Home International

International

International

Himalayan glaciers may disappear within decades: UN

By IANS New York : Himalayan glaciers are melting fast and may disappear within decades, affecting as many as 750 million people downstream who depend on the glacial melt for their water, according to a new UN report. Rivers in the region such as the Ganga, the Indus and the Brahmaputra, as well as others criss-crossing northern India may soon become seasonal rivers - a development that has ramifications for poverty and the economies in the region, warns the report released by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State arrives in Nepal

By Xinhua, KATHMANDU : United States Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs, Richard Boucher arrived in Nepali capital Kathmandu Wednesday afternoon. During his two-day visit, Boucher will meet President Ram BaranYadav, Prime Minister Prachanda and Foreign Minister Upendra Yadavamong others. Boucher is the most senior US official visiting Nepal after the establishment of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)-led government last year.

Colombia finds arsenal of slain drug lord

By IANS Bogota : Colombian authorities in an operation against the country's drug cartels seized a large cache of arms and ammunition from the gang of drug lord Wilber Varela, slain last January in Venezuela, the police said Wednesday. The cache comprising 63 rifles and 124 cartridges was found stashed in a cattle ranch near Andalucia, a town in the southwestern province of Valle del Cauca, according to the police, the Spanish news agency EFE reported Wednesday. The administrator of the property was arrested.

US dispatches destroyer to search for Malaysian airliner

Washington: The US Navy said Saturday that it has dispatched a warship to assist in the search for a missing Malaysia Airlines plane. The USS...

42 African refugees drown off Yemeni coast

Sana'a: About 42 African refugees drowned Sunday evening off the Yemeni coast when their boat capsized in the Gulf of Aden, the Yemeni government...

Ghana’s central bank five-year bond oversubscribed

By IANS, Accra : The five-year bond issued by Ghana's central bank Thursday was oversubscribed by 141 percent.

North Korean top leader elected to parliament

By Xinhua, Pyongyang : North Korea's top leader Kim Jong Il has been unanimously elected to the parliament, state media said Monday. The official KCNA quoted the election committee as saying that the leader gained 100 percent approvals following a 100 percent turnout. "This is the expression of all service persons and people's absolute support and profound trust in Kim Jong Il," KCNA said. It said all the registered voters, including overseas voters, had participated the election, but it didn't release the results of other election districts.

Efforts on to retrieve black money stashed abroad: government

By IANS, New Delhi : The government is not sitting idle over the issue of retrieving over Rs.70 trillion of Indian black money stashed in various foreign banks and will detail the actions taken in this regard within "48 hours", the Supreme Court was told Wednesday. Additional Solicitor General Gopal Subramaniam made this assertion before a bench of Chief Justice K.G. Balakrishnan during the hearing of a lawsuit that accused the government of being oblivious to black money stashed away by tax evading citizens in foreign banks.

Real Madrid annoyed at Huntelaar turning down Stuttgart

By DPA, Madrid : Real Madrid are clearly annoyed at unwanted striker Klaas Jan Huntelaar finally turning down a lucrative offer from VfB Stuttgart. After more than two weeks of ardous negotiations, it seemed that Huntelaar was finally set fair to sign for Stuttgart for around 18 million euros (25.57 million dollars). The Dutch forward had requested not to go to Real's pre-season training camp in Ireland in order to negotiate with Stuttgart.

Powerful earthquake hits northwest China

By Xinhua, Xining (China) : An earthquake measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale hit northwest China's Qinghai province Monday morning. There was no immediate report of casualties. The epicentre of the quake was in the Mongolian-Tibetan district of Haixi, about 716 km west of the provincial capital Xining, according to the National Seismic Network. The Qinghai provincial seismic network monitored an aftershock measuring 3.9 on the Richter scale in the same area an hour after the quake.

12 killed in Mali mutiny

By IANS, Bamako (Mali) : At least 12 people died in the confrontation between Mali's mutinous soldiers and the presidential guards, police said Friday.

UN role in Sri Lanka ‘inescapable’: rights group

By IANS

New Delhi : The need for UN monitoring of human rights violations in Sri Lanka is "inescapable", a leading rights body has said, warning that the global community was getting disgusted with Colombo.

IMF seeks more funds in crisis as finance ministers meet

By DPA, Washington : The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank began their annual spring meetings Saturday in the midst of a deep global recession, seeking more funds and aid to help countries that can't manage the economic crisis on their own. The IMF, whose decision-making board was meeting Saturday, is hoping to win new pledges from countries for funds. Leaders at the Group of 20 (G20) summit in London promised $500 billion for the IMF's lending resources, which would triple its existing budget.

SpiralFrog takes a jump at free online music

San Francisco, Sep 26 (DPA) In the annals of online music, there have been hundreds of so-called iPod killers that have tried to challenge Apple's shiny music players and the company's equally dominant iTunes music store. Unfortunately, almost all of them died a quick death before they even put a scratch on their targets. But that hasn't stopped others trying. The latest hopeful goes by the name of SpiralFrog and aims to unseat Apple by offering free legal downloads of millions of tracks.

Power-starved Nepal government calls for a dim Diwali

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : As Nepal began celebrating its Hindu festival of Diwali with five days' festivities, the Himalayan republic's power-strapped government is appealing to the nation to go slow on lights, one of the main accessories of the festival. Currently reeling under a three to five hours' power outage daily and the closure of nearly 200 small to medium-scale industries due to the power crisis, the state-run Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) has issued an appeal to consumers not to light electric lamps as these would further pressure the reeling power supply.

Londoners vote in mayoral election

By SPA, London : Millions of London voters were going to the polls on Thursday to choose a new mayor who will command a multi-billion pound budget and help prepare the capital for the 2012 Olympics, Reuters reported. After months of increasingly bitter campaigning, polling stations opened at 7.a.m. and the three main candidates cast their votes at schools around the city. Current mayor Ken Livingstone voted near his home in Cricklewood, northwest London, while his Conservative rival Boris Johnson visited a polling station in Islington with his wife, Marina.

