Home International

International

International

NRI body speaks up for two ex-communicated Sikhs in Canada

By IANS, Chandigarh : A body representing Indians in North America Friday appealed to the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) to pardon two Sikhs in Canada ex-communicated 23 years ago for serving food on tables in a gurdwara. "We are appealing to Akali Dal president Sukhbir Singh Badal to convince SGPC to pardon Kashmir Singh Dhaliwal and Balwant Singh Gill, presidents of Ross Gurdwara and Surrey Gurdwara, respectively," Vikram Bajwa, secretary of Indian Immigrants in North America (IINA) told reporters here.

Georgian ex-defense minister to stay in politics

By RIA Novosti Tbilisi : Former Georgian Defense Minister Irakly Okruashvili, who faces several criminal charges in his country, is determined to continue his political activities, his lawyer said on Monday. Eki Beselia, who is now in Paris with her client, said Okruahsvili had never quit politics even though Georgian authorities had tried to silence him by arresting him.

Australia sends plane to bring back MH17 victims

Canberra : Australia Tuesday sent a C-17 military plane to the Netherlands to bring back the victims of the Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 which...

US keeping close watch on Pakistan’s n-programme Text

By Arun Kumar, Washington, Oct 22 (IANS) The US is watching very closely the security threat posed to Pakistan's nuclear arsenal by militants as also the proliferation threat from those directly engaged in Islamabad's weapons programme, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said. But Washington does not think recent militant attacks in Pakistan including the one on its military headquarters "pose a threat to the nuclear command and control or access," she said in an address on non-proliferation issues at the US Institute of Peace think tank Wednesday.

Russia warns Ukraine against NATO membership

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Russia said Tuesday Ukraine's admission to NATO will have a negative impact on European security and Moscow's relations with Kiev. "Ukraine's accession to NATO will cause a deep crisis in Russian-Ukrainian relations that will affect all European security. Therefore, the West must also make a choice as to what kind of relationship with Russia is in its interests," Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin said. He said Kiev's admission to NATO would require a review of Russia's own security policy.

Spain extradites suspect in Russian governor’s murder

By RIA Novosti Moscow : A suspect in the 2002 murder of a former governor of Russia's Far East region of Magadan arrived in Moscow on Saturday after being extradited by Spain, the Russian prison service said. Martin Babekekhyan, charged with organizing the murder, has been put in a pre-trial detention center in the Russian capital. Babekekhyan was accompanied to the center by Russian Interpol and prison service officers, a spokesman for the service said.

‘Gandhi prevented sectarianism in South Africa, but could not at partition’

By Fakir Hassen, IANS, Johannesburg : The young lawyer Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, leading South African Indians on a march 100 years ago to burn registration certificates imposed by the government of the day, avoided the sectarianism that the Mahatma could later not avert during the partition of India in 1947. Internationally-respected academic and veteran African National Congress leader Kadar Asmal shared this view as he delivered an address in the last of a series of events to commemorate the 1908 Bonfire March that saw the birth of Gandhi's passive resistance philosophies.

China, South Korea, Japan move to strengthen ties

By DPA, Seoul : The heads of three of Asia's leading nations agreed Saturday to create a liaison office to help cement their international cooperation. The new office, based in Seoul and focusing on the interests of South Korea, China and Japan, should "strengthen, institutionalise and facilitate cooperation among the three nations". The agreement was made during a three-way summit by South Korean President Lee Myung Bak, Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao.

Greenspan blasts spendthrift Bush in new book

By DPA Washington : Former US Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has slammed US President George W Bush in his upcoming memoir, accusing the president of failing to curb runaway government spending. Although Bush's election in 2000 had been a moment of high expectation, the president had been unwilling to veto out-of-control spending and turned an unprecedented surplus in the budget into a large deficit during his administration, wrote Greenspan, also a Republican.

China’s GDP to grow at 11.2 Percent: ADB

Beijing, Sep 17 (Xinhua) Brisk exports, strong investments and buoyant consumption will lift economic growth in China to 11.2 percent this year, up from an earlier estimate of 10 percent, says an Asian Development Bank (ADB) report released here Monday. China's inflation barometer, the Consumer Price Index (CPI), is estimated to be 4.2 percent this year and 3.8 percent in 2008 against the previous forecasts of 1.8 percent and 2.2 percent, respectively, said the ADB report.

18 dead in Somalia violence

By IANS, Mogadishu : At least 18 people were killed and 25 wounded after fighting erupted between Islamist fighters and Somali government forces in Mogadishu Friday, officials said. The clashes broke out in the southwestern district of Dharkinley after Islamist fighters attacked soldiers' positions in an area which is part of the Somali government-controlled side of the capital, Xinhua reported. The officials said that the dead and the injured include civilians as well as combatants from both sides.

FARC rebels kill 18 in Colombia

By IANS, Bogota : At least 18 people have been killed by leftist rebels in a settlement in Colombia, EFE news agency reported Tuesday. According to the National Indigenous Organization of Colombia (ONIC), the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas have killed at least 18 Awa Indians in recent days in southwestern Colombia's Narino province. It feared that the death toll could be even higher.

EU ‘well on track’ to Kyoto goals: officials

By DPA, Brussels : The European Union (EU) is on track to hit its short-term target for reducing emissions of the gases which create global warming, officials in Brussels said Wednesday. But serious challenges remain if the bloc is to hit its medium-range targets, with emissions of the main greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide (CO2), barely dented by current policies, figures from the European Environment Agency indicated.

UN rants US$8.8 million to aid cyclone victims in Bangladesh

By NNN-UNNS United Nations : The United Nations has allocated $8.8 million from its Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) to support relief efforts in the wake of the deadly cyclone which struck Bangladesh last week, affecting more than 3 million people in the South Asian nation.

60 international reporters killed in 2014: Report

Washington : At least 60 reporters were killed worldwide in 2014 with about one-fourth losing their lives in global trouble spots, according to the...

Canada warns Sikh radicals against violence

By IANS, Toronto: In a stern warning to Sikh radicals here, the Canadian government said Monday that "threats of violence" by extremists will not be tolerated. The warning comes after last week's threats in Vancouver by hardliner Sikhs to Indo-Canadian leader and former Canadian health minister Ujjal Dosanjh. Speaking in the House of Commons, Deepak Obhrai, Indian-origin parliamentary secretary, said his government "strongly condemns the recent threats of violence made by extremists within the Canadian Sikh community. This is unacceptable.''

