The Foreign Ministry in Tiraspol sent an official letter to the United Nations asking that the Transdniester Republic be acknowledged internationally, according to Moldovan news agency Unimedia, quoted by Hotnews. The document mentions the decision of the Court of The Hague, last week, according to witch the Kosovo declaration of independence did not violate the international law. “The Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic (Transdniester) finds yet again and notifies the UN that the Republic meets all international criteria to act as an independent state and all necessary conditions to be acknowledged as such on international level,” is stated in the document released by the news wire regnum.ru.
“The Foreign Ministry urges the United Nations, alongside other international organizations, to take an active part in defining common criteria for the acknowledgment of states, which have proved their viability for years,” is further stated in the document. The Tiraspol authorities made...
British PM calls Gaza “prison camp”, urges better Turkey-Israel ties.
ANKARA - British Prime Minister David Cameron promised on Tuesday to fight for Turkey to join the European Union and criticised opponents of Turkish membership as prejudiced. Turkey began accession talks with the 27-member EU in 2005, but progress has been slow. The bloc is deeply divided over whether to give full membership, with France taking the strongest stand against Turkish entry.
On his first visit to Ankara since becoming prime minister in May, Cameron said Turkey would bring greater prosperity and political stability to the bloc thanks to its vast economic potential and growing influence in the Middle East. “This is something I feel very strongly, very passionately about,” Cameron said in a speech to the Union of Chambers of Commerce and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey, an influential business group.
Cameron said that in light of Turkey’s unique importance in terms of security, diplomacy and economics, it angered him that its efforts to join the EU were being...
BRUSSELS - The EU urged Serbia and Kosovo on Monday to start negotiating despite Belgrade’s refusal to recognise its former province as independent, stressing the incentive of eventual EU membership. Both Serbia and Kosovo hope to join the bloc one day, but European Union diplomats say they will struggle to make progress if their relations remain poor. A non-binding ruling by the International Court of Justice last week that Kosovo’s 2008 secession did not violate international law should be seen as an opportunity to bridge differences, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said. “What I have offered to Pristina and Belgrade is that the future of both lies in the European Union ... I hope they will want to come forward and start discussions,” Ashton told a news conference after a meeting of EU foreign ministers.
In an emergency session on Monday, the Serbian parliament adopted a resolution staring that Serbia will never accept the secession of Kosovo, Deutsche Welle said....
Russia slams new
sanctions on Iran
Russia condemned new EU sanctions on Iran on Tuesday, tempering hopes of closer cooperation between Moscow and the West over Iran’s nuclear programme. EU foreign ministers on Monday approved a range of extra restrictions on Iran that went well beyond U.N. sanctions agreed last month. “This not only undermines our joint efforts to seek a political and diplomatic settlement around Iran’s nuclear programme, but also shows disdain for the carefully calibrated and coordinated provisions of the UN Security Council resolutions,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.
Chavez beefs up border troops in Colombia spat
Venezuela said it beefed up its troop presence along the border with Colombia as its neighbor’s incoming finance minister vowed on Monday to restore trade between the feuding Andean nations. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez broke off diplomatic ties with Colombia last week, bringing the countries’...
US military entering final phase of its mission in the country, Defense Secretary Robert Gates says.
WASHINGTON/BAGHDAD - President Barack Obama declared an end to the seven-year U.S. combat mission in Iraq on Tuesday and promised recession-weary Americans “my central responsibility” now is to repair the U.S. economy. Obama, who inherited the war from President George W. Bush and is fighting another in Afghanistan, said he had fulfilled a 2008 campaign promise to end U.S. combat operations in Iraq and declared the Iraqi people now have lead responsibility for their security. “Now, it is time to turn the page,” Obama said in an Oval Office address, speaking from the same desk Bush had used to declare the 2003 start of the war.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki told Iraqis their country “today is sovereign and independent.” But many Iraqis, who have seen at least 100,000 of their countrymen killed since the 2003 invasion, are apprehensive as U.S. military might is scaled down, with violence continuing and efforts to form a new government stalemated six months after an...
WASHINGTON - Israel’s defence minister said on Wednesday the Jewish state would be willing to hand over parts of Jerusalem in peace talks with the Palestinians to be launched by U.S. President Barack Obama. A flare-up of violence in the Palestinian West Bank and a deadlock over Jewish settlements there loom as potential deal-breakers for Obama, who will host Israeli and Palestinian leaders for dinner at the White House in Washington.
Obama brought Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas together for face-to-face negotiations after months of U.S.-mediated indirect talks. But he faces deep skepticism about his chances of success. Defence minister Ehud Barak’s rare comments about the need to partition Jerusalem, which is at the heart of the conflict, could signal Netanyahu’s willingness to divide the holy city in any final peace deal with Palestinians. Netanyahu has publicly balked at ceding the eastern, Arab part of the city that Israel...
