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At least 13 killed in north Yemen clashes - security source Friday, Feb 28, 2014 10:24 PM PST At least 13 people died when Shi'ite Muslim fighters clashed with security forces in northern Yemen on Friday, government sources said, underlining the chaos still gripping the country two years after mass protests ousted its leader. The fighters were from the Houthi movement which is seeking to strengthen its hold on the north - one of a string of challenges facing an interim government also battling southern separatists, al Qaeda-linked militants and an economic crisis. Local authorities said two soldiers were killed in the attack and four others were wounded when Houthis attacked a security checkpoint in the northwestern al Jawf province, according to state news agency Saba. An exchange of fire took place as a result of the attack and three of the Houthi attackers were killed and several others were then arrested, a statement by the local authorities said. Full Story | Top |
Obama warns Putin against military intervention in Ukraine Friday, Feb 28, 2014 10:15 PM PST | Top |
Detained China dissident Cao Shunli near death-close friend Friday, Feb 28, 2014 08:41 PM PST | Top |
South Korea proposes regular family reunions with North Friday, Feb 28, 2014 08:17 PM PST | Top |
Bangkok boating lake park becomes focus of protests Friday, Feb 28, 2014 07:10 PM PST | Top |
Obama warns Russia of 'costs' for intervention in Ukraine Friday, Feb 28, 2014 03:59 PM PST | Top |
U.S. regulator seeks to block Alaskan mine to protect salmon Friday, Feb 28, 2014 03:52 PM PST By Julie Gordon VANCOUVER (Reuters) - U.S. environmental regulators moved on Friday to block development of the Pebble mine in Alaska, which could be one of the largest copper projects in the world, citing potential "irreversible harm" to the state's salmon fishery. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said it has initiated a rarely used process under the Clean Water Act to "identify appropriate options to protect" the Bristol Bay fishery from the impact of the proposed mine. The decision follows a report in January that found large-scale mining would pose serious risks to salmon and native cultures in the pristine corner of southwest Alaska. "Extensive scientific study has given us ample reason to believe that the Pebble mine would likely have significant and irreversible negative impacts on the Bristol Bay watershed and its abundant salmon fisheries," EPA administrator Gina McCarthy said in a statement. Full Story | Top |
U.S. sees Russian troop movements into Crimea, officials say Friday, Feb 28, 2014 03:33 PM PST WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States has seen indications of Russian troop movements from and into Ukraine's Crimea region on Friday but their numbers are unclear, as are the intentions of those movements, U.S. officials told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity. One U.S. official said some of the movements could be designed to bolster protection of Russian forces there. (Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Eric Beech) Full Story | Top |
Ukraine's U.N. envoy: 'We are strong enough to defend ourselves' Friday, Feb 28, 2014 03:20 PM PST By Louis Charbonneau UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Ukraine's U.N. ambassador on Friday accused Russia of illegally sending military planes and attack helicopters across the border of the former Soviet republic and declared that his country was strong enough to defend itself. Ambassador Yuriy Sergeyev was speaking to reporters after briefing the U.N. Security Council in a closed-door session on the escalating crisis in Ukraine. Armed men took control of two airports in Ukraine's autonomous Crimea region earlier on Friday in what the country's leadership described as an invasion and occupation by Russian forces. Russia denied involvement in the airport seizures. Full Story | Top |
Ukraine's defense ministry warns of action by 'radical' forces in Crimea Friday, Feb 28, 2014 02:45 PM PST Ukraine's defense ministry said it had information that unknown "radical forces" were planning to try to disarm its military units in Crimea early Saturday morning and warned against such action. "In the case of such unknown actions, the Ukrainian armed forces will act in accordance with the laws of Ukraine and the regulations of the Ukrainian armed forces," the ministry said in a statement on its Website. Full Story | Top |
Russia says Crimea deployments based on agreements with Ukraine Friday, Feb 28, 2014 02:25 PM PST UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Any Russian military movements in Crimea are in keeping with Moscow's existing arrangement with Ukraine on the deployment of military assets in the former Soviet republic, Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said on Friday. "We are acting within the framework of that agreement," he told reporters after a closed-door meeting of the U.N. Security Council. He did not give any details or comment on specifics of any Russian military deployments on Ukrainian territory. (Reporting by Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Chris Reese) Full Story | Top |
