Sunday, May 4, 2014

Daily News: Reuters World News Headlines - Death toll lowered to 17 in road accident in southwest Haiti

Sunday, May 04, 2014 08:46 PM PDT
Today's Reuters World News Headlines - Yahoo News:

Death toll lowered to 17 in road accident in southwest Haiti 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 08:46 PM PDT
By Amelie Baron MIAMI (Reuters) - Authorities in southwest Haiti have revised the death toll from a road accident on Saturday saying that 17 people were killed and another 17 were injured. The mayor of the city of Jeremie, Ronald Etienne, told Reuters on Saturday that 23 people had died and 17 had been injured when a truck carrying passengers overturned on the main highway. A government civil protection official, Silvera Guillaume, said the initial death toll had been misreported by officials due to confusion after the accident as dead and injured were being transported to hospitals and a local morgue. Haiti's rural road infrastructure is in poor shape though foreign assistance after the 2010 earthquake has led to improvements on the national two-lane highway in the southwest.
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Two Chinese sailors die, six missing after boat sinks in Pacific 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 08:30 PM PDT
(Reuters) - Two Chinese sailors died and six are missing after their boat caught fire and sank in the Pacific Ocean, the U.S. Air Force said on Sunday. The boat sank on Friday and the survivors were picked up by a Venezuelan fishing boat. Seven sailors were in good condition, Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona said on its website. Two of the Chinese sailors died of burns and two were critically burned, it said.
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Panama leader's deputy-turned-rival wins presidency 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 08:04 PM PDT
An electoral staff member counts ballots for the presidential election at a polling station in Panama CityBy Christine Murray and Elida Moreno PANAMA CITY (Reuters) - Panama's vice-president, running as an opposition candidate, won the presidential election on Sunday after a campaign in which he took credit for outgoing leader Ricardo Martinelli's successful economic policies while promising a cleaner government. Juan Carlos Varela of the center-right Panamenista Party (PP) helped Martinelli get elected as president in 2009 but later fell out with him. Varela had 39 percent support with about 80 percent of votes counted, enough for a comfortable victory over his two main rivals, Jose Domingo Arias or the ruling Democratic Change party (CD) and left-leaning former Panama City mayor Juan Carlos Navarro of the Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD). There will be an honest, humane government of national unity, a government of social peace," Varela told Reuters at a Panama City hotel after the election tribunal declared him the winner.
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Maiteeq installed as Libya's new premier but dismissed by speaker 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 05:30 PM PDT
Ali Tarhouni, head of the committee drafting a new constitution for Libya, speaks during a news conference in BenghaziBy Feras Bosalum and Ulf Laessing TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Businessman Ahmed Maiteeq was sworn in as Libya's new prime minister on Sunday after chaotic voting in parliament, but hours later the deputy speaker declared the election invalid as a power struggle erupted in the assembly. The divisions in the assembly showcase growing turmoil in the North African country awash with arms and militias from the 2011 ouster of Muammar Gaddafi, where government and parliament are unable to assert authority. Officials gave contradicting versions of the parliamentary election outcome, with First Deputy Speaker Ezzedin al-Awami initially saying Maiteeq had failed to obtain the necessary quorum even through he had emerged as front-runner in prior votes. But a power struggle over who controls the assembly broke out when Saleh Makhzoum, second deputy speaker, rejected Awami's assertion and said Maiteeq had won the necessary support.
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Panama president's deputy-turned-rival takes early election lead 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 04:37 PM PDT
Residents prepare their ballots in voting booths during the presidential election at a polling station in Panama CityBy Christine Murray and Elida Moreno PANAMA CITY (Reuters) - Panama's vice-president, running as an opposition candidate, took an early lead in Sunday's presidential election after a campaign in which he took credit for outgoing President Ricardo Martinelli's policies but vowed cleaner government. Juan Carlos Varela of the center-right Panamenista Party (PP) helped Martinelli get elected in 2009 but later fell out with him and has vowed to cut the cost of living and reduce poverty. Varela had 38.87 percent support with votes counted from around 25.7 percent of polling booths, Panama's election authority said. Ruling party contender Jose Domingo Arias had 31.86 percent, while left-leaning former Panama City mayor Juan Carlos Navarro of the Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD) had 27.97 percent.
