British deputy PM Clegg ‘plotted to ditch tuition fees pledge’
By IANS,
London: British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg was secretly plotting to ditch his pledge to axe tuition fee hike two months before the election, a media report said Saturday.
Putin to attend conference on the Arctic
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin will attend the international Arctic Conference where the exploration and development of mineral resources, environmental protection and improving transport infrastructure in the region will be discussed, an official said.
The conference will be held in Moscow April 22-23.
Svetlana Mironyuk, editor-in-chief of RIA Novosti, said: "The conference will be the first major international project of the RGS (Russian Geographical Society."
Ban urges Russia, Georgia to control their armed forces
By DPA,
New York : UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has called on both Russia and Georgia to rein in their armed forces following reports of looting, continued fighting and lack of access to those in need in the Caucasan country.
Ban said Thursday that he had become "extremely concerned by the humanitarian impact of the recent conflict on the civilian population in Georgia, which has suffered loss of life and injury, significant damage to property and infrastructure."
California State Senate to open with Hindu prayer
By IANS
Los Angeles : After opening the US Senate with the chanting of the Gayatri Mantra, Hindu priest Rajan Zed will open the California State Senate's session in a similar way Aug 27.
Zed will read out from the Rig Veda, dating back to 1,500 BC, besides reciting lines from Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita, both ancient Hindu scriptures.
He plans to start and end the prayer with "Om", the mystical syllable containing the universe, which in Hinduism is used to begin and conclude religious work.
Palestine seeks extremists’ withdrawal from East Jerusalem holy sites
United Nations: The Palestine has called on the UN Security Council (UNSC) to demand withdrawal of extremist Israelis desecrating Islamic holy sites in East...
South Korea, U.S. agree to maintain current U.S. troops
By Xinhua,
Seoul : South Korea's Defense Minister Lee Sang-hee and his U.S. counterpart Robert M. Gates agreed Tuesday to maintain the level of 28,500 American troops here, a senior defense official here said.
The meeting in Seoul followed a summit between South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and U.S. President George W. Bush in Aprilwhen the two heads of state agreed to freeze a drawdown of U.S. forces in Korea.
No change in Nepal Maoists’ status for now: US
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington : The United States says there is no change in the status of Nepal's Maoist party even as the once underground party is poised to lead the new government after its victory in the elections last month.
"I don't think there's any change - there's no change in their status," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters Tuesday when asked if the Communist Party of Nepal Maoist (CPN-Maoist) would now be removed from the terrorist list.
Thai army chief asks PM to dissolve parliament
By Xinhua,
Bangkok : Thai Army Chief Anupong Paochinda Wednesday urged Prime Minister Somchai Wonsawat to dissolve parliament in the wake of massive protest of the opposition People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) demanding the resignation of the prime minister.
Paochinda also asked the protesters who laid siege to the Bangkok international airport disrupting all flights to disperse.
Anupong made the "suggestions" Wednesday afternoon at a press conference after holding an urgent meeting with military and police top brass, business leaders and academics.
‘Brazil better equipped to face market crisis’
By Prensa Latina,
Brasilia : Brazil has said it is better equipped than the rich economies to face the global market meltdown and invited foreign investment as a proof of its economic stability.
"We are in better conditions to face the crisis than rich countries," President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Monday said during his Coffee with the President programme on radio.
The Brazilian president is scheduled Wednesday to visit Italy where he will meet business leaders, government officials, and the opposition, and to meet the Pope Thursday to conclude an agreement with the Vatican.
Two Koreas exchange fire in border incident: report
By RIA Novosti
Seoul : North and South Korean border guards briefly exchanged fire Monday, a day before the start of a new round of working-level talks on North Korea's nuclear disarmament, South Korean news agency Yonhap said.
It quoted a spokesman for South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff as saying that the firefight took place near Inje, 165 km northeast of Seoul, on the eastern portion of the buffer zone that separates the two Koreas.
Nine killed in mine blast in southwest China
By DPA
Beijing : Nine people have been killed in a gas explosion at a coalmine in southwestern China, local officials said Monday.
The toll given by officials in the blast at Shizishan mine in Yunnan province halved the number of victims reported initially in local newspapers.
All 36 miners who had been missing in Sunday's accident at the Shizishan mine near Zhaotong had been rescued and seven miners were injured, the officials said.
North Korea developing new n-capable missiles: Seoul
Seoul : North Korea is developing new missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads, media reported Tuesday citing a South Korean intelligence source.
"Based on our...
US Congress honours first Indian American member
By Arun Kumar, IANS
Washington : Dilip Singh Saund, the first Indian-American to be elected to the US Congress nearly 50 years before Louisiana governor elect Bobby Jindal, has been honoured with a portrait in the complex.
Saund, who represented the 29th congressional district of California in the US House of Representatives from 1957 until 1963, is the seventh person to be so honoured.
Google buys more than 1,000 IBM patents
By IANS,
New York: Google, which last month failed to grab a huge portfolio of Nortel patents, has bought more than 1,000 patents from IBM.
Car bomb in Spain injures at least 17
By IRNA,
Madrid : A car bomb injured 17 people Thursday at a university in the northern Spanish city of Pamplona after police searched the wrong campus for explosives following a telephone call purportedly from the Basque separatist group ETA warning of an imminent attack, Spain's Interior Ministry said.
The government blamed ETA for the incident.
The bomb exploded in a parking lot at the University of Navarra at 11 a.m., according to the Interior Ministry in Madrid. Few students were in the area where the bomb exploded because of rain.
Nearly 400,000 affected by Philippines floods
By Xinhua
Manila : Heavy rains and floods caused by typhoon Sepat and the southwest monsoon have affected close to 400,000 people in the Philippines, the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) said Saturday.
Hundreds were forced to leave their homes as at least 20 villages were flooded in southern Luzon while 80,000 families were directly affected in Metro Manila and other parts of Luzon, the NDCC said.
Philippine President to meet Bush in June visit to U.S.
By Xinhua,
Manila : The Philippine government on Thursday announced that President Gloria Macapagal-Arryo will meet U.S. President George W. Bush in her working visit to the country next month.
In a statement dispatched to media, Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said on the president's June 23-29 visit, Arroyo will discuss with Bush the issues surrounding benefits given to the Filipino World War II veterans.
