Updated round-the-clock, with major updates after 10:00 PST (05:00 GMT)
One dead, three wounded in Gaza-Egypt shooting: medics RAFAH, Gaza Strip, Feb 4, 2008 (AFP) One Palestinian was killed and three others were wounded on Monday as Egyptian policemen opened fire to disperse a protest after the Gaza-Egypt border was sealed, medics and witnesses said. Witnesses on the Egyptian side of the border told AFP that three policemen were also shot and wounded in the incident. The Palestinian sources named the dead man as Hamed al-Qadi, 40. Twelve other people were treated for tear-gas inhalation, medics said.(Posted @ 23:15 PST) Tennis-Mirza to boycott Indian tournaments NEW DELHI, Feb 4 (Reuters) Sania Mirza will boycott all Indian tournaments, including next month's WTA Bangalore Open, after being dragged into a series of controversies at home in the last two months. The 21-year-old Asian number one said she had been advised by her manager and mixed doubles partner Mahesh Bhupathi to skip the tournament starting on March 3. “At this moment, I have been advised by my manager not to play,” she told reporters on Monday in her hometown of Hyderabad.(Posted @ 23:06 PST) 20 hurt in Pakistan road mishap NAWABSHAH, Pakistan, Feb 04 (PPI): Twenty people were injured when a Peshawar-bound coach overturned on National Highway near Qazi Ahmed on Monday. The coach was coming from Karachi and turned turtle after its tie-rod broke down.(Posted @ 20:31 PST) Bush proposes 3.1 trillion-dollar budget WASHINGTON, Feb 4 (AFP) - US President George W. Bush proposed Monday a 3.1 trillion-dollar budget for fiscal 2009 that widens the government deficit with an economic stimulus and expenditures for the war in Iraq. Bush's spending plan, sent to Congress for the fiscal year starting October 1, forecasts heavy deficits for the government -- 410 billion dollars for the current year and 407 billion for the coming fiscal year. It is the first budget plan over three trillion dollars.(Posted @ 20:18 PST) Iran rocket test 'unfortunate' - White House WASHINGTON, Feb 4 (AFP) - The White House on Monday branded Iran's firing a rocket into space “unfortunate” and warned that it would further isolate the Islamic republic from the international community.(Posted @ 20:15 PST) Amin Fahim for recovery of missing persons Khipro, Sindh, Pakistan, Feb 04 (PPI): Senior Vice Chairman of Pakistan People's Party (PPP) Makhdoom Amin Fahim Monday said his party would take steps for the recovery of all missing persons of the country if voted to power. Talking to newsmen he said the registration of fake cases against PPP workers and transfer and postings of government officers on the eve of elections were underway but Election Commission seemed to be helpless in this regard. Makhdoom Amin said inflation had broken the back of the poor masses. “The provision of justice without independent judiciary is not possible,” he further said.(Posted @ 19:46 PST) Motorcyclist fires at PPP rally in Karachi KARACHI, Feb 4 (AP) A gunman on a motorcycle opened fire Monday in Karachi’s Lyari area on a gathering of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People’s Party, wounding one person, police said. The shooting occurred at a rally of about 100 supporters, police officer Mohammad Pervez said. After the attack, party activists pelted police and nearby shops with stones but no one was injured, he said. Party officials claimed 10 people were hurt. Meanwhile, in the eastern city of Multan, about 4,000 supporters of a coalition of opposition political parties staged a rally in support of the ousted judges of the superior judiciary and for the boycott of February 18 elections.(Posted @ 19:26 PST) Security increased near Amitabh Bachchan’s home after anti-migrant clashes in Mumbai MUMBAI, India, Feb 4 (AP) - Actor Amitabh Bachchan’s Mumbai home was under guard Monday after Raj Thackeray, leader of the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena or Maharashtra Reconstruction Party, criticized him at an anti-migrant rally for funding a college in another state, sparking violence in Mumbai, police said. Raj Thackeray told supporters at a rally Friday that actor Amitabh Bachchan, 65, should have built the women's college in Mumbai, the city where he lives and works, rather than in his home state of Uttar Pradesh. Thackeray also called for action to prevent Indians from other states from taking jobs in Maharashtra, blaming the migrants for increasing unemployment in the state. Thackeray's comments sparked clashes in Mumbai late Sunday between supporters of his party and the Socialist Party, which Bachchan's wife Jaya represents in India's parliament. Four people were injured and police arrested 25 more, police commissioner K.L. Prasad said. Reports said vandals threw glass bottles at Amitabh’s house but the actor and his family were not home at the time.