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“Open your Hearts, Open your Minds” towards Asylum Seekers: Labour’s new leader Jeremy Corbyn...

By M Ghazali Khan Tens of thousands of demonstrators converging from all around into central London marched to Downing Street, the precinct where the British...

Tropical storm hits China’s southeast coast after killing hundreds in Philippines

By SPA, Shanghai : Tropical storm Fengshen brought another bout of wet misery to southern China on Wednesday with heavy rains and strong winds after killing hundreds in the Philippines, reported ap. China's southeast was still recovering from flooding earlier this month that killed at least 63 people, forced the evacuation of at least 1.66 million and caused billions of dollars in damage in a region anchored by the country's manufacturing capital, the Pearl River Delta in Guangdong province.

China mudslides toll rises to 1,287

By IANS, Beijing : Mudslides triggered by torential rains in northwest China in the past 10 days have claimed 1,287 lives so far, with 457 people went missing, authorities said. The death toll from the mudslides in Zhouqu County, northwest China's Gansu Province, rose to 1,287 Wednesday, with 457 still missing, according to Xinhua. The rains Aug 7 prompted an avalanche of sludge and debris to crash down on the county seat of Zhouqu the following morning, ripping many houses from their foundations and tearing multi-story apartment buildings in half.

52 suspects arrested in Sri Lanka’s deadly bus blasts

By SPA, Colombo, Sri Lanka : Sri Lanka's military says 52 suspects have been arrested in connection with Friday's twin bus bombings that killed 23 passengers and wounded dozens. Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara says that 51 suspected rebels were picked up around Moratuwa, the suburb of capital Colombo where a roadside bomb ripped through a bus, killing 21 passengers. Another suspect was arrested in the hilly central district of Kandy, where a second blast tore through a bus, killing two passengers, he was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.

Finnish PM pledges to provide his house to refugees

Helsinki: Finnish Prime Minister Juha Sipila said he is willing to provide his little used house to refugees, reported Finnish media on Saturday. Sipila travels...

Nepal cabinet finally moves to take over king’s property

Kathmandu(IANS) : Almost 10 months after Nepal's new constitution laid down that King Gyanendra would forfeit all the property he had inherited from his slain brother and the royal palaces would be put to public use, the cabinet finally passed an ordinance, beginning the legal process. On Tuesday, Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala held a meeting of his cabinet to pass an ordinance for establishing a trust that would in future administer the six royal palaces and land measuring over 25 million sq ft, which are to be eventually put to public use.

Don’t stay away from voting, says South African president

By IANS, Pretoria : South African President Kgalema Motlanthe Wednesday appealed to people to cast their vote in the country's fourth general election since the end of apartheid, saying "it's an important opportunity and everyone must utilise it". After casting his vote shortly after 7 a.m., Bua News reported Motlanthe as saying: "You can't improve any situation by staying away from it. If you have a vote and you don't use it, it will take five years (until the next election)."

HuJI chief gets death term for 2004 grenade attack on British envoy

By IANS, Dhaka : The chief of Harkatul Jihad-e-Islami (HuJI) and two others of the banned militant outfit were sentenced to death Tuesday for a grenade attack that seriously injured British envoy to Bangladesh Anwar Choudhury and killed three people in May 2004. A Speedy Trial Tribunal in Sylhet in northeastern Bangladesh convicted HuJI chief Mufti Abdul Hannan for the attack, Star Online reported. Choudhury, a British diplomat of Bangladeshi origin, was hospitalised for long after the attack. He completed his term as the envoy earlier this year before returning to London.

Labour retains UK’s Little India seat: Virendra Sharma wins Ealing Southall

By Prasun Sonwalkar, IANS

London : The Labour party Friday retained the two seats of Sedgefield and Ealing Southall (better known as Little India) but with reduced majorities, prompting charges that Labour may lose more ground by the time the next general elections are held.

The by-elections were the first after Gordon Brown took over as Britain's prime minister, but his delight was dampened by the fact that the winning margin in both constituencies had dwindled since the 2005 general elections.

Londoner of Nigerian descent suspect in terror attack

By IANS, London : Michael Adebolajo, a 28-year-old Londoner of Nigerian descent, is one of the two suspects who hacked to death a British soldier in London, a media report said Thursday.

Michael Jackson has a fourth child?

By IANS, London: Late pop legend Michael Jackson is rumoured to have a fourth child, Omer Bhatti, who was given a front-row seat at the singer's memorial service earlier this month. Norwegian dancer Bhatti, 25, is thought to be the "Billie Jean" singer's child from a one-night stand, reports imdb.com. Jackson, who passed away June 25, is said to have admitted to friends in 2004 he was his father. Bhatti is now believed to be seeking a DNA test to determine if he is a descendent of the King of Pop.

Nepal government, ethnic parties reach deal to end strike

By DPA Kathmandu : Nepal's government and the agitating ethnic group in the southern part of the country Thursday reached a deal to address ethnic demands and end more than two weeks of crippling strikes. The deal came after days of talks between the government and the ethnic United Democratic Madhesi Front (UDMF) in the capital. The UDMF announced the withdrawal of a crippling indefinite general strike it imposed across the region for the last 16 days following the agreement.

FBI going undercover on Facebook

By DPA, San Francisco : US law-enforcement agents are being trained to use social-networking sites like Facebook to befriend suspects and collect evidence, according to documents released by advocacy group The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). The Justice Department internal training document, called Obtaining and Using Evidence from Social Networking Sites, revealed that undercover agents for the FBI and other agencies set up false profiles on sites like My Space and Facebook to try to nab suspects by getting access to their social networks.

India recalls envoy to New Zealand after wife accused of assaulting staff

New Delhi/Wellington: India on Saturday asked its envoy in New Zealand to return following allegations that his wife assaulted a member of the domestic...

Mass protest against Indian PM and Hindutva Agenda planned in NYC

By TCN News, New York City: A broad coalition of organizations and individuals under the umbrella Alliance for Justice and Accountability have announced a rally, demonstration and press conference outside the Madison Square Garden to register their protest against India's PM Narendra Modi, as well to protest against India's descent into intolerance, religious repression and economic exploitation of the poor.

