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The poor sell kidneys for quick buck in Filipino organ trade

By Girlie Linao, DPA, Manila : Nilda Reyes winced as she lifted a chair to give to a customer in her small neighbourhood store that is also her home in Manila's slum district of Tondo. The widowed 36-year-old mother of two admitted that she still feels pain from her side, almost five months since she donated one of her kidneys to an unknown recipient. But for Reyes, it was all worth it.

Brazil urges urgent reform of global financial system

By DPA, Brasilia : Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has called for "urgent" reform in international financial institutions as the ongoing credit crisis has put developing countries at risk. "The progress that our countries have made is at risk. The global financial crisis can affect developing countries in an unfair and particularly harsh way," he said Thursday. "The current crisis shows us that international financial institutions are in urgent need of reform," Lula said at a lunch to honour Jordan's visiting King Abdullah II.

At Least 9 killed in strong Indonesian earthquake

By Xinhua

Jakarta : At least nine people were killed and more than one hundred feared injured after a strong earthquake measuring 7.9 magnitude on Ritcher Scale hit Bengkulu province of Indonesia on Wednesday, Disaster Management Agency said here Thursday.

African Union Chases Comoro Rebels

By Prensa Latina Maputo : Troops of the Africa Union still search for rebels in Anjouan, Comoro Islands, after they occupied the island with little resistance. The final assault follows eight months of verbal strife between Comoro Union federal government and forces of Bacar who refused to step down when the July elections results were declared illegal. The reports say that several loyal to the renegade President Bacar fell during the operation and his whereabouts is still unknown but multiple sources said he fled in female clothes.

India’s vice president goes to Botswana in search of diamonds

By Devirupa Mitra, IANS, Lilongwe (Malawi): India is a on a diamond search in the southern African state of Botswana from where it hopes to increase the direct access of Indian companies to rough diamonds, rather than through middlemen. This purpose had already been articulated by Indian Vice President Hamid Ansari, who will reach Botswana Saturday afternoon from Malawi on the last leg of his tri-nation tour in Southern Africa that took him first to Zambia.

Russian ministers leave for Paris for bilateral security talks

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Russia's foreign and defense ministers will leave for Paris on Monday to meet with their French counterparts for bilateral security negotiations. The seventh Franco-Russian Cooperation Council for Security Issues will be held on Tuesday, involving Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, his French counterpart Bernard Kouchner, and Russian and French defense ministers Anatoly Serdyukov and Herve Morin.

Google brand awareness soars in China after pull-out threat

By IANS, Beijing : Web search engine Google's brand awareness in China has soared after the firm threatened to pull-out of the country over hacking of email accounts of many human rights activists, a research firm said. Edward Yu, president of domestic research firm Analysys International, told China Daily Tuesday that his company has sensed a significant growth of search inquiries for Google.

Dominican president moots fund to help poor nations buy oil

By IANS, Santo Domingo (Dominican Republic) : Dominican President Leonel Fernandez has proposed a $40 billion fund to be made available on easy terms to poor countries to help them buy oil, EFE reported Sunday. Fernandez said at a press conference here Saturday that while high oil prices have pushed much of the world into a grave crisis, the oil producing countries are reaping a rich harvest from the price spiral.

Crew rescued Greek-registered vessel from heavy seas

By SPA London : All 20 crew members have been rescued from a Greek-registered cargo ship that was listing badly in heavy seas in the English Channel on Monday. Britain's Coastguard said the vessel Ice Prince was carrying more than 5,250 metric tons (5,700 tons) of timber to Alexandria, Egypt when its cargo shifted in a storm on Sunday and the ship began tilting toward the water between Normandy, France and the coast of England.

Shelters of Katrina Victims Toxic

By Prensa Latina Washington : US victims of Hurricane Katrina in shelters provided by the government are exposed to high levels of toxicity, and must leave them immediately, local health authorities affirmed Thursday. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) found dangerous formaldehyde concentrations in 519 trailers in Louisiana, and Mississippi, two states severely pounded by the hurricane that in August 2005 left 1,800 people dead, and over 100,000 homeless.

Obama names Hillary Clinton secretary of state

By Xinhua, Washington : US President-elect Barack Obama Monday nominated Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, wife of former president Bill Clinton, as secretary of state. window.onload =...

Italy’s parliament dissolved, fresh polls in April

By DPA Rome : Italian President Giorgio Napolitano Wednesday announced he had "regrettably" dissolved Italy's parliament, paving the way for a snap election without first reforming the country's electoral law. "Regrettably, I have to take a decision which will bring voters back to the polls" without parliament first approving electoral law reform, Napolitano said in a televised statement.

Bush Urges House to Pass Protect America Act

By SPA Washington : U.S. President George W. Bush on Thursday urged the U.S. Congress to reauthorize the Protect America Act before they leave for a recess.

France to inject $14 bn into six major banks

By DPA, Paris : France will inject 10.5 billion euros ($14 billion) into the country's six biggest banks in an effort to provide capital for business and consumer lending, Finance Minister Christine Lagarde announced late Monday. The government is to subscribe to subordinated debt issued by the six banks but will not gain voting rights. In all, Paris could eventually inject 40 billion euros into the financial system by this method, as part of the 360-billion-euro rescue package forged earlier in October.

Hurricane Irene kills four in US

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Washington : Four people, including a child, were killed Saturday as a result of powerful hurricane Irene that has hit the US East Coast, emergency officials said.

Zimbabwe’s medical bodies implore end to political violence

By DPA, Harare : Some 2,900 victims of political violence wracking Zimbabwe ahead of a presidential election run-off have been treated in hospital since elections March 29, medical specialists said Sunday. The specialist doctors in Zimbabwe, comprising surgeons, anaesthetists, physicians and paediatricians, said in a statement Sunday that over 200 people had had to be hospitalized with injuries and complications as a result of injuries.

Ravi urges Indian diaspora to retain cultural identity

By Paras Ramoutar

IANS

Port-of-Spain (Trinidad) : The Indian diaspora which amounts to 40 percent of the 1.3 million people in Trinidad and Tobago have been urged, "to keep your cultural identity and religious faith" by a visiting Indian minister.

India to help build infrastructure in Central Asia: Modi

Ufa (Russia)­­: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday said India will help develop infrastructure in the Central Asian region. "Our ties with Central Asia are...