They will also touch on a broad range of topics including food security, environmental protection and human rights.
Crane protesters demand EU treaty referendum
By KUNA
London : Protesters scaled a crane near the Houses of Parliament Monday, to demand a referendum on the EU Treaty, police said.
Two men climbed hundreds of feet above central London to tell British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to trust the people and hold a national vote.
The protest comes ahead of this Wednesday's House of Commons vote on a main opposition Conservative party proposal to hold a referendum on the controversial agreement.
Death sentences upheld in China terrorist attack case
Beijing : A Chinese court Friday upheld the death sentences of three men implicated in a terrorist attack that killed 31 people at a...
Myanmar organizes diplomatic mission to look into cyclone-hit areas
By Xinhua,
Yangon : A diplomatic mission, organized by the Myanmar government, has been taken to some disaster-hit areas in the country Saturday by helicopters to look into the status of the areas after disaster, according to diplomatic sources.
It is the first time that the government made such move to allow foreigners to inspect the cyclone-torn regions in the aftermath of the disaster.
The diplomatic corps includes officials of resident United Nations organizations and foreign diplomats in Myanmar.
Pakistan must admit mistakes vis-a-vis 26/11: ex-official
Islamabad: Pakistan must admit its mistakes for allowing Pakistani terrorists to sail to Mumbai in 2008 and carry out a massacre, a retired Pakistani...
Russia says nuclear sector open to foreign investment
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia's nuclear industry is open to both domestic and foreign investors, a Russian deputy prime minister told an international nuclear forum on Wednesday.
"In addition to large-scale investment of state funds, we have grounds to count on substantial private investment. The Russian nuclear sector is now open to cooperation. Furthermore, not only with domestic businesses, but also with foreign investors," Sergei Ivanov told an international forum, ATOMCON-2008.
Obama hopes to finally put pastor scandal behind him
By Chris Cermak, DPA,
Raleigh (US) : In a very personal and emotional appearance in North Carolina this week, Barack Obama for the first time completely dissociated himself from his former pastor, hoping to finally put an end to a controversy that nearly derailed his US presidential campaign.
Less than two months ago in a broad speech on race relations in Philadelphia, Obama said that despite Reverend Jeremiah Wright Jr's offensive remarks, he was "like family", and a man Obama could no more disown than he could the African-American community to which he belongs.
Brazil seeks to measure energy from solar explosions
By IANS/EFE,
Sao Paulo: A team of Brazilian scientists plan to use a pair of stratospheric balloons to study the energy produced by explosions on the Sun, the head of the project said.
Cleaner energy vital for global prosperity: Australia
By IRNA,
New Delhi : The Australian Minister for Resources and Energy, Martin Ferguson told the 10th Sustainable Development Summit in Delhi his government believes clean energy technologies are vital to achieve economic and social prosperity in the developing world.
Clean energy technologies deliver quality of life through clean air, clean water and the sustainable use of energy resources.
Toll from Brazil mudslides rises to 225
By IANS/EFE,
Rio de Janeiro : The death toll from a series of mudslides in the southeastern Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro has climbed to 225, officials said.
Two more bodies were recovered Sunday morning in the shantytown of Morro do Bumba in Niteroi, a suburb of Rio de Janeiro, where it is feared that another 150 people could be buried.
China starts crackdown in Tibet after journalists’ visit
By IANS
Kathmandu : China has intensified its crackdown in Tibet after a visit by two western journalists, a rights organisation has charged.
39 killed in Sri Lanka fighting
By Xinhua
Colombo : At least 39 combatants from the government troops and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels have been killed in fighting throughout Sunday, defense officials said here Monday.
Some 22 rebels and two soldiers were killed in several clashes in the northern Vavuniya district while five LTTE rebels were killed in Welioya district.
Four LTTE members were killed in Mannar and Jaffna districts while another LTTE cadre was killed in eastern district of Batticaloa. A soldier was killed in the northern Jaffna peninsula clashes.
Nigerian government inks deal with Boko Haram for girls’ release
Abuja: Nigerian military Friday said it has agreed a ceasefire with Islamist militants Boko Haram and the schoolgirls abducted by the group will be...
Poll: Obama’s lead over McCain declines by half
By Xinhua,
Washington : U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama's lead over his Republican rival, John McCain, has declined by half, according to a poll released on Wednesday.
The CNN poll of polls showed that Obama only has a slim lead of 3 percentage points over McCain, at 46 to 43 percent, compared to a high of 8 points he had in mid of July.
Sri Lankan president announces end of civil war, Prabhakaran’s body found
By DPA,
Colombo : Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa Tuesday officially announced the end of the over 25-year-old civil war against Tamil rebels as the army's commander said the body of rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran has been positively identified.
General Sarath Fonseka's official announcement came hours after the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) claimed its rebel leader was still alive.
Rajapaksa said in a speech at the parliament that he was addressing the nation after victory in the war against the LTTE but made no specific mention of Prabhakaran.
Shops set on fire in Tibet violence
By SPA
Beijing : Shops were set on fire in violence in Tibet's capital of Lhasa on Friday, witnesses said,
as the region was hit by a fresh wave of rare street protests, according to Reuters.
Chinese rule in remote, Buddhist Tibet has become a focus for critics ahead of the Beijing Olympics, with global marches this week to mark the 49th anniversary of a failed uprising against Communist rule spilling into Tibet itself.
S.Africa Focuses on Peacekeeping
By Prensa Latina
Cape Town : South Africa will focus its foreign policy on peacekeeping in the continent and beyond, said Defence Minister Mosioua Lekota on Wednesday, reported BuaNews.
The Defence Minister, addressing a media briefing on the programme of action of government's International Relations, Peace and Security cluster, said: “It is clear that peacekeeping is now not a passing engagement [for South Africa].”
Clinton, McCain likely to win US presidential nominations
By Ronald Baygents, KUNA
Washington : US political analysts generally agree that Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican John McCain are in the best position to face off for the US presidency in the November election, and will prove it on Tuesday, when more than 20 states cast ballots in primaries and caucuses across the country.
Three quarters of world population need visa to visit Britain
London, Mar 1, IRNA -- The British government Monday pledged to work closer than ever with other countries to preventing illegal immigrants coming to the UK, boasting that already 75 percent of the world’s population already needed visas.