(Posted @ 19:07 PST) Fire at German nuclear plant put out FRANKFURT, Feb 4 (Reuters) German daily newspaper Die Welt reported on its website Monday that a fire had broken out at the 1,402 MW Kruemmel nuclear plant, closed since June last year after a fire in its transformer, but the local government said soon afterwards that it had been extinguished.(Posted @ 18:39 PST) Bird flu spreads in Bangladesh, compensation to rise DHAKA, Feb 4 (Reuters) Bird flu has spread to two more districts in Bangladesh, taking the number of affected districts to 36, a livestock official said Monday, as the government pledged to raise compensation to farmers for culled poultry. The latest cases were reported in southern Bagerhat and western Kushtia districts while the virus has re-emerged in several others, an official in the livestock department said. More than half Bangladesh's 64 districts are affected by bird flu. The official said the interim government had decided to increase the amount of compensation for poultry farmers to encourage them to report and cull sick birds. Farmers currently receive between 60 and 80 taka for each culled chicken.(Posted @ 18:36 PST) Bird flu spreads in Pakistan; new outbreak in birds ISLAMABAD, Feb 4 (Reuters) Pakistani authorities confirmed Monday a fresh outbreak of the H5N1 strain of bird flu at a poultry farm on the outskirts of Karachi, the second case in four days in the country's biggest city, a government official said. The new outbreak was found on a farm only 300 metres from where an outbreak was detected last week. “Samples taken from it were tested and found positive for H5N1,” said Food and Agriculture Ministry official Rafiqul Hassan Usmani. “Some 500 to 600 birds died of the virus and the remaining 5,500 chickens at the farm are being culled now.” Tests were also being done on samples taken from poultry farms in Punjab province but no outbreak had been confirmed, a government spokesman said.(Posted @ 18:28 PST) Suicide bomber strikes Israel’s nuclear-reaction town DIMONA, Israel, Feb 4 (Reuters) A Palestinian carried out a suicide bombing in Israel Monday, killing a woman and injuring 10 others in the desert town of Dimona where a top-secret nuclear reactor is located. Police said they prevented a second blast in the town’s shopping centre by shooting dead an accomplice before he could detonate an explosives belt. A source in the Palestinian Fatah faction said the “Army of Palestine” wing of Fatah's al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades launched the attack along with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas condemned the Dimona bombing but also levelled censure at an earlier military raid by Israel in the occupied West Bank. Police said the suicide bomber blew himself up, killing himself and the Israeli woman. “The second terrorist was shot in the head as he tried to set off his bomb belt,” police chief in Israel's southern Negev region said. Israel's Dimona nuclear reactor, where it is widely believed to have produced atomic bombs, is located in a heavily guarded, fenced compound on the outskirts of the town. (First Posted @ 14:00 PST, Updated @ 18:25 PST) At least three killed in Israel bombing JERUSALEM, Feb 4 (AFP) At least three people were killed and 10 wounded Monday in a suspected suicide bombing in a shopping centre in the Israeli desert town of Dimona, site of Israel's top secret nuclear facility, rescue services reported. “There were at least three dead,” the Magen David Adom medical rescue service said. Another 10 people were wounded, three in serious condition. An unexploded bomb belt was found at the site of the blast, raising a possibility that the attack was to be carried out by two bombers, Magen David said. (First Posted @ 14:00 PST, Updated @ 18:09 PST) Cargo train derails in China, burying six BEIJING, Feb 4 (AFP) - A cargo train derailed in Qujing, a mountainous area in Yunnan province in southwest China early Monday, destroying several houses and burying six people, Xinhua news agency reported. The 17-car train went out of control shortly after leaving Geyitou station, jumping off the track and plowing into a number of houses, according to the agency. The report did not say what happened to the six people who were buried.