U.S. "gravely disturbed" by reports of Russian military deployments in Ukraine Friday, Feb 28, 2014 02:08 PM PST The United States on Friday said it was gravely concerned by reports that Russia has deployed military assets in Ukraine's autonomous region of Crimea and called on Moscow to pull back. "We are gravely disturbed by reports of Russian military deployments into the Crimea," U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power told reporters after a closed-door meeting of the U.N. Security Council on Ukraine. She also called for an independent international mediation mission to be quickly dispatched to Ukraine. Full Story | Top |
Jailed Venezuela protest leader mocks Maduro's talks Friday, Feb 28, 2014 01:58 PM PST | Top |
Ukraine leader's son ran major business empire Friday, Feb 28, 2014 01:55 PM PST By Stephen Grey KIEV (Reuters) - On a street in ousted President Yanukovich's political stronghold, Donetsk, stands the imposing headquarters of the Mako Group, a Ukrainian banking-to-construction conglomerate. The 20-storey block is modern but built in the decorated style of the Stalin era and contains a hotel, restaurant, bank, and Mako's unmarked offices - all, according to residents, belonging to Yanukovich's eldest son Oleksander, 40. The business activities of Oleksander, who trained as a dentist, have long been the object of scrutiny by critics of Yanukovich. Two opposition research groups, PEPWatch and Anticorruption Action Centre, say on yanukovich.info, a website they jointly run, that his assets have risen by 7,285 percent in three years. Full Story | Top |
France striving to stop Central African Republic split, Hollande says Friday, Feb 28, 2014 01:52 PM PST | Top |
Son of Ukraine's ex-president says Swiss bank freeze will hit coal exports Friday, Feb 28, 2014 01:39 PM PST By Stephen Grey KIEV (Reuters) - Switzerland's freezing of bank accounts linked to the family of ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich could reduce coal exports from Ukraine, a company owned by his son warned on Friday. In a statement to Reuters, a Ukrainian conglomerate, the Mako Group, based in Yanukovich's political stronghold Donetsk, in eastern Ukraine, confirmed it was 100 percent owned by Oleksander Yanukovich, a son of the former president. His and Oleksander's foreign assets were frozen by Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein earlier in the day. Mako said that its Swiss arm - the Mako Trading Company (Switzerland) - "carries out legal trading activity (coal exports) from Ukraine to more than 20 countries". Full Story | Top |
In Crimean port city, dreams of a return to Russia's fold Friday, Feb 28, 2014 01:20 PM PST By Alissa de Carbonnel SEVASTOPOL, Ukraine (Reuters) - Flying the Russian flag, men in combat fatigues wave down cars at a roadblock made of plywood and tyres outside this port city in Ukraine's southern region of Crimea that dates from Tsarist times. They are ethnic Russians intent on defending Sevastopol against people they regard as Ukrainian nationalists who they fear may arrive from the capital Kiev to impose their rule after ousting President Viktor Yanukovich. "We don't want to be ruled by fascists," said Oleg Golovan, a retired Russian military officer who is in charge of the checkpoint about 20 km (12 miles) outside the city. Full Story | Top |
Armed men seize two airports in Ukraine's Crimea, Russia denies involvement Friday, Feb 28, 2014 01:06 PM PST | Top |
Venezuela unrest chokes transport, worsens economic woes Friday, Feb 28, 2014 01:04 PM PST By Eyanir Chinea CARACAS (Reuters) - Anti-government protests in Venezuela have left some 1,500 trucks that distribute about half the country's vegetables sitting idle in the western city of La Grita, waiting for roads blocked by demonstrators to be re-opened. At least 17 people have been killed in unrest that has posed the most serious challenge yet to socialist President Nicolas Maduro's 10-month-old administration. Some transport companies have idled trucks due to the threat of violence as protesters face off against security forces at barricades, especially in the western state of Tachira. "It's not just that we could lose our trucks, or their contents, we could lose our lives too," said Freddy Rosales, spokesman for a group of vegetable producers in La Grita. Full Story | Top |
Ukraine says Russia follows pre-Georgia war scenario in Crimea Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:44 PM PST Ukraine's acting president accused Russia of open aggression on Friday and said it was provoking his country in the same way as it had Georgia before going to war in 2008. Urging President Vladimir Putin to stop "provocations" in Ukraine's Russian-speaking Crimea, Oleksander Turchinov recalled Russia's intervention in Georgia over breakaway Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which have large ethnic Russian populations. Russia's Black Sea fleet has a base in the Crimean port city of Sevastopol. Full Story | Top |
Tunisian Prime Minister replaces Islamist governors ahead of election Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:41 PM PST | Top |
Colombian rebels want U.S. to participate in peace talks Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:37 PM PST | Top |
