2010年5月5日星期三

Yahoo! News: World News

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: World News


3 die in Athens riot over cutbacks, debt crisis (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 05:01 PM PDT

Protestors chant  anti government slogans outside the Greek Parliament Athens, Wednesday, May 5, 2010. Protestors tried to storm Greece's parliament and hurled paving stones at police, who responded with tear gas Wednesday as tens of thousands of outraged Greeks took to the streets to protest harsh new spending cuts aimed at saving their country from bankruptcy. The banner reads: 'The 'haves' should pay for the crisis - Thieves, crooks, despoilers'(AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris)AP - Rioting over harsh austerity measures left three people dead in a torched Athens bank and clouds of tear gas drifting past parliament, in an outburst of anger that underlined the long and difficult struggle Greece faces to stick with painful cutbacks that come with an international bailout.


Shiite agreement gives Iraq's clerics greater say (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 01:23 PM PDT

Ahmed Chalabi, the head of the Accountability and Justice Committee speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, May 5, 2010. Chalabi said Iraq's other political groups should be reassured by the fact that the Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani the revered Shiite cleric in Iraq who's essentially the head of the marjaiyah has said no political groups should be excluded from the political process. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)AP - An agreement to form an alliance between Iranian-backed Shiite blocs gives the final say on political disputes to Iraq's top clerics, solidifying a role for the Shiite religious leadership in the country's likely new government.


Arabs see opening for nuke-free Mideast (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 02:13 PM PDT

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton addresses the Nuclear  Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) conference at United Nations headquarters, Monday, May 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)AP - The world's five recognized nuclear-weapons powers on Wednesday reaffirmed the goal of a Middle East free of nuclear weapons, a long-dormant Arab idea that's come back to life at this month's nonproliferation treaty conference.


Nigeria President Yar'Adua dies after long illness (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 04:49 PM PDT

Nigeria president Umaru Yar'Adua, pictured in 2007, has died, an official at his office confirmed late Wednesday.(AFP/File/Pius Utomi Ekpei)AP - Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua, long plagued by poor health, has died at age 58, almost three months after his vice president assumed control of Africa's most populous nation, Yar'Adua's spokesman said.


Italy mezzo-soprano Giulietta Simionato dies at 99 (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 04:07 PM PDT

AP - Giulietta Simionato, an Italian mezzo-soprano whose instantly recognizable voice was wildly popular with audiences, died Wednesday, La Scala opera house said. She would have turned 100 on May 12.

3 Dead in Greece Riots; Will Protests Threaten Reform? (Time.com)

Posted: 05 May 2010 04:45 PM PDT

Time.com - Three people were killed when Greeks took to the streets to protest the austerity measures attached to the country's $145 billion bailout. But regrets over the deaths may not be enough to calm the growing anger

Last push in Britain as vote approaches (AFP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 04:33 PM PDT

Conservative Party leader David Cameron speaks during a rally in Bristol. Party leaders rushed across Britain in a frantic final day of campaigning Wednesday as they battled to win over undecided voters, before what is expected to be the tightest election contest in decades.(AFP/POOL/Carl de Souza)AFP - Party leaders rushed across the country in a frantic final day of campaigning Wednesday as they battled to win over undecided voters, before what is expected to be the tightest election contest in decades.


After lengthy diplomacy, Mideast peace talks begin (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 12:14 PM PDT

Palestinian school girls are reflected in a car window as they walk past a banner of U.S. President Barack Obama in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Wednesday, May 5, 2010. Both Israelis and Palestinians stand to gain by renewing U.S.- mediated contacts this week, the Obama administration's first sustained, on-the-ground attempt to bridge vast differences over what a Palestinian state should look like. (AP Photo/Tara Todras-Whitehill)AP - A U.S. mediator launched Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations Wednesday after a break of more than a year, starting a shuttle mission between a hard-line Israeli government and a Palestinian administration in control of only part of its territory.


US senators ask $3.5 billion for Haiti recovery (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 05:13 PM PDT

People pray at the Incarnation of Our Lord church in Philadelphia, Wednesday, May 5, 2010 during a check presentation ceremony by Cardinal Justin Rigali Archbishop of Philadelphia and Catholic Relief Services President Ken Hackett. A ceremonial check representing  over $1.8 million in parishioners' donations for Haiti earthquake recovery efforts was presented to a representative of Catholic Relief Services. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)AP - U.S. senators proposed Wednesday to increase American aid to Haiti to $3.5 billion over the next five years to help the country emerge from the pulverizing blow of the Jan. 12 earthquake.


Nigeria's President Yar'Adua dead: official (AFP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 05:33 PM PDT

Nigerian president Umaru Yar'Adua, pictured in 2007, has died, an official at his office has confirmed.(AFP/Pool/File/Jose Cendon)AFP - Nigeria president Umaru Yar'Adua has died, an official at his office has confirmed.


2 Australian workmen flee excavation bungle (AP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 04:52 PM PDT

AP - Two workmen who excavated the wrong front yard in Australia's eastern city of Brisbane fled after realizing their error, the home owner said on Thursday.

Calgary police lift downtown cordon, no bomb found (Reuters)

Posted: 05 May 2010 02:08 PM PDT

Reuters - A suspicious package that led police to evacuate buildings and cordon off a swath of Calgary's downtown core on Wednesday afternoon turned out not to be a bomb, officials said.

Aussie teen's round-the-world no record: manager (AFP)

Posted: 05 May 2010 12:52 AM PDT

Australian schoolgirl Jessica Watson, pictured, was on track to become the youngest sailor to circumnavigate the world but her journey would not be officially recognised as a record, her manager said Wednesday.(AFP/File/Greg Wood)AFP - Australian schoolgirl Jessica Watson was on track to become the youngest sailor to circumnavigate the world but her journey would not be officially recognised as a record, her manager said Wednesday.


IAEA chief: Iran refuses to answer key nuclear questions (McClatchy Newspapers)

Posted: 05 May 2010 05:29 PM PDT

McClatchy Newspapers - UNITED NATIONS — Even as it faces the threat of new U.N. sanctions, Iran is refusing to discuss its alleged military-related research or provide data on new uranium enrichment plants it plans to build — preventing the U.N. nuclear watchdog from verifying that Tehran isn't seeking nuclear weapons — the agency chief said Wednesday.

Megacities of the world: a glimpse of how we'll live tomorrow (The Christian Science Monitor)

Posted: 05 May 2010 08:22 AM PDT

The Christian Science Monitor - On a teeming street in Mumbai's Dharavi slum, amid a colorful swirl of sweet lime carts and red-clay pottery, Pastor Bala Singh brings an assortment of buckets to retrieve his daily ration of water. The indoor spigot he uses provides water only three hours a day. It is the only source for the six small homes on his street, and each family has 30 minutes to fill its containers.

Iraq: Moving toward a new government, more instability (Time.com)

Posted: 05 May 2010 03:45 PM PDT

Time.com - A new Shi'ite political pact could break the post election deadlock and form a new government, but shutting out the Sunnis may stoke new violence

Minor Rebels, Major Terror in DR Congo (OneWorld.net)

Posted: 05 May 2010 05:26 PM PDT

OneWorld.net - NIANGARA, May 5 (IRIN) - They may number as few as 100 men, women and adolescents, but Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) units scattered across the forests of northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo's Orientale Province have sown sufficient terror to make some 318,000 people take flight, abandoning their homes and fields, in many cases to the uncertain sanctuary of urban centres.

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