Today's Reuters World News Headlines - Yahoo! News: | | Chinese developer livid at Iceland's rejection of resort Sat,26 Nov 2011 10:44 PM PST Reuters - BEIJING (Reuters) - A multimillionaire Chinese developer is livid at Iceland's rejection of his plan to build a sprawling resort, saying it reveals western "hypocrisy and deep prejudice." Foreigners also wrongly assume Chinese companies automatically have ties to China's military, Huang Nubo said in comments published in Chinese media on Sunday. The Iceland government on Friday rejected a bid by Huang to buy 300 sq km (186 sq miles) on the island nation because it did not meet legal requirements on foreign ownership. ...
Full Story | Top | Analysis: In India, a sense of crisis fans embers of reform Sat,26 Nov 2011 09:49 PM PST Reuters - NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's move to open India's protected retail sector to global supermarket giants last week surprised critics who had written him off as a policy ditherer, but he was probably motivated by expedience rather than any reformist zeal. India's stellar economic growth is slowing, the rupee has skidded to record lows and inflation is stuck close to a double-digit clip. Faced with this predicament, Singh may have simply weighed the benefits of opening a $450 billion market to foreign investment against the political risk, and taken his chance. ...
Full Story | Top | Yangon: From stately city to crumbling symbol of isolation Sat,26 Nov 2011 08:34 PM PST Reuters - YANGON (Reuters) - There are no skyscrapers in Yangon. No gleaming shopping malls. Certainly no subway system. Its rutted sidewalks are laced with treacherous holes and broken slabs of concrete. Myanmar's former capital and biggest city is a crumbling monument to almost half a century of isolation and mismanagement at the hands of generals who took power in a 1962 coup and ruled with an iron first until a nominally civilian parliament opened in March this year. The city that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will visit this week wasn't always that way. ...
Full Story | Top | Malaysia to alter planned public gathering law: report Sat,26 Nov 2011 07:22 PM PST Reuters - KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysia will ease the provisions of a proposed law setting down rules for public assemblies, a newspaper reported on Sunday, after an outcry that the new legislation was oppressive. The government had announced plans last week to allow citizens to hold peaceful public gatherings as part of a move toward political reform. But organizers were obliged to give police 30 days' notice instead of applying for a permit as stipulated under present law. ...
Full Story | Top | New Zealand set for asset sales after crushing election win Sat,26 Nov 2011 07:11 PM PST Reuters - WELLINGTON (Reuters) - New Zealand's re-elected center-right government claimed a mandate on Sunday to push on with up to $5 billion worth of asset sales and welfare reforms and said it would quickly get down to forming a new administration. The National Party, led by former foreign exchange dealer John Key, scored 48 percent of the vote, increased its number of seats to 60 from 58 and gained the support of two small parties to guarantee a majority in the 121-seat parliament. ...
Full Story | Top | FARC rebels execute 4 military hostages: Colombia Sat,26 Nov 2011 04:41 PM PST Reuters - BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombian FARC rebels executed four members of the security forces during a botched mission to free them from a decade as hostages, the most violent act by the group since troops killed its leader Alfonso Cano this month. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which has a policy of killing hostages if troops approach their camps, shot three of the captives in the head and the fourth in the back, President Juan Manuel Santos said. The bodies were found in chains, he said. "These heroes of Colombia sacrificed their lives trying to bring peace to Colombia," Santos said. ...
Full Story | Top | Police ban Congo election rallies, at least 2 dead Sat,26 Nov 2011 04:15 PM PST Reuters - KINSHASA (Reuters) - Police in Congo blocked President Joseph Kabila's main rival at an airport in Kinshasa on Saturday to stop him staging an election rally after at least two died in violence across the central African state's capital city. Two days before presidential and parliamentary elections, rival factions hurled rocks at each other and gunfire was heard across town. A Reuters reporter saw one lifeless body on the road to the airport while a U.N. source reported another death elsewhere in town. ...
Full Story | Top | Pakistan stops NATO supplies after deadly raid Sat,26 Nov 2011 03:33 PM PST Reuters - YAKKAGHUND, Pakistan (Reuters) - NATO helicopters and fighter jets attacked two military outposts in northwest Pakistan Saturday, killing as many as 28 troops and plunging U.S.-Pakistan relations deeper into crisis. Pakistan shut down NATO supply routes into Afghanistan - used for sending in nearly half of the alliance's land shipments - in retaliation for the worst such incident since Islamabad uneasily allied itself with Washington following the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. ...