MOSCOW - Russian police detained more than 100 people including prominent opponents of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin at anti-Kremlin protests on Tuesday, after Putin said demonstrators without permits could expect harsh treatment. In Moscow, police detained opposition politician Boris Nemtsov and dozens of other protesters who defied authorities by gathering on a central square declared off-limits last week, shouting “Shame!” and “Russia without Putin!”
Police dragged protesters through the crowd on Triumph Square and shoved them into buses, carrying some who tried to resist or twisting their arms behind their backs. About 70 people were detained in Moscow, police spokesman Viktor Biryukov said at the scene. In St. Petersburg, some 50 people were detained on the main street, Nevsky Prospekt, and 15 more at a protest on the imperial-era capital’s Palace Square.
Opposition leaders and rights activists have been converging on Moscow’s Triumph Square on the 31st of each...
Sweden reopens WikiLeaks founder rape investigation
Sweden’s chief prosecutor said on Wednesday she was reopening a preliminary investigation into rape charges against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange that a lower official had withdrawn two weeks ago. Neither Assange, who has denied the charges, nor his lawyer could be immediately reached for comment. WikiLeaks published more than 70,000 secret military files on Afghanistan in July in what U.S. officials have called one of the biggest security breaches in U.S. military history. Assange has said he has been warned by Australian intelligence that he could face a campaign to discredit him after leaking the documents.
Azerbaijan, Karabakh trade blame over deadly clash
Azerbaijan and the rebel mountain region of Nagorno-Karabakh traded blame for a deadly clash on their frontline on Tuesday in which Azerbaijan said two of its soldiers had died. The Azeri Defence Ministry said in a statement that two...
WARSAW - Poland is marking the 30th anniversary of the Gdansk accords, which gave rise to the Solidarity trade union - the first independent trade union in the Soviet bloc. Various events marking the historic occasion were being held around Poland, centered on the Baltic coast towns where Solidarity had its birth, according to Radio Free Europe.
Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski set the tone for the celebrations in a speech he gave on August 29 in the port of Szczecin. “On this special day, we can face all these people with pride and satisfaction and pay a tribute to their heroic fight for the abolition of the system and commemorate with pride that the fight was not only successful in knocking down communism, but it also established the base for an effective and wise reform,” he said.
The Gdansk accords were signed on August 31, 1980, between the communist government and striking workers along the Baltic coast. The accords allowed a free trade union, the right to...
SEOUL - China pressed regional powers on Tuesday to restart talks on ending North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, and Seoul offered aid to its destitute neighbour despite a new round of U.S. sanctions against Pyongyang. In a move that could ease tensions on the peninsula, South Korea made its first large-scale offer of humanitarian aid to the North since the sinking of one of its warships in March.
Seoul offered 10 billion won (USD 8.4 M) to North Korea after heavy rains in July and August in its northern and eastern provinces forced thousands from their homes and put farmland under water. Seoul cut off most of its ties with Pyongyang after accusing the North of torpedoing the Cheonan corvette and demanded an apology. North Korea says it did not carry out the attack, and has told its only major ally China it is committed to denuclearising the peninsula and wants to resume the aid-for-disarmament talks.
China is lobbying neighbours to sign up for renewed talks, and on...
A recent blunder of Bulgarian Defence Minister Anyu Angelov related to the US missile defence in Europe has led to Syria threatening to break its diplomatic relations with Bulgaria, Novinite reported. This highly problematic statement made by Angelov, together with two other blunders, are very likely to lead Prime Minister Boyko Borisov to replace him, reported Trud Daily citing sources from the government and the ruling party GERB.
Speaking on private cable TV channel Pro.bg on June 3, 2010, Bulgaria’s Defense Minister Anyu Angelov declared that the country must join the US missile shield in Europe because of the threats it faces from certain Middle Eastern countries. “The threat comes not only from Iran, which clearly has medium-range missile technologies. But we also got information that Syria is developing such technologies as well,” Gen. Angelov declared largely suggesting that Syria might offensive plans as an enemy of Bulgaria.
The gaffe caused a diplomatic...
Fire bombs thrown at Russian embassy in Minsk
An unknown assailant threw two fire bombs at the Russian embassy in Minsk late on Monday, in an attack that hurt nobody but destroyed an embassy car, a Belarussian Emergencies Ministry spokesman said on Tuesday. Vitaly Novitsky said the motive for the attack and the identity of the perpetrator were unknown. Belarussian Foreign Ministry spokesman Andrei Savinykh condemned the attack as a hooligan stunt aimed at hurting Belarusian-Russian relations, the Belapan news agency reported.