Australian manufacturing activity flat in November

By IANS, Sydney : Manufacturing activity in Australia remained flat in November, a monthly survey of manufacturers in the country showed Thursday.

North and South Korean warships exchange fire: Report

By DPA, Seoul : Warships belonging to North and South Korea clashed off their west coast Tuesday, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported, citing a defence official in Seoul. A North Korean patrol ship crossed the Northern Limit Line, the countries' disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea, prompting a naval vessel from the South to fire warning shots, the unnamed official told Yonhap. The North Korean ship returned fire near Baekryeong Island, he said, adding that while it apparently was damaged, there were no immediate reports of South Korean casualties.

US military deaths in Iraq war reach 4,209

By IINA, Washington : As of Wednesday, at least 4,209 members of the U.S. military had died in the Iraq war since it began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. The figure includes eight military civilians killed in action. At least 3,397 military personnel died as a result of hostile action, according to the military's numbers.

Russia to deploy new ICBM in 2014

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: Russia will deploy its newest medium-weight solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) in 2014, a military source said.

Sarkozy to quit politics if he loses election

By IANS, Paris : French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said he will abandon his political career if he fails to win a second mandate as president in the upcoming elections.

Flooding affects 20,000 in Colombia

By IANS, Bogota : At least 20,000 people have been displaced in the latest flooding in northern Colombia already ravaged by an unusually long and disastrous rainy season, EFE reported Monday. The city of Plato in Magdalena province, some 900 km north of Bogota, was flooded when the Magdalena river broke through a levee, inundating the entire metropolis and many neighbouring areas, Mayor Jose Santander Rosales said. Colombia's rainy season, which started in mid-September, has lasted longer than usual, killing more than 60 people and affecting about one million.

Plunging US home sales spark fears of slower recovery

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : US home sales plunged to their lowest level in 15 years, leading economists to warn that a likely double-dip in housing prices could further slow America's recovery from its worst downturn in decades. Existing home sales sank 27.2 percent in July, twice as much as analysts expected, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.83 million units, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday, the lowest level since the industry group started its tally in 1999.

Typhoon Rammasun toll 11 in Vietnam

Hanoi : The number of people killed by typhoon Rammasun in Vietnam has risen to 17, officials said Monday. According to flood control officials, of...

Indian company seeks to invest $1.2 bn in Yemen

By IANS, Sanaa: Indian Nagarjuna Construction Company is seeking to invest $1.2 billion in Yemen, Yemeni official agency Saba reported.

Turkish PM: closure case against AK Party means against national will

By Xinhua Ankara : Ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party Chairman and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Saturday the closure case was a move against national will, not against AK Party, the semi-official Anatolia news agency reported. Chief prosecutor of the Supreme Court of Appeals Abdurrahman Yalcinkaya filed a lawsuit to close the AK Party Friday, saying "the party has become the focal point of anti-secular activities." "We are a political party struggling for democracy," Erdogan was quoted as saying at his party meeting in southeastern province of Siirt.

Global warming killing 150,000 more people in poor countries: WHO

By IANS, Copenhagen : Around 150,000 deaths now occur in low-income countries each year due to climate change that causes crop failure and malnutrition, diarrhoea, malaria and flooding, says the World Health Organisation (WHO). "Almost 85 percent of these excess deaths are among young children," WHO spokesperson Sari Setiogi said Thursday. Health hazards from climate change are diverse, global and difficult to reverse over human time scales, WHO experts said at the Climate Change: Global Risks, Challenges and Decisions conference here, according to Setiogi.

German activists stop train carrying radioactive material

By IRNA Berlin : Anti-atomic power activists on Wednesday evening blocked for several hours a train carrying radioactive material near the northwest German town of Burgsteinfurt, news reports said Thursday. A 26-year-old female environment activist let herself down a rope which was tied to a tree and was hovering seven meters above the rail tracks, a spokesman for the federal police announced. A police helicopter notified the train driver to halt the train in time. Special police forces freed the environment activist and removed her from the scene.

European business climate deteriorates again – INSEE

By KUNA, PARIS : The business climate in European nations continued to deteriorate in March but at a slower pace than in February, although the outlook is still bleak for European business, Frances National Statistics Institute (INSEE) said in a report Tuesday. Some improvement was noted in Belgium, and there was relative stability in France and Germany, but the business climate in Spain and Holland worsened, the report said.

Uganda, Ethiopia deny selling arms to Somali rebels

By Xinhua, Kampala : Uganda and Ethiopia denied accusations by a UN panel that their troops in Somalia have been selling weapons to local insurgents. Earlier this week, a UN panel had accused Ugandan officers in the African Union peacekeeping force, which also groups Ethiopian and Somali commanders, of selling weapons to Islamist rebels in violation of a 1992 arms embargo. The UN panel has been in Somalia reviewing the 1992 arms embargo placed on the country after it descended into anarchy following the ouster of military strongman Mohamed Siad Barre.

9/11 anniversary: US ramps up security

By IANS, Washington: The US ramped up security measures ahead of the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks Tuesday, said the White House Monday.

New impeachment filed against Philippine President Arroyo

By Xinhua, Manila : Opponents on Monday filed another impeachment against Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the fourth one during her presidency over the past years. The case was filed by a group led by Joey de Venecia III, son of former House Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr., before the Secretary General's office at the Philippine House of Representatives. The Philippine law allows only one impeachment bid each year against the President and the previous one-year period lapsed last weekend, De Venecia told reporters.

