Gaza aid ship sails from Greece, may head to Egypt

July 10 (Reuters) – A ship carrying aid for Palestinians blockaded by Israel in Gaza left Greece on Saturday, just over a month after 9 activists died in an Israeli raid on an aid flotilla trying to reach Gaza.

It was unclear if the boat, with twelve crew and up to ten activists on board, would try to reach Gaza in defiance of the Israeli blockade or would go to the Egyptian port of El Arish.

A spokesman at the Greek Foreign Ministry said the ship would head for El Arish.

An official from ACA Shipping, which owns the ship, told Reuters ahead of the ship’s departure: “The ship will leave in a few minutes for Gaza. If they don’t let us reach there (Gaza) we will head to El Arish harbour in Egypt.”

A charity chaired by the Libyan Leader’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is organising the trip and said the Amalthea vessel, re-named Hope for the trip, carried some 2,000 tons of food and medicine and complied with international rules.

Nine pro-Palestinian activists died in May when Israeli marines stormed a Turkish aid ship leading a Gaza-bound convoy, prompting world outcry and a condemnation from the United Nations Security Council.

Israel said its commandoes were attacked with knives and sticks when they boarded the ship and acted in self-defence.

(Reporting by Reuters TV and Lefteris Papadimas; additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem; writing by Ingrid Melander, editing by Matthew Jones)

Gaza aid ship sails from Greece, may head to Egypt

July 10 (Reuters) – A ship carrying aid for Palestinians blockaded by Israel in Gaza left Greece on Saturday, just over a month after 9 activists died in an Israeli raid on an aid flotilla trying to reach Gaza.

It was unclear if the boat, with twelve crew and up to ten activists on board, would try to reach Gaza in defiance of the Israeli blockade or would go to the Egyptian port of El Arish.

A spokesman at the Greek Foreign Ministry said the ship would head for El Arish.

An official from ACA Shipping, which owns the ship, told Reuters ahead of the ship’s departure: “The ship will leave in a few minutes for Gaza. If they don’t let us reach there (Gaza) we will head to El Arish harbour in Egypt.”

A charity chaired by the Libyan Leader’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is organising the trip and said the Amalthea vessel, re-named Hope for the trip, carried some 2,000 tons of food and medicine and complied with international rules.

Nine pro-Palestinian activists died in May when Israeli marines stormed a Turkish aid ship leading a Gaza-bound convoy, prompting world outcry and a condemnation from the United Nations Security Council.

Israel said its commandoes were attacked with knives and sticks when they boarded the ship and acted in self-defence.

(Reporting by Reuters TV and Lefteris Papadimas; additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem; writing by Ingrid Melander, editing by Matthew Jones)

Gaza aid ship sails from Greece, may head to Egypt

July 10 (Reuters) – A ship carrying aid for Palestinians blockaded by Israel in Gaza left Greece on Saturday, just over a month after 9 activists died in an Israeli raid on an aid flotilla trying to reach Gaza.

It was unclear if the boat, with twelve crew and up to ten activists on board, would try to reach Gaza in defiance of the Israeli blockade or would go to the Egyptian port of El Arish.

A spokesman at the Greek Foreign Ministry said the ship would head for El Arish.

An official from ACA Shipping, which owns the ship, told Reuters ahead of the ship’s departure: “The ship will leave in a few minutes for Gaza. If they don’t let us reach there (Gaza) we will head to El Arish harbour in Egypt.”

A charity chaired by the Libyan Leader’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is organising the trip and said the Amalthea vessel, re-named Hope for the trip, carried some 2,000 tons of food and medicine and complied with international rules.

Nine pro-Palestinian activists died in May when Israeli marines stormed a Turkish aid ship leading a Gaza-bound convoy, prompting world outcry and a condemnation from the United Nations Security Council.

Israel said its commandoes were attacked with knives and sticks when they boarded the ship and acted in self-defence.

