2012年3月22日星期四

Yahoo! News: World News

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: World News


Clashes across Syria despite U.N. ceasefire call

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Syrian army tanks are seen in Deir al-Zour cityBEIRUT (Reuters) - More than 40 people died in clashes across Syria on Thursday, opposition activists said, as a U.N. Security Council call for an immediate end to the fighting fell on deaf ears. In the worst incident 10 civilians, including three children and two women, died when their small bus was shot up in the northern town of Sermeen as they tried to flee to Turkey, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said. The SOHR, which depends on a network of local contacts for its information, said it was not clear who was behind the killings. ...


Soldiers say they have seized power in Mali

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Malian soldiers and security forces gather at the offices of the state radio and television broadcaster after announcing a coup d'etat in the capital BamakoBAMAKO (Reuters) - Renegade soldiers said they seized power in Mali on Thursday and ordered its borders closed, threatening to reignite instability in a Saharan region shaken by the conflict in Libya. The overnight coup bid was led by low-ranking soldiers angry at the government's failure to stamp out a two-month-old separatist rebellion in the north of the west African state. Heavy weapons fire rang out throughout the night as the presidential palace came under attack. The whereabouts of President Amadou Toumani Toure, who oversaw a decade of relative stability, are unknown. ...


Dispute with Egypt triggers fuel crisis in Gaza

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Palestinians wait to fill containers with fuel at a petrol station in GazaGAZA (Reuters) - Petrol pumps have run dry and power cuts are blacking out the Gaza Strip because of a dispute over fuel supplies between Egypt and the enclave's Hamas Islamist rulers. Taxis are scarce, with would-be passengers fighting for rides, and the government has ordered civil servants with vehicles to pick up hitchhikers. Gaza's emergency medical service has halved the number of ambulances it puts on the streets. At least one hospital has cancelled non-essential operations to conserve power for its generator. ...


Angry UK police to seek right to strike

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British Police officers walk ahead of council officials as they inspect the Dale Farm travellers' site, near Billericay in southern EnglandLONDON (Reuters) - British police officers angry with the coalition government's plans to cut jobs and freeze pay will vote on whether they want the right to strike, the body representing them said on Thursday. The Police Federation, which represents 135,000 ordinary "bobbies" and low ranking officers in England and Wales, said the move to seek full industrial rights showed its members were infuriated by the government's austerity drive. "Officers genuinely feel what the government is doing is decimating the best of British policing," a Federation spokesman said. ...


Portuguese strike against austerity snarls transport

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Protesters carry a banner during the Portuguese general strike in LisbonLISBON (Reuters) - Portuguese strikers halted trains, shut ports and paralyzed most public transport on Thursday, but the limited scale of the protest against austerity measures seemed unlikely to weaken the government's resolve in implementing the terms of an EU/IMF bailout. There was little impact beyond the transport sector from the strike that caused no major output disruptions at companies. The country's second-largest union, UGT, did not back the strike, unlike in previous work stoppages. ...


Pope in Latin America in shadow of John Paul

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A car drives past a poster of Pope Benedict XVI, which reads VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - A ghost will be following Pope Benedict at every step of his trip to Mexico and Cuba -- that of his predecessor John Paul. John Paul, who died in 2005, was a huge draw in many places. But, apart from his native Poland, nowhere was he a more towering figure than in Latin America, visiting every one of the region's countries at least once. He drew oceanic, throbbing crowds, sloshed through swampy slums in Ecuador, challenged Maoist guerrillas in the Peruvian highlands and defended miners' rights in Bolivia. ...


Sweden ends row over Nobel Peace Prize attribution

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U.S. President and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Obama holds up his medal and diploma as he poses with Nobel Committee Chairman Jagland at the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony at City Hall in OsloOSLO (Reuters) - The Nobel Foundation has defended the award of its annual Peace Prize to U.S. President Barack Obama, Yemeni rights campaigner Tawakul Karman and others by persuading a Swedish regional body that the awards remained consistent with its founder's wishes. The County Administrative Board of Stockholm said on Thursday in an emailed statement that it had received a reply from the Nobel Foundation which supported its view that the foundation "fulfils its obligation to examine how the Nobel committees work". ...