Chile begins drilling mine rescue shaft
Engineers in Chile have begun drilling the rescue shaft through which they hope to eventually free the 33 men trapped in a collapsed gold mine, BBC News reported. The miners have been stuck 700m underground for the past three weeks. Officials say it could take up to four months for the tunnel to be completed and the men to be winched out. The miners will have to clear thousands of...
National day
H.E. DATIN PADUKA HALIMAH ABDULLAH, Ambassador of Malaysia to Romania.
Malaysia celebrates its 53rd anniversary of Independence on August 31 this year. On this auspicious occasion, it gives me great pleasure to wish all Malaysians and our friends in Romania for continued success and prosperity. For this year, the Independence Day theme is “1Malaysia – Generates Transformation”.
Under the spirit of 1Malaysia, the country shall continue to focus on its human capital development and performance in order to optimise its potential and gear towards greater social unity towards achieving the status as a developed nation in 2020. With a comprehensive economic plan and the nation’s dedication and commitment toward this objective, Malaysia is well under way in its target to achieve this status.
At international level, Malaysia will continue to commit itself as an active player in international fora, and uses its experiences and knowledge in the efforts to help promote and contribute to a more peaceful, secured and balanced world.
On...
Libyan leader set to meet with Berlusconi, business in focus.
ROME - Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s attempt to convert dozens of young women to Islam during a visit to Italy led to an angry reaction from Italian media on Monday. Several commentators accused Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of sacrificing principles and dignity for the sake of trade and investment ties with Libya. The mercurial Gaddafi invited a large group of young women hired by a hostessing agency to an event at a Libyan cultural centre in Rome on Sunday and tried to convert them to Islam.
“What would happen if a European head of state went to Libya or another Islamic country and invited everyone to convert to Christianity?” asked the daily Il Messagero. “We believe it would provoke very strong reactions across the Islamic world.” Press reports said three women had converted, but there was no way to verify if that was true. The event, due to be repeated on Monday, followed a similar reception involving some 200 women on a previous visit by Gaddafi to Rome last...
MOSCOW - Russia’s paramount leader, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, hinted on Monday he would return to the presidency in 2012 for six more years and said democracy protesters marching without permission deserved to be beaten. Asked by the Kommersant daily newspaper in an interview whether Russia’s 2012 presidential election did not worry him because he had already decided it, Putin replied: “No, it interests me like...I wanted to say like everyone, but in fact more than everyone else. But I don’t want to make a fetish out of it.”
Putin ruled as president from 2000 to 2008 before handing the presidency to his chosen successor Dmitry Medvedev, in order to observe a law banning a third consecutive term. However Putin will be free to run again in 2012 for a newly extended term of six years. “The most important thing is that these problems of 2012 don’t derail us from the path of stable development,” Putin added in the interview.
Kommersant said it was conducted during a...
BRATISLAVA - A gunman killed six people and wounded 14 in the Slovak capital Bratislava on Monday, the national rescue service said. “There was shooting at around 10 a.m. (0800 GMT) in the morning,” Dominika Sulkova of the rescue service said in a live television broadcast. “There were 20 wounded and unfortunately six did not survive the assault, four women and two men,” she said. “Fourteen people including a three-year-old child were taken to hospital, while light injuries were treated on the spot,” she added, saying the child’s life was not in danger. The SME daily said on its website that the shooter was a 15-year-old drug addict who shot himself dead after the rampage in Devinska Nova Ves, a northwestern district of the Slovak capital. Police did not confirm this piece of information. Eyewitnesses quoted by the TA3 news channel said the shooting took place on a busy street near a kindergarten and a supermarket. The shooter allegedly attacked a family living in a flat above the...
SUKA NALU - An Indonesian volcano, inactive for four centuries, erupted again on Monday, pitching ash two km into the air and sending nearby residents scurrying from their homes. Villages were emptying fast near Mount Sinabung on the north of Sumatra island, leaving behind only officials from the bureau of meteorology and the police. Short-haul flights skirting the volcano were delayed.
Reuters Television footage showed vast black clouds billowing into the sky, against a background of trees and farmhouses. A Reuters TV producer said it began raining at around 4 p.m. and that clouds obscuring the 2,460-metre volcano’s peak made it difficult to tell if ash was still erupting in the afternoon. “The air is very foggy and smoky,” he said. “There is no one around, only police and officials.”
About 21,000 people had been evacuated. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono instructed the disaster mitigation agency to help set up emergency tents, kitchens and toilets, said...
Ecuador bus crash kills 38 in highlands, 12 hurt
A bus winding its way through Ecuador’s highlands toward the capital of Quito went off the road before dawn on Sunday, killing 38 passengers in the worst accident of this kind in the country in years. Authorities said 12 more people were injured in the crash. Local television showed rescue workers struggling to extract bodies and look for survivors on the steep cliffs around Lake Yambo in the central province of Cotopaxi where the accident occurred.