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Sinn Fein's Gerry Adams urges calm after release 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 04:36 PM PDT
Sinn Fein President Adams arrives at a news conference after he was released from police detention, in BelfastBy Conor Humphries BELFAST (Reuters) - Northern Ireland police released Gerry Adams from custody on Sunday and the Sinn Fein leader sought to calm fears that his four-day detention could destabilize the British province by pledging his support to the peace process. Police arrested Adams on Wednesday over the 1972 murder of Jean McConville, a killing he repeated that he was "innocent of any part" in. His detention had raised tensions among Northern Ireland's power-sharing government and its fragile peace. After Sinn Fein pointed the finger at "dark forces" in the police service and their Protestant partners in government accused it of a "thuggish attempt" at blackmail, a calm Adams toned down the rhetoric and said he supported the police.
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Maiteeq installed as Libya's new PM but dismissed by speaker 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 02:55 PM PDT
Ali Tarhouni, head of the committee drafting a new constitution for Libya, speaks during a news conference in BenghaziBy Feras Bosalum and Ulf Laessing TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Businessman Ahmed Maiteeq was sworn in as Libya's new prime minister on Sunday after chaotic voting but parliament's deputy speaker hours later declared the election invalid as a power struggle erupted in the assembly. The divisions in the assembly showcase growing turmoil in the North African country where government and parliament are unable to assert authority in a country awash with arms and militias from the 2011 ouster of Muammar Gaddafi. Officials gave contradicting versions of the parliamentary election outcome, with First Deputy Speaker Ezzedin al-Awami initially saying Maiteeq had failed to obtain the necessary quorum even through he emerged as front runner in prior votes. But a power struggle over who controls the assembly broke out when second deputy speaker Saleh Makhzoum rejected Awami's claims and said Maiteeq had won the necessary support.
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Earthquake jolts Tokyo, no tsunami warning 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 01:58 PM PDT
TOKYO (Reuters) - An earthquake with preliminary magnitude of 6.2 jolted Tokyo and vicinity early Monday morning, the Japan Meteorological Agency said. There was no tsunami warning and no immediate reports of major damage. The epicenter was 160 km below the ocean just south of Tokyo. At least one local train line was halted but TV broadcasts showed cars moving normally in the capital. There were no reports of trouble at nuclear power plants in the vicinity, public broadcaster NHK said. (Reporting by Linda Sieg; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)
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Afghan boy relives terror of 'bomb-like' landslide 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 01:37 PM PDT
Displaced Afghans walks near the site of a landslide at the Argo district in Badakhshan provinceBy Mirwais Harooni AAB BAREEK, Afghanistan (Reuters) - Six-year-old Abdul Maqsood stood outside his neighbor's simple mud-brick home, staring aghast at the damage caused by a landslide which had slammed into his village in remote northeast Afghanistan. Maqsood had no idea that the entire side of the bare mountain above him, drenched by a week of heavy rain, had fractured and was about to cave in. The second, even bigger landslide happened so quickly that Maqsood had no time to run. He was swamped by a wall of mud that swallowed up his home and some 300 others around him, taking hundreds, possibly thousands of lives in Afghanistan's worst natural disaster in a decade.
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Pro-Russians storm Odessa police station, PM slams local police 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 01:23 PM PDT
Pro-Russia protesters climb with a Donbass flag at the military prosecutor's office building in DonetskBy Oleksander Miliukov ODESSA, Ukraine (Reuters) - Pro-Russian militants stormed a Ukrainian police station in Odessa on Sunday and freed nearly 70 fellow activists as the country's leaders lamented a police force they said was widely undermined by graft or collaboration with separatists. Militants chanted "We will not forgive!" and "Russia!" as they smashed windows and broke down the gate at the compound two days after over 40 pro-Russian activists died in a blaze at a building they had occupied after clashes with pro-Kiev groups. Odessa police said 67 activists were allowed to walk free. Some officers were offered the black and orange St. George's ribbon, a Russian military insignia that has become a symbol of the revolt, and were cheered by the crowd of several hundred.