Full Story | Top | Egypt's ElBaradei turns up heat on ruling generals Sat,26 Nov 2011 03:20 PM PST Reuters - CAIRO (Reuters) - Presidential candidate Mohamed ElBaradei has offered to lead a government of national unity, raising the pressure on Egypt's ruling generals amid protests demanding an immediate end to army rule. Activists are calling on citizens to converge again in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Sunday, a day before the start of a parliamentary election overshadowed by political turmoil and the threat of violence. The interim government led by Essam Sharaf resigned last week as protests against army rule intensified in Cairo and other cities. The violence has left 42 people dead. ...
Full Story | Top | Police ban Congo election rallies, at least 2 dead Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:56 PM PST Reuters - KINSHASA (Reuters) - Police in Congo blocked President Joseph Kabila's main rival at an airport in Kinshasa on Saturday to stop him staging an election rally after at least two died in violence across the central African state's capital city. Two days before presidential and parliamentary elections, rival factions hurled rocks at each other and gunfire was heard across town. A Reuters reporter saw one lifeless body on the road to the airport while a U.N. source reported another death elsewhere in town. ...
Full Story | Top | Dutchman, South African, Swede confirmed kidnapped in Mali Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:44 PM PST Reuters - AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Three people kidnapped in Mali were from South Africa, the Netherlands and Sweden, their governments said Saturday, a day after their abduction in a region where al Qaeda agents operate. Gunmen seized the three and killed a fourth person as the group walked along a street in the northern Mali town of Timbuktu Friday. In Berlin, the German foreign ministry said that "in all probability" the person killed in Mali was a German citizen. Timbuktu, famous as a major trading center for gold and salt, was once one of Mali's biggest tourist attractions. ... Full Story | Top | Egypt's ElBaradei willing to head cabinet: statement Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:31 PM PST Reuters - CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian presidential candidate Mohamed ElBaradei is prepared to drop his bid to be head of state if he is asked to lead a transition government to steer the country to civilian rule, his campaign team said on Saturday. ElBaradei is offering himself as an alternative to Kamal Ganzouri, a veteran politician named by the country's ruling military council on Friday to head a new interim government after a week of protests and violence that has killed 42 people. The cabinet of Prime Minister Essam Sharaf resigned last week as the clashes spread. ... Full Story | Top | Arab states plan to cut commercial ties with Syria Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:22 PM PST Reuters - CAIRO (Reuters) - Arab states plan to cut commercial ties with President Bashar al-Assad's government and freeze its assets in response to violence in Syria, where activists said 42 civilians and soldiers died on Saturday. The sanctions, which would plunge Syria deeper into economic crisis and regional isolation, were drawn up by an Arab League economic committee in Cairo on Saturday and need to be ratified by foreign ministers meeting on Sunday before coming into force. ...
Full Story | Top | Yemen presidential election set for February 21 Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:20 PM PST Reuters - SANAA (Reuters) - Yemen's vice president called presidential elections for February 21 on Saturday under a deal aimed at ending months of protests against President Ali Abdullah Saleh that have brought the country to the edge of civil war. If the agreement goes according to plan, Saleh will become the fourth Arab ruler brought down by mass demonstrations that have reshaped the political landscape of the Middle East. ...
Full Story | Top | Obama aide urges Yemen's parties to work together Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:20 PM PST Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's top counter-terrorism aide urged Yemen's ruling party Saturday to cooperate with the opposition after the vice president called presidential elections for February 21. The White House said John Brennan telephoned Vice President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to "commend" him for announcing the date of the election, struck under a deal to end violent protests against the rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. ... Full Story | Top | Factbox: Ties between Pakistan and U.S. in crisis Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:16 PM PST Reuters - (Reuters) - U.S.-Pakistan relations plunged into crisis on Saturday when NATO helicopters and fighter jets killed as many as 28 Pakistani troops in attacks on two military outposts in northwest Pakistan. Pakistan retaliated by shutting NATO supply routes into Afghanistan that are vital to the 10-year war against the Taliban and asked the United States to vacate within 15 days an air base used by U.S. forces for drone strikes, which have been at the center of a dispute between Islamabad and Washington. ... Full Story | Top | Tripoli protesters block jet from taking off Sat,26 Nov 2011 02:04 PM PST Reuters - TRIPOLI (Reuters) - About 100 Libyans surrounded a Tunisian passenger aircraft at one of the capital's airports Saturday, delaying its takeoff in a protest at the government. Witnesses told Reuters that about a dozen cars drove out on to the tarmac at Tripoli's Mitiga airport and blocked a Tunisair Airbus 300-20 jet, with passengers on board, from moving. ... Full Story | Top | FARC rebels execute 4 military hostages: Colombia Sat,26 Nov 2011 01:31 PM PST Reuters - BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombian FARC rebels executed four members of the armed forces during a botched mission to free them from a decade as hostages, the most violent act by the group since troops killed its leader Alfonso Cano this month. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which has a policy of killing hostages if troops approach their camps, shot three of the captives in the head and the fourth in the back, President Juan Manuel Santos said. The bodies were found in chains, he said. "These heroes of Colombia sacrificed their lives trying to bring peace to Colombia," Santos said. ...