Death toll in flash floods rises to 19 in Taiwan

By SPA, Taipei, Taiwan : Taiwanese officials say the death toll from flash floods triggered by tropical storm Kalmaegi has climbed to 19. The disaster relief center lists another six people as missing in its Sunday report. The storm lashed southern Taiwan with torrential rains Friday, triggering flash floods and landslides. On Sunday, the death toll was raised from 13 to 19. The center said mudslides buried two houses in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan, killing seven people. Most others were washed away by rampaging waters.

5.3-magnitude quake rattles Chinese town

Beijing:Authorities in southwest China said they are checking the losses after a 5.3-magnitude quake jolted a town early Saturday, Xinhua reported. The tremor hit Yongshan...

North Korean navy official visits Russia

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Vladivostok : A senior North Korean navy official will start Thursday an official visit to Russia's Pacific Fleet.

Former US first lady Barbara Bush hospitalised

By DPA, Washington : Former US first lady Barbara Bush, 83, underwent tests at hospital after she complained of stomach pains, CNN reported. Bush, who is also the mother of the current US President George W. Bush, was hospitalised in Houston, Texas Tuesday night, the broadcaster reported, quoting a family spokeswoman. Jim McGrath, a spokesman for Bush's husband, former president George H.W. Bush, told CNN that the tests were negative and she was due to be released Wednesday.

Lawyers for ‘Merchant of Death’ to seek his extradition to Russia

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Lawyers for a Russian businessman who is being held in Thailand on charges of illegal arms trading are to demand his extradition to Russia, his lawyer told a Moscow-based radio station on Friday. Viktor Bout, 41, is a former lieutenant in the Russian military who quit the armed forces in 1991. He then allegedly transformed himself into an international arms dealer.

Floods in west Europe, heat wave in east

By IANS

London : Parts of Britain, Germany and Switzerland were left flooded Sunday, Denmark and Sweden braced for very heavy rainfall, while a tornado hit Poland and the heat wave continued in eastern and southwest Europe.

Parts of the English Midlands and areas to the west were left paralysed by floods Sunday, as helicopters were called in to rescue the stranded, and drinking water threatened to run out in one area.

28 killed in Cameroon road accident

By IANS, Yaounde (Cameroon) : Twenty-eight people were killed and several others were seriously injured when a passenger bus collided head-on with a truck in Cameroon, Xinhua reported Monday.

Hamas fires mortar missiles at Israeli forces in Gaza

By KUNA, GAZA : Martyr Ezz Eddin Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, on Tuesday launched several mortar missiles at an Israeli special force in central Gaza Strip. The Israeli force was trying to advance into eastern al-Maghazi refugee camp at the heart of the Strip, the armed wing said in a release handed out here, a copy of which was obtained by Kuwait News Agency (KUNA). It said one of its combat groups "had fired 18 mortar missiles at an Israeli force making incursions into eastern al-Maghazi refugee camp in the center of the Strip".

Indian mission in Jeddah working to get back pending arrears of workers

By Irfan Mohammed Jeddah : As India said it will try to bring back over 10,000 Indians rendered jobless in the Gulf, the Indian...

15 killed in China highway accident

By Xinhua Changsha (China) : At least 15 people have been killed and 25 injured when a bus rammed into the rear of a tanker, triggering a fire and an explosion in central China's Hunan province, authorities said. The accident occurred at around 7.00 p.m. Monday at Chenzhou city on the north-south freeway connecting Beijing and Zhuhai cities, according to the traffic police. The blaze engulfed three more vehicles, a police spokesperson said. Traffic on the Beijing-Zhuhai freeway was stopped temporarily because of the accident.

Henry finally signs for Barcelona

By DPA

Madrid : Thierry Henry has finally signed for FC Barcelona - exactly a year after turning down the Catalan giants.

Connectivity key aspect of India-Turkmenistan ties: Modi

Ashgabat (Turkmenistan): Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday said that connectivity is a key aspect of the relationship between India and the Central Asian...

South Korea’s government debt reaches $435.7 bn

By IANS, Seoul : South Korea's government debts reached 468.6 trillion won ($435.7 billion) in the 2011 fiscal year under new accounting rules, the finance ministry said Monday.

Food crisis mounts pressure on G8 to deliver in Africa

By DPA, Nairobi : Africa is once again set to be high on the agenda at the upcoming G8 meeting in Japan as the global food crisis threatens to set back the tentative progress the continent has made in recent years. Independent bodies, campaigners and government officials are calling for an urgent increase in aid to prevent Africa from sliding further into poverty and hunger. However, the G8's failure to meet development aid targets already set has lead many to worry that further financial commitments are likely to be no more than empty promises.

LTTE vows to carry on the ‘liberation struggle’

By DPA Colombo : Tamil rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran has vowed to carry on with the fight after one of his senior members was killed recently in an air strike by Sri Lankan forces. Suffering one of the biggest losses at the hands of the Sri Lankan forces in its 25-year armed struggle, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) has vowed to keep up the fight. LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran was speaking to mark the death of his political wing leader S.P. Thamilselvan, who was killed Friday in an air raid in Kilinochchi, 370 km north of the capital Colombo.

UN panel seeks ways to better assess climate science

By IANS, Busan (South Korea): The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has said it will make major changes in the way it works to ensure best assessment of climate science.

White House sways to bhangra to celebrate Asian heritage

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : After celebrating Diwali last year by lighting a ceremonial diya, US President Barack Obama celebrated Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month with bhangra beats that he said had probably not been heard in the White House before. "I want to thank DJ Rekha (Malhotra) who's been spinning a little East Room bhangra for everybody - mixing a hip-hop beat with the sounds of her heritage; making a uniquely American sound that may not have been heard in the White House before," Obama said greeting guests Monday amid loud applause and laughter.

