
October 2009
"In the URL it was designed for the World Wide Web. (BBC) (The Daily Telegraph)
A Zimbabwean court orders an officer MDC, Roy Bennett, back in jail on terrorism charges. (Al Jazeera) (South Africa Times)
Iraqi Human Rights Ministry announced at least 85,000 Iraqis have been killed by bombs, assassinations and the fight against between 2004 and 2008. (Associated Press) (Al Jazeera)
News of 15 October 2009 (15/10/2009) (Thursday)
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Lisbon Treaty:
Czech President Klaus Vclav disruption of the Lisbon Treaty is considered "absurd, irresponsible and damaging to the country" by his predecessor Vclav Havel. (The Times)
President signs of Ireland Mary McAleese to the Treaty of Lisbon after the return of Luxembourg. (RT) (Reuters) (Taiwan News)
Ugandan MP David Bahati proposes the creation of a capital crime of "aggravated homosexuality" for gay sex with people under 18, disabled or when the accused is HIV positive. (BBC)
The United Nations General Assembly elects Bosnia-Herzegovina, Brazil, Gabon, Lebanon and Nigeria to the Security Council as members of non-veto holding. (Reuters)
Narges Kalhor, the daughter of a senior advisor to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, seeking asylum in Germany. (Reuters)
Burma and Bangladesh to send warships to disputed area in the Bay of Bengal 50 nautical miles west the island St. Martin. (Mizzima)
Three of the five members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee initially argued against the award of U.S. President Barack Obama, the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize. (AFP via Google News) (main source: Verdens Gang)
North Korea accuses South Korea to enter its territorial waters, to further increase tensions on the Korean Peninsula Peninsula. (Yonhap) (Reuters) (AFP)
The Palestinians have urged UN to act to punish Israel for its offensive in the Gaza Strip last winter. (BBC) (Haaretz)
At least 37 people are killed in a series of bombings in Pakistani cities by militants. (News) (Bloomberg) (Indian Express)
Six others were sentenced to death over ethnic unrest in Xinjiang, China in July. (China Daily) (Al Jazeera) (BBC)
The International Criminal Court opens an investigation the removal of an opposition demonstration in Guinea, where dozens of people were killed. (Associated Press)
Finland became the first country to declare the broadband Internet access a legal right. (CNN)
The ruling party in Malaysia, the Organization United Malays National announces internal reforms after a series of defeats in local elections. (Al Jazeera) (Bernama)
Militants launch attacks the police in Lahore, the capital of Punjab province, Pakistan, killing 31 people, after a week of violence in which more than 100 people died. (Reuters)
Norwegian pop trio A-ha announce they are splitting after 25 years together. (BBC) (Daily Telegraph) (The Independent)
Through a circus the media surrounding an incident in which a six year old boy is accused of flying hot air balloon homemade, the boy was found safe at home. (CNN)
News of October 16, 2009 (2009-10-16) (Friday)
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Voters in Botswana to participate in a general election. (IOL) (Al Jazeera)
The U.S. recorded a deficit of 1.42 one billion dollars. (Bloomberg)
Stephen Gately:
The surviving members of Boyzone flying to Majorca to escort the body of Stephen Gately house in Dublin. (RT) (BBC) (The Belfast Telegraph) (The Irish Times)
The complaints against the press in the United Kingdom Commission website crashed after receiving hundreds of complaints about an article in January Moir in the Daily Mail about his views on the singer's death. Retailer Marks & Spencer withdraws advertising Nestle and dissociates from his writing. (Source Daily Mail Primary) (The Guardian) (BBC) (The Irish Times) (The Huffington Post)
Lisbon Treaty:
Czech Prime Minister Jan Fischer said disruption Vclav President Klaus of the Lisbon Treaty is damaging to the country's credit. (Ceske Noviny)
A survey Opinion shows that 65% of Czechs support President Klaus Vclav refusal to sign the Treaty of Lisbon. (Wall Street Journal)
A powerful earthquake strikes Indonesia, causing panic and mass evacuations in Jakarta. (CNN)
The United Nations Human Rights Council approves the Goldstone on war in Gaza, and Hamas accused Israel of war crimes. (Jerusalem Post) (AFP) (Al Jazeera)
Five men sentenced to Sydney, Australia of plotting a terrorist attack. (News.com.au) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