At least 24 people dead as plane crashes in Brazilian river

By RIA Novosti, RIO DE JANEIRO : At least 24 people died after a small passenger plane crashed into a river in Brazil's Amazon jungle, the country's firefighting service said on Sunday. The plane crashed amid heavy rain into the Manacapuru River some 80 kilometers (50 miles) from Manaus, the capital of the Brazilian state of Amazonas, on Saturday. Four people, including a 9-year-old girl, have been rescued. It is yet to be clarified how many passengers were on board the plane.

Sri Lanka will consider talks if LTTE lays down arms

By IANS Colombo : The Sri Lankan government said Thursday that it would consider peace talks if the guerrillas laid down arms and came to the negotiating table. "We have not closed the door for talks," cabinet spokesman Anura Priyadarshana Yapa told the media here. "In future, if the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) lays down arms and comes for talks, the government will reconsider its stand," he said.

Yet another Sikh dies in gang-style violence in Vancouver

By IANS, Vancouver : A 32-year-old Sikh man became the latest victim of gangster violence that has claimed dozens of young lives in the largely prosperous Indian-Canadian community which has been plagued by drug trafficking and gun running among other crimes. Sukhwinder Singh Dhaliwal, of Abbotsford city near here, who faced charges of drug and weapon possession and was out on bail, was gunned down in the Delta area of Vancouver Monday evening. Police said his bullet-riddled body was found next to his Cadillac near the Delta city golf course.

Landslide leaves eight dead in the Philippines

By Xinhua Manila : Eight people were buried alive in a landslide triggered by tropical storm that washed away residential houses in a village in northern Philippines. The victims were members of two families living in Ifugao, a mountainside village. A 9-year-old boy was the lone survivor of the two families. Floods, caused by tropical depression "Hanna" (locally named "Lekima") also affected 350 families in the neighbouring Kalinga province, in northern Philippines.

Turkish PM to visit Gaza despite US request for delay

By IANS, Istanbul: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan insists on visiting Gaza following his trip to the US despite US request for a delay, reported Xinhua Monday citing local media.

Geneva-II second round concludes without results

By IANS, Geneva: The second round negotiations of the Geneva-II international conference on Syria concluded Saturday without achieving tangible results, said UN-Arab League Special Envoy...

US senator McCain meets Egypt president

By IANS, Cairo: Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi Wednesday met a US delegation led by Senator John McCain and discussed the latest regional developments as well as bilateral ties.

US bans electronics on flights from 8 Muslim countries

Washington, (IANS): Passengers travelling to the US from eight countries in the Middle East and North Africa will be prohibited from carrying electronic devices...

LTTE chief Prabhakaran hiding in Vanni area: Sri Lankan Defence Ministry’s website

By NNN-KUNA, New Delhi : Two LTTE (Liberation of Tamil Tigers Ealam) cadres who had surrendered before the Sri Lankan Army, have revealed that LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran was still hiding in Vanni area and holding a large number of civilians as captives to use them as "human bombs." The two LTTE suicide bombers, in their twenties, had surrendered before the Lankan troops on January 28, after they failed in their attempts to bomb the Iranamadu Tank, said a report published on Sri Lankan Defence Ministry's website.

Mobile phones to notify namaz timings through image

By IANS, Washington : A new software application meant for mobile phones can alert Muslim users to namaz timings through an image combined with audible alerts. The screen of the mobile phone shows an image of the sun lining up with a green circle when it is time to pray. "Users told us that tracking the sun was the most religiously valued method to determine prayer times," said Susan Wyche, doctoral candidate at Georgia Institute of Technology, and member of the team that developed the application.

Blair begins last week as PM amidst talk of new role

By Prasun Sonwalkar, IANS

London : It is said that generals never retire - but what about prime ministers? As British Prime Minister Tony Blair begins his last week in 10, Downing Street - he is due to step down next Wednesday - speculation is rife on what role he will take on next.

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.

NATO urges Russia not to escalate tensions in Ukraine

Brussels: NATO Thursday urged Russia not to take any action which could escalate tension or create misunderstanding in Ukraine. "NATO has a long-standing partnership with...

UNSC urges Nepalese to respect electoral outcome after peaceful vote

By APP, United Nations : The UN Security Council has urged the people of Nepal to abide by the outcome of the historic, “largely peaceful” elections to the Constituent Assembly that were held on April 10. In a statement read out on Monday to the press by Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo of South Africa, which holds the Council’s rotating presidency for April, the 15-member body urged all Nepalese parties “to respect the will of the people and the rule of law in the coming weeks as the results are being counted.”

Obama to name former Washington governor as commerce secretary

By Xinhua, Washington : US President Barack Obama is likely to name a former Washington state governor to be the commerce secretary, a media report said. Citing senior administration officials, the CNN said Monday Gary Locke, the country's first Chinese-American governor who has served two terms in Washington State from 1997 to 2005, to be designated to the key cabinet post. Obama's first pick for commerce secretary, New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, withdrew his nomination due to his involvement in a corruption case under investigation.

29 die in Nepal bus accident

By IANS, Kathmandu: Twenty-nine people were killed and 11 injured when their bus fell into a river in western Nepal, Xinhua reported Tuesday. The accident took place Monday in Kalikot area.

Israelis caught in Goa drug trade isolated cases: Diplomat

Panaji: Israel's Mumbai-based Consul General David Akov on Tuesday said instances of Israelis caught during unlawful activities in Goa were isolated incidents. Goa has seen...

Clinton goes national, Obama looks to lock in South Carolina

WASHINGTON (AFP) - Hillary Clinton, bristling from a debate brawl with Democratic foe Barack Obama, took her 2008 campaign onto the national stage Tuesday, targeting delegate-rich states which may decide the nomination. Senator Obama meanwhile was anchoring himself in South Carolina, hoping to lock in victory in Saturday's next White House nominating clash, where most polls give him a double digit lead by dominating the African-American vote.

World’s biggest Bible factory opens in China

By DPA Nanjing : It is a country where people caught smuggling religious texts or organising illicit services can face years in jail. Yet China is about to become home to the world's biggest Bible factory, producing a staggering one million copies a month. The aircraft hangar-sized plant in an industrial park outside the eastern city of Nanjing will be capable of producing more than one Bible every second and is expected to supply one quarter of all the world's Bibles by 2009.