Age doesn’t dent one’s ability to make sound decisions

By IANS, Washington : Just because your mom has turned 85, you shouldn't assume you'll have to take over her financial matters. She may be just as good or better than you at making quick, sound, money-making decisions, according to researchers at the Duke University Medical Centre (DUMC). "It's not age, it's cognition that makes the difference in decision-making," said Scott Huettel, DUMC associate professor of psychology and neuroscience. He recently led a lab study in which participants could gain or lose money based on their decisions.

Wall Street mixed amid muddled economic signals

By DPA, New York : Major US stock indices have turned in mixed results. Rising energy prices pushed oil stocks higher, and banks rose amid signs of easing credit markets. Concerns about a looming slump in US corporate profits continued Tuesday, though, weighing on some sectors of the stock market. A survey of analysts by the Bloomberg financial news agency found an average estimate that profits at S&P 500 companies probably fell by 20 percent in the October-December quarter.

‘This is India’s 9/11’

By IANS, New York : Outraged at the Mumbai terror attack, Indians in the US and community organizations termed it as India 9/11 and an assault on its financial heart. "Like 9/11 (the Sep 11, 2001 terror attack on the US), this attack was on India's financial capital," said the Hindu America Foundation. Urging for calm and restraint by the people, the Foundation demanded the Maharashtra state government and the union government take emergency measures to halt further attacks and bring the terrorists to justice.

World Bank lends $441 mn to China

By Xinhua, Beijing : The World Bank (WB) Wednesday approved a $441 million loan to China for improving energy efficiency and reducing emissions from power plants in the country. "Improving energy efficiency is a priority area for the World Bank's work in China," said David Dollar, the bank's country director. An energy efficiency project, co-financed by the World Bank and Global Environment Facility (GEF), would get $200 million.

Fairness of Zimbabwe elections compromised: Rights body

By DPA Harare/Johannesburg : Any prospect of free and fair elections in Zimbabwe on March 29 have been undermined by "serious electoral flaws and human rights abuses," Human Rights Watch said Wednesday. Close to six million Zimbabweans are registered to vote in synchronized presidential, parliamentary and local elections, in which 84-year-old President Robert Mugabe is seeking to extend his 28-year leadership by five years.

Mass grave found in Kosovo

By DPA

Pristina : Kosovo authorities Thursday started retrieving human remains from a suspected mass grave from the 1999 conflict in the province.

New Zealand army to take biblical references off guns

By DPA, Wellington : The New Zealand Defence Force will remove abbreviated references to Bible verses from US-made gun sights used by its forces in Afghanistan, saying they were "inappropriate" and could be used in enemy propaganda. Military chiefs said they were unaware that inscriptions on the Trijicon advanced combat optical gunsights, also used by US and British troops, included references to verses in the Bible until alerted by a newspaper.

Police shut down 9/11 plotters’ mosque in Hamburg

By DPA, Hamburg: German police Monday shut down a mosque in Hamburg which gained notoriety as a meeting place for several plotters of the Sep 11 attacks on New York in 2001. A city spokesman said that the Arabic cultural organization backing the Taiba Mosque in the city had been banned. Police forced entry to the mosque in the early hours and searched the site, as well as the apartments of four governing committee members, confiscating material.

Canada injects billions into markets to ease credit crunch

By IANS, Toronto : With credit squeeze hitting Canadian markets, the Bank of Canada Friday announced injection of billions of dollars into term lending markets even as the finance claimed that the Canadian economy was doing fine. In a statement, the nation's central bank said that beginning Sept 19 it has extended $8 billion to provide liquidity to term lending markets.

Spain Digs Deep into CIA Flights

By Prensa Latina Madrid : The Spanish National Attorney General's Office demanded testimony from people involved in the passage of secret US prisoner flights to Guantanamo base, revealed El Pais Newspaper on Monday. Prosecutor Vicente Gonzalez Mota launched the demand that involves airport and plane officers as well as military and civil controllers of air bases in Moron de la Frontera (Sevilla), Rota (Cadiz) and Torrejon de Ardoz (Madrid).

Obama declares emergency for New York ahead of hurricane

By IANS, Washington : US President Barack Obama declared Friday a state of emergency for New York state as Hurricane Irene is approaching the US East Coast, Xinhua reported.

Congo Conflict Endangers Region, UN

By Prensa Latina, Nairobi : UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Friday that the armed conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo is endangering the area near the African Great Lakes, and demanded a ceasefire. A summit was held in Kenya to analyze the Congolese conflict and attendants urged an immediate ceasefire in North Kivu, the opening of a humanitarian row, the abidance by agreements signed between Congo and neighboring Rwanda, and the reinforcement of the UN mission to Congo.

EU-Japan summit to discuss global issues

By KUNA, Brussels : The 17th annual EU-Japan summit to be held in Tokyo on Wednesday will focus on strengthening cooperation on key global challenges such as climate change and meeting the Millennium Development Goals, particularly in Africa. This meeting, ahead of the G8 from 7-9 July in Japan, will also address the situation in the WTO Doha Development Agenda negotiations, and regional issues in East Asia, the Middle East, Afghanistan and Myanmar, as well as EU-Japan relations, according to an European Commission (EC) statement today.

Russian Corp Resumes Co-Op with Cuba

By Odalys Buscaron Ochoa, Prensa Latina, Moscow : Russian and Cuban executives consider positive negotiations to resume exchange with Russia's heavy truck Corporation KAMAZ through the signing of new contracts. At a business meeting with a delegation led by Transportation Minister Jorge Luis Sierra, Company General Director Kogogin lauded the resumption of active ties with the Cuban market.

French National Assembly approves ban on burqa

By DPA, Paris : The lower house of the French parliament, the National Assembly, Tuesday passed a bill banning the wearing of the Islamic all-body veil, or burqa, in all public places. If approved in the fall by the Senate and then by the Constitutional Council, the law would impose a fine of 150 euros ($190) or a lesson in citizenship on any woman caught wearing the burqa outside her home. A man convicted of forcing a woman to wear the garment, meanwhile, would be liable to a fine of up to 30,000 euros and a one-year prison sentence.

Medvedev will stand for 2012 election, says official

By IANS, Moscow : A top Kremlin official said Friday Russian President Dmitry Medvedev intends to seek re-election in the 2012 presidential poll.

Obama envoy holding first talks with Netanyahu government

By DPA, Jerusalem : US special envoy George Mitchell met Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman Thursday morning, holding his first talks in Israel since the new government of hardline Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took office last month. Meeting Israeli President Shimon Peres earlier in the morning, the envoy reiterated Barack Obama administration's commitment to Israeli security, but also to a two-state solution to the Middle East conflict. Netanyahu's office has said his government is still undergoing a policy review, which will take several more weeks to complete.

