HOUSTON – BP said yesterday the cement seal on its crippled Gulf of Mexico oil well was holding and a relief well to permanently plug the ill-fated borehole was on track to reach its target in mid-August.
– – – –
SUKKUR, Pakistan – Heavy rains are expected to lash areas of Pakistan already devastated by the worst floods in 80 years, probably intensifying a calamity that has cast more doubts about the leadership of President Asif Ali Zardari.
– – – –
DUBAI/TOKYO – Militants attacked a Japanese supertanker with explosives near the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important shipping routes, the United Arab Emirates state news agency said yesterday.
– – – –
WASHINGTON – U.S. private employers added fewer workers to their payrolls in July than expected and hiring in June was much weaker than initially thought, a big blow to an already feeble economic recovery.
– – – –
WASHINGTON – U.S. President Barack Obama is considering economic adviser Austan Goolsbee and Laura Tyson, a senior economist in Bill Clinton’s White House, to take over as one of his top policymakers, an administration official said yesterday.
– – – –
MOSCOW – Dense clouds of acrid smoke from peat and forest fires choked Russia’s capital yesterday, seeping into homes and offices, diverting planes and prompting exhausted Muscovites to wear surgical masks to filter the foul air.
– – – –
CHEQUERS, England – Britain and Pakistan agreed yesterday to do more together to fight Islamist militancy, brushing aside a diplomatic spat that followed British criticism of Pakistani efforts to counter extremism.