Bhutan lifts vehicle import ban

Thimpu : Bhutan has lifted a ban on import of vehicles imposed a year ago, with dealers saying that most clients were interested in...

Fatal school shootings in recent years

By Xinhua, Beijing : A teenager opened fire at a high school in southern Germany Wednesday, shooting and killing 15 people before turning the gun on himself. The following are several serious school shooting cases across the world in recent years: Sep 23, 2008 - A 22-year-old student killed nine fellow students, a teacher and himself in a shooting spree in a vocational school in Kauhajoki, Finland. Feb 14, 2008 - A gunman stormed into a lecture hall at Northern Illinois University in the US, killing five students and wounding 18 others before committing suicide.

Cameron to visit Moscow

By IANS/RIA Novosti,

Doc declines donation raised by pic of French first lady in the nude

By ANTARA News Geneva : A doctor running hospitals in Cambodia said Sunday he had refused a donation raised by selling a picture of France's first lady in the nude, because Cambodians disapproved of exploiting female flesh for money. Swiss pediatrician Beat Richner, head of a children's medical care group, said he had turned down an offer of 91,000 dollars (57,000 euros) raised at a New York auction last week of the 1993 picture of Italian ex-model Carla Bruni, now married to President Nicolas Sarkozy.

5,000 civilians flee Sri Lanka’s war-zone: Military

By IANS, Colombo : Over 5,000 civilians Monday fled Sri Lanka's northern war-zone and entered the government-held areas as troops continued to advance towards the last stronghold of the Tamil Tigers as part of their "hostage rescue mission", a military spokesman here said. "A record 5,000 besieged civilians in the Puthumathalan No Fire Zone (NFZ) escaped from the grip of the LTTE and reached the army-held areas in Puthukkudiyiruppu early this (Monday) morning," Military Spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara told IANS.

Interpol China opens email for information on suspects

By IANS, Beijing : The Interpol bureau in China Thursday opened an email account to which people can report on Chinese criminals who have fled overseas.

Kyrgyz leader denies rumors of health problems

By RIA Novosti Bishkek : Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who returned from Germany on Saturday after receiving medical treatment, denied reports that he is suffering from severe health problems. Earlier this week, Bakiyev missed celebrations in Kyrgyzstan of the third anniversary of protests dubbed the "tulip revolution" that brought him to power. Bakiyev's extended stay in Germany for a "routine health check" sparked rumors in his Central Asian homeland that his health was at serious risk.

Sri Lanka slams UN panel to probe war crimes

By DPA, Colombo : Sri Lanka Wednesday criticised the appointment of a panel by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to investigate allegations of human rights violations during the last months of the government's war against separatist Tamil rebels. "The move is unwarranted and unacceptable to a sovereign nation like Sri Lanka," media minister Keheliya Rambukwella said in a reaction to the panel's appointment late Tuesday.

Suspected car bomb found in Times Square

By DPA, New York : Police evacuated part of Times Square after finding a suspected car bomb in the busy midtown Manhattan district Saturday night, media reports said. Officials said it was not considered to be a terrorist threat, and New York City police reportedly asked federal authorities to stand down. The New York Times quoted an explosives' expert saying it was an improvised device using propane cylinders and powder, but the ignition source "failed to function the main charge".

Pentagon plans three missile interceptor tests this summer

By RIA Novosti

Washington : The US is planning to conduct three test launches of ballistic missile interceptors by the end of September as part of its missile defence programme, a spokesman for Missile Defence Agency (MDA) said.

Five killed as Maoist activists clash with police in west Nepal

By DPA, Kathmandu : At least five people, including a police officer, were killed after violent clashes erupted between police and Maoist supporters in western Nepal, media reports said Saturday. The clashes erupted Friday after police tried to evict thousands of illegal settlers occupying forest land in Kailali district, about 400 kilometres west of the capital, Kantipur newspaper reported. The Maoist-aligned squatters had been illegally occupying forest land and constructed huts to start a settlement last week.

Five dead in Shanghai fire

By IANS, Beijing : A massive fire at a market selling farm produce in Chinese business hub Shanghai killed at least five people and wounded 12 others, the city government said Monday.

9 killed in Philippine bank robbery, mostly bank employees shot in head

By SPA, Manila : At least eight bank employees and a security guard were lined up and shot dead in the head Friday in one of the bloodiest bank robberies in the Philippines, AP quoted police as saying. One employee was in critical condition in a hospital. The victims were found sprawled on the floor of a branch of the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. in Cabuyao town in Laguna province, south of Manila, after the bank failed to open as scheduled at 9 a.m. and suspicious customers alerted authorities, Chief Superintendent Ricardo Padilla said.

9/11 terrorists came from Canada: John McCain

By IANS, Toronto : Former Republican presidential candidate John McCain created a diplomatic flap Friday when he told a US television network that 9/11 terrorists came from Canada. He joined US homeland security secretary Janet Napolitano who earlier this week suggested that the 9/11 terrorists entered the US from Canada. McCain told Fox News channel that the homeland security secretary was right in suggesting that the terrorists entered the US from Canada to carry out the biggest attack on American soil eight years ago.

She made 800 hoax calls to cops, now faces jail

By IANS, London : A teenaged girl in Britain has been taken to court for making around 800 hoax calls to police emergency number 999 on Christmas and the following day.

Japan’s opposition bloc puts censure motion against Fukuda in upper house

By Xinhua, Tokyo : Japan's opposition camp on Wednesday introduced a nonbinding censure motion against Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda in the opposition-led upper house. The main opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) and two other opposition parties tabled the motion in the House of Councillors to criticize Fukuda's policy on domestic issues such as the elderly healthcare insurance.

APEC leaders pledge support for ‘most vulnerable’

By RIA Novosti, Singapore : Leaders of the Pacific Rim countries pledged on Sunday to provide support for the 'most vulnerable' in their economies and also measures to stimulate small and medium business. "We will consider income supplements or earned income tax credits that encourage work and enterprise," the 21 leaders of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum said in their joint declaration at the end of their two-day summit in Singapore.

Greek therapy: Fresh air, sun and water

By DPA

Hamburg (Germany) : Every year countless vacationers take a beach holiday to relax, feel the surf on their feet, the warmth of the sun on their skin and the wind in their hair.