Full Story | Top | Arabs plan to freeze Syria economic ties: document Sat,26 Nov 2011 01:19 PM PST Reuters - CAIRO (Reuters) - Arab states plan to cut commercial ties with Syria's government and freeze its assets as they step up pressure to end months of political violence in the country, a draft document to be discussed by Arab ministers on Sunday showed. The sanctions would also include a travel ban on senior Syrian officials and a halt to commercial flights to the country, according to the Arab League document seen by Reuters on Saturday. ... Full Story | Top | NASA rover launched to seek out life clues on Mars Sat,26 Nov 2011 12:36 PM PST Reuters - CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - An unmanned Atlas 5 rocket blasted off from Florida on Saturday, launching a $2.5 billion nuclear-powered NASA rover toward Mars to look for clues on what could sustain life on the Red Planet. The 20-story-tall booster built by United Launch Alliance lifted off from its seaside launch pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 10:02 a.m. EST (3:02 p.m. GMT). It soared through partly cloudy skies into space, carrying NASA's Mars Science Laboratory on a 354-million mile (556 million km), nearly nine-month journey to the planet. ...
Full Story | Top | Arabs plan to freeze Syria economic ties: document Sat,26 Nov 2011 12:23 PM PST Reuters - CAIRO (Reuters) - Arab states plan to cut commercial ties with Syria's government and freeze its assets as they step up pressure to end months of political violence in the country, a draft document to be discussed by Arab ministers on Sunday showed. The sanctions would also include a travel ban on senior Syrian officials and a halt to commercial flights to the country, according to the Arab League document seen by Reuters on Saturday. Dealings with Syria's central bank would be halted, it said, but basic commodities needed by the Syrian people would be exempted from the list of sanctions. ... Full Story | Top | Iran says could target Turkey missile shield Sat,26 Nov 2011 12:21 PM PST Reuters - TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran could target installations in Turkey that are part of a planned NATO missile shield in any future conflict, a senior military official said on Saturday, upping the rhetoric against its neighbor with whom relations have soured in recent months. "We are ready to attack NATO's missile shield in Turkey if we face a threat and then we will follow other aims," the semi-official Mehr news agency quoted Amir Ali Hajizadeh, head of the Revolutionary Guards' aerospace division, as saying. ... Full Story | Top | Factbox: NATO supply routes into Afghanistan Sat,26 Nov 2011 12:00 PM PST Reuters - KABUL (Reuters) - NATO helicopters attacked a military checkpoint in northwest Pakistan on Saturday, killing up to 28 troops and prompting Pakistan to shut the vital supply route for NATO troops fighting in Afghanistan, Pakistani officials said. NATO supply trucks and fuel tankers bound for Afghanistan were halted at Jamrud town in the Khyber tribal region near the city of Peshawar hours after the raid, officials said. ... Full Story | Top | Morocco Islamists poised to win parliamentary vote Sat,26 Nov 2011 11:52 AM PST Reuters - RABAT (Reuters) - Morocco's moderate Islamist PJD party is on course to win a parliamentary election, partial results showed on Saturday, in what would be the second victory for Islamists in the region in the wake of the "Arab Spring" uprisings. Incomplete results from Friday's vote indicate that PJD will lead a coalition government in partnership with the secularist party of the outgoing prime minister and two other groups. Tunisia, birthplace of the Arab Spring, sent ripples through the Middle East last month when a moderate Islamist movement won the country's first democratic election. ...