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Libyan deputy speaker declares election of prime minister invalid 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 01:16 PM PDT
TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libya's deputy parliamentary speaker declared the election of Ahmed Maiteeq as new prime minister invalid, according to a letter published on a government website on Sunday. Maiteeq had failed to obtain the necessary quorum during a parliamentary vote earlier on Sunday, First Deputy Parliamentary Speaker Ezzedin al-Awami said in a letter to the government. The government of former premier Abdullah al-Thinni, who resigned three weeks ago, would stay in office until a successor is elected legally, he wrote. ...
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Three killed in bus blasts on second day of violence in Kenya 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 01:02 PM PDT
Bomb experts and plain clothes policemen gather at the scene of a bus explosion along the Thika super-highway in Kenya's capital NairobiAt least three people were killed when two buses driving on a busy highway in the Kenyan capital Nairobi were struck by explosive devices on Sunday, the day after attacks in Mombasa. There was no immediate claim of responsibility but Kenya has blamed similar attacks on the al Qaeda-linked Somali group al Shabaab, which killed at least 67 people at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi last September. "So far three people have been confirmed dead, one was killed at the scene and two died in hospital," Moses Ombati, the deputy police commander for Nairobi told Reuters. Somali Islamist militants have been carrying out such attacks in retaliation for Kenya's intervention in neighboring Somalia in October 2011.
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Five killed as boulder crushes house in Sierra Leone capital 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 12:55 PM PDT
Five people, including two children, were killed on Sunday when a boulder dislodged by heavy rains crushed a house in a poor area of Sierra Leone's capital Freetown, witnesses said. Among the dead were a 10-year-old girl and a 17-year-old citizen of neighboring Guinea, who was visiting Freetown on holiday. "We had to make do with our bare hands and the shovels and pick axes we could lay hands on," youth organizer Yusufu Bendu told Reuters.
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India's Modi rails against illegal immigrants after Muslim killings 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 12:48 PM PDT
Hindu nationalist Modi holds a lotus cut-out after casting his vote at a polling station in AhmedabadBy Sujoy Dhar and Frank Jack Daniel KOLKATA/NARAYANGURI, India (Reuters) - Hindu nationalist Narendra Modi, the prime ministerial front-runner in India's mammoth general election, on Sunday reiterated his strong stance against illegal immigrants, just days after a wave of sectarian killings in the north-eastern state of Assam. India is in the home stretch of a five-week election, which has heightened ethnic and religious tensions in many parts of the country and in which Modi's opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) looks set to emerge as the biggest group. India deployed troops in Assam on Saturday after more than 30 Muslims were gunned down in three days of what police said were attacks by Bodo tribal militants, who resent the presence of settlers they claim are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
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Relatives bury victims of Indian national park ethnic massacre 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 12:48 PM PDT
By Frank Jack Daniel NARAYANGURI, India (Reuters) - Survivors of a massacre of Muslim villagers on the fringes of an Indian national park have buried 18 bodies after a spasm of ethnic violence in the northeastern state of Assam that has cast a shadow over the world's biggest ever election. India is in the home stretch of the five-week election, which has heightened ethnic and religious tensions in some parts of the country and in which the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) looks set to emerge as the biggest group. At least 21 people were gunned down in the village of Narayanguri, a popular picnic spot close to one of the entrances to the Manas national park.
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U.S. pushes Congo on term limits, pledges aid 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 12:34 PM PDT
U.S. Secretary of State Kerry walks alongside Hospital Director Nembunzu and Sister Mary Joseph at the Fistula Clinic at Saint Joseph's Hospital, funded by USAID, in KinshasaBy Phil Stewart KINSHASA (Reuters) - The United States urged Democratic Republic of Congo on Sunday to stick to its constitution that sets terms limits for the president, as speculation grows that Joseph Kabila may seek a third term. Highlighting an issue that exists in several African countries where leaders have sought to extend their rule beyond constitutional limits, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry pledged $30 million in aid aimed in part at ensuring "credible" elections in 2016. Kerry stressed that the legacy of Kabila, who in 2006 won Congo's first democratic elections since independence but was heavily criticized over fraud-tarnished polls five years later, must go beyond security gains. "I believe it is clear to him that the United States of America feels very strongly - as do other people - that the constitutional process needs to be respected and adhered to." "We're a country with term limits.
