World News

Vietnam zoo owner jailed for selling dead tigers

Posted 1 year 1 month ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

HANOI, Vietnam (AP) A court in southern Vietnam has sentenced a zoo owner to three years in prison for selling the carcasses of five endangered tigers.

Presiding Judge Hoang Huy Toan said Monday that Huynh Van Hai was convicted during a two-day trial earlier this month of selling the dead tigers he had raised at his farm near Ho Chi Minh City.

He said 14 other defendants were sentenced to up to 30 months in jail on the same charges.

The judge said Hai told the cour… Click to Read More

Tagged As: AS-Vietnam-Tiger-Trade

China checks food, water for radiation in 14 areas

Posted 1 year 1 month ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

China checks food, water for radiation in 14 areas

BEIJING (AP) Chinese health authorities say they are monitoring food and drinking water for radiation contamination in 14 provinces and cities in northeastern and coastal areas, after low levels of radioactive material were detected in the northeast.

China has been on high alert for contamination since a nuclear power plant in neighboring Japan started leaking radiation after being damaged in a massive earthquake and tsunami on March 11.

Chinese authorities say low levels … Click to Read More

Tagged As: AS-China-Japan-Radiation

Latest developments in Arab world's unrest

Posted 1 year 1 month ago
Source: The Associated Press

A look at the latest developments in Mideast political unrest on Friday:

_____

LIBYA

Moammar Gadhafi's government accuses U.S.-led forces of ignoring civilian casualties, showing journalists a Tripoli neighborhood that has come under attack for at least two nights. U.S. and British officials insist civilians have been spared and say the Libyan leader has engineered his own atrocities for propaganda purposes.

A U.S. official says ships in the Mediterranean launc… Click to Read More

Tagged As: ML-Mideast-Protests-Glance

Canadian general to take NATO command of Libya

Posted 1 year 1 month ago
Source: The Associated Press

TORONTO (AP) A Canadian general will take over command of the NATO mission in Libya.

Canadian Defense Minister Peter Mackay said Friday that Lt.-Gen. Charles Bouchard has been designated to lead the alliance's military campaign in Libya.

Bouchard, a lieutenant-general whose rank is equivalent to a three-star U.S. general, is stationed in Naples, Italy, at the Allied Joint Force Command.

Bouchard's recent job was deputy commander of NORAD, reporting to an American g… Click to Read More

Tagged As: CN-Canada-Libya-NATO

Dozens missing as China cracks down on activists

Posted 1 year 2 months ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

BEIJING (AP) The last time the prominent Chinese lawyer Jiang Tianyong was seen or heard from, he was visiting his brother in a Beijing suburb when police grabbed him and threw him into a waiting van, pushing aside his elderly mother who had clung on to the vehicle.

Jiang is among dozens of well-known lawyers and activists across China who have vanished, been interrogated or criminally detained for subversion in recent weeks, a crackdown that human rights groups say is on a scale … Click to Read More

Tagged As: AS-China-Crackdown

Latest in Japan's quake, tsunami, nuclear crisis

Posted 1 year 2 months ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

Latest in Japan's quake, tsunami, nuclear crisis

Workers trying to cool Japan's radiation-leaking nuclear plant were pulled back Monday after smoke rose from one of its tsunami-damaged reactor units. The cause of the smoke at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant was unclear.

Early in the day, the Health Ministry advised one village about 20 miles from the plant not to drink tap water due to elevated levels of iodine. Still, the government said the radiation levels were too small to pose an immediate health risk.

The toll of Japan's … Click to Read More

Tagged As: AS-Japan-Earthquake-Update

Iraq weighs if US troops should stay after 8 years

Posted 1 year 2 months ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

BAGHDAD (AP) The American invasion of Iraq was supposed to take only a few months: a quick blitz to depose dictator Saddam Hussein, find and dismantle weapons of mass destruction and go home.

Eight years later, thousands of U.S. troops remain in Iraq and their mission may not be accomplished until far into the future.

Despite a security agreement requiring a full U.S. military withdrawal by the year's end, hundreds if not thousands of American soldiers will continue to… Click to Read More

Tagged As: ML-Iraq-Eight-Years-Later

Japanese fend for themselves as aid trickles in

Posted 1 year 2 months ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

SHIZUGAWA, Japan (AP) An American helicopter crewman shouted above the din of the rotor: "What do these people need? Do they need food? Do they need medicine?"

The answer one week after a tsunami devastated Japan's northeast coast is: They need everything.

Aid has started trickling in, but much of it appears ad hoc and many survivors remain isolated and cold and are fending for themselves.

Two American military helicopters touched down on a hilltop above this flatt… Click to Read More

Tagged As: AS-Japan-Earthquake-Devastation

Libyan forces attack last rebel-held western city

Posted 1 year 2 months ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

Libyan forces attack last rebel-held western city

BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) Moammar Gadhafi's forces are bombarding the last rebel-held western city as the international community discusses how to enforce a no-fly zone and protect the Libyan people.

A doctor says at least six people were killed Friday when tanks moved into Misrata and opened fire. He says a hospital and a mosque were shelled.

The doctor, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared reprisals, says the tanks then pulled back to the outskirts of the cit… Click to Read More

Tagged As: AF-Libya

CIA contractor release eases Pakistan-US tensions

Posted 1 year 2 months ago by Bea Karnes
Source: The Associated Press

ISLAMABAD (AP) A "blood money" deal to free a CIA contractor who killed two Pakistani men removes a major thorn in relations between the United States and Pakistan, but bruising from the incident and disagreements over Afghanistan mean the alliance will likely remain stormy.

The already weak Pakistani government has also seen its standing among the country's 180 million people further diminished, though it remains to be seen whether right wing and Islamist parties are able to orga… Click to Read More

Tagged As: AS-Pakistan-Detained-American

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