Thai govt lifts emergency in more provinces

July 20 (Reuters) – Thailand’s government said on Tuesday it was lifting a state of emergency in three provinces but it would remain in force in others including Bangkok, after being imposed in April to help authorities cope with political unrest.

The government had lifted the emergency in five provinces on July 6 when the initial period came to an end, but extended it for another three months in other areas covering a quarter of the country because it said anti-government elements still posed a threat.

The state of emergency bans political gatherings of more than five people and gives the government powers to censor the media. It also gives broad powers to the security forces, including the right to detain suspects without charge. (Reporting by Pracha Harirasapitak; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Zijin Mining sewage leak contaminated river -Xinhua

July 12 (Reuters) – A sewage leak from a copper mine owned by Zijin Mining Group Co (2899.HK), whose shares were suspended from trading in Hong Kong on Monday, has polluted a river and reservoir in Fujian province, Xinhua news agency reported.

Xinhua cited environmental authorities as saying the leak from a plant of the Zijinshan Copper Mine had killed or poisoned about 1.89 million kg of fish.

Zijin is building a copper smelter in Fujian with capacity of 200,000 tonnes per year.

A spokesperson for the company was not immediately available for comment. (Additional reporting by Alison Leung in HONG KONG; Editing by Chris Lewis)

In China’s interest to revalue -IMF chief economist

June 16 (Reuters) – It is in China’s interest to revalue its currency, and from the point of view of the rest of the world, it should happen as soon as possible, the International Monetary Fund’s top economist was quoted as saying.

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“Some sectors in China are overheating and workers are demanding more pay. They (authorities) don’t want the inflation risk to grow,” IMF Chief Economist Olivier Blanchard said in Finnish business paper Kauppalehti on Wednesday.

“I don’t know when and by how much the yuan will be revalued, but I believe it is in their (China’s) interests. For the rest of the world it is important that it happens as soon as possible,” he said.

Blanchard also said it was clear the global economy was on a growth path.

“The real economy is recovering, of that there is no doubt. If anything the recovery has been stronger than we have forecast,” he said.

(Reporting by Brett Young; Editing by Neil Fullick)

One Pakistani killed, 15 abducted in Kyrgyzstan

ISLAMABAD, June 13 (Reuters) – One Pakistani student has been killed and around 15 reportedly taken hostage in Kyrgyzstan’s riot-stricken city of Osh, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said on Sunday.

“Our first priority is to ensure safety of our brethren stranded there. We are trying to establish contact with Kyrgyz authorities,” Qureshi told Reuters. (Reporting by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Chris Allbritton) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

India court to hear Vodafone tax case on July 8

June 8 (Reuters) – An Indian court has deferred hearing of Vodafone’s (VOD.L) appeal against India’s tax department to July 8, a company spokesman said on Tuesday.

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Vodafone (VOD.L) filed an appeal with the Bombay High Court on Monday challenging the tax department’s jurisdiction to tax the company’s stake buy in a telecoms firm in 2007.

Vodafone has not said how much the authorities were seeking, but a person with knowledge of the matter has said it was about 120 billion rupees ($2.6 billion), which is higher than the $2 billion figure estimated by Indian media.

The tax department had set a June 14 hearing to discuss the size of the tax bill, Vodafone said last week. [ID:nSGE6530I8] ($1=46.9 rupees) (Reporting by Devidutta Tripathy)

UK Kaupthing probe looks at Deutsche – sources

June 7 (Reuters) – Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) has become embroiled in a UK probe into market manipulation at the time of the collapse of Icelandic bank Kaupthing, sources familiar with the matter said. Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) said in December it was investigating suspected offences against the Fraud Act prior to Kaupthing’s demise in October 2008.

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The suspicion was that Kaupthing tried to prop up the price of its debt through a number of investment vehicles that the bank was financing itself, the sources said.

“Generally speaking, we’re looking at potential market manipulation,” one of the sources said.

The vehicles were buying Credit Default Swaps (CDS) — instruments used to insure Kaupthing’s debt against default — sending a positive signal to markets in the hope that Kaupthing’s debt prices would rise.

Kaupthing was effectively buying the CDS itself, because it was financing the investment through a loan.

“We are cooperating with the authorities in seeking to establish the facts in this matter,” Deutsche Bank said when asked about the story, which was first reported by UK newspaper The Guardian on Monday.

The German bank declined to provide further detail, while the SFO declined to comment altogether.

