Terrorists’ plot to target ministers with perfume bottle like bombs foiled: Pakistan

Pakistan interior minister Rehman Malik has said that a plot to target ministers and key figures with perfume bombs has been foiled.

“Terrorists had devised a perfume bottle like bombs as gifts to target ministers and key political figures in the month of Ramazan,” The Dawn quoted Malik, as saying

in his report.

He reportedly prepared the report after his ministry received information from the spy agencies.

The report was sent to President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, DG ISI Shuja Pasha, DG MI and to all four provincial chief ministers along with 21 other key figures.

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Bangladesh supreme court lifts ban on newspaper

July 18 (Reuters) – Bangladesh’s Supreme Court on Sunday lifted a government ban on the publication of a pro-opposition newspaper, but the daily’s editor remained in police custody.

Authorities last month banned the Amar Desh newspaper, considered a mouthpiece of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and detained its editor Mahmudur Rahman.

“A full bench led by Chief Justice Mohammed Fazlul Karim in a ruling scrapped the ban,” a registrar of the Supreme Court told reporters.

The publication was banned following a complaint by a businessman who had accused its editor of cheating him by continuing to list him as a publisher even though he resigned from that post in December 2008.

Rahman, a former energy adviser to the BNP government between 2001-06, was charged with graft and was denied bail by a lower court.

The BNP accused the government of halting publication after the daily ran articles critical of the government and the prime minister.

(Reporting by Nizam Ahmed, editing by Jonathan Thatcher))

Kazakhstan says to tax oil export at $20 a tonne

July 13 (Reuters) – Kazakhstan on Tuesday said it would introduce oil export duties of $20 a tonne, with the Finance Ministry saying the levy is set to be paid by Chevron-led (CVX.N) Tengizchevroil, among others.

The decision was signed by Prime Minister Karim Masimov at Tuesday’s government meeting. (Reporting by Raushan Nurshayeva; Writing by Toni Vorobyova)

India adviser:FY11 industrial output to be at FY10 level

July 13 (Reuters) – India’s industrial output in the current fiscal year INIPC=ECI will be similar to last fiscal’s 10.4 percent growth, C. Rangarajan, chairman of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, said on Tuesday.

He also said the central bank would need to act if double-digit inflation persists.

“If the inflation level persists at double-digit level for several months together, some action on demand side is needed. So the action on the part of RBI (Reserve Bank of India) is required.”

(Reporting by C.J. Kuncheria; editing by Malini Menon)

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)

Czech president to name Civic Dem leader as new PM

June 27 (Reuters) – Czech President Vaclav Klaus will name Civic Democrat leader Petr Necas as the next prime minister on Monday at 0800 GMT, he said in a television interview on Sunday.

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“Tomorrow at 10 a.m. I will name Petr Necas as prime minister at the castle,” Klaus said.

Necas is leading coalition talks with two other centre-right parties, TOP09 and Public Affairs, after the three won a combined 118 seats out of 200 in a May 28-29 election. (Reporting by Jason Hovet)

Greek pension reform to be fair, viable – PM

June 25 (Reuters) – Greece’s pension reform will be fair and is needed to make the system viable, Prime Minister George Papandreou told parliament ahead of a cabinet meeting meant to agree a pension reform plan.

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“Today we want to succeed on two fronts, to have a pension system that is viable … and fair,” the Prime Minister said on Friday.

Opinion polls show a very large majority of Greeks oppose the pension reform and unions will stage a general 24-hour strike on June 29.

The cabinet meeting is meant to agree on a major overhaul of the debt-choked country’s ailing pension system and to ease labour rules to make it easier to fire staff, key requirements of a 110-billion euro EU/IMF bailout programme. (Reporting by Tatiana Fragou and Ingrid Melander)

Putin calls for new gas transit talks with Minsk

June 24 (Reuters) – Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin called on Thursday on Belarus to hold new talks on gas transit after the head of Russia’s Gazprom told him a gas dispute with Minsk had yet to be solved.

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Alexei Miller, chief executive of Russia’s gas export monopoly, said Minsk was still demanding payment for gas transit in the amount which was not in line with the existing contract.

Earlier on Thursday, Gazprom said it had restarted gas supply to Belarus in full after Minsk repaid its debt for gas deliveries [ID:nnLDE65N06D.] (Reporting by Gleb Bryanski, writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov, Editing by Lidia Kelly)

Australian Finance Minister Tanner to retire

June 24 (Reuters) – Australian Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner on Thursday said he would retire at the coming national election and would not re-contest his marginal Melbourne seat.