(Posted @ 18:05 PST) Iran launches first space centre TEHRAN, Feb 4 (AFP) Iran inaugurated a space centre aimed at launching its first home-built research satellites Monday. A rocket was fired into space at the remote desert centre in northern Iran to mark the opening. “We witness today that Iran has taken its first step in space very firmly, precisely and with awareness,” declared President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as he gave the order for the launch. The space centre includes an underground control station and launchpad which will be used to fire an Iranian satellite named Omid (Hope) into space, the IRNA news agency reported.(Posted @ 17:51 PST) US wants Bangladesh emergency rule lifted, elections DHAKA, Feb 4 (AFP) - The United States on Monday urged Bangladesh authorities to lift a year-long state of emergency and hold elections before the end of 2008. “The sooner the emergency is lifted the better, and the sooner the elections can be held the better,” said visiting US deputy assistant secretary for South Asian affairs after talks with Foreign Minister Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury and the country's army chief, General Moeen U. Ahmed. He later met the head of the country's emergency government Fakhruddin Ahmed, who reiterated his pledge to stage timely polls -- a reference to an earlier statement that elections would be held in late 2008.(Posted @ 17:23 PST) 13 killed, 17 injured on S.Lanka’s Independency Day COLOMBO, Feb 4 (AFP) - Thirteen people were killed in two roadside bombings in Sri Lanka on Monday, as the island's president marked independence day by insisting he was winning the war against Tamil Tiger rebels. A bomb in the northeast killed 12 bus passengers and wounded 17 others, the military said, adding that a soldier was killed in a similar bomb attack against a military vehicle in the south. Two more blasts just outside the capital earlier Monday did not cause any casualties, but an electricity transformer was destroyed in one of the attacks, police said.(Posted @ 11:05 PST, Updated @ 17:19 PST) Bomb hits Bhutan, rebels warn of more attacks GUWAHATI, India, Feb 4 (Reuters) A bomb exploded in Bhutan on Monday, police said. No-one was hurt in the blast in the southern district of Samtse, where two other bombs were also found and defused. The United Revolutionary Front of Bhutan (URFB), a newly formed armed group fighting for the rights of ethnic Nepalis exiled in 1991, claimed responsibility for the blast, warning of more attacks unless the March 24 elections were cancelled. Bhutanese police told Reuters the targets of the blast were some election duty staff who were staying in two offices close to the attack site. (Posted @ 16:30 PST) Sri Lanka bus blast kills 12 COLOMBO, Feb 4 (Reuters) Suspected Tamil Tiger rebels bombed a civilian bus in northeastern Sri Lanka Monday, killing at least 12 people, the military said. “It was a Tamil Tiger claymore mine targeting a civilian bus in Weli-oya, about 200 km from Colombo. Twelve were killed and 17 admitted to hospital,” a military spokesman said. (First Posted @ 11:05 PST, Updated @ 16:45 PST) Bomb hits Bhutan, rebels warn of more attacks GUWAHATI, India, Feb 4 (Reuters) A bomb exploded in Bhutan on Monday, police said. No-one was hurt in the blast in the southern district of Samtse, where two other bombs were also found and defused. The United Revolutionary Front of Bhutan (URFB), a newly formed armed group fighting for the rights of ethnic Nepalis exiled in 1991, claimed responsibility for the blast, warning of more attacks unless the March 24 elections were cancelled. Bhutanese police told Reuters the targets of the blast were some election duty staff who were staying in two offices close to the attack site. (Posted @ 16:30 PST) Israeli air force attacks Gaza militant GAZA, Feb 4 (Reuters) Israel's air force attacked a senior Palestinian militant as he drove through the northern Gaza Strip Monday, wounding him and several others, a Hamas source