Deutsche issued credit-linked notes on behalf of the investment vehicles set up by Kaupthing, one of the sources said. But that did not mean it would necessarily have known about the way the vehicles were financed.

Last month, an Icelandic court ordered the former head of Kaupthing, Hreidar Sigurdsson, to be held for 12 days pending further investigation for suspected embezzlement, market manipulation and forgery. [ID:nLDE6460Q8]

Another former Kaupthing executive who now runs a privately held bank in Luxembourg, was also arrested. (Reporting by Douwe Miedema; Editing by Louise Heavens)

‘Headley not a sticking point between India and US’

A top Obama Administration’s official has denied that Mumbai terror attacks suspect David Coleman Headley of late has emerged as a sticking point of relationship between India and the US.

“I don’t think it’s a sticking point. I think that we’ve got a good dialogue and I think we’ll work out a way forward,” Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Robert Blake told reporters at a news conference yesterday.

“We are very pleased that the United States and India have been able to cooperate very closely on this critical and very complex issue.

“We continue to work very hard with our Indian counterparts to move forward on that. But I don’t have anything more to say,” Blake said.

“I am not in a position to,” Blake said when asked if he can say that whether the US is going to give India access to Headley, the US national of Pakistani origin who has been arrested by the FBI on charges of being involved in the planning of the Mumbai terrorist attack.

Indian investigating authorities have been seeking access to Headley so that they could interrogate him on his role in the Mumbai terrorist attack, that killed more than 160 people in November 2008.

Two killed in Mexico plane crash

Mexico City, May 29 (IANS) At least two people were killed Friday when a small plane crashed in Mexico, authorities said.

According to the public security ministry, the four seater Cirrus plane crashed in the mountain range of Xalatlaco municipality, 70 km west to Mexico City, Xinhua reported.

So far, rescuers have found the corpses of a man and a women, who are yet to be identified.

South Africa games moved from Jamaica due to violence

The violent situation in Jamaica has led cricket authorities to move a one-day international and the first test against South Africa to Trinidad, the West Indies Cricket Board said on Wednesday.

The fifth one-day international on June 3 and the opening test from June 10, both scheduled for Sabina Park in the Jamaican capital Kingston, will now be held at the Queen’s Park Oval in Port of Spain, Trinidad.

Kingston has suffered four days of violence with security forces fighting armed supporters of a fugitive alleged drug lord in clashes that have killed nearly 50 people.

(Reporting by Simon Evans; editing by Kevin Fylan)

(To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

100 missing after motorboat sinks in Amazon river

Lima, May 26 — At least 100 people went missing on Wednesday in Peru after the motorboat they were travelling in sank in the Amazon river, Peruvian radio station RPP reported. According to RPP, some 80 survivors had been rescued, and two bodies had also been recovered.

The motorboat Camila, which had a capacity for 160 passengers and according to survivors was carrying at least 200 at the time of the accident, sank as it travelled through the village of Santa Rosa, near the Colombian border. It reportedly had a hole in its hull.

The accident happened around 2 am, when most of the passengers were asleep. The authorities took a long time to reach this remote area, and preliminary rescue efforts were carried out by locals

Ex-Colombian beauty queen arrested on drug charges

A former Colombian beauty queen suspected of leading a band of young women who smuggled cocaine from Argentina to Europe was arrested on Wednesday in Argentina, a judicial source said.

Police arrested Angie Sanclemente Valencia, 31, at a youth hostel in Buenos Aires, the source told Reuters, asking not to be named because the investigation is ongoing.

The ex-model and actress won one of Colombia’s top beauty pageants in 2000 but was later dethroned after it was revealed she had lied about being single.

She vanished several months ago amid an investigation by Argentine authorities into accusations she headed up a group of women who transported cocaine on flights from Buenos Aires to Europe via Mexico.

Colombia is the world’s No. 1 cocaine producer.

Authorities say Valencia employed young, attractive women who reportedly often traveled first class to smuggle the drugs.

She has repeatedly denied the charges. Her lawyer has said Valencia refused to turn herself in out of fear she could be abused in jail.

(Reporting by Karina Grazina; Writing by Kevin Gray; Editing by Xavier Briand)

Pak blockage of Facebook, YouTube might increase traffic to these sites

Islamabad, May 21 (ANI): Pakistan’s blockage on wildly popular web-sites like YouTube and Facebook will likely have a reverse effect from the one desired by authorities as curious Netizens would log onto these sites to see what the brouhaha is about.

