E. coli cucumbers may be in Austria, Hungary

Small numbers of Spanish vegetables suspected of contamination with a potentially deadly bacteria are being recalled from stores in Austria and the Czech Republic to prevent the spread of an outbreak that has killed at least nine people and sickened hundreds across Europe, officials said Sunday. Czech officials said 120 organic Spanish cucumbers suspected of contamination by a potentially fatal bacteria were being pulled off shelves. Health... [more]

French minister quits over sex harassment case

A junior minister in French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s center-right government resigned on Sunday after he was accused of sexual harassment by two women, the government said. One of Georges Tron’s accusers said she had been encouraged to speak up by the arrest two weeks ago of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the French head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), on charges he attempted to rape a chambermaid in New York City. French... [more]

2.6 billion euros for disabled workers in Netherlands

By 2015 municipalities together will have 2.6 billion euros to help underprivileged workers, Deputy Minister for Social Affairs Paul de Krom says in a letter to parliament. Around 1.8 billion euros are intended to support work schemes for the disabled, and the rest to help disabled workers get a regular job. The letter explains a number of aspects of a new law, Working to one’s Ability, that the cabinet wants to introduce in 2013. The... [more]

Nuke town residents allowed 2-hour visit back home

Residents of the town around Japan’s radiation-leaking nuclear plant donned protective suits and briefly returned home to collect belongings Thursday for the first time since the complex went into crisis in March. Futaba’s 8,000 residents were evacuated soon after Japan’s massive March 11 earthquake and tsunami flooded the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex and set off radiation leaks. Local officials and nuclear experts... [more]

Explosions in south China city wound at least 5

Three explosions, some from car bombs, occurred within a half-hour outside three government buildings in a south China city Thursday, blowing out windows and wounding at least five people, an official and state media reported. A car exploded outside the prosecutor’s office in Fuzhou city, then 10 minutes later an explosion went off at a district government building and 15 minutes later a car exploded outside a drug administration office,... [more]

Volcanic ash forces Berlin airport closures

A cloud of volcanic ash from Iceland that has caused headaches for air travelers spread to Germany on Wednesday, forcing the closure of Berlin’s airports and disrupting hundreds of flights, but experts said the eruption appeared be winding down. European air traffic controllers said they expect about 700 flights to be canceled on Wednesday, but Eurocontrol added that activity from Iceland’s Grimsvotn volcano has declined sharply... [more]

US team in NKorea to talk food aid, human rights

A U.S. government team was in North Korea on a rare trip Tuesday to assess food shortages, while the country’s reclusive leader Kim Jong Il reportedly traveled to an eastern Chinese city to study Beijing’s economic reforms. The American delegation — led by Robert King, U.S. special envoy for North Korean human rights issues — will use its five-day visit to verify food supply surveys conducted by the United Nations and U.S.-based... [more]

Greek opposition party rejects new austerity plan

Greece’s main opposition leader bluntly refused Monday to back new austerity measures designed to tackle the crippling debt crisis, arguing they would only bring further recession, despite the European Union’s insistence for cross-party support. Top EU finance officials have argued that Greece, which is struggling to meet the terms of an international euro110 billion ($154 billion) bailout and could require more help, needs all... [more]

Volcano ash will cancel up to 500 flights

The spread of dense ash from the erupting Iceland volcano could force the cancellation of up to 500 commercial flights in Northern Ireland, Scotland and parts of Scandinavia, the European air traffic agency said Tuesday. Between 200 and 250 flights had already been canceled, said Brian Flynn, head of network operations at Eurocontrol. There are just over 30,000 flights within Europe on average every day at this time of the year. Ash from... [more]

UN atomic watchdog experts set off for Japan

A team of experts from the UN atomic watchdog flew out to Tokyo from Vienna on Sunday to team up with other international experts investigating Japan’s nuclear crisis. Six experts from the International Atomic Energy Agency boarded a Tokyo-bound flight from Vienna at around midday on Sunday in preparation for a fact-finding mission from May 24-June 2. Jim Lyons, director of the IAEA’s division of nuclear installation safety,... [more]

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