Turkey - on Europe's doorstep, but still so far from joining the club
The Independent - 01/10/2005
TURKEY - Joining the European Union is the great Turkish dream.
However distant the goal, however bitter many Turks may feel about the disdain in which their country has been held since it first applied 40 years ago, that dream has endured.
US defers sanctions on Saudi
AP - 01/10/2005
USA - The United States has postponed punishing Saudi Arabia, its close ally and key oil supplier, for restricting religious freedom.
US officials said on Friday that the Bush administration had decided to delay imposing sanctions on Saudi Arabia for six months.
Northern Vietnam reels from typhoon, 57 dead
AFP - 29/09/2005
VIETNAM - Northern Vietnam was reeling from the aftermath of Typhoon Damrey which triggered landslides and flooding that left at least 57 people dead and caused widespread destruction.
Powerful Earquake Rocks Northern Peru
AP - 26/09/2005
LIMA, PERU - A powerful earthquake hit northern Peru late Sunday, causing power outages and cutting phone service throughout much of the region. At least one person was killed, officials said.
Merkel urges Schroeder to concede
CNN - 19/09/2005
GERMANY - Conservative leader Angela Merkel has urged Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's party to enter talks to form a "grand coalition" under her leadership.
Norway votes to spend oil riches on welfare state
AP - 13/09/2005
NORWAY - The Norwegian opposition party regained power in the oil-rich country's general election yesterday, according to exit polls, after wooing voters with pledges to plough cash into their already generous welfare state system.
North Korea adamant on nuclear power as talks resume
Reuters - 13/09/2005
BEIJING, CHINA - North Korea clung to its right to a civilian nuclear programme on Tuesday, a position that has prevented progress in breaking a deadlock over its nuclear ambitions, as crisis talks opened in Beijing.
Strong earthquake rocks Aceh
AP - 11/09/2005
INDONESIA - A strong earthquake rocked Indonesia's tsunami-battered Aceh province, causing residents to flee their homes in panic, seismologists said Sunday, AP reported.
Nations divided over UN reform
The Scotsman - 09/09/2005
UNITED NATIONS - United Nations members are deeply divided over proposals for an urgent overhaul of the world body. The reform proposals were made this week in the report into the troubled Iraq oil-for-food programme.
Cost of disaster could exceed $200 billion
AP - 09/09/2005
USA - The cost of rebuilding the vast area devastated by Hurricane Katrina and providing relief to its inhabitants is expected to exceed $200 billion (109 billion pounds), a sum comparable to the gross domestic product of Poland.
Pope urges Muslims to fight spread of terror
Associated Press - 08/09/2005
GERMANY - Pope Benedict XVI decried the "cruel fanaticism" of terrorism Saturday and urged Muslims to join Christians in trying to combat its spread.
In blunt remarks, he told a gathering of Muslim officials in Germany that Muslim leaders had a "great responsibility" in properly educating their younger generations.
EU and China reach textile deal
BBC NEWS - 05/09/2005
EUROPE - The EU and China have signed a deal to end the strife over textile quotas that has left more than 75 million Chinese garments piled up in European ports
Under the deal, half the blocked goods will be released unconditionally. The rest will count against 2006 quotas.
The EU imposed quotas in June to stem a huge surge in Chinese imports, after a worldwide, decades-old textile tariff and quota system ended in January.
World pledges aid to US
AP - 04/09/2005
USA - Nations around the world are offering aid to the crisis-hit United States, with donations coming from old friends like Britain and old foes like Cuba alike.
Offers streamed in after the United States, the world's biggest single aid donor, said it would be open to assistance though it was not making an appeal for foreign aid. "Whatever they ask for, it will be given, from reserves of oil... to any other thing that they may need," European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana said in Newport, Wales, during a meeting of the 25-nation bloc.
Criticism of Bush mounts as more than 10,000 feared dead
The Guardian - 03/09/2005
NEW ORLEANS, USA - Governor threatens looters with shoot-to-kill. Relief convoys arrive after four days.
George Bush arrived last night in the ravaged Gulf coast region amid mounting criticism of his handling of the crisis and a prediction by one senator that the death toll in Louisiana alone could top 10,000 people.
As thousands of people sat on the streets of New Orleans, having spent their fourth day waiting to be rescued, the city fell deeper into chaos, with gangs roaming the city and corpses rotting in the sun.
US needs world's help, Annan says
ABC News - 02/09/2005
USA - United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan has urged the world community to offer assistance to the United States after Hurricane Katrina which he says has caused a "huge disaster".
"The damage is far worse than any of us imagined at first," Mr Annan said in a statement. "The American people who have always been the most generous in responding to disasters in other parts of the world have now themselves suffered a grievous blow.