2013年5月3日星期五

Yahoo! News: World News

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: World News


Bomb outside Sunni mosque kills six in Iraqi capital

Posted: 03 May 2013 08:02 AM PDT

Men carry the coffin of a victim, killed in Friday's bomb attack, during a funeral in al-Rashidiya district of BaghdadBAGHDAD (Reuters) - A roadside bomb killed a Sunni cleric and five worshippers when they left a mosque in Bagdhad after Friday prayers, police and medics said, as regional sectarian violence threatens to return Iraq to all-out conflict. Iraq has become increasingly volatile as the civil war in neighboring Syria strains volatile relations between Sunnis and Shi'ites. April saw the most killings since 2008, but was below the height of sectarian bloodletting in 2006-07. A further 31 people were wounded in the blast outside the mosque in al-Rashidiya district of Baghdad, medics said. ...


Venezuela's Maduro says Colombia's Uribe plotting to kill him

Posted: 03 May 2013 02:30 PM PDT

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro smiles during a news conference with Venezuela's Under -17 soccer team in CaracasCARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Friday said Colombian ex-president Alvaro Uribe was plotting to kill him, adding to a deluge of accusations by the former bus driver in recent months. "Uribe is behind a plot to kill me," Maduro said in a televised speech. "Uribe is a killer. I have enough evidence of who is conspiring, and there are sectors of the Venezuelan right that are involved." He did not provide details. ...


U.S. judge rules Cuban spy can stay in Cuba if U.S. citizenship renounced

Posted: 03 May 2013 02:13 PM PDT

Car drives past a poster of the five Cuban prisoners in U.S. jails, in HavanaBy Tom Brown MIAMI (Reuters) - A Cuban spy on probation after 13 years behind bars in the United States can remain in Cuba, where he returned on a court-approved visit last month, if he renounces his U.S. citizenship, a federal judge in Miami ruled on Friday. Rene Gonzalez, 56, one of what Cuba calls its "Five Heroes," returned to the communist island temporarily on April 22 to attend a memorial service for his deceased father. U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard granted Gonzalez's request for the visit on condition that he return to Florida by next Monday. ...


Amazon Indians occupy controversial dam to demand a say

Posted: 03 May 2013 04:30 PM PDT

Amazon Indians from the Xingu, Tapajos and Teles Pires river basins invade the Belo Monte dam project in Vitoria do XinguBRASILIA (Reuters) - Amazon Indians on Friday refused to end their occupation of a building site that has partially paralyzed work on the world's third largest hydroelectric dam for two days. Some 200 people from various indigenous groups occupied one of three construction sites of the controversial Belo Monte dam on the Xingu River on Thursday, halting work by 3,000 of the 22,000 workers on the project. ...


American journalist held in Syria believed to be in detention center

Posted: 03 May 2013 04:49 PM PDT

Family photo of U.S. journalist James Foley in Aleppo, SyriaNEW YORK (Reuters) - The family and employer of James Foley, a U.S. journalist missing in Syria since November, say they now believe he is being held by the Syrian government in a detention center near the capital, Damascus. That conclusion follows a five-month investigation by Foley's family and his employer, GlobalPost, and was announced on Friday in an article posted on the news organization's website. ...


At least three killed in violent Guinea election protest

Posted: 03 May 2013 04:08 PM PDT

Police try to put out a fire set by opposition protesters during a political rally in ConakryCONAKRY (Reuters) - At least three people died on Friday on the second day of violent street protests that have swept the Guinean capital over the organization of delayed legislative elections, witnesses and officials said. Guinea's opposition parties have accused President Alpha Conde, who took office in 2010 following Guinea's first democratic transfer of power since 1958, of trying to rig the polls in the world's largest bauxite exporter. ...


Why no sign of 'sequester' cuts in perky April jobs report?

Posted: 03 May 2013 01:50 PM PDT

The new jobs report that came out Friday showed little sign that "sequestration" – those much-maligned automatic federal spending cuts that kicked in because Congress and the White House could not agree on a better way – has had an effect on the labor market, at least so far.

Newest 'Most Wanted Terrorist': Should Assata Shakur make the list?

Posted: 03 May 2013 01:36 PM PDT

The FBI has added the first woman to its "Most Wanted Terrorists" list, Joanne Chesimard, who is currently living in Cuba under the name Assata Shakur.

Fertilizer plant blast: Does post-9/11 secrecy make your life riskier?

Posted: 03 May 2013 12:09 PM PDT

Before an ammonium nitrate tank blew up in the small central Texas town of West on April 17, with a blast so powerful it registered a 2.1 on the Richter scale, some residents said they were aware of possible dangers at the plant, while others said they had absolutely no idea that something could go so horribly wrong.