Pakistan’s telecom regulatory body, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has said it found ‘sacrilegious’ content on YouTube, leading them to block it. Incidentally, YouTube has been co-founded by Jawed Karim, a Muslim.

“We have asked the Internet service providers to block more than 450 web links, which contain derogatory material,” The News quoted a PTA spokesman, as saying.

“The action follows our repeated attempts to convince these websites to discard such material,” he added.

He said the PTA had approached the administrators of the websites through emails, however he could not name the officials who had been contacted.

Industry officials, on the other hand, say the authorities have yet to get in touch with the people who run Facebook and YouTube, the report said.

These hasty suppressive tactics are probably not going to be too fruitful, according to industry officials.

“There is no way of stopping this. The day government lifts restriction from these websites, the Internet traffic will double. People will visit them just out of curiosity,” said an advertiser, who deals with Facebook and YouTube. (ANI)

Afridi wants quick and ‘decisive’ action in match fixing controversy

Karachi, May 21 (ANI): Pakistan T20 skipper Shahid Afridi believes that the uncertainty surrounding players’ involvement in match fixing during the winless Australia tour is adversely effecting the team’s focus, and has asked the concerned authorities to take ‘decisive action’ over the issue soon.

Afridi said the controversy is damaging for players keeping in view that they have to compete in some important tournaments in the coming months, including the 2011 World Cup.

“The thing is that there is too much uncertainty because of all those allegations regarding match-fixing. It’s really damaging for the players and the team and I’m really concerned because it comes at a time when we are looking forward to a very busy calendar filled with major assignments, including the all-important World Cup,” The News quoted Afridi, as saying.

“We will be playing in the World Cup just nine months from now and it’s hardly the sort of situation you need to prepare for such a huge event,” he added.

The suspicion of match fixing involving some of the key players, particularly wicket keeper Kamran Akmal spiralled after a video tape was leaked to the media, which showed players and some of the former team officials raising questions over the performance of the team during the disastrous Australia tour while testifying before an inquiry committee set up by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).

The leaked footage also showed Afridi raising suspicions of match fixing.

Afridi, however, refused to make any statement about the video, and urged the concerned authorities to resolve the issue as soon as possible so that players could concentrate on the game more.

“I think that for our team to move on, we need to quickly resolve all such controversies. You can’t expect the players to give their best when there are so many allegations thrown at them,” the flamboyant cricketer said. (ANI)

Malaysia offers amnesty to illegal workers

May 21 (ANI): The Malaysian Government is offering illegal foreign workers a chance to return home without facing action.

Authorities have, however, said they will increase the levy based on the number of immigrant labour and their skill levels in order to regulate their inflow.

The amnesty programme has yielded productive results in the past with 230,000 workers taking up offers.

“After the amnesty offer expires, we will act against all those who harbour foreign workers without permits,” The Star quoted Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin as saying.

The government will be bearing the expense of sending back the workers only partially and employers would also be held responsible, he added.

On the introduction of biometric system, Yassin said: “The biometric identification system is necessary to ensure that we record the entry of all visitors and workers into the country. It will include work to update and coordinate all hardware, software and data managed by different agencies and ministries.”

“We will leave it to the Home Ministry, namely the Immigration Department, to implement it as soon as possible,” he added. (ANI)

Landslides block Batote-Kishtwar Highway

Doda (Jammu and Kashmir), May 21 (ANI): Batote-Kishtwar Highway in Jammu and Kashmir”s Doda District remained closed for vehicular traffic for the second consecutive day on Thursday due to a landslide at Raggi Nullah.

Hundreds of vehicles were stranded on the highway following a landslide, triggered during widening of the road at Raggi Nullah, around 155 kilometers from Jammu.

Border Roads Organisation (BRO) is working round the clock to clear the landslide, as this highway is the lifeline and only communication link that connects three districts of Doda, Ramban and Kishtawar with the rest of the country.

Stranded passengers, who are facing a lot of problems, alleged that the transporters are taking advantage of the situation and charging exorbitant fares.

Traffic Inspector Mohd Yaqub, however, said the concerned authorities have assured that the road would be cleared today. (ANI)

British family shot dead in Pakistan

London, May 21(ANI): A British family hailing from Lancashire has been shot dead in Pakistan in a suspected honour killing.

According to police, Mohammed Yousaf, his wife Parviaz, and their daughter Tania, from Nelson, Lancashire were killed in a village in Pakistan’s Gujrat District on Thursday morning.

“We were informed that an incident had taken place in Pakistan. We are currently liaising with authorities in Pakistan,” The Telegraph quoted a Lancashire Police spokesman, as saying.

