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/ 7 March 2008

Nokia in €2bn deal with China Postel

Nokia on Friday announced a deal to sell handsets worth a total â,¬2-billion to China Postel during 2008, in the company’s largest market. The world’s number one cellphone maker said the deal includes the development of technological infrastructure and marketing with China Postel, with which it has worked since 1998.

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/ 11 February 2008

UN: Up to 600 000 displaced in Kenya

The United Nations’s top emergency relief official said on Monday that as many as 600 000 people had been displaced following violence sparked by Kenya’s disputed elections. ”We estimate that 300 000 people were displaced and are now in camps,” John Holmes said, adding: ”There are probably as many displaced who are not in camps.”

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/ 29 January 2008

Hospital serves up mouse head on plate

A hospital patient in Finland found a mouse head among the steamed vegetables on his plate. ”Understandably, he lost his appetite,” said Sakari Kela, chief administrator at the Northern Karelia Central Hospital. The health of the patient in Joensuu, eastern Finland, had not been compromised by the dead rodent, Kela said on Saturday.

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/ 15 November 2007

Finns queue up for booze

Finns formed long lines outside the country’s rare liquor shops that remained open on Thursday after a strike by employees of state-owned monopoly distributor Alko. The company said that only about 40 out of 336 outlets were expected to be open during the strike over employment conditions that was to last until Saturday.

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/ 7 November 2007

Pupil kills seven at school in Finland

At least seven people died when a gunman opened fire at a school in southern Finland on Wednesday, hours after a video was posted on YouTube predicting a school massacre. A teacher at Jokela High School said the gunman was one of its pupils. Three people were wounded in the shooting, according to early reports.

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/ 6 August 2007

Finns sweat it out for gold in sauna-sitting champs

Finns stayed invincible to keep their world champion titles in male and female sauna sitting, beating Russian, American, German and Turkish competitors on their home ground, organisers said on Monday. Timo Kaukonen won the male championship for the third year in a row, staying in a sauna heated to 110 degrees Celsius for 12 minutes and 26 seconds.

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/ 5 December 2006

UN: World’s richest 2% own half global wealth

The world’s richest 2% of adults own more than half of global household wealth, while half the world’s population own only 1%, a United Nations report published on Tuesday showed. The report, entitled The World Distribution of Household Wealth, found that assets of  200 or more placed a household in the top half of world wealth distribution in 2000.

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/ 27 November 2006

EU: Last-ditch talks with Turkey over Cyprus fail

Last-ditch talks in Finland on Monday between the European Union and Turkey aimed at averting an EU crisis with Ankara over the Cyprus issue have failed, Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja said. "An agreement could not be reached," Tuomioja, whose country currently holds the rotating EU Presidency, told reporters following talks.

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/ 6 November 2006

Mathematician creates hardest sudoku puzzle

A Finnish mathematician on Monday claimed he had created the world’s hardest sudoku puzzle, a brain-teaser that required three months’ work and a billion combinations to produce. ”AI Escargot is the most difficult sudoku puzzle known so far,” the puzzle’s 37-year-old creator and applied mathematician Arto Inkala said.

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/ 1 November 2006

World’s report on global warming: ‘Must try harder’

More than a decade after world leaders pledged to avert ”dangerous” climate change, a report card on their efforts so far might read: ”Must try harder”. Rising industrial emissions of greenhouse gases, acrimony between Washington and many of its allies over policy and a report this week that the world economy risks a 1930s-style Depression by failing to act are among reasons for gloom.

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/ 27 August 2006

Finn takes gold at cellphone throwing contest

Anyone wanting to throw away their cellphone can do it in style and may even win a medal — at the Mobile Phone Throwing World Championship, Finland’s latest contribution to offbeat athleticism. Originally a local event in this small town close to the Russian border, the seventh annual contest on Saturday drew about 100 throwers from as far afield as Canada, Russia and Belgium.

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/ 15 August 2005

Young athletes make their mark

”Old stars fade, new stars light up the sky,” was how 110m hurdler Allen Johnson assessed athletics ahead of the world championships, and he couldn’t have been more correct. If the Helsinki championships were anything to go by, then the old guard has been stood down for the new kids on the block.

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/ 14 August 2005

Dibaba completes double at world athletics meet

On a day made for doubles, Tirunesh Dibaba clinched an unprecedented long-distance sweep and sprinter Lauryn Williams added a second gold by helping the United States win the 400m relay on Saturday at the World Athletics Championships. The 19-year-old Dibaba successfully defended her title in the 5 000m race.

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/ 12 August 2005

Ramzi beats Mulaudzi in 800m heat

Bahrain’s newly crowned 1 500m world champion Rashid Ramzi began his quest for a golden double with an easy win in his 800m first-round heat at the World Athletics Championships in Montreal on Thursday. Mbulaeni Mulaudzi of South Africa struggled to get the third automatic qualifying spot.

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/ 11 August 2005

Rookie Madison clinches long-jump gold

United States teenager Tianna Madison stunned her more experienced rivals by taking the women’s long-jump title at the world athletics championships in Finland on Wednesday. The 19-year-old jumped 6,89m in her first major championships to beat Olympic bronze medallist Tatyana Kotova of Russia (6,79m) while defending champion Eunice Barber of France took the bronze (6,76m).

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/ 10 August 2005

Storm disrupts world athletics meet

The rain was everybody’s enemy but Justin Gatlin’s. A torrential storm delayed the 200m quarterfinals until Wednesday and gave the 100m champion some much-needed extra rest for his pursuit of three gold medals at the World Athletics Championships in Helsinki. For the Finns, however, the javelin is the main attraction.

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/ 9 August 2005

Havoc at world pole-vaulting event

The pole-vaulting competition at the World Athletics Championships in Helsinki was disrupted on Tuesday when a Finnish vaulter’s crash damaged the measuring equipment. When the event restarted, using a second pit where the equipment was intact, gusty winds hampered the vaulters’ efforts.

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/ 9 August 2005

From tragedy to glory

Kenenisa Bekele and Lauryn Williams, two athletes who have confronted personal tragedies in their lives, raced to world title glory at the World Athletics Championships in Helsinki on Monday. Bekele’s fiancée died earlier this year and Williams won despite her father’s long-running battle with leukaemia.