Why America's top general is wary of US military intervention in Syria

Posted: 03 May 2013 12:01 PM PDT

Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is America's highest-ranking military officer and a key adviser to the president. He was the guest at an April 30 Monitor Breakfast.

Sectarian killings reported in Syrian village

Posted: 03 May 2013 12:08 PM PDT

In this citizen journalism image released on Thursday, May 2, 2013 by a group that calls itself The Syrian Revolution Against Bashar Assad, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, a Syrian man, center, identifies dead bodies, who were killed according to activists by Syrian forces loyal to Bashar Assad, in Bayda village, in the mountains outside the coastal city of Banias, Syria. Syria's main opposition group on Friday accused President Bashar Assad's regime of committing a "large-scale massacre" in a Sunni village near the Mediterranean coast, killing scores of people, according to activists. (AP Photo/The Syrian Revolution Against Bashar Assad)BEIRUT (AP) — The bodies of the Syrian boys and young men in jeans and casual shirts were strewn along a blood-stained pavement, dying apparently where they fell. Weeping women moved among the dead, and one of them screamed, "Where are you, people of the village?"


Pressure on Bangladesh, retailers to fix factories

Posted: 03 May 2013 08:58 AM PDT

A clothes tag lies in the rubble of a garments factory that collapsed in Savar near Dhaka, Bangladesh, Friday, May 3, 2013. More than 500 bodies have been recovered from the debris of the building, even as the Bangladeshi government suspended Savar's mayor and arrested an engineer who had called for the building's evacuation last week, but was also accused of helping the owner add three illegal floors to the eight-story structure. (AP Photo/Ismail Ferdous)DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — In the aftermath of a building collapse that killed more than 500 people, Bangladesh's garment manufacturers may face a choice of reform or perish.


Bangladesh official: Disaster not 'really serious'

Posted: 03 May 2013 10:02 AM PDT

A woman covers her nose to block out the smell of decomposing bodies as people in the background identify bodies at a makeshift morgue where victims of the collapse of a garment factory buildings are brought Friday, May 3, 2013 in Savar, near Dhaka, Bangladesh. Authorities suspended the mayor of the suburb of Savar, where the building was located, and arrested an engineer who called for the building's evacuation last week but was also accused of helping the owner add three illegal floors to the eight-story structure. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — Bangladesh's finance minister downplayed the impact of last week's factory-building collapse on his country's garment industry, saying Friday he didn't think it was "really serious" hours after the 500th body was pulled from the debris.


Pakistan's lead prosecutor in Bhutto case killed

Posted: 03 May 2013 09:48 AM PDT

Family members and relatives of Pakistani prosecutor Chaudhry Zulfikar who was assassinated hours earlier, load his body into an ambulance from a morgue in Islamabad, Pakistan, Friday, May 3, 2013. Gunmen killed Pakistan's lead prosecutor investigating the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto as he drove to court in the capital on Friday, throwing the case that also involves former ruler Pervez Musharraf into disarray. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)ISLAMABAD (AP) — Gunmen on Friday killed the lead Pakistani prosecutor in two high-profile cases — the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, and the brutal assault on civilians in Mumbai — shocking a country reeling from Taliban attacks as it prepares for nationwide elections.


Rat meat sold as lamb in latest China food scandal

Posted: 03 May 2013 11:24 AM PDT

BEIJING (AP) — Chinese police have broken up a criminal ring accused of taking meat from rats and foxes and selling it as lamb in the country's latest food safety scandal.

Kazakh man linked to Boston suspect 'normal teen'

Posted: 03 May 2013 02:00 PM PDT

Deputy principal Yuri Dovgal speaks to The Associated Press in his office in a school in Almaty, the largest Kazakhstan city on Friday, May 3, 2013. At the Kazakh school where Dias Kadyrbayev who was arrested in connection with the Boston Marathon bombings attended when he was 14 and 15, Dovgal said Friday: ALMATY, Kazakhstan (AP) — Former teachers of one of the students from Kazakhstan arrested in connection with the Boston Marathon bombings described him on Friday as an easygoing teenager who distinguished himself mainly by his failing grades in math and science.


Obama doesn't foresee ground troops in Syria

Posted: 03 May 2013 04:55 PM PDT

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — President Barack Obama says he doesn't foresee sending U.S. ground troops into Syria.