Tanner made the announcement in parliament, but said his decision was not related to the ruling Labor Party’s decision to elect Julia Gillard as prime minister to replace Kevin Rudd.

(Reporting by James Grubel; Editing by Ed Davies)

India inflation at uncomfortable levels – adviser

June 17 (Reuters) – India’s inflation rate has reached uncomfortable levels and some action from the central bank is needed to curb demand-side pressures, a top policy adviser said on Thursday.

C. Rangarajan, chairman of the prime minister’s Economic Advisory Council, was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a conference.

India’s headline inflation unexpectedly accelerated 10.16 percent in May, heightening expectations the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) would raise rates before its scheduled July review despite concerns over Europe’s debt crisis. [ID:nSGE65D0E6] (Reporting by Suvashree Dey Choudhury and Neha D’silva)

Slovak president wants PM Fico to try to form govt

June 13 (Reuters) – Slovak President Ivan Gasparovic said on Sunday he wanted Prime Minister Robert Fico, whose leftist party SMER won the most votes in a general election on Saturday, to try to form a new government.

But four centre-right opposition parties won a majority in the election and have the greatest chance to form a cabinet. They have all rejected working with Fico.

“I want to ask the winner of the election to try form the government…It is a tradition which I will not break,” Gasparovic said. (Reporting by Martin Santa; writing by Jan Lopatka; editing by Michael Winfrey)

Top Italy union to strike over budget on June 25

June 9 (Reuters) – Italy’s largest trade union has announced it will hold a national strike on June 25 over the government’s 25 billion-euro austerity package that includes cuts to funding for local governments and salary freezes.

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The left-wing CGIL said on Wednesday its state sector workers, which are hardest hit by the government’s package, will strike for 24 hours, while its other members will strike for just four hours.

The strike will be preceded on June 12 by CGIL protest marches and rallies around the country.

The CGIL has around 6 million members, more than half of whom are pensioners.

Its leader Guglielmo Epifani told Reuters last month that the union planned a national strike, probably on June 25, but gave no details on the separate plans for public and private sector workers. [ID:nLDE64U09O]

The two-year austerity budget is already taking a toll on the popularity of Silvio Berlusconi [ID:nLDE6520J7] but pressure on the prime minister is eased by trade union divisions.

The other two main unions, the CISL and UIL, have offered only muted criticism of the budget and refused to join the CGIL in strike action [ID:nLDE64Q17S].

Japan deputy finmin Noda confirmed as new finmin

June 8 (Reuters) – Japan’s new leader Naoto Kan on Tuesday appointed deputy finance minister Yoshihiko Noda, a fiscal conservative, as finance minister.

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The appointment of Noda, who shares Kan’s views on the need to rein in Japan’s massive public debt, was expected after Kan vacated the finance post to become prime minister. (Reporting by Leika Kihara)

Snap Analysis: North Korea’s Kim turns to family, old guard

(Reuters) – North Korea’s rubber-stamp parliament named leader Kim Jong-il’s brother-in-law to the post of vice chairman of the National Defense Commission, possibly making him the second most powerful man in the reclusive state.

World

It also dismissed the prime minister, seen as the main economic policy official, and replaced him with another member of the old guard and a confidant of the Kim dynasty.

Here are some implications of the reshuffle announced at a rare session of the assembly, which Kim has attended.

Major changes ahead in Malaysian Indian Congress

Kajang (Selangor), June 6 (IANS) The Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) will undergo ‘major changes in the next six months’, its chief S. Samy Vellu announced here Sunday.

He would overhaul the party machinery, including at the state level, before stepping down in the third quarter of next year, Vellu said at the opening of the 64th Selangor MIC Convention here.

MIC, Malaysia’s oldest party of the 1.7 million ethnic Indians, is a key constituent of the ruling alliance Barisan Nasional (BN) headed by Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak.

‘Every leader has to prove the worthiness of his or her leadership. If we fail to do that due to our own negligence, then we are only failing our community. We will lose our right to represent our community,’ Vellu was quoted as saying by Bernama, the official news agency.

‘There must be a complete overhaul of our party machinery. If we are weak and fight among each other, then other Barisan Nasional component parties will not respect us. We will not have any honour and will lose our dignity,’ he added.

Vellu has said he is working to rejuvenate the MIC in tandem with Razak in time for the March 2012 general election.

Obama calls to congratulate Japan’s PM-elect Kan

U.S. President Barack Obama called Japan’s prime minister-elect, Naoto Kan, on Saturday to congratulate him on his election and pledge to work together on issues including North Korea and Iran, the White House said.

