2013年3月21日星期四

Yahoo! News: World News

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: World News


Obama to shore up ally Jordan on last stop in Mideast

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 03:51 PM PDT

U.S. President Obama acknowledges the audience after delivering a speech on policy at the Jerusalem Convention CenterBy Matt Spetalnick JERUSALEM (Reuters) - President Barack Obama flies to Jordan on Friday for talks with King Abdullah, a key U.S. Middle East ally, that are expected to focus on the civil war in neighboring Syria and the prospects for Israeli-Palestinian peace diplomacy. Obama will head to Amman after the final day of his first official visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories, which will be heavy on symbolism as he tours sites of historic and religious importance to both peoples. ...


Damascus mosque blast kills 42 including senior Syrian imam

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:17 PM PDT

A file photo shows high-level cleric Mohammed al-Buti speaking at a mosqueBEIRUT (Reuters) - An explosion at a mosque in the Syrian capital on Thursday killed at least 42 people, including a senior pro-government Muslim cleric, and wounded 84, the Syrian health ministry said. State television and anti-government activists earlier had reported 15 dead. The television said a "terrorist suicide blast" hit the Iman Mosque in central Damascus, and Mohammed al-Buti, imam of the ancient Ummayyad Mosque, was among the dead. "The death toll from the suicide bombing of the Iman Mosque in Damascus is 42 martyrs and 84 wounded," the health ministry said later in a statement. ...


France's Sarkozy investigated in party-funding affair

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 04:39 PM PDT

Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy reacts as he leaves his car in ParisBy Claude Canellas BORDEAUX, France (Reuters) - Ex-French president Nicolas Sarkozy was placed under formal investigation on Thursday for "abuse of weakness" in a 2007 party funding case involving elderly L'Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, the public prosecutor said. The risk for Sarkozy, unseated May last year but considered a potential conservative candidate in the 2017 presidential race, is that he may end up plagued by suspicion for months or years, even if his lawyer says there is no case against him. ...


Russia tones down criticism of new U.S. missile plans

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 12:22 PM PDT

Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov speaks during a news briefing in the main building of Foreign Ministry in MoscowBy Steve Gutterman MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia signaled on Thursday that a change in U.S. plans for a European anti-missile shield could help the two sides make progress towards resolving a dispute that has frayed their relations. On Friday, the United States announced it would station 14 new anti-missile interceptors in Alaska after North Korea threatened a pre-emptive nuclear strike, and forgo a new interceptor that would have been deployed in central Europe. Cold War-era foes Moscow and Washington have long been at loggerheads over the shield in Europe. ...


Iran will destroy Israeli cities if attacked: Khamenei

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 10:07 AM PDT

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks during the 16th summit of the Non-Aligned Movement in TehranBy Marcus George and Zahra Hosseinian DUBAI (Reuters) - Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned on Thursday that the Islamic Republic would destroy the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv and Haifa if its nuclear infrastructure came under attack from the Jewish state. Israel puts little stock in big power negotiations aimed at curbing Iran's uranium enrichment - which Western nations suspect is a conduit to nuclear weapons capability - and has repeatedly hinted at pre-emptive war against its arch-enemy. During a visit to Israel on Thursday, U.S. ...


Russian President Putin wants BRICS to tackle geopolitics

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 03:43 PM PDT

Russia's President Putin meets with the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) CEO Dmitriev at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside MoscowBy Steve Gutterman MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia wants the BRICS group of major emerging economies to broaden its role and get more involved in geopolitics, President Vladimir Putin said in an interview published on Friday. Putin, who has frequently criticized European and U.S. activities and has teamed up with fellow BRICS nation China to counter Western clout, spoke before a summit next week of the group, which also includes Brazil, India and South Africa. ...


Cyprus court finds Hezbollah member guilty in Israeli plot

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 03:57 PM PDT

NICOSIA (Reuters) - A court in Cyprus on Thursday convicted a Hezbollah member of plotting against Israeli interests on the island in a verdict likely to increase pressure on the European Union to declare the Lebanese group a terrorist organization. Hossam Taleb Yaccoub was arrested in the Cypriot port city of Limassol last year, two weeks before a suicide bomber killed five Israeli tourists in Bulgaria in July, an attack Sofia blamed on Hezbollah. The group denies involvement. ...