Obama says does not foresee sending U.S. troops to Syria

Posted: 03 May 2013 04:53 PM PDT

U.S. President Obama speaks during a joint news conference with Costa Rica's President Chinchilla after their meeting at Casa Amarilla in San JoseSAN JOSE, Costa Rica (Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Friday he does not foresee a scenario in which he would send U.S. ground troops to Syria. At a news conference in the Costa Rican capital, Obama also vowed the United States would take a cautious approach to responding to Syria's alleged use of chemical weapons, saying he will not "leap before we look." (Reporting By Steve Holland and Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Sandra Maler)


Obama: Will 'stay on' Syria chemical weapons issue

Posted: 03 May 2013 04:51 PM PDT

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — President Barack Obama says the United States will keep pressure on Syria while investigating whether the government has used chemical weapons against its people, but that it must proceed carefully.

South Sudan's Kiir to visit Sudan for oil flow in May

Posted: 03 May 2013 02:27 PM PDT

South Sudan's President Kiir addresses a joint news conference with his Sudan's counterpart al-Bashir in Juba South SudanBy Hereward Holland JUBA (Reuters) - South Sudan's President Salva Kiir will visit Sudan this month to witness with his counterpart Omar Hassan al-Bashir the first shipment of oil from the south after a 15-month shutdown, an official said on Friday. In March, the African neighbors agreed to resume oil exports from landlocked South Sudan through Sudan and defuse tension that has plagued them since South Sudan seceded in 2011. ...


Cameron's Conservatives suffer in UK local votes

Posted: 03 May 2013 02:18 PM PDT

United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) leader Nigel Farage arrives in Westminster, London, Friday May 3, 2013, after a successful night in the local council elections. David Cameron's Conservative Party has taken a drubbing in local elections amid a surge of support for right-wing UKIP, an anti-European Union and anti-immigration party. The rise of UKIP adds to pressure on Cameron to staunch a flow of voters from his party ahead of the next general election in 2015 and take a harder line on European reform. (AP Photo/PA, Stefan Rousseau) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVELONDON (AP) — David Cameron's Conservatives took a drubbing in local elections amid a surge of support for an anti-European Union and anti-immigration party, heaping pressure on the British prime minister to appeal to the dissident right-wing of his own party.


Obama: US, Latin America must fight drug violence

Posted: 03 May 2013 02:16 PM PDT

President Barack Obama greets people as he arrives to speak at the Anthropology Museum in Mexico City, Mexico, Friday, May 3, 2013. (AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills)SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — President Barack Obama on Friday cast Mexico as a nation ready to take "its rightful place in the world" and move past the drug battles and violence that have defined its relationship with the United States. He then headed to Costa Rica to prod Central American leaders to tackle those same issues more aggressively.


Peru probes ex-President Garcia's finances in corruption inquiry

Posted: 03 May 2013 01:50 PM PDT

Peru's President Alan Garcia toasts with ministers during his last cabinet meeting at the government palace in LimaLIMA (Reuters) - Peru's attorney general is opening the financial records of two-time former president and likely 2016 presidential candidate Alan Garcia as part of a preliminary corruption inquiry, the government said on Friday. The government suspects Garcia may have used illegally acquired funds to buy a house in an upscale Lima neighborhood, a spokeswoman in the attorney general's office told Reuters. ...


Sudan police use teargas to end land protest

Posted: 03 May 2013 01:44 PM PDT

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudanese police used teargas and batons to break up a protest by around 400 people in Khartoum on Friday demanding the government grant them land to build homes, witnesses said. Protesters blocked several roads in the east of the capital and hurled stones at police, witnesses said. They shouted slogans complaining the government had not honored a promise to allocate land for houses. The police were not immediately available for comment. ...

Cuba says will consider U.N. and Red Cross visits

Posted: 03 May 2013 01:10 PM PDT

Cuba's President Raul Castro salutes at the May Day parade in Havana's Revolution SquareBy Stephanie Nebehay GENEVA (Reuters) - Cuba said on Friday it would consider letting in U.N. human rights investigators to examine allegations of torture and repression and allowing Red Cross officials access its prisons after a gap of nearly 25 years. Dissidents say security forces round up opponents of the Communist country for short-term detention and some are mistreated. Cuban officials deny allegations of arbitrary detention or torture. The call for access by Western countries was among 293 recommendations presented to Cuba at the U.N. ...


Egyptian billionaire Sawiris returns home to warm welcome

Posted: 03 May 2013 01:07 PM PDT

Orascom Telecom chairman Naguib Sawiris speaks during a conference in BeirutCAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris returned home on Friday, ending a self-imposed exile that began after the election of President Mohamed Mursi last year, and was warmly welcomed by a government grappling with an economic crisis. Sawiris, one of Egypt's most prominent Coptic Christians and a critic of Mursi and his Muslim Brotherhood, was greeted at Cairo airport by an envoy of the Islamist president who presented him with flowers. Economists said his return was a boost to business sentiment which has been battered by political instability. ...