Part of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Delta Niger (MEND) ended a three-month truce and resumed attacks against the oil industry in Nigeria. (BBC) (Reuters) (IOL)
Guinea
Guinea's Minister of Public Alpha Diallo resigns after a massacre of opposition supporters, following the Minister of Agriculture Abdourahmane Sanoh who resigned days earlier. (IOL)
The Secretary General of the United Nations Ban Ki-Moon announced his intention create a commission on the assassination of unarmed protesters in Guinea last month. (AP via Google News)
Australian pop singer, songwriter, Kylie Minogue and actress made her Hindi film debut in Blue, considered the most expensive production ever Bollywood. (The Times)
At least seven people are killed and at least ten people were injured in an explosion in a mosque, police station and passengers by bus in Peshawar, Pakistan. (Xinhua) (RT) (BBC)
In Berlin, the Neues Museum officially reopened the rebuilt after 70 years. (Deutsche Welle) (The Times)
Zimbabwe:
The MDC takes part the unity government with Zanu-PF in Zimbabwe after one of their members, Roy Bennett is being held on terrorism charges. (Zim Online) (Associated Press) (Xinhua)
Roy Bennett is then released from prison on bail, ordered by the High Court. (Reuters) (Associated Press)
North and South Korea fail not agree on other family gatherings, after the North related to the prospect with deliveries of humanitarian aid. (Korea Times) (Straits Times)
Controversial Dutch politician Geert Wilders arrives in UK amid protests from the Netherlands, proclaiming "a victory for freedom of expression. "(CNN) (Guardian) (Reuters)
Uruguay became the first country to provide a laptop for each child attending public primary school. (BBC)
News of 17 October 2009 (17/10/2009) (Saturday)
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Czech President Klaus compares Vclav the Lisbon Treaty to "an unstoppable train speeding" he was forced to sign. (BBC)
A report on the dumping of toxic waste by Trafigura in Cote d'Ivoire is published. (BBC)
Two policemen were killed after their helicopter police is shot by drug traffickers in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Ten drug smugglers were also killed in the violence. (Associated Press) (Brazzil Mag) (Al Jazeera)
The sheriff of Fort Collins, Colorado recommends that criminal charges be laid on the boy balloon hoax. (AP via Minneapolis Star-Tribune) (Sky News)
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) imposed an embargo on arms to Guinea after the death of opposition supporters at a rally last month. (African Press Agency) (Reuters)
A South Korean legislator says Korea North holds 154,000 of its citizens in the gulags. (Yonhap) (AFP) (BBC)
A Colombian military official said that eight members of the FARC and five Colombian soldiers Army were killed in heavy fighting in the department of Cauca. (AFP via Google News)
Iran Maziar Bahari Newsweek released from custody bail after four months of detention following the disputed presidential election. (Press TV) (IOL) (Associated Press)
More than one million anti-abortion protesters March in Madrid in one of the largest demonstrations since 2003 and 2004 anti-war demonstrations. (The Australian) (Reuters India)
Thousands of fans, celebrities and politicians attend the funeral of singer Stephen Gately Boyzone in Dublin. (RT) (The Guardian) (The Times) (ABC News)
30,000 soldiers of the Pakistani army started an offensive operation against the Taliban and their allies in South Waziristan. (BBC)
The Maldivian government, including President Mohamed Nasheed, is the first meeting of the submarine to the Cabinet, to highlight the threat of global planet. (Miadhu News) (BBC)
32 people are killed in a fire at a fireworks warehouse in southern India during celebrations Diwali. (Hindustan Times) (CNN)
News of 18 October 2009 (18/10/2009) (Sunday)
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Yemen claims to have killed 18 Shiite rebels in the fight against the North. (Pro Kerala)
Iraq accuses neighbors of stealing items of national archives, including documents dating back several centuries. (AFP)
Ukraine begins his first presidential campaign since the Orange Revolution of 2004. (Reuters)
A Rwandan doctor working in a French hospital is suspended after a nurse locates an Internet Interpol arrest warrant, accusing 1994 "Genocide, war crimes." (Reuters)
At least 60 Taliban militants were killed in an ongoing offensive in South Waziristan, northwest Pakistan. (The Guardian) (Xinhua)
Jenson Button wins 2009 Formula One World Championship at Interlagos, So Paulo, Brazil, finishing fifth in the Brazilian Grand 2009 Price.