“Three quarters of the world’s population now need a visa to come to Britain, and UK Border Agency officers are working in 135 different countries to stop organised criminals in their tracks,” said Border and Immigration Minister Phil Woolas.
Oil prices rise over prolonged US cold weather
By IANS,
New York: Oil prices jumped Tuesday as traders expected cold weather in the US will boost the demand for heating fuel.
Consumption of heating...
Obama, Clinton split Oregon and Kentucky
By IANS,
Washington : Democratic presidential candidates Senator Barack Obama and Senator Hillary Clinton split the latest primary rounds late Tuesday in Oregon and Kentucky as they battle to clinch the Democratic nomination for the general election next fall.
Clinton won 65 percent of the ballots in Kentucky compared with 30 percent for Obama who won around 58 Percent of the ballots in Oregon to 42 percent for Clinton.
Kenya to deploy 4,600 soldiers in Somalia
By IANS,
Nairobi : Kenya will deploy 4,660 soldiers in Somalia as part of the Africa Union peacekeeping force, a top official said Monday.
NATO set to postpone Ukraine, Georgia membership bids
By RIA Novosti
Bucharest : The NATO Bucharest summit resumed on Thursday morning with little chance of the former Soviet republics of Georgia and Ukraine being invited to join the alliance's Membership Action Plan (MAP).
"I would be happy to be proved wrong, but I do not expect MAP for Georgia and Ukraine," NATO spokesman James Appathurai said on Wednesday night.
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...
Taliban capture second district in Afghan province
Kabul: A second district in Afghanistan’s northern province of Kunduz on Monday fell to the Taliban militants amid their recent advances in the area.
The...
With trust in Zardari waning, US wooing Sharif: NYT
By IANS,
New York : As American confidence in the Pakistani government wanes, the Obama administration is reaching out more directly than before to Pakistan president Asif Ali Zardari's chief rival Nawaz Sharif, the New York Times said in a report.
American officials have long held Sharif at arm's length because of his close ties to Islamists in Pakistan, but some Obama administration officials now say those ties could be useful in helping Zardari's government to confront the stiffening challenge by Taliban insurgents, the influential newspaper said Saturday.
End to crisis as Kenya names 40-member cabinet
By DPA
Nairobi : Kenya's bickering leaders announced a 40-member coalition cabinet Sunday after weeks of wrangling, diffusing tensions and bringing the East African country back from the brink a second time.
Tensions had mounted over the creation of a coalition government since President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga signed a peace deal in February that ended a vicious spate of post-election violence that killed more than 1,000 people.
UN to deploy more forces to contain Congo conflicts
By Xinhua,
Kinshasa : The UN peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo will soon deploy a new force to help the government army of the troubled west African country contain conflicts, it was announced Friday.
Alan Doss, head of the UN peacekeeping mission known as MONUC, made the announcement during his stay in the eastern town of Goma, the provincial capital of North Kivu.
He said the force will be deployed at the initiative of the member countries of the UN Security Council.
Japan to inspect all highway tunnels after deadly collapse
By IANS/EFE,
Tokyo : The Japanese government ordered the inspection of dozens of highway tunnels throughout the country after the ceiling of one of them collapsed and killed nine people.
Indian Americans welcome nomination of Rashad Hussain as US Religious Freedom Ambassador
On July 30, the White House nominated Hussain, who has served in various roles including Senior Counsel at the Department of Justice’s National Security...
UAE group to bring affordable healthcare to smaller Indian cities
By Arun Kumar, IANS,
Washington: A prominent woman-owned hospital group in the United Arab Emirates, begun by a woman who moved there from Nagpur, plans to bring affordable health care services to smaller Indian cities with a $24 million World Bank financing.
"The project will introduce high clinical and managerial standards and create new jobs where there is significant unemployment, especially in smaller Indian cities," the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a World Bank Group member, said on signing of agreements to finance Zulekha Hospitals Group's expansion plans.
LTTE offers unilateral truce for SAARC summit
By IANS,
Colombo : The Tamil Tiger guerrillas Monday night offered unilateral truce to the Sri Lankan government between July 26 and Aug 4, as a goodwill gesture for the upcoming SAARC summit that opens here Aug 2.
Claiming that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was always keen to develop friendship with the countries around the world, especially the neighbouring countries, the group however warned that it would retaliate if the government disregarded its goodwill gesture and carried out military offensive.
Sri Lanka military says blast on train kills 4
By SPA,
Colombo, Sri Lanka : Four people are dead after a bomb exploded on a passenger train near the Sri Lankan capital of Colombo, the Associated Press reported.
A Defense Ministry official says the blast occurred on a packed passenger train during rush hour near a railroad station outside of Colombo.
The blast killed four people and wounded more than a dozen others.
Tory MP seeks to ban Muslim face veil in UK
By IRNA,
London : Conservative MP Philip Hollobone has controversially introduced a private member’s bill, seeking to outlaw the wearing of Muslim face veil in public in Britain.
Although the bill has little chance of being passed because of the lack of parliamentary time allowed for non-government legislation, Hollobone said he was wanted to make it illegal for people to cover their faces in public “which would obviously have a big impact for those who wear full-face Islamic veils”.
Nepal kicks off tourism campaign with ‘no strike’ pledge
By IANS,
Kathmandu : Sixteen major parties of Nepal, including the opposition Maoists who are seeking a change in the government, pledged not to enforce any general strikes or violent protests as Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal Friday kicked off a campaign that seeks to bring at least 1 million tourists in 2011.
Brown declines comment on alleged Mumbai role of Britons
By DPA,
London : British Prime Minister Gordon Brown Friday refused to be drawn on reports that British citizens of Pakistani origin could have been involved in the terrorism attacks in Mumbai.
Brown said he would talk to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh about the claim made by NDTV news channel.
Singh has said that the terrorists who attacked the city were believed to have been based outside India.
"I would not want to be drawn into early conclusions about this," Brown said on Sky News.
World’s biggest diamond found in South African mine
By DPA
Johannesburg : The world's biggest diamond has been found in a mine in South Africa's northwest province.
According to SAfm public radio the stone found was twice the weight of the previous record-holder, the Cullinan Diamond, which weighed about 3,106 carats when found in present-day Gauteng province in January 1905.
