Sunday, September 23, 2012

Daily News Digest: Reuters World News Headlines - Yahoo! News

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Today's Reuters World News Headlines - Yahoo! News:
China jails ex-police chief, closes in on disgraced Bo
Sun,23 Sep 2012 07:13 PM PDT
Reuters -

Still image of former police chief Wang speaking during a court hearing in ChengduBEIJING (Reuters) - A Chinese court jailed ex-police chief Wang Lijun for 15 years on Monday after finding him guilty on four charges, including seeking to conceal the murder of a British businessman, in a scandal that felled ambitious politician Bo Xilai. The verdict ends the career of one of China's most controversial police officers and moves the ruling Communist Party closer to deciding the fate of Bo whose contentious downfall has shaken a looming leadership handover. ...


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China surveillance ships enter waters near disputed islands
Sun,23 Sep 2012 07:02 PM PDT
Reuters -

Visitors look at a model of China's surveillance ship Haijian 50 in the 13th China International Machinery and Electronic Products Expo in WuhanTOKYO (Reuters) - Two Chinese marine surveillance ships entered what Japan considers its territorial waters near disputed islands in the East China Sea on Monday, prompting an official protest from Tokyo amid rising tension between Asia's two biggest economies. China's Xinhua news agency confirmed that two civilian surveillance ships were undertaking a "rights defense" patrol near the islands, citing the State Oceanic Administration, which controls the ships. Japan's Foreign Ministry said it had lodged an official protest with the Chinese envoy to Japan against the move. ...


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China jails ex-police chief Wang for 15 years in murder scandal
Sun,23 Sep 2012 06:16 PM PDT
Reuters -

Still image of former police chief Wang attending a court hearing in ChengduBEIJING (Reuters) - A Chinese court sentenced ex-police chief Wang Lijun to 15 years in jail on Monday, after finding him guilty on four charges, including seeking to conceal the murder of a British businessman in a scandal that felled the ambitious politician Bo Xilai. The court in Chengdu in southwest China said Wang received the sentence for "bending the law for selfish ends, defection, abuse of power and bribe-taking," according to the state-run Xinhua news agency. Wang was the police chief of Chongqing municipality also in the southwest, where Bo Xilai was Communist Party head. ...


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China surveillance ships enter waters near disputed islands
Sun,23 Sep 2012 05:35 PM PDT
Reuters - TOKYO (Reuters) - Two Chinese marine surveillance ships entered what Japan considers its territorial waters near disputed islands in the East China Sea on Monday, the Japanese Coast Guard said, a move bound to raise tension between Asia's two largest economies. China's Xinhua news agency confirmed that two civilian surveillance ships were undertaking a "rights defense" patrol near the islands, citing the State Oceanic Administration, which controls the ships. ... Full Story
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U.N. chief warns Iran's Ahmadinejad on fiery rhetoric
Sun,23 Sep 2012 05:26 PM PDT
Reuters -

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon listens to speech in the Swiss National Council during his visit in the Autumn Parliament Session in BernUNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of the dangers of incendiary rhetoric when two men met in New York on Sunday before this week's annual gathering of world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly. "The secretary-general drew attention to the potentially harmful consequences of inflammatory rhetoric, counter-rhetoric and threats from various countries in the Middle East," Ban's press office said in a statement. ...


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China surveillance ships enter waters near disputed islands
Sun,23 Sep 2012 04:58 PM PDT
Reuters - TOKYO (Reuters) - Two Chinese marine surveillance ships entered what Japan considers its territorial waters near disputed islands in the East China Sea on Monday, the Japanese Coast Guard said, a move bound to raise tension between Asia's two largest economies. China's Xinhua news agency confirmed that two civilian surveillance ships were undertaking a "rights defense" patrol in waters near the disputed islands, citing the State Oceanic Administration, which controls the ships. ... Full Story
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Belarus says election turnout strong, despite opposition boycott
Sun,23 Sep 2012 04:55 PM PDT
Reuters -

Members of local electoral commission count ballots at polling station after parliamentary election in MinskMINSK (Reuters) - Authorities in Belarus said they had a strong turnout in a parliamentary election on Sunday after hardline President Alexander Lukashenko denounced opposition leaders as "cowards" for urging people to boycott it as a sham exercise. The two main opposition parties had called on people to go mushrooming or fishing and abstain from voting in an election which they said would produce a token parliament to rubber-stamp directives by Lukashenko. "Elections took place in the course of which 109 deputies were elected ... ...