Germany and Israel complaining about a museum Bangkok picture of a hello by Adolf Hitler next to the slogan "Hitler is not dead. "(BBC) (Radio Netherlands Worldwide)
Rick Hurricane strengthens to a Category 5 storm, becoming the strongest hurricane since a decade in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. (Associated Press) (Straits Times) (CNN)
The Australian state of Queensland says the state emergency after more than 50 forest fires out of control. (TVNZ) (Al Jazeera) (The Australian)
Eight people are trapped in Hubei, China, for "disturbing public order" after 10,000 people took part in riots after the controversial death of a chief of June (BBC) (China Daily) (Bangkok Post)
Scotland Yard investigates a complaint about an article by Jan Moir in the British newspaper Daily Mail tabloid about his point views on the death of Boyzone singer Stephen Gately. (RT)
2009 bombing Pishin:
Senior commanders of the Revolutionary Guards are among 35 people killed in a suicide bombing in south-east. (Zee News) (Press TV) (RIA Novosti)
Iranian state television, said Britain was directly involved in the attack and he intends as a distraction from the problems it faces in Afghanistan. (Reuters)
The Pakistani charge d'affaires was summoned after Iran said it has evidence the attack was launched from Pakistani soil. (Press TV)
Seven people are killed and 20 injured after gunmen fire into a bar open in Puerto Rico. (Associated Press)
Two foreign aid workers, Sharon Commins and Hilda Kawuki an Irishman and a Ugandan working for the charity GOAL captured in the Sudanese region of Darfur, more than three months are published. (Associated Press) (RT) (BBC)
A boat with 76 migrants on board to Canada is seized by the Canadian Navy and the RCMP off its west coast Pacific Ocean. (CTV) (AFP)
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) helps organizations with two Indonesian and Malaysian boats in distress. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
The Icelandic government says it has come to a new agreement with the governments of Netherlands and the United Kingdom during the refund 5 billion dollars. (BBC)
News of 19 October 2009 (19/10/2009) (Monday)
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Charles Wesley Mumbere is crowned king of the people in the neighborhood Bakonjo Rwenzururu Uganda. (NPR) (AP via Google)
U.S. election fraud investigators Nationsacked throw third of the votes of President Hamid Karzai leading to a second round of the presidential election. (AP via Google)
Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico says it will also require an opt-out in the Lisbon Treaty if the Czech Republic is granted. (Der Spiegel)
Lauhenaspessy Abraham ("Bram Captain "), a baron of suspected smuggler, was detained in Indonesia. (The Sydney Morning Herald) (The Australian)
Opposition to the request of Parliament Australian information on the wages of high-profile Kerry O'Brien, 7.30 Report presenter for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
32 extra-solar planets are discovered and announced, which sets the record for most exoplanets discovered in one day and in a months. (CNN)
News of October 20, 2009 (2009-10-20) (Tuesday)
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Afghanistan orders of the commission Election of a second ballot for the Nov. 7 presidential election in Afghanistan. (AP via Jamaica Observer)
In a set of laws cannon Vatican welcomes groups of Anglicans as "ordinariates personal" in the Catholic Church, Pope Benedict XVI announced. (BBC) (CNN)
A court Yemen sentences 10 Shiites to death Houthi rebels and detained five others during clashes that killed hundreds of people last year. (Al Jazeera) (Al Bawaba)
Nine North Koreans who entered the Danish embassy in Hanoi, Vietnam last month to leave for South Korea. (The Copenhagen Post)
Richard Herman resigns as Chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the wake of a scandal for admission. (Chicago Tribune)
Sun Microsystems announced plans to lay off up to 3,000 workers as it prepares to merge with Oracle Corp. (Market Watch)
The entire government of Kyrgyzstan Kurmanbek Bakiyev resigns as president announces a new campaign reform. (AFP) (BBC) (Taiwan News)
Niger is suspended by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) after President Mamadou Tandja went ahead with a parliamentary election, he asked to be transferred to boycotts. (BBC) (Reuters)
At least four students were killed and many injured in bomb explosions in an Islamic university in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AP via Google)
China vows to save the crew aboard the Chinese vessel Xin Hai after it was hijacked by Somali pirates in the Indian Ocean. Pirates threaten to kill the crew if is an attempt to save them. (Xinhua) (CNN) (The Guardian)
Detectives arrested a man in Belfast as part of the barracks shooting Massereene County Antrim, Northern Ireland, in March 2009. (RT) (BBC) (Associaton release)
Iran buries its dead members of the Revolutionary Guards, killed in a suicide bombing two days ago. Thousands of people attend the funeral. (BBC) (Press TV)
The U.S. Supreme Court agrees to decide whether federal courts have the authority to order prisoners held at Guantanamo to be released in the country. (The New York Times)
Nearly 100,000 women signed a petition Italian Berlusconi said after a politician is "more beautiful than intelligent" on live TV. (BBC) (Reuters)
rare footage of the abuse of alleged witches caused controversy in India. (BBC)
The United States observes National Day on writing, sponsored by the Council National Teachers of English (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette).
