S.Korea urges ‘courage’ from Japan on sex slaves

South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak urged Japan to have the “courage” to compensate ageing wartime sex slaves before it is too late and let the two nations’ relationship progress. Lee on Sunday told Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda in Japan’s ancient capital of Kyoto that the issue had prevented their countries from becoming “true partners” in the years since World War II. Japan, which insists the issue... [more]

N.Korea ‘agrees to suspend uranium enrichment’

North Korea has agreed to suspend its enriched-uranium nuclear weapons programme, a key United States demand for the resumption of disarmament talks, according to news reports. Yonhap news agency and the Chosun Ilbo daily quoted an unidentified diplomatic source saying the Washington had also agreed to provide the North with up to 240,000 tonnes of food aid. Pyongyang pledged “to implement initial measures of denuclearisation that... [more]

UN ends sanctions on Libya central bank

The UN Security Council lifted sanctions on Libya’s central bank and a key investment bank freeing tens of billions of dollars to ease a post-Kadhafi cash crunch. The United States immediately announced it would unblock more than $30 billion dollars of assets of the Central Bank of Libya and its subsidiary, the Libyan Foreign Bank (LFB). Britain said it would release more than $10 billion. An estimated $150 billion of assets were frozen... [more]

Six explosive devices found in Bangkok

Thai police said Friday they had found and defused six potentially explosive devices in the capital Bangkok, days after the government called for heightened vigilance over the New Year period. A man was arrested on suspicion of planting the devices outside a bank, on an overpass and at a road intersection in the city’s eastern suburbs. “So far six bombs were found at three locations,” Major General Wichai Sungprapai, metropolitan... [more]

Ex-president Chirac convicted

Former French president Jacques Chirac was found guilty on Thursday of embezzling funds and violating public trust for hiring members of his political party for non-existent civil jobs while he was mayor of Paris. Chirac says he will not appeal. Former French president Jacques Chirac was given a two-year suspended jail sentence on Thursday after he was convicted of embezzling public money to finance his political party. Chirac has said he... [more]

Japan set to declare Fukushima plant shutdown

Japan was set to announce Friday it has finally tamed leaking reactors at Fukushima, in what authorities say is a vital step on the long road to recovery, nine months after its nuclear crisis began. Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda was expected to tell a disaster-weary public that all reactors at the plant, struck by a titanic tsunami in March, were in a state of cold shutdown and were no longer at any risk of spontaneous fission. Stabilisation... [more]

Dutch infrastucture minister astonishes MPs

Infrastructure Minister Melanie Schultz van Haegen has surprised MPs by telling them that when maximum speeds on motorways are increased to 130 kilometres per hour in 2012, 20 percent of the roads will not yet be suitable for such speeds. She says this is because measures to improve safety will not be ready until later. Nevertheless, she wants to introduce the increased maximum speed as of 2012, even on roads which still need to be adapted.... [more]

Struggling pensioners forced back to work in Germany

Germany, as Europe’s top economy, may be currently seen as the land of plenty but its senior citizens are increasingly being forced to take a part-time job in their twilight years just to make ends meet. With more inhabitants over the age of 65 than any of its European partners, Germany’s senior citizens are having to resort to jobs such as animal- or babysitting or as a caretaker to top up their pensions. Notices such as “Still... [more]

Greece losing ‘billions of euros to corruption’

Crisis-hit Greece is still losing billions of euros (dollars) to corruption in spite of efforts to stamp out graft and maximise the state’s tax revenue, a report said on Wednesday. The Ta Nea newspaper said that tax evasion cost Greece 13 billion euros ($17.4 billion) annually in lost revenue, citing remarks by experts and state officials at a conference on corruption on Tuesday. The finance ministry’s former information systems... [more]

Cabinet Meets Amid Rising Tensions Over Veto UK

Conservative and Liberal Democrat ministers will meet face-to-face across the Cabinet table today amid growing tensions within the coalition over Europe. The weekly meeting comes a day after their differences were laid bare by Nick Clegg’s decision not to attend the Commons as David Cameron defended using Britain’s veto in Brussels . The deputy Prime Minister was reportedly furious when he heard Mr Cameron had refused to sign... [more]

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