A round-up of today's world stories
Ban on Indian nuclear trade to remain
VIENNA -A 45-nation meeting on whether to lift a ban on nuclear trade with India ended inconclusively yesterday after many raised conditions for the move, leaving the future of a controversial US-Indian nuclear deal unclear. The countries in the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) will meet again on September 4th-5th to try to resolve the matter, diplomats said. - (Reuters)
Four Britons die in SA crash
SOUTH AFRICA -Four Britons died in a minibus crash in South Africa, the Foreign Office said last night. The victims — understood to be relations of Hollywood actress Helena Bonham Carter — were on a safari holiday when the vehicle they were travelling in lost control and overturned on Wednesday. Three of the dead were named as 14-year-old Eton schoolboy Marcus Egerton-Warburton, his grandmother Brenda Bonham Carter, 74 and step-grandfather Francis Kirkwood, 75. -(PA)
Ex-minister gets death sentence
BAGHDAD -Iraq's former culture minister, believed to be in hiding since last year, has been sentenced to death by hanging for involvement in the killing of another politician's two sons, a court spokesman said yesterday. A Baghdad court found former minister Saad al-Hashemi responsible in absentia for the 2005 deaths of secular Sunni politician Mithal al-Alusi's two sons. - (Reuters)
Rebel chief is new defence minister
KATHMANDU -Nepal's Maoist prime minister Prachanda picked a coalition cabinet yesterday and named ex-guerrilla commander Ram Bahadur Thapa as defence minister in charge of the army that once battled the rebels. Thapa is seen as a hardliner among the Maoists. - (Reuters)