World News
Labor Day Parade, float of Women's Trade Union League, New York, 7 September 1908.
photo: US Library of Congress
Labor Day, Workhorses and Revolutions
read more WorldNews.com
Article by WorldNews.com Correspondent Dallas Darling. "Standing at the fringe of a crowd watching the men from the slaughterhouse, in blood-stained aprons, struggling to cut away a horse that had collapsed in its tracks while pulling a wagonload of coal," writes Robert Littell in "The Revolutionist," Zander thought about companions and relatives...
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates walks to a press conference with President Hamid Karzai at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, Sept. 2, 2010.
photo: USAF / Master Sgt. Jerry Morrison
Afghan officials closer to talks with insurgents
read more The Boston Globe
KABUL, Afghanistan - In a further step toward reconciling with insurgents, President Hamid Karzai said yesterday that he will soon name the members of a council tasked with pursuing peace talks with rebels willing to break with Al Qaeda and recognize the government in Kabul. Karzai's announcement was given added poignancy by comments from the...
A man protects himself with an umbrella as he rides a bike in Antigua, Guatemala, Friday, Sept. 3, 2010.
photo: AP / Moises Castillo
Guatemala hit by severe weather
read more Al Jazeera
Unrelenting rains and severe weather have lashed Guatemala, leaving at least 21 people dead over the past 24 hours, in what the country's president calls a "national tragedy". Twelve people were killed, and another dozen injured on Saturday when a rain-triggered landslide buried a bus on a major highway near central Chimaltenango city....
An UNAMID peacekeeper patrols at the Abu Shouk refugee camp, near the Darfur town of al-Fasher, Sudan Thursday, March 26, 2009. The Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir is visiting Libya in his third trip abroad in less than a week, after an international court issued an arrest warrant for him on war crimes
photo: AP / Nasser Nasser
At least 43 killed in violence in Sudan's Darfur
read more The Times of India
CAIRO: Clashes in a refugee camp in Sudan's restive Darfur region left six people dead, UN-African Union peacekeepers said Saturday, days after violence elsewhere in the area claimed the lives of at least 37 people dead. The spokesman for the UNAMID mission, Chris Cycmanick, said the fighting took place in the Hamidia refugee camp in West Darfur...
An unidentified Bahraini man walks past anti-government graffiti Thursday, Aug. 26, 2010, scrawled in the Shiite Muslim village of Malkiya, Bahrain.
photo: AP / Hasan Jamali
Bahrain accuses Shia activists of 'terror campaign'
read more BBC News
Prosecutors in Bahrain have accused 23 Shia activists of planning to overthrow the state's Sunni-dominated government. The men, arrested since mid-August, belonged to a "sophisticated terrorist network" that was planning and executing a "campaign of violence and subversion", an official said....
Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Mohamed ElBaradei speaks during an interview with the Associated Press, on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 2005, at Vienna's International Center.
photo: AP / Ronald Zak
ElBaradei says government behind daughter's swimsuit photos
read more Zeenews
Cairo: Mohamed ElBaradei, the former UN nuclear chief turned Egyptian reformer, accused the government of publishing pictures of his daughter in a swimsuit and at events with alcohol in reply to his bid for democracy, a newspaper reported on Saturday. The Nobel Laureate, who returned to Egypt early year to push for reforms, told the independent...
Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai, during a press conference with U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan,Thursday, Sept. 2, 2010.
photo: AP / Mustafa Quraishi
Karzai announces council to deal with Taliban reconciliation
read more CNN
Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- Afghan President Hamid Karzai announced the creation of a high peace council as part of the reconciliation effort to reintegrate some Taliban militants, a spokesman for his office said on Saturday. Syamak Herawi, the spokesman, said the council will be very effective in bringing peace and stability in the country. The...
Bricks and other rubble are scattered outside stores in central Christchurch, New Zealand, Saturday, Sept. 4, 2010.
photo: AP / NZPA, David Wethey
City awakes to billion-dollar aftershock
read more NZ Herald
5:30 AM Sunday Sep 5, 2010 Share Email Print Expand Shrink Looting, homeless families and thousands of lives thrown into disarray: Kiwis are coming to terms with the devastation of one of their proudest cities. The 7.1 magnitude earthquake caused terror across Canterbury, damaged nearly 100 buildings and tore apart water pipes, sewerage, roads and...
Protesters hold a banner reading ""No to State Racism" and a doctored image of President Nicolas Sarkozy in a fez, at a march to protest French President Nicolas Sarkozy's security policies, including the recent expulsions of Gypsies, or Roma, in Paris, Saturday, Sept. 4, 2010.
photo: AP / Francois Mori
French protesters deride Roma crackdown
read more CBC
Protesters march in Paris against government security policies, including expulsions of Roma. (Francois Mori/Associated Press) A whistle-blowing, drum-beating crowd of thousands demonstrated in Paris on Saturday against expulsions of Roma as well as other new security measures adopted by...
Waves lap against the shore at West Dennis Beach, in West Dennis, Mass., on Cape Cod, Saturday, Sept. 4, 2010.
photo: AP / Steven Senne
Earl reaches Canada with hurricane-speed punch
read more The Star
HALIFAX, Canada (Reuters) - Hurricane Earl lashed into the Canadian Maritime provinces on Saturday, picking up wind speed in warm Atlantic waters after a surprisingly tame brush with the U.S. East Coast. Hurricane Danielle is (L) is seen southeast of Bermuda and Tropical Storm Earl (C) is pictured west of the Cape Verde Islands, in this National...
 