The Cullinan was cut into several smaller stones, which now adorn the British crown jewels.
The stone was to be transported to Johannesburg under tight security, Safm said. No further details were immediately available.
Australian held for smuggling animal mummies in Egypt
By DPA,
Cairo : An Australian teacher who allegedly tried to leave Cairo with 2,000-year old animal mummies and statues was charged with smuggling antiquities Wednesday.
An official at the airport became suspicious at the small statues that were wrapped as gifts in the 61-year-old teacher's suitcase.
When unwrapped, it was found that the tourist had two mummies of a cat and an ibis, a long-beaked bird. He also had 19 statues of the ancient Egyptian gods Horus and Thoth.
No military expansion, China vows in white paper
By IANS,
Beijing : China would not pursue military expansion, it declared in a white paper on national defence issued Thursday.
French Unions Call to Strike
By Prensa Latina,
Paris : Three French union of the public sector called o Thursday to a week of actions in June, against reduction of jobs and a bill about mobility of officials.
The General Workers' Confederation, the FSU (Unitary Union Federation) and a solidarity group issued a communique, complaining about absence of government response to the strike on May 15.
They also said they just announced an unacceptable questioning of the right to strike in education and the Public Service.
Workers' organizations also called to a week of mobilization, from June 9-13.
Russia successfully test fires Bulava missiles
By IANS/RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russia successfully test launched two intercontinental ballistic missiles Friday, defence officials said Friday.
‘Missing AirAsia plane maybe at the bottom of the sea’
Jakarta : The AirAsia plane which vanished Sunday with 162 people onboard on its way from Indonesia to Singapore is likely to be at...
Unprotected sex leads to paralysis, costs $200,000 claim
By Gurmukh Singh, IANS,
Toronto: Unprotected sex led to paralysis and cost a Canadian man his $200,000 medical insurance claim.
Throwing out his hefty medical claim Friday, the Canadian Supreme Court said unprotected sex that leads to disabling diseases is not an "accident" entitling the victim to insurance benefits.
Randolph Gibbens, a former high-pressure water blaster in Vancouver, contracted genital herpes in 2003 after unprotected sex with three women.
The herpes virus later attacked his spine and paralyzed him from his abdomen down.
Toddlers flourish in secure learning environments: Study
By IANS,
Sydney : Infants develop a spirit of inquiry and flourish in secure yet flexible learning environments, fostered by teachers, according to new research findings.
A team led by Massey University Child Care Centre director Faith Martin and colleague Raewyne Bary, and guided by Barbara Jordan and Cushla Scrivens, carried out a study on ties between teachers, children and families.
It questioned the ways in which educational leadership impacted infants' and toddlers' levels of inquiry - their propensity to try new things and ask questions.
Prominent Caribbean Hindu community leader dead
By Paras Ramoutar, IANS,
Port-of-Spain: Pundit Jankie Persad Sharma, a pioneer of the Hindu religion and culture in Trinidad and Tobago and Canada, has died. He had begun the practice of celebrating Diwali on the Caribbean island, apart from constructing several temples, conducting weddings and organising trips to India for the diaspora.
The 80-year-old Sharma, who had emigrated to Canada in 1989 on the request of many Trinidadians settled there, passed away in Mississagua in Ontario Thursday. His funeral arrangements will be announced next week.
Brown sets nine conditions for use of intercept evidence
London, Feb 6, IRNA ,Prime Minister Gordon Brown Wednesday gave a tentative go ahead for the limited use in court of evidence gained from bugging suspects, provided that nine conditions were met.
The approval comes as the result of a review that said intercept evidence was needed in some cases in England and Wales for security reasons.
But it added that the material gained should not be used against the wishes of the intelligence agencies collecting it, or if it could have been gained in another way among other conditions.
Chinese telecom equipment makers to meet officials
By IANS,
New Delhi: Top honchos of Chinese telecom companies will meet senior government officials here in the next two days to resolve all issues, including security concerns, regarding export of equipment to India.
The meetings take place amid reports that Chinese companies are being disallowed from bidding for some contracts to supply telecom equipment to Indian companies. And some of their shipments are stuck in the country for want of various clearances.
Fate of Niger’s president uncertain after coup attempt
By DPA,
Niamey(Niger) : The fate of Nigerien President Mamadou Tandja remained unclear Thursday after the presidential palace in the capital Niamey came under attack in a coup attempt.
President Mamadou Tandja last year rode roughshod over parliament and the constitutional court to extend his rule and allow himself a chance at another term, raising tensions in the uranium-rich nation.
Heavy gunfire was reported around the presidential palace, which then tailed off to sporadic shooting mid-afternoon. Smoke was seen rising from the palace.
Ukraine signs deal with U.S. firm on nuclear fuel supplies
By RIA Novosti
Kiev : Ukraine's nuclear power utility Energoatom said on Monday it had signed a contract with the U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Company on fuel supplies for its nuclear power plants.
Ukraine, which relies almost entirely on Russia for its nuclear fuel imports, has stepped up efforts in recent years to diversify supplies amid rising prices and energy disputes with Russia.
The document signed by the parties stipulates nuclear fuel supplies for Ukrainian nuclear power plants in 2011-2015.
Hillary Clinton visits Haiti
By DPA,
Port-au-Prince/Washington : US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with Haitian President Rene Preval Saturday at the Port-au-Prince airport to discuss US aid, which is already flowing into the earthquake-ravaged country.
She landed but did not travel beyond the airport to avoid using vehicles and other resources needed to deliver desperately needed water, food and other relief supplies. Her own plane was loaded with food, water and other goods.
Mexican massacre policemen go missing
By DPA,
Mexico City : The aftermath of the migrant massacre in northern Mexico continued to unfold Friday as two police officials went missing and the family of the sole survivor received police protection in Ecuador.
A police officer and a special investigator working on the massacre of 72 migrants were missing, the Attorney General's Office of the state of Tamaulipas said. There were unconfirmed reports in the Mexican daily La Jornada that two decapitated bodies had been found that appeared to belong to the two men.
Australian dad froze off ‘hated’ right leg
By DPA,
Sydney : An Australian father-of-three who had "hated" his right leg for 25 years told Sunday how he plunged it in a bucket of dry ice for six hours so surgeons at a Sydney hospital had no choice but to amputate below the knee.
