Police authorities in China and Taiwan were among those of several countries
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Police authorities in China and Taiwan were among those of several countries
vernment and sought a vote of confidence to get the measures passed. With negotiations continuing over a second bail-out package for Greece, Standard & Poor's, a rating agency, downgraded the country's long-term sovereign debt to just above default status; it now has the lowest credit-rating of any country covered by S&P.
ITALY'S government was trounced in four referendums, on nuclear power, legal immunity for government ministers and two on water privatisation. The setback for Silvio Berlusconi came just weeks after the prime minister had seen his favoured candidate defeated in a mayoral election in Milan, his home town.
Robert Gates, America's departing defence secretary, attacked the lack of commitment from some European members of NATO, describing the organisation as a "two-tiered alliance" with diminishing abilities to mount operations. Mr Gates complained that "while every alliance member voted for the Libya mission...fewer than a third have been willing to participate in the strike mission."
Police authorities in China and Taiwan were among those of several countries that co-operated to bust a SOUTH-EAST ASIAN crime ring.
Nearly 600 suspects were arrested, 177 of them in Indonesia alone. Most were Taiwanese nationals. The criminals used an array of scams to defraud their victims, who were mostly ethnic Chinese residents in six countries.
MYANMAR'S army engaged one of the country's largest rebel militias in pitched battles in the north-east, where China is building a series of vast hydropower projects. Most of the fighting took place just 30km from the Chinese border. Thousands of civilians fled, most of them ethnic Kachins, and many sought refuge across the border.
A court in Jakarta found ABU BAKAR BASYIR guilty of terrorism-related charges and sentenced him to 15 years in prison. The radical Islamic cleric has previously been blamed for a number of bomb plots across Indonesia. He was jailed for conspiring in the Bali attack in 2002, but the Supreme Court eventually quashed that conviction.
Ayman al-Zawahiri took over as AL-QAEDA'S new leader following the killing of Osama bin Laden by American forces in Pakistan. The organisation's former number two vowed to continue its JIHAD against America and Israel.
At least 8,500 SYRIANS fled to Turkey after government troops backed by helicopters and tanks entered the restive town of Jisr al-Shughour, near the border. Demonstrations continued to spread across the country. Turkey castigated President Bashar Assad's regime. B
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ITALY'S government was trounced in four referendums, on nuclear power, legal immunity for government ministers and two on water privatisation. The setback for Silvio Berlusconi came just weeks after the prime minister had seen his favoured candidate defeated in a mayoral election in Milan, his home town.
Robert Gates, America's departing defence secretary, attacked the lack of commitment from some European members of NATO, describing the organisation as a "two-tiered alliance" with diminishing abilities to mount operations. Mr Gates complained that "while every alliance member voted for the Libya mission...fewer than a third have been willing to participate in the strike mission."
Police authorities in China and Taiwan were among those of several countries that co-operated to bust a SOUTH-EAST ASIAN crime ring.
Nearly 600 suspects were arrested, 177 of them in Indonesia alone. Most were Taiwanese nationals. The criminals used an array of scams to defraud their victims, who were mostly ethnic Chinese residents in six countries.
MYANMAR'S army engaged one of the country's largest rebel militias in pitched battles in the north-east, where China is building a series of vast hydropower projects. Most of the fighting took place just 30km from the Chinese border. Thousands of civilians fled, most of them ethnic Kachins, and many sought refuge across the border.
A court in Jakarta found ABU BAKAR BASYIR guilty of terrorism-related charges and sentenced him to 15 years in prison. The radical Islamic cleric has previously been blamed for a number of bomb plots across Indonesia. He was jailed for conspiring in the Bali attack in 2002, but the Supreme Court eventually quashed that conviction.
Ayman al-Zawahiri took over as AL-QAEDA'S new leader following the killing of Osama bin Laden by American forces in Pakistan. The organisation's former number two vowed to continue its JIHAD against America and Israel.
At least 8,500 SYRIANS fled to Turkey after government troops backed by helicopters and tanks entered the restive town of Jisr al-Shughour, near the border. Demonstrations continued to spread across the country. Turkey castigated President Bashar Assad's regime. B
Corporate tracksuits
Geo A/C compressors
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