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At least 19 killed and 130 injured in Indian train accident: police 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 12:26 PM PDT
Rescuers search for survivors from the debris of a passenger train after it derailed near Nidi villageAt least 19 people were killed and more than 130 injured when a passenger train was derailed in western India on Sunday, police said. The accident took place in Raigad district, around 100 km (60 miles) south of India's financial capital Mumbai, when the engine and some of the coaches of the train came off the tracks on Sunday morning. The Konkan Railway Corporation, the government-owned company that operates the railway line, put the death toll at 13 and the number of people injured at 123 in a statement on its website earlier on Sunday.
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Switzerland has frozen $193 million in Ukrainian assets: report 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 12:13 PM PDT
Switzerland's federal prosecutor has frozen 170 million Swiss francs ($193.34 million) of assets in Swiss bank accounts belonging to former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovich and people close to him, a Swiss newspaper reported on Sunday. The Swiss government ordered the freezing of the assets of 20 Ukrainians, including Yanukovich and his son Oleksander, at the end of February. Swiss newspaper Zentralschweiz am Sonntag said Switzerland's federal prosecutor had opened five investigations against individuals suspected of money-laundering and the assets it had frozen in that context were partly identical with those concerned by the government freeze. "The federal prosecutor's office said around 170 million Swiss francs had been frozen in connection with the investigations," the newspaper said.
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Police disperse crowd after Belgium bans French comedian event 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 11:57 AM PDT
Police used water cannon on Sunday to disperse a crowd after authorities banned a rally in Brussels that a French comedian accused of anti-Semitism was due to address. Eric Tomas, mayor of the Brussels suburb of Anderlecht, told Reuters he had issued an order prohibiting the "First European Dissidents' Congress" scheduled to be held in the area on Sunday because there was a clear risk of a disturbance to public order. The event, organized by a small far-right group, "Stand up Belgians!", was to have been addressed by speakers including French comedian Dieudonne M'Bala M'Bala, according to the group's web site. The Belgian League against Anti-Semitism had lodged a legal complaint against the meeting, describing it as a "real day of hatred which would be a framework for the worst gathering of anti-Semitic authors, theoreticians and propagandists in our country since World War Two".
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Thousands flee Syria rebel infighting 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 10:21 AM PDT
A resident walks past damaged buildings in the Damascus suburb of ZamalkaFighting between al Qaeda's Syria branch and a splinter group in eastern Syria has forced more than 60,000 people to flee their homes, emptied villages and killed scores of fighters, a monitoring group said. Fighters from the al Qaeda branch, the Nusra Front, also arrested a rebel commander from a more moderate group and several other insurgent leaders in a southern province, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Infighting among insurgents has undermined the three-year-old rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad and killed thousands of people since the start of the year. The British-based Observatory said the Nusra Front had taken over control of the town of Abreeha from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a former al Qaeda affiliate formally disowned by the group this year.
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Yemeni army in heavy fighting; six soldiers die in suicide blast 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 10:16 AM PDT
Yemen's Defence Minister Major General Muhammad Nasir Ahmad gestures as he visits Mayfaa, in the southeastern province of ShabwaBy Mohammed Mukhashaf ADEN, Yemen (Reuters) - Yemen said at least 37 al Qaeda militants were killed in the southern province of Shabwa on Sunday as the army intensified an offensive to root out foreign and local Islamist fighters holed up in some of the country's most impenetrable areas. The report by state news agency Saba came shortly after a military source told Reuters a suicide bomber killed six soldiers by their outpost in Shabwa, one of two provinces where the army has been fighting al Qaeda and its allies. The number of attacks against the army and security forces in the south has risen sharply since Yemen's U.S.-backed army launched its anti-al Qaeda offensive last week. Western countries fear further destabilization in Yemen, which also faces separatists in the south and unrest in the north, could give more space to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the local branch of the global Islamist militant movement, to plot attacks on international targets.
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East Antarctica more at risk than thought to long-term thaw: study 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 10:10 AM PDT
By Alister Doyle OSLO (Reuters) - Part of East Antarctica is more vulnerable than expected to a thaw that could trigger an unstoppable slide of ice into the ocean and raise world sea levels for thousands of years, a study showed on Sunday. The Wilkes Basin in East Antarctica, stretching more than 1,000 km (600 miles) inland, has enough ice to raise sea levels by 3 to 4 meters (10-13 feet) if it were to melt as an effect of global warming, the report said. The Wilkes is vulnerable because it is held in place by a small rim of ice, resting on bedrock below sea level by the coast of the frozen continent. That "ice plug" might melt away in coming centuries if ocean waters warm up.