said. (Posted @ 16:18 PST) Second bus bomb attack kills 10 in Sri Lanka COLOMBO, Feb 4 (AFP) A powerful roadside bomb killed at least 10 civilians and wounded several others Monday in northeastern Sri Lanka, a military official said. A large number of casualties were taken to hospital following the bombing, a military official in the area said. Hours earlier, a similar mine attack against a military vehicle in the south left one soldier dead and three others wounded. (First Posted @ 11:05 PST, Updated @ 16:12 PST) Two killed, nine wounded in attacks across Thai south YALA, Thailand, Feb 4 (AFP) Two people were killed and nine wounded Monday in a string of bombing and shooting attacks in southern Thailand, police said. Six people, including three police officers, were wounded when a bomb exploded around midday outside a shop in Yala town, one of the region's main cities, police said. The five-kilogram bomb had been planted near a motorcycle parked outside the shop, police said. An hour later, a second bomb exploded outside a school in nearby Pattani province, killing one government official and wounding two others and a policeman, they said. Later in the day, a 30-year-old man was shot dead in a drive-by attack in Yala province, they added. (First Posted @ 14:10 PST; Updated @ 16:10 PST) 10 people killed in raids by foreign, Afghan troops KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, Feb 2 (AP) Afghan and foreign troops conducted separate raids on the homes of suspected Taliban militants Monday, leaving 10 people dead, including women and children, police said. A separate clash in southern Uruzgan province left nine suspected militants dead. In the Bakwa district of western Farah province, foreign and Afghan ground forces attacked the home of suspected Taliban member Mullah Manan, killing nine people, including two women and two children, said district police chief Khan Agha. He said the troops acted on intelligence indicating that insurgents were meeting at his house. Manan escaped the attack. In Helmand province, foreign troops raided the house of another Taliban suspect near Lashkar Gah, killing him and wounding his 8-year-old daughter, said provincial police chief Mohammad Hussein Andiwal. It was not immediately clear which foreign troops participated in the raids. (First Posted @ 14:15 PST, Updated @ 16:00 PST) Turkish warplanes bomb Kurdish area along Iraq-Turkey border IRBIL, Iraq, Feb 4 (AP) Five Turkish fighter jets bombed suspected Kurdish rebel hideouts Monday in northern Iraq, a senior Kurdish official said. No casualties were reported. The raid lasted one hour early Monday, in an area inside Iraq along the country's northern border with Turkey, said Jabbar Yawar, an undersecretary for the ministry governing Kurdish protection forces known as peshmerga. On Sunday, Turkish troops killed 10 separatist Kurdish rebels in clashes in southeastern Turkey, according to a Turkish military official. (First Posted @ 09:15 PST, Updated @ 15:45 PST) Ali Ahmad Kurd re-detained QUETTA, Pakistan, Feb 4 (AFP) Pakistani authorities Monday detained a second leading anti-government lawyer just days after he was freed from nearly three months under house arrest, police said. Ali Ahmad Kurd was first held in November when President Musharraf imposed emergency rule. He was released last week but has now been detained again. “Mr Kurd was trying to leave Quetta. He has been served a detention order and he will be under house arrest for 30 days,” senior police official Rehmatullah Niazi told AFP. Kurd said that he had tried to go to address lawyers in Lahore, but authorities feared that he would cause trouble. “The rulers are scared that I will create problems for them and under this fear they have again detained me. This detention is illegal,” Kurd said. “Our struggle for the independence of judiciary will continue and such steps cannot deter us,” he said. (Posted @ 15:33 PST) Roadside bomb kills Sri Lanka soldier COLOMBO, Feb 4 (AFP) A powerful roadside blast killed at least one soldier and wounded three others in southern Sri Lanka’s Buttala town Monday, officials said. The Claymore mine exploded as soldiers transported lunch for their colleagues, a police official in the area said by telephone. The defence ministry said suspected Tamil Tiger rebels carried out the attack. On the same day, the rebels shot dead another 10 