(Reporting by Reuters TV and Lefteris Papadimas; additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem; writing by Ingrid Melander, editing by Matthew Jones)

Russia says U.S. spying allegations contradictory

(Reuters) – Russia is studying U.S. spying allegations and finds the information contradictory, Interfax news agency quoted Russia’s foreign ministry as saying on Tuesday.

World

Russia’s foreign intelligence service and the chief spokesman for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told Reuters they had no comment on U.S. allegations that a Russian spy ring had been arrested.

(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov and Alexei Anishchuk, writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman)

Russia says US spying allegations contradictory

June 29 (Reuters) – Russia is studying U.S. spying allegations and finds the information contradictory, Interfax news agency quoted Russia’s foreign ministry as saying on Tuesday.

Russia’s foreign intelligence service and the chief spokesman for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told Reuters they had no comment on U.S. allegations that a Russian spy ring had been arrested. [ID:nN28245608]

(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov and Alexei Anishchuk, writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman)

Analysis: After China’s words on yuan, world now awaits deeds

(Reuters) – Ambassadors to China are only occasionally summoned by the foreign ministry to be told that an announcement of international significance is due.

China

That was the case at 6 p.m. on Saturday.

Within the hour, China had duly ditched the yuan’s 23-month old peg to the dollar that has been a lightning rod for criticism that Beijing has been gaining an unfair trade advantage during the global downturn by artificially holding down its currency.

Despite the disruption to their evening plans, the envoys did not go away disappointed. This was big news.

But the potential for political and market disappointment in the months to come remains considerable.

For the consensus among China-watchers is that the central bank will initially be cautious about taking advantage of the permission it has been granted to revert to the flexibility it enjoyed before the yuan was effectively repegged near 6.83 per dollar in mid-2008 to provide stability during the global crisis.

In the three years following an initial 2.1 percent revaluation of the yuan on July 21, 2005, the currency gained a further 19 percent.

But in those first remaining months of 2005, the appreciation was just 0.56 percent.

A repeat of that snail’s pace of climb will infuriate U.S. lawmakers who, while welcoming China’s policy shift, want to see words followed by deeds.

No one knows what will happen in the days and weeks to come. Predictability and transparency are not hallmarks of China’s policy.

As Qing Wang, Morgan Stanley’s chief China economist, put it in a note: “The best way to characterize this policy move is as a ‘switch to the pre-crisis regime’. Anything that has happened under the previous regime can happen now going forward.”

UNDER PRESSURE

But there are several reasons to assume that gradualism will be the initial watchword:

Firstly, the economics. In its statement, the People’s Bank of China noted — correctly — that its external surpluses have been falling. As such, it said, “the basis for large-scale appreciation of the RMB exchange rate does not exist.”

The debt woes of the euro zone, China’s biggest trading partner, will merely reinforce this judgment.

Second, the politics. The decision was so important, according to two informed sources, that it was taken by the country’s highest decision-making body, the nine-member Standing Committee of the ruling Communist Party’s Politburo.

A stronger currency is in China’s interest because it will add momentum to domestic demand. This dovetails with the Party’s strategy to spread wealth, reduce yawning income equalities and reduce reliance on investment-heavy export industries. A firmer yuan will also help cap incipient inflationary pressures.

Letting the yuan rise should also cool anti-China sentiment in the U.S. Congress, for now at least, and fend off the risk of China’s being declared a currency manipulator by the U.S. Treasury. Those are all important pluses for China.

Still, the shift could expose China’s leaders to criticism by nationalists that they have acted under external duress, a perceived loss of face that would be compounded if they were then to let the yuan rise at a rapid rate of knots.

“The message to the outside world is: don’t pressure us,” said Li Daokui, an academic adviser to the monetary policy committee of the People’s Bank of China, the central bank.

Another economist with direct knowledge of the workings of the central bank’s committee agreed.

“You’ve backed us into a corner this time. Don’t do it again,” would be the thrust of what President Hu Jintao tells the Group of 20 summit in Toronto at the end of this week, he said.

FOCUS STILL ON DOLLAR

This person, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue, said the PBOC had held serious discussions about depegging the yuan as far back as December.