Current events of October 21, 2009 (21/10/2009) (Wednesday)
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The Philadelphia Phillies won the 2009 National League Championship Series 4 games to 1 after beating the Los Angeles Dodgers 104. (New York Times)
A report on the discovery of a new species of dinosaur, haagarorum Fruitadens, measuring about 70 cm long, was published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. (RSPB), (BBC) (The Daily Telegraph)
After 10 hours, a man armed with a gun and wearing military camouflage holding 8 people hostage in downtown Edmonton, Canada during the 2009 Council of occupational accidents in Alberta goes hostage crisis peacefully for the Edmonton Police Service (Global Edmonton) (Edmonton CTV)
Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev called the former mayor of Bishkek Daniar Usenov, as new Prime Minister after the resignation of his predecessor, Igor Chudinov. (BBC) (Reuters)
President of the Marshall Islands Litokwa Tomeing was ousted in the first country voting favor of censorship. Ruben Zackhras was appointed acting president until a new election October 23, 2009. (AFP) (Yokwe)
Hundreds of Protesters gather in Lima, Peru, as a bill proposing the legalization of some form of abortion is approved. (BBC)
The United States is to send a mission to Burma for rare talks with the military government. (AFP) (Reuters)
Several people were arrested during a bomb attack in southeastern Iran that killed 42 people, including members of the Revolutionary Guard. (Associated Press)
Azza Transport Flight 2241 crashed on take-off from Sharjah International Airport in the United Arab Emirates, killing all six crew members. (Gulfnews) (Arabian Business) (Network Aviation Safety)
Gunmen take six people captive in a Lidl supermarket in Sevran, France. (BBC) (Euronews) (Ghana Broadcasting Corporation) (Channel News Asia) (Jakarta Globe)
At least thirteen people died in India's Rajasthan state after Goa Express crashes in the stationary Mewar Express. (CNN)
A freight train derailed east of Poti, Georgia, in an incident described as "sabotage." (BBC) (The Times of India) (Khaleej Times) (RIA Novosti)
The International Atomic Energy Agency proposed draft agreement for Iran and the three powers World agreement, aimed at reducing international concerns over Tehran's nuclear program. (BBC)
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk agrees to station interceptor missiles SM-3 from United States President Barack Obama reformulated missile defense system on the territory this NATO ally. (The New York Times)
Daniel O'Connell's crypt in the cemetery of Glasnevin, Dublin is refurbished and opened to tourists. (RT)
Sentenced a Japanese who served seventeen years in prison for the murder of a four year old girl, has pleaded not guilty at a retrial. (BBC)
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced its intention to reduce the number of Crown corporations through privatization of some. (RIA Novosti) (Financial Times)
Former President Mandela of South Africa Nelson denies writing a foreword praising the biography of the Republic of Congo Denis Sassou Nguesso, the right to an address in Africa. (IOL) (Guardian)
News of October 22, 2009 (2009-10-22) (Thursday)
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Lutheran Sweden decides to conduct same-sex marriage becomes the first major church to do so. (Reuters)
China's economy grows 8.9% in the third quarter of last year, the fastest pace in a year. (Bloomberg) (AFP) (CNN)
In a policy shift, the British Broadcasting Corporation provides a platform on the controversial question time in the extreme right British National Party (BNP) leader Nick Griffin. (BBC) (Associated Press)
The operating system Microsoft Windows 7 will retail at worldwide. (CNET News)
The rights of Russian civil society Memorial is awarded the 2009 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought. (Press EP Press) (RIA Novosti) (Euronews)
Ethiopia appeals for food aid for 6.2 million people face starvation. (AFP) (CBC)
Close than 6,000 Tamil refugees are released from the main camp of Sri Lanka for people displaced by war, to be relocated during coming weeks. (BBC)
A U.S. State Department report to Congress states that war crimes were committed by the army Sri Lanka and the rebel Tamil Tigers in the closing months of civil war in Sri Lanka. (AFP) (Guardian) (BBC)
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security will allow Russian and Chinese tourists to travel to the Northern Mariana Islands without a visa. (Saipan Tribune)