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Dozens protest against detention of relatives at Saudi prison
Sun,23 Sep 2012 04:07 PM PDT
Reuters - RIYADH (Reuters) - Dozens of Saudis protested at a prison in Qassim near the capital Riyadh on Sunday against the detention of their relatives in the Gulf kingdom where demonstrations are banned, protesters and a rights activist said. Police restricted the protesters to a cordoned off area for six hours, they said. Demonstrations are rare in Saudi Arabia which escaped last year's Arab Spring unrest but has faced criticism for its human rights record. ... Full Story
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Clinton summit highlights good business practices
Sun,23 Sep 2012 03:43 PM PDT
Reuters -

Former U.S. President Clinton speaks during the Clinton Global Initiative 2012 in New YorkNEW YORK (Reuters) - Former U.S. President Bill Clinton opened his annual philanthropic summit on Sunday by urging business leaders to do more to alleviate poverty and improve the environment. "We live to prove that cooperation works better than conflict," Clinton said at the opening session of the eighth Clinton Global Initiative in New York. "Today we want to talk about how you can design your actions in advance to make it more likely that those efforts will succeed. ...


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Japan, China military conflict seen unlikely despite strain
Sun,23 Sep 2012 03:33 PM PDT
Reuters -

A woman plugs her ears as she walks past an anti-China rally, attended by about 30 demonstrators, in TokyoTOKYO (Reuters) - Hawkish Chinese commentators have urged Beijing to prepare for military conflict with Japan as tensions mount over disputed islands in the East China Sea, but most experts say chances the Asian rivals will decide to go to war are slim. A bigger risk is the possibility that an unintended maritime clash results in deaths and boosts pressure for retaliation, but even then Tokyo and Beijing are expected to seek to manage the row before it becomes a full-blown military confrontation. "That's the real risk - a maritime incident leading to a loss of life. ...


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Ivory Coast to admit Ghana flights, keep land, sea borders shut
Sun,23 Sep 2012 03:30 PM PDT
Reuters - ABIDJAN (Reuters) - Ivory Coast will reopen its airspace to flights from Ghana but keep land and sea borders with its neighbor shut, said the Ivorian government on Sunday, after a series of deadly attacks last week in Abidjan and at a border crossing. "After 48 hours of observation of the movements of people and goods between the two countries, it is decided that only the air borders will be opened from Monday," the office of President Alassane Ouattara said in a statement read on state television. Ivorian airspace would reopen to Ghanaian flights from midnight, the statement said. ... Full Story
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Exclusive: North Korea plans agriculture reforms
Sun,23 Sep 2012 03:16 PM PDT
Reuters - BEIJING (Reuters) - North Korea plans to allow farmers to keep more of their produce in an attempt to boost agricultural output, a source with close ties to Pyongyang and Beijing said, in a move that could boost supplies, help cap rising food prices and ease malnutrition. The move to liberalize agriculture under new leader Kim Jong-un, who took office in December 2011 after the death of his father, would reverse a crackdown on private production that started in 2005. It comes amid talk that the youngest Kim to rule the impoverished North is considering reforms to boost the economy. ... Full Story
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Street battles erupt in Guinea refinery town
Sun,23 Sep 2012 03:06 PM PDT
Reuters - CONAKRY (Reuters) - Street clashes broke out on Sunday in the Guinean industrial town of Fria, home to RUSAL's huge alumina refinery, after local youths armed with knives and guns attacked suspected black market fuel salesmen, witnesses and officials said. At least 20 people were injured in the fighting which ran for several hours before regional security forces arrived in the afternoon to break it up, witnesses said. "Some youths ... ... Full Story
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Sudan, South Sudan leaders negotiate on border, oil
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:39 PM PDT
Reuters -

Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir meets his host, the new Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, in Addis AbabaADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Leaders of Sudan and South Sudan met on late on Sunday to try reach a deal to end hostilities and restart oil exports but there was still no breakthrough on a key security accord after two weeks of talks in Ethiopia, officials said. South Sudan said it expected Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and his southern counterpart, Salva Kiir, to reach an deal on Monday, after a U.N. Security Council deadline was unofficially extended. ...


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Myanmar president heads to U.S., seeks end to sanctions
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:36 PM PDT
Reuters -

Myanmar's President Thein Sein visits Laem Chabang port, in Chonburi province, east of Bangkok(Reuters) - Myanmar's reformist president heads to the United States this week, keen to win an end to sanctions and open a new chapter in a once frosty relationship that could bring economic and geostrategic benefits to both sides. After feting Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Washington last week, the United States will welcome Thein Sein, a 67-year-old former general who emerged as the unlikely catalyst for a wave of reforms that were unthinkable a year ago. Thein Sein's U.S. ...


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Insight: China housing drive gives measure of next Premier
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:29 PM PDT
Reuters -

China's Vice Premier Li Keqiang attends a meeting with European Commission President Barroso at the EU Commission headquarters in BrusselsMENGTOUGOU, China (Reuters) - One day last summer, the man slated to become China's next premier strolled through a run-down alley between cramped brick huts and then toured a construction site a few miles away where brightly painted tower blocks promised new homes for the country's poor. The contrasting neighborhoods, both in Beijing's poor, mining region of Mengtougou, embody the affordable housing policy overseen by Vice Premier Li Keqiang, who is expected to replace Premier Wen Jiabao in an upcoming leadership handover. ...


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From Nigeria to Athens, Muslim protests rumble on
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:13 PM PDT
Reuters -

A girl attends an anti-U.S. demonstration with religious students in the compound of the Red Mosque in IslamabadDUBAI (Reuters) - Muslims protested in Nigeria, Iran, Greece and Turkey on Sunday to show anti-Western anger against a film and cartoons insulting Islam had not dissipated. As delegates from around the world gathered in New York for a U.N. General Assembly where the clash between free speech and blasphemy is bound to be raised, U.S. flags were once again burning in parts of the Muslim world. ...


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China's corruption crackdown takes shine off luxury boom
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:11 PM PDT
Reuters - HONG KONG (Reuters) - Luxury brands banking on a China rebound to boost sales may be in for an unpleasant surprise: weak demand in the world's second largest luxury market may last longer than the economic slowdown as Beijing cracks down on conspicuous consumption. China is sensitive to anything that raises suspicions of corruption, especially after the scandal involving Bo Xilai and his emerald-wearing wife Gu Kailai marred this year's once-a-decade leadership transition. ... Full Story
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Pakistani radio show uses mothers and mullahs to undercut Taliban
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:08 PM PDT
Reuters - PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - Slowly, Ziarat Bibi recalled the last words she spoke to her son, her pain seeming to fill the dimly lit radio studio. "He was preparing for his exam. I told him to pick up his books," she said, as transmitters beamed her grief to listeners across northwest Pakistan. A Taliban bomb killed her son before he took his exam. She has not been able to touch his books since. ... Full Story
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Philippine mining at policy crossroads as investment sputters
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:06 PM PDT
Reuters - MANILA (Reuters) - Conflicting regulations and a freeze on new mine deals in the Philippines are strangling development of its rich mineral resources, with mining investment over the next four years at risk of being less than half the $12 billion touted by the government. The Southeast Asian nation has huge mineral reserves, estimated to be worth $850 billion, ranking third in the world in gold, fourth in copper and fifth in nickel, according to the Philippine Mines and Geosciences Bureau agency. ... Full Story
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Japan PM says dispute with China could hurt economy: report
Sun,23 Sep 2012 02:01 PM PDT
Reuters -

Japan's PM Noda delivers a speech at Japan's ruling DPJ leadership election in Tokyo(Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said violent protests in China over the two countries' ongoing territorial dispute could weaken China's economy and spook foreign investors, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday. "China should be developing through the various foreign investments it receives," Noda told the Journal. "Anything to discourage that is a disservice to itself." Japan and China have been at odds over a group of islands in the East China Sea, called Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan. ...