Fire at Indian restaurant in Australia

By IANS, Sydney : Four people had a miraculous escape after an explosion in an Indian restaurant severely damaged the property. Police are hunting for two men seen running from the scene after the blaze at the restaurant in Cleveland Street, Surry Hills, broke out Monday night, the Australian news agency AAP reported. Four people in a residential property above the business escaped, the report said. About 20 fire tenders managed to bring the blaze under control just after midnight, a spokesman for New South Wales Fire Brigades said.

Maldivians saw ‘low flying plane’ after Malaysian flight disappeared

Male: Maldives island residents saw "low flying plane" of the morning of disappearance of the Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, Maldivian news website Haveeru reported. Residents...

Food additive restores damaged polymers to full strength

By IANS, Washington : Food additives in damaged polymers can help restore them to full strength, say Illinois University scientists who cooked up the novel, self-healing system. "While our previous solvent worked well for healing, it was also toxic," said Scott White, a professor of aerospace engineering and a researcher at the university's Beckman Institute. "Our new solvent is both non-toxic and less expensive."

Danish police use teargas, arrest 436 in Copenhagen youth protest

Copenhagen, October 06, SPA -- Danish police used teargas to break up a major demonstration in Copenhagen Saturday in which 436 young people were detained and a number of people injured, radio reports said according to DPA. The protesters were demanding a new autonomous youth centre be made available in the capital's north-west following the demolition of a landmark "alternative scene" youth centre six months ago.

Terai protesters give Aug 5 deadline to Nepal government

By IANS

Kathmandu : With less than four months remaining for the crucial constituent assembly election, Nepal's eight-party government faces fresh disruption with two groups of ethnic protesters warning of a fresh stir after Aug 5.

One of the most powerful groups from the Terai plains, the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum, Saturday gave Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala's government eight days to meet its demands or face fresh agitation in the plains.

China gives its nod to Indian desire for nuclear commerce

By M.R. Narayan Swamy, IANS Singapore : Premier Wen Jiabao said Wednesday that China backs international civil nuclear energy cooperation with India, remarks seen as Beijing's inclination not to block New Delhi's efforts to conduct nuclear commerce. Wen made the remarks to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at a 30-minute bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit here as New Delhi was set for talks with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on an India-specific safeguards agreement.

24 killed in apartment blast in Ukraine

By DPA, Kiev : An explosion in a Ukrainian block of flats killed at least 24 people and left dozens buried, officials said Thursday. The blast took place Wednesday evening in a Soviet-era five-storey prefabricated concrete building in Evpatoria, on the Black Sea shore of Ukraine's Crimea peninsula. More dead were likely to be discovered as rescue workers had only picked through the top two floors of the fallen building, and debris from remains of three more floors remained to be inspected, Eduard Hrivovsky, a ministry for emergency situations spokesman, said.

Obama urges Congress to pass cybersecurity bill

By IANS, Washington : US President Barack Obama has urged the Congress to pass a cybersecurity bill to boost digital defence against cyber attacks.

World Bank ups Russia GDP growth

By IANS, Moscow : Russia's gross domestic product (GDP) will grow by 3.8 percent and 4.2 percent in 2012 and 2013 respectively, the World Bank said Wednesday.

Canadian leader vows to roll back immigration changes

By IANS, Toronto : Calling the proposed immigration changes a blow to Canadian multi-culturalism, opposition leader Jack Layton has vowed to oppose the amendment "every step of the way". If the Conservative government manages to enact these changes, Layton said that his New Democratic Party (NDP) would "work to roll these back" after the next elections. "The government is putting in place an arbitrary process under which you may not be allowed to come here even if you qualify. The immigration minister has been given the powers to pick and choose," Layton told IANS.

US school closed after teacher finds loaded gun

By IANS, Washington: An elementary school in the US state of Oklahoma was briefly locked down after a teacher found a loaded gun in his chair, media reports said.

Demand to rebuild Tamil schools in Malaysia

By IANS, Kuala Lumpur : The Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) has demanded that 60 percent of the 523 Tamil schools in the country be rebuilt by 2011 under a financial package allotted to promote better education among the two million-plus ethnic Indians. MIC President S. Samy Vellu urged the government to set up a committee to coordinate rebuilding and refurbishing of the schools, for which a RM 50 million ($23 million approx.) stimulus package has been planned.

Nepal HR interrogates police, Home Secretary over Kapilvastu carnage

By NNN-Nepal News Kathmandu : The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) summoned and interrogated the chief of Armed Police Force (APF) and Home Secretary to inquire about the insecurity leading to carnage in Kapilvastu recently. At a time when there have been widespread condemnations over the lax security, the Commission had summoned APF chief Basudev Oli and Home Secretary Umesh Mainali for explanations.

Aamir, Nepal PM discuss malnutrition in South Asia

By Anil Giri, Kathmandu : Though some substantive achievement has been made in the region for overall development of children, compared with developed nations, South...

Search for survivors ends as Haiti toll at 111,000

By DPA, Port-au-Prince : The Haitian government declared the search-and-rescue phase over Saturday as the first official estimate put the toll from the devastating earthquake at more than 111,000 people. Yet even as the search slowed and the emphasis turned to relief operations, television broadcaster CNN reported a young man was found alive under the rubble of Hotel Napoli in Port-au-Prince, 11 days after the earthquake left much of the Haitian capital in ruins. French, Greek and US rescue teams were on the scene.

Colombian militia camp found inside Venezuela

By IANS, Caracas : Venezuela's armed forces have discovered a camp set up by a Colombian militia group inside the country and arrested four of its members, Spain's EFE news agency reported Wednesday quoting a top military official. The secret camp of the outlawed United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia, or AUC, was found last Thursday in the western state of Zulia near the Colombian borders, General Jesus Gonzalez said, adding that the camp was set up to train the right-wing paramilitaries.

Italian court recognises gay union for first time

Rome: An Italian, recognising a same-sex marriage contracted overseas, has authorised two men to have their union recorded in the local civil registry. The court...

Seeking the roots of the modern potato

By IANS New York : New research into the history of the potato has rubbished two popular theories about how they travelled from their homeland in South America to Europe - and then to the rest of the world. The study, by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, used DNA to conclude that a whopping 99 percent of all modern potatoes are descendents of varieties once grown in south-central Chile.