Germany welcomes France return to NATO command

By RIA Novosti, Berlin : German Chancellor Angela Merkel Thursday welcomed France's decision to rejoin NATO military command after 43 years out of the alliance's key decision-making processes. French President Nicolas Sarkozy Wednesday announced that France would return to NATO military structures and seek a larger role as a full partner of its Atlantic allies.

Japanese designer urges Obama to visit Hiroshima

By IANS, London : Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake has urged US President Barack Obama to visit the site of the Hiroshima nuclear bomb explosion on the 64th anniversary next month as a "symbolic step" to create a nuclear weapons-free world. Miyake, who survived the bombing on Hiroshima by the US army, has called upon the American leader to accept an invitation to the city to show that he is determined to try and rid the world of nuclear arms, reports imdb.com.

Israeli PM Olmert may resign Sunday

By DPA, Jerusalem : Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert may resign early next week, his spokesman said. "He will notify the cabinet Sunday and then he will go to the president to give his formal letter of resignation," Mark Regev said. Formal notification to the cabinet prior to a prime minister's resignation is a requirement under Israeli law, Regev explained. Under the law, Olmert's resignation will take effect 48 hours after submission. The premier's resignation automatically means resignation of the cabinet, which then becomes a transitional government.

Japan to move SDF missile command post to US airbase

By KUNA, Kuwait : Japan will move the command post for its missile defense system from a Self-Defense Force facility to a US airbase this year.

Obama rejects Crimea referendum, backs new Ukrainian government

Washington: US President Barack Obama Wednesday rejected the legitimacy of a referendum on the future of Ukraine's Crimea region and expressed strong support for...

Passengers injured as trains collide in Belgium

By DPA, Brussels : Two passenger trains collided Monday in the Belgian town of Halle, south of Brussels, leaving several people seriously injured and more trapped in the coaches, police reported. The two trains ran into one another head-on approximately one kilometre from Halle station, police in the town told DPA. Several people were "heavily injured", but there was as yet no confirmation of how many. The accident happened during the morning rush hour and after overnight snowfall.

Cuba intensifies fight against corruption

By IANS/EFE, Havana : Corruption and illegal activities in areas like fuel distribution are of great concern for the Cuban government, the official media reported here Monday.

Washington citizens’ court ‘indicts’ PM Modi for human rights violations in Gujarat

By Kaleem Kawaja, Washington DC: The US based Sikh Foundation for Justice (SFJ) in coordination with the American Gurudwara Prabhandak Committee (AGPC), held a citizens' court on Tuesday in Lafayette Park, a small park in front of the White House to indict PM Narendra Modi for the human rights violations in 2002 in Gujarat.

Prehistoric fossils may boost tourism in Kenya

By IANS, Nairobi : Leading Kenyan scientists have called upon their government to tap the potential of the country's vast trove of prehistoric fossils to boost the tourism industry.

UP couple claims Geeta their daughter

Lucknow: A family from Uttar Pradesh's Pratapgarh district has now claimed that deaf and mute Geeta, who returned from Pakistan after being separated from...

UAE, Unicef discuss joint cooperation

By IANS/WAM, Abu Dhabi: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Unicef have discussed ways to enhance cooperation and strengthen relations.

Brown hails bailout plan for banks

By DPA, London : British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has hailed as "bold and far-reaching" a major rescue package for leading banks of 50 billion pounds ($87 billion) announced Wednesday. "New and innovative" ways were required to tackle the fall-out of the global credit crisis on banks and the economy in general, Brown said in a statement.

Russia continues to bomb Georgia

By DPA, Moscow/Tbilisi : Fighting continued overnight to Monday in Georgian capital Tbilisi, despite attempts by western mediators to end the conflict between Georgia and Russia and calling for an immediate ceasefire by all parties. Two explosions were heard overnight in the capital Tbilisi, according to Georgia's interior ministry. Two military bases were also bombarded by Russian fighter planes, though no details were available.

2,000-year-old stoves found in ancient China battlefield

By IANS, Beijing: Ancient stoves dating back 2,000 years have been found in an ancient battlefield in north China.

Red Cross says ready to care for top Colombian hostage

By Xinhua Bogota : The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Colombia said Sunday it is ready to send doctors anywhere in the nation's jungles, to take in or care for Ingrid Betancourt, the most famous captive of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). "There are foreign doctors in Colombia working with the International Red Cross with everything needed to care for the captives whenever it should be needed," Barbara Hintermann, top official of the ICRC in Colombia, told a local radio.

Dead diva’s mum denied over $100,000 she wanted for holiday

By DPA, Hong Kong : The 85-year-old mother of late Canto-pop diva Anita Mui has been stopped from taking 800,000 Hong Kong dollars ($102,000) from her daughter's estate to finance a round-the-world trip, a media report said Thursday. Tam Mei-kam told judge Andrew Cheung she felt bored and stressed from last year's unsuccessful attempt to gain control of her late daughter's estate and needed to take along nurses, maids and family on the trip, the South China Morning Post said.

British tabloid apologises to missing girl’s parents

By DPA London : A British tabloid newspaper chain Wednesday published front-page apologies and were due to pay substantial damages to the parents of Madeleine McCann, who has been missing in Portugal since May. In an unprecedented action in response to a libel case brought by Kate and Gerry McCann, the Daily Express and Daily Star newspapers said on their front pages Wednesday: "Kate and Gerry McCann: Sorry." Similar action is due to be taken by their Sunday paper equivalents at the weekend.

Second Indian student pilot killed in Australia in a month

By Neena Bhandari, IANS, Sydney : An Indian trainee pilot was killed when his single engine aircraft crashed in Sydney's Luddenham suburb Wednesday, less than a month after another Indian trainee pilot's death in a plane crash. The 20-year-old student from Mumbai, who has not been named, died after his Liberty XL2 single-engine aircraft crashed into farmland in Sydney's Luddenham suburb Wednesday evening, police said. He was undertaking pilot training at the Sydney Flight Training Centre in Bankstown, about 30 km from the Sydney central business district, since January this year.

