Asylum seekers riot, torch buildings in Australia

Asylum seekers torched nine buildings at an Australian detention centre in a night of wild riots with a handful still on rooftops Thursday, reviving debate over the country’s immigration policies. The riots kicked off late Wednesday at the Villawood Detention Centre in western Sydney with an estimated 100 detainees involved at the height of the drama. Firefighters were at one stage pelted with roof tiles and pieces of furniture as... [more]

Japan PM declares no-go zone around nuclear plant

Japan’s Prime Minister Naoto Kan on Thursday declared the 20-kilometre (12-mile) evacuation area around the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant a legal no-entry zone. The move, due to come into effect at midnight local time (1500 GMT), came after police found more than 60 families still living inside the zone around the plant that was hit by the March 11 quake and tsunami. The plant, where reactor cooling systems were knocked out, has... [more]

Russia’s Putin warns against economic complacency

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Wednesday Russia was emerging powerfully from the global financial crisis but must reduce its reliance on energy and raw materials to see off external threats to its economy. In his last annual report to parliament before a presidential election in March 2012, Putin said inflation would not exceed 6.5 to 7.5 percent in 2011 and that gross domestic product grew by 4.4 percent in the first quarter of the... [more]

Second Swedish woman reports ‘fake rape’ slur

Greek authorities were saying that Swedish women were out to cash in on fake rape claims as early as 2002. Another Swedish woman has come forward telling the story of how she was mistreated after reporting a rape on the island of Kos in 2002. Last week the case of ‘Anna’, who was told she was trying to cash in on a special Swedish ‘rape insurance’ after reporting a rape in 2008, kicked off a media storm in Sweden. The second woman,... [more]

Portugal pays high rates to borrow 1 bn euros

Portugal, negotiating a debt rescue with the EU and IMF, raised one billion euros ($695 million) on Wednesday but had to pay sharply increased interest rates as markets demanded record returns. Even as Lisbon raised short-term funds, sceptical investors were adding to the pressure on the government by pushing 10-year bond yields to record highs, reflecting their doubts that Portugal’s public finances can be stabilised. In midday trading,... [more]

Spanish police snatch Sicilian mafia fugitive

Spanish police said on Wednesday they had arrested Sicilian mafia fugitive Claudio Adriano Giusto after 13 years on the run for murder and robbery. Giusto, who had been sentenced to 28 years in Italy for shooting dead a man in 1998, was arrested in the northeastern Spanish town of Alcarras by police working with their Italian colleagues and Interpol. “After a search of more than 13 years he was arrested in the Lerida town of Alcarras... [more]

Dutch watchdog ticks off Google

American internet giant Google has been intercepting private information in the Netherlands via people’s insecure wireless networks, says the Dutch Data Protection Authority (CBP). Google has destroyed the information: the company was threatened with damages imposed on a daily basis in case of non-compliance. The privacy watchdog says Google vehicles, which were taking photographs of Dutch streets for its Street View service, collected... [more]

TNT Milan – a package you can’t refuse

TNT Express in Milan has been infiltrated by the mafia. The Italian justice ministry has intervened and will be at the helm of the packages delivery company for the coming six months. It appears that dozens of smaller courier companies that work for TNT are run by the ‘Ndrangheta, the Calabrian branch of the mafia. TNT was under the impression that they were independent companies but it has transpired the couriers were a cover for organised... [more]

Finnish PM-elect sees no big change to Portugal bailout

Finland’s likely next prime minister ruled out proposing major changes to a bailout package for Portugal, seeking to soothe concerns that its new government could block the European Union’s plans and upset markets. Finland’s parliament, unlike others in the euro zone, has the right to vote on EU requests for bailout funds. Strong gains by the anti-euro True Finns, which came third in Sunday’s vote, has raised concerns... [more]

EU to provide 110 million euros for new Chernobyl shell

The European Commission will allocate an extra 110 million euros (96.5 million pounds) towards the cost of building a new shelter over the Chernobyl nuclear reactor which blew up in 1986, commission president Jose Manuel Barroso said on Monday. “Tomorrow I will be ready to declare extra money put forward by the European Commission of the order of 110 million euros,” Barroso told Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, Interfax... [more]

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