News

Aid Rush Follows Indonesia Quakes

Aid agencies rush emergency relief to Indonesia quake zone.

Ethiopia's Ogaden Rebels Warn of 'African Genocide'

Rebels from Ethiopia's troubled Ogaden region said on Thursday an "African genocide" was unfolding there while a U.N. fact-finding mission had only visited areas sanctioned by the government.

EU's 'Set-Aside Farmland' Scheme Faces Abolition

Europe's farm chief has proposed ending the EU's rule that farmers leave 10 percent of their land fallow, part of a strategy to temper soaring grain prices and increase supplies, the EU executive said on Thursday.

Analysis - Sudan in Danger of Reverting to North-South War

A north-south peace deal in Sudan is in danger of unravelling, threatening a return to full scale civil war even as world leaders press for an end to violence in the western region of Darfur.

British Foot and Mouth Strains Likely to be Same

Foot and mouth disease found on a farm in southern England this week is likely to be the same strain as that found in two previous outbreaks in August, the ministry of agriculture said on Thursday.

EU to Propose Immigration Steps to Plug Labour Gap

The European Union executive plans to encourage legal migration into Europe to plug labour shortages caused by a declining, ageing population, EU officials said on Thursday.

U.N.'s Sudan Envoy Says Will Work to Build Trust

A senior United Nations official appointed to oversee implementation of Sudan's troubled north-south peace deal said on Thursday his first priority would be to earn the trust of both sides.

Ethiopia Sees 10 pct Economy Growth in Coming yrs

An export boom is likely to drive 10 percent annual economic growth in Ethiopia for the next few years, the finance minister said on Thursday, but added that the target was a minimum to tackle poverty.

Ozone Cuts Could Beat Kyoto in Aiding Climate - UNEP

Curbs on chemicals that damage the ozone layer could have a side-effect of reducing far more greenhouse gases than the main U.N. plan for confronting climate change, the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP) said on Thursday.

Aid Groups Rush to Assess After Indonesia Quake

Aid agencies have pledged cash and rushed teams to assess damage and help the injured after a major earthquake and a series of powerful aftershocks shook Indonesia's Sumatra island.

Somali Govt Dismisses Opposition 'Terrorist' Alliance

Somalia's government on Thursday said a new opposition movement vowing war on Ethiopian troops in the Horn of Africa nation was a "terrorist alliance" posing no real threat.

Web Sites Let Anybody be Banker to World's Poor

Fueled by last year's Nobel Prize for a man nicknamed "banker to the poor," microlending to small businesses in the world's poorest countries is booming as individuals discover they can be their own mini World Bank.

Amnesty Accuses Sudan of Torturing Eight Prisoners

Eight Sudanese men accused of an attempted coup have been tortured in detention in Kobar prison in the capital Khartoum, the human rights group Amnesty International said in a statement received on Thursday.

U.N. Experts Call on Myanmar to Release Protesters

Three U.N. human rights experts called on Myanmar on Thursday to release more than 150 protesters detained after demonstrating against fuel price increases.

Egypt to Close Rights Group Aiding Torture Victims

Egypt has told a rights group that aids torture victims it will be shut down for financial misdeeds, the group said on Thursday, in what activists called a government effort to quash criticism.

Hillsong United Conference to Hit America

More than 5,000 pastors, youth leaders, worship leaders, musicians and students around the world will gather for the Hillsong United Conference in Orlando, Florida this autumn.