Security Council Mission Visits Chad

By Prensa Latina, United Nations : A Security Council mission arrived in Chad Friday, it thirds port of top of a tour through Africa to evaluate directly the situation of the areas in conflict in that territory. During his two-day stay in that Central African country the representatives from 15 country-members of the Security Council have foreseen to meet local authorities and leaders of humanitarian organizations. The UN mission arrived in N Djamena, Chad capital, coming from Khartoum where they it was received by Sudan President Omar Hassan Al Bassir Thursday.

Wireless sensor EcoNet to monitor environment

By IANS, Toronto : A wireless sensor network under development will not only collect data from remote environmental locations but also help monitor them anywhere in the world. A University of Alberta research team recently launched EcoNet, a functional model of a wireless sensor network (WSN) for environmental monitoring in the display house at the University's Agriculture/Forestry Centre.

Rescue work continues in China, nearly 20,000 dead or missing

By KUNA, Tokyo : The death toll from Monday's earthquake in southwest China's Sichuan Province has climbed to 12,012 killed and 26,206 injured, with the number of dead likely to further rise, as at least 7,841 people remained buried, state media reported. The death toll is the highest for a quake in China since the Tangshan earthquake in the northern province of Hebei in 1976, which claimed 242,000 lives.

‘Immigrants being treated as prisoners in Britain’

By IANS, London : Asylum seekers and illegal immigrants in Britain are being virtually treated as prisoners in the country's immigration detention centres, the chief inspector of prisons has said. Reacting to the alleged brutal treatment of asylum seekers before their return to their countries of origin, chief inspector Dame Anne Owers said there was growing conflict between the forced removal of failed asylum seekers and the proper care of detainees held in immigration custody. The UK Border Agency's (UKBA) primary role is to enforce immigration control, she said.

105 immigrants arrested near Mexico border

By IANS/EFE, Tucson (Arizona) : US Border Patrol personnel have arrested 105 immigrants near the Mexico-Arizona border, officials said. Most of the illegal immigrants were Mexicans and Central Americans, officials of the Border Patrol said Friday. They had been arrested Wednesday after the patrol detected three groups of immigrants, using a mobile camera surveillance system, near the Baboquivari mountains in the border area. They were taken to Tucson where they were finger-printed before being deported.

Gordon Brown, prime minister in waiting, is an enigma

By DPA

London : Despite having played a pivotal role in government for the past 10 years, Gordon Brown remains something of an enigma.

Healthy people more willing to take drugs to enhance traits

By IANS, Washington : People's willingness to take a pill or drug depends on whether the trait the drug promises to boost is they one they consider desirable. Authors Jason Riis (Harvard Business School), Joseph P. Simmons (Yale University) and Geoffrey P. Goodwin (Princeton University) examined the reasons why healthy people take drugs to improve concentration or anti-depressants to lift their moods. People don't prefer using pills to enhance a trait they believe to be fundamental to their identity or nature. But other traits like concentration are more acceptable targets.

Chinese police apologize to Japanese reporters after clash

By Xinhua, Kashi (China) : Officials and the police in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur region apologized Tuesday to two Japanese reporters who were manhandled for covering the terrorist attack in the region Monday. Both sides expressed understanding of the incident after local foreign affairs officials and border policemen had a meeting with the reporters Tuesday in Kashi, the officials told Xinhua. The two reporters clashed with local border police when they tried to film a controlled restricted area at around 11 p.m. Monday night.

Maoists woo Muslims with offer of special commission

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : In a bid to woo Nepal's minority Muslims, Maoist supremo Prachanda has promised the formation of a powerful Muslim Commission to protect the rights of the group after a Maoist-led government is formed. "In the past, Muslims and other sects suffered oppression as Hindu extremism prevailed in Nepal. To compensate for that, our party supports giving Muslims special rights," Prachanda, poised to be the next prime minister of Nepal, said at an event here Tuesday.

Thai anti-government protesters march towards ASEAN venue

By Xinhua, Pattaya (Thailand) : About 100 Thai anti-government protesters broke through an army cordon here Friday and marched to the Royal Cliff Beach Resort, the venue of the 14th ASEAN Summit. Thousands of red-shirted protesters blocked all roads leading to the Royal Cliff Beach Resort. The crowd briefly clashed with police before some forced their way through a group of security personnel deployed about 500 metres from the luxury hotel. The protesters shouted slogans against Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, demanding that he step down and dissolve the house.

Obama postpones Christmas break for health reform vigil

By DPA, Washington : US President Barack Obama has vowed to remain in Washington until the health care reform bill wins Senate approval, effectively pushing back the departure date for his holiday vacation in Hawaii. "I will not leave until my friends in the Senate have completed their work," Obama said. "My attitude is, is that if they're making these sacrifices to provide health care to all Americans, then the least I can do is to be around and to provide them any encouragement and last-minute help if necessary," he said.

US report exposes gaps in India’s counterterrorism apparatus

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : The Mumbai terror attacks have put the spotlight on how India's outdated and overburdened law enforcement and legal systems are hampering the country's counterterrorism efforts, says a US State Department report. "Although clearly committed to combating violent extremism, the Indian government's counterterrorism efforts remained hampered by its outdated and overburdened law enforcement and legal systems," said the State Department's annual report on global terrorism released Thursday.

‘Stateless’ enclave dwellers finally getting a country

Dinhata (West Bengal) : Having been "stateless" for 68 long years, more than 51,000 enclave dwellers will finally have a country of their...

Philippines prepares for celebrating new presidency

By Abdullah Boqus, KUNA, Kuala Lumpur : The Philippines is preparing to celebrate its new President on Wednesday after the 15th elected Pilipino President and the successor of Gloria Arroyo, Benigno Aquino took the oath before members cabinet, parliament and the country's representatives. Dressed in yellow, supporters of Aquino, the son of former president Corazon Aquino, attended the celebration of the president who won May's elections with five million votes separating him from ousted president Joseph Estrada.

European mediators present plan to end Georgia-Russia conflict

By DPA, Moscow/Tbilisi : The first western mediators in Tbilisi to work for an end to the conflict between Georgia and Russia have called for an immediate ceasefire by all parties. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, whose nation holds the rotating EU presidency, and Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb, head of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), met Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili late Sunday. The next step would be for all the wounded to be treated during a ceasefire, Kouchner said.

Obama, Hillary on Collision Course

By Prensa Latina Washington : Hillary Clinton is running out of lifesavers in the midst of the tsunami of popularity that seems to escort Barack Obama. Texas and Ohio could be the final rounds for the contenders. With only a dozen US states left to hold primary elections, the former first lady has fallen behind in the important competition for delegates to attend the Democratic Convention in August.

