Russian boat stricken in Antarctic has second hole

A second hole has been found in a stricken Russian fishing boat in Antarctic waters, but rescuers said they were making good progress with repairs and the vessel should be seaworthy by Wednesday. The Sparta, with a crew of 32, has been stranded near the Antarctic ice shelf since it was holed 11 days ago and heavy ice in the area prevented nearby vessels offering immediate assistance. Pumps and fuel dropped from a New Zealand Air Force Hercules... [more]

Tepco seeks $9 billion more for Fukushima compensation

Tokyo Electric Power Co <9501.T> asked a government-backed bailout body on Tuesday for an additional 690 billion yen (5.6 billion pounds) to help compensate victims of the nuclear crisis at its Fukushima Daiichi power plant. To help Japan’s biggest utility, known as Tepco, meet costs running into trillions of yen for compensation and cleanup, the government had already agreed in November to provide 890 billion yen through a... [more]

Most Germans don’t want president to resign

Most Germans do not want President Christian Wulff to resign despite the continuing scandal over his business dealings, although roughly half have lost confidence in the head of state, according to a new poll. While 50 percent believe that Wulff used his public position to help friends and 48 percent have little or no confidence in him, 73 percent do not think he should resign, according to the poll conducted for the Bild newspaper. A... [more]

Despite crisis, Germany benefits from euro

Ten years after the introduction of the euro, and in the midst of its biggest crisis to date, the AFP’s Celine Le Prioux says there are many reasons Europe’s biggest economy has benefited from the single currency. Chancellor Angela Merkel has made no bones about the advantages for Germany of the euro, which went into circulation as banknotes and coins on January 1, 2002, and whose future she has been grimly racing to shore up. “As... [more]

Serbia folk diva back in court

Serbia’s folk diva Svetlana Raznatovic on Monday denied charges of violent behavior she and another defendant are facing for allegedly insulting and beating up the manager of a football club. Raznatovic claimed at a court hearing that it was she who was insulted. “He (the manager) even wanted to attack me,” she told the court. “I have never caused any incidents.” The hearing was briefly interrupted when the... [more]

Review: Streep can’t save superficial ‘Iron Lady’

The same problems that plagued “La Vie en Rose,” starring Marion Cotillard as Edith Piaf, exist in “The Iron Lady,” a biopic about Margaret Thatcher starring Meryl Streep as the former British prime minister. While both films feature strong performances from strong actresses playing strong, real-life women, the scripts are weakened by going strictly by the numbers. Sure, Streep reliably nails her impression of Thatcher... [more]

Spain economy ‘shrinks in Q4, outlook bleak’

Spain’s economy shrank in the last quarter and faces a bleak outlook for the coming months, its new economy minister said on Monday, heightening fears of a fresh recession. Luis de Guindos dampened already gloomy expectations for the economy as the new conservative government got to work on its programme of tough spending cuts. “This quarter the Spanish economy will surely see a downturn and we will return to negative growth,”... [more]

Russian activist ‘handed new 10-day sentence’

A leading anti-Kremlin Russian activist has been handed a new 10-day jail sentence just after a mass opposition protest in Moscow, his lawyer said. Sergei Udaltsov, who leads the extreme-left wing Left Front Movement, had already served 15 days for taking part in a protest in Moscow against the conduct of December 4 parliamentary elections won by Vladimir Putin’s party. But a Moscow court has now ordered him to serve 10 more days... [more]

Brazilian economy ‘overtakes Britain’

Brazil has overtaken Britain as the world’s sixth largest economy, a London-based research group said Monday. In its latest World Economic League Table, the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) said Asian countries were moving up while European countries were slipping down. CEBR chief executive Douglas McWilliams told BBC radio that Brazil’s advance was part of a wider trend. “I think it’s part of the... [more]

Russian spy chief resigns

The chief of Russia’s military intelligence (GRU), Lt. Gen. Alexander Shlyakhturov, resigned from his post on Saturday, the Kommersant business daily reported. According to the newspaper, Shlyakhturov, 64, will in the near future head the board of directors of the Moscow Institute of Heat Engineering (MIT), the developer of the Bulava ballistic missile and other strategic missile systems. Now it is led by the head of Russia’s Federal... [more]

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