U.N. launches probe of possible Syrian chemical arms attack

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 03:56 PM PDT

U.N. Secretary General Ban during the signing ceremony of the peace deal to end eastern Democratic Republic Congo conflict, in Addis AbabaBy Michelle Nichols and Louis Charbonneau UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The United Nations said on Thursday it would investigate Syria's allegations that rebel forces used chemical weapons in an attack near Aleppo, but Western countries sought a probe of all claims concerning the use of such banned arms. "I have decided to conduct a United Nations investigation into the possible use of chemical weapons in Syria," said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. The investigation will focus on "the specific incident brought to my attention by the Syrian government," he told reporters. ...


Venezuelan police fire tear gas during clash ahead of vote

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:49 PM PDT

Riot police officer takes cover behind a car as he attempts to break up a demonstration in CaracasBy Deisy Buitrago and Efrain Otero CARACAS (Reuters) - Police fired tear gas in downtown Caracas on Thursday as anti-government student protesters clashed with supporters of late President Hugo Chavez in an increasingly volatile atmosphere ahead of next month's election. Several hundred students were marching to the election board's headquarters to demand a clean vote when they were blocked by government supporters who hurled stones, bottles and eggs at them, a Reuters witness said. Some of the students threw stones back, other witnesses said. "We were holding a peaceful march. ... ...


Italy's Bersani maneuvers for new government

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:13 PM PDT

Italian centre-left leader Bersani speaks after meeting with Italian President Napolitano at Quirinale palace in RomeBy James Mackenzie and Gavin Jones ROME (Reuters) - Italian center-left leader Pier Luigi Bersani on Thursday appealed to all parties in parliament to back a new government, a move that may brighten prospects of resolving the political deadlock following last month's inconclusive election. After meeting with President Giorgio Napolitano, Bersani said "all the forces in parliament" should support a government with a program of reforms presented by the center-left. ...


Syria: Bombing kills top pro-Assad Sunni preacher

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 03:28 PM PDT

In this undated photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Sheikh Mohammad Said Ramadan al-Buti, an 84-year-old cleric known to all Syrians as a religious scholar, speaks at a press conference. Al-Buti, a top Sunni Muslim preacher and longtime supporter of President Bashar Assad was killed in a suicide bombing in the Eman Mosque, at the Mazraa district, in Damascus, Syria, Thursday, March 21, 2013, state TV reported . (AP Photo/SANA)BEIRUT (AP) — A suicide bomb ripped through a mosque in the heart of the Syrian capital Thursday, killing a top Sunni Muslim preacher and outspoken supporter of President Bashar Assad in one of the most stunning assassinations of Syria's 2-year-old civil war. At least 41 others were killed and more than 84 wounded.


'Peace is possible,' Obama insists in Middle East

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:41 PM PDT

President Barack Obama waves to the audience as he arrives to speak at the International Convention Center in Jerusalem, Thursday, March 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)JERUSALEM (AP) — Insisting "peace is possible," President Barack Obama on Thursday prodded both Israelis and Palestinians to return to long-stalled negotiations with few, if any, pre-conditions, softening his earlier demands that Israel stop building settlements in disputed territory.


Scientists find universe is 80 million years older

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:26 PM PDT

This image released on Thursday March 21, 2013 by the European Space Agency (ESA) from the Planck spacecraft shows a bridge of hot gas that connects galaxy clusters about a billion light-years from Earth. (AP Photo/ESA Planck Collaboration)PARIS (AP) — A new examination of what is essentially the universe's birth certificate allows astronomers to tweak the age, girth and speed of the cosmos, more secure in their knowledge of how it evolved, what it's made of and its ultimate fate.


Obama visit poses tough choices for Palestinians

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 01:23 PM PDT

President Barack Obama looks into the crowd and tries to hear a person yelling at him during his speech at the International Convention Center in Jerusalem, Thursday, March 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)JERUSALEM (AP) — President Barack Obama spoke grandly of big picture peacemaking Thursday, but the Palestinians are focused on a specific demand — that Israel freeze settlement building before they'll return to talks.


Kurdish rebel leader calls for historic truce

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 12:50 PM PDT

Some thousands of supporters demonstrate waving various PKK flags and images of jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan, in southeastern Turkish city of Diyarbakir, Turkey, Thursday, March 21, 2013. Ocalan called Thursday for an immediate cease-fire and for thousands of his fighters to withdraw from Turkish territory, a major step toward ending the fighting for self-rule for Kurds in southeastern Turkey, one of the world's bloodiest insurgencies lasting nearly 30-years and costing tens of thousands of lives.(AP Photo)ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — In a major step toward ending one of the world's longest, bloodiest insurgencies, the Kurds' jailed rebel leader called Thursday for a "new era" of peace that includes an immediate cease-fire and the withdrawal of thousands of his fighters from Turkey.