Portugal intercepts threat message against Eiffel Tower

By Xinhua Lisbon : The Portuguese aviation authorities have intercepted a conversation on a possible attack against the Eiffel Tower in Paris, the local media reported. The Santa Maria aerial centre intercepted the conversation early Thursday about an attack on the Eiffel Tower through the short-wave radio, the police said. Portuguese officials have alerted their French counterparts, who are trying to identify the people involved in the telephone conversation. Portuguese and French officials are on alert.

Russia to upgrade IAF’s MiG-29 combat jets

By IANS New Delhi : The long-delayed upgrade of the Indian Air Force's MiG-29 jets is set to get underway with its manufacturer RAC-MiG inking a deal with the Indian defence ministry in Moscow Friday, the company said. The upgrade, which will cost some $850 million, will convert the MiG-29 from an aerial interceptor and air dominance jet to a fighter-bomber capable of striking mobile and stationary targets on the ground and at sea with high-precision weapons under all weather conditions.

Israeli doctors urge release of hunger striker Palestinian

Jerusalem : The Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR) warned on Wednesday that a Palestinian prisoner who has been on hunger strike for 50 days...

Suspected toxic gas leak affects 9 detenus in China

By IANS, Kunming (China) : A suspected toxic gas leak near a detention facility in southwest China caused the poisoning of nine inmates Monday night, local officials and witnesses said Tuesday.

Nepali gov’t asked to recover spending of royal ministers

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : The Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority (CIAA) of Nepal Tuesday instructed the government to recover a sum of money from former royal ministers, local newspaper The Rising Nepal reported on Wednesday. The involved amount of 14 million Nepali rupees (around 203,000 U.S. dollars) from royal regime ministers Kamal Thapa, Shrish Shumsher Rana and Tanka Dhakal is to be investigated, since the CIAA believed that the process of spending from the public fund during their tenure was wrong, according to highly placed sources at the CIAA.

41 guards arrested over Mexico prison escape

By IANS/EFE, Mexico City : Forty-one guards at a Mexican prison have been arrested in connection with the escape of 151 inmates, officials said.

Six infants died, 294,000 took ill in China milk scandal

By DPA, Beijing : At least six infants died and 294,000 were taken ill as they were fed milk contaminated with melamine, the Chinese health ministry said Tuesday. Four months after the scandal of melamine contamination was revealed, 861 infants and babies are still hospitalized with kidney problems. A total of 154 infants are in a serious but stable condition, the ministry said.

We cannot ‘corroborate’ death of IS No. 2: US

Washington : The US Central Command has said that it cannot "corroborate" the death of the second-in-command of the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group,...

US neither friend nor foe: Russian foreign minister

By DPA, Moscow: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday that the US was "no longer an enemy, but also not yet a friend," shortly before talks with US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Interfax news agency reported. Lavrov said that his personal relationship with Clinton was "constructive and solution-oriented." The relationship between President Barack Obama and President Dmitry Medvedev 20 years after the end of the Cold War was one of "trust", he added. Clinton arrived in Moscow early Thursday for talks on nuclear disarmament and the Middle East.

The CIA’s secret triumph

MOSCOW. (Member of the Russian pen club Anatoly Korolev for RIA Novosti) - Under the rules of the Swedish Academy, the Nobel Prizes archives may be opened 50 years after the awarding takes place. Thus, the documents of October 1958 may be declassified in January of this year. This is a notable date for Russian culture. That year, the Academy awarded a Nobel Prize in literature to Soviet poet Boris Pasternak. Now that the archives have been declassified, the circumstances of the loudest scandal in the history of Nobel Prizes will be finally scrutinized.

Movie theme park planned near Rome

By IANS/AKI, Rome : A 500-million euro movie theme park named after Italy's renowned Cinecitta film studio is to be built on the outskirts of the capital Rome. The theme park will be called Cinecitta World and will be constructed on 150 hectares of land at Castel Romano. According to a report in the Italian daily La Repubblica, the theme park will include 35 family attractions, as well as restaurants, snack bars and shops. It will be built on the same location where Hollywood producer Dino De Laurentiis had his studios during the 1960s.

Brazil presidential candidates locked in technical tie in new poll

Sao Paulo : A new poll of voter intentions for next month's Brazilian presidential elections has revealed a technical tie between President Dilma Rousseff,...

U.S. House of Representatives Approves New Taxes on Oil Companies

By SPA Washington : The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday approved $18 billion in new taxes on the largest oil companies as Democrats cited record-high oil prices and rising gasoline costs in a time of economic difficulties. The money collected over 10 years would provide tax breaks for wind, solar, and other alternative energy sources and for energy conservation. The legislation, approved 236 to 182, would cost the five largest oil companies an average of $1.8 billion a year over that period. Those five companies earned $123 billion in profits last year.

Putin proposes anti-terror centre in SCO

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Beijing : Russian President Vladimir Putin Thursday proposed establishing an anti-terrorism centre within the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO).

Opposition claims victory in Zimbabwe, vote-counting plods on

By DPA Johannesburg/Harare : The counting of votes in Zimbabwe's presidential and parliamentary elections, in which President Robert Mugabe is battling to retain power, was under way Sunday with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) already claiming victory. "We have won this election," Tendai Biti, secretary-general of the MDC said in the early hours of Sunday morning. "But they (the government) still might steal it," he told DPA.

Obama invites Modi to visit US; vows to work closely with him

By Arun Kumar , Washington:Ending a decade long US boycott of Narendra Modi, President Barack Obama congratulated him on BJP's "success in India's historic election"...

China to regulate online equity financing

Beijing : China's securities regulator will soon begin inspecting online equity financing platforms to address risks brought by illegal activities and help the platforms...

Nepal records highest tourist arrivals in eight years

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Nepal, regarded a Shangri-La for holiday makers with its Himalayan ranges, assortment of religious shrines and network of casinos, has recorded the highest tourist arrivals in eight years. According to the Nepal Tourism Board Monday, figures released by the Immigration Office at the Tribhuvan International Airport indicate that 50,567 tourists visited Nepal in October, the highest in a single month since 2000.

Beijing considering limited visa-free stay

By IANS, London : Beijing is considering allowing foreign tourists a 72-hour window to explore the capital without a visa.