"I'm tired of lying all the time and I just want people to know I'm not crazy," David Openshaw, 29, told Channel Seven in his first television interview since losing the limb last year.
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.
Cambodian opposition leader finds no judge to receive his evidence over defamation charges
By Xinhua,
Phnom Penh : Sam Rainsy, president of the eponymous opposition party, here Wednesday found no staff members at the local court to receive his evidence over the defamation charges filed against him by Cambodian foreign minister Hor Namhong.
Rainsy went voluntarily to the court to submit documents in his defense, but no prosecutors showed up to receive them.
"The prosecutors all fled. They are scared by Sam Rainsy," he told reporters as left the court.
Court officials could not be reached for comments immediately.
Menon to meet Obama team next week
By IANS,
New Delhi : India will make its first high-level contact with the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama when Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon goes to the US next week to meet key figures of the transition team.
Menon is likely to meet influential figures in the transition team that includes Wendy Sherman, the co-chair of the state department's Agency Review Team, which is tasked with preparing policy and personnel for the soon-to-be-named secretaries.
Survivors narrate ordeal as Nepal bridge collapse toll rises
By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS
Kathmandu : Doleful eyewitness accounts started pouring in as Nepal grappled with its worst accident in recent times after a bridge collapsed in the remote midwest, killing at least 15 and causing hundreds to fall into the icy-cold river below.
Ambedkar King Study Circle conducts its first Annual Conference in California
A report By TCN:
California: The first annual conference of Ambedkar King Study Circle took place in Cupertino, the Bay Area Silicon Valley, California on...
Russia, US need to solve missile shield impasse: Putin
By IANS,
Moscow : Russian President Vladimir Putin has called for joint efforts by Russia and the US to address the thorny issue of a missile shield, Xinhua reported.
Berlusconi wins Italian elections, vows to revive economy
By RIA Novosti,
Rome : Billionaire and twice former premier Silvio Berlusconi has won his third general election in Italy, but faces major challenges reviving the country's economic slowdown.
With almost all votes counted, Berlusconi's conservative People of Freedom party (PDL) won 46.7% of the vote ahead of his center-left rival Walter Veltroni with 37.6% in the lower house, and by a similar margin in the upper house.
Arrested FBI agent doesn’t enjoy diplomatic immunity: Pakistan
Islamabad: The Pakistan foreign ministry Thursday said an employee of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrested this week for carrying ammunition does...
Raising pandemic alert level to 6 still possible: WHO
By Xinhua,
Geneva : The World Health Organization (WHO) said Saturday that the risk of a pandemic caused by the A/H1N1 virus was still very high and there was still the possibility to raise the alert level to Phase 6 from the current Phase 5.
"At the present time, I would still propose that a pandemic is imminent because we are seeing the disease spread," Michael Ryan, the agency's director for global alert and response, told a news briefing in Geneva.
"This is the time for us to prepare, and be ready," he said.
Sri Lanka’s flood havoc kills 11, displaces over 150,000
By P. Karunakharan, IANS,
Colombo : Floods and landslides due to heavy rains in several parts of Sri Lanka have left at least 11 people dead and over 150,000 displaced amid warning of further rains and strong winds, officials here said Monday.
Colonel Keethi Ekkanayake, national coordinator of the Disaster Management Centre, said the overnight death toll of four increased to 11 by Monday noon when seven people including children were reported dead due to floods and fresh landslide in the southern Kalutara district.
Japan prepares to intercept North Korean rocket
By IANS,
Tokyo : Japanese Defence Minister Naoki Tanaka ordered the Self-Defense Forces (SDF) Friday to intercept a North Korean rocket launch, if necessary.
Spain will not negotiate with ETA again: Minister
By IANS,
Cadiz (Spain) : Spain's Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba Saturday said that talks with the Basque terrorist group ETA are over and the government will not renewed it again.
"At this point, everybody ought to know that nobody in the government will negotiate with ETA again," Rubalcaba said in a statement, the EFE news agency reported.
The interior minister's statement came after Esperanza Aguirre, President of Madrid regional governmnet, expressed her fear Friday that Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero's government might resume negotiations with ETA again.
‘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...
France’s sovereign wealth fund to boost economic security
By Xinhua,
Paris : France's plan to create a sovereign wealth fund is a part of the country's efforts to guarantee its economic security in the current world financial crisis.
The fund, announced by French President Nicolas Sarkozy last week, is designed to protect the strategically important French enterprises threatened by the global credit crunch and prevent those companies from foreign takeover, the latest manifestation of economic patriotism of the country.
Russia will gradually prepare state companies for IPOs – Putin
By RIA Novosti
Moscow : Recently-established government corporations will be gradually prepared for initial public offerings (IPOs), President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday at his final Kremlin news conference.
"We'll seek to ensure that these companies are prepared, within several years of receiving state capital investment and improving their technology and market capitalization, to hold initial public offerings to make them part of the market economy," Putin said.
German peace group urges closure of US bases
By IRNA,
Berlin : A major German peace group on Saturday called for the closure of all US military bases in Germany and the removal of all American nuclear bombs.
Talking to IRNA, the spokesman of the Westpfalz Peace Initiative, Detlev Besier said, "It would be nice, if the bases close but we are aware that this won't happen so soon. The long-term goal is not to have any military here. The co-existence of people must be ensured without the military."
180,000 online publications halted for porn
By IANS,
Beijing : Chinese authorities have halted 180,000 online publications for spreading pornographic content since the country launched an Internet clean-up campaign in March.
Judge cuts sentences for two Cuban spies
By EFE,
Miami : A US federal judge reduced the sentence of one of the five Cuban intelligence officers convicted in 2001 of spying on the US from life in prison to 30 years and trimmed a little more than a year from the 19-year term handed down to another spy.
Ramon Labanino, shackled and wearing a beige prison uniform, embraced defence attorney William Morris when District Judge Joan Lenard announced she was cutting his sentence to 30 years.
Fernando Gonzalez, serving a 19-year prison term, saw his sentence reduced to 17 years behind bars plus five years of probation.
5.6-magnitude quake jolts Tibet
By IANS,
Beijing : An earthquake measuring 5.6 on the Richter scale hit Xigaze prefecture of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region early Sunday morning, a report said.