civilians there, according to police. There were two bomb explosions just outside Colombo Monday but there were no casualties, police said. (First Posted @ 11:05 PST, Updated @ 15:30 PST) Two dead, one missing after South Korea cargo ship collision SEOUL, South Korea, Feb 4 (AP) A South Korean cargo ship sank Monday after a collision with a tug boat off the country's west coast, leaving two crew dead and one missing, the Coast Guard said. Three other crew members were rescued after a 600-ton freighter collided with a 270-ton tug boat, said Coast Guard official Cho Young-chol. (Posted @ 14:18 PST) Air strike kills seven civilians in Afghanistan HERAT, Afghanistan, Feb 4 (Reuters) An air strike targeting a Taliban commander killed seven civilians from one family in southwestern Afghanistan’s Farah province’s Bakwa district late Sunday, provincial officials said Monday. “Mullah Malang, a Taliban commander in the district, was the target, but he was not among the casualties,” provincial police chief General Khiasbaz Sherzai said. A provincial official, who declined to be named, said the civilians killed were family members of the Taliban commander. Both International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan said they had no immediate information on the air strike. (Posted @ 14:15 PST) Ten injured in bomb blasts in Thai south YALA, Feb 4 (AFP) Ten people, including two students, were injured Monday when two bombs exploded in southern Thailand, police said. The first bomb exploded around midday outside a shop in Yala town, one of the region's main cities, police said. Three policemen, the shop owner, and two high school students were wounded when the five-kilogram bomb exploded, police said. An hour later, a second bomb exploded outside a school in nearby Pattani province, injuring three local government officials and a policeman, they said. (Posted @ 14:10 PST) India, Pakistan sign security exchange accord NEW DELHI, Feb 4 (AFP) India and Pakistan Monday signed an agreement to exchange security information, officials said. The accord clears the way for regular contacts between India's military-funded Institute of Defence Studies and Analysis (IDSA) and Pakistan's state-run Institute for Strategic Studies (ISS). “The purpose is to build channels of communication at the level of scholars, because exchanges of security studies had been limited because of the strained ties we have had,” ISS director Shireen Mazari said at a signing ceremony in New Delhi. IDSA head Narendra Sisodia, a former Indian defence secretary, said the accord was a landmark because “except for contacts at international forums, we never had open discussions on security issues.” The pact stipulates that the two think tanks will send experts to participate in state-sponsored workshops in India and Pakistan and later engage in joint military research projects. Sisodia cautioned, however, that Monday's accord between the IDSA and the ISS would not replace any official dialogue. (Posted @ 14:05 PST) Explosion in southern Israel, at least three dead JERUSALEM, Feb 4 (AP) At least three people were killed and five wounded in an explosion in the southern Israeli town of Dimona Monday, medics said. Police confirmed an explosion in a commercial area of the town but could not immediately say what had caused it. (Posted @ 14:00 PST) Explosion in southern Israel, at least one dead JERUSALEM, Feb 4 (AP) An explosion rocked the southern Israeli town of Dimona Monday and at least one person was killed, firefighters told radio stations. Police confirmed an explosion in a commercial area of the town but could not immediately say what had caused it. (Posted @ 13:55 PST) Rebels out of Chad's capital, 200 reported wounded NAIROBI, Kenya, Feb 4 (AP) Chadian rebels said Monday they withdrew voluntarily from Chad's capital overnight, but it was unclear if they succumbed to the force of helicopter gunships and tanks deployed by government forces. Dozens of civilians have been wounded in fighting. Rebel spokesman Abderaman Koulamallah told The Associated Press ''we decided to retreat to give the population a chance to get out.'' Chadian Gen. Mahamat Ali Abdallah Nassour charged Sudanese troops were involved and called it a ''declaration of war'' from Sudan. Sudan has repeatedly denied any involvement. A spokesman for Medecins sans Frontieres in Paris said the Chadian Red