2009年9月6日星期日

Yahoo! News: World News

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: World News


U.S.-German rift emerges over Afghan deaths case (AP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 04:19 PM PDT

German colonel Georg Klein is pictured at the German base in Kunduz, Afghanistan, Sunday, Sept. 6, 2009. An airstrike ordered by a German commander Klein and carried out by U.S. fighter jets that appears to have killed Afghan civilians could turn into a major dispute between the two NATO allies, as tensions began rising Sunday over Germany's role in the attack. Afghan officials say up to 70 people were killed in the early morning airstrike Friday in the northern province of Kunduz after Taliban militants stole two tanker trucks of fuel and villagers gathered to siphon off gas.  Afghan and NATO investigations are just beginning, but officials already appeared to be trying to deflect blame. (AP Photo / Anja Niedringhaus)AP - An airstrike by U.S. fighter jets that appears to have killed Afghan civilians could turn into a major dispute for NATO allies Germany and the United States, as tensions began rising between them Sunday over Germany's role in ordering the attack.


Thousands of civilians flee battles in NW Pakistan (AP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 04:28 PM PDT

Local residents flee from a troubled area of Pakistan's tribal region of Khyber, where security forces launched an offensive against militants on Sunday, Sept. 6, 2009. Pakistani troops killed dozens of alleged militants in an operation in the Khyber tribal region while airstrikes left several more dead Saturday in the stronghold of the new Taliban chief elsewhere in the northwest, officials said. (AP Photo/Qazi Tariq)AP - Thousands of civilians have fled Pakistan's northwest Khyber tribal region where the latest military offensive killed 33 more suspected militants Sunday.


9 dead, 926 rescued from capsized Philippine ferry (AP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 05:25 PM PDT

In this photo released by the Philippine Naval Forces Western Mindanao, navy ships approach the tilted Superferry 9 off Zamboanga del Norte province, southern Philippines, Sunday Sept. 6, 2009. Rescuers transferred 900 of 968 passengers and crewmen to two nearby commercial ships, a navy gunboat and a fishing boat from the sinking ferry. (AP Photo/Philippine Navy Forces Western Mindanao)AP - Passengers leapt into the dark sea and parents dropped children into life rafts when a ferry carrying nearly 1,000 people capsized in the middle of the night in the southern Philippines.


Iraq presses for tribunal for Syria bomb suspects (AP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 05:11 PM PDT

An Iraqi policeman stands near the remains of a parked car bomb in southeast Baghdad on Sunday, Sept. 6, 2009. Police said a car parked near a security checkpoint exploded, killing at least one person and wounding another five civilians. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)AP - Iraq's prime minister pressed a U.N. envoy Sunday on the need for an international tribunal to bring Syrian-based bombing suspects to trial, as Damascus refused to hand over those it called political refugees.


Sarkozy to Brazil with fighter jet bid looming (AP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 10:52 AM PDT

AP - French President Nicolas Sarkozy left Sunday for Brazil with hopes of persuading officials there to choose French-made fighter jets in a hot competition with U.S. and Swedish rivals.

In Italy, An Offended Berlusconi Goes on the Offensive (Time.com)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 07:05 AM PDT

Time.com - Derided for alleged peccadilloes, the Prime Minister of Italy lashes out in court and in print against his enemies, not sparing the Catholic Church

Sex Pistols frontman reforms PiL: report (AFP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 05:34 PM PDT

Johnny Rotten, British singer of the Sex Pistols' punk band, performs at an earlier concert in France. Rotten, alias John Lydon, is reforming his second most famous band, Public Image Ltd, after 17 years, a report said Monday. Lydon told the Guardian newspaper his PiL band would embark on a mini-tour starting in England in December.(AFP/File/Fred Tanneau)AFP - Punk rocker John Lydon, formerly Johnny Rotten, is reforming his second most famous band, Public Image Ltd, after 17 years, a report said Monday.


Israel approving new West Bank construction (AP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 01:55 PM PDT

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, front right, arrives with others unidentified at the weekly cabinet meeting in his office, in Jerusalem, Sunday, Sept. 6, 2009.  Israel has faced international criticism for a decision announced Friday to build hundreds of new housing units in settlements, defying calls for a settlement freeze that will allow peace talks with the Palestinians to resume.  (AP Photo/Ronen Zvulun, Pool)AP - Israel defied U.S. pressure to halt construction in its West Bank settlements Sunday, with key leaders speaking out in support of the contentious enclaves and preparing to sign orders to allow building of hundreds of new housing units there.


Mom caught in Mexico allegedly sold baby for house (AP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 03:03 PM PDT

AP - Mexican authorities have detained a young mother on suspicion of selling her 8-month-old daughter in exchange for a house and undisclosed payments.

Zimbabwe's neighbors to seek end to sanctions (Reuters)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 04:43 PM PDT

Reuters - African leaders will step up calls Monday for an end to Western sanctions against Zimbabwe and urge South Africa to plead Harare's cause within the Group of 20 rich and developing nations, officials said.

Cargo ship reported it was sinking off Philippines (AFP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 05:52 PM PDT

<p/>(AFP)AFP - A Panama-registered cargo vessel with two South Koreans and 18 Filipinos aboard sent out a distress signal saying it was sinking off the central Philippines, the coastguard said Monday.


Ten years on, no justice for ETimor's Suai massacre victims (AFP)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 10:56 AM PDT

An East Timorese child walks in the cemetery near Dili where the remains of twenty-three unidentified victims of a massacre were temporarily buried in November 1999. Hundreds of people lit candles and held prayers in East Timor on Sunday to mark the 10th anniversary of one of the worst massacres in the country's history.(AFP/File/Weda)AFP - Hundreds of people lit candles and held prayers in East Timor on Sunday to mark the 10th anniversary of one of the worst massacres in the country's history.


Afghan President Karzai closer to winning in disputed election (McClatchy Newspapers)

Posted: 06 Sep 2009 12:41 PM PDT

McClatchy Newspapers - KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghan President Hamid Karzai edged closer to a second term in office on Sunday as updated polling results gave him nearly enough votes to avoid a run-off election.

North Korea seeks international attention with uranium claim (The Christian Science Monitor)

Posted: 04 Sep 2009 02:00 AM PDT

The Christian Science Monitor - North Korea's notice to the United Nations Security Council that it's on the verge of developing nuclear warheads with highly enriched uranium appears as a grab for the attention of the US and other major powers. The North's expertise in uranium would mark a significant escalation of its potential as a nascent nuclear power.

The Gangs of El Salvador: A Growing Industry (Time.com)

Posted: 05 Sep 2009 10:35 PM PDT

Time.com - The impoverished Central American nation is beleaguered by thugs but cannot afford the programs that might get at the root of the crisis

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