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Iran could launch pre-emptive Israel strike-commander
Sun,23 Sep 2012 01:39 PM PDT
Reuters - DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran could launch a pre-emptive strike on Israel if it was sure the Jewish state was preparing to attack it, a senior commander of its elite Revolutionary Guards was quoted as saying on Sunday. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, a brigadier general in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, made the comments to Iran's state-run Arabic language Al-Alam television. "Iran will not start any war but it could launch a pre-emptive attack if it was sure that the enemies are putting the final touches to attack it," Al-Alam said, paraphrasing the military commander. ... Full Story
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Sudan, South Sudan leaders negotiate on border, oil
Sun,23 Sep 2012 12:54 PM PDT
Reuters - ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Leaders of Sudan and South Sudan met on late on Sunday to try reach a deal to end hostilities but there was still no breakthrough on a security accord after two weeks of talks in Ethiopia, officials said, as a U.N. deadline expired. Highlighting the deep mistrust between the neighbors, South Sudan accused Sudan of air dropping weapons at the weekend to rebels in the new African nation, which split off from its former civil war foe Khartoum in July 2011. ... Full Story
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Europeans among nine climbers killed in Nepal avalanche
Sun,23 Sep 2012 12:49 PM PDT
Reuters -

Rescue team members carry a tourist after an avalanche at Mount Manaslu Base CampKATHMANDU (Reuters) - An avalanche swept away climbers and their camps on the world's eighth highest mountain in northwestern Nepal on Sunday, killing at least 10 people, officials said. Mountaineering officials in Nepal and France said they had been told most of the dead climbers were French. "There were seven French victims ... We got the information directly from base camp," said Denis Crabieres, head of the French Mountain Guides Association. He said rescue operations on Mount Manaslu had been stopped until morning. ...


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Chinese verdict on ex-cop set to tighten noose on Bo
Sun,23 Sep 2012 12:03 PM PDT
Reuters -

Still image of former police chief Wang attending a court hearing in ChengduBEIJING (Reuters) - The ex-police chief who triggered China's most spectacular political upheaval for decades is virtually sure to be convicted on four charges on Monday, turning attention to the fate of his disgraced former boss, Bo Xilai. A court in southwest China will announce its verdict on the charges against Wang Lijun, the former police chief of Chongqing municipality in southwest China -- chiefly, that he tried to cover up the murder of a British businessman by Gu Kailai, the wife of Bo, one of China's most controversial politicians. ...


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Libyan army tackles rogue militias as two disband
Sun,23 Sep 2012 10:41 AM PDT
Reuters - TRIPOLI/DERNA, Libya (Reuters) - Libya's army on Sunday ordered rogue armed groups in and around Tripoli to leave state and military premises or be ejected by force, apparently seeking to capitalize on the withdrawal of militias from Benghazi and Derna. The two main Islamist militias in Derna, a town in eastern Libya known as an Islamist stronghold, said on Saturday they were disbanding after one of them, Ansar al-Sharia, was driven out of Libya's second city, Benghazi. ... Full Story
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Israel, Palestinians discuss developing gas off Gaza coast
Sun,23 Sep 2012 10:33 AM PDT
Reuters - JERUSALEM (Reuters) - The U.S.-backed Palestinian administration is negotiating with Israel for permission to develop natural gas off the coast of the Gaza Strip, Israeli and foreign diplomats said on Sunday. Mediterranean gas could be a windfall for the Palestinian Authority (PA), which operates under Israeli occupation in the West Bank and has alarmed the World Bank by sinking into fiscal crises amid shortfalls in international aid. ... Full Story
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Former Russia defense chief Grachev dies
Sun,23 Sep 2012 09:52 AM PDT
Reuters -

