SYUKEYEVO, Russia (Reuters) – Russia said there was little hope of finding any more people alive yesterday after an overloaded tourist boat sank in the Volga River, killing 128 people in Russia’s worst river accident in three decades.
LONDON, (Reuters) – British government lawyers are drawing up plans to block Rupert Murdoch’s bid to buy out the broadcaster BSkyB, the Independent newspaper said on Monday — a move that could spare Prime Minister David Cameron a potentially damaging parliamentary vote.
CANBERRA, (Reuters) – Australia unveiled its most sweeping economic reform in decades on Sunday with a plan to tax carbon emissions from the nation’s worst polluters, reviving hopes of stronger global climate action with the largest emissions trade scheme outside Europe.
BEIRUT, (Reuters) – Interpol has circulated arrest warrants for four suspects in the 2005 assassination of Lebanese statesman Rafik al-Hariri, U.N.-backed
LONDON, (Reuters) – Britain’s Daily Mirror newspaper reported yesterday that News of the World journalists had offered to pay a New York police officer to retrieve the private phone records of victims of the Sept.
WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The United States is withholding some $800 million in military assistance to Pakistan in a show of displeasure over its cutback on U.S.
MOSCOW, (Reuters) – Nearly 100 people were missing after a tourist boat sank in Russia’s Volga river yesterday, killing at least one person, emergency services officials said.
JUBA (Reuters) – Tens of thousands of South Sudanese danced and cheered as their new nation declared independence yesterday, a hard-won separation from the north that still leaves simmering issues of disputed borders and oil payments unresolved.
(Trinidad Guardian) The government is taking legal action against G-pan inventor Professor Brian Copeland and three associates for profiting from sale of the G-Pan whose intellectual rights are owned by the government, Attorney General Anand Ramlogan said on Friday.
LONDON (Reuters) – In a moment of celebration tinged with sorrow and no little anger, the staff of Britain’s best-selling News of the World tabloid cheered as they left their offices yesterday for the last time.
GUATEMALA CITY (Reuters) – Argentine singer Facundo Cabral, one of the stars of Latin American folk music, was shot dead in Guatemala City early yesterday when gunmen riddled his car with bullets, authorities said.
JUBA, (Reuters) – Thousands of South Sudanese danced in the streets today (last night local time) to mark their long-awaited independence, a hard-won separation from the north that also plunged the fractured region into a new period of uncertainty.
LONDON, (Reuters) – Police arrested David Cameron’s former spokesman yesterday over the scandal that has shut down Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World, forcing the prime minister to defend his judgment while promising new controls on the British press.
KINSHASA, (Reuters) – An airliner ploughed into dense forest as it tried to land during a rainstorm in the Democratic Republic of Congo yesterday, killing 127 people on board, the Congolese transport ministry said.
KAMPALA, (Reuters) – Ugandan shopkeepers, who shuttered shops for two days this week to protest over the cost of doing business, have complained about an influx of Chinese, prompting the government to promise a headcount of immigrants.
LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – Betty Ford, the wife of the late President Gerald Ford, who overcame alcohol and prescription drug addictions and helped found a rehabilitation clinic that bears her name, died yesterday at the age of 93.
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, (Reuters) – A man suspected of killing seven people, including two children, in western Michigan on Thursday ended a hostage standoff with police by killing himself, authorities said.
LONDON, (Reuters) – Rupert Murdoch will shut down Britain’s biggest selling Sunday newspaper, the News of the World, in a startling response to a scandal engulfing his media empire.
ISLAMABAD, (Reuters) – A retired Pakistani general strongly denied yesterday a report that he took $3 million in cash in exchange for helping smuggle nuclear technology to North Korea in the late 1990s, while the nation’s foreign office called the story “preposterous.”
TEGUCIGALPA, (Reuters) – Both Honduras’ leftist President and the coup leaders who ousted him in 2009 broke the law, a truth commission report found yesterday, in a bid to heal a political rift in the country caused by the affair.