Ukraine enters the WTO

By Prensa Latina, Kiev : Ukraine was definitely approved Friday by the General Council of the World Trade Organization (WTO) to become member 152 of this multilateral institution. The first sign of approval emerged February 5, when president Victor Yuschenko and the general director of the WTO, Pascal Lamy, signed the agreement in Geneva after almost 18 years of waiting. The entrance of Kiev to the trade forum was backed on April 10 by the Ukrainian parliament (Supreme Rada) with 411 votes in favor of a total of 450.

Biofuels a risk, but not all bad: UN report

By IANS, London : The global biofuels boom risks harming the world's poorest people by forcing them off the land they depend on, says a report published Monday by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED). But the report adds that biofuels are not all bad, and shows that their production can also allow poor groups to increase their access to land and improve their livelihoods if the right policies are in place.

Get things done now, Obama told

By IANS, Washington : Now that he has reclaimed the US presidency, Barack Obama needs to "think big" and take bold steps both domestically as well as abroad, a Washington Post writer has said.

Spending cuts to push unemployment to three million in Britain

By Venkata Vemuri, IANS, London : The British government's spending cuts are projected to result in 500,000 public sector job cuts between now and 2015 and the unemployment level expected to touch the three million mark. The employment group, Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), has warned in a report that there was little prospect of real wage growth until at least 2015, and public sector workers faced pay cuts. The chancellor is expected to lay out sweeping cuts to try to trim the 156 billion pound deficit in his budget 22 June.

Hong Kong court rejects appeal of ‘milkshake murder’ convict

BY DPA, Hong Kong : The wife of a wealthy American investment banker Monday lost her appeal against her life sentence in Hong Kong for killing her husband in the so-called "milkshake murder" case. Nancy Kissel, 44, drugged her husband Robert, a senior Merrill Lynch banker, with a strawberry milkshake then smashed him over the head with a statuette in their luxury Hong Kong apartment in 2003. Her sensational 2005 trial had all the elements of a Hollywood thriller. It was the highest-profile expatriate criminal case in Hong Kong for years and generated headlines worldwide.

EU condemns Russia’s decision on Abkhazia, South Ossetia

By Xinhua, Brussels : The European Union (EU) Tuesday condemned the Russian decision to recognise Georgia's two breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent countries. The EU in a statement said Russia's move is "contrary to the principles of Georgia's independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, recognised by the UN Charter, the conference on security and cooperation in Europe and UN security council resolutions".

Global swine flu toll rises to 1,799

By DPA, Geneva : At least 1,799 people have died of swine flu since April, the World Health Organisation (WHO) reported Wednesday in its latest global tally. The figures showed that 182,166 infections had been confirmed by national health authorities, though the total number of people who had contracted the disease was higher. The Americas remained hardest hit, with at least 105,882 infections and 1,579 deaths. Europe had more than 32,000 cases and 53 deaths, while South-East Asia had over 13,172 infections, of which 106 were fatal.

Two face jail in Britain for 9/11-like plot

By IANS, London : Two members of a terrorist cell face jail in Britain after they admitted their involvement in a suicide bomb plot comparable to "another 9/11", a media report said.

Man raped daughter, locked up another in room for a year

By IANS, London : A man in the US repeatedly raped one of his daughters, who was less than 13 years old, and locked up another in a room no bigger than a wardrobe for more than a year, it was reported here Tuesday. The case is similar to that of Josef Fritzl, an Austrian father who kept his daughter locked in a room for years and repeatedly raped her. Daily Mail reported that Jeffrey York not only ruled his home with fear, he prevented his wife and seven children from meeting friends and family.

Britain starts voting

By IANS, London : Balloting was under way in Britain Thursday to elect a new government amid growing fears of a hung parliament. Polling began across the country at 7 a.m., with people queuing up in many of nearly 50,000 voting centres. Voting closes at 10 p.m. by which time the fate of about 4,150 candidates in the fray will be decided in 649 constituencies. Election has been postponed to May 27 in one constituency where a candidate died during campaign. More than 44 million people are eligible to vote. Preliminary results are expected early Friday.

Nepali Election Commission releases names of candidates elected under PR system

By Xinhua, Kathmandu : Nepal's Election Commission (EC) Thursday released the final list of 335 candidates nominated for the Constituent Assembly (CA) under proportional representation (PR) system. According to the EC, out of 54 political parties contested in April 10 CA elections, 25 parties managed to win seats through PR system. The EC distributed certificates to winning candidates representing 25 parties amidst a program held in Nepali capital Kathmandu.

Darfur rebels agree to a joint front for peace talks

By DPA Nairobi/Arusha : A three-day meeting meant to unite fractured rebel groups from Darfur ended Monday, with representatives vowing to negotiate on a joint platform with the Sudanese government to stop the conflict in the embattled region. The United Nations and African Union (AU) mediated the talks in the northern Tanzanian town of Arusha, which saw the eight rebel factions agree to present a common position when negotiating with Khartoum and recommended peace talks to begin in two or three months.

Train-bus collision kills 10 in Slovakia

By Xinhua, Prague : At least 10 people were killed and 20 others injured Saturday when a train collided with a bus carrying 35 people at a railway crossing in central Slovakia. The accident occurred at about 9 a.m. (0800 GMT) Saturday near Brezno town in central Slovakia, the country's state-run TASR news agency said.

Greece Nixes Atlanta Decision on the Five

By Prensa Latina, Athens : Thousands of Greek young people and workers condemned the recent decision taken by Atlanta’s Court of Appeals against the antiterrorists Cuban Five imprisoned in US, local media reports Wednesday. The demonstrators, gathered at US embassy in Athens, expressed their solidarity to the people of Cuba and their indignation before the decision issued by that hearing on June 4.

Explosion at NYC building injures 17, including 4 children

NEW YORK, October 06, SPA -- An explosion Saturday at an apartment building in the Harlem neighborhood of New York hurt 17 people, including four children and a firefighter, and spewed pieces of the building out onto the street, officials said according to The Associated Press.

Italian man shoots two women dead, kills self

By IANS/AKI, Rome: A pistol-wielding bankrupt man stormed into a government office in central Italy's Perugia city and singled out two women employees who he shot dead before committing suicide.