Sarkozy cuts rival's poll lead after shooting drama

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France's President and UMP party candidate for the 2012 French presidential elections Sarkozy delivers a speech at a political rally in StrasbourgPARIS (Reuters) - A survey on Thursday showed President Nicolas Sarkozy cutting into his Socialist challenger's lead, the second opinion poll to show the conservative gaining since a deadly police standoff with an Islamist gunman gripped the nation. The poll also showed a hard-left candidate surging to third place for the April 22 first election round, overtaking far-right candidate Marine Le Pen. Police in Toulouse on Thursday shot dead Mohamed Merah, who had killed three Jewish schoolchildren, a rabbi and three soldiers. ...


Five more bodies found in wrecked Italian ship

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A firefighter walks on top of the Costa Concordia cruise ship during operations to bring up four bodies from the wreck at Giglio islandROME (Reuters) - Five more bodies have been found in the half-submerged wreck of the Costa Concordia cruise liner, bringing the number of confirmed dead to 30, Italy's Civil Protection agency said on Thursday. The giant vessel capsized off the Tuscan island of Giglio after hitting rocks on January 13. Two people are still unaccounted for. A spokeswoman for the agency said all the bodies were discovered at the rear of the vessel. It would probably be several days before they could be removed as it would be a complicated operation using robots, she said. ...


France to resume election race after gunman's death

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An undated and non-datelined frame grab from a video broadcast by French national television station France 2 who claim it shows Mohamed MerahTOULOUSE, France (Reuters) - France's presidential election race resumes on Friday, irrevocably altered by the killing of an al Qaeda-inspired gunman whose murders have shifted the political debate in favor of incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy. Mohamed Merah's cold-blooded shootings of seven people, including three Jewish schoolchildren, forced politicians to suspend normal campaigning while a giant manhunt closed in on the 23-year-old unemployed panel-beater. That hunt ended in a cacophony of gunfire shortly before midday on Thursday, after a 30-hour siege in the southern city of Toulouse. ...


French standoff ends with suspect shot in the head

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French firefighters leave after a police assault on a suspected Islamic extremist holed up in an apartment in Toulouse, southwestern France, Thursday, March 22, 2012. Mohamed Merah, who boasted of killing seven people to strike back at France died Thursday after jumping from his window, gun in hand, in a fierce shootout with police, a French minister said.. (AP Photo/Bob Edme)Inspired by radical Islam and trained in Afghanistan, the gunman methodically killed French schoolchildren, a rabbi and paratroopers and faced down hundreds of police for 32 hours. Then he leapt out a window as he rained down gunfire and was fatally shot in the head.


Mali coup leader says ex-president 'is safe'

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A soldier participating in a mutiny stands near civilians and burning tires lit in support of the mutiny, in Bamako, Mali Wednesday March 21, 2012. Gunshots could still be heard in the Malian capital late Wednesday, hours after angry troops started a mutiny at a military base near the presidential palace. Soldiers stormed the offices of the state broadcaster, yanking both TV and radio off the air.(AP Photo/Harouna Traore)Drunk soldiers looted Mali's presidential palace hours after they declared a coup on Thursday, suspending the constitution and dissolving the institutions of one of the few established democracies in this troubled corner of Africa.


Argentina to stock markets: Falklands oil illegal

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Argentina has asked stock markets in New York and London to warn investors of its claim that five oil exploration companies are working illegally off the Falkland Islands, which Argentina contends were stolen by Britain more than a century ago.