US jobless claims rise by 12,000

Washington : New claims for unemployment benefits in the United States increased by 12,000 last week to 267,000. This was revealed by the Labor Department...

UN concerned over Nepal’s deadlock in drafting constitution

United Nations: The UN has expressed concern over Nepal's deadlock in drafting a new constitution and Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has called on the nation's...

Clinton avoids Tibet and human rights on first China visit

By Mayank Chhaya,IANS, Chicago : Wanting China to continue to fund US debt, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton avoided any public assertion over of Tibet and human rights during her first two-day visit to China which ended Sunday.

Controversy in Spain over poet Lorca’s lost bones

By DPA Madrid : In August 1936, one month after General Francisco Franco's right-wing nationalists had risen against Spain's leftist republican government, four men fell to the bullets of a Francoist firing squad near the southern city of Granada. The executioners reportedly vented their fury especially on one of the victims, spitting on his body and calling him a "red queer" as he lay in the mass grave. The 38-year-old victim was Federico Garcia Lorca, Spain's most beloved poet, whose verses on love and death are still read all over the world.

Spaniards see corruption as worst blot on country’s image

By IANS/EFE, Madrid: Fifty-two percent of Spaniards see political corruption as the worst blot on Spain's image abroad, a survey released Friday shows.

US Navy hospital ship heads to Cambodia

By IANS, Phnom Penh : The US Navy is sending one of its hospital ships to Cambodia to provide free medical services, the US Embassy said Thursday.

Mugabe arrives in Rome for food talks

By DPA, Rome : Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe was one of the first leaders to arrive in Rome for this week's summit on soaring food prices and climate change organised by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), reports said Monday. Mugabe is the first of 40 leaders expected at the three-day summit in the Italian capital that starts Tuesday. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was also expected to attend, marking the first occasion since his election in 2005 that he would visit a European Union member state.

8,500 plots of land ‘misused’ in China

By IANS, Beijing : Over 8,500 plots of land, measuring more than 38,000 hectares, were "misused" in China in 2009, a government report has said. A survey of 24 provinces said that in 2009, 8,514 plots of land were involved in illegal use. The total area in these plots comes to 38,600 hectares of land, of which 13,000 hectares were farmland, Global Times reported Tuesday citing the report by the ministry of land and resources.

In changing Cuba, the great longing to travel simmers

By Silvia Ayuso, DPA Havana : Hopes have spread like wild fire in recent days for elimination of the "white card" - the exit permit required to leave Cuba and one of the main hurdles for Cubans longing for travel - amid a wave of reform under new Cuban President Raul Castro. Computer specialist Javier, 26, cannot wait to get out of the communist island. "The main reason is the economy, and behind that economy there is the system that we have in our country," he said. Soon there may be fewer barriers to stop him.

Bomb blast in front of Nepal parliament

By IANS, Kathmandu : A bomb exploded in front of Nepal's interim parliament in Kathmandu Tuesday, creating panic and triggering intense police search. However, there were no casualties, police said. Security forces found pamphlets scattered in the New Baneshwor area, claiming the blast was the handiwork of a new organisation, Dynamic Youth Force. Though the new budget session started Monday, the house was not in session when the explosion occurred around 11.30 a.m.

Belarusian goverment cut by a third

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Minsk : Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko Monday said the state and government administration in the country will be downsized by 25 to 30 percent.

Seven die in shootout at Mexican cemetery

By IANS/EFE, Monterrey (Mexico): Seven people were killed and 17 wounded in a shootout at a cemetery in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila, said authorities.

26th International Population Congress opens in Morocco

By Xinhua, Marrakech (Morocco) : The 26th International Population Congress has opened here to discuss population related problems, migration and the economic crisis, among others. Over 2,000 demographers from 114 countries attended the five-day meeting that started Sunday to discuss more than 200 topics, including population and global climate change, migration, economic crisis, the imbalance of fertility rate and social security system. The global conference is sponsored and organised by the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population and the Moroccan government.

John Kerry Endorses Barack Obama

By SPA Washington : Barack Obama, a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, received an endorsement from a man with some experience on Thursday - one-time Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry. Kerry, a senator from Massachusetts, successfully garnered his party’s nomination for presidential candidate in 2004, but went on to lose the race to incumbent George W. Bush.

Firing at Nepal casino ahead of legal battle

By IANS Kathmandu : Nepal's casino industry, embroiled in an ownership tussle, has hit the headlines again with gunmen opening fire at one of them, ahead of a crucial court hearing. Two gunmen fired three rounds of blank cartridges on the premises of Casino Royale in Kathmandu Saturday night, adding one more incident to a string of disturbances that have rocked the popular casino since this year after two of its partners became involved in an ownership dispute.

Revamp Process Starts at UN Headquarters

By Prensa Latina, United Nations : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon chaired a ceremony to officially start the revamping process of the UN central building in New York, to be completed in five years. The objective is to make it a safer, more modern and functional place, located on the banks of the East River, in the cosmopolitan city. Ban said the building will be more environmental friendly and efficient, "a model of environmental protection by reducing the use of electricity and water and eliminating dangerous materials used in its original construction."

Russia, Singapore say N.Korea nuclear talks should continue

By RIA Novosti, Singapore : Russia and Singapore are in favor of continuing talks on North Korea's nuclear issue, according to a joint statement adopted during Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's official visit to Singapore. The six-party negotiations over North Korea's nuclear program, which involve Russia, the United States, China, Japan and the two Koreas, stalled late last year when Pyongyang missed a deadline to hand over nuclear data as part of a deal under which the North was promised economic aid and diplomatic incentives.