99-year-old divorces wife for affair 60 years ago

By IANS, London : A 99-year-old Italian man is divorcing his wife of 77 years, and the mother to his five children, after he found out she had an affair more than 60 years ago.

Protests against ‘Tibet independence’ in China

By Xinhua, Beijing : Demonstrations against "Tibet independence" continued Sunday in several Chinese cities. Demonstrators were seen in northwestern city of Xian, and the northeastern city of Harbin and eastern city Jinan following Saturday's demonstrations in Beijing, and other places. The demonstrators gathered in front of outlets of the French supermarket chain Carrefour, in the northwestern city of Xian, chanting "Oppose Tibet independence", and "Oppose CNN's anti-China statements".

‘The true winners today are the world’s children’ : UN chief

United Nations: UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Friday hailed the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzai saying, "The true...

Zimbabwe election officials charged with ‘deflating Mugabe vote’

By DPA Johannesburg/Harare : Seven employees of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission were due to appear in court on charges of fraud and criminal abuse of duty for allegedly deflating the vote of President Robert Mugabe in recent presidential elections. The seven are accused of deliberately underestimating the 84-year-old leader's tally in the March 29 elections by around 5,000 votes, South African radio Tuesday quoted a police spokesman as saying. Ten days after the election, the commission has yet to announce the results.

At Least 144 Killed In S. Philippines Violence: Officials

By Bernama, Manila : At least 144 people have been killed in recent violence after some radical separatists attacked civilians in the Philippines' southern region of Mindanao, Xinhua news agency quoted disaster-relief and military officials as saying on Saturday. The death toll from attacks by members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in Mindanao has risen to 144 as of Saturday morning, said the Philippine National Disaster Coordinating Council. In its latest report, the agency said 53 persons were wounded in the attacks and one remained missing.

Protest bacchanalia ends in rowdyism, paralyse London Tube

By IANS, London : Police arrested 17 people and closed six London Underground stations after thousands of revellers organised a non-stop drinks party late Saturday night to protest a ban on tippling in the city's most popular mass transit system. Four train drivers and three Underground staff were assaulted, one police vehicle was damaged and two officers assaulted and another was injured in the chaotic revelry that paralysed the underground transport system, a Guardian online report said Sunday.

Don’t flee Myanmar, exiled leaders advise activists

By Syed Zarir Hussain Moreh (Myanmar-India Border), Sep 28 (IANS) Exiled Myanmar leaders have urged pro-democracy activists against fleeing their country in the wake of the ongoing military crackdown, according to information reaching this Indian town. Exiled leaders who live in Moreh on the border with Myanmar reported that hundreds of pro-democracy activists were preparing to flee Myanmar following the government assault on pro-democracy protestors.

Humans could live on floating mini cities in future

By IANS, London: Humans in the future could be living in floating mini cities that drift across the Pacific Ocean as if on giant water lilies.

Seven Injured In Brawl In Russian Province

By Bernama, Vladivostok : Seven people were injured in a brawl that broke out between Russian and Chinese students in Vladivostok on Tuesday, Russia's Itar-Tass news agency reported Wednesday. The brawl occurred near the State University of Economics and Services in the downtown area following a heated argument, which later turned into fist fighting using knives. Quoting the Russian news agency's report, approximately 40 students were involved, and four of them, including one Chinese student received out-patient treatments.

US stocks higher on positive jobs data

By IANS, New York : US stocks jumped Thursday after a government report showed the jobs market was steadily improving.

I am not a war monger, Kouchner says

By DPA Paris : French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner tried to distance himself from statements he had made that the Iranian nuclear crisis could lead to war by saying that he was in favour of a negotiated settlement, the daily Le Monde reported Tuesday. "I do not want it said that I'm a war monger. My message was one of peace, serious and determined," Kouchner said on the aircraft taking him to Moscow.

Myanmar starts releasing over 6,000 prisoners under amnesty

By DPA, Yangon : Myanmar authorities Saturday began to free prisoners from Yangon's notorious Insein jail, including some political prisoners, under a government amnesty for 6,313 inmates nationwide. Eyewitnesses saw scores of prisoners leaving Insein Saturday evening. Among them were Thet Wai, a member of the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) party, and five other low-ranking opposition members. Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her deputy Tin Oo have apparently been excluded from the amnesty. Suu Kyi and Tin Oo have been under house arrest since mid-2003.

Russia and China to step up military cooperation: Putin

By DPA Moscow : Russia and China aim to step up their military cooperation in the battle against terrorism, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday while attending a major anti-terrorism military exercise by six regional states. Putin made the remarks while observing the "Peace Mission 2007" exercises by the six-nation Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Chebarkul in the southern Urals, Interfax reported.

Powerful North Korean military figure dies

By DPA, Seoul : Jo Myong Rok, one of the most influential military figures of the North Korean communist regime and a close confidante of military ruler Kim Jong Il, died at age 82.

US welcomes resumption of Japanese anti-terrorism efforts

By DPA Washington : The US welcomed the decision by the Japanese government to resume naval operations in the Indian Ocean in support of the war on terrorism in Afghanistan. "We were disappointed that the cooperation had to cease temporarily," US State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey said Friday. "We welcome the decision by the Japanese government to renew this very important support."

China sparks aircraft carrier scare, but says it will be ‘defensive’

By IANS, London : Refusing to scotch speculation that China is building one or more aircraft carriers, a senior Chinese defence ministry official has said if and when such a warship is built it will be used for defensive purposes. "The question is not whether you have an aircraft carrier, but what you do with your aircraft carrier," Major General Qian Lihua, a senior official with the ministry of defence, said in comments published here Monday.

Chinese students ready to donate sperm

By IANS

Beijing : Donations can be in money, goods, blood, organs and bone marrow. But what happens when you mix heartfelt charity with a handful of self-gratification? Sperm donation.

And college students are taking a leading role in this field in China, said chinanews on its website.

Nearly 10 percent of China's couples cannot conceive, with male infertility being the reason for one-third of them. Experts put the blame on pollution, work-related stress and unhealthy lifestyle.

TV reporter in critical condition after falling 25 floors

By Xinhua, Wenzhou (China) : A TV reporter is in critical condition after he fell from the roof of a 25-storey building in China's Zhejiang Province Tuesday, an official said. Bao Cunliang, a reporter of the Wenzhou TV channel, fell from the roof of the TV station's building at 8.45 a.m. Bao was shooting the streets from the top of the building. He was in a critical condition after the fall, said Dong Jinghai, news director of the TV channel.