The central bank wanted more autonomy in monetary policy, which was partly hostage to the Federal Reserve’s stance due to the dollar link, but could not overcome opposition from pro-export lobbies.

He said the PBOC was likely to revert to a crawling peg against the dollar — as was the case from July 2005-2008 — because the concept of managing the yuan against a basket of currencies was too complicated to convey to politicians.

Finally, he said appreciation was likely to resume eventually at the same pace as prior to mid-2008, in other words about 7 percent a year.

“Some years it could be 8 percent, other years it might be 5 percent. But you can forget a 30 percent increase. We haven’t forgotten what happened to Japan,” this insider said.

China blames the long years of slow growth and deflation suffered by Japan on its acquiescence, under foreign pressure, to a sharp rise in the yen as part of the 1985 Plaza accord.

Andy Rothman, a strategist at brokerage CLSA in Shanghai, broadly shared this analysis. He said he expected appreciation of about only 0.2 percent a month until Europe stabilizes.

“Then look for the appreciation to return to the 5-7 percent pace of the 2005-2007 period,” Rothman said in a note.

He, too, said China was likely to focus almost exclusively on the yuan exchange rate against the dollar, despite lip service to managing the exchange rate with reference to a basket of currencies.

NO SALVATION FOR GLOBAL IMBALANCES

China’s shift is an important ingredient in helping to rebalance its economy and hence the global economy. So is the round of big pay increases in southern China. Both increase domestic purchasing power.

But the macroeconomic forces that determine savings and investment rates, and hence a country’s external balance, are complex and slow-burning. A rising yuan, by itself, will be no more of a game changer for global imbalances today than it was from 2005-2008.

The aging of China’s working population from mid-decade, which will erode its savings rate, will be more of a watershed.

“For the near term, the rate of appreciation will be slow enough as to have no material impact on Chinese exports,” Rothman wrote.

And, as U.S.-China Business Council President John Frisbie said, a change in the yuan may not have much of an impact on China’s all-important trade balance with the United States.

“On the import side, much of what we import from China is stuff that we imported from elsewhere before; if we didn’t import it from China, we’d likely just import it from somewhere else,” he said in a statement.

Moreover, the group’s members have never cited the yuan’s exchange rate as an impediment to exporting to China.

“Macroeconomics says an appreciating RMB would likely have some effect on trade flows, but the reality is probably not very much,” Frisbie said.

(Editing by Neil Fullick)

Libya, Swiss to sign deal ending row-Libyan official

June 13 (Reuters) – Libya and Switzerland will soon sign a memorandum of understanding to resolve their long-running diplomatic dispute, a source in the Libyan Foreign Ministry said on Sunday.

Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey arrived in the Libyan capital for talks early on Sunday and is expected to make a statement to reporters shortly, the source, who did not want to be identified, told Reuters. (Reporting by Ali Shuaib; Writing by Christian Lowe)

Israel says U.N. sanctions on Iran “important step”

June 9 (Reuters) – Israel said on Wednesday a fourth round of U.N. Security Council sanctions imposed on Iran over its nuclear programme was an important step, but called for even broader economic and diplomatic measures.

Currencies | Global Markets

“Israel sees the Security Council decision 1929 as an important step,” Israel’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “It is of great importance to implement the decision fully and immediately.”

“Together with this, it is clear the decision in itself is not enough,” the statement said, calling for stronger sanctions in different sectors in Iran. (Writing by Ari Rabinovitch)

Russia says U.N. Iran sanctions exclude use of force

June 9 (Reuters) – Russia’s Foreign Ministry said that U.N. sanctions against Iran agreed on Wednesday rule out the possibility of using force.

“All the measures, signed today in the resolution … exclude the possibility of employing force,” the ministry said in a statement on its website mid.ru.

“Nothing in the resolution’s text gives ground for taking measures or actions … including the use of force or the threat of force,” it said.