Over 150 killed in Papua New Guinea floods

By RIA Novosti Jakarta : At least 153 people have been killed and dozens are missing in heavy floods in Papua New Guinea, regional media reported Wednesday. The death toll in the South Pacific nation near Indonesia is expected to rise further as the county is currently suffering from acute shortage of food and drinking water after a week of heavy floods and torrential rains caused by a tropical cyclone.

19 killed as Ukraine helicopter crashes into drilling rig

By DPA, Kiev : A Ukrainian helicopter crashed into a Black Sea oil drilling rig Monday, killing all 19 people aboard, a government spokesman said. The MiG-8 passenger helicopter had been carrying workers to an offshore oil rig in the Sea of Azov near the Crimea peninsula, said Yury Avdeev, an official from the state-owned Chernomornaftohaz energy company. Victims included 17 rig workers and three flight crew, Avdeev said.

Strike threat may choke British airports August-end

By Venkata Vemuri, IANS, London : If you are planning to land in the UK between Aug 25-29 for a holiday or join a university, check before you actually depart from home. Barring Heathrow, many airports may be choked, thanks to a strike threat by baggage handlers. It is expected that up to 1.3 million people may have their holidays disrupted by strike action at two of Britain's busiest airports next weekend. Baggage handlers and check-in staff at Gatwick and Stansted are to stage two 24-hour strikes, including one on Bank Holiday Monday, in a dispute over pay.

EU violated rights of two Al Qaeda suspects: Court

By DPA, Luxembourg : The European Union (EU) has violated the rights of two presumed Al Qaeda affiliates by freezing their assets without first informing them that they had been blacklisted as terror suspects, Europe's highest court has ruled. The Luxembourg-based European Court of Justice also acknowledged Wednesday that the suspects could have avoided punishment if they had been warned in advance by the authorities. It therefore agreed to maintain the asset freeze for "no more than three months" in order to give the EU time to "remedy the infringements found".

Colombia offers cash reward for FARC hostage release

By Xinhua Bogota : Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has said he would pay cash to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) for release of hundreds of hostages from its captivity. He said he would pay the amount from a fund of $100 million for the release of hostages, including former politician Ingrid Betancourt, many of whom were held by the group for several years.

N. Korea to submit nuclear list late Thursday — report

By KUNA, Tokyo : North Korea is expected to submit a promised declaration of its nuclear activity late Thursday, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency said, citing diplomatic sources. Pyongyang is widely expected to hand over the list to Beijing, which chairs the six-way talks on the nuclear issue, within the day. "North Korea will likely submit the declaration probably at night," the source told news agency. The six-party talks involve the two Koreas, the US, China, Japan and Russia.

Pentagon unconcerned by Russian subs off U.S. Coast

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The Pentagon is unconcerned by the presence of two Russian submarines in international waters off the U.S. coast, the Pentagon press secretary said at a news conference. Geoff Morrell told journalists on Wednesday, "So long as they are operating in international waters - as, frankly, we do around the world - and are behaving in a responsible way, they are certainly free to do so and it doesn't cause any alarm within this building."

Seven people killed in Beirut, national mourning declared

By IRNA Beirut : Seven people have been killed in Beirut after a demonstration against power cuts turned into violence. National mourning was declared on Monday. Shots were fired as the army intervened when protesters tried to block a road. An opposition activist was killed, triggering violent protests in which six more people were killed. Lebanese PM Fouad Siniora spoke of "most difficult and dangerous times" and declared Monday a day of mourning.

Spanish priest readies his grave in Jharkhand

By Nityanand Shukla, IANS, Ranchi : Strange though it may sound, a Christian priest here is getting his own grave prepared so that there is no dispute over his last rites when he dies. Father Alfaro, 65-year-old Spaniard, teaches in Kamra village under Torpa block of Khuti district, around 70 km from here. He arrived here at Kamra eight years ago and opened a school to teach children in this one of the most backward areas of the state.

Four in 10 Americans believe God created earth 10,000 years ago

Washington : This may come as a shock to you but nearly 40 percent US citizens reject the evolution theory and believe that God...

Proposal to Extend East Timor Mission

By Prensa Latina United Nations : UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon proposed to the Security Council Wednesday that they extend the UN Mission in Timor Leste (UNOTIL) for a year, to support stability in that small Asian country. In a report to the Council, Ban Ki Moon pointed out the need to intensify the efforts in Timor Leste to promote a greater political consensus and strengthen democracy. "These actions are essential for long-term stability and prosperity in Timor Leste, which still faces great challenges," he said.

How Europe wants to reduce dependence on Russian energy

By Roland Siegloff, DPA, Brussels : Section 9 of this week's European Union (EU) summit declaration on Georgia was kept markedly short. In the light of the recent crisis in the Caucasus, the two sentences nevertheless contain an important message for European leaders. "Recent events illustrate the need for Europe to intensify its efforts with regard to the security of energy supplies," it said. The Council of Ministers and the European Commission ought to examine ways to diversify energy sources and supply routes, it added.

Mandela gets an emotional welcome at Soccer City stadium

By Abhishek Roy, IANS, Johannesburg : It was an emotional farewell to the World Cup at the vuvuzuela-buzzing Soccer City stadium here Sunday as the iconic Nelson Mandela expressed his gratitude to football fans from across the world in a colourful closing ceremony, bringing down curtains to the historic occasion. Mandela missed the opening ceremony June 11 following the tragic death of his great grand-daughter in a car crash, and there were doubts over his appearance at the closing ceremony Sunday since he was not keeping well.

Israel to shut Al-Aqsa mosque site to Jewish visitors

Jerusalem : Israeli police on Tuesday said east Jerusalem's flashpoint, the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, will be closed to Jewish visitors until the end of...

Russia allocates $19 mn more for sports infrastructure

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow : Russia has set aside an extra $19 million for upgrades to the country's sports infrastructure over the next three years.