US shuts down 80 websites for selling fake goods

By IANS, Washington : Over 80 websites have been shut by US officials after it was found they were dealing in counterfeit goods.

Doctors use vodka drip to save dying man

Sydney, Oct 10 (DPA) Australian doctors in a far-north Queensland hospital saved the life of an Italian tourist by putting him on a drip-feed of vodka to flush out the poison he had drunk in a suicide attempt, local media reported Wednesday. "The patient was drip-fed about three standard drinks an hour for three days in the intensive care unit," physician Todd Fraser said Tuesday. "The hospital's administrators were also very understanding when we explained our reasons for buying a case of vodka."

German court finds former Nazi guard guilty of 27,900 deaths

By IANS/RIA Novosti, Munich : A court in Munich Thursday found 91-year-old Ukraine-born Ivan Demjanjuk guilty of helping to kill at least 27,900 Jews at a Nazi extermination camp in 1943.

Spain to offer 500,000 euros in aid to cyclone-hit Myanmar

By Xinhua, Madrid : The Spanish government said on Tuesday that it would contribute 500,000 euros (775,000 U.S. dollars) to the World Food Program to help cyclone-hit Myanmar. The announcement was made during a meeting at Spain's International Cooperation Agency for Development (AECID) on the situation in Myanmar which was hit by Tropical cyclone Nargis recently. What most urgently needed in Myanmar included blankets, drinking water and food, according to reports from Spain's embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, and from some non-governmental organizations.

2,700-year-old human skeletons found in Mexico

By IANS, Mexico City : Archaeologists claimed to have discovered a tomb with four skeletal remains dating back some 2,700 years in the ruins of a Mexican pyramid. The tomb at the ancestral site of Zoque ethnicity in southeastern state of Chiapas, "consists of the skeletons of four individuals, two of them wearing jade, along with ceramics and other objects prized by the culture of the period", the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) said.

Three dead, 16 injured in Nigerian suicide attacks

Abuja : At least three people were killed and 16 others injured in two suicide bombings Monday in northern Nigeria's Kano state, officials said. In...

Obama Moving into Clear Lead

By Prensa Latina, Washington : Senator Barack Obama (D.-Ill.) heads towards winning the Democratic candidature after his split win with Hillary Clinton in Oregon and Kentucky primaries. Obama scored 16 points in Oregon and the ex first lady 32 in Kentucky yet Real Clear Politics on-line says Obama won at least 42 of the 103 delegates matching majority popular vote. Obama, 46, regards his 182 lead on Clinton with 1957 commissioners a clear popular message, which he defined in Iowa as a sign to get 200 undecided superdelegates.

Sarah Palin to join Fox News

By DPA, Washington : Former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin has reached a deal to join Fox News as an occasional contributor, the New York Times reported Monday. The Republican former governor of Alaska will not have a regular programme, but will host a series that will air from time to time, the newspaper reported. Palin ran on John McCain's ticket in the 2008 elections, losing to President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden.

Nepal government accuses UN of meddling

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Paralysed by Maoist protests, Nepal's beleaguered government Thursday lashed out at the UN, accusing it of meddling in Nepal's internal matters. As the former Maoist guerrillas kept up their siege on government offices, Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal called an emergency meeting of the 22 ruling parties to decide the government's future strategy.

Six human heads found in Mexico

By IANS/EFE, Mexico City : Six human heads were found in two Mexican cities, while at least 13 people were gunned down in two separate incidents in the country, police said. The six human heads were found in Lerdo and Gomez Palacio cities, in Durango state. Two heads belonged to municipal police officers, who were reported missing last week. The bodies of the two officers were found later, officials at the Durango state Attorney General's Office said.

Cuba Seeks Support to Release The Five

By Prensa Latina Geneva : Cuba sought support from the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention on Tuesday to speed the release of the five Cuban anti-terrorists serving unjust terms in US prisons. The proposal was submitted during an interactive debate with the president-rapporteur of the Group on Mercenary Use, the president-rapporteur for Arbitrary Detention, and the rapporteurr on Toxic Products and Waste.

International community apprised on Tibetans’ plight

By IANS, Dharamsala : Tibetans in exile are reaching out to the international community to intervene in ending human rights violations of Tibetans in China.

Norway to fund UN project for women’s role in panchayats

By IANS, New Delhi : The Norwegian government Wednesday signed an agreement to grant the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) $9 million for strengthening participation of women in local governance in India. The partnership agreement was signed by UNIFEM executive director Ines Alberdi and the Ambassador of Norway to India Ann Ollestad. "This signature is an initial step in working to promote women's participation in local governance and government in India," Alberdi told reporters here at the UN office.

China arrests 59 people over Tibet ‘rumours’

By DPA, Beijing : Police in China's Tibet region have arrested 59 people suspected of "spreading rumours" in the nine months since Tibetans staged violent protests against Chinese rule in the regional capital of Lhasa, state media said Friday. After the protests and rioting in Lhasa in March, "some people started making up stories and spreading rumours, posing a threat to the security of the region and its people", the China Daily newspaper quoted Xin Yuanming, the city's deputy police chief, as saying.

Mbeki faces ouster as ANC head at party conference

By DPA Polokwane (South Africa) : A leadership conference of South Africa's ruling African National Congress (ANC) that could oust President Thabo Mbeki after 10 years as the party head got underway Sunday in the northern town of Polokwane. Mbeki, 65, headed into the conference as the underdog in a bitter race against ANC deputy president Jacob Zuma, the 65-year-old Zulu politician who took nearly two-thirds of the votes at the party nominations level.

Hare Krishna soliciting at airport barred; court upholds ban

By IANS, Washington : The California Supreme Court has upheld a Los Angeles International Airport ordinance barring Hare Krishnas from soliciting donations inside airport terminals. "Soliciting the immediate receipt of funds at a busy international airport like Los Angeles is particularly problematic," the court said Thursday in a ruling written by Justice Carlos Moreno. "The problems posed by solicitations for the immediate receipt of funds that arise in any public place would be exacerbated in the often crowded and hectic environment of a large international airport."

54 high-speed trains recalled in China

By IANS, Beijing : Fiftyfour high-speed trains used on the Beijing-Shanghai route will be recalled over safety concerns, its manufacturers said Friday.