The quake struck the area bordering the Ngamring and Saga counties at 4.08 a.m. and no casualties have been reported so far, a Xinhua report quoted National Seismological Network as saying.
The report said that the epicenter of the earthquake was detected at 29.4 degrees north latitude and 86.1 degrees east longitude, with a depth of about 33 km.
300,000 without water as floods damage pipelines in China city
By IANS,
Beijing : Floods caused by torrential rains damaged pipelines leaving 300,000 people without water in Tonghua city in China's Jilin province, an official said Monday.
Wang Ruimin, head of the public utility bureau in Tonghua, said four water pipelines had been damaged since Sunday, cutting water supply to the whole city.
Wang said the bureau has mobilised 300 workers to repair the pipelines, but no deadline could be given as to when water supply would be resumed.
Indian worker dies in shipyard explosion in Singapore
By DPA,
Singapore : An Indian national who was severely burned in a shipyard explosion died in a Singapore hospital, officials said Tuesday.
Karuppan Arjunan, 42, had suffered burns to 90 percent of his body when the explosion and blaze rocked a Belize-registered ship being painted Sunday.
He was one of 15 foreign shipyard workers and crewmen who were injured, but died Monday at Singapore General Hospital.
The Tamil Nadu native, who had been working in Singapore for three years, was thinking about returning to India, a relative told The Straits Times.
Russian warships to hold drills in Indian Ocean
By RIA Novosti,
Moscow : Russian warships from the Pacific and Northern fleets will conduct exercises in the Indian Ocean later this year.
"Pacific and Northern fleet warships will meet and jointly perform a series of combat training missions in the Indian Ocean," Russian Navy spokesman Captain Igor Dygalo said.
BBC yet to commit to 2010 Commonwealth Games
By IANS,
London : The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) says it has yet to reach an agreement to broadcast the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi despite the claims of chairman of Organising Committee Suresh Kalmadi that they have struck "good deals with broadcasters in Australia and Britain".
Kalmadi last month had said that they had earned 37.5 million pounds -- 12.5 milion pounds more than the original target.
Australian broadcasters' Network Ten and Foxtel announced two years ago that they had secured TV rights for Delhi in a shared deal.
Russia blocks Clooney from debate on peacekeepers
By DPA
New York : After being named a Messenger of Peace for the UN, Academy Award winner George Clooney got a taste of superpower play when Russia barred him from attending a meeting of governments that send troops to UN missions.
Clooney came to the UN headquarters in New York Thursday to receive a certificate naming him to the position and a dove pin from Deputy Secretary General Asha Rose Migiro and was to appear before a committee of troops contributing countries to peacekeeping missions, which includes all major powers.
Top UN official stresses need to end impunity for war crimes and human rights...
By NNN-APP,
United Nations : UN Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro has called on lawyers to play a greater role in ensuring that countries live up to their commitments to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.
In an address to the American Bar Association in New York, Ms. Migiro said the fight to bring an end to impunity for such crimes is one of the most important ways of ensuring that the rule of law is put into practice worldwide.
Ukraine seeks integration with European missile defence
By IANS,
Moscow/Kiev (Ukraine) : Ukraine may integrate its early warning missile system with Europe or propose other countries use its missile defence capabilities, the foreign ministry has said.
Earlier in the year, Russia and Ukraine had withdrawn from an agreement on Moscow's renting radar sites in Ukraine. The agreement, signed in 1992, defined the main principles for using early-warning missile systems located in Ukraine and funding for their modernization and reconstruction.
Pro-European Tadic wins presidential elections in Serbia
By DPA
Belgrade : Serbia's incumbent and pro-European President Boris Tadic has won the presidential runoff, according to partial results by the election authorities and projections by pollsters.
"I can announce that we won in these presidential elections," Tadic told a crowd of supporters gathered outside his Democratic Party (DS) headquarters Sunday.
Tadic was leading ultra-nationalist challenger Tomislav Nikolic with 51 percent to 47 percent, with roughly half of ballots counted, the central election commission said, announcing raw figures, not a projection.
EU reaches deal on extra Iran sanctions, says Germany
By DPA,
Luxembourg : The European Union has reached a deal on a package of sanctions against Iran on top of those decided last week by the United Nations Security Council, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said Monday.
Western powers suspect that Iran's nuclear programme is designed to create an atomic bomb, something that Tehran denies. As a result, the country has been the subject of several rounds of UN sanctions, the last of which was approved Wednesday.
Westerwelle said the EU's decision to add to them was "an important signal of determination".
Islam Awareness Week held at University of Toronto
Toronto, Canada : The Muslim Students’ Association (MSA) at the University of Toronto (UoT) hosted last week the Annual Islam Awareness Week at the...
Dalai Lama: China denies problem in Tibet
By IANS,
Washington : China is "denying there is a problem" between its government and Tibet despite reports of "suppression ... or restrictions" culturally and religiously of the Tibetan people, the Dalai Lama says.
China claims Tibetans are "very happy ... much, much, much better than previous Tibet," the Tibetan spiritual leader told CNN Monday days after his controversial meeting with President Barack Obama last week.
China’s 5,158-m-deep well to help forecast earthquake
By Xinhua
Beijing : A 5,158-meter-deep well China drilled to get to know about the earth's crust could contribute to forecast earthquakes, said scientists.
"Researchers will be able to record the movements of liquid and gas which lies five kilometers underground. While drilling the well they have found abnormal movements related to earthquakes," said Xu Zhiqin, the chief scientist of the China Continental Scientific Drilling Engineering Center and member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Cherie Blair wants UN to recognise International Widows Day
By IANS,
London : Cherie Blair, the wife of former British prime minister Tony Blair and a leading human rights lawyer, has appealed to the UN to recognise June 23 as International Widows Day.
The appeal came Tuesday on the campaign's 5th anniversary celebrations at the House of Lords, Britain's upper house of parliament.
"I am pleased to see that our campaign for UN recognition of International Widows Day is gaining support from all over the world and call upon the UN to bestow official recognition accordingly," Blair said.
Five arrested in Australia for alleged terror plot
Melbourne : Australian counter-terrorism police on Saturday arrested five men in Melbourne for an alleged terror plot.
According to officials, two of the five men...