Nepali gov’t to table statute amendment Saturday

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : The Nepali government has decided to table a supplementary bill to the Fifth Amendment bill of the Interim Constitution at Saturday's Constituent Assembly meeting, according to local media. However, the protesting Madhesh-based parties would continue their protest as their demands were not met by the bill, local newspaper The Rising Nepal reported Saturday.

Climate friendly policies pay off: Study

By IANS, New Delhi : Climate-friendly policies not only reduce greenhouse gas emissions and bring environmental benefits, they also boost and diversify the economy, reveals a recent study analysing some 100 climate policies of G20 countries. Carried out by think tanks Ecofys and Germanwatch for global NGOs WWF and E3G, the study evaluates climate policies of countries accounting for around three-quarters of global greenhouse gas emissions, identifying best and worst examples and lessons learned.

British minister walks out of segregated Muslim wedding

By IANS, London : A British minister Friday defended his decision to walk out of a Muslim wedding where men and women were separated, saying such practices ran against his efforts to build "inclusion." Farming Minister Jim Fitzpatrick and his wife walked out of the marriage ceremony in his east London constituency - home to a large number of Bangladeshis - after discovering they would have to sit in separate rooms. He told BBC radio Friday that such practices promoted "exclusion rather than inclusion," which his government was trying to build in areas like east London.

North Korea says it’s in final phase of uranium enrichment

By DPA, Seoul : North Korea said Friday that it was entering the final phase of uranium enrichment and was reprocessing plutonium for nuclear weapons from spent fuel rods. "Experimental uranium enrichment has successfully been conducted and entered into the completion phase," North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency reported, according to South Korea's Yonhap News Agency. "Reprocessing of spent fuel rods is in its final phase and extracted plutonium is being weaponised."

Aussie PM says he admired Benazir Bhutto’s courage

By NNN-Bernama Melbourne : Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has condemned the assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, 54, who was shot by an assassin who also blew himself up, killing about 20 others, at an election rally in Rawalpindi. Rudd said Bhutto was campaigning "resolutely" for democracy in the lead up to the country's Jan 8 polls.

Hillary, Romney emerge as winners of Nevada caucuses

By Xinhua Washington : U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton won the Democratic Nevada caucuses Saturday, beating arch-rival Barack Obama in a hard-fought race, while former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney won a landslide victory on the Republican contest. With 79 percent of precincts reporting, Hillary has 51 percent of the vote, compared to 45 percent for Barrack Obama, her arch-rival. John Edwards came in with a remote third place, grabbing only 4 percent of the votes.

Bomb blast kills three in Nepal

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : Three people were killed and seven others injured Sunday in a bomb blast in western Nepal, a media report said. The blast took place in Malakheti village in Dhangadhi area of Nepal's western Kailali district, Nepalnews.com reported. Three of the injured were in serious condition at a hospital. Chief district officer Shiv Prasad Nepal said the explosion occurred Sunday evening in the courtyard of the house of Harka Bahadur Mohta. The police have launched an investigation into the incident.

10,000 spectators at naked tobogganing race in Germany

By DPA, Braunlage (Germany) : A naked tobogganing race attracted around 10,000 people to an eastern German town in the Harz mountains Saturday. Car parks were overflowing ahead of the popular event in the town of Braunlage, one spokesman said, while police confirmed that roughly 10,000 spectators had gathered to watch the event. Around 30 scantily clad male and female teams had registered to compete on the 100-metre-long track. Earlier this month, a row erupted in another winter resort, in eastern Germany, over plans to hold a topless tobogganing event.

US tested mustard gas on its own soldiers during WWII

By Gurmukh Singh, IANS, Toronto : Americans tested mustard gas on thousands of their own soldiers during World War II to know which race was more vulnerable to it, according to a Canadian historian. Susan Smith of Alberta University said Monday that the misguided race-specific mustard gas tests by the American military were carried out on White, African-American, Japanese-American and Puerto Rican soldiers to know its effectiveness against different races.

Indian American doctor’s name restored to 9/11 victims list

By IANS, New York : The name of an Indian American doctor missing since the day before the 9/11 attacks here has been restored to the casualties list after an appeals court decided that there was no other plausible explanation for her disappearance. The city medical examiner's office said Thursday that Sneha Anne Philip, 31, was among 2,751 victims killed at the World Trade Centre Sep 11, 2001.

Sri Lanka condemns attack on its cricketers

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lanka Tuesday described as "appalling" the terror attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Pakistan's Lahore city. "It is appalling that anybody should have targeted a sporting team in such a brutal manner. The attitude of targeting sportsmen must change," Sri Lankan Foreign Secretary P. Kohona said Tuesday. He added that the players would be back on the first available commercial flight.

Sri Lanka launches ‘world’s largest mission’ to rescue civilians

By IANS, Colombo : Sri Lankan troops have launched "the world's largest humanitarian operation" to rescue thousands of civilians trapped in the government-declared no-fire-zone after seizing control of the last rebel bastion in the north, the defence ministry said Friday. It said the troops have "almost swept away terrorist strongholds in the northern anterior of the 12-km-long no-fire-zone demarcated for the civilians" and were conducting mop-up operations in the southern anterior of the no-fire-zone (NFZ).

EU seeks to expand ties with Indonesia

By KUNA, Brussels : The European Union congratulated here Saturday Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono upon his successful re-election on July 8, which was officially confirmed today by the Indonesian General Election Commission (KPU). "In peaceful elections the people of Indonesia have testified to their commitment to democracy and have entrusted President Yudhoyono with a strong second mandate, expressing confidence in his policies and the further pursuit of reforms," said the Swedish EU Presidency in a statement.

UN chief arrives in Myanmar to press junta

By DPA, Yangon : UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon arrived in Myanmar Friday for a two-day official visit during which he will press for the release of all political prisoners including opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. Ban and his entourage arrived at Yangon International Airport, stopping over briefly in the old capital before flying on to the junta's new headquarters in Naypyitaw, 350 km north of Yangon.

N-deal unlikely to get cold under new US president: Boucher

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington : The next US president, be it a Republican or a Democrat, is unlikely to pose a hurdle to the stalled India-US nuclear deal even if it does not go through during the watch of President George W. Bush. A senior US official who has worked under both previous Democratic and the current Republican administrations indicated this Wednesday when asked at a briefing how the deal was likely to play out under Republican John McCain or Democrats Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton.

New brick-laying machine makes building roads easier

By IANS, London: A Dutchman has designed a machine that takes the sweat out of bricklaying and also does it in a jiffy, especially in road building.