Horse’s tragic death cancels royal ceremon

By IANS, London : A royal gun salute marking the Queen's coronation was cancelled after an Army horse died accidentally while participating in the ceremony.

Mexico releases beauty queen arrested for drug links

By DPA, Mexico City : A Mexican beauty queen arrested last December on suspected connections to illegal drugs was Friday released without being charged, the prosecutor's office said. Laura Elena Zuniga, 23, who is Hispanic America Queen 2008 and was to represent Mexico in the Miss Universe 2009 pageant, was suspected of membership in a criminal organization, possessing illegal weapons and criminal violations of public health. But prosecutors said Friday that they had not found any evidence that she was involved in criminal activity.

Over 3,000 illegal migrants died in Mediterranean in 2014: Report

Geneva : Up to 3,072 illegal migrants are believed to have died in the Mediterranean so far in 2014, compared with an estimated 700...

Bush warns nuclear-armed Iran could mean ‘World War III’

By DPA Washington : US President George W. Bush has warned that a nuclear-armed Iran could lead to a third world war, trying to persuade countries to step up pressure on the Islamic state that has called for the destruction of Israel. Bush Wednesday said Iran poses a threat to peace and referred to comments by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has previously said Israel should be eliminated.

Illegal tunnel equipped with elevator found in Mexico

By EFE, Mexico City : Thirteen Mexicans have been arrested for building a clandestine tunnel, which was equipped with a elevator, under the border with the US, authorities said. "The tunnel is equipped with the most advanced technology and was presumably going to be used to smuggle drugs, arms and people into the United States," Mexico's Public Safety Secretariat said Thursday.

UN body seeks Israeli cooperation in flotilla probe

By DPA, Geneva/Tel Aviv: The president of the UN Human Rights Council Wednesday called for Israel to collaborate with the team he has appointed to investigate the deadly Israeli raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla in May. "I hope they will engage positively ... with the mission," Sihasak Phuangketkeow said in Geneva. The three-member "independent international fact-finding mission" is tasked with travelling to the Middle East to examine whether the flotilla raid, which left nine Turkish activists dead, violated international law.

Jordan in meeting of NATO

By NNN-Petra Brussels : Jordan has taken part in the meeting of NATO foreign ministers which started on Dec 7 2007 in Brussels. Foreign Minister Salahiddin Al Bashir headed the Jordanian delegation to the Mediterranean Dialogue Ministerial. The delegation comprises Jordanian Ambassador to European Union (EU) and the Kingdom of Belgium Ahmad Massa’deh and diplomat at Jordanian Embassy Ali Al Bsoul. Al Basher is expected to meet with a number of his European and Arab counterparts for talks on bilateral ties between Jordan and their respected countries.

U.N. Chief Heading to Spain for Dialogue Meeting

By SPA United Nations : United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will travel to Madrid next week to open the inaugural meeting of the Alliance of Civilizations, an international dialogue initiative. Ban is expected to attend alongside leaders from countries including Spain and Turkey, according to Alliance of Civilizations acting director Shamil Idriss. The Alliance, an initiative of the Spanish and Turkish governments under the auspices of the United Nations, was started in June 2005 to build bridges between nations and cultures through dialogue.

Chinese teachers hardly get Indian visa: Chinese diplomat

By Sreya Basu, IANS, Kolkata : There is a rising demand in India to learn the Chinese language, but New Delhi is hardly issuing visa to teachers from China, says Beijing's top diplomat here. "There are no native Chinese teachers to teach the language to Indians since April 2008 despite the growing demand to learn the language," Consul General Mao Siwei said in an interview here. "The main problem is they don't get Indian visa easily. They are not directly denied the visa but the procedure is delayed for so long that the teachers ultimately give up," Mao told IANS.

Low-grade blast at New York army recruitment centre

By Parveen Chopra, IANS New York : A military recruitment station near New York City's landmark Times Square was targeted with a low-grade explosion early Thursday. Security agencies took a serious view of the incident though nobody was injured. The blast caused by a low-grade explosive device kept in a small ammunition box occurred around 4 a.m. local time at the empty recruitment centre. It left a gaping hole in the front window and shattered a glass door, twisting and blackening its metal frame. No one was injured even though some policemen were in the vicinity.

Crimean parliament adopts new constitution

Kiev: The Crimean parliament Friday voted unanimously in favour of a new constitution that proclaims it a legal and democratic state within the Russian...

Woman arrested after stabbing pilots on New Zealand plane

By RIA Novosti Auckland : A woman who stabbed both pilots on board a 19-seater New Zealand commuter plane and then threatened to detonate a bomb has been charged with hijacking, police said on Friday. The incident took place on board a commercial flight between Blenheim and Christchurch, both on the country's South Island. The woman, 33, and originally from Somalia, reportedly demanded to be flown to Australia.

Climate-change adaptation to cost $75-90 bn: World Bank

By DPA, Bangkok : Climate-change adaptation is likely to cost developing countries $75-90 billion annually from 2010 to 2050, according to a study released Wednesday by the World Bank. Based on an assumption that global temperatures would rise at least two degrees Celsius over the next four decades, adaptation costs for the developing world in such sectors as infrastructure "climate proofing" are to cost $75-90 billion a year, the bank said on the sidelines of UN climate-change talks being held this week and next in Bangkok.

French Interior Minister Manuel Valls named new PM

Paris: French President Francois Hollande has named Interior Minister Manuel Valls to head his new "fighting" executive team, replacing Jean-Marc Ayrault after the Socialists...

Al Qaeda calls for holy war against China

By DPA, Cairo : A senior Al Qaeda leader in a video distributed Wednesday urged Muslims to launch a holy war against Chinese "invaders" in response to the "massacre" of Uighurs in western China. "The atheist criminals have long used the most despicable, cruel and brutal means against Muslims in Turkistan," said Abu Yayha al-Libi, who is sometimes identified as the commander in Afghanistan of the international terrorist network Al Qaeda. "Thousands of Muslims were killed, and no one knows about them," he said in the 20-minute video, referring to Uighurs living in China.

Helping family repatriate Indian’s body from Saudi Arabia: government

New Delhi : The Indian government is working with authorities in Saudi Arabia for repatriation of the mortal remains of an Indian worker allegedly...

Ex-Italian PM convicted for bribery

Rome : Former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has been found guilty of bribing a senator in 2006 in an attempt to bring...