Kan, 63, will become Japan’s fifth prime minister in three years, taking the helm as the country struggles to rein in a huge public debt, engineer growth in an aging society, and manage ties with security ally Washington and a rising China.

“The two leaders agreed to work very closely together to address the many issues facing both nations and the global community, including the challenges posed by North Korea and Iran,” the White House said in a statement.

“They emphasized the importance they each place on the US-Japan Alliance,” it said.

The two men are expected to meet at the G8 and G20 summit meetings in Canada later this month. (Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Peter Cooney)

Centre to crack down on Karnataka mining mafia: Handique

With the Karnataka government rejecting suggestions for a CBI probe, the Union Mines Ministry is pursuing other moves to crack down on the mining mafia in the state.

In the face of the Karnataka government’s resistance to a CBI probe, the matter was referred to the Cabinet and the issue was discussed in the Prime Minister’s office, Mines Minister B K Handique said. One of his concerns was whether any money from illegal mining was going to terrorists and the issue was discussed at the PMO.

Asserting that the “crackdown” on illegal mining was on the top of his agenda, Handique said that at present there were not enough legal provisions for central intervention and he would make attempts to incorporate provisions for this in the proposed Mining Act.

“There were discussions at the PMO level (on illegal mining). It would be tracked down. If money goes to terrorists, then licenses will be cancelled. It is a big thing. With NIA (National Investigation Agency) now, things are moving,” he said.

“We thought that CBI will be the right approach. But we can’t enforce it. We have given it to Cabinet now. We have asked them (their help) for investigation,” he said.

Asked to elaborate, he said that there was a provision in the law governing NIA and the Home Ministry may be on the path of tracking where the money was going. “They have been consulting us also on this,” he added.

Handique said the problem of not having adequate provisions in the law now was also discussed with Law Minister Veerappa Moily. “With Moily, we have discussed. We have discussed this with Chidambaram also. He had organised a meeting.”

Handique’s insistence on a probe and action in Karnataka comes against the backdrop of allegations of illegal mining by the Reddy brothers, who are ministers in the Karnataka government.

The current moves come at a time when Karnataka Governor and former Union Law Minister H S Bharadwaj has decided to refer to the Election Commission a complaint seeking disqualification of three ministers, including G Janardhana Reddy and his brother and Revenue Minister G Karunakara Reddy, from the state assembly.

Hitting out at the state government, Handique said, “Illegal mining is a dent on the industry… They (Karnataka government) don’t give (permission for CBI probe). They say without CBI enquiry we can control. We (Centre) cannot take any action. It is a criminal act.”

Admitting that he faced severe political pressure in his crusade against illegal mining, Handique said, “Many MPs have come to me…. (it is a) sensitive area, no doubt about it.”

He said the proposed legislation would ensure that anybody can file a case against illegal mining, contrary to the provisions in the existing MMDR Act, under which only state government officials have the powers.

Karnataka is one of the mineral rich states in India with about 11 percent f the country’s hematite iron ore reserves. It has over 9,000 million tonnes of iron ore resources concentrated in the Bellary-Hospet area, while the rest is found in the Chitradurga, Bagalkot and Tumkur districts.

UN calls for New Zealand-led inquiry into Israel’s Gaza flotilla raid

Tel Aviv, June 6 (ANI): United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon has called for a New-Zealand committee led investigation into Israel’s Gaza flotilla raid.

He said that the committee should be led by New Zealand Prime Minister Geofferey Palmer and must include Israeli and Turkish deputies in an advisory role.

The UN has handed over the proposal to Israel over the weekend and is yet to receive an official response from the country.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said on Saturday that he supports the formation of an inquiry committee on the IDF raid of the Mavi Marmara ship, as long as the soldiers who participated in the mission would not be investigated.

Sources in Barak”s office said that the defense minister backs an Israeli-led probe of the event, and if necessary, would support an international probe, the paper said.

The Isreali defense establishment is now open to the idea of ships sailing through Gaza strip provided that they dock at (ANI)

Russia pledges extra $340 mln to car scrappage scheme

June 3 (Reuters) – Russia will pledge an additional 10.5 billion roubles ($339.8 million) to its car scrappage programme after the incentive scheme boosted monthly car sales for the first time in 18 months in April. [ID:nLDE64B24K]

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told a government meeting on Thursday he planned to pour more cash into the scheme, which offers buyers 50,000 roubles to trade in vehicles aged over ten years.

(Reporting by Darya Korsunskaya; Writing by John Bowker)