Full Story | Top | Yemeni vice president fixes February 21 election date Sat,26 Nov 2011 10:24 AM PST Reuters - SANAA (Reuters) - Yemen's vice president called a presidential election for February 21, the Saba state news agency said on Saturday, under a deal aimed at ending months of violent protests against the rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Saleh signed the deal on Wednesday under which he transferred his powers to Vice President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi after 33 years in office and 10 months of protests that have brought the country to the edge of civil war. Hadi issued a decree on Saturday setting the election date. "Registered voters and everyone who has reached the legal age ... ... Full Story | Top | Analysis: Islamists strong ahead of Egypt poll Sat,26 Nov 2011 10:23 AM PST Reuters - CAIRO (Reuters) - The Muslim Brotherhood goes into Egypt's first free election in living memory with a strong hand enhanced by recent unrest. Well-organized, the Islamists will be able to get out their vote, even if fears of violence hit the overall turnout. By far the best-drilled group in the country, the Islamists were in a good position even before the latest unrest triggered by protests against the military rulers who assumed power after Hosni Mubarak was overthrown in February. ... Full Story | Top | Libya's tribes meet to make peace, end skirmishes Sat,26 Nov 2011 09:29 AM PST Reuters - ZAWIYAH, Libya (Reuters) - Libyan tribal leaders met on Saturday in the hope of easing tensions between clans in a country where the new central government is still weak, weapons abound and rival militias sometimes lock horns. The National Transitional Council (NTC) convened the conference in Zawiyah, the site of a major skirmish between a militia from the coastal city and fighters from the Wershifanna tribe over a strategic military base this month. The NTC hopes a tradition of mediation between tribal chiefs can nip such clashes in the bud. "This is a tribal society. ... Full Story | Top | Romanian mayor ends hunger strike over cuts Sat,26 Nov 2011 09:21 AM PST Reuters - BUCHAREST (Reuters) - Romanian mayor Florin Cazacu Saturday ended a six-day hunger strike over cuts in heating subsidies after the government handed his town extra funds for fuel oil. He said thousands of residents in Brad have shivered at home after the government scrapped a centralized heating subsidy which, Cazacu said, left the central Romanian town with a 3 million lei ($912,500) shortfall. Winter temperatures around Brad fall as low as minus 30 degrees Celsius (-22 Fahrenheit). The government said Friday it would give Brad 1 million lei, which Cazacu said was a beginning but not enough. ... Full Story | Top | Media bias helped Gambia's Jammeh win election: AU Sat,26 Nov 2011 08:49 AM PST Reuters - BANJUL (Reuters) - Gambian President Yahya Jammeh benefited from a strong media bias and greater financial resources than his rivals to secure a new five-year term in elections, the African Union said on Saturday. Former military coup leader Jammeh scored a landslide 72 percent victory to extend his 17 year-rule over the tiny West African country, criticized for alleged human rights abuses and press-muzzling. ... Full Story | Top | Fractured town shows challenges ahead for Libya Sat,26 Nov 2011 08:47 AM PST Reuters - BANI WALID, Libya (Reuters) - Every revolution has its losers. Libya's new rulers, who swept to power three months ago in a revolt against Muammar Gaddafi's 42-year rule, have promised the country a brighter future. In the biggest cities, celebratory gunfire and the war-cry "God is great" can still be heard daily. In Bani Walid, long a stronghold for Gaddafi loyalists and one of their last bastions to fall during this year's civil war, the mood is entirely different. ...
Full Story | Top | Suspected al Shabaab rebels raid Kenya police post Sat,26 Nov 2011 08:09 AM PST Reuters - GARISSA, Kenya (Reuters) - Suspected Somali al Shabaab rebel fighters raided a police post near Mandera in northern Kenya on Saturday, seizing weapons and burning a mobile phone transmission mast, security officials said. The group of fighters attacked Arabiya, a trading center 60 kilometers (37 miles) from Mandera, and engaged police in a firefight before overpowering them and taking all the guns and bullets from the local police post. "Arabiya was attacked. We believe it's al Shabaab. ... Full Story | Top | Police ban Congo rallies as poll violence flares Sat,26 Nov 2011 08:08 AM PST Reuters - KINSHASA (Reuters) - Police in Kinshasa banned all campaign rallies on Saturday after rival supporters hurled rocks at each other and at least one person was reported dead as tensions rose two days before presidential and parliamentary elections. Riot police in the Congolese capital used tear gas to disperse a political gathering in the city center and one person was injured as presidential guard members fired shots to clear opposition supporters from the airport, Reuters reporters said. Asked to confirm the ban, Kinshasa police chief Jean de Dieu Oleko told Reuters: "Yes, all of them. ...