Cross had told MSF doctors that they had counted about 200 wounded. Hundreds of people are fleeing the fighting, crossing the Chari River to Kousseri, in neighbouring Cameroon, the U.N.'s refugee agency said. (First Posted @ 11:55 PST, Updated @ 13:55 PST) Nine killed in German house fire BERLIN, Feb 4 (Reuters) Nine people, including five children, were killed in a fire in a house in the western German city of Ludwigshafen, police said Monday. A further 24 were taken to hospital and it was possible that more bodies would be found in the house, which was in danger of collapse, a police spokesman said. It was unclear what had caused the fire, the spokesman said, adding that 52 people, mostly Turkish citizens, were registered as living in the house. (Posted @ 13:30 PST) Thousands flee Chad capital, rebels say pulled back N'DJAMENA, Feb 4 (Reuters) Thousands of civilians fled the Chadian capital N'Djamena early Monday after rebel forces said they had pulled back from the city following two days of fighting, while the government said it had driven them back. A Reuters reporter inside N'Djamena said there were no sounds of fighting this morning and some people were venturing out of their homes. Another Reuters correspondent who was across the Logone-Chari river from the city reported a flood of refugees streaming over the river bridge into Cameroon. (First Posted @ 11:55 PST, Updated@ 13:25 PST) Trial of ex-Bangladesh PM adjourned after courtroom row DHAKA, Feb 4 (AFP): The corruption trial of former Bangladeshi prime minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed was adjourned Monday after defence lawyers accused the judge of bias, lawyers said. “They hurled abuse at the judge, accusing him of taking sides... The judge left the court after telling the lawyers that he would report their behaviour to the Supreme Court,” state prosecutor Mohammad Borhanuddin said. Sheikh Hasina's lawyer, Kamrul Islam, accused the judge of refusing to allow the defence to cross-examine the plaintiff in the case, a businessman who says the former premier and her cousin extorted 435,000 dollars from him. (Posted @ 12:35 PST) Chad rebellion quashed, Sudan behind it: minister NDJAMENA, Feb 4 (AFP): The Chadian government said Sunday it had quashed a rebellion aimed at ousting President Idriss Deby and driven the rebels out of the capital Ndjamena, though a leading rebel said they had only withdrawn temporarily. “The battle for Ndjamena is over,” Foreign Minister Amad Allam-Mi told France's RTI radio in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa in an interview in which he angrily accused Sudan of being directly behind the rebellion. A rebel told AFP the insurgents had simply withdrawn temporarily to allow civilians time to leave the capital. (Posted @ 11:55 PST) Iran to test satellite rocket launcher: TV TEHRAN, Feb 4 (Reuters): Iran said it would test a rocket launcher on Monday that was designed to send the country’s first homemade research satellite into orbit in the future, state media reported. The ability to launch satellites into orbit could indicate an advance in Iran's missile technology that might alarm some Western powers wary of the Tehran's nuclear ambitions. State television said the satellite would be launched by March 2009 but the official IRNA news agency said it would be launched in the near future. (Posted @ 11:40 PST) Sri Lankan celebrates 60th anniversary amid intense security COLOMBO, Feb 4 (AFP/AP): Sri Lanka marked the island's 60th independence anniversary on Monday with a vow to defeat Tamil Tiger rebels, despite warnings the worsening conflict could lead to an aid cut. President Mahinda Rajapakse said the “challenge bestowed upon us is the defeat of terrorism. Our security forces are today achieving victories against terrorism. Terrorism is receiving an unprecedented defeat,” the president said. Sri Lanka celebrated its independence anniversary with parades, speeches and an intense security clampdown. Many roads throughout the capital, Colombo, were sealed and one of Sri Lanka's main cellular phone providers shut off its text messaging service for six hours. Despite the precautions, rebels set off a bomb near a power transformer south of Colombo about 6 a.m., causing no injuries, a military spokesman said. (Posted @ 11:06 PST) Israeli troops kill two Palestinians in West Bank JERUSALEM, Feb 4 (AP): Israeli