The Olympic flame was lit at a ceremony in Olympia, Greece to start the 2010 Olympic Torch Relay. (Gamesbids.com)
The U.S. House Financial Services Committee approved a able to establish a Financial Consumer Protection Agency. (Washington Post)
News of October 23, 2009 (2009-10-23) (Friday)
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At the end of their three-week synod at the Vatican, over 200 Catholic bishops from Africa issue a 12-page document asking what they call corrupt political leaders on the continent to repent of their sins or to resign and to criticize multinational corporations that exploit and destroy the earth. (BBC) (Reuters) (CBC)
Bernard Fellay, Superior General of the Society St. Pius X, said that the Vatican is considering the possibility of converting the group into a personal Prelature Lefebvrists. (Pakistan Christian TV)
Phone charger Universal works with any mobile handset is approved by the International Telecommunication Union. (BBC)
Jean Todt defeats Ari Vatanen in an election to become the new head of the International Federation to the Automobile, replacing former chief Max Mosley, who served for 16 years. (BBC)
Contracts in the United Kingdom's GDP by 0.4% between July and September, meaning that the United States United contract has been for 6 consecutive quarters for the first time since records were kept in 1955. (BBC) (RT)
The Swiss Government declares that the United States has formally requested the extradition of director Roman Polanski for unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor in 1977. (AP via Washington Post) (Yahoo)
A huge explosion rips through a prestigious district of Peshawar in Pakistan. (AFP via Google News and Yahoo News)
A huge explosion occurred in an oil refinery in Catão, Puerto Rico. (Reuters)
Vitit Muntarbhorn, United Nations Special Rapporteur for North Korea says the country must improve its "catastrophic" human rights record, adding that it should provide food to more than 8 million citizens. (Al Jazeera) (Taiwan News) (BBC)
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) launched its first human rights body, the ASEAN Inter-Governmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR). (Thai News Agency) (Associated Press)
A white Kenya, Thomas PG Cholmondeley, was freed after five months of sentence of eight months in prison for manslaughter. (Daily Nation) (BBC)
News of 24 October 2009 (24/10/2009) (Saturday)
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The International Day of Climate Action took place in the world as a prelude to the United Nations Climate Change 2009, with more than 5,400 advocacy of the claim that 350 ppm is the maximum safe level of carbon dioxide Earth's atmosphere, and called to the mitigation of global warming before the Earth reaches a tipping point climate. (New York Times) (CNN)
Ten bodies had bullet wounds supposedly belonging to a Colombian football team are abducted in Venezuela. (BBC) (American Latin Herald Tribune)
Pakistan reports re-take control of Kotka, South Waziristan, the birthplace of Pakistani Taliban chief Mehsud Hakimullah and also the city native of the master trainer of suicide bombers Taliban, Qari Hussain, after a week of fierce fighting with the Taliban. (BBC)
Morrissey, former lead singer of The Smiths, is hospitalized after an illness on stage when performing "This Charming Man" during his world tour. (BBC) (Guardian) (New Sky)
Rosanna Al-Yami, a journalist in Saudi Arabia, was sentenced to sixty lashes and a ban on travel for two years for his involvement in a controversy sex program. (BBC) (CNN) (The New York Times) (Radio Netherlands Worldwide) (Reuters)
senior envoys from North Korea and U.S. hold talks rare on the North Korean nuclear program in New York. (Channel News Asia) (Reuters)
At least 15 people were killed after two trains come into Al-Ayyat collision near Cairo, Egypt. (BBC) (Al Jazeera)
Less than a week after the release of aid workers and AIM Commins Hilda Kawuki Sharon, the International Committee of the Red Cross confirms one of its French employees were kidnapped in Darfur. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
Myanmar Prime Minister Thein Sein told the 15th ASEAN summit his government is prepared to relax the residency of National League for Democracy Aung San Suu Kyi. (Financial Times) (Bangkok Post)
An undersea earthquake of magnitude 7.0 struck off the coast of Indonesia Eastern. (Associated Press) (Jakarta Post)
Thousands of people protested in London, England, demanding the withdrawal of British troops from Afghanistan. (BBC) (The Times) (AFP)
