Yahoo! News: World News
Yahoo! News: World News |
- Time to refer Syrian war crimes to ICC: U.N. inquiry
- U.S. could resume direct Mali military aid if elections successful
- Venezuela's Chavez makes surprise return from Cuba
- Workers and police clash at airport during Iberia strike
- Mexico's new president has 56 percent approval rating: poll
- Thousands in Guinea demand graft-free vote
- Tunisia PM fails to get new cabinet to stem unrest
- Ecuador's re-elected Correa vows media and land reforms
- Bulgaria presses EU to toughen stance on Hezbollah
- Armenian president wins re-election, exit poll shows
- Kurdish refugees have mixed feelings about Syria
- Ailing Chavez returns to Venezuela from Cuba
- Girlfriend's mom: Why did he do this?
- Israeli Ethiopian birth control ignites debate
- Costa Rica toughens stance in US-backed drug fight
- Germany: Tighter controls needed on meat products
- Pro-Cuba protesters halt dissident Yoani's event
- 32 Myanmar nationals rescued at sea off Sri Lanka
- 2 charged in Papua New Guinea 'witch' killing
- Belarus guard get 2-year sentence for teddy bears
- Colombia: Violence flares in lead up to new round of FARC peace talks
- Family of slain girlfriend seeks answers, Pistorius to face bail hearing
- Red-letter weekend for Latin America's left as Correa wins reelection and Chavez returns home
- Young Ugandan chess-prodigy: lessons in the slum take her to the world stage
Time to refer Syrian war crimes to ICC: U.N. inquiry Posted: 18 Feb 2013 11:44 AM PST GENEVA (Reuters) - United Nations investigators said on Monday that Syrian leaders they had identified as suspected war criminals should face the International Criminal Court (ICC). The investigators urged the U.N. Security Council to "act urgently to ensure accountability" for violations, including murder and torture, committed by both sides in an uprising and civil war that has killed about 70,000 people since March 2011. "Now really it's time ... ... |
U.S. could resume direct Mali military aid if elections successful Posted: 18 Feb 2013 01:49 PM PST BAMAKO, Mali (Reuters) - The United States is likely to eventually resume direct support for Mali's military, but only after full restoration of democracy through elections, the head of a visiting U.S. Congress delegation said on Monday. Senator Christopher Coons, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on Africa, was leading the first American congressional visit to the West African nation since France sent a military force there last month to halt an offensive by al Qaeda-allied insurgents. ... |
Venezuela's Chavez makes surprise return from Cuba Posted: 18 Feb 2013 01:57 PM PST CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez made a surprise return from Cuba on Monday, more than two months after surgery for cancer that has jeopardized his 14-year rule of the South American OPEC nation. The middle-of-the-night homecoming implies some medical improvement - at least enough to handle a flight of several hours - and will again fire up supporters with hope that the socialist leader could return to active rule. Yet there was no new information on Chavez's health nor images of his arrival, and aides say the 58-year-old's condition remains "complex. ... |
Workers and police clash at airport during Iberia strike Posted: 18 Feb 2013 09:48 AM PST MADRID (Reuters) - Striking union workers clashed with police at Madrid's Barajas airport on Monday on the first day of a week-long strike over more than 3,800 pending job cuts at Spain's flagship airline Iberia. More than 80 Iberia flights were canceled as workers at the carrier began a series of five-day walkouts that are expected to cost the airline and struggling national economy millions of euros in lost business. Hundreds of workers flooded into Terminal 4 at Barajas - the biggest airport in Spain - to noisily protest, chanting and whistling, with one group staging a sit-in. ... |
Mexico's new president has 56 percent approval rating: poll Posted: 18 Feb 2013 11:27 AM PST MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has a lower approval rating at the start of his term than his predecessor did, a poll showed on Monday, underscoring the challenge he faces to push key economic reforms through a divided Congress. Less than three months into office, 56 percent of Mexicans approve of Pena Nieto as president compared to 29 percent who disapprove of the job he is doing, according to a survey by Buendia y Laredo published by daily El Universal on Monday. ... |
Thousands in Guinea demand graft-free vote Posted: 18 Feb 2013 11:05 AM PST CONAKRY (Reuters) - Opposition supporters held protests across Guinea on Monday to demand a free and fair parliamentary election, fearing the first such vote in more than a decade will be cheapened by fraud. The May 12 election is intended to be the last step in Guinea's return to civilian rule following the death of veteran strongman Lansana Conte in 2008 and two years of violent army rule. President Alpha Conde was elected in 2010 and has promised prosperity for Guinea's 10 million people. The West African nation's economy produces only about $1. ... |
Tunisia PM fails to get new cabinet to stem unrest Posted: 18 Feb 2013 01:06 PM PST TUNIS (Reuters) - Tunisia's main political parties failed to agree on forming a non-partisan cabinet to tackle turmoil triggered by the assassination of an opposition leader, Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali said on Monday. But he said efforts would continue to form a government supported by most parties in the North African state that spawned the slew of popular uprisings against dictatorship across the Arab world two years ago. ... |