special forces killed two members of Islamic Jihad and seriously wounded a third in a pre-dawn raid Monday into a West Bank village, Palestinian and Israeli officials said. Last month Israeli forces killed an Islamic Jihad commander in the same village. (Posted @ 10:50 PST) France says 700 people evacuated from Chad PARIS, Feb 4 (Reuters): France has evacuated at least 700 people from Chad, its foreign ministry said on Sunday, as fighting raged in the African state's capital between government and rebel troops. A ministry statement added that there were a further 450 foreigners currently in the Chad capital of N'Djamena who might fly out later. This figure included 200 French nationals. (Posted @ 10:15 PST) US military ‘accidentally’ kills 9 Iraqi civilians near Baghdad BAGHDAD, Feb 4 (AP): The U.S. military said Monday that it accidentally killed nine Iraqi civilians during an operation targeting Al-Qaeda. The civilians were killed Saturday near Iskandariyah, 50kms south of Baghdad, a U.S. navy official told The Associated Press. Three more civilians were wounded and taken to nearby U.S. military hospitals nearby, he said. (Posted @ 10:10 PST) US soldier killed by grenade in Baghdad; another dies of non-combat cause BAGHDAD, Feb 4 (AP): A U.S. soldier was killed by a rocket-propelled grenade last week in Baghdad, the military said Sunday. The Multi-National Division Baghdad soldier's vehicle was struck while on patrol in eastern Baghdad on Thursday, according to a statement. It did not say why the death was not reported earlier. The military also reported that a U.S. soldier assigned to Multi-National Division North died Saturday of non-combat causes in Ninevah province. Eleven dead in gun battle at Nigerian pipeline LAGOS, Feb 4 (Reuters): Three soldiers and eight militants were killed in a gun battle at an oil pipeline hub operated by Royal Dutch Shell in Nigeria's southern state of Bayelsa, the navy said on Sunday. Shell said the Tora manifold, which sends oil to the Bonny export terminal, was not damaged in the attack late on Saturday and oil production in Nigeria, the world's eighth largest oil exporter, was unaffected. “Some militants attacked the Tora manifold where we had some men. There was an exchange of fire and they killed three of our men. The militants lost eight,” a navy spokesman said. (Posted @ 10:00 PST) Suicide bombing in Rawalpindi kills at least six RAWALPINDI, Feb 4 (AP): A suicide bomber on a motorcycle rammed into a bus carrying security personnel, detonating a blast Monday that killed six people and wounded ten others in Rawalpindi, police said. The bomb went off during the morning rush hour outside the army's National Logistics Cell, where the army has its headquarters. The bus was destroyed and several people wounded in the explosion, police official Abdul Waheed said. Several vehicles were badly damaged and army caps were scattered on the road. The site is about 100 metres from the back of the army headquarters compound, a witness said. State television was reporting at least three people killed. “I am on the spot, it appears to be a suicide blast. There are casualties but we are not sure how many as they have been shifted to hospital,” city police chief Saud Aziz told AFP. The explosion happened in the busy R.A. Bazar area, near the Pakistan Army headquarters, he said. Security personnel had cordoned off the area. Suicide bombers have struck in Rawalpindi at least five times in the past year. (First Posted @ 08:45 PST, Updated @ 09:25 PST) Ten Kurdish rebels killed in Turkey clash ANKARA, Feb 4 (AFP): Turkish troops killed 10 separatist Kurdish rebels on Sunday in the eastern Bingol province, the Anatolia news agency reported. Fighting erupted near Ortacanak village where troops have been hunting rebels from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) for the past three days, the report said. (Posted @ 09:15 PST) Weekend Kenya violence claims at least 70 lives despite peace plan NAIROBI, Feb 4 (AFP): Weekend clashes in Kenya left at least 70 dead as tribal violence in the country since flawed polls a month ago showed no sign Sunday of abating despite a peace plan set in place by Kofi Annan. “A total of 13 people were killed overnight” along the Kisii-Kalenjin tribal border and nearby areas in western Nyamira district, a police commander told AFP. Later on Sunday, an AFP photographer