File photo of Russian President Boris Yeltsin and Defence Minister Pavel Grachev sharing a laugh after a wreath laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in MoscowMOSCOW (Reuters) - Former Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev, who said Chechen rebels could be crushed in a few hours with a single airborne regiment - ahead of a devastating 20-month war - died on Sunday aged 64. The general was defense minister under President Boris Yeltsin in 1992-1996 and was one of the decision-makers behind the first war Moscow launched, in December 1994, to defeat separatist forces. ...


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Iran accuses IAEA of passing nuclear secrets to Israel
Sun,23 Sep 2012 09:12 AM PDT
Reuters - DUBAI (Reuters) - A senior Iranian lawmaker accused the UN nuclear watchdog on Sunday of passing confidential details of Iran's atomic work to Israel, and a military commander said Tehran may consider a pre-emptive strike on the Jewish state if it looked set to attack. Javad Jahangirzadeh, a member of parliament's presiding board, said International Atomic Energy Agency chief Yukiya Amano had made "repeated trips" to Israel, divulging sensitive information about what Tehran says is its peaceful nuclear program. ... Full Story
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Dangerous and deepening divide between Islamic world, West
Sun,23 Sep 2012 09:09 AM PDT
Reuters -

Supporters of the religious political party Markazi Jamiat Ahlehadith Pakistan shout slogans during protest against anti-Islam film made in the U.S. mocking Prophet Mohammad, in KarachiWASHINGTON (Reuters)- For those who believe in a clash of civilizations between the Islamic world and Western democracy, the last few weeks must seem like final confirmation of their theory. Even those who reject the term as loaded and simplistic speak sadly of a perhaps catastrophic failure of understanding between Americans in particular and many Muslims. The outrage and violence over a crude film ridiculing the Prophet Mohammad points to a chasm between Western free speech and individualism and the sensitivities of some Muslims over what they see as a campaign of humiliation. ...


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Turkey clips military's wings in landmark verdict
Sun,23 Sep 2012 08:55 AM PDT
Reuters - ISTANBUL (Reuters) - The jailing of hundreds of Turkish army officers including top generals accused of plotting to topple Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan underscored how far he has come in gaining control of the country's once all-powerful military. But Erdogan, 10 years in power, must grapple with suspicions among critics and even some sympathizers that he is using this and other coup investigations to silence opposition as he sets about taming a militant secularist establishment. Far from flinching, he may seek more power in a revamped presidency. ... Full Story
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Muslim protesters rally in Athens over anti-Islam video
Sun,23 Sep 2012 08:41 AM PDT
Reuters - ATHENS (Reuters) - Hundreds of Muslim protesters staged a rally in central Athens on Sunday to protest against a film made in California which mocks Islam's Prophet Mohammad, the first such demonstration in Greece. The protesters chanted "All we have is Mohammad" and held banners reading "We demand an immediate punishment for those who tried to mock our Prophet Mohammad" as they prepared to march to the U.S. embassy. There were brief moments of tension when some demonstrators hurled bottles at police, who responded with teargas. ... Full Story
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Lebanese Christian leader says escapes assassination
Sun,23 Sep 2012 08:38 AM PDT
Reuters - BEIRUT (Reuters) - A Lebanese Christian political leader and ally of the Shi'ite group Hezbollah said he escaped an assassination attempt when his convoy came under fire in the south of the country. Michel Aoun, head of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), was returning to Beirut on Saturday evening when one of the cars in his convoy was shot at in the mainly Sunni city of Sidon, a statement on the FPM website said. "I have been exposed to three assassination attempts (in the past) and the perpetrators were discovered," the website quoted Aoun as saying. ... Full Story
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Free Syrian Army rebel leaders face challenges on home ground
Sun,23 Sep 2012 08:28 AM PDT
Reuters - BEIRUT (Reuters) - Free Syrian Army commanders hope that transferring their leadership to Syrian territory from exile in Turkey will make the rebel force more effective, but the challenge of unifying the disparate fighters is as great as ever. Rebel commander Riad al-Asaad said on Saturday the Free Syrian Army (FSA), an umbrella body which nominally groups together many of President Bashar al-Assad's armed foes, was moving its command into rebel-controlled areas in north Syria for the first time. ... Full Story
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Eyes wide shut, world watches Syria bleed
Sun,23 Sep 2012 08:28 AM PDT
Reuters -