“We have also made contact with family in Nelson regarding the incident,” the spokesman added.

The family, who had lived in the UK for over 30 years, had jetted out to Pakistan for a wedding, believed to be their son’s.

Talking about the incident, Nelson Councillor Mohammed Sakib said: “I know the family well. This incident wasn’t just murder, it was an honour issue.” (ANI)

Pak civilian arrested in Chile denies illegal possession of explosives

Santiago, May 20 (ANI): Saifur Rehman Khan, the Pakistani civilian who was detained after traces of explosives were detected on him at the US Embassy in Chile, has denied all charges being labelled against him.

Saifur, who was released after charges of illegal possession of explosives were labelled against him, appealed to the US authorities to trust him, saying he was not involved in any wrongdoing.

“I have friends and family in the US and more than anyone I want America to be safe and secure. I have been to the US and I greatly admire the American values of truth, justice and freedom,” a statement released by him stated.

“As my defence pleaded, the panic appears to have stemmed from a false alarm… Please, have your trust in me. I have no knowledge of any substance that can cause harm to anyone. I wish the perpetrators of violence are caught,” The Daily Times quoted Saifur, as saying.

Saifur described the whole controversy as part of a ‘big misunderstanding’, which was could have been a result of some kind of ‘mistaken identity.’

Traces of Tetryl, a compound used as a booster to help detonate explosives, was found on documents and the mobile phone recovered from Saifur, while he was trying to enter the US Embassy in Chile. (ANI)

China cracks down on Internet mapping to prevent leaking of state secrets

Beijing, May 19 (ANI): Aiming to prevent state secrets from being disclosed and uncertified maps from being published online, an updated standard for Internet map servers would be implemented next month.

“The new standard issued by the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping, one year after the first standard was launched, requires all Internet map servers to keep servers storing map data inside the country and provide public Internet protocol addresses,” The China Daily reports.

As per the latest standard, the qualified online map servers must have no record of information leakage in any form in the past three years.

The new regulation includes all maps downloaded or copied from the Internet onto cell phones and handheld computers.

It has been reported that by the end of December, the authorities would also crack down on unregistered or illegal Internet map servers and release the blacklist to the public.

Song Chaozhi, Deputy Director of the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping, said in a conference on Internet map services last week that there are two main problems existing in the field: one is publishing maps with wrong locations or information, and the other is leaking sensitive information involving State secrets on maps. (ANI)

Teacher lands in trouble after ”teaching maths class how to shoot Obama’

London, May 19 (ANI): Using examples didn’t really suit a teacher in Alabama, who found himself at the centre of a US Secret Service investigation for using a hypothetical assassination of President Barack Obama as a way to teach geometric angles.

However, the police found that Obama was not under threat.

Officials said the Corner High School teacher apparently was instructing his students about parallel lines and angles and used the example of where to stand and aim to shoot the president.

However, the incident alerted the authorities, and Roy Sexton, special agent in charge of Birmingham”s Secret Service office, said his agency spoke with the teacher.

“We did not find a credible threat,” the Telegraph quoted Sexton as saying.

And no charges were filed against the teacher.

Jefferson County school officials said that Supt Phil Hammonds declined to release the teacher”s name.

The teacher remains at work and there are no plans to fire him, according to police.

“We are going to have a long conversation with him about what”s appropriate. It was extremely poor judgment on his part, and a poor choice of words,” Supt Hammonds told The Birmingham News.

Joseph Brown, a senior in the geometry class, told the News that teacher “was talking about angles and said, ”If you”re in this building, you would need to take this angle to shoot the president.”” (ANI)

10 die in coalmine blast in China’s Shanxi Province

New Delhi, May 19 (ANI): A coalmine gas explosion in north China’s Shanxi Province has resulted in death of at least 10 people.

The accident occurred on Tuesday evening when 41 miners were working in the shaft of Chentong Coal Industry Co., Ltd., in Yuxian County, said a spokesperson for work safety authorities on Wednesday.

Twenty-seven people escaped from the scene unhurt and 14 were trapped underground, said Liu Xianyun, of the work safety committee of Yangquan City, which administers Yuxian County.

Three of the trapped miners had been rescued, while 10 were confirmed dead and one was still missing, Liu said at a press conference, the China Daily reports.

The company was licensed with an annual production capacity of 600,000 tonnes.

Rescue work is continuing, and work safety authorities are investigating the cause of the accident. (ANI)