Russian court rules open trial in journalist’s murder case

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : Three men charged in the October 2006 murder of Russian investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya will be tried in an open court, a Moscow military judge ruled Monday. The court turned down prosecutors' request to hold the trial in camera. The prosecution had said that material due to be presented as evidence during the trial included classified documents. Defence lawyers acting for the suspects and the journalist's family had insisted on an open trial.

Australia set for turbulent times after tied vote

By DPA, Sydney : Chances of a fresh parliamentary election being needed to break the political paralysis in Australia rose Tuesday after vote counting showed a tie and independents likely to hold the balance of power dithered over their pick. Prime Minister Julia Gillard's Labor and Tony Abbott's Conservatives need 76 seats to have an outright majority in the 150-seat parliament, but both are projected to hold 73.

FARC to be blamed if Betancourt dies: Sarkozy

By IANS Paris : French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said the Left-wing Revolutionary Armed forces of Colombia (FARC) would be held responsible if former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt dies in their captivity. "A decision on your part would suffice to save a woman from death and maintain the hope of all those who remain detained. Make this decision: free Ingrid Betancourt," the French leader said Tuesday in a televised message directed to Manuel "Sureshot" Marulanda, chief of Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), EFE news agency reported Wednesday.

Indian man convicted for attacking compatriot

Dubai: An Indian national in UAE was Wednesday convicted and sentenced in absentia to six months in jail for a violent attack on a...

Cuba plans 24-hour TV channel with foreign content

By DPA Havana : Cuba plans to start a 24-hour television channel in the first half of this year that would draw most of its programming from broadcasters in other countries, a government media official has said. Speaking Wednesday night on the fringes of a writers' congress in Havana, Luis Acosta, vice president of the Cuban Institute of Radio and Television, did not comment on the content of the new channel's broadcasts but said about a dozen countries would contribute.

Colombian warlord collected ID papers of his 12,000 victims

By EFE, Bogota : Late Colombian right-wing militia chief Carlos Mauricio Garcia had amassed a collection of some 12,000 identity cards belonging to people killed on his orders, one of his erstwhile lieutenants said Thursday. Garcia kept the documents at a clandestine safe house, Luis Adrian Palacio told prosecutors during a hearing in the northwestern city of Medellin. Known as "Double Zero", Garcia was an army veteran who created the Metro Bloc militia, an outfit closely linked to the organisation of Carlos Castano, the now-deceased founder of the AUC militia federation.

Man gets $63,500 mobile bill

By IANS, Beijing : A Chinese man who got a 400,000 yuan ($63,500) bill for his mobile phone charges in one month has won compensation from a shop that installed malware on his phone.

Russia’s upper house recognizes Georgia’s rebel regions

By DPA, Moscow : Russia's upper house of parliament voted unanimously to recognize Georgia's rebel regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia Monday. After an emergency meeting of the house, lawmakers issued a statement to President Dmitry Medvedev urging recognition of the two provinces that are ethnically separate from Georgia.

Argentine man kills father, eats heart and kidneys

By IANS, Buenos Aires : In a gruesome act of murder and cannibalism, an Argentine man killed his father, removed the heart and kidneys, cooked them in a pot mixing garlic and parsley and ate them, EFE news agency reported Wednesday citing the police. The suspect, identified as Raul Ernesto Piñel, was arrested Sunday after he was found with blood-stained hands in his father's house, located in the town of Daireaux, a city in Buenos Aires province.

Robbie Williams to appear on ‘The X Factor’

By IANS, London: Singer Robbie Williams will reportedly appear as a guest judge on reality show "The X Factor" to give unbiased opinions.

Man selling alcohol shot dead in Egypt

By IANS, Cairo: Islamist militants have shot dead a man selling alcohol in Egypt's Sinai peninsula, security sources said.

Tropical Storm Kalmaegi Heads For China’s Southeast Coast

By Bernama, Fuzhou : Tropical storm Kalmaegi is approaching China's southeast coast, and is expected to bring heavy rains in the next two days to Fujian Province, the provincial observatory said on Thursday. The storm was moving northwest from Hualian County, Taiwan, on Thursday morning, bringing winds gusting up to 108 kilometers per hour at the center, according to a report by Xinhua news agency. Kalmaegi, the seventh tropical storm to hit Fujian this year, became a strong tropical storm on Wednesday night.

Russia’s Progress cargo spacecraft ‘buried’ in Pacific

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The Progress M-65 cargo spacecraft, which undocked from the International Space Station (ISS) Sep 17 and served as a temporary space laboratory, has been "buried" in the Pacific Ocean, Russia's Mission Control said Sunday. "The cargo spacecraft's remaining fragments fell into the ocean after re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere at 11.49 a.m. Moscow time [0849 GMT] Sunday," the Mission Control said.

U.S., Russian leaders meet in Hokkaido, disagree on missile shield

By Xinhua, Toyako, Japan : Russia and the United States still disagreed on the deployment of a U.S. missile shield in eastern Europe, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said ahead of the G8 summit in northern Japan Monday. "There are certain questions on our agenda where we disagree, and these are the matters pertaining to Iran and North Korea. But then certainly there are others with respect to European affairs and this missile defense where we have differences," Medvedev said after his first meeting as Russian head of state with his U.S. counterpart George W. Bush.

Eight die as bus falls down from road in Brazil

By ANTARA News/Xinhua Rio de Janeiro : At least eight people died and 26 got injured on Thursday in an accident involving a bus that fell down from a road connecting the cities of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil, local press reported on Thursday. The number of fatal casualties includes two children. The injured victims were taken to hospitals in the region. According to NovaDutra, the private company that runs the Presidente Dutra road, one of the most important in the country, it is possible that other dead bodies will be found within the wreckage of the vehicle.