Zimbabwe’s opposition pulls out of polls

By DPA, Johannesburg/Harare : Zimbabwe's main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change, has decided to withdraw from the presidential run-off elections June 27, party sources said Sunday. The decision was made Sunday morning at a meeting of the pro-democracy party's national executive in Harare, said the source, asking not to be named. He said the decision would be announced by Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC's leader and its candidate in the elections, later Sunday.

Japan’s exports fall in November

By IANS, Tokyo : Japan's exports fell 4.5 percent in November from a year earlier, marking the second straight month of decline, the ministry of finance said in a preliminary report Wednesday.

Russian Nobel winner Solzhenitsyn dies at 89

By DPA, Moscow : Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the Nobel prize winner for literature who was exiled from the former Soviet Union for his graphic portrayals of life in Soviet labour camps, died here early Monday. He was 89. The Interfax news agency reported the news quoting literary circles in the Russian capital, where he was living since 1994 after the fall of the Soviet Union. The world famous writer and historian had not been seen in public for months, and had reportedly been seriously ill for months. He died from the aftermath of a stroke, according to unconfirmed information.

37 LTTE rebels, four troopers killed in N. Sri Lanka

By KUNA, New Delhi : At least 37 rebels of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and four government soldiers have been killed in battle fatigues Northern Sri Lanka. On the Mannar front 21 LTTE rebels and one soldier were killed in separate clashes yesterday, Sri Lankan Defence Ministry said in a statement Wednesday at Colombo. While one LTTE cadre was killed in Elathumadduwal and Muhamalai in clashes, two soldiers were killed in Muhamalai in Jaffna yesterday, Sri Lanka's Media Centre for National Security said today.

US concerned over Israeli decision on new homes

Washington: The US is "deeply concerned" by reports that Israel would build more settler homes in east Jerusalem, the state department has said. "Israel's leaders...

Violence against Indians in Oz not taken seriously: Author

By IANS, New Delhi: Incidents of violence against Indians in Australia have not been addressed seriously by that country's top administrators, says Australian author Richard Flanagan.

15 new swine flu cases in Canada prompts awareness drive

By IANS, Toronto : With 15 news cases of swine flu taking the nation's total to 34, Canadian authorities have said they will start an awareness campaign Friday to stem the spread of the virus. Of the 15 new cases reported Thursday, five were in British Columbia province, four each in Alberta and Nova Scotia provinces and one each in Ontario and Quebec provinces. The Public Health Agency of Canada is launching an awareness campaign Friday to caution people about the steps to be taken to avoid infection.

Obama asks Brazil to press Iran on nukes

By EFE, L'Aquila (Italy) : US President Barack Obama has urged his Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to help convince Iran to keep its nuclear programme peaceful. The two leaders met for about 30 minutes on the sidelines of the G8 summit in the Italian city of L'Aquila and discussed issues like energy, climate, the political crisis in Honduras, global economic downturn and Iran, the White House said Thursday.

‘China bugging, burgling, honey-trapping British businessmen’

By IANS, London : The Chinese government is not only hacking into computers but also bugging, burgling and blackmailing British business executives in search of commercial secrets, the British intelligence agency was quoted saying Sunday. The Sunday Times quoted a secret MI5 document as saying spies from the Chinese army and public security ministry approach British businessmen with offers of gifts, including cameras and memory sticks that have been found to contain electronic bugs which provide the Chinese remote access to users' computers.

US embassy attack: 94 Tunisians to face trial

By IANS, Tunis : At least 94 people arrested for their involvement in an attack on the US embassy here in the capital of Tunisia will be tried in a military court, Xinhua reported.

Hundreds unable to vote in British election

By DPA, London : Hundreds of people were unable to vote in Britain's general election because of long queues at polling stations and, in one instance, a shortage of ballot papers, it emerged Friday. The Electoral Commission watchdog said it had ordered a "thorough review" into incidents around the country in which people were unable to cast their votes by the time polls closed at 10 p.m. (2100 GMT Thursday). The commission said the incidents were cause for "serious concern."

Vietnam matures into world’s second-largest coffee producer

By Christiane Oelrich,DPA, Buon Me Thuot (Vietnam) : This southeast Asian nation's coffee industry has experienced rapid development over the past 25 years. Coffee plantations have mushroomed from a mere 22,000 hectares to currently half a million hectares, which makes Vietnam today the world's second-largest coffee producer behind Brazil. In 2007, Brazil harvested 36 million sacks of 60 kg each, while Vietnam's harvest tallied in at 18 million sacks. Number three producer Colombia trailed with 12 million sacks.

Death toll in Ukraine mine blast reaches 72

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

Germany keen to help Nepal to dispose dangerous pesticides

By Pushpranjan, EuAsiaNews, Kathmandu : The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (German Technical Cooperation) or GTZ has expressed its interest to help Nepal to dispose obsolete pesticides stored across the country since three and a half decades. Most of the pesticides are stored very close to Indo-Nepal border towns, which may cause serious health hazard. GTZ officials have told Nepali environment ministry, that they are ready to take the no longer useful pesticides and dispose it safely in their country, if Nepal can collect all the pesticides at one point.

Next Nepal PM duel Sep 5

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : After failing to elect a new prime minister Monday despite five rounds of vote spread over a month, Nepal's parliament will now hold an unprecedented sixth round of election Sep 5 amidst growing protests at home and concern among the world community. It is likely to be the last chance for Maoist chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda and his sole rival, former deputy prime minister Ram Chandra Poudel of the Nepali Congress, to win the support of at least half the 599 MPs or clear the decks for a different solution.

EU-Africa summit opens in Lisbon to discuss future relations

By Xinhua Lisbon : Leaders from 53 African countries and 27 European Union nations opened a "summit of equals" in the Portuguese capital city of Lisbon on Saturday, to outline future cooperation and relations between the two continents. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is not attending the meeting as he refuses to sit with Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe. Britain is represented by Baroness Amos, the former International Development Secretary.

Ferry sinks near Tonga, 27 missing

By DPA, Wellington : A sea and air search was under way Thursday for 27 people missing following the sinking of an inter-island ferry off the South Pacific Island of Tonga. New Zealand's rescue coordination centre is overseeing the rescue effort, and an airplane is searching the area. Three vessels, including a Tongan naval boat, are assisting with the search, the centre said in a statement. The centre launched the response late Wednesday, after receiving a distress call just before 11 p.m. Wednesday in New Zealand. It received a distress beacon from the vessel a few minutes later.