The ruling National Movement for the Development of the company wins a controversial parliamentary election Niger. (African Press Agency) (AFP)
An attempted assassination of the President of the Chechen Republic Ramzan Kadyrov is avoided. (RIA Novosti) (Bloomberg)
News of 25 October 2009 (25/10/2009) (Sunday)
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The Yankees New York beat the Los Angeles Angels 5-2 in Game 6 of the 2009 American League Championship Series to advance to the World Series. (New York Times)
Israeli police and Palestinians clash on the Temple Mount, a holy place in Jerusalem, resulting in 12 arrests. (BBC) (Straits Times) (Associated Press)
Explosions kill 155 people and injuring at least 500 in central Baghdad, the deadliest attack in the country for two years. (BBC) (Reuters India) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
India tells China that the Dalai Lama is honored "guest" and will not be allowed to visit Arunachal Pradesh in spite of protests from China. (Associated Press) (Times of India) (Straits Times)
Nigeria main militant group, Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta declares a permanent ceasefire. (NEXT) (African Press Agency) (Xinhua)
Maksharip Aushev, human rights activist and leader of the opposition Ingushetia, was shot while driving his car near Nartan in Kabardino-Balkaria. A passenger was also attacked. (Xinhua) (Radio Netherlands Worldwide) (RIA Novosti)
Tunisians vote at a general election. (Al Jazeera)
Uruguayans voting at a general election. (Press TV) (Associated Press)
Easter Islanders vote to restrict the number of immigrants in a referendum. (Radio Netherlands Worldwide) (BBC)
The fire an oil refinery continues to burn out of control in Catão, Puerto Rico, two days after the initial explosion. (Washington Post)
Buildings around the Netherlandst. Martin Cathedral, Utrecht, Rotterdam and Groningen Euromast Martinitorenim their lights as clocks go back in Europe. (Radio Netherlands Worldwide)
Inspectors from the United Nations nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy (IAEA), arrived in Iran to inspect disclosed a new nuclear facility near the city of Qom. (CNN)
It is revealed that the composer Andrew Lloyd Webber has been diagnosed with prostate cancer. (The Guardian)
News of October 26, 2009 (2009-10-26) (Monday)
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President of Tunisia Zine El Abidine Ben Ali won 90% of the votes, his fifth term and a new five-year term in general election the country. (BBC) (Al Jazeera) (CBC)
Jurelang Zedkaia is elected the 5th President of the Marshall Islands, following the ouster of Litokwa Tomeing in a vote of confidence last week. (Bernama)
At least seven people were killed and at least four other people were injured when a three-storey fall in Palma, Majorca. The dead include at least three of Colombia. (BBC)
Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic boycotts his own trial because he started at The Hague. (BBC) (The Guardian) (The Australian)
UN tribunal in Freetown, Sierra Leone saw its last case, after seven years of civil war inquiry the country. (BBC) (Reuters Africa) (Ghana Broadcasting Corporation)
The trial of singer and actress Noriko Sakai Japan begins in Tokyo. (Xinhua) (BBC) (Japan Today)
South Korean cloning researcher Hwang Woo-Suk was found guilty of fraud over his stem cell research. (BBC) (Radio Netherlands Worldwide) (New Zealand Herald)
King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia cut the sentence of 60 lashes for Rosanna Yami, a journalist involved in the sex scandal Red Lines. (BBC) (Al Arabiya) (CBC)
A court in Sri Lanka in Colombo reported Vetrivel Jaseeharan, the publisher of the monthly Northeast, and his wife after being accused conspiracy against the government in March 2008. The editor was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment in August 2009. (BBC) (Khaleej Times)
It was announced that Silvio Berlusconi will be held Nov. 16. (BBC)
A Milan court rules as directed by Silvio Berlusconi's Mediaset is anti-competitive relative News Corporation to run by Rupert Murdoch. (BBC)
The five surviving sextuplets Conway, the first sextuplets born on the island of Ireland, back home. (BBC)
At least 10 patients operated on thirty-four partially blinded after free cataract operations in Nellore, Andhra Pradesh. (BBC)
A crater found in northern Latvia, first thought to strike the meteorite, proves to be a hoax perpetrated by telecom operator Tele2. (Fox News)
Uldis No, a scientist at the Latvian Environment, Geology and Meteorology Center, said: "This is not a real crater is artificial .." (The Sun).