(Reporting by Amie Ferris-Rotman and Ludmila Danilova)

U.N. refugee body says hopes resume work in Libya

GENEVA, June 9 (Reuters) – The United Nations refugee agency UNHCR said on Wednesday it wants to talk with Libya about resuming work in the country after the authorities last week told the agency it must cease operations.

The Libyan Foreign Ministry late on Tuesday said the presence of an UNHCR office in the capital Tripoli was illegal and accused the agency of unlawful activities.

“We are seeking open, constructive dialogue with Libya to dispel any misunderstandings which we hope would lead to consensus to resume our work,” spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said.

The Geneva-based agency, headed by High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres, would be making no further comment at this stage, she added.

Reporting the Libyan expulsion order, not yet enforced, on Tuesday, Fleming said it had special gravity because of Italy’s policy of sending people fleeing North Africa and the Middle East by sea out of Italian into Libyan waters.

Libya has not signed the 1951 convention on refugees and does not have a domestic asylum system so the UNHCR has been helping the authorities determine whether people arriving are refugees or other migrants, she told a briefing. There are estimated to be more than 12,000 refugees and asylum seekers.

“This will leave a huge vacuum for the thousands of refugees and asylum seekers who are there already and of course those who continue to arrive steadily on boats every week,” Fleming told a Tuesday news briefing.

The UNHCR says Libya has given it no deadline or reason for the closure decision.

In its Tuesday statement, the Libyan Foreign Ministry said it had repeatedly told U.N. representatives that Tripoli saw the U.N. refugee office presence as illegal since it is not bound by a convention with the United Nations.

Libya has been opening up to the United States and Europe, but the move against the UNHCR is a sign of the unpredictability of Muammar Gaddafi’s government, diplomats in Geneva said.

The UNHCR says it has registered about 9,000 refugees in Libya, and that there are 3,700 asylum seekers. The largest group of refugees are Palestinians, with people from Iraq, Sudan, Somalia, Eritrea, Liberia and Ethiopia making up the rest. The biggest group of asylum seekers are from Eritrea.

The UNCHR provides healthcare, shelter, education and training to refugees as well as legal advice on how to move from Libya to a country where they can settle permanently.

The agency has been working in the North African country since 1991 and has 26 staff there, mostly local.

European countries argue that many of the people involved are economic migrants rather than political refugees. (Reporting by Robert Evans; Editing by Matthew Jones)

UN chief proposes joint Gaza aid flotilla probe

Tel Aviv, June 6 (IANS) United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has proposed to Israel to set up an international commission of inquiry into the attack on the Gaza-bound aid flotilla, a media report said Sunday.

The committee would be headed by former New Zealand prime minister Geoffrey Palmer, an expert on maritime law. Its members would include representatives from the United States, Turkey and Israel, Haaretz reported.

Senior government officials said the Foreign Ministry recommends responding favourably to establishing the committee because Turkey will probably oppose it, the report said.

A senior official said the investigation would help expose links between Turkish authorities and the flotilla organisers whom Israel accuses of supporting terror groups, the paper said.

Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak are said to be leaning toward an examination of the events surrounding the takeover of the Mavi Marmara with American or other international participation.

Israeli Navy commandos attacked the Gaza-bound aid flotilla Monday killing nine activists.

China again urges calm over Korean peninsula

China’s Foreign Ministry repeated its call for calm and restraint on the Korean peninsula, but refused to be drawn on the sinking of a South Korean ship by a Northern torpedo in March.

Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Zhijun said China had no first-hand information on the sinking of the South Korean ship Cheonan in March, which international investigators officially ruled last week was due to a North Korean torpedo.

China was still evaluating the information, Zhang said.

“We have always believed that dialogue is better than confrontation,” Zhang said, the day after North Korea said it would cut all ties with the South.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Writing by Lucy Hornby; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Thai court orders Thaksin arrest on terrorism charges

A Thai court issued orders on Tuesday to arrest former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on terrorism charges in connection with riots over the past two months that were the worst in the country’s modern history.

Armed with the arrest warrant, Thai prosecutors and the Foreign Ministry will launch a global hunt for the fugitive telecoms tycoon, a top government official said.