OPEC shows optimism about world oil market outlook

By IANS, Vienna : The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has revised upward the demand for crude oil in 2013, showing confidence about the future oil market.

Russian Troops to Provide Security

By Prensa Latina, Moscow : Russian Foreign Minister Serguei Lavrov reiterated Friday that his country will provide internal security to the rebel republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, by virtue of bilateral agreements. By a telephone conversation with the US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Lavrov emphasized that international observers will be deployed only around the territories already mentioned.

31 killed in Burundi bar attack

By IANS, Bujumbura (Burundi) : Thirty-one people were killed when gunmen opened fire at a bar in western Burundi, Xinhua reported Monday.

British cattle factory to house 8,000 cows

By IANS, London : An ambitious plan to set up a 50-million-pound cattle factory, where over 8,000 cows will be milked around the clock, has been unveiled in Britain. First of its kind in Britain, the industrial-scale farm will house the UK's largest dairy herd in Western Europe inside giant metal sheds with little access to green grass or sunshine, the Daily Mail reported Friday. The farm, where 8,100 'battery cows' will be milked around the clock, is expected to be built at Nocton, south of Lincoln.

Eight of 10 Malala attack suspects were acquitted, confirms police

Islamabad : Eight of the 10 militants reportedly jailed for their role in the 2012 attack on Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai have been freed,...

दानिश सिद्दीक़ी की मौत पर खुश क्यों हैं नफ़रत के सौदागर !

-यूसुफ़ अंसारी अफ़ग़ानिस्तानी सेना और तालिबान के बीच चल रही जंग को कवर करने अफग़ानिस्तान गए न्यूज़ एजेंसी रॉयटर्स के फोटो जर्नलिस्ट दानिश सिद्दीक़ी की...

Public wrath makes Nepal revoke state honours

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Bowing to mounting public outrage, Nepal's beleaguered government Wednesday decided to withdraw the state honours conferred on two controversial security personnel, though a tainted former army chief was spared.

Pashupatinath to be dragged to court?

By Sudeshna Sarkar, IANS, Kathmandu : Seven months after Nepal's god-king Gyanendra was stripped of his crown and legal immunity, the shadow of prosecution lies over the patron of the deposed monarch, Lord Pashupatinath, whose temple in Kathmandu valley is one of the eight holiest Hindu shrines.

China sends activist, daughter to labour camp

By DPA, Beijing : China has sentenced a well-known environmental activist and his daughter to "reform through labour" after accusing them of "endangering state security" by disclosing details of radioactive pollution from a uranium mine, rights groups said Friday. Sun Xiaodi, a former employee of the state-run Number 792 Uranium Mine in the northwestern province of Gansu, has campaigned for more than a decade to draw attention to pollution from the mine.

US Congress raises federal debt limit, imposes spending curbs

By DPA, Washington : The US Congress voted Thursday to raise the federal debt limit by an additional $1.9 trillion to prevent the government from defaulting on its skyrocketing debt levels. The controversial increase raises the debt ceiling to $14.3 trillion. The House of Representatives voted 233-187 to send the bill to President Barack Obama's desk for signature. The Senate passed the measure last week. As part of the initiative, Congress also toughened "pay-as-you-go" budgeting rules that will force future spending measures to be coupled with spending cuts elsewhere.

41,000 facing deportation go `missing’ in Canada

By IANS, Toronto : Canadian authorities have no clue on the whereabouts of 41,000-odd people who face deportation from the country. According to a report by attorney general Sheila Fraser, which was tabled in parliament Tuesday, 63,000 people currently face orders for removal from Canada. Only 22,000 of them are known to the Canadian Border Service Agency (CBSA), which is responsible for stopping and detaining those who entered the country illegally. But the agency knows nothing about the remaining 41,000 people to enforce removal orders against them.

Report points to 10-fold surge in number of Dutch neo-Nazis

By IRNA, Berlin : The number of active neo-Nazis in the Netherlands has increased 10-fold to around 400 since 2004, according to a report released Thursday by Leiden University and the Anne-Frank-Foundation. Neo-Nazi groups are much better organized and more active than at any time in the past, the study added. The authors of the report branded the Freedom Party of controversial Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders who is also a known Islamophob, as extreme right-wing.

OPEC oil price crosses $90 threshold

By DPA Vienna : The price of crude oil produced by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) crossed $90 for the first time Wednesday, according to a statement by the OPEC secretariat here Thursday. One barrel (159 litres) of crude produced in the 12 OPEC member states cost $90.71 Wednesday, the secretariat said, a marked increase from $89.13 the previous day.

Goodbye America? Not yet

By Manish Chand, IANS, Book: The Post-American World; Author: Fareed Zakaria; Publisher: Penguin/Viking; Price: Rs. 499. Don't write an obituary of the American superpower yet. It's not that America is declining, but everyone else is rising - this is the "great story of our times" Fareed Zakaria tells in his new book that goes to the heart of tectonic power shifts to the non-Western world in the 21st century.

North Korea Again Criticizes South Korean Leader As ‘Traitor’

By Bernama Seoul : North Korea again lambasted the conservative South Korean president as a "traitor" Saturday, urging all Koreans in and out of the Korean Peninsula to rally against his tough position toward Pyongyang, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported. On Tuesday, North Korea called President Lee Myung-bak a "traitor" when it lashed out at him by name for the first time since he took office in February.

G8 leaders to address climate, global economic problems

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The G8 summit, which opens Monday on the Island of Hokkaido, Japan, will focus on climate change and the global economy, a Kremlin aide said on Thursday. Arkady Dvorkovich, who is also Russian Sherpa at the G8, said during the three-day summit the G8 leaders will discuss African development, climate change, global economy, including energy prices, the situation on the food market, and international security. Separate documents will be adopted on each specific issue.

Obama never in danger from Secret Service scandal: Official

By IANS, Washington : US President Barack Obama was never in danger because of a prostitution scandal involving Secret Service agents during a trip to Colombia, a top official said Wednesday.

Venezuela threatens to cut oil to US

By IRNA Madrid : Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has threatened to cut off his country's oil shipments to the United States if a court ruling goes forward ordering Venezuelan assets be frozen in a case brought by Exxon Mobil. The dispute centers on President Hugo Chavez's nationalization of heavy oil projects. "One court orders that Venezuela be frozen," he said on his weekly television and radio program "Hello, President." "If you wind up freezing and hurt us, we will hurt you. Do you know how? We are not going to send oil to the United States."

