in Spain train crash
By IANS,
Madrid : At least two people were killed and a boy and a woman were injured Tuesday due to a train crash in Madrid, local media reported.
Russian, Ukrainian PMs set to talk oil and aviation, not gas
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Talks on the oil and aviation sectors are on the agenda of Wednesday's meeting between the prime ministers of Russia and Ukraine, a Russian government source has said.
Russian Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov and his Ukrainian counterpart Yulia Tymoshenko are not, however, expected to discuss natural gas deliveries - an issue that hit the headlines last week when Russia threatened to turn off gas supplies to its neighbor over unpaid debts.
Chinese president stresses full implementation of free religious policy
By Xinhua
Beijing : Chinese President Hu Jintao on Wednesday reiterated a policy of free religious belief while stressing law-abiding management on religious affairs and support to self-governance of religious groups.
Hu, also the general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, made the statement at a meeting of the members of the Political Bureau of the 17th CPC Central Committee in their second study on religious issues at home and abroad.
British PM supports Gandhi statue in London
By Anasudhin Azeez,
London : British Prime Minister David Cameron has offered support to the Gandhi Statue Memorial Trust's initiative to install a statue of...
Chinese leader, Dalai Lama rank among Time’s most influential
By DPA,
Hong Kong : Chinese President Hu Jintao and the Dalai Lama were named Thursday as among the world's 100 most influential people by Time magazine.
Taiwan's president-elect Ma Jing-Jeou and Lou Jiwei, chairman of the China Investment Corp sovereign wealth fund, also make the list as did actress Mia Farrow, who was due to speak on China's human rights record Friday in Hong Kong.
Other personalities included on the annual list were Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, former British prime minister Tony Blair, and actors George Clooney and Robert Downey Jr.
Air China to issue 400 mn shares for more aircraft
By Xinhua
Beijing : China's national flag carrier Air China announced Thursday plans to issue up to 400 million A-shares - 5.1 percent of its total shares - to raise funds to purchase aircraft and replenish the company's working capital.
The company intends to utilize the proceeds from the offering to finance the acquisition of 15 Boeing-787 aircraft, 24 Airbus-320 series aircraft and 15 Boeing-737 series aircraft in an effort to increase the airline's transport capacity. It will also spend up to 1.5 billion yuan ($200 million) to supplement its working capital.
Sri Lanka records over 7,000 child abuse complaints
By IANS,
Colombo : Over 7,000 complaints of children being abused have been recorded in Sri Lanka this year, an official said Sunday.
Tamil refugees in Sri Lanka to return home from Thursday
By IANS,
Chennai: Sri Lanka has assured a team of 10 MPs from Tamil Nadu that 58,000 Sri Lankan Tamils currently staying in fenced-off camps will be taken back to their homes from Thursday, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi said here Wednesday.
"There are 253,000 Tamils living in the camps and they will be sent back to their original places in phases - that is the assurance the MPs team got from Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa," the DMK chief told reporters here.
Russia set to continue WTO talks in Geneva
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : A new round of bilateral and multilateral talks on Russia's bid to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) will begin in Geneva on Monday, Russia's chief delegate to the talks said.
It remains unclear whether the WTO's newest member, Ukraine, or fellow ex-Soviet state Georgia will be taking part in the negotiations, Maxim Medvedkov said.
"Ukraine, like every other WTO member, has the right to join the working group on Russia's accession," he said.
"Everyone has been invited, including Georgia."
UK allays India’s AfPak concerns, confident of special ties
By IANS,
New Delhi/Bangalore: Britain is hopeful that the two-day visit of British Prime Minister David Cameron beginning Tuesday night will infuse "a new lease of life" into bilateral ties and is confident that its new immigration policy and perceived differences over dealing with Afghanistan-Pakistan issues will not come in the way, British high commissioner Sir Richard Stagg has said.
46 mn Americans live in poverty
By IANS,
Washington: About 46 million Americans lived in poverty last year, accounting for 15 percent of the population, the US census bureau announced Wednesday.
Russian water detector to ride piggyback on US lunar orbiter
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : A Lunar Exploration Neutron Detector (LEND) has had the final touches added at the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences and has been sent to the US to be installed on the American Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), scheduled to be launched in early 2009.
The aim of the mission is to map the Moon's surface. The task of the Russian device is to look for hydrogen and hydrogen-containing compounds, above all frozen water, in the lunar subsurface.
US Democrats introduce Obama’s $825-billion stimulus plan
By DPA,
Washington : Democrats in the US House of Representatives Thursday introduced an $825-billion economic stimulus plan that president-elect Barack Obama hopes will help revive the struggling economy.
The bill would provide for $550 billion in job-creating investments over two years and $275 billion in tax relief, media reports said.
Obama had originally requested $775 billion for his stimulus plan.