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South Africa's ANC vows to extend rule, rivals promise election 'shock' 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 09:24 AM PDT
Supporters of South Africa's President Jacob Zuma's ruling African National Congress (ANC) cheer during their party's final election rally in SowetoBy Stella Mapenzauswa JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's ruling ANC predicted it would sweep national elections this week on promises to build more houses, create jobs and eradicate inequality, but opponents warned of a shock for a party they said was arrogant after 20 years in power. An Ipsos poll in the Sunday Times newspaper suggested the ANC would win 63.9 percent of the vote, down from 65.9 percent five years ago and short of the two-thirds majority needed in parliament to push through changes to the constitution. Analysts and critics say Nelson Mandela's movement has lost support due to rising anger among its mainly black supporters over the slow delivery of adequate housing, sanitation, quality education and jobs. "The ANC lives, the ANC leads.
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Germany calls for second Geneva meeting on Ukraine 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 09:19 AM PDT
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Sunday called for a second international conference to put an end to the crisis in Ukraine. He said he made the proposal in telephone conversations on Sunday with EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). "In the many discussions I've had in the last couple of hours, I've been campaigning ... to hold a second meeting in Geneva to follow up on the first one," he told ARD television, according to a text of an interview to be aired later. On April 17, the United States, Russia, Ukraine and the European Union struck a deal in Geneva that outlined steps to defuse the crisis, including the disarmament of militants and a national dialogue on constitutional reform.
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Sinn Fein's Gerry Adams expected to be released by police: source 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 09:15 AM PDT
Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams arrives to the funeral of British Labour politician Tony Benn at St Margaret's Church, Westminster Abbey in LondonNorthern Ireland police are expected to release Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams later on Sunday and send a file to the province's public prosecutor after four days of questioning, a source familiar with the case told Reuters. Police arrested Adams on Wednesday over the 1972 abduction and murder of Jean McConville and have until 1900 GMT to decide whether to charge, release him, or seek a further extension in custody. His detention has raised tensions among Northern Ireland's power-sharing government and the province's fragile peace.
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Blasts hit buses in Kenyan capital, casualties feared 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 09:14 AM PDT
Two buses driving on a busy highway in the Kenyan capital Nairobi were struck by explosive devices on Sunday, ripping a huge hole in one of the vehicles. A Reuters reporter saw blood and broken glass next to the two buses that were about 1 km from each other heading out of town. There was no word on casualties and no immediate claim of responsibility but Kenya has blamed similar attacks on the al Qaeda-linked Somali group al Shabaab, which killed at least 67 people at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi last September. Four people were killed on Saturday when attackers threw an explosive device at passengers at a bus station in Mombasa, and also targeted a luxury hotel in the coastal city.
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U.N. chief says Syrian authorities holding up aid access 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 07:41 AM PDT
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon speaks during a conference on climate change in Abu DhabThe head of the United Nations said on Sunday that "bureaucratic resistance" by Bashar al-Assad's government was preventing aid getting to millions of Syrians in need due to the three-year-old conflict. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the Saudi-owned Al Arabiya television channel he was no longer in direct communication with Assad after months of the Syrian president "not keeping his promises." Last month, Ban said none of the warring parties in Syria were meeting U.N. demands for aid access and demanded the Security Council take action on violations of international law. In Sunday's interview, he said a February Security Council resolution demanding rapid, safe and unhindered aid access had "not helped much" and that there were still 3 million people in areas the U.N. could not reach and deliver humanitarian aid to. "It's not that we are in shortage of something to deliver, it's just because of bureaucratic resistance by the Syrian government," he said.
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Iran has briefed U.N. nuclear agency on detonators: ISNA 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 06:54 AM PDT
Iran's President Hassan Rouhani speaks during an event to mark Nawroz, the Persian New Year, in KabulDUBAI/VIENNA (Reuters) - Iran has provided the U.N. nuclear watchdog with information about detonators with possible military applications, under an accord intended to allay concerns about Tehran's atomic activities, an Iranian news agency said on Sunday. There was no immediate comment from the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which for years has been trying to investigate suspicions that Iran may have researched how to make an atomic bomb. Iran, which is seeking an end to sanctions hurting its oil-dependent economy, denies any such work. Diplomats in Vienna, where the IAEA is based, last week told Reuters they did not know whether Iran had so far given the U.N. body the requested information about fast-functioning Exploding Bridge Wire (EBW) detonators, which can be used to help set off an atomic explosive device but also has civilian applications.