Passing reference in 'Argo' rankles New Zealand

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 12:46 PM PDT

An image of a U.S. State Dept. document provided by the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, crediting four embassies, Canadians, Britian, Swedish and New Zealand, with aiding in the protection and escape of six Americans from Iran during the 1979 Islamic Revolution. There is only a brief mention of New Zealand in the Oscar-winning movie "Argo,", that seems to suggest that New Zealanders turned away the group of Americans, and that is rankling New Zealanders five months after the film was released in the South Pacific nation. Even Parliament has expressed its dismay, passing a motion stating that Ben Affleck, who also directed the movie, "saw fit to mislead the world about what actually happened." (AP Photo/Jimmy Carter Library and Museum)WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Thirteen minutes into the Oscar-winning movie "Argo," CIA agent Tony Mendez asks supervisor Jack O'Donnell what happened to a group of Americans when the U.S. Embassy was stormed in Tehran.


Mob kills alleged thief in Egypt vigilante attack

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 01:06 PM PDT

This image made from video, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting shows a man, bound by his feet, surrounded by villagers as he asks to be taken to a hospital, before he was beaten and then tied to a tree until he died in the northern Sharqiya province in Egypt, Thursday, March 21, 2013. Egyptian witnesses and officials say villagers beat the man to death after catching him trying to steal a car in a new case of vigilante violence. A number of recent lynchings or attempted lynchings have raised worries over an increasing breakdown of security, adding a new challenge to Egypt's government. A security official says dozens of villagers in Ezbat el-Gindy in the northern Sharqiya province caught the man trying to steal a car at gunpoint Thursday.(AP Photo)CAIRO (AP) — Villagers in Egypt's Nile Delta killed a man suspected of trying to steal a car Thursday in the country's latest incident of vigilante violence, dragging him half-naked and bloody as they kicked and hit him with sticks and fists before tying him to a tree to bleed to death, witnesses and officials said.


AP PHOTOS: Obama stance setback for Palestinians

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 01:16 PM PDT

President Barack Obama, left, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, participate in a joint news conference at the Muqata Presidential Compound, in the West Bank town of Ramallah, Thursday, March 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)JERUSALEM (AP) — In eight years on the job, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has seen his share of ups and downs. Thursday's appearance with visiting U.S. President Barack Obama looked like it was one of his lowest points.


Italy to return marine murder suspects to India

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 12:50 PM PDT

ROME (AP) — The Italian government said on Thursday that it will return to India two marines facing murder charges in the shooting deaths of two fishermen, reversing an earlier decision that had escalated diplomatic tensions between the nations.

WHITE HOUSE NOTEBOOK: Up close, Obama the tourist

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:56 PM PDT

President Barack Obama, accompanied by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, removes his Israeli Medal of Distinction, which he received at the State Dinner at President's residence in Jerusalem, Israel, Thursday, March 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)JERUSALEM (AP) — President Barack Obama has permitted TV crews with live microphones to accompany him at virtually every stop in Israel, giving a rare and fascinating glimpse at the joking and small talk that takes place on the sidelines of official visits.


Obama to Israel: 'You are not alone'

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:21 PM PDT

President Obama's whole visit to Israel can be summed up in one Hebrew phrase he uttered to a packed auditorium of Israeli students this afternoon: You are not alone.

What the US is doing to help some Syrian rebels, undermine jihadis

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 02:02 PM PDT

US Ambassador to Syria Robert Ford, who was withdrawn from Damascus over a year ago, laid out the Obama administration's assistance to some Syrian rebel groups, its efforts to undermine others, and overall plans for continued involvement in the Syrian civil war in testimony to Congress yesterday.

Remarkable tales of survival from around the world

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 10:39 AM PDT

This photo released by the Maine Warden Service shows Nicholas Joy, 17, of Medford, Mass., sitting on a snowmobile Tuesday morning, March 5, 2013, after being found on a trail off the western side of Sugarloaf Mountain at Carrabassett Valley, Maine. Joy, who went missing Sunday during a family ski trip, survived two nights in the wild by building a snow cave for shelter, drinking water from a stream and walking toward the sound of snowmobiles during the day. (AP Photo/Maine Warden Service, Scott Thrasher)Stories of survival often include extraordinary challenges, hardship, and a broader tragedy. But most of all, they inspire.