Alex Reid admits making mistakes

By IANS, London: Cage fighter Alex Reid admits he has made "bad mistakes" throughout his relationship with fiancee Chantelle Houghton.

At least 30 dead in Myanmar, Australia says

By DPA Sydney : At least 30 pro-democracy protesters have been killed in Myanmar's crackdown on dissent - three times the official figure, Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Tuesday. The Australian newspaper, quoting diplomatic sources, also put the death toll at 30 and said 300 Buddhist monks and 1,500 civilians had been arrested. "We estimate many thousands have been injured, many very seriously, especially among the monks who took very heavy beatings last Wednesday and Thursday," the unnamed diplomat told the paper.

Magnitude 6.8 quake hits northern Japan

By DPA, Tokyo : A magnitude-6.8 earthquake hit northern Japan Wednesday night, the Japan Meteorological Agency said. No tsunami warnings were issued. Several people were taken to a hospital in northern city of Aomori, but all sustained only minor injuries, according to media reports. There was no damage reported to nuclear power plants in Miyagi province, and these continued operating. Immediately after the quake, the government set up a task force at prime minister's office.

French Navy finds another victim of Air France crash

By DPA, Paris : The French Navy has found another body from the Air France airliner that plunged into the Atlantic with 228 people aboard, a spokesman said here Sunday. The body was spotted by a helicopter and recovered from waters about 1,200 km northeast of the Brazilian coastline by the frigate Ventose. The announcement follows the discovery of two male bodies Saturday and three other victims earlier Sunday by Brazilian searchers. The French navy spokesman provided no details about the identity or gender of the body.

‘Silly criticism in Pakistan of Modi-Sharif meeting’

New Delhi: India has dismissed as "petty, to the point of being ludicrous", the criticism over Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif walking up to...

Eurocopter to invest up to $550 mn in Mexico

By IANS/EFE, Mexico City : Eurocopter plans to invest up to $550 million in Mexico over the next few years, the European aviation company's president and CEO, Lutz Bertling, said.

Columbia shuttle crew died within seconds: NASA report

By DPA, Washington : The astronauts, including India-born Kalpana Chawla, who died in the 2003 disintegration of the space shuttle Columbia as it returned to Earth had just seconds to respond before becoming incapacitated, an in-depth report on the tragedy has said. The 400-page report released Tuesday by NASA was aimed at gleaning lessons for crew survival from the tragedy that killed Columbia's seven-member crew. The accident was blamed on foam that broke from the craft during takeoff and damaged heat shielding tiles, a defect that caused it to burn up during reentry.

Kenya’s president set to form power-sharing government

By Xinhua Nairobi : Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki is set to name a new government this week after parliament approved a power-sharing deal between him and opposition leader Raila Odinga. Kibaki, leader of Party of National Unity (PNU), is expected to appoint a cabinet with the 63-year-old Odinga of Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) as prime minister in a political deal reached Tuesday that is expected to end countrywide violence over disputed December election results.

Co-op sought in Indonesian nuclear plans

By Xinhua, Jakarta : The Indonesian government is considering offering incentives for regions that allow part of their area to be used as a site for nuclear power plants. "The concept is being formulated by a working team for nuclear power plants under the ministry," the Jakarta Post daily Thursday quoted Evita H. Legowo, an expert adviser at the Indonesian Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources, as saying. Nevertheless, opposition from local communities had been a major problem in developing nuclear power plants, she said.

Foreign adviser to South Korea’s president-elect tries to help woo investors

By SPA Seoul, South Korea : South Korea can attract more foreign investors but needs to first address worries they have about putting money in the country, a high-profile adviser to President-elect Lee Myung-bak said Sunday, according to AP. David Eldon, the chairman of the Dubai International Financial Center Authority, said openness, transparency, strong and consistently applied laws and a level playing field are requirements for drawing the attention of foreign capital.

Hillary Clinton enters 2016 presidential race

Washington : Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Sunday launched her long-awaited second presidential bid and promised to be a champion for...

17 dead in bus accident in Southern Bolivia

By SPA, La Paz, Bolivia : A bus went off a curve on a mountainous road Monday in southern Bolivia, leaving 17 people dead and 30 injured, local media reported. The vehicle carrying a sports team plummeted 200 meters off the pavement before coming to rest, DPA reported.

Ozzy Osbourne to get his own airport?

By IANS, London: Singer Ozzy Osbourne is reportedly set to have an airport named after him.

European education fair to begin Nov 30

New Delhi : Offering Indian students keen on exploring higher education opportunities in Europe a platform to meet European universities and higher education institutions,...

Russia, neighbours hold air defence drills

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Moscow: Russian and Central Asian military pilots are currently carrying out joint exercises to repel missile strikes over the region, a military spokesman said.

UK parliament adjourns ahead of general elections

By IRNA, London : Britain’s parliament session has been adjourned until after next month’s general election with a final flurry of around 20 bills passed in a 48-hour marathon session. Although ministers temporarily retain their government post, all MPs seeking re-election become parliamentary candidates among others contesting seats. The final session of parliament has been described as one of the most scandalised in British history and included revelations about the extent of expenses claimed by MPs from all parties.

NKorea to resume nuclear dismantlement

By SPA, Seoul, South Korea : North Korea planned to resume dismantling its nuclear program Tuesday for the first time in two months, days after the United States removed the communist regime from a terrorism blacklist as a reward under a disarmament pact. Pyongyang has told the International Atomic Energy Agency that it would restart work to disable the Yongbyon nuclear reactor and allow international inspectors to resume their activity, according to a restricted IAEA document to the agency's 35 board members and obtained by The Associated Press.

Hollywood director Robert Mulligan dies at 83

By DPA, Los Angeles : Robert Mulligan, the director of the movie classic "To Kill a Mockingbird" which brought the issue of entrenched racism in the US South to the screen, has died. He was 83. Mulligan died Friday of heart disease at his Connecticut home, according to an announcement by his family Monday.

N.Korea Bares US, S.Korea Espionage

By Prensa Latina Pyongyang : The Peoples Democratic Republic of Korea denounced over 200 spy missions against its territory by the US and South Korea. A military source told KCNA news agency that US planes carried out 110 such missions and said the South Korean Air Force for over 90 flights. The PDR of Korea denounced deep inland flights on March 9 by a U-2 plane, with base overseas, and an E-3 that took off in Japan guided US and South Korean planes during a war game but spied on the PDR of Korea from March 17-19.