Thaksin’s lawyers sentenced six-month in jail for bribery attempt

By Xinhua, Bangkok : Thailand's Supreme Court on Wednesday handed down a six-month jail term to each of three lawyers working for ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra over a charge of attempted bribery in which a lawyer handed a pastry box filled with cash to a court official on June 10. The three are lawyer Pichit Chuenban, his assistants Suppasri Srisawasdi and Thana Tansiri.

Europe’s biggest wind energy park inaugurated in Portugal

By DPA, Lisbon : Portugal's Economy Minister Manuel Pinho Wednesday inaugurated what was described as Europe's biggest wind energy park in the northern region of Viana do Castelo. The Alto Minho I park began generating energy already a year ago, gradually increasing its production to the full potential Wednesday. The 120 turbines divided between five sub-stations will produce 530 gigawatts annually or one percent of Portugal's energy. The park, which cost 400 million euros ($520 million), was expected to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 370,000 tonnes annually.

A unique mission: Beijing man tests radiation in the community

By Xinhua, Beijing : Holding a black electronic gadget, Cheng Jing, a 38-year-old man who lives here carefully reads the figures on its screen and jots them down in a notebook. Cheng is a voluntary "radiation examiner" in the community. Cheng began his free-of-charge initiative to measure radiation of home appliances and power transmission facilities some two months ago. For the past two years, many residents in Baiziwan have been worrying about electromagnetic radiation released by high-voltage wires in the area.

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.

Three killed as New Zealand air force helicopter crashes

By IANS, Wellington : At least three people were killed and one seriously injured after a helicopter of the New Zealand air force crashed, officials said Sunday. The Iroquois helicopter of the Royal New Zealand Air Force crashed while enroute from Ohakea to Anzac Day commemorations in Wellington. Police and ambulance services said they were called to the scene on farmland near the Paekakariki Hill Rd, 40km north east of Wellington about 6.45am.

Search on for happiest person in Singapore

By DPA Singapore : The search is on for the happiest person in Singapore following a recent survey that found nine in 10 people feel life is stressful and they need more fun, news reports said Thursday. Led by Philip Merry, chief executive and founder of the Global Leadership Academy, the hunt will last until March 30. Singaporeans can nominate anyone they know over the age of 18. He or she must contribute to society and be happy "no matter what life throws at them", The Straits Times quoted Merry, 58, as saying.

100 members of British armed forces are pagans

By IANS, London : Around 100 members of the British armed forces are pagans, while another 30 are witches, says a media report. The strange details about the beliefs of soldiers, sailors and airmen were obtained from the ministry of defence using the Freedom of Information Act, the Daily Mail reported. Paganism, which focuses on the worship of nature and its "vitality and spirituality", finds its roots in the traditional religions of ancient Britain. Stonehenge, the ancient British site of stone obelisks, is their favourite place of pilgrimage.

Small island states appeal for their survival

By IANS Colombo : Small island states that face the prospect of going under water as sea levels rise due to climate change sent an SOS to governments around the world Wednesday evening. The Male declaration on the human dimension of climate change - that was reached after a two-day meet of the Association of Small Island States (AOSIS) at Kurumba resort, called for immediate and effective action to protect these countries from the increasing threats of climate change.

China, US 2008 Trade Ups 10.5 Percent

By Prensa Latina, Beijing : Trade between the US and China grew 10.5 per cent in 2008, netting $333.7 billion, say specialized sources. This is the smallest growth since China joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2002 but reflects an active bilateral exchange. The General Customs Administration (GCA) rates Chinese sales to the US in $252.3 billion, which is 8.4 per cent higher than 2007. US exports to China netted $81.4 billion, for a 17.4 per cent growth compared to the previous year.

Huge Indian Ocean tsunamis occur every 600 years

By IANS, New York : The devastating Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, which claimed more than 200,000 lives, was not the first of its kind to hit the region, according to new research. The research also suggests that such huge tsunamis occur in the Indian Ocean every 600 to 700 years. The findings could be used to put statistical weight behind estimates of the likelihood of a future tsunami.

2,000-year-old palace discovered in Mexico

By IANS/EFE, Mexico City : A team of Mexican specialists discovered remnants of a 2,000-year-old Mayan palace at an archaeological site in the southeastern state of Chiapas.

Maldives’ new cabinet sworn in

By Xinhua, Male : The Maldives' new cabinet consisting of 14 members was sworn in here by Chief Justice Abdulla Saeed Wednesday night, one day after the archipelago's new President Mohamed Nasheed (Anni) assuming office. The 14 ministers are from six political groups within the coalition government led by Anni's Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP). Anni's MDP got five posts, including finance, defence, fisheries and agriculture, health, as well as housing, transport and environment.

Rice says Taiwanese referendum to join UN ‘provocative’

By DPA Washington : Taiwan's plan to hold a referendum next year on whether it should join the United Nations is a "provocative policy" that will raise tensions with China, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said. Rice Friday said the US opposes any attempt by Taiwan to alter cross strait relations with China and will not support formal independence from Beijing. "We think that Taiwan's referendum to apply to the United Nations under the name Taiwan is a provocative policy," Rice said in her final press conference of the year.

Changes in rodent size tied to population, climate change

By IANS, Washington : The head shape and overall size of rodents have been changing over the years. Now, an ecologist has tied these changes to human population density and climate change. Oliver Pergams, assistant professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago, said that such size-and-shape changes in mammals, occurring in less than a century, are quite substantial.

It’s a transformational moment for America

By Carolyn Sauvage-Mar, IANS, New Delhi : Americans love the idea of democracy, and argue all the time about what that democracy should look like. This election gives us a chance to settle the argument, for at least four years, about our vision of America. I welcome the clear choice before us, as the imperative to change course is stark. The mortgage meltdown and its impact on ordinary Americans and the global economy have dominated the news for weeks. But as bad as the economic crisis is, the Republican legacy does not end there.

Russian opposition launches ‘alternative’ national assembly

By RIA Novosti, Moscow : The Russian opposition movement launched an alternative national assembly in Moscow on Saturday, committing itself in its founding charter to working toward the "restoration of political democracy in Russia." The Other Russia opposition coalition announced its plans for the assembly, which they hope will unite varying anti-Kremlin groups, in mid-March.