Good Reads: US-China relations, 'Lean In,' ballet's whodunit, Ireland's Downton

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 01:41 PM PDT

The United States has two clear choices in dealing with China: Engage or isolate the world's most populous nation. "You cannot have it both ways," argues Lee Kuan Yew, prime minister of Singapore for more than three decades, who led his tiny Asian nation to Western-style prosperity despite being in the shadow of its giant communist neighbor. "You cannot say you will engage China on some issues and isolate her over others. You cannot mix your signals."

From Turkish jail, Kurdish guerrilla leader offers to lay down arms

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 01:37 PM PDT

Jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan today called for a cease-fire and withdrawal of his forces from Turkey, signaling a possible end to a three-decade-long conflict that has cost 40,000 lives.

Delhi braces for return of some serious monkey business

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 12:25 PM PDT

Monkeys are poised to take back the corridors of power in the world's largest democracy. Once literally overrun with packs of small but troublesome rhesus monkeys, Delhi's government zone began to fight back the menace a decade ago with large langur monkeys who were trained to them chase away.

Like Pope Francis, new archbishop of Canterbury seen as advocate for the poor

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 11:49 AM PDT

The new archbishop of Canterbury was formally enthroned Thursday, providing the Church of England and millions of members of the worldwide Anglican communion with a leader who – much like the new pope – has emerged as a strong advocate of social justice.

In Kenya, social media hate speech rises as nation awaits election ruling

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 11:04 AM PDT

Patricia Amira, a popular Kenyan television talk-show host, began noticing the comments and tweets soon after the country's election results were declared nearly a fortnight ago.

The real warning in Syrian chemical weapons claims

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 10:56 AM PDT

The Syrian government today asked the United Nations to investigate allegations, completely unproven and unsubstantiated to this point, that a chemical weapon of some sort was used near Aleppo earlier this week.

Cyprus' Plan B: What will happen if Moscow won't foot the bill?

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 10:38 AM PDT

The clock in Nicosia is ticking a lot louder: Tiny Cyprus has four days to come up with about 6 billion euros ($7.5 billion) or lose its current lender of last resort, the European Central Bank (ECB).

Study: Mexico pays price for being soda king

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 10:34 AM PDT

Mexicans drink more refrescos, or soda, than people in just about any other country, according to new research.

With Cyprus desperate for bailout help, Russia plays hardball

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 09:30 AM PDT

As Cyprus races against a deadline from Europe's central bank to put its financial house in order or face bankruptcy, the country's leaders are turning to an unlikely champion in hopes of finding some relief from their escalating troubles: Russia.

Europe, Cyprus look for way out of crisis. Could Moscow save the day?

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 08:47 AM PDT

As Cyprus, the eurozone's third smallest economy, is staring state bankruptcy in the face, European leaders are scratching their heads: How did we end up in this mess? And, more importantly, what is the way out?

Water crisis runs much deeper than digging a well

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 08:26 AM PDT

It's easy to tell a powerful and heart-rending story about the lack of clean water that afflicts millions of people.

As Obama does about-face on settlements, Palestinians question US as 'honest broker'

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 08:16 AM PDT

As President Obama arrived in Ramallah for a short visit today, he faced widespread disillusionment that America has the ability or willingness to be a fair arbiter in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict – even with a historic leader at its helm, who has sought to fashion himself after Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr. and the freedom they espoused.

Why cyberattacks are the logical North Korean weapon

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 07:40 AM PDT

After an apparent cyberattack disrupted operations at a number of South Korean broadcasters and banks yesterday, officials here are trying to figure out whether North Korea is responsible. If so, it would show that despite the stark contrast in development between the two countries, the North is capable of striking its southern rival in an unconventional, but harmful, manner.

Penn & Teller in Cairo, 2003

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 07:21 AM PDT

Last night stumbled across this video bringing together two of the world's greatest magicians and one of the world's greatest, if seriously troubled, cities.

'The world upside down': The rise of Spanish immigration to Morocco

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 06:52 AM PDT

Marcos Martinez Bacelo does not know when he will be able to go home.

West Bank hosts Obama, Gaza sends rockets

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 05:46 AM PDT

• A daily summary of global reports on security issues.

Who is Pope Francis?

Posted: 21 Mar 2013 05:00 AM PDT

The new leader of 1.2 billion Roman Catholics was an unexpected choice – he wasn't on any Vatican-watcher's list of potential popes and the crowd in St. Peter's Square seemed to respond at first with a collective, "Who?" Here's some of what is known about the former Archbishop of Buenos Aires, and what his election might mean.

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