said hundreds of fighters armed with bows and arrows and rocks fought pitched battles as police struggled to contain them. (Posted @ 09:10 PST) One dead, more than 200 injured in Japan snow TOKYO, Feb 4 (AFP): At least one man died and more than 200 people were injured after the Tokyo region was hit at the weekend by the season's heaviest snowfall, officials and media said Monday. “A 67-year-old man died after falling from the roof of his house” in Yokohama, near Tokyo, a municipal official said, adding 58 other people were injured by early Monday. In Tokyo alone, 74 people were rushed to hospital by late Sunday, according to a spokeswoman for the Tokyo Fire Department, which is in charge of ambulance services. (Posted @ 09:08 PST) Lebanese killed by Israeli fire TYRE, Feb 4 (AFP): One Lebanese man was killed and another wounded on Sunday when Israeli troops opened fire on them near the divided border village of Ghajar, a Lebanese security official told AFP. “The two men were hit by Israeli gunfire and transported to the hospital in Marjayoun,” the official, said. An Israeli army spokesman claimed the Zionist troops had come under fire from the Lebanese side as they carried out a patrol. (Posted @ 09:05 PST) Nine die in mudslide outside Rio RIO DE JANEIRO, Feb 4 (AFP): Nine people died Sunday when mudslides overran their homes in a town outside Rio de Janeiro, emergency officials said, according to reports. The fatalities occurred in Itaipava, 80 kilometers from Rio. Twelve people were hospitalized with injuries. Officials were searching mud-filled houses for other casualties. (Posted @ 09:00 PST) Six killed in Papua New Guinea ethnic clashes: police PORT MORESBY, Feb 4 (AFP): Six people were killed and several seriously injured in an eruption of ethnic violence in Papua New Guinea's third largest city Mount Hagen, police said Monday. The clashes were triggered by the killing of a security guard in a hotel brawl early Sunday. When the dead man's family learnt of the incident, truckloads of tribesmen rushed into the city to seek revenge against a clan of settlers. The mob killed one settler before being driven off by police, but returned with reinforcements armed with guns and bush knives. Four people were killed in the later clash, including three settlers and one tribesman. (Posted @ 09:00 PST) Suicide bomber kills at least six in Rawalpindi ISLAMABAD, Feb 4 (AP/Reuters): A suicide bomber on a motorcycle in Rawalpindi rammed into a minibus carrying security personnel, detonating a blast Monday that killed at least six people, police said. The explosion wounded at least eight people, police said.The bus was destroyed and several other people were wounded in the explosion on a road running through a bazaar near the offices of the army's engineering department, police official Abdul Waheed said. It was not immediately clear which branch of the armed forces the passengers were from. Police said the army had cordoned off the area. Another official said the army had cordoned off the area, and at least r nine badly wounded people have been taken to hospital. (Posted @ 08:45 PST) Five dead in Philippines troops clash with militants MANILA, Feb 4 (Reuters): At least five people were killed on a remote island in southern Philippines on Monday when troops clashed with militants holding two people hostage, an army spokesman said. He said troops were on a mission to rescue the two hostages, including the daughter of a wealthy local trader, when they clashed with the Abu Sayyaf rebels on the island of Jolo. “We lost two men but we killed three on their side,” the spokesman said, adding five soldiers were also wounded in the hour-long gunbattle. (Posted @ 08:45 PST) Colombian rebels to release more hostages to Venezuela's Chavez BOGOTA, Feb 4 (AP): In its latest gesture to push for a high-profile prisoner swap, Colombia's main leftist rebel army says it will free three ailing politicians it has held for more than six years. In a communique, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, said the planned liberation springs from efforts by President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and “other friendly governments” to seek a solution to the country's long-running conflict. (Posted @ 08:45 PST) Founder: Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah
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