Russian cooperation crucial for resolving Ukraine's crisis: EU official Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:22 PM PST By Daniel Bases NEW YORK (Reuters) - Any peaceful resolution of Ukraine's political turmoil must have Russia in the mix out of concern the two nations could descend into open warfare, European Commissioner for Industry and Entrepreneurship Antonio Tajani said on Friday. "Of course it is important to back democracy, but at the same time it is important to work with Russia. Because without strong cooperation with Russia it is impossible to have a good solution. Tajani was alluding to the 2008 war involving Russia and another former Soviet republic, Georgia, over two Moscow-backed breakaway regions, Abhkazia and South Ossetia. Full Story | Top |
Chilean indigenous leader jailed in high-profile murder case Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:16 PM PST A court on Friday sentenced a Mapuche indigenous leader to 18 years in prison for his participation in the killing of a couple during an arson attack last year in a high-profile case that rekindled divisions over land rights in Chile. A Temuco criminal tribunal found Celestino Cordova, a 27-year-old traditional healer, guilty of taking part in the deadly attack on the elderly Luchsinger landowners on their estate in the southern Araucania region. Many Mapuche, famous for their fierce resistance to the Spanish conquest, say they were robbed by the Chilean government's often brutal colonization policy in the 19th century. That has bred deep-seated Mapuche resentment against the descendants of immigrants such as the Luchsingers, whose ancestors reportedly arrived in Southern Chile in 1883. Full Story | Top |
IMF's Lagarde says no need to panic on Ukraine aid request Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:14 PM PST By Anna Yukhananov WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The head of the International Monetary Fund said on Friday that there was no need to "panic" in terms of delivering economic aid to Ukraine, as she cast doubt the nation would need as much immediate help as its new leaders claim. "We do not see anything that is critical, that is worthy of panic at the moment," IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde told reporters. "We would certainly hope that the (Ukrainian) authorities refrain from throwing lots of numbers which are really meaningless until they've been assessed properly." Ukraine's government coffers have been depleted by huge debt repayments, efforts to protect its currency and high energy costs. The country's new leaders, appointed after President Viktor Yanukovich was ousted last weekend, say they need $35 billion over two years to avoid default, and may need $4 billion immediately. Full Story | Top |
Ukraine accuses Russia of aggression, following Georgia scenario Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:09 PM PST Ukraine's acting president accused Russia of open aggression on Friday and said Moscow was following a similar scenario to the one before it went to war with Georgia in 2008. Urging President Vladimir Putin to stop "provocations" in the Ukrainian region of Crimea, Oleksander Turchinov drew a comparison to Russia's intervention in Georgia over the breakaway Akhazia region which has a large ethnic Russian population. "Russia has sent forces into Crimea ... they are working on scenarios which are fully analogous with Abkhazia, when having initiated a military conflict, they started to annex the territory," he said in televised comments. Full Story | Top |
Panama Canal says deal with consortium to be signed next week Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:06 PM PST | Top |
Cuban agent released from U.S. prison gets hero's welcome Friday, Feb 28, 2014 12:04 PM PST | Top |
U.S. State Department official to make delayed trip to India next week Friday, Feb 28, 2014 11:55 AM PST | Top |
U.N. Security Council to hold emergency meeting on Ukraine crisis Friday, Feb 28, 2014 11:33 AM PST By Louis Charbonneau UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council will hold a closed-door emergency session on the escalating crisis in Ukraine on Friday at the request of the new Kiev government, which warned that the situation in Crimea threatened Ukraine's territorial integrity. Armed men took control of two airports in Ukraine's autonomous Crimea region earlier on Friday in what the country's leadership described as an invasion and occupation by Russian forces. Russia denied involvement in the airport seizures. "Due to the deterioration of the situation in the Autonomous Republic of the Crimea, Ukraine, which threatens territorial integrity of Ukraine ... I have the honor to request an urgent meeting of the Security Council in accordance with Articles 34 and 35 of the U.N. Charter," Ukraine's U.N. Ambassador Yuriy Sergeyev wrote to Lithuanian Ambassador Raimonda Murmokaite. Full Story | Top |
White House to Russia: intervention in Ukraine would be grave mistake Friday, Feb 28, 2014 11:27 AM PST The White House urged Russia to respect the territorial integrity of Ukraine on Friday, saying any intervention would be a grave mistake. White House spokesman Jay Carney's comment came as reports surfaced of armed men having taken control of two airports in the Crimea region of southern Ukraine in what the new Ukrainian leadership called an invasion. He said Washington is concerned about reports that there might have been an intervention by "an outside state." The United States has sided with the pro-Western Ukrainian leadership that took over after the departure of pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovich early this week. Full Story | Top |