A view of a damaged house in the city of HomsBEIRUT (Reuters) - Thirty years ago Hafez al-Assad cut phone lines from Hama to stop word spreading of his bloody crackdown on an uprising in the city, ensuring that the 1982 Syrian revolt was crushed and many thousands killed before the world even knew of it. Three decades on, his son is 18 months into a military campaign waged, despite efforts at censorship, in the glare of a global media spotlight; but Bashar too can rely on Cold War-era divisions among major powers, and a growing sense of impotence and indifference, to shield him from armed foreign intervention. ...


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Suicide bomber kills two, wounds 46, at Nigerian church
Sun,23 Sep 2012 08:03 AM PDT
Reuters - BAUCHI, Nigeria (Reuters) - A suicide car bomber blew himself up outside a Catholic church in northern Nigeria on Sunday, killing himself and at least two other people and wounding 46, police said. Police cordoned off the area around St. John's church after the blast, which caused minimal damage to the building but killed at least two people in a market area of Bauchi city. A Reuters journalist saw emergency services bring out three bodies in the area, called Wunti, and police identified one as the occupant of the car that blew up. Several wounded were being taken out on stretchers. ... Full Story
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Photo evoking Russian punk band pulled from IKEA Russia website
Sun,23 Sep 2012 08:00 AM PDT
Reuters - MOSCOW (Reuters) - Furniture firm IKEA has removed a photograph from its Russian website of people in colorful ski masks like those worn by punk band Pussy Riot, three of whose members were jailed after staging a protest against Vladimir Putin in a church. The picture, which showed four people in the masks sitting on IKEA furniture, had been posted on a section of the site which displays photographs of customers posing at stores. A notice on the website confirmed the image had been removed and said: "IKEA is a commercial organization that conducts its activity outside of politics and religion. ... Full Story
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South Sudan accuses Sudan of supplying arms to rebel group
Sun,23 Sep 2012 07:46 AM PDT
Reuters - JUBA (Reuters) - South Sudan accused Sudan on Sunday of air-dropping weapons to rebels, just as the presidents of the African neighbors were about to meet to finalize a border security deal to restart oil exports. Sudan dismissed the charges and any links to rebels in the South, which seceded from Khartoum in July last year under a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war. Sudan, in turn, often accuses Juba of supporting rebels in its borderlands. ... Full Story
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Hamas chief Meshaal wants to step down: political sources
Sun,23 Sep 2012 07:35 AM PDT
Reuters -

Hamas leader Meshaal speaks during news conference after meeting with Egypt's President Mursi in CairoGAZA (Reuters) - Hamas's leader in exile, Khaled Meshaal, is tired of policy challenges from the Islamist group's Gaza-based leadership and is not seeking re-election in a vote now underway, political and diplomatic sources said on Sunday. Over the past five months, Hamas, which has ruled the Gaza Strip since 2007, has been quietly holding a leadership ballot among activists in the territory, the occupied West Bank, Israeli prisons and in Arab and other foreign countries. ...


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Fighting in Turkey kills soldier, three Kurdish militants
Sun,23 Sep 2012 07:22 AM PDT
Reuters - TUNCELI, Turkey (Reuters) - Clashes in Turkey overnight killed one soldier and three Kurdish militants, the latest in the heaviest fighting the country has seen in more than a decade, security sources said on Sunday. Fighting erupted outside the southeastern town of Tunceli after two groups of Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) fighters simultaneously attacked two military outposts, the sources said. ... Full Story
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