Obama begins quick visit to Costa Rica

Posted: 03 May 2013 01:03 PM PDT

US President Barack gestures as he speaks at the Anthropology Museum in Mexico City, Friday, May 3, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — President Barack Obama is opening a two-day trip to Costa Rica, his first stop in the Central American nation as president.


Anti-militia protest attacked in Libya

Posted: 03 May 2013 12:50 PM PDT

FILE - In this March 13, 2013 file photo, Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zidan speaks during a joint news conference with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at the State Department in Washington. Over the past three days, militiamen stormed the headquarters of the Interior Ministry and state-run TV and besieged the Foreign Ministry while publicly calling for the removal of Gadhafi-era officials from government posts and the passage of the so-called "isolation law," which would bar from political life anyone who held any position —even minor— under the ousted autocrat's regime. However, analysts and democracy advocates believe militiamen are using the isolation law as a way to get rid of Zidan, who has vowed to restore the authority of the state and disband the armed groups that have become a power unto themselves in Libya. Many of the militias have an Islamist ideology, while Zidan is seen as more secular and liberal.. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — Hundreds of Libyan pro-democracy advocates marched in Tripoli on Friday, denouncing militias' recent blockade of government buildings and coming under attack briefly by supporters of the armed groups, in the latest sign of the turmoil that threatens the country's first elected authorities.


SAfrica: officials suspended over wedding scandal

Posted: 03 May 2013 12:46 PM PDT

In this photo supplied by The New Age newspaper of South Africa and taken Thursday May 2, 2013, guests watch as the bridal couple, Vega Gupta, centre right, and Aakash Jahajgarhia, are pulled across a pool on a float at Sun City's Palace of the Lost City, South Africa, during their wedding ceremony. The self-proclaimed "wedding of the century" has become a public relations disaster for the government since a private jet appears to have received diplomatic courtesies, allegedly bypassing customs procedures, when the jet landed the wedding party at the military Waterkloof Air Force Base near Pretoria, South Africa. The jet landed Tuesday angering many South Africans who see the scandal as a case of cronyism linking big business and government and igniting accusations that security laws were breached. (AP Photo/The New Age)JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Five South African officials, including police and military commanders, have been suspended after a chartered plane carrying about 200 guests from India to a lavish family wedding was allowed to land at a South African air force base, the government said Friday.


Saudi Arabia reports 3 cases of SARS-like virus

Posted: 03 May 2013 11:49 AM PDT

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Saudi Arabia's Health Ministry has confirmed three more cases of a new respiratory virus related to SARS, bringing to 10 the number of cases it reported this week, including five deadly ones.

US military plane carrying 3 crashes in Kyrgyzstan

Posted: 03 May 2013 11:43 AM PDT

CHALDOVAR, Kyrgyzstan (AP) — An American military refueling plane carrying three crew members crashed Friday in the rugged mountains of Kyrgyzstan, the Central Asian nation where the U.S. operates an air base key to the war in Afghanistan.

Liberia denies resource deals violated laws

Posted: 03 May 2013 11:42 AM PDT

Liberia President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf smiles during a meeting in MonroviaMONROVIA (Reuters) - The Liberian government denied on Friday it had violated its own laws in awarding resource contracts and pledged to implement the recommendations of an independent audit into the deals. According to a draft of the audit obtained by Reuters, almost $8 billion worth of contracts signed by Liberia since 2009 have violated its laws, casting doubt on President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf's anti-graft and good governance efforts. "We did not violate any laws ... ...


Gunmen in standoff with Libyan army at Tripoli protest

Posted: 03 May 2013 11:34 AM PDT

By Jessica Donati and Ghaith Shennib TRIPOLI (Reuters) - The Libyan army was deployed to Tripoli's main square on Friday to guard a pro-government rally and became involved in an uneasy standoff with anti-government gunmen. The pro-government protesters were rallying against groups of gunmen who have taken control of two ministries in the capital. "We are here to support the government and ask the prime minister to deploy the police and the army. We don't want the militias here any more," one protester said at the rally that had been organized through social networks. ...

U.S. names veteran diplomat Dobbins as new envoy to Afghanistan/Pakistan

Posted: 03 May 2013 11:28 AM PDT

U.S. ENVOY TO THE AFGHAN OPPOSITION JAMES DOBBINS TALKS TO THE PRESS IN ROME.WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has appointed veteran U.S. diplomat James Dobbins as Washington's new special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said on Friday. Dobbins, head of international security and defense at the RAND National Defense Research Institute and a former senior U.S. diplomat, will replace Marc Grossman as special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. Grossman had replaced the late Richard Holbrooke in the post. Holbrooke died suddenly in December 2010. ...


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