Geithner at G20 urges more flexible forex policies

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Thursday called for more flexible exchange rate policies at a Group of 20 meeting in China, saying it was crucial to global monetary system reform. Geithner did not explicitly single out China in his remarks at a G20 seminar on international monetary reform attended by ministers and central bankers, but hinted that Beijing needed to loosen its grip on the yuan. He said that to better manage sweeping... [more]

Obama Won’t Rule Out Arming Libyan Rebels

US President Barack Obama has said he has not ruled out supplying weapons to Libyan rebels whose advance West has been halted by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces. In a series of TV interviews, Mr Obama said the noose has tightened around the leader but that diplomatic and political pressure needs to be intensified further. And he said he had already agreed to provide nonlethal aid such as communications equipment, medical supplies... [more]

Obama to lay out his case on Libya to nation

President Barack Obama is offering Congress and an anxious public his first detailed accounting of his rationale for U.S. military involvement in Libya and perhaps an answer to the burning question: What’s next? His speech, set for 7:30 p.m. EDT Monday, comes after the administration scored an important diplomatic victory. NATO ambassadors on Sunday approved a plan for the alliance to assume from the U.S. command all aerial operations,... [more]

Ontario introduces Dutch Heritage Month

The government of the Canadian province of Ontario has procolaimed the month of May ‘Dutch Heritage Month’. The provincial parliament has adopted a proposal introduced by MP Elizabeth Witmer, a native of the Dutch town of Schiedam. Dutch Heritage Month is to symbolise the special bond between the Canadian province and the Netherlands. More than 500,000 citizens of Ontario are of Dutch extraction. Dutch Ambassador Wim Geerts pointed out... [more]

US eye more firepower to hit pro-Gadhafi forces

Battered by a week of air strikes, forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi still remain a potent threat to civilians, according to Pentagon officials, who are considering more firepower and airborne surveillance systems to find and attack the enemy troops. As the military eyes other tools in its arsenal, the White House announced late Friday that President Barack Obama will give a speech to the nation Monday evening explaining his... [more]

Radiation in Tokyo water; U.S. curbs Japan food imports

Japanese authorities advised against allowing infants to drink tap water in Tokyo due to raised radiation levels and the United States became the first nation to block some food imports from Japan. The crisis at the tsunami-smashed nuclear power plant, 250 km (150 miles) north of the Japanese capital, appeared far from over with workers attempting to gain control ordered to leave the site after black smoke began rising from one of its six... [more]

Japan Crisis Sparks Global Nuclear Review

A continuing crisis at Japan’s Fukushima 1 nuclear power plant has spurred nations around the world to review the safety of their own nuclear installations. The European Union reached an agreement to conduct “stress tests” on the continent’s nuclear plants as it tries to draw lessons from the events in quake-hit Japan. Amid soaring public concern on nuclear energy, the EU gathered ministers, national safety chiefs... [more]

Katie Holmes sues Star Magazine over cover

Katie Holmes sued the publishers of Star Magazine on Tuesday, accusing them of libel over a magazine cover that insinuated she was a drug addict. The actress filed the lawsuit against American Media Inc. in federal court in Los Angeles. She said a January cover that featured the headline “Katie DRUG SHOCKER!” was false and not supported by the actual story in the magazine. The cover featured a disheveled picture of Holmes, and... [more]

Discovery ‘ready to fly’ on last space mission

NASA said Tuesday that the space shuttle Discovery is “ready to fly” on its final mission to the International Space Station and weather looks 80 percent favorable for launch day on February 24. “Over the last few months the team has been very busy effecting repairs to the external tank and making it stronger than ever,” said NASA test director Steve Payne. “We have also resolved a problem with a hydrogen vent... [more]

EU watches Apple subscription service, probe unlikely

EU antitrust regulators are keeping tabs on a new media subscription service by Apple Inc. because of concerns voiced by publishers, a European Commission spokeswoman said on Friday. An official investigation appears unlikely, however, as commissioners believe rivalry in the field is increasing, according to their comments to EU legislators. Apple on Tuesday rolled out a subscription service for magazines, newspapers, videos and music which... [more]

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