Ph: 77909466

JavaScript disabled. Please enable JavaScript to use My News, My Clippings, My Comments and user settings.

New feature Personalise your news, save articles to read later and customise settings View Demo

Hi there! Beta version

If you have trouble accessing our login form below, you can go to our login page.

[ ]

World News

Revellers celebrate during the Banda de Ipanema Carnival street band parade, along Ipanema beach in Rio de Janeiro.

Rio awash with revellers for Carnival

Rio de Janeiro 5:38pm The Rio Carnival has come alive with more than two million revellers in outlandish costumes staging a mammoth, frenzied samba-driven street festival in the city centre.

Man found alive after two months trapped in snow

Snowed-in car in Sweden

2:18pm A Swedish man was dug out alive after being snowed in to his car on a forest track for two months with no food, police and local media reported on Saturday.

Cyber zoo to preserve endangered languages

Blackboard.

A ''ZOO'' for endangered languages has been set up on the internet in a bid to save thousands of ancient tongues from extinction.

'VatiLeaks' embarrass the Holy See

A Swiss guard salutes as Cardinal designate Archbishop of New York Timothy Dolan leaves the Synod hall after a meeting with the Pope.

Elisabetta Povoledo Leaked documents have exposed power battles within the church.

Arrests after seizure of phoney US bonds

The fake US bonds.

Rome Italian police have arrested eight people on charges related to the seizure of $US6 trillion in fake US Treasury bonds, in a mysterious scam that stretched from Hong Kong to Switzerland to the southern Italian region of Basilicata.

Rio's revellers thank their lucky stars

Sao Paulo.

RIO DE JANEIRO: Showered in confetti and flanked by sequined samba queens, Rio's mayor symbolically relinquished control of the city to its rotund Carnival king to kick off the five-day festivities, a time of joyous excess when the streets fill with roving percussion bands and throngs of dancing, drinking revellers.

Stray dog foils prison breakout

Paraguayan police watch prison guard Miguel Barrios emerge onto a sidewalk after inspecting a tunnel that was dug by inmates of the Tacumbu high security prison in Asuncion February 16, 2012.

ASUNCION, Paraguay: A stray dog is getting credit for thwarting a prison break in Paraguay. Officials say three dangerous inmates dug a tunnel about 8 metres from their cell to the street, and were about to break free when the dog began to bark and alerted a guard.

Autism detected at just six months old

A baby.

Liz Szabo CHANGES in brain development have been detected in autistic babies as young as six months old - half a year or more before parents typically begin to notice symptoms of the condition, researchers have found.

Honour for Houston

Cards and flowers for Whitney.

CHRIS CHRISTIE, the Governor of New Jersey, has defended his decision to have flags lowered to half-mast for Whitney Houston.

Bird flu research to be vetted

Senior medical virologist Professor Bill Rowlinson left with post doctoral research scientist Sacha Stelzer processing specimens in the lab that was used to rule out suspected bird flu cases and other infectious diseases.

GENEVA: Bird flu experts have ruled that controversial research on a mutant form of the virus potentially capable of being spread among humans should be made public.

Capitol bomb plot foiled, says FBI

This artist rendering shows Amine El Khalifi before U.S. District Judge T. Rawles Jones Jr. in federal court in Alexandria, Va., Friday, Feb. 17, 2012.

WASHINGTON: A Moroccan man who believed he was working with al-Qaeda has been arrested near the US Capitol as he was planning to detonate what he thought was a suicide vest, given to him by undercover operatives.

Death threat in email to lover

Members of the Virginia women's lacrosse team hold candles during a memorial for teammate Yeardley Love at the school in Charlottesville, Va., Wednesday, May 5, 2010.

Yeardley Love was killed after confronting her boyfriend, write Bonnie Winston and Tom Schoenberg.

Iran agrees to talks as sanctions pain bites

Men load cargo onto a wooden dhow ship for export at Dubai Creek in this February 6, 2012 file photo.

Rick Gladstone, Steven Lee Myers WASHINGTON: The United States and the European Union have signalled negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program could soon resume for the first time in more than a year, even as a telecommunications network vital to the global banking industry prepared to expel Iranian banks.

Obama's geeks v GOP billions

US President Barack Obama greets Principal Beth Hamilton during a surprise motorcade stop in the rain to greet children and teachers at Medina Elementary School in Medina, Washington, on February 17, 2012 following a visit to a nearby neighborhood for a Democratic fundraiser.

NEW YORK: Barack Obama's re-election team is building a vast digital operation that, for the first time, combines a database on millions of Americans with the power of Facebook to target individual voters to a degree never seen before.

Vatican properties to be taxed

The Vatican.

ROME: The Vatican, which previously enjoyed an exemption, must now pay taxes on its commercial properties, the Italian Prime Minister, Mario Monti, has announced.

Parting clouds at The Sun

News Corp. chief executive Rupert Murdoch, reads his group's The Sun daily newspaper, as he is driven from his home, in central London, Friday, Feb. 17, 2012.