11 killed in explosion on bus in Sri Lanka

By DPA Colombo : At least 11 civilians were killed in a bomb explosion on a passenger bus in central Sri Lanka Saturday morning, a military spokesman said. The explosion took place when the bus was in the bus stand at Dambulla, 148 km north of the capital, Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said. More than 20 people were injured in the blast, hospital sources said. The blast comes ahead of the country's 60th anniversary of independence to be marked in Colombo Feb 4.

U.S. presidential candidates practice diplomacy as British PM visits

By Xinhua, Washington : Three U.S. presidential candidates displayed their diplomacy on Thursday as they held the one-on-one meeting separately with the visiting British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown. Brown, who is on his second visit to the United States since he came in office in June, granted a 45-minute meeting to each of the three White House hopefuls.

Russia and Bulgaria Ink Several Contracts

By Prensa Latina Sofia : Presidents of Russia and Bulgaria, Vladimir Putin and Georgi Parvanov respectively, signed eight bilateral cooperation agreements Friday, among which is for construction of a nuclear plant and an oil pipeline. The agreements signed during Putin s official visit to Sofia refer to bilateral issues in energy, culture, transport and tourism.

Ties with China will not be at the cost of India: US

By Arun Kumar, IANS, Washington: Allaying any concerns in New Delhi about Washington warming up to Beijing, the US Wednesday made it clear that building better relations with China or any other country would not be at the cost of India. "Of course, we are interested in building better relations with China, but that does not mean it has to be at the cost of India," US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs William Burns said when asked about President Barrack Obama not mentioning India in a major speech about Asia's role in world affairs.

Japan not to join US global missile shield, says Russia

By RIA Novosti Moscow : Japan will not join the US global missile defence network in the near future despite close cooperation with the US on boosting its own missile defences, Russia's top commander said Friday. "Japan is not planning to integrate its national missile shield into the US global missile network," Gen. Yury Baluyevsky, chief of the general staff, said after talks with his Japanese counterpart Admiral Takashi Saito in Moscow.

France expels Tunisian recruiting nationals for Syria

Paris: French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve Saturday ordered with "the absolute urgency", the expulsion of a Tunisian man accused of recruiting young French nationals...

Mexican gunmen remove wounded man from ambulance, kill him

By IANS, Ciudad Juarez (Mexico) : Gunmen removed a wounded man from an ambulance heading for a hospital in this Mexican city and shot him dead, officials said. The killing occurred Monday night as the Red Cross ambulance was taking the wounded man from the Juarez suburb of Guadalupe to a clinic in the city, which lies across the border from El Paso, Texas, EFE reported. The gunmen forced the unidentified victim to get out of the ambulance and then shot him on the side of the road.

No survivors in Kenya crash: rescuer workers

By IANS

Nairobi : Rescue workers have given up all hopes of finding any survivors of the Kenya Airways plane that crashed into a swamp near the Cameroonian capital Douala.

Al Qaeda claims responsibility for fatal Algeria blasts

By RIA Novosti Moscow : The North African arm of terrorist group al Qaeda has claimed responsibility for Tuesday's two truck bombings outside a UN building in Algiers, which killed at least 26 people, including 11 UN staff. Al-Qaeda in Islamic North Africa posted images of two of the suicide bombers on its website, and called the attack a "successful conquest" against the "international infidels" at the United Nations.

UN endorses Middle East conference in Annapolis

New York(DPA) : The United Nations Friday gave its support to the Middle East peace conference in Annapolis, Maryland, earlier in the week, saying it provides a "clear way forward" to ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The UN Security Council was considering a resolution to endorse activities, including bilateral negotiations to implement the so-called road map, which ultimately aims to create a Palestinian state living in peace next to Israel.

Belief in God, parenthood prompt gays to legalise partnerships

By IANS, Washington : Lesbian and gay couples who believe in God and have children are more likely to formalise their relationship, according to a new study. "Opponents of relationship recognition for same-sex couples often say that we have to protect children, or that same-sex relationships are against God,” said Ramona Faith Oswald, a University of Illinois associate professor. “But this study suggests that lesbians and gays who seek relationship recognition may be acting to protect their children and enact their own religious beliefs."

Indonesia’s longest bridge to complete in 2009

By Xinhua Jakarta : The Indonesian government is expecting the completion of its longest bridge connecting Java and Madura islands before the start of general elections in April 2009,local press said Monday. The 5.4-km long bridge is under construction between Surabaya in East Java and the town of Bangkalan on the island of Madura. The 3 trillion rupiah (330 million U.S. dollars) bridge will have two lanes in each direction plus an emergency lane and a dedicated lane for motorcycles, reported English-language daily The Jakarta Post.

Nepali ‘lord of crows’ eyes Guinness record

By IANS Kathmandu : More than three decades after Indian filmmaker Satyajit Ray created a scientist, Professor Shanku, who could communicate with a crow, the fiction has come alive in Nepal with a 25-year-old claiming he can chat with the bird. Gautam Sapkota, who lives in Makwanpurgadhi village in Thimi town, claims he can "talk" with wild crows and make them obey simple commands like "come", "go" and "stay".

Singapore, China to build model sustainable city

By DPA, Singapore : Singapore and China have agreed to jointly build an eco-city near China's northern port city of Tianjin as a model of sustainable development, The Strait Times reported Thursday. The model city will have an economy based on the sustainable use of resources the two countries agreed in Beijing during the first meeting of the China-Singapore Joint Steering Committee for the Tianjin Eco-city on Wednesday.

Chinese police nets 5,100 for online prostitution, gambling

Beijing : In a nationwide crackdown on online prostitution, gambling and arms deals, Chinese police have detained more than 5,100 people, the Ministry of...

‘Hillary Clinton world’s No.1 powerful mom’

By IANS, Washington : US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been named by the ForbesWoman magazine as the world's No.1 'Powerful Mom' in its annual ranking list.

Maoists rule out polls before Nepal king’s ouster

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS Kathmandu : Nepal's Maoists, who are no longer part of the government, Wednesday ruled out the possibility of holding the constituent assembly election before the ouster of King Gyanendra. Even as prime minister Girija Prasad Koirala expressed hope that the new session of parliament, scheduled to start from Monday, would take the halted peace process forward by deciding fresh dates for the twice-stalled election, Maoist chief Prachanda said there would be no polls before the abolition of Nepal's two-century-old crown.

Kerry warns N.Korea over missile launch

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Seoul: US Secretary of State John Kerry has warned North Korea that any test of a mid-range missile would further isolate it from the international community.