Chechen rebels claim responsibility for Moscow attacks
By IANS,
London : A Chechen militant group has claimed responsibility for the bombings at two Moscow metro stations that killed 39 people, media reports said.
In a video message posted on a Chechen rebel website, militant leader Doku Umarov said his group was behind Monday's double suicide bombings on the Moscow Metro, BBC reported Wednesday.
The rebel, who styles himself as the Emir of the Caucasus Emirate, said attacks on Russian soil would continue.
Greenpeace protests trial of two who exposed Japan whaling scam
By IANS,
New Delhi : Environment organisation Greenpeace Tuesday held a demonstration to press their demand for justice for its two activists being tried in Japan for unravelling corruption in Japan's whaling industry.
The authorities in Japan have demanded 18 months' jail term for Greenpeace activists Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki, who exposed corruption in the "Japanese government sponsored the whaling industry".
Two airmen die in South Korean crash
By DPA,
Seoul : Two South Korean airmen were killed Friday after an air force fighter jet crashed into the sea off the west coast, a media report said.
The F-5F plane went down near the coastal city of Gangneung during a training flight, Yonhap news agency quoted an unnamed official as saying.
"Our rescue team has discovered bodies of the two pilots and are recovering the wreckage scattered in the waters," the official said.
There was no information about the possible cause of the crash, which took place 237 km east of Seoul.
Study raises ethical concerns over kidney donation websites
By IANS,
Washington : Thirty-eight percent of all kidney transplants in the US are performed using living donors, but some patients who don't have access to such donors approach websites for the organ. Now ethical questions about this practice are being raised.
Although these websites, known as 'Good Samaritan' donors accounted only for 71 and 68 kidney donations in 2005 and 2006 in US, respectively, they represent a source of hope for patients who cannot count on their family members or social networks.
1.5 Billion in Asia Need Assistance to Escape Poverty
By ADB News
Mnila, Philippines : Asian Development Bank representatives are highlighting the continuing prevalence of poverty in the region during discussions over the replenishment of the Asian Development Fund (ADF), an endowment used to provide grants and low-interest loans to some of Asia and the Pacific's poorest nations.
Despite the impressive progress made by Asia-Pacific nations over the past decade in fostering economic growth, 1.5 billion people in the region still live on less than $2 a day.
Brazil’s Petrobras studying oil extraction project in US
By IANS,
Rio de Janeiro : Brazil's state-owned energy giant Petrobras would conduct a feasibility study to extract oil from oil shale in the US using technology developed by a Brazilian firm, EFE reported Tuesday.
The oil major announced Monday it had struck a deal with Oil Shale Exploration Company, which will give the technology, and Japan's Mitsui group to conduct the study on extracting oil from oil shale in Utah.
"Petrobras will conduct a technical, economic and environmental feasibility study testing the Petrosix process," said the Brazilian firm in a communique.
Taiwan shaken by 12 earthquakes, no casualties
By DPA,
Taipei : Taiwan was struck by 12 undersea quakes, including a powerful one on the eastern part of the island, but no damage or casualties were reported so far, the earthquake centre said Thursday.
The first quake, measuring 5.9 on the Richter scale occurred at 2.28 a.m. (1828 GMT), shaking the eastern county of Taitung. The second tremor struck 24 minutes later with a magnitude of 4.3 near Chengkung in Taitung, the centre said.
Dalai Lama due to start visit to Britain
By KUNA,
London : The Dalai Lama was due to arrive in London Tuesday at the start of a 10-day visit to the UK, the BBC said.
The Tibetan spiritual leader will address Parliament and give evidence on human rights violations to a parliamentary committee during his trip.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown will not receive him at 10 Downing Street but is due to meet him with the head of the Anglican Church, the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams, at his official residence of Lambeth Palace, central London, this Friday.
UNSC welcomes agreement by Kenyan parties to solve post election crisis
By KUNA
United Nations : The Security Council welcomed the "Agreement on the Principles of Partnership of the Coalition Government" between Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and his opponent Raila Odinga to resolve the crisis following the disputed elections last December.
Some 160,000 People at Olympics Opening
By Prensa Latina,
Beijing : About 160,000 people, included several heads of State, are expected to attend the opening ceremony of the 29th Olympic Games Friday night, this capital's government official reported Monday.
The figure includes 70,000 guests, athletes and artists, while the rest are spectators, supporting staff and volunteers, Zhou Zhengyu, assistant director of the municipal communications committee, told press.
He noted that organizers already approved a plan to transport that enormous figure of people until the Bird's Nest National Stadium.
I will do better: Brown
By DPA,
London : British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said in an interview Sunday that he has made mistakes in office but will do better in future.
Speaking to the BBC on the second day of the Labour Party's annual conference in Manchester, Brown said "you asked me had we made mistakes and I said yes ... Of course I always want to do better and I will do better."
Brown described his cabinet as "pretty united." He has been under pressure from poor poll ratings and an attempt by a handful of junior government ministers last week to seek a leadership contest.
US announces probe into mine blast; toll reaches 29
By DPA,
Washington : US President Barack Obama vowed the government would conduct a thorough investigation of the country's worst mining accident in decades after the bodies of four missing US miners were found early Saturday.
The final death toll stood at 29.
"We did not receive the miracle we prayed for," said West Virgina Governor Joe Manchin. "This journey has ended and now the healing will start."
US court stops federal funding of embryonic stem cell study
By DPA,
Washington : A US federal judge has issued a preliminary injunction stopping expanded federal funding of human embryonic stem cell research, which was part of a new policy outlined by the Obama administration last year.
US District Judge Royce Lamberth Monday issued an order barring the Health and Human Services Department and the National Institutes for Health (NIH) from conducting studies on new human embryonic cell lines.
Anti-Israel protests target UK bank
London, Jan 17, IRNA -- One of Britain’s leading banks is being targeted in the latest wave of anti-Israel demonstrations across the country, protesting against the ongoing slaughter of more than 1,000 Palestinians in Gaza.
Protests were being held by the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign (SPSC) Saturday at Lloyds TSB in Edinburgh and Glasgow after the bank stopped clearing the cheques of Britain’s largest Palestinian charity, Interpal.
Largest-ever vaccination drive to be launched in African countries
By DPA,
New York: Close to 12 million people in Benin, Liberia and Sierra Leone will be vaccinated against yellow fever in the largest-ever health campaign in Africa, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said Tuesday.
