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World News

May 16, 2008

LUOSHUI, China - Troops dug burial pits in this quake-shattered town and black smoke poured from crematorium chimneys elsewhere in central China as priorities began shifting Thursday from the hunt for survivors to dealing with the dead. Officials said the final toll could more than double to 50,000.

As the massive military-led recovery operation inched farther into regions cut off by Monday's quake, the government sought to enlist the public's help with an appeal for everything from hammers to cranes and, in a turnabout, began accepting foreign aid missions, the first from regional rival Japan.

BEIJING - After days of refusing foreign relief workers, China has accepted offers from four countries to send in rescue teams.

Hours after saying it will accept a Japanese rescue team, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement early Friday that specialist crews from Russia, South Korea, and Singapore would be welcome as well. The turnabout came as the death toll from Monday's magnitude-7.9 quake soared.

WASHINGTON - It's the gift that keeps on giving.

Barack Obama picked up more heavyweight support Thursday after a key endorsement this week delivered another blow to Hillary Clinton's longshot campaign for the Democratic nomination. Obama drew at least five delegates from former candidate John Edwards, who jumped off the fence Wednesday to support the front-runner.

NEW YORK - Osama bin Laden, who has threatened to extend al-Qaida's terror to Israel, will release a new Internet message dealing with Israelis and Palestinians, a terrorism monitoring group said Thursday.

The announcement of the impending comments by the head of al-Qaida was posted on websites often used by Islamic militant groups, the site Intelligence Group said.

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - A military spokesman says a suicide bomb blast in Sri Lanka's capital has killed six policemen and wounded 50 other people.

Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara says a suicide bomber on a motorbike targeted a bus carrying policemen Friday on a busy street in Colombo. He says authorities suspect separatist Tamil Tiger rebels in the attack.

TOKYO - The U.S. military says a military court has found an American marine guilty of abusive sexual conduct of a Japanese teenager in Okinawa, southern Japan.

The military said Staff Sgt. Tyrone Hadnott was sentenced Friday to four years in prison. Four other charges, including rape of a child under 16, making false official statements, adultery and "kidnapping through inveigling," or trickery, were dropped.

MANILA, Philippines - Police say eight people, most of them bank employees, have been fatally shot in a bank robbery in a town south of Manila.

Police Gen. Ricardo Padilla says the victims were found fatally shot when the bank opened at 9 a.m. Friday. He says two security guards were missing, leading authorities to suspect they were involved in the robbery. Padilla said another security guard was among the dead.

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Unknown assailants have detonated a bomb outside a Christian school in Gaza City, causing no injuries.

Damage from the pre-dawn explosion is visible at the entrance to the Zahwa Rosary School. The school is run by nuns but caters mainly to Muslim students. Friday's bombing appears to be the latest in a string of attacks on Christian institutions in the overwhelmingly Muslim territory.

YANGON, Myanmar - Myanmar's junta warned Thursday that legal action would be taken against people who trade or hoard international aid as the cyclone's death toll soared above 43,000.

It was the first acknowledgment by the military government, albeit indirectly, of problems with relief operations in the aftermath of cyclone Nargis.

KATHMANDU, Nepal - Hundreds of Tibetan exiles calling for freedom in their homeland demonstrated in the Nepalese capital Friday until police stopped them.

About 500 Tibetans, many of them women, marched on the outskirts of Kathmandu for about three kilometres holding banners that said "Free Tibet, Tibet for Tibetans." Police at first tried to detain some of them, but after scuffles lasting several minutes the protesters returned to their refugee camp at the southern edge of Kathmandu. No-one was arrested.

UNITED NATIONS - The UN secretary general has decided to dispatch his top emergency relief co-ordinator to Myanmar, if he can get a visa from the country's military rulers.

Ban Ki-moon has been frustrated by the government's obstacles to foreign assistance for victims of the May 3 cyclone.

JERUSALEM - U.S. President George W. Bush gently urged Mideast leaders to "make the hard choices necessary for peace," leaving it to embattled Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to stand before a divided parliament Thursday and forcefully declare that this war-weary country is ready for a historic agreement with Palestinians.

On a day mourned by Palestinians as the 60th anniversary of their uprooting by Israel's independence, Bush mentioned the Palestinians only once in a 23-minute speech to the Knesset, and then only in the context of what a Palestinian state would look like six decades from now.

WASHINGTON - Democratic front-runner Barack Obama accused President George W. Bush of launching a "sad" and "false" political attack on him Thursday by saying those in favour of negotiating with terrorists and radicals are like Nazi appeasers.

The White House denied Bush's words in a speech to Israel's parliament were directed at Obama, who has argued in favour of meeting with leaders of U.S. adversaries like Iran, Cuba and North Korea.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Republican John McCain declared for the first time Thursday he believes the Iraq war can be won by 2013, but he rejected suggestions his talk of a timetable put him on the same side as Democrats clamouring for fullscale troop withdrawals.

The Republican presidential contender, in a mystical speech that also envisioned Osama bin Laden dead or captured, said only a small number of U.S. troops would remain in Iraq by the end of a prospective first term.

NEW YORK - A landlord has been indicted after prosecutors say he planted a homemade bomb to try to kill a tenant he wanted to evict from a commercial building in Brooklyn.

The tenant lost a leg in the blast.

JAIPUR, India - A previously unknown Islamic militant group claimed Thursday to have carried out deadly bombings in the historic Indian city of Jaipur by planting bicycles packed with explosives on the city's crowded streets, police said.

The claim of responsibility for Tuesday's attacks, which killed 61 people, was reportedly made in videos and an e-mail sent to Indian television stations and a Hindu nationalist political party, said Pankaj Singh, the city's inspector-general of police.

BEIRUT - The Hezbollah-led opposition and U.S.-backed government reached a deal Thursday to end Lebanon's worst violence since the 1975-90 civil war, now that the cabinet has reversed measures aimed at reining in the Iranian-backed militants.

The feuding factions agreed to hold political talks in Qatar on Friday that will lead to the election of Lebanon's army chief, Gen. Michel Suleiman, as a compromise president, said Qatari Prime Minister Sheik Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani, who headed an Arab League team that mediated the agreement.

SAN FRANCISCO - California's Supreme Court declared gay couples in the biggest U.S. state can marry, a monumental but perhaps short-lived victory for the gay rights movement Thursday that was greeted with tears, hugs, kisses and at least one instant proposal of matrimony.

Same-sex couples could tie the knot in as little as a month. But the window could close soon after since religious and social conservatives are pressing to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot in November that would undo the Supreme Court ruling and ban gay marriage.

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