Monday, 23 Dec, 2024

International

N.Korea demands apology for Japanese colonial `terrorism`

SEOUL: North Korea on Friday demanded an apology and compensation from Japan for its 1910-1945 colonial rule of the peninsula, denouncing the annexation as "state terrorism.""Japan can never shirk its obligation to make an apology and reparations to the DPRK (North Korea) for its

Al-Qaeda claims attack on Iraq army recruits

BAGHDAD: An Al-Qaeda group on Friday claimed it was behind a suicide bombing on a crowded Iraqi army recruitment centre in Baghdad that killed 59 people in the deadliest attack this year, US monitors said.The Islamic State of Iraq said Tuesday`s attack, which coincided with the holy

US tells Israel Iran is one year from atomic bomb: report

WASHINGTON: The United States has persuaded Israel that Iran would take one year or longer to build a nuclear weapon, dimming the prospects of a preemptive strike on Iran`s nuclear facilities, The New York Times said late Thursday."We think that they have roughly a year dash time,"

Ahmadinejad says Iran ready for nuclear talks: report

TOKYO: Iran is ready for immediate talks with world powers over a nuclear fuel swap deal, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in an interview published in Japan on Friday.Iran is "ready to resume in late August or in early September" talks with the five permanent members of the UN Security

Israel, Palestinians to resume direct talks: report

WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is expected to announce Friday that Israel and the Palestinians will resume direct peace talks for the first time in 20 months, the New York Times reported.The Times, citing two unnamed officials briefed on the situation, said Israeli

Seoul wants apology before nuclear talks resume

SEOUL: South Korea said Friday it wanted Pyongyang to apologise for the sinking of one of its warships before it could consider a resumption of North Korea nuclear disarmament talks. The comments followed a visit by a top Chinese envoy to Pyongyang this week to discuss the disarmament

Bus crash kills 20 in northern India

SHIMLA: At least 20 passengers died when the bus they were travelling in plunged into a gorge Thursday in northern India, a day after 37 people were killed in a similar accident in the same state. Twelve others were injured when the bus fell into the ravine 40 kilometres (25 miles) from

Afghanistan marks independence day

KABUL: Afghanistan marked independence day Thursday as the Taliban-led insurgency drags on, with foreign troop deaths at record highs and the government under pressure to honour pledges on corruption and security. August 19 commemorates the signing of the Treaty of Rawalpindi in 1919,

NATO soldier, five civilians killed in Afghan violence

Kabul: A suicide car bomb struck a police vehicle in southern Afghanistan, killing a district police chief and four other people, and a NATO soldier died in a separate attack, NATO and Afghan officials said Thursday. "The insurgents pulled alongside the Daman district police chief`s

Myanmar announces restrictions on election campaigning

Yangon: Military-ruled Myanmar Thursday announced restrictions on campaigning for November`s general election that it said were to assure the polls are "free and fair". Candidates wishing to address the public must apply for permission at least seven days in advance, according to the

Taiwan seeks F-16s to boost defence

Taipei: Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou called Thursday on the US to sell F-16s to Taipei to boost the island`s defences after the Pentagon said this week that China is gaining military superiority over Taiwan. "Taiwan people`s top concern is Taiwan`s security," Ma said. "I hope the US can

1 in 5 Americans thinks Obama is a Muslim

Washington: As many as one in five Americans think wrongly that President Barack Obama is a Muslim, indicating a significant increase in the number of such people since his inauguration in January 2009. At the same time, the number of people who now correctly identify Obama as a

Asian Development Bank to help Pakistan with $2 billion

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is expected to contribute at least $2 billion to help Pakistan recover from its worst ever floods.The economic costs of the floods are expected to run into the billions of dollars, stepping up pressure on Pakistan`s government just

UN to meet on Pakistan aid as fears mount for survivors

ISLAMABAD: Hundreds of thousands of Pakistanis remain without food and shelter as the UN prepared to meet Thursday to drum up aid for the flood-stricken nation amid criticism of the slow pace of the relief effort.Foreign aid has begun reaching some of the 20 million flood victims, but

Iran to launch first nuclear plant after decades of delay

TEHRAN: After decades of delay and sanctions, Iran on Saturday launches its Russian-built first nuclear power plant in the face of Western suspicion that its atomic programme has a covert military agenda.Iran`s nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi said last week that "on August 21, the

Australia judge orders witness to remove niqab in court

Australia:  Australian judge has ruled that a Muslim woman must remove her full veil while giving evidence before a jury in a fraud case.The judge in Perth said she did not consider it appropriate that the witness appear with her face covered.The prosecution said the woman - identified

North Korea confirms Chinese among detained fishermen

SEOUL: North Korea confirmed on Thursday it was holding the seven-man crew of a South Korean fishing boat, including three Chinese, after they illegally entered its waters earlier this month.China earlier voiced concern about reports that its nationals were being held by Pyongyang, which

A year later, freed Lockerbie bomber lives in seclusion

TRIPOLI: A year after the controversial release from jail of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi on medical grounds, Libya continues the secrecy over the health of the ex-intelligence agent convicted of the deadly Lockerbie bombing.Serving a life sentence in Scotland for the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am

Kabul defiant on private security firms despite fears

KABUL: The Afghan government is standing firm on its plan to disband all private security firms despite widespread concerns that the four-month deadline is too tight and could ultimately be self-defeating.President Hamid Karzai`s decree, issued on Tuesday, ordered the 52 private security

Four die in Japan coastguard helicopter crash

TOKYO: Four Japanese coastguard personnel died in a helicopter crash while rescuers continued to search for a missing crew member, officials said Thursday.Coastguard helicopter Akizuru crashed Wednesday afternoon after hitting offshore power lines near small islets that are part of Kagawa