Thaksin was last believed to be in France for the Cannes film festival, but he keeps his location secret.

“The court said there was enough evidence to believe that Thaksin was the mastermind, having played a significant role in instructing and manipulating the incidents,” Department of Special Investigations chief Tharit Pengdit told Reuters, referring to the riots.

Government officials say Thaksin funded the 10-week, anti-government protests to the tune of about $1.5 million a day and is believed to have organised the smuggling of arms and fighters from Cambodia.

If found guilty, he can be sentenced to death.

The red shirt protesters have demanded that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva quit and call new elections, saying they have been disenfranchised by a Bangkok elite supported by the military. They mostly support Thaksin, who was prime minister until 2006 when he was ousted in a coup.

Thaksin denied the terrorism charges on his Twitter page, http://twitter.com/thaksinlive.

“As a prime minister who won two landslide election victories, I was ousted in a coup,” Thaksin wrote in Thai. “As I was fighting peacefully for justice for the return of my robbed assets, I was slapped with terrorism charges.”

At least 85 people were killed in Bangkok and more than 1,400 wounded in violence that began in April.

The violence peaked last week when almost 40 buildings were set on fire as the army dispersed thousands of anti-government protesters who had taken over the commercial heart of the city.

RHETORIC COULD INCITE TROUBLE

There have been no reports of violence in Bangkok since Thursday, when the red shirt protesters started to withdraw. But some have threatened to resume their campaign next month.

Jatuporn Prompan, a top red shirt leader who surrendered to the authorities but was freed on parliamentary immunity, said on Tuesday he did not support violence, but the current rhetoric from the government could lead to more unrest.

“A government reconciliation plan must not incite hatred, misunderstanding and finger-pointing … otherwise this volcano will erupt,” Jaturon told reporters after being interviewed by investigators.

In a move to help businesses and people affected by the riots, the cabinet approved a relief plan on Tuesday, including unspecified grants and 5 billion baht ($154 million) of soft loans, Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij told reporters.

Bangkok, a city of 15 million, was operating as usual on Tuesday, but the government said a night curfew would stay in force until May 29, over concerns that some remnants of the hardcore protesters could launch more attacks.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said the curfew, which will be in force between midnight and 4 a.m. in the capital and 23 provinces, was necessary to prevent more unrest, but would not be in place for seven days, as was announced on Monday.

“We have cut the timeframe from seven to four days because we want to limit the impact on the public,” Suthep told reporters. Thaksin is no stranger to arrest warrants and court cases. He jumped bail and fled abroad in 2008 when he was facing charges of corruption and was sentenced in absentia to two years in jail.

In February, Thailand’s top court seized $1.4 billion of his assets, saying it was accrued through abuse of power.

(Addition reporting by Pracha Hariraksapitak and Chalathip Thirasoonthrakul; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Thai court orders Thaksin arrested on terrorism charges

A Thai court issued orders on Tuesday to arrest former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on terrorism charges in connection with riots over the past two months that were the worst in the country’s modern history.

Armed with the arrest warrant, Thai prosecutors and the Foreign Ministry will launch a global hunt for the fugitive telecoms tycoon, a top government official said.

Thaksin was last believed to be in France for the Cannes film festival, but he keeps his location secret.

“The court said there was enough evidence to believe that Thaksin was the mastermind, having played a significant role in instructing and manipulating the incidents,” Department of Special Investigations chief Tharit Pengdit told Reuters, referring to the riots.

Government officials say Thaksin funded the 10-week, anti-government protests to the tune of about $1.5 million a day and is believed to have organised the smuggling of arms and fighters from Cambodia.

If he is convicted of terrorism, he can be sentenced to death.

For a graphic related to the story, see:

http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/RNGS/2010/MAY/THAI5.jpg

The red shirt protesters have demanded that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva quit and call new elections, saying they have been disenfranchised by a Bangkok elite supported by the military. They mostly support Thaksin, who was prime minister until 2006 when he was ousted in a coup.