Full Story | Top | France's ruling party denies role in DSK downfall Sat,26 Nov 2011 07:13 AM PST Reuters - PARIS (Reuters) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy's ruling UMP party dismissed allegations on Saturday of a political plot to bring down disgraced former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, following an investigative report by a U.S. journalist. The article by Edward Jay Epstein, published in the New York Review of Books, raised the question of whether a Blackberry phone belonging to Strauss-Kahn was being tapped by his political opponents at the time of his arrest in May on charges of sexually assaulting a hotel maid. ...
Full Story | Top | Libyan women demand support for war rape victims Sat,26 Nov 2011 07:08 AM PST Reuters - TRIPOLI (Reuters) - About 100 Libyan women took to Tripoli's streets on Saturday in a silent march to demand more support from the country's new government for victims of rape during the eight-month war that ousted Muammar Gaddafi. Their mouths covered with duct tape, women both young and old marched for an hour to Prime Minister Abdurrahim El-Keib's office and later met him to discuss their demands. ...
Full Story | Top | NATO says "likely" it caused Pakistan casualties Sat,26 Nov 2011 05:58 AM PST Reuters - KABUL (Reuters) - A spokesman for NATO-led troops in Afghanistan confirmed that NATO aircraft had been called in to support troops during an incident near the border with Pakistan, and its forces were "highly likely" responsible for deaths of Pakistani soldiers. "Close air support was called in, in the development of the tactical situation, and it is what highly likely caused the Pakistan casualties," said Brigadier General Carsten Jacobson, spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). ... Full Story | Top | U.N. sees no need yet for Syria humanitarian corridor Sat,26 Nov 2011 05:32 AM PST Reuters - UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - French proposals for "humanitarian corridors" in Syria to help civilians affected by eight months of unrest are not justified by humanitarian needs identified so far in the country, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator said. Valerie Amos said 3 million people had been affected by the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, and Syria's Red Crescent had sought support to feed 1.5 million people. ... Full Story | Top | Libya displays Roman treasures looted by Gaddafi troops Sat,26 Nov 2011 05:30 AM PST Reuters - TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi stole ancient Roman artifacts when they fled Tripoli, bundled them into sacks and planned to sell them abroad, Libya's new rulers said on Saturday as they displayed the haul for the first time since its recovery. The artifacts -- a collection of 17 stone heads, most the size of tennis balls, and terracotta fragments dating from the second or third centuries A.D. -- were recovered on August 23 when anti-Gaddafi fighters intercepted a convoy of loyalists heading south from Tripoli. ... Full Story | Top | Tang confirms bid to be Hong Kong's next leader Sat,26 Nov 2011 05:15 AM PST Reuters - HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong's former number two official Henry Tang on Saturday confirmed his bid to become the financial hub's next chief executive, brushing off a scandal over marital infidelity that tarnished his public image. An experienced administrator and textiles tycoon, Tang is seen as the frontrunner, having been long groomed by senior Chinese officials to take over the reins of the former British colony from bow tie-sporting Donald Tsang. ...
Full Story | Top | National marches back to power in New Zealand Sat,26 Nov 2011 04:58 AM PST Reuters - AUCKLAND (Reuters) - The ruling center-right National Party returned to power in a crushing win in New Zealand's general election on Saturday and secured the backing of minor parties to ensure a majority for asset sales and welfare reforms. National, led by former foreign exchange dealer John Key, was sitting on 48 percent share of the vote on election night. That would give the party 60 seats in the 121-seat parliament from its current 58. Key was guaranteed a second three-year term with the return of current coalition partners, free-market ACT and centrist United Future, each with one ...
Full Story | Top | Columnist says assault shows why Egypt revolt goes on Sat,26 Nov 2011 04:53 AM PST Reuters - CAIRO (Reuters) - An Egyptian-American columnist who said she was sexually assaulted by Egyptian riot police this week said her experience showed why protesters are pressing their demands for democratic government, nine months after Hosni Mubarak was toppled. Riot police also broke Mona El Tahawy's hand and arm during the assault Wednesday night near Cairo's Tahrir Square, where protesters have been demonstrating for a week against the military council which replaced Mubarak in February. "I was surrounded by four or five guys and systematically assaulted," Tahawy said in a telephone interview. ... Full Story | Top |
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