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Pro-Russian activists attack police station in Ukraine's Odessa 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 06:32 AM PDT
ODESSA, Ukraine (Reuters) - Hundreds of pro-Russian activists attacked a police station in Ukraine's southern port city of Odessa on Sunday, forcing open its gate and breaking windows. Calling for the release of their detained comrades, hundreds surrounded the building. (reporting by Oleksander Miliukov, writing by Elizabeth Piper, editing by Ralph Boulton)
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Lockheed sees Ukraine crisis boosting missile system sales: paper 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 06:31 AM PDT
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Lockheed Martin is on the lookout for acquisition deals and expects the crisis in Ukraine to boost sales of its missile defense system MEADS, the company's chief executive told German weekly paper Welt am Sonntag. "We see strong demand for defense systems in the world. Here in Europe it is for missile defense systems. Many of our NATO partners are also looking at our F-35 fighter jet program," Marilyn Hewson, company CEO, was quoted as saying. Across the world there are around 20 new clients for its Medium Extended Air Defense System (MEADS) Hewson told the paper. ...
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Tight finish looms in Panama presidential election 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 06:30 AM PDT
Employee of Electoral Tribunal carries several sacks of electoral materials for distribution to various polling stations around city, outside Electoral Tribunal's office in Panama CityBy Christine Murray and Elida Moreno PANAMA CITY (Reuters) - Panama's presidential election on Sunday is expected to be the closest in decades, as the opposition battles to deny outgoing President Ricardo Martinelli a chance to keep an indirect hold over the booming Central American economy. The winner will inherit oversight of a major expansion of the Panama Canal, which briefly stalled earlier this year after a row over costs between the canal and the building consortium. A banking and trading hub, Panama is best known for the canal that links the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The 62-year-old Martinelli backs former businessman and housing minister Jose Domingo Arias of the ruling Democratic Change (CD) party.
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Syria court accepts Assad's presidential nomination bid 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 05:46 AM PDT
Syria's President Assad meets with members of the Higher Committee for Relief in DamascusA Syrian court said on Sunday it had accepted requests from President Bashar al-Assad and two other candidates to be nominated to run in a presidential election next month. Assad's challengers are unlikely to pose a serious threat to the president in the June 3 vote, which his international opponents and the rebels fighting to overthrow him have dismissed as a farce. Syria's opposition leaders in exile are barred from standing by a constitutional clause requiring candidates to have lived in the country continuously for 10 years. The Supreme Constitutional Court had accepted nomination requests from Assad as well as Hassan Abdallah al-Nouri and lawmaker Maher Abdel-Hafiz Hajjar, court spokesman Majid Khadra said in statements broadcast on state television.
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Yemen says 37 militants killed in southern army offensive: Saba 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 05:19 AM PDT
Yemen said on Sunday 37 al Qaeda fighters had been killed in heavy clashes between the army and the militants in the southern Shabwa province. The state news agency Saba quoted a military source as saying most of those killed in the fighting on Sunday were Saudis, Afghans, Somalis and Chechens and other nationalities. The source also said the army destroyed a number of vehicles and weapons belonging to the militants.
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Egyptian militants claim attacks near tourist sites in Sinai 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 05:18 AM PDT
Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis, the most active of the militant groups waging an insurgency against the army-backed government since it deposed elected leader Mohamed Mursi last summer, made the claim in a statement posted online. "We announce our responsibility for the attacks which targeted a security checkpoint and a tourist bus in South Sinai," the statement said. "We will not rest ... until we avenge Muslims' blood and honor." Militant attacks and other political violence have intensified since the army overthrew Mursi last July following mass protests against his rule. The militant group's statement called on Egyptians to violently oppose the government and not to rely on peaceful actions.