John F. Burns and Ravi Somaiya IN A gesture aimed at restoring morale in his battered newspaper empire in Britain, Rupert Murdoch has walked the floor of his flagship British tabloid, The Sun, with his son Lachlan, ended suspensions of reporters and editors who have been arrested in a Scotland Yard corruption scandal and announced a new Sunday edition.

Sun rises on Sunday as Murdoch placates his troops

In this photo made available by News International News International of Rupert Murdoch (right) talking to staff during a tour of The Sun newsroom, London Friday Feb. 17, 2012. Murdoch moved to quell growing disquiet at Britain's top-selling newspaper Friday as he lifted the suspensions of all arrested staff. While pledging

Martin Daly, London Rupert Murdoch has again changed the face of British media after he flew to London to appease enraged staff - who were in open rebellion against his empire - and announced that far from closing their newspaper, he would give them another.

Talks offer eases nuclear fears

Western governments are alarmed about Iran's recent efforts to move key parts of its nuclear program into underground bunkers.

Joby Warrick, Washington United States and European officials have cautiously welcomed a letter from Iran proposing talks about its nuclear program, a request that appeared to spark a flicker of hope for resuming long-stalled diplomatic engagement with Iranian leaders.

Analysis

Tehran's bark may be worse than its bite

An Iranian woman buys a gift during Valentine's day shopping at a shop in Tehran February 13, 2012.

Ian Black Iran watchers have had their work cut out making sense of attacks on Israeli diplomats in Asia, confusion over a ban on oil sales to European Union countries, a vaunted advance in the country's nuclear program and a cleverly formulated offer of a new round of talks on that contentious issue.

Comment

When artists tell tales of rape and war

U.S. actress and director Angelina Jolie poses on the red carpet before the gala premiere of the movie 'In The Land Of Blood And Honey' in Zagreb February 17, 2012.

Slavenka Drakulic Fictionalising war will always attract controversy.

Dolphin activist released from jail

Erwin Vermeulen

Steve Jacobs 12:58am A Dutch environmentalist has been ordered to be released from a Japanese jail pending a judge's verdict in the case against him.

Murdoch: No defence for tabloid wrongs

Rupert Murdoch has taken to Twitter.

News Corp chief executive Rupert Murdoch has warned staff at his scandal-hit British tabloid The Sun that he won't protect reporters found to have broken the law, but pledged unstinting support to the title he claimed is among his proudest achievements.

Moroccan accused of Capitol Hill bomb plot is held after FBI sting operation

police

Jon Swaine A Moroccan man allegedly poised to attack the US Capitol was arrested in Washington on Friday night carrying what he is said to have believed was a vest packed with explosives.

Dutch prince critically ill after being buried in avalanche

prince

A delegation of Dutch royalty has arrived in Austria after the second son of Queen Beatrix was injured in an avalanche while skiing in the resort of Lech.

Kim Jong-il's playboy son kicked out of casino

nam

Peter Simpson in Beijing The playboy eldest son of the late North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il has been kicked out of a five-star hotel in the Chinese gambling territory of Macau after his credit card was cancelled, according to reports.

Honeymoon murder trial: drowned woman's heart problem cured, says doctor

Watson

An Alabama woman had a heart condition that was diagnosed and fixed two years before she drowned during a honeymoon diving trip in Australia, a doctor has testified as prosecutors tried to head off defence claims that medical problems caused her death.

Probe says Iraqi vice-president behind deaths

Iraq's Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi.

Baghdad An Iraqi judicial panel says Sunni Vice-President Tariq al-Hashemi and his employees ran death squads that for years carried out deadly attacks on security officials and Shiite pilgrims.

Syrian conflict attracting foreign fighters, weapons

The shadow of an armed rebel Free Syrian Army member on a wall in Binnish.

Ruth Pollard, Beirut Syria has become a magnet for foreign fighters, with al-Qaeda aligned jihadists streaming across the border from Iraq and rebel soldiers from the Libyan city of Misrata crossing in from Turkey, experts say.

Cameron makes plea for Scottish loyalty to Union

British Prime Minister David Cameron in Scotland.

Juliette Jowit, London British Prime Minister David Cameron has held out the prospect of more freedom from Westminster in an appeal to Scots not to opt out of the United Kingdom.

Doctor saw Watson 'helping' wife

Gabe Watson and new wife Kim in Alabama.

Peter Mitchell, Alabama A doctor who watched Tina Thomas sink to her death thought Gabe Watson was trying to help, not murder her, during a honeymoon dive.

Latest Video

World News Video More video

Cruise captain free of drugs, alcohol

The captain of the Costa Concordia which ran aground last month has tested negative for drug and alcohol abuse.

Advertisement
sudan

Referendum of hope

Multimedia: Kate Geraghty portrays the challenges faced by Medecins Sans Frontieres in Sudan.

Congolese woman

Confessions of a child rapist

Multimedia: Man tells of the terror he wrought as a boy soldier in the Democratic Republic of Congo where rape is cheaper than bullets.

Advertisement


You are viewing a mobilized version of this site...
View original page here

Mobilized by Mowser Mowser