Judges: Ex-Irish leader Ahern took secret payments

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FILE - A Thursday June 12, 2008, photo from files showing former Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Bertie Ahern casting his ballot in a polling centre in Dublin city centre. Former Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern received 209,779 euro ($276,000) in secret payments while in office and repeatedly told lies about this under oath, a mammoth fact-finding investigation ruled Thursday, March 22, 2012, in a long-awaited verdict. The three judges of the Mahon tribunal stopped short of finding Ahern guilty of corruption, because they found no evidence that Ahern gave favors to any of his donors of cash when he was finance minister in the 1990's. (AP Photo/ Peter Morrison, File)Former Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern received at least €209,779 ($276,000) in secret payments while in office and repeatedly lied about this under oath, a mammoth fact-finding judicial investigation ruled Thursday in a long-awaited verdict.


Colombian police say rebel captured in Venezuela

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A member of Colombia's largest rebel group has been captured in neighboring Venezuela and is wanted for his role in the kidnapping and killing of three Americans in 1999, Colombian police said Thursday.

Pope visits heart of conservative Catholic Mexico

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An image of Pope Benedict XVI is taped to a wall, topped with a Vatican-colored bow, in Leon, Mexico, Thursday March 22, 2012. It's been a decade since the former Pope John Paul Paul II visited Mexico; his fifth and final trip to the country. His successor, Benedict, arrives Friday. The Pope will hold Sunday Mass in Silao, Mexico, against the backdrop of the 60-foot-tall hilltop statue of Christ the King, before leaving for Cuba on Monday. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)The last time a pope visited Mexico, more than 1 million believers cheered and wept in the streets of the capital. Aztec dancers shook rattles and blew conch shells inside the cathedral where John Paul II canonized the first Indian saint in the Americas.


5 more bodies found in Concordia cruise wreck

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FILE - A Monday, Feb.13, 2012 file photo showing ongoing operations to remove fuel from the half sunken hulk of the luxury ship Costa Concordia a month after it ran aground outside the port of Isola del Giglio island in Tuscany, Italy. The Concordia capsized in a protected sea sanctuary, and salvage teams have been removing fuel since Feb. 12 in hopes of sparing the pristine waters from pollution. Costa Crociere SpA., the Italian cruise company, and Italian officials said fuel removal was expected to be completed by Friday evening. (AP Photo/Giorgio Fanciulli, File)Search crews in Italy have found five more bodies in the wreck of the Costa Concordia cruise ship, which struck a reef off an Italian island in January.


Syria's Assad in firm control after a bloody year

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A vendor displays pictures of Syrian President Bashar Assad in Damascus, Syria, Thursday, March 22, 2012. Mounting international condemnation of Bashar Assad's regime and high-level diplomacy have failed to ease the year-old Syria conflict, which the U.N. says has killed more than 8,000 people. (AP Photo/Muzaffar Salman)As world leaders close ranks against Syrian leader Bashar Assad, the U.S. president summed up the popular wisdom during a recent White House press conference: "Ultimately, this dictator will fall."


Russian lawmaker: Assad must pull out troops first

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In this image made from amateur video and released by Ugarit News Wednesday, March 21, 2012, purports to show Syrian rebels chanting slogans in in Deir Al Zor 450 Kilometers (280 miles) northeast of Damascus, Syria. The Syrian uprising, which began one year ago, is transforming into an armed insurgency that many fear is pushing the country toward civil war. Because of Syria's close alliances with Iran and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, there are deep concerns that the violence could spread beyond the country's borders, especially if other nations arm the rebels or send in their own troops. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via APTN) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUTSyrian President Bashar Assad must take the first step toward settling his country's yearlong conflict by pulling his forces out of cities and allowing humanitarian assistance, a senior Russian lawmaker said Thursday, in a statement that signaled a marked shift in Moscow's stance.


APNewsBreak: Piracy fighters use floating armories

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Private security firms are storing their guns aboard floating armories in international waters so ships that want armed anti-piracy guards for East Africa's pirate-infested waters can cut costs and circumvent laws limiting the import and export of weapons, industry officials say.

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