 
I like a drink as much as the next person but the latest public health statistics are enough to...
It is four months since British voters expelled Labour and Gordon Brown from power. Only last...
The Scepticism in Climate questions becomes always louder - world-wide. There are some very...
 
DUBLIN (AP) - Protesters hurled shoes and eggs at Tony Blair who held the first public signing of his memoir amid high security in Ireland's capital. Hundreds more people lined up to have their books autographed - evidence that the divisions left by...
photo: AP / Peter Morrison
 
About £4,000 in cash, which had been paid to an agent as part of a newspaper sting operation, was found in the rooms of three...
photo: AP / Matt Dunham
 
Unison leader warns leadership frontrunner that he must abandon New Labour's strong preference for privatisation David Miliband has been accused of causing untold 'trauma' to public sector workers. Photograph: Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA...
photo: AP / Sang Tan
 
General Sir Richard Dannatt attacks Tony Blair and Gordon Brown over split on spending levels Then prime minister Tony Blair addresses troops in Basra in 2003, becoming the first foreign leader to visit postwar Iraq. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AP...
photo: AP / Andy Wong
 
Britain's biggest banks will hand over their worst economic case survival plans to the Financial Services Authority (FSA) next month ahead of the G20 summit in South Korea. The recovery and resolution plans, more commonly known as "living wills",...
photo: AP / Matt Dunham
 
A surge in bank lending. A speculative rush to buy houses - not just second properties, but third or fourth homes. Soaring property prices. Banks hiding the loans off their balance sheets. Surely it could not be happening again? And not so soon? But...
photo: AP / Alexander F. Yuan
 
 
Find Your Own News


News by Region
Politics
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair arrives at the RTE television studios in Dublin, Ireland, Friday, Sept. 3, 2010. Blair was in the Irish capital for a book signing of his new autobiography. Blair's  long-awaited memoir hit bookstores Wednesday, and the revealing, self-justifying 700-page volume provides plenty of fodder for the former British leader's supporters _ and detractors.
Sport
Germany's Miroslav Klose celebrates after scoring during the semifinal match between Germany and Turkey in Basel, Switzerland, Wednesday, June 25, 2008, at the Euro 2008 European Soccer Championships in Austria and Switzerland.
Business
Pedestrians wait to cross a street in front of an electric board in Tokyo as Japan's key stock index plunged a stunning 9.6 percent Friday, Oct. 10, 2008 to close out its worst week in history. The benchmark Nikkei 225 index tumbled 881.06 points to 8,276.43, its lowest since May 2003. It was its biggest one-day percentage loss since the stock market crash of October
Sci / Tech / Health
French President Nicolas Sarkozy shakes hands with children holding French and British union flags after a commemorative ceremony at the Mont Valerien memorial in Suresnes, west of Paris, Friday, June 18, 2010, on the 69th anniversary of Charles de Gaulle's appeal from London for a French resistance to the German during World War II.
Politics
President Barack Obama reports on the economy as the latest unemployment figures are released, Friday, Sept. 3, 2010, in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington.
Sport
England national soccer team player Wayne Rooney speaks during a news conference at the team hotel in Watford, England, Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2009. England are due to play Ukraine in a World Cup qualifier on Saturday.
Business
Charice Pempengco performs during the David Foster And Friends concert at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino Hollywood, Florida: 01.11.09
Sci / Tech / Health
President Barack Obama speaks about the economy, Wednesday, June 2, 2010, at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.
Politics
President Barack Obama greets people waiting on the tarmac after arriving at the Port Columbus International Airport, in Columbus, Ohio, Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2010, on Air Force One.
Sport
England's Kevin Pietersen inspects his right index finger during thier practice session ahead of their 3rd and final test match against New Zealand at Trent Bridge Stadium, Nottingham, England, Wednesday June 4, 2008. The final test starts Thursday.
Business
Gasoline - Crude Oil - Price Hike
Sci / Tech / Health
Cinnamon
Politics
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard  speaks at a press conference in Canberra, Australia, Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2010. A Greens lawmaker agreed Wednesday to help the center-left Labor Party form a minority Australian government in a climate-focused alliance while other kingmaker legislators said they are close to deciding whether to back Labor or a conservative coalition.
Sport
Pakistan's one-day captain Shahid Afridi, top center right, huddles with the rest of his team before the one-day cricket match  between Somerset County Cricket Club and Pakistan at the County Ground in Taunton, England, Thursday, Sept. 2, 2010.
Business
A kid's meal of macaroni and chocolate milk is served by a worker at Burger King with a toy in San Jose, Calif., Tuesday, April 27, 2010. In an effort to curb childhood obesity, county officials in Silicon Valley voted Tuesday to ban restaurants from giving away toys and other freebies that often come with high-calorie meals aimed at kids.
Sci / Tech / Health
Vegetable dish
 
RSS RSS more headlines news