Report: Israel to attack Hezbollah arms depots in Syria
Israel is planning to attack Hezbollah arms depots and weapons manufacturing plants in Syria, the Kuwaiti newspaper Al Rai reported, quoted by Haaretz. The report is based on Western sources who asserted that Israel has increased its military force level along the northern border in the Golan Heights and Mount Dov areas. The report cited European sources who claimed that recent Israeli unmanned...
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Sunday opened a pipeline branch to carry Siberian oil to China and hailed Russia’s energy business in China as an important counterweight to its traditional European clients. Putin was speaking in the town of Skovorodino, the end of the pipeline to the Pacific region, in honour of the completion of a branch that will carry Siberian oil to the Chinese town of Daqing from the end of the year. PetroChina is the importer....
Netanyahu and Abbas meet in Washington on Thursday for the first direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks since 2008.
WASHINGTON - Many clocks will be ticking during the next year when Washington hopes an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal can be hammered out. President Barack Obama faces congressional elections on Nov. 2 and a possible re-election bid in 2012, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is on borrowed time because his elective term has already expired and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s delicately balanced coalition could unravel at any time. For all three, the clock starts ticking on Thursday when Netanyahu and Abbas meet in Washington for the first direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks since 2008.
Announcing the negotiations, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she believed the core issues - which include borders, Jewish settlements on the West Bank and the fate of Palestinian refugees - could be resolved in a year. The fledgling talks’ first test will come far sooner, on Sept. 26, when Israel’s temporary, limited moratorium on new settlement building in the...
BRUSSELS - Popular support for European Union membership has fallen to a nine-year low within the 27 countries in the bloc, a poll showed on Thursday. The yearly Eurobarometer survey was carried out in May when the EU was hit by sovereign-debt problems and when some member states were in recession.
According to the poll, conducted by the TNS Opinion and Social research group for the European Commission, support for EU membership fell to 49 percent, down 4 percentage points, and highlighted fears that the economy will deteriorate further. The poll asked an average 1,000 people in each member state whether membership of the EU was a good thing, a bad thing or neither good nor bad for their country. Those voting for ‘bad’ rose to 18 percent from 15 percent last year.
In Germany, the EU’s biggest economy and traditionally pro-EU, support for the bloc fell 10 points to 50 percent. In Greece, support for the EU fell 17 points to 44 percent. The bailout for Greece, offered...
Thousands flee as Sumatra volcano erupts
Thousands of Indonesians were evacuated from the slopes of a volcano on Sunday after it erupted for the first time in more than 400 years, spewing out lava and sending smoke and dust 1,500 metres into the air. Mount Sinabung, in the north of the island of Sumatra, began erupting around midnight after rumbling for several days, prompting some villagers to panic before the mass evacuation got under way.
S.Korea’s PM-designate quits under pressure
South Korea’s reformist prime minister-designate and two other ministerial nominees stepped down on Sunday amid allegations of corruption, stymying President Lee Myung-bak’s plans to boost ruling party morale. Lee had picked Kim Tae-ho as prime minister earlier this month, but after a heated confirmation hearing last week in which the opposition called into question his qualifications and ethics, Kim gave up his quest for the post....
For Kazakhstan the last month of summer is characterized by a very important event. On August 30 the people of Kazakhstan will celebrate one of the most important state holidays – Constitution Day. The Constitution appeared in 1995 when the state’s fundamental law was adopted through a referendum. The country’s new modern democratic institutions were created in line with it and democracy’s main principle was established: the separation of power into three branches – legislative, executive and judicial, with a clear checks and balances mechanism.
The fact that the date of its adoption was celebrated on a wide scale in Kazakhstan reveals the powerful significance of the public system’s mainstay document. Especially since this year Kazakhstan celebrates 15 years since the adoption of this document.
The Constitution of the Republic of Kazakhstan, adopted through national referendum on August 30, 1995 (with subsequent amendments in 1998 and 2007) as the country’s...
Ex-U.S. President Carter in Pyongyang.
SEOUL - North Korea’s reclusive leader Kim Jong-il is visiting powerful ally China possibly with his son and heir apparent, South Korean government sources said, ahead of a meeting next month that may settle his succession. The Workers’ Party (WPK), which rubber stamps major policy decisions in the secretive North, is holding a rare meeting in September at which the assembly could set in motion the succession of the leader’s son, Kim Jong-un, analysts say. “Kim Jong-il is travelling through China by train, but we have no information as to whether his son is accompanying him,” a presidential source told Reuters. A South Korean foreign ministry source said there was evidence that both Kim and his son were in China. The South’s Yonhap news agency reported that Kim was in Jilin, northeastern China, where he visited a school he attended as a child. Kim, his iron rule underpinned by a personality cult, rarely travels abroad. But this would be the second time since May that he has gone to...