Ecuador's re-elected Correa vows media and land reforms Posted: 18 Feb 2013 01:14 PM PST QUITO (Reuters) - Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa vowed on Monday to press ahead with laws to control the media and redistribute land to the poor as he looks to deepen his socialist revolution after a resounding re-election victory. Correa, a pugnacious 49-year-old economist, trounced his nearest rival by more than 30 percentage points on Sunday to win a new four-year term. He has already been in power for six years, winning broad support with ambitious social spending programs. ... |
Bulgaria presses EU to toughen stance on Hezbollah Posted: 18 Feb 2013 01:19 PM PST BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Bulgaria urged European governments on Monday to take a harder stance towards Hezbollah after blaming the Lebanese Islamist movement for a bus bombing that killed five Israelis at a Bulgarian Black Sea resort last year. But the country's Foreign Minister Nikolai Mladenov cautioned European states not to be in a rush to brand the Lebanese group as a terrorist organization, saying careful consideration was needed of potential consequences in Beirut. ... |
Armenian president wins re-election, exit poll shows Posted: 18 Feb 2013 01:15 PM PST YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan won a new five-year term on Monday, an exit poll and initial results showed, in an election marred by allegations of fraud and the lack of a serious opposition challenge. Police said they had received at least 70 reports of voting violations after a campaign in which one of the outside candidates was shot and wounded. The opposition Heritage Party said many ballots cast for opposition parties had been thrown out, but did not say whether it would challenge the result. ... |
Kurdish refugees have mixed feelings about Syria Posted: 18 Feb 2013 11:43 AM PST |
Ailing Chavez returns to Venezuela from Cuba Posted: 18 Feb 2013 04:46 PM PST CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — President Hugo Chavez returned to Venezuela early Monday after more than two months of treatment in Cuba following cancer surgery, his government said, triggering street celebrations by supporters who welcomed him home while he remained out of sight at Caracas' military hospital. |
Girlfriend's mom: Why did he do this? Posted: 18 Feb 2013 09:36 AM PST |
Israeli Ethiopian birth control ignites debate Posted: 18 Feb 2013 02:51 PM PST |
Costa Rica toughens stance in US-backed drug fight Posted: 18 Feb 2013 03:34 PM PST LIBERIA, Costa Rica (AP) — On a recent Friday morning at a gleaming new international airport in Costa Rica, hundreds of tourists from New York and Minnesota emerged blinking onto the sun-blasted tarmac. At the other end of the runway, eight Americans zipped into tan flight suits aboard a massive white surveillance plane. |
Germany: Tighter controls needed on meat products Posted: 18 Feb 2013 01:57 PM PST |
Pro-Cuba protesters halt dissident Yoani's event Posted: 18 Feb 2013 04:50 PM PST |
32 Myanmar nationals rescued at sea off Sri Lanka Posted: 18 Feb 2013 04:22 PM PST |
2 charged in Papua New Guinea 'witch' killing Posted: 18 Feb 2013 04:33 PM PST |
Belarus guard get 2-year sentence for teddy bears Posted: 18 Feb 2013 10:31 AM PST MINSK, Belarus (AP) — A Belarusian court has handed out a two-year prison sentence to a border guard who failed to protect the ex-Soviet nation from foreign teddy bears. |
Colombia: Violence flares in lead up to new round of FARC peace talks Posted: 18 Feb 2013 07:58 AM PST Colombian government and rebel negotiators begin a new round of peace talks today, even as hostilities between the two sides intensify and test the patience of war-weary Colombians. But the fact that negotiations have withstood the strain is a promising sign of the strength of the process, analysts say. |
Family of slain girlfriend seeks answers, Pistorius to face bail hearing Posted: 18 Feb 2013 06:53 AM PST The family of Oscar Pistorius' slain girlfriend wants answers, her mother told a Johannesburg newspaper as the country waited to hear for the first time why prosecutors believe the iconic athlete murdered Reeva Steenkamp by shooting her multiple times on Valentine's Day morning. |
Red-letter weekend for Latin America's left as Correa wins reelection and Chavez returns home Posted: 18 Feb 2013 07:00 AM PST The photos illustrating the biggest news in Latin America this weekend could not have differed more. One was of a vigorous and victorious Rafael Correa in Ecuador, winning a third term in office Sunday; the other was of Hugo Chavez, Venezuela's ailing president, smiling but, weeks after surgery for cancer, still lying in a hospital bed. |
Young Ugandan chess-prodigy: lessons in the slum take her to the world stage Posted: 18 Feb 2013 06:00 AM PST The muddy alleyways and dark, crowded rooms of the Katwe slum in Uganda's capital city seem like the last place you'd expect to pick up a game of chess. But this is where one of the world's most unlikely chess champions, 16 year-old Phiona Mutesi, first laid eyes on a board. |
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