Thaksin, through his lawyer, denied the terrorism charges.

“Today, the mask is off the junta in Thailand,” London-based lawyer Robert Amsterdam said in a statement on behalf of Thaksin.

“Lacking legitimacy and fearing being held to account for the brutal murder of their countrymen, the military-backed Abhisit regime has perverted justice through the laying of a charge that violates logic, law and any claim of hopes for reconciliation.”

At least 85 people were killed in Bangkok and more than 1,400 wounded in violence that began in April.

The violence peaked last week when almost 40 buildings were set on fire as the army dispersed thousands of anti-government protesters who had taken over the commercial heart of the city.

There have been no reports of violence in Bangkok since Thursday, when the red shirt protesters started to withdraw. But they have threatened to resume their campaign next month.

Bangkok, a city of 15 million, was operating as usual on Tuesday, but the government said a night curfew would stay in force until May 29, over concerns that some remnants of the hardcore protesters could launch more attacks.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said the curfew, which will be in force between midnight and 4 a.m. in the capital and 23 provinces, was necessary to prevent more unrest, but would not be in place for seven days, as was announced on Monday.

“We have cut the timeframe from seven to four days because we want to limit the impact on the public,” Suthep told reporters. Thaksin is no stranger to arrest warrants and court cases. He jumped bail and fled abroad in 2008 when he was facing charges of corruption and was sentenced in absentia to two years in jail.

In February, Thailand’s top court seized $1.4 billion of his assets, saying it was accrued through abuse of power.

(Addition reporting by Pracha Hariraksapitak and Chalathip Thirasoonthrakul; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

US proposal of opening a consulate in Quetta a security risk

Islamabad, May 21 (ANI): Pakistani law enforcement agencies have termed the US proposal of opening a consulate in Quetta a “security risk”.

In a report presented before the Pakistani Foreign Ministry, the agencies after gathering comprehensive information opposed the proposal and declared it a ‘security risk’, the sources said.

According to experts, Balochistan is rich in natural resources like coal, natural gas, gold, oil, silver, iron and several other minerals.

Owing to the Gwadar port, this part of the world has become a gateway for Central Asia and Afghanistan to reach out to the Middle East and Europe, the Daily Times reports.

Keeping in view the minerals and its geographical position, the officials said that many world powers, especially the US, were thinking of settling in Balochistan.

Geological experts said that the oil in the region flows from Iran into Iraq, from where it is drilled and supplied to the world.

Due to the law and order situation, foreign companies are reluctant to invest in exploration in Balochistan, which is the only reason why law enforcement agencies have opposed the US proposal.

Local diplomats said that the US was constructing an air base in Ormara Creek, while another base was being built at Bochik in the Chaghi area, from where the US security experts will be able to monitor developments in Iran and keep an eye on the Afghan Taliban and al Qaeda. (ANI)

South Korea claims proof that North Korean torpedo sank its ship

New York, May 19 (ANI): South Korea will claim that a North Korean torpedo was the culprit in sinking their naval ship, according to domestic media reports.

The torpedo smashed into the ship, broke it into half, caused it to sink and killed 46 South Korean sailors.

The revelation will widen the existing chasm between the two countries as it breaks the tenuous calm that prevailed since the end of the Korean war.

South Korea is meticulously amassing evidence to support this claim, as this will help in mobilizing international opinion in their favour and probably result in further isolation of their belligerent neighbour.

“We will blame a torpedo attack and link it to North Korea,” said a government official briefed on the investigation, adding that the authorities were still fine-tuning an official announcement to be made on Thursday, the New York Times reports.

He refused to discuss forensic evidence that will be cited in the report.

In a series of closed-door briefings scheduled for Wednesday, the Foreign Ministry intends to present to Chinese, Russian, Japanese and European diplomats “scientific and objective evidence to back up the conclusion that it was a North Korean torpedo attack,” said the South Korean news agency Yonhap.