"High vaccination coverage will prevent outbreaks of yellow fever, a disease that is very difficult to diagnose in the early stages of infection," said William Perea, coordinator of WHO's epidemic readiness and intervention unit.
Recent yellow fever outbreaks in these three African nations have been severe.
Autistic people make more rational decisions
By IANS,
London : People with autism-related disorders are less likely to make irrational decisions and are less influenced by gut instincts, according to the latest research.
Decision-making is a complex process, involving both intuition and analysis: analysis involves computation and more "rational" thought, but is slower; intuition, by contrast, is much faster, but less accurate, relying on heuristics, or "gut instincts".
Previous studies have shown that our response to a problem depends on how the problem is posed - the so called "framing effect".
British nuclear-powered submarine runs aground
By DPA,
London : A British nuclear-powered submarine has run aground near an island off the west coast of Scotland, the ministry of defence (MoD) said Friday.
Sri Lankan opposition to put up presidential candidate
Colombo : Heating up Sri Lanka's presidential race, several opposition parties Monday pledged to support common candidate Maithreepala Sirisena in the poll battle against...
Cambodian official: Thai troops to withdraw from 2nd occupied border temple
By Xinhua,
Phnom Penh : The Thai side has agreed to withdraw its troops from a temple at Cambodia's border province Otdar Meanchey and reduce its total number of soldiers within the border area, an advisor to Prime Minister Hun Sen said here Tuesday.
Either country will keep only 10 military personnel at the 13-century Ta Moan Thom Temple and Thailand is also to decrease its troops that have accumulated during the 22-day-long standoff with Cambodia near the border, said the advisor on condition of anonymity.
Lovato plays games with Britney on ‘X Factor’
By IANS,
London: Singer Demi Lovato and Britney Spears passed the time during breaks on the set of "The X Factor" playing games.
Heavy fighting as military inches towards LTTE strongholds
By IANS,
Colombo : Fierce fighting broke out Saturday between the government troops and the Tamil Tiger rebels in Sri Lanka's restive north as the military claimed to be closing in on the rebels' "administrative capital".
The defence ministry Saturday evening claimed at least 11 guerrillas of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were killed and 21 wounded when the advancing troops "confronted elements of the LTTE head-on during their forward push into the main garrison township Kilinochchi".
Remarks on Prophet Muhammad: Sale of Indian products hit in Gulf
Several calls for the boycott of Indian products flooded social media with several hashtags critical of the Indian government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi...
Obama willing to compromise on offshore drilling
By DPA,
Washington : US presidential candidate Barack Obama has voiced willingness to compromise on offshore US oil drilling as part of "comprehensive" energy legislation.
In what was quickly seen as a significant reversal, Obama told Florida's Palm Beach Post newspaper in an interview Friday that he was open to offshore drilling if it would break a logjam on energy legislation in Congress.
"My interest is in making sure we've got the kind of comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices," Obama said.
Taiwan leader welcome, but no flag please: China
By Manish Chand
IANSNew Delhi : China has told India that it has no issues with the coming visit of Taiwanese opposition leader Ma Ying-jeou as long as he does not sport a Taiwanese flag on his car or flaunt any independent Taiwanese insignia or identity.
‘British Asian officer in 300,000 pound deal to end racism claim’
By IANS,
London : London’s police force is set to pay Britain's highest-ranking Asian police officer around 300,000 pounds in an out-of-court settlement for racial discrimination, a newspaper reported Wednesday.
Assistant Commissioner Tarique Ghaffur, who was suspended after a high-profile public spat with Metropolitan Police Commissioner Ian Blair, is close to agreeing to the settlement after originally asking for 1.2 million pounds, the Daily Mail said.
FBI foiled terrorist plans to attack US on July 4
Washington : The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) thwarted terrorist plans in recent weeks to attack United States during July 4 festivities and...
Sri Lanka rejects Canada’s call for ceasefire
By IANS,
Colombo: Sri Lanka Monday rejected a call by Canada for a ceasefire in the island's north, where the army has cornered Tamil Tigers in its ongoing fight-to-finish military campaign.
Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama conveyed his government's position when he was met by Canada's Minister for International Co-operation Beverley J. Oda, who is on a brief official visit to Colombo.
Mexico to US: No Conditions to Fight Drugs
By Prensa Latina,
Mexico : National Human Rights Commission President Jose Luis Soberanes rejected US conditioned terms to grant Mexico aid to fight drug traffickers and their widening violence.
Soberanes talked about the agreement of US Senate, which imposes legal modifications to Mexico to control the behavior of its army and police forces, which will have to be verified by US embassy here.
The Ombudsman indicated that decision affects the sovereignty of Mexico because US Senate does not have jurisdiction to decide in Mexican territory.
Lower fat hormone levels turn blood infection deadly
By IANS,
Toronto: Below normal levels of a natural fat hormone may heighten death risk from sepsis -- an overwhelming infection of the blood which claims thousands of lives every year -- says an Indian-origin Canadian scientist.
The study by St. Michael's Hospital researchers and the University of Toronto (U-T) focussed on adiponectin, a hormone secreted by visceral fat surrounding the abdominal organs.
US denies pulling punches with China on Tibet issue
By Arun Kumar, IANS
Washington : The US has repeated its call to Beijing to engage in a dialogue with the Dalai Lama, denying suggestions it was pulling punches so as not to jeopardise President W. George Bush's visit to China.
"We are very concerned about the situation in Tibet," State Department spokesman Tom Casey said Monday drawing attention to Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice's call Saturday to Beijing to urge restraint in its response to protesters against Chinese rule in Tibet.
UNSC deplores widespread violence following Kenyan elections
By KUNA
United Nations : The UN Security Council late Wednesday expressed "deep concern" that civilians continued to be killed, abused and displaced in Kenya following the disputed December elections, and at the political, security and economic impact of that crisis on the wider region.
Chavez offers help to French aid mission for Betancourt
By DPA
Caracas : Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has offered France his help in its humanitarian mission seeking release of former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, in captivity of the leftist rebels.
Chavez said Thursday night in Caracas that he offered to personally escort the French mission, which includes a former French consul and doctors, during a telephone call with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.