Gates’ bounty goes to waste in Nepal

By IANS Kathmandu : A maternity hospital built in southern Nepal with the assistance of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has not been in use even four years after its completion due to the government's failure to appoint doctors, state media reported Tuesday. Located in Taulihawa town in Kapilavastu district, the region where the Buddha was born, the hospital was built at a cost of Nepali Rs.4.3 million, the government-owned Rising Nepal daily said Tuesday. It has eight post-operation wards and state-of-the-art surgical equipment. However, there is no doctor.

Gandhi was a ‘bad man’ to Churchill, secret notes reveal

By Venkata Vemuri, IANS, London : Winston Churchill once called Mahatma Gandhi "a bad man and an enemy of the Empire" who should have been done away with. The war-time prime minister of Britain told Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts of South Africa at a meeting of the war cabinet in London in the 1940s: "You are responsible for all our troubles in India - you had Gandhi for years and did not do away with him." To which, Smuts replied: "When I put him in prison - three times - all Gandhi did was to make me a pair of bedroom slippers."

UK court criticizes US refusal to disclose torture evidence

London, Oct 23, IRNA, Two High Court judges have criticized as "deeply disturbing" the refusal by the US to disclose evidence that could prove a British resident held at Guantanamo Bay was tortured before confessing to terrorism offenses. There was "no rational basis" for the American failure to reveal the contents of documents essential to the defence of Binyam Mohamed, who faces the death penalty, Lord Justice Thomas and Justice Lloyd Jones said.

South Korean president meets Pyongyang delegation

By Xinhua, Seoul : South Korean President Lee Myung-bak held talks with a visiting North Korean delegation here Sunday amid Pyongyang's latest conciliatory moves that show signs of easing tensions on the Korean Peninsula, media reports said. A high-level North Korean delegation arrived here Friday to pay their last respect to late former South Korean president Kim Dae-jung who died recently.

Kenya’s opposition to take to the streets again

By SPA Nairobi : Kenya's opposition is to take to the streets again to protest against President Mwai Kibaki after unsuccessful international mediation talks, a spokesman for the Orange Democracy Movement (ODM) said Friday, according to dpa. The government had not shown any willingness to hold talks, the spokesman added. A mass rally originally scheduled for Tuesday this week was cancelled to create a "peaceful frame" for mediation efforts by Ghanaian President and African Union leader John Kufuor.

South Africa to circumcise two million men

By IANS, Durban : In an effort to combat the scourge of HIV and Aids, over two million men will be circumcised in South Africa's eastern KwaZulu-Natal province, BuaNews reported Friday. The premier of KwaZulu-Natal province, Zweli Mkhize, said Thursday this initiative had received overwhelming support from HIV activists and the medical fraternity. The process will begin April 11.

Indian-American computer scientist’s fatal beater gets 12 years’ jail

New Jersey: A New Jersey court has sentenced last of five men charged with the 2010 fatal beating of an Indian-American computer scientist Divyendu...

Landslide kills at least 22 in Guatemala

By Xinhua, Mexico City : At least 22 people were killed and 10 others were missing in a massive landslide in northern Guatemala, emergency officials said. The landslide occurred in Alta Verapaz district, some 200 km north of Guatemala City, Sunday night. Falling stones and mud hit several people walking along a nearby road, an official said. According to a local radio, around 10 people were missing after the landslide. Rescue workers were continuing their search for the missing people, the report said.

Lavrov, Clinton meet in Geneva to ‘reboot’ relations

By RIA Novosti, Geneva : Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made a symbolic "reboot" to improve relations between the two countries when they met in Geneva Friday. As a symbolic start to the process, Clinton brought to the meeting a yellow box with a large red "reset" button, which she asked Lavrov to push with her. On either side of the button was a label in English "reset", and what was supposed to be a Russian translation.

Martial law declared in Filipino province where 57 were murdered

By DPA, Shariff Aguak (Philippines) : Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Saturday declared martial law in a southern province where 57 people were murdered and security forces rounded up at least eight prime suspects in the gruesome crime. Arroyo said she placed Maguindanao province, 930 kilometres south of Manila, under military rule as "heavily armed groups (in the area) have established positions to resist government troops."

Putin calls for rapid resumption of EU partnership talks

By DPA, Paris : Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin called Thursday for a quick resumption of talks on a new partnership agreement with the European Union. Speaking to journalists after meeting in Paris with French Prime Minister Francois Fillon, Putin said that the talks should be taken up again "as soon as possible”. Monday, EU foreign ministers had agreed on a mandate for a new partnership accord with Russia. But authorities in Moscow still fear that the talks will drag on without reaching a conclusion this year.

Sashay through fire in this fabric

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Sydney : Flame-proof, anti-piracy, stab-resistant and a host of other cutting-edge fabrics, produced by New Zealand's government-owned research group AgResearch, will be on show at the country's annual fashion week beginning Tuesday. A team of AgResearch textile scientists has worked with 10 of New Zealand's top fashion designers to create a special collection of garments made from the revolutionary fabrics, based on Merino wool. The AgResearch developed fabrics include Natural Easy Care 100 percent wool shirting and suiting fabrics.

U.S. nuclear sub visits Japan’s port amid concerns over radioactive leakage

By Xinhua, Tokyo : A U.S. nuclear-powered submarine arrived at the U.S. naval base in Sasebo, Nagasaki Prefecture Monday to give a short break to its crew, said reports from the southwestern Japanese port city of Nagasaki. The submarine "La Jolla", with a displacement of 6,080 tons, came amid widespread concerns in Japan over radioactive leakage by another Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine "Houston" when it called at the port in March.

Plan to build Britain’s biggest mosque blocked

By DPA, London : Plans to build a "super-mosque" next to the site for the 2012 Olympic Games in London have collapsed and the Islamic group behind the project will be evicted later this week, a London council responsible for the district said Monday. Newham Council in east London said the Islamic group Tablighi Jamaat, which has been operating a temporary mosque on the land in question since 2006, had been asked to leave the land by Thursday.

France Bans Transgenic Corn

By Prensa Latina Paris : The legal battle in France to ban the transgenic corn strain OGM MON810 produced by the US company Monsanto has had a successful end with the official ban released Saturday. French Agriculture Minister Michel Barnier announced a decree that bans trading with corn seeds developed from the genetically altered MON810 strain. The ban will be in force until a new trading license is arranged. Ex presidential candidate Jose Bove, who carried out a hunger strike in Paris last January to protest transgenic products, considers it a success.