Colombian rebels release two captured cops

By IANS/EFE, Bogota : Colombia's FARC rebels have released two police officers taken prisoner last month, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.

Sustainable development tops UN chief’s priorities for 2010

By IRNA, Tehran : UN Secretary-General Monday outlined seven priorities for 2010, beginning with the urgent need for a renewed focus on sustainable development, including advancing efforts to achieve the globally agreed targets aimed at ending poverty, disease and hunger. The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – as the targets are known – are among the seven “strategic opportunities” to be realized not over decades but within the next twelve months, Ban Ki-moon told the 192-member General Assembly at UN Headquarters in New York.

Ten dead in trample incident of rock concert in Indonesia

By Xinhua Jakarta : A trample incident triggered by crowd at a rock concert in Bandung of West Java province, Indonesia resulted in 10 people dead and some of others injured, local police said on Sunday. "10 youngsters died with one's identity has not confirmed, at least six others were injured," Bambang Suparsono, local police chief officer, was quoted by local news website Detik as saying. Hundreds of teenagers assembled in a hall to watch performance of local punk rock band named Beside on Saturday night.

Iraq failed to adopt new electoral law: UN

By DPA, New York : The UN mission in Iraq said Thursday it was ready to help Iraq's parliament complete a set of electoral laws after it failed to reach an agreement before adjourning for the summer. Iraqi legislators and political parties Wednesday failed to agree on the law, which may affect the holding of provincial elections in October. The electoral law was aimed at consolidating gains in establishing stronger security through the electoral process.

Washington mulls sanctions on North Korea

By IANS, Seoul : There would be "more developments in the days ahead" in Washington's push to punish North Korea for its rocket launch, said a top US diplomat Wednesday.

European women’s lobby launches gender balance campaign

By Nicholas Rigillo, DPA, Brussels : Despite some progress, women remain grossly under-represented in European politics. Slightly fewer than one third of the European Parliament's (EP) 785 seats are occupied by women, while only nine of the EU's 27 commissioners are female. A group of leading women politicians has recently launched a campaign in Brussels aimed at bridging this gender gap when the composition of the EP and the European Commission come up for renewal next year.

Scolari says he is ‘unwanted’ for 2014 World Cup

By IANS, Rio de Janeiro: Brazil's 2002 World Cup-winning coach Luiz Felipe Scolari has reiterated his desire to return to international coaching, but claims he is unwanted.

Small aircraft with British businessmen disappears in Brazil

By DPA, Rio de Janeiro : A light aircraft carrying four British businessmen has gone missing in Brazil, local media reported Saturday citing aviation authorities. The twin-engine Cessna from the small airline Aero Star disappeared from radar late Friday over the north-eastern state of Bahia, the reports said. The identities of the passengers has not been announced. Travelling to the town of Ilheus from Salvador, the plane's last contact with control authorities had been late Friday evening. The pilots reported no problems, and said they were beginning landing maneuvers.

Fiji parliament to hold first sitting Oct 6

Suva : Fiji, home to a large ethnic Indian population, is likely to hold its first sitting of parliament Oct 6, media reported. "Fiji is...

Gas, regional security to dominate Russian, Uzbek leaders’ talks

By RIA Novosti Moscow : The presidents of Russia and Uzbekistan will discuss joint natural gas projects and regional security at their talks in Moscow on Wednesday, a senior Kremlin official said. "The presidents will focus on efforts to carry out the May 2007 agreements between the leaders of Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan on the development of the natural gas transportation infrastructure in the Central Asian region," the official said.

Venezuela bans toy guns, violent video games

By RIA Novosti, Buenos Aires : The Venezuelan parliament has passed a law holding as illegal the production, import and sale of toy weapons and violent video games, a media report Friday said. The law, which includes a penalty of three to five years in jail in case of any violation, will come into effect in three months' time, a Globovision TV report said. National media will also be banned from running advertisements of toys of a "military" nature that are likely to encourage the "aggressive" tendencies among young children and teenagers, the report added.

CPN-M leaders stress on reviewing ties with India

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : Senior leaders of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (CPN-M), the ruling party, said Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal "Prachanda", may review ties between Nepal and India, local newspaper The Rising Nepal reported on Sunday. Mohan Baidhya known as "Kiran", chief of the CPN-M organizational department, said the government had all rights to sign in the bilateral and multilateral treaties, as it is the elected body. However, he also said the present government, like previous ones, would not sign in any agreement without doing proper homework.

Raging row over Hindi now reaches Nepal parliament

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : The row over a lawmaker taking his oath of office in Hindi, which has rocked Nepal since Wednesday, reached the new republic's caretaker parliament Sunday with the Maoists and Madhesi lawmakers of Indian origin entering the fray.

Dr Bahauddin Nadwi gets warm reception in Kuwait

By TCN News, Kuwait: Dr Bahahuddin Nadwi, vice chancellor of Darul Huda Islamic University, Kerala, was given a warm reception here by many Keralite associations...

UN relief agencies delivering more assistance to Haiti

By IRNA, Tehran : Despite the difficult conditions in post-earthquake Haiti, United Nations agencies are reaching more and more survivors with vital assistance, even as search and rescue operations continue for those who still might be saved. The 7.0-magnitude quake that struck the Caribbean nation on January 12 levelled buildings, including homes, schools and hospitals, damaged roads and other vital infrastructure, and left one third of the country’s 9 million people in need of food, water, medical help and other urgent aid.

Don’t spit or litter please, Ugandans told

By M.R. Narayan Swamy, IANS Kampala : Ugandans living in the capital have been asked to put their best foot forward as the country hosts its biggest international meet: the three-day summit of 53 Commonwealth nations that began Friday. Authorities have warned Kampala residents that anyone found littering or spitting will be penalised. Motorists have been told to discipline themselves while a fresh coat of paint has been given to buildings near the summit venue. Owners of cattle roaming Kampala - scenes familiar in New Delhi - can be jailed for up to six months. xxx

South African mine shut down, hundreds trapped

By DPA Carletonville (South Africa) : South Africa's Minerals and Energy Minister Buyelwa Sonjica Thursday ordered the temporary shutdown of a goldmine where a major rescue operation was underway to free hundreds of workers trapped underground for over a day. The shutdown of three to six weeks would allow time for an investigation into the cause of Wednesday's accident at Elandsrand mine near Carletonville in Gauteng province and for repairs to a damaged shaft, the minister told a press conference at the mine.
Send this to a friend