Vancouver Indo-Guyanese to fight Canadian elections

By IANS Vancouver : An Indo-Guyanese has been nominated by Ontario's New Democratic Party (NDP) as its candidate from the Brampton-Springdale area for provincial elections next month. Mani Singh, 47, who moved to Canada in his late teens with his parents, is a realtor. He has lived in Brampton for 26 years with his wife Prema and four children. The provincial elections are slated for Oct 10.

China registers Cuban drug to treat diabetes

BY Prensa Latina, Beijing: The Chinese government has registered a Cuban drug that is used for treating acute diabetic patients, officials said. The Heberprot-B, a drug manufactured in Cuba, was introduced in Beijing Monday. Foreign drugs have to be registered under the Chinese Medicine Regulation Agency before they can be prescribed to patients. Luis Herrera, director of the Genetic and Biotechnology Engineering Centre (CIGB) in Cuba, said the Heberprot-B is an effective drug to cure diabetic patients.

Quake-hit China focuses on resettlement, reconstruction

By Xinhua, Chengdu (China) : A month into its relief work, quake-weary China is now focusing on resettlement and reconstruction. More and more people are going home after dwelling outdoors under temporary shelters since the devastating May 12 quake that hit the southwestern province of Sichuan. Having lived in a heat-trapping tent with bottled water and instant noodles over the past 10 muggy days, Luo Chaogui was now merrily preparing Kong Pao chicken and Sichuan-style tofu (a health food made by coagulating soymilk)for her family in their air-conditioned home.

US Anti-Immigrant Law from Both Parties

By Prensa Latina Washington : US Republican and Democrat representatives discussed a hard-handed migratory measure against people in the US without documents, an initiative similar to that fostered by conservative senators. The project presented Tuesday by Congressman Heath Shuler (D,NC) focused on security and has more than 140 supporters, almost 50 percent of whom are Democrats.

Crashed Kenya aircraft found: TV

By DPA

Nairobi : The Kenyan airliner believed to have crashed in Cameroon on Saturday with 114 people aboard has been found, Kenya television broadcaster KTN reported citing official Cameroonian sources.

World Spent 228 Times More On Militaries Than On Peacekeeping

WASHINGTON, Feb 14 (Bernama) -- The world spent 228 times as much on its militaries in 2006 as it did on UN peacekeeping operations, according to the latest Vital Signs Update from the Worldwatch Institute. United Nations peacekeeping operations around the world between July 2007 and June 2008 are expected to run to US$7 billion -- substantially higher than the record US$5.6 billion spent in 2006-07. Yet world military budgets stood at a staggering US$ 1,232 billion in 2006.

Don’t dismiss god for Darwin, British scientist tells schools

By Venkata Vemuri, IANS, London : It is a case of god versus Charles Darwin as a leading British scientist has asked the country's schools to teach creationism in science classes, calling it as legitimate a point of view as the theory of evolution. Biologist and director of education at the Royal Society, Reverend Michael Reiss, says it was "self-defeating" to dismiss as wrong or misguided the belief of a section of school students that god created the universe.

Prince Philip joins British Hindus to fight climate change

By IANS, London : Hindu leaders in Britain have teamed up with Prince Philip and the UN to launch a long-term action plan that will engage with the community worldwide in the fight against climate change, an Oxford University centre said. The Bhumi Project was launched Friday after a three-way meeting between Hindu leaders, Prince Philip - the husband of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II - and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon as part of this week's environmental summit at Windsor Castle, attended by over 200 faith leaders from nine major world religions.

Sri Lanka bans meetings inciting hatred among religions

Colombo : Sri Lanka Sunday announced a ban on public meetings and rallies which promote hatred among religions. The ban will also apply to any...

UN Concerned about Kenya Situation

By SPA United Nations : The United Nations on Wednesday expressed concern about the “deteriorating humanitarian situation” in Kenya, where hundreds of people have been killed in violence following a controversial presidential election. Michele Montas, spokeswoman for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, told reporters that the organization’s office in Nairobi issued a press release on the situation. “The humanitarian access has become a major problem” in Kenya, according to the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

Mosley expects strong Schumacher comeback; manager warns

By DPA, Hamburg: World motorsport supremo Max Mosley is excited about Michael Schumacher's return and expects top results from the record world champion. "Michael Schumacher is a winner, he has proven that ... He can win," the FIA president said in an interview with Saturday's edition of German daily Bild. Mosley termed Schumacher's comeback "great" and said "it will give Formula One a big boost."

July 7 bomb memorial unveiled in Britain

By KUNA, London : A memorial commemorating the 52 victims of the July 7 bombings in London was to be unveiled Tuesday, the UK government announced.

Two new signals detected in search for MH370

Canberra: An Australian ship detected two more underwater signals in the southern Indian Ocean, possibly from an airplane black box, in the search for...

No spot in the Mediterranean safe from tsunamis

By Ivonne Marschall, IANS, Vienna : Countries around the Mediterranean are not prepared to deal with tsunamis occurring in the region, geoscientists have said. Any region surrounding the Mediterranean Sea, among them popular tourist destinations in Italy, Spain or Greece, could be hit by a tsunami within a few minutes, but warning systems are not in place, Stefano Tinti of Italy's University of Bologna warned. "If a tsunami hits, there is no safe place in the Mediterranean," Tinti said Wednesday.

Etihad, Alitalia to launch Rome-Abu Dhabi flights

By IANS, By WAM, Abu Dhabi: Etihad Airways, the national airline of the UAE, and Italian flag carrier Alitalia have announced direct Rome-Abu Dhabi flights from December.

At least 20 killed in Algiers bombings

By Xinhua Algiers : Two explosions rocked Algerian capital early Tuesday morning, killing at least 20 so far, security sources said. The sources said that more than 40 others were also wounded in the two bomb blasts, one of them hit a school bus near the country's Supreme Court while the other was near a UN building in Algiers. Meanwhile, pan-Arabic satellite TV reported that among the 20 victims, 15 were killed in the bombing attack near the court while another five were caused by the other blast near the UN building.

Manmohan in Thailand, to meet Chinese PM to ease tensions

By M.R. Narayan Swamy, IANS, Hua Hin (Thailand): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh flew into this Thai resort Friday night to attend the India-ASEAN and East Asia summits, but the high point of his numerous engagements will be a meeting with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao that will seek to ease tensions between the two Asian neighbours.
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