Thai police denies plan to forcefully disperse demonstrators

By Xinhua, Bangkok : Thai senior police officials on Wednesday denied reports that they planned to forcefully disperse the anti-government demonstrators at the Government House, although core members of the rally said they were prepared to be arrested. Anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) leader Chamlong Srimuang said earlier that he and the other core members of the activist group were prepared to be arrested if police decided to disperse the group's demonstration.

Obama to visit Myanmar Monday

By IANS, Yangon : US President Barack Obama will Monday undertake a historic visit to Myanmar, one among the 10 members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Serbia hands war crimes suspect Stojan Zupljanin to ICTY

By DPA, Belgrade : Serbia Saturday flew Serb Stojan Zupljanin, accused of genocide in the Bosnian 1990s war, to the Netherlands to produce him before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), the Tanjug news agency said. The arrest and extradition of war crime suspects is a key requirement for Serbia's further progress to European Union (EU) membership. After Zupljanin, there are three more fugitive suspects - Bosnian Serbs Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic and the Croatian Serb leader Goran Hadzic.

China’s GDP up 6.1 percent in first quarter

By Xinhua, Beijing : China's economy expanded by 6.1 percent year-on-year in the first quarter, official data showed Thursday. The quarterly growth rate was the lowest in 10 years as the global financial crisis continued to affect the world's fastest-growing economy. It was 4.5 percentage points lower than the first quarter of 2008 and down 0.7 percentage points from the previous quarter. Gross domestic product (GDP) reached 6.5745 trillion yuan ($939 billion) in the first quarter, Li Xiaochao, spokesman of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), said at a press conference.

Report: 21 people killed in China road crash

By SPA, Beijing : At least 21 people were killed and a dozen others hurt Tuesday when a bus and coal truck collided in China's northwest Xinjiang region, a state-run news agency reported. The head-on collision happened on a highway in a remote area, the Xinhua News Agency said. Two vehicles were damaged and three of the 12 injured were in serious condition, Xinhua said.

Nearly 700 fishermen rescued from floating ice

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : A total of 675 fishermen stranded on a block of floating ice off Russia's far eastern region were rescued Sunday.

Samoa to establish diplomatic offices in China, Japan

By Xinhua, Wellington : The South Pacific island nation of Samoa has finally decided to establish diplomatic missions in Asia by having embassy offices in China and Japan, Radio New Zealand International reported on Monday. Samoan Prime Minister Tuila epa Sa ilele Malielegaoi announced the government's initiative before parliament passed a new financial year budget, which includes funding for the new diplomatic offices and staff.

Sri Lanka army fights to finish off Tamil Tigers

By SOA, Colombo : Sri Lankan troops fought toward the shrinking strongholds of the separatist Tamil Tiger rebels on Sunday, the military said, seeking a crushing battlefield victory to end one of Asia's longest insurgent ground wars, reported reuters. The military said it had killed at least 24 rebels after a series of confrontations on Saturday in the small northeastern wedge of jungle which is all that is left of the Tigers' self-proclaimed state.

Colombian drug trafficker nabbed at father-in-law’s funeral

By EFE, Bogota : A suspected drug trafficker was arrested in the Colombian city of Cali while attending his father-in-law's funeral, the police said. Gennie Alberto Moreno Valencia was arrested Monday on murder, criminal conspiracy, arms possession and other charges. Valencia, 29, was the main individual responsible for "drug trafficking activities and for smuggling large quantities of drugs into Central America and the US", police said.

Three Indians jailed for oil theft in Nigeria

Abuja: A court in Nigeria has sentenced three Indian nationals to 15 years in prison for oil theft. The convicts -- Ajay Bhatia, Sailesh Kumar...

15 killed as truck rams into house in Indonesia

By IANS, Jakarata : At least 15 people were killed and many others wounded after a truck rammed into a house in Indonesia's East Java province Tuesday, Xinhua reported Wednesday.

Domestic violence hits productivity at workplace

By IANS, Sydney : Domestic violence may directly hit productivity at the workplace, with one in five victims experiencing continued harassment from their partners.

Seven Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes

Gaza City, May 18 (DPA) Three children were among seven Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza, while four more four died in internal factional fighting. The children were in their father's car, which belongs to the Rafah municipality, when it was struck by a missile in the latest attack Thursday, witnesses said. The father was outside the vehicle and escaped unharmed. Two bystanders were seriously wounded.

Hillary Clinton congratulates Israel on 60th birthday

By DPA, Washington : Senator Hillary Clinton, who is battling to keep her head above water in the waning days of the Democratic battle for the presidential nomination, has sent her "heartfelt congratulations to the people of Israel" on the occasion of the country's 60th anniversary. But she warned that the "Jewish state is still not safe". "In every generation, Israel faces serious challenges to its security and threats to its existence," Clinton said in a statement Thursday.

12 killed in clashes in Kyrgyzstan

By IANS, Bishkek : At least 12 people were killed and over 100 injured in overnight clashes in southern Kyrgyzstan, a health ministry official said Friday. Armoured vehicles have been sent in to stabilise the situation after hundreds of youths smashed windows, looted shops and set fire to cars in the city. Earlier, the Kyrgyzstan interim government declared a state of emergency in the southern city of Osh due to the turmoil there, Xinhua reported.

Jordan to lodge protest with Israel over border fires

By DPA, Amman : Jordan would lodge a protest with Israel over fires that started in Israel last month and spread across the border, damaging a number of citrus farms in the Jordan Valley, the official Petra news agency reported Saturday. "Jordan will lodge a protest with the Israeli Foreign Ministry tomorrow," Petra quoted an official source as saying. The Israeli ambassador in Amman will also be summoned to explain what happened and "give guarantees that it will not happen in future," the official said.

UK urged to investigate influence of Zionist lobby

By IRNA London : A parliamentary committee is being urged to investigate the pervasive influence of the Israeli regime's lobby in Britain that have been embedded in the country's major political parties for over 50 years. Secretary of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, Charles Ramsden is being asked to examine the variety of so-called "Friends of Israel" groups that are at the centre of the British political establishment and at the very heart of government."