Prof Salamat Akhtar requires the repeal of blasphemy laws in Pakistan. (Pakistan Christian TV)
Silvio Berlusconi has been diagnosed with scarlet fever. (The Times)
The composer and pianist Elton John cancels its third concert in several days because of flu. (BBC) (Daily Telegraph) (CBC)
Yahoo! terminates its hosting GeoCities Free service, ten years after its purchase by David Bohnet and Rezner John. (The Los Angeles Times)
The Australian authorities provide Aus $ 1 million reward in their search for a man suspected of ordering the murder of a vampire. (BBC)
A police officer in Liverpool in England, is hospitalized in a state of danger for life after suffering a homophobic attack by a gang of twenty youths. (Sky News) (BBC)
Current events of October 27, 2009 (2009-10-27) (Tuesday)
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An Australian government report warns that globalization global climate change threatens the coastal lifestyle of the country, with the prospect of a ban on coastal homes. (The Guardian) (The Daily Telegraph)
Professions Grassroots Austrian universities extend to several others in Vienna, Graz and Linz, requiring education free for everyone. (Boston Herald) (CNN iReport) (Austrian Times)
Qatar inaugurates one of the trains of the world's largest LNG, operated by RasGas. (Al Bawaba) (The Peninsula) (Gulf Times)
Pope Benedict XVI appointed Cardinal Peter Turkson of Cape Coast, Ghana, to serve as the new head of the Pontifical Council Justice and Peace. (Pakistan Christian TV)
NASA announced a delay in the launch of the Ares IX test rocket, developed to replace the space shuttle, due to poor weather. (New Scientist) (BBC)
The Church of Scientology in France is convicted of organized fraud. (France 24) (The Times) (Al Jazeera)
China confirms that it has executed two Tibetans during unrest last year. (Angola Press) (The Guardian) (The Hindu)
The son of former President François Mitterrand French, Jean-Christophe Mitterrand, a former government minister, Charles Pasqua, are convicted for their role in illegal arms sales to Angola. (Associated Press) (Reuters)
A nephew of interim leader Honduras Roberto Micheletti and a military officer of high rank are found murdered. (Times of India) (BBC) (Press TV)
A British couple are missing after their vessel was hijacked by Somali pirates off the Seychelles. (Bloomberg) (AFP) (Xinhua)
North Korea says a man South Korean defector to North Korea across the DMZ Zone. (Yonhap) (Associated Press) (Xinhua)
Burundi and Uganda strengthen security after threats by militant Somali al-Shabaab, a group with ties to Al Qaeda, to attack their capitals. (Reuters India) (VOA)
The autonomous province of Aceh in Indonesia to ban women from wearing tight trousers under a new law, if a statute authorizing stoning to death adulterers and flogging of homosexuals will be reviewed. (Globe Jakarta) (Straits Times) (Reuters South Africa)
The authorities Venezuela to take a number of people accused of being intelligence agents from neighboring Colombia on charges of espionage. (El Universal) (Reports Colombia) (BBC)
Prime Minister of Thailand Abhisit backs autonomy for the provinces restive south to end violence the region. (The Nation) (Straits Times)
News of 28 October 2009 (28/10/2009) (Wednesday)
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Canadian folk singer Taylor Mitchell is mutilated to death by coyotes at the age of 19. (CBC) (The Star)
Voters go to Mozambique to the polls for general elections. (AFP via Google News) (IOL)
An explosion in Meena Bazar, Peshawar, Pakistan, killing at least 95 people while 110 are injured. (Geo TV) (The Times)
12 people including six UN staff were killed after Taliban militants attack a house guest international in Afghan capital Kabul. (Associated Press) (New York Times)
One of the last German Nazi war crimes trial begins with Heinrich Boere charge the killing of three civilians in the Netherlands. (The Local) (BBC) (Deutsche Welle)
Ares IX, section first test rocket from NASA Ares I launches with successful launch pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center complex in Florida on a test flight suborbital. (CNN)
The Lebanese army says it found and deactivated four 107 mm rockets in the garden of a house built in part one day after a rocket fired from hit Hula northern Israeli border town of Kiryat Shmona. This is the fifth time the firing of rockets have been used to try to break the cease-fire. (Reuters)
Chinese police rescue more than 2,000 children in a six-month campaign against human trafficking. (BBC) (The Daily Telegraph)
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