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Drive to solve old crimes rocks fragile Northern Ireland peace 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 03:59 AM PDT
Adams speaks to the media in BelfastBy Conor Humphries BELFAST (Reuters) - Major cracks are appearing in the deal that brought peace to Northern Ireland, and there appears to be no easy fix. Police investigating an unsolved 1972 murder on Wednesday arrested Irish nationalist leader Gerry Adams, whose Sinn Fein party was for decades the political ally of IRA militants fighting to end British rule in Northern Ireland. Reviled by some as an apologist for bombers, hailed by others as a freedom fighter and peacemaker, Adams led Sinn Fein in the talks that produced the 1998 Good Friday agreement, which ended three decades of sectarian killing in Northern Ireland. "This could destabilize the entire process if this goes further into serious arrests," said Malachi O'Doherty, an Belfast-based author who has written extensively on the violence between mainly Catholic Irish nationalists and Protestant pro-British Loyalists that tore Northern Ireland apart.
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Side deals with Moscow thwart drive to wean Europe off Russian gas 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 03:56 AM PDT
A worker rides a bicycle past gas pipes at Gas Connect Austria's gas distribution node in BaumgartenBy Henning Gloystein LONDON (Reuters) - While officials in Brussels were calling for Europe to reduce its dependency on Russian natural gas and negotiate with Moscow as a bloc, Austria was quietly bypassing the European Commission to cut its own bilateral deal on building a pipeline. The deal on the South Stream pipeline, which will be built under the Black Sea to Bulgaria and on to central Europe, shows the European Union's difficulty in creating a unified energy policy on Moscow during the Ukraine crisis.
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Syria's Assad calls for aid cooperation without hurting "sovereignty" 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 03:27 AM PDT
Syria's President Assad meets with members of the Higher Committee for Relief in DamascusSyria's President Bashar al-Assad has said government agencies should increase cooperation on aid work but it must be done without "compromising national sovereignty", state media reported. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said last month none of the warring parties in Syria was meeting U.N. demands for aid access and demanded the Security Council take action on violations of international law. Blaming "terrorists" for inflicting suffering on civilians, Assad was quoted by state news agency SANA late on Saturday as saying aid work was a top priority for the government and urged agencies to increase cooperation. Assad stressed "the importance of delivering aid without delay and continuing field work with all concerned bodies domestically and abroad to ease relief operations without compromising national sovereignty", SANA said.
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Earthquake of 6.6 magnitude deep in Pacific Ocean south of Fiji: USGS 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 03:26 AM PDT
An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.6 struck in the Pacific Ocean on Sunday deep in the ocean about 328 miles south of Suva, Fiji, the U.S. Geological Survey said. The USGS initially estimated the earthquake at 6.8 magnitude and revised that to 6.6. It reported a second earthquake of magnitude 6.1 about 10 minutes later, further south. The second earthquake was 379 miles deep, USGS said.
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U.N.'s Ban urges climate action ahead of New York summit 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 02:26 AM PDT
Ki-moon leaves after the opening of a meeting in Mexico CityU.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Sunday he was hopeful that a goal of limiting global temperature rises to a maximum 2 degrees Celsius could be achieved, but urged governments to take practical action before it was too late. "We have to ask the leaders to commit to bold ambitious targets and we will ask them to accelerate their actions on the ground," Ban told a two-day conference on climate change in the United Arab Emirates capital Abu Dhabi. Ban said both meetings would be "solution shops" for an urgent problem. Many developing nations want a one-day summit in New York on September 23 to be the deadline for rich countries to outline planned cuts in greenhouse gases beyond 2020, seen as a key step towards securing a global climate deal in 2015.
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Wooing the Zulu vote pays off for South Africa's ANC 
Sunday, May 04, 2014 02:21 AM PDT
By Ed Stoddard ISIMANGALISO, South Africa (Reuters) - If the African National Congress maintains its 65 percent majority in South Africa's May 7 election, it will be thanks in large part to rural ethnic Zulu voters such as Alfred Sabela. Before, we fetched water from the river," said 43-year-old Sabela, standing by the makeshift shop from which he hawks carvings near iSimangaliso Wetland Park, a major tourist attraction in a once-neglected area. The ANC's drive to develop this corner of KwaZulu-Natal province, 700 km (450 miles) southeast of Johannesburg, has paid dividends, notably by undermining the rival Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), once the regional political force. The IFP's decline has accelerated under President Jacob Zuma, a 72-year-old Zulu with a rural upbringing and firm beliefs in traditional practices such as polygamy.
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