Chinese tourists go house-hunting in US: Daily

By Xinhua, Los Angeles : Chinese visitors are seeking to buy mortgaged houses impounded for payment default and other bargain property taking advantage of crashing housing prices, a US daily has reported. The trips are part of a broader trend of individuals and businesses in China seeking greater investment opportunities abroad, the Los Angeles Times said. "With housing prices crashing in the United States, home-buying trips to America are becoming one of the more popular tour group packages in China," the paper said.

New UN guidelines for teachers to help students better

By IANS Paris : The United Nations (UN) has developed new guidelines to help instructors utilise better Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in education, saying it takes more than having a computer for teachers to pass on the skills to students, WAM news agency reported Sunday.

Six soldiers, 26 rebels killed in Sri Lanka

By DPA, Colombo : The military said Saturday that it had killed at least 26 Tamil rebels and lost six soldiers in northern Sri Lanka as it fights to capture the last remaining guerilla-held ground on the island. Military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said the fighting occurred around Pudukudirrippu and Karaivamulliyakal, 390 km northeast of Colombo. Government troops reached the outer perimeters of a "no-fire zone" meant for civilians in the northeast of the country, which is in the rebel-held area, he said.

Nine Former Soldiers In Philippines Sentenced To Imprisonment

By Bernama Manila : A Philippine court on Tuesday sentenced nine former soldiers from 6 to 40 years in jail, after pleading guilty to charges of coup d'etat for a July 2003 mutiny. The Makati Regional Trial Court sentenced Captains Gerardo Gambala and Milo Maestrecampo, who were among the core leaders of the so-called "Oakwood Mutiny", between 20 and 40 years of imprisonment. While seven others were sentenced between 6 and 12 years in jail.

US Flouts Deal, N.Korea to Retaliate

By Prensa Latina, Pyongyang : The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) announced on Friday it has stopped dismantling nuclear facilities in Nyongbyon given the US refusal to eliminate it from the list of countries supporting terrorism. KCNA agency quoted a foreign ministry's spokesperson as saying efforts are being made to return those facilities to their previous state, as a counter-measure to the White House's negative response.

Private helicopter with two people onboard lost in Siberia

By SPA Moscow : A Robinson R44 helicopter with two people onboard goes missing on the border of the Khanty-Mansi autonomous district and the Tyumen region, the press service of the Russian emergencies ministry told Itar-Tass on Thursday. “At 18:50 Moscow time on March 4, we received the information that the R44 helicopter owned by AMK Vigas company had not arrived to the Samotlor oil field in the Nizhnevartovsk district,” the source said.

Egypt to host second round of Mideast peace talks

By DPA, Cairo : Egypt will host the next segment of the direct round of Middle East peace talks Sep 14, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said Sunday, confirming earlier reports. The talks will take place at the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh, Hossam Zaki, the spokesman, said in a statement. Israeli and Palestinian leaders held their first direct peace talks in nearly two years in Washington last week, pledging to reach a peace agreement within a year.

Dalai Lama calls for international investigation into crackdown in Tibet

By SPA Dhramsala, India : The Dalai Lama says there should be an international investigation into the crackdown against protests in Tibet, AP reported. The Tibetan spiritual leader says he wants a «respected international organization ... (to) find out what the situation is in Tibet and what is the cause.» Speaking to journalists Sunday in Dharmsala, the base of his government-in-exile in northern India, he said there is a problem in Tibet «whether the (Chinese) government there admits it or not.»

1 in 3 Americans would deny illegal immigrants social services

By Arun Kumar, IANS Washington : One-third of Americans want to deny the country's estimated over 12 million illegal immigrants, including some 300,000 Indians, social services like public schooling and emergency room healthcare, a new poll has found. Still a strong bipartisan majority -- 60 percent-favours allowing illegal immigrants, who have not committed crimes to become citizens if they pay fines, learn English and meet other requirements, the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll noted.

Ugandan president fires prime minister

Kampala : Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has sacked Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi, a State House statement said here Friday. The statement said Mbabazi has been...

Moroccan drug ring uses divers to smuggle hashish to Spain

By DPA, Madrid : Spanish police have discovered a drug ring using divers to help bring hashish from Morocco to Spain, police said Thursday, describing the method as unprecedented. The ring transported drug cargoes across the Mediterranean to near Estepona on the southern Spanish coast, then lowered the hashish bundles to a depth of about 20 metres on the sea bed.

Sri Lanka woos Chinese tourists

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lanka has opened a page on Chinese social networking site - www.renren.com - to attract more Chinese tourists to the country, an official said Monday.

Thatcher taken to London hospital for tests: official

By AFP London : Former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher has been admitted to a London hospital where she is in a "stable" condition, its spokeswoman said Saturday. Thatcher, 82, is expected to spend the night at Saint Thomas' Hospital in central London, to which she was reportedly driven from her home in the capital late Friday for precautionary tests.

Why was Mallya allowed to leave India, Kejriwal asks Modi

New Delhi: Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi why beleaguered business tycoon Vijay Mallya was allowed to leave...

Terror threat rises in Britain: police chief

By Xinhua London : Britain's top police officer revealed here Tuesday that the number of terrorist plots in Britain is increasing "year on year". Ian Blair, chief of the Metropolitan Police, told the Home Affairs Select Committee that at present there is no need to extend the maximum detention period for terrorism suspects without charge from 28 days, although there will be in the near future, Sky news reported. The chief urged the parliament to find a way to prolong the detention period before an atrocity occurs.

Hillary Clinton preferred as US president: poll

By DPA Paris : Americans and Europeans agree that Democratic Party candidate Hillary Clinton would make the best US president of the current contenders for the post, according to a poll made public Friday. The survey by the Harris Institute for France 24 television and the Paris-based International Herald Tribune found that enthusiasm for Clinton was significantly higher among Europeans than Americans.

Gloves off for allies in British constituency

By IANS, London : Elections in Britain's Thirsk and Malton constituency will be the first test for Britain's Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition. Polls were postponed following the death of a candidate and will now be held on May 27. Liberal Democrat candidate Howard Keal said he had no qualms in battling his Conservative rival. "This is a gloves-off fight all the way. I have been dismayed at some of the tactics...For us, going into coalition is a huge success and is absolutely to be welcomed," The Independent quoted Keal as saying.
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