Friday, June 18, 2010

World News Briefs -- June 18, 2010



Kyrgyzstan Death Toll Could Be 2,000, Warns Leader -- The Guardian

Rosa Otunbayeva says Uzbek refugees will be allowed to return home and that wrecked city of Osh will be rebuilt

Kyrgyzstan's interim leader Rosa Otunbayeva said today that the death toll from savage ethnic violence in the south of the country could be as high as 2,000, as she paid her first visit to the region since the unrest began.

Otunbayeva, who pledged that the hundreds of thousands of Uzbek refugees would be allowed to return home, told Russian media that she would "multiply by 10" the official death toll of 191.

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MIDDLE EAST

Turkey: May air raid killed 100 Kurdish rebels.

U.S. and Europe press tighter sanctions on Iran.

Israel eases but doesn't end its Gaza blockade.

ASIA

Interim pres: Kyrgyz violence likely kills 2,000.

UN official warns of extremism in Central Asia.

S.Lanka marks Tiger defeat as war crimes pressure mounts.

Scholars see future of Pakistan democracy as uncertain.

World’s mining companies covet Afghan riches.

AFRICA

Nelson Mandela makes first public appearance during World Cup.

Al Qaeda recruits in Africa.

Kenya police assault, seek bribes from Somalia refugees, report says.

Christians expelled, Morocco and US spar over religious freedom.

EUROPE

Britain's Cameron to hold post-summit talks with France's Sarkozy.

Bank of Italy to publish stress tests, Draghi says.

Facebook draws 7,000 to anti-Muslim pork sausage party in Paris.

Many heads of state to attend Sweden's royal wedding.

AMERICAS

An angry US Congress lambasts BP chief Hayward over safety.

Colombian coal mine blast kills 16, traps dozens.

Canada needs security tsar, Air India probe says.

TERRORISM/THE LONG WAR

Suspect in Times Square bombing attempt was paid by Pakistani Taliban, indictment says.

Radical Islamist group is returning to Chicago for major recruitment drive.

Federal judge rejects terrorism suspect’s plea to halt his strip-searches.

ECONOMY/FINANCE/BUSINESS

Fresh economic worries trigger rush into gold.

Reality of America’s fiscal mess starting to bite.

Russia to help found ‘new world economic order,’ Medvedev says.

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