Deutsche Welle
   English Service News
   14. 05. 2005, 16:00 UTC
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   Today's highlight on DW-WORLD:

   EU Agrees Air Travel Tax to Fund Aid

   EU finance ministers meeting in Luxembourg on Saturday agreed in
   principle to levy a tax on airplane tickets to fund extra development
   aid. The tax would be voluntary or obligatory depending on the country.

   To read this article on the DW-WORLD website, just click on the
   internet address below:
   http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,1564,1583396,00.html

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   give you a weekly look at Germany's cultural, peculiar and sometimes
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   please go to our Newsletter section at 
   http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,1564,1170241,00.html

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   Up to 500 dead in Uzbekistan unrest

   Human rights organisations say up to 500 people were killed when
   government troops shot at protestors gathered at the city square in
   the eastern Uzbek city of Andijan on Friday. President Islam Karimov
   said Saturday that troops were forced to open fire when insurgents
   who had seized a government building attempted to break through an
   advancing line of police and soldiers. He accused a radical Islamic
   group of starting the unrest to spark an uprising. Thousands of
   people fled Andijan Saturday while new crowds gathered at the
   square. Troops have ordered journalists to leave and shut access to
   the city. The US, which maintains a major airbase in Uzbekistan, has
   urged authorities and demonstrators to exercise calm. The bloodshed
   in Andijan, Uzbekistan's fourth largest city, started early Friday
   when armed men stormed the local prison to free inmates accused of
   belonging to an outlawed Islamic group.


   Muslim groups condemn Koran desecration

   Muslim groups have called on the United States to investigate a
   magazine report that their holy book, the Koran, was desecrated by
   US staff at Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba, and to punish those
   responsible. The 57-nation Organisation of the Islamic Conference
   (OIC) said it had written to US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
   following a huge outcry in the Muslim world. The magazine report
   triggered massive demonstrations including Afghanistan, Pakistan,
   Indonesia and the Palestinian territories. 16 people were killedin
   Afghanistan on Friday in the worst anti-US protests there since
   Americans moved in 2001.


   CIA plane kills Al Qaeda leader in Pakistan

   American TV networks are reporting that a senior al Qaeda leader was
   killed in a missile attack by an unmanned CIA intelligence Predator
   aircraft in Pakistan. The man, identified as the Libyan national
   Haitham al-Yemeni, was Al Qaeda's third most senior member. US
   intelligence officials had been tracking al-Yemeni for some time,
   hoping he would lead them to Al Qaeda leader, Osama Bin Laden.
   Palestinian officials deny the reports.


   Israel starts flare-up on Lebanon border

   Israeli artillery and aircraft pounded the outskirts of Lebanese
   border villages on Saturday, in the fiercest clashes with Hizbollah
   guerrillas in four months. European diplomats say Israel provoked
   the Shiite militant group,in order to force it to meet UN Security
   Council demands to disarm. The fighting comes as Lebanon prepares to
   hold its first general election without a Syrian military presence
   in 33 years.


   Chen wins most votes in Taiwan poll

   Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian's ruling Democratic Progressive
   Party (DPP) has won a poll on Saturday. The result could ease
   pressure on the independence-minded leader to reconcile with
   China. Chen's party won just over 42 percent of the vote while the
   island's largest opposition party, the Nationalists or Kuomingtang
   (KMT) received just under 39 percent of the vote. The poll was to
   elect an ad hoc, 300-member National Assembly to ratify
   constitutional amendments approved by parliament last year. But
   Taiwan-China ties dominated the agenda and the election was viewed
   as a vote of confidence on Chen's China policy. The National
   Assembly, a legacy from Taiwan's former dual parliament system, is
   being formed only for the purpose of voting on the constitutional
   amendments and will be dismantled by the end of the year.


   Two Koreas to meet next week

   North Korea has proposed a meeting with South Korea for early next
   week. The proposal for working level talks came in a message
   Pyongyang sent to Seoul's unification ministry on Saturday. The
   ministry said it would use the meeting to press Pyongyang to return
   to stalled six-party nuclear talks. The two Koreas, the United
   States, Japan, China and Russia met for three rounds of talks up to
   June 2004 with no substantive progress. The North agreed to meet for
   a fourth round, set for last September, but it has yet to take
   place.


   Turkish airline banned, regarded unsafe

   The German government has intervened to rescue thousands of its
   nationals stranded in Turkey. The tourists were stranded after air
   safety regulators banned Turkish charter company Onur Air from
   German, Swiss, Dutch and French airports. Berlin said it wants
   assurances from Turkey that replacement aircraft will be allowed to
   land. A spokesman for Onur Air rejected claims that the air
   carrier's 28 planes were unsafe and said the company planned to take
   legal action.


   Bulgaria to host three US military bases

   The US Congress has decided to use three Bulgarian military bases
   for the deployment of US forces. Defence Minister Nikolay Svinarov
   said on Saturday that a US governmental delegation was expected to
   arrive in Bulgaria in the coming days to discuss the bases. The
   stationing of US troops in Bulgaria is part of a broader US strategy
   of shifting troops based in Europe further east. The aim is to move
   soldiers from positions to cope with a possible Soviet invasion of
   Europe to a deployment better suited to the current US preoccupation
   with terrorism and conflicts in the Middle East.


   Glazer poised to take over soccer club

   Manchester United fans are preparing to launch a series of protests
   over the attempted take over of the club by American billionaire
   Malcolm Glazer. Glazer was poised to take full control of the
   English soccer club having secured a fraction short of the 75
   percent stake he needs under stock market rules to take the club
   into private ownership. By the end of Friday's trading he'd bought
   up enough shares to raise his stake in the club to 74.8 percent. A
   spokesman for Glazer said he expected to hit the 75 percent
   threshold on Monday. Many United supporters are not pleased. Angry
   fans were expected to demonstrate at Sunday's match at Southampton.
   They fear that Glazer will jack up ticket prices and withdraw the
   club from the stock exchange.


   DR Congo passes draft constitution

   The Democratic Republic of Congo's national assembly has adopted a
   draft constitution. The draft seeks to lay the base of a democratic
   regime and free elections for the first time in 40 years. The
   constitution curbs the powers of the President of Africa's third
   largest country and decentralises power by increasing the number of
   provinces from the current 11 to 26. The draft replaces the 2002
   transitional constitution and still has to be voted on in a
   referendum. The 2002 solution provided for a transition period
   following a five year civil war involving neighbouring states and
   caused some three million deaths.


   Tonnes of cocaine seized in Columbia

   Columbian authorities say they have seized almost 14 tonnes of
   cocaine worth almost 280 million euros. Columbia's national police
   director told a news conference in the capital, Bogota, that it was
   the biggest haul ever seized in a single operation. He said the
   cocaine was found stashed on a riverbank in the south of the
   country. And he said the drugs belonged to members of an outlawed
   far-right militia.


   Strong quake rocks Sumatra

   A strong earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter Scale has rattled
   Indonesia's Sumatra island. The quake struck around noon Saturday as
   residents fled their homes for higher ground fearing a possible
   tsunami. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage.
   The quake was also felt on nearby Nias island, which was hit by an
   8.7 magnitude quake on March 28 that killed hundreds of residents.
   Indonesia, especially Sumatra, has been hit by daily aftershocks
   since the massive earthquake on Dec. 26 that led to a devastating
   tsunami.

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