17 more bodies recovered from crashed French plane

By DPA, S㯠Paulo : Search teams Sunday recovered the bodies of 17 people from the Air France plane that plunged into the Atlantic Ocean with 228 people on board June 1, a Brazilian Air Force spokesman said. While Brazilian teams retrieved nine bodies, French teams recovered eight, Brazilian Air Force spokesman Henry Munhoz said in the northeastern city of Recife. He said four of the bodies were male and four female, but didn't identify the sex of the remaining nine victims.

Obama blames Bush administration for economic crisis, vows bold actions

WASHINGTON, March 7 (KUNA) -- U.S President Barack Obama blamed on Saturday Bush administration for the worst economic crisis in decades and vowed bold actions to address it. "My administration inherited a USD 1.3 trillion budget deficit, the largest in history. And we've inherited a budgeting process as irresponsible as it is unsustainable." Obama said in his weekly radio address.

President Bush signs historic n-deal law

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : US President George W. Bush has signed the enabling law on the India-US civil nuclear deal making clear there would be no change in the implementing 123 agreement including the US commitment on nuclear fuel assurances. “This is a big deal,” said Bush as he signed the “H.R. 7081, the United States-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Nonproliferation Enhancement Act” at 2:34 p.m. Wednesday (00:04 a.m. IST Thursday) in the East Room of the White House, which has witnessed many a historic event.

Five children released in Italian nursery siege

By RIA Novosti Rome : Five children were released on Wednesday several hours after a man armed with a box-cutting knife barricaded himself into a day-care centre in southern Italy. National media said however that the siege was continuing and that some 15 children and two teachers were still inside the building in Italy's southernmost city of Reggio-Calabria.

New Zealand makes licence mandatory for immigration advisers

By Amandeep Sehmi, IANS, Hamilton (New Zealand) : New Zealand has made it mandatory for immigration consultants to get a licence. A stiff penalty, including up to seven years' imprisonment, will be imposed on violators. The law makes it necessary for people living in other countries who give advice on New Zealand immigration to be licensed with Immigration Advisors Authority from May 4, 2010. New Zealand will not accept applications filed by people using an unlicensed immigration adviser after the law comes into effect.

Take firm action on Somalia piracy: maritime body to UN

By Lalit K. Jha, IANS, United Nations : The International Maritime Organisation (IMO) has urged the UN Security Council to act fast with firm determination to "rid the world of this modern scourge" of increasing armed robbery and piracy off the coast of Somalia. Addressing a meeting of the Security Council on Somalia Thursday, IMO Secretary General Efthmios Mitropoulos said a coordinated and cohesive response at the international level was necessary for the safety and well-being of seafarers and for seamless delivery of humanitarian aid to Somalia.

Russian anti-corruption laws come into force

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The Russian government has put in place a package of anti-corruption laws requiring state officials and politicians to declare their assets and sources of income. President Dmitry Medvedev told the country's federal investigation agency FSB that he had signed Thursday the package of anti-corruption laws passed by the lower house of parliament Dec 19. Medvedev had declared after taking office in May that tackling corruption was a priority for his administration.

US Senate recommends studying Syria no-fly zone

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

College students largest sperm donor group in China

By IANS, Beijing : College students in their large numbers have now become sperm donors in a south China province because of an increase in payment, a media report said Monday.

China, North Korea seek restart of nuclear talks

By IANS, Beijing : China and North Korea have said they both seek an early resumption of the six-party nuclear talks to ease tensions in the Korean peninsula. North Korean leader Kim Jong-il held talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Changchun in Jilin province during a five-day unofficial visit to China. Kim expressed hope that the six-party talks would be resumed soon.

Bush urges unity for Republican Party

By IRNA New York : Although he did not explicitly mention Senator John McCain, President George W. Bush has sought to unify the Republican Party behind its eventual nominee, describing the election of his successor as president as a stark ideological choice. Bush delivered in an early-morning speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference to presage the role his aides said he would play all year: using the power of the presidency to shape the agenda and attack his Democratic critics, International Herald Tribune said.

US Congress freezes funds for Cuba political change

By IANS, Miami (Florida) : The US Congress has frozen $45 million in government funding to promote political change in Cuba after a series of troubling audits, the EFE news agency reported Wednesday. The US Agency for International Development (USAID) tried to keep the amount from going into effect by carrying out an in-depth review of its programmes meant to promote democracy in Cuba, the report quoted the Miami Herald as saying Tuesday.

5 hijacked Filipino seamen released

By Xinhua, Manila : The five Filipino seamen hijacked with other crew members a Dutch cargo ship by pirates off the coast of Somalia in late May have been released, the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said on Thursday. Reider Shipping, the Dutch owner of MV Amiya Scan, has confirmed that the hijacked vessel and its crew including the five Filipino sailors have been freed by the Sonali pirates, the DFA said in statement, citing Romeo Arguelles, Philippine Ambassador to the Netherlands.

Thai Parliament debate for peaceful solution for political turmoil

By Xinhua, Bangkok : A special bicameral parliament session continued on Sunday evening, aiming at sorting out a peaceful solution for Thailand's ongoing political turmoil. The session opened at 1:30 p.m. (0630 GMT), chaired by parliament president and House Speaker Chai Chidchob. A total of 460 elected members in the House of Representatives and senators attended the session.

Moroccan planned to kill 30 in US suicide attack

By IANS/EFE, Washington : A 29-year-old Moroccan national detained for trying to attack the US Capitol planned to kill around 30 people in a suicide bombing, sources said.

US Army plans to lay off 40,000 military posts

Washington: The US Army is set to cut 40,000 military and 17,000 civilian posts, between 2015 and 2017, due to budget constraints, US media...

China’s communist party begins 12th Plan discussions

By IANS, Beijing : The ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) opened a key meeting here Friday to discuss the nation's next five-year development plan.
Send this to a friend