However, China’s affinity to North Korea could prove to be a stumbling block in South Korea’s plans, as China has the veto-power and will need to be convinced beyond any doubt before they act against North Korea for whom they hold a sympathetic view, the New York Times said.

Investigators reportedly established a critical forensic link when they matched metal pieces and traces of explosive recovered from the ship with a stray North Korean torpedo secured by the South seven years ago, Yonhap and other South Korean news outlets reported.

They also said they had found a fragment believed to be part of a North Korean torpedo’s propeller, the paper said. (ANI)

South Korea calls North Korea’s ‘nuclear fusion’ claim bluff

New Delhi, May 12 (ANI): South Korea has dismissed North Korea’s claims of successfully producing a nuclear fusion reaction as untrue. They cite lack of adequate funds and facilities that are necessary for carrying out costly experiments and its lack of nuclear research as the reason for ruling out such claims.

Nuclear experts too have discounted their tall claims saying that North Korean scientists had been trying to achieve a fusion reaction for five years without success, and felt that even if the North Koreans had managed to produce the reaction, it would be rudimentary in nature.

Local media in Seoul cited unidentified South Korean officials as dismissing Pyongyang”s claim, with many nuclear experts in Seoul also laughing it away, Xinhua reports.

Seoul”s Yonhap News Agency quoted a South Korean foreign ministry official as calling Pyongyang”s claim “absurd,” citing a lack of intelligence indicating the country has costly facilities needed for such experiments.

Moreover, even if their claims were true, South Korean officials feel these experiments could in a broad sense be tantamount to a violation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1874, which demands the country halt its nuclear weapons programs and conduct no further nuclear or missile tests, the agency said in its report.

Some South Korean experts feel that these claims are a strategic move by North Korea to up its ante before returning to the suspended Six-Party talks, while others pointed out that Pyongyang wants to retain its image as a nuclear state by making the claim, the agency said. (ANI)

China signals willingness to peacefully resolve border-disputes with India

New Delhi, May 12 (ANI): China has expressed its willingness to work toward maintaining peace and stability on the border until differences with India are finally resolved.

In response to media reports documenting several transgressions from the Chinese side into the Indian territory, a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Jian Yu said, “China”s position on the Sino-Indian border issue is consistent and clear,” Xinhua reports.

She reiterated that Chinese border patrols have always abided by the rules and regulations of the consensus agreed to by the two sides.

According to the paper, China and India have reached a consensus to work together to maintain peace and stability in border areas until the disputes are finally settled. (ANI)

Pakistani, Indian prime ministers to meet in Bhutan

The prime ministers of nuclear-armed rivals Pakistan and India will meet in Bhutan on Thursday, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani and his Indian counterpart, Manmohan Singh, are in Bhutan for a summit of South Asian leaders.

(Reporting by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Now, Musharraf accused of selling properties ‘gifted’ by Indonesian Prez for ‘peanuts’

Islamabad, Apr.28 (ANI): A report prepared by the Pakistan Foreign Affairs Ministry has charged former President General Pervez Musharraf and his cronies of selling government owned non-movable properties in Jakarta at the rate of peanuts.

The report said the government-owned Chancery building and the ambassador’s residence in Jakarta, which were gifted to Musharraf by former Indonesian President Soeakarno, were sold in 2002 by passing all rules and regulations.

The report indicts former Pakistani ambassador to Indonesia Major General (retired) Mustafa Anwar Hussain for the irregular sale of the ‘gifted’ properties, saying he forced the authorities to sideline normal procedures in order to avoid heavy penalties.

The report noted that the ambassador’s huge residence was sold for a mere f 2.28 million dollars.

The foreign ministry had even told Hussain that he cannot proceed with the deal without the approval of the inter-ministerial committee, and asked him to refrain from finalising the agreement.

However, he went ahead with the sale, claiming he had acted in line with “a directive by the chief executive on the sale of both properties,” The Daily Times reports.

Quoting the then defence attaché Colonel. Khalid Mehmood, the report says that Hussain and one of his close friends had extracted massive kickbacks in the sale of the properties in Jakarta. (ANI)