Pope skips seminary visit because of slight fever -Vatican Friday, Feb 28, 2014 11:26 AM PST | Top |
UK's Hague to hold talks in Ukraine on Sunday with new leadership Friday, Feb 28, 2014 11:15 AM PST British Foreign Secretary William Hague said on Friday he would travel to Ukraine at the weekend to hold talks with the new leadership, after Prime Minister David Cameron told Russia to respect the volatile nation's territorial integrity. I will travel to Kyiv on Sunday for talks with the new government," Hague said on Twitter. Hague's announcement followed a phone call between Cameron and Russian President Vladimir Putin in which the British government said the two men had agreed that the elections that the interim government has pledged to hold were the best way to secure a positive future for Ukraine. Full Story | Top |
Ukraine protests to Russia over airspace violation Friday, Feb 28, 2014 10:53 AM PST KIEV (Reuters) - Ukraine protested on Friday to Russia that it had violated its airspace and broken the terms of an agreement under which Moscow leases a base for its Black Sea fleet in Crimea. The Foreign Ministry gave no details but the Ukrainian border guard service said more than 10 Russian military helicopters had flown from Russia into Ukrainian airspace over the Crimea region. Russian servicemen also blocked off a unit of Ukrainian border guards near the port city of Sevastopol, where part of Russia's Black Sea fleet is based, a Reuters correspondent said. ... Full Story | Top |
Ukrainian airline says Crimean airspace closed Friday, Feb 28, 2014 10:18 AM PST KIEV (Reuters) - Ukrainian International, Ukraine's biggest airline, said on Friday the airspace over the Crimea region had been closed after its main airport was taken over by armed men. Interfax reported earlier on Friday that no flights from the national capital Kiev were being allowed to Simferopol international airport. But an airport information official said only one flight from Kiev had been delayed, and other flights had been coming and going from Simferopol without any problems. (Reporting by Sabina Zawadzki, Editing by Timothy Heritage) Full Story | Top |
Crackdown on share fraud yields 110 arrests in Europe and U.S. Friday, Feb 28, 2014 10:07 AM PST Anti-fraud police have arrested 110 people in Europe and the United States in an international crackdown on gangs selling bogus shares that cost some investors their life savings, British authorities said on Friday. City of London Police, responsible for law enforcement in the British capital's financial district, said the arrests, made in a series of raids this week, arose out of a two-year investigation into "boiler room" operations believed to be responsible for millions of pounds of investment fraud. Boiler rooms consist of teams of young men cold-calling potential investors offering them worthless, overpriced or even non-existent shares using high-pressure sales techniques. Codenamed Operation Rico, the investigation led to 84 arrests in Spain, 20 in Britain, four in Serbia and two in the United States, with most of those arrested on suspicion of money laundering and fraud, City of London police said. Full Story | Top |
Italy approves decree to stave off bankruptcy for Rome council Friday, Feb 28, 2014 10:07 AM PST | Top |
EU says Van Rompuy, Russia's Putin discuss Ukraine Friday, Feb 28, 2014 09:54 AM PST BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed the financial and security situation in Ukraine in a phone call on Friday, a European Union spokesman said. The EU gave no details of the call, which came amid international concern over the situation in Ukraine's Crimea region where armed men took control of two airports on Friday. Europe is also discussing a range of options for short- and longer-term financial assistance to Ukraine after President Viktor Yanukovich was ousted after months of protests. ... Full Story | Top |
Myanmar orders aid group to stop work, patients at risk: MSF Friday, Feb 28, 2014 09:50 AM PST | Top |
Fugitive Yanukovich urges Russia's Putin to take firm line over Ukraine Friday, Feb 28, 2014 09:47 AM PST By Denis Pinchuk ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia (Reuters) - Viktor Yanukovich urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to take a bolder line with Ukraine's new rulers who had ousted him, telling him on Friday that Russia could not remain indifferent to what had happened in the former Soviet republic. Appearing in southern Russia where he has taken refuge since fleeing Ukraine on February 21, Yanukovich said: "I think that Russia should act and is obliged to act. "Knowing Vladimir Putin's personality, I am surprised that he is still saying nothing. Russia cannot be indifferent, cannot be a bystander watching the fate of as close a partner as Ukraine," the 63-year-old Yanukovich said. Full Story | Top |
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