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/ 2 February 2007

UN climate report paints bleak picture

The United Nations climate panel issued its strongest warning yet on Friday that human activities are heating the planet, adding pressure on governments to do more to combat accelerating global warming. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicted more severe rains, melting glaciers, droughts, heatwaves and rising sea levels.

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/ 25 January 2007

Are video games the new radio?

Live music and internet-based social networking sites YouTube and MySpace are helping break new music acts — but video games are the latest new cool music space. ”It’s a great way of breaking new artists,” Joseph Stopps of independent, United Kingdom-based dance-music company MofoHifi said.

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/ 25 January 2007

Lebanon looks to aid conference for help

Lebanon’s political and economic crisis takes centre stage at an international aid conference on Thursday, with the country’s Western-backed leaders hoping anti-government protests don’t scare away the donors. Prime Minister Fouad Siniora has said Lebanon needs billions of dollars to help shore up its debt-riddled finances and to recover from last year’s war.

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/ 25 January 2007

Korea’s passion for opera crosses the globe

Asia’s passion for singing and karaoke may be legendary, but now Asians are so enamoured of Western opera that Europe’s music academies are bursting at the seams with young Korean and Chinese opera students with stars in their eyes. ”The Koreans are mad about opera,” Christophe Capacci, the new artistic director for classical music and jazz at Midem.

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/ 23 January 2007

Israel defence official missing in Paris, say police

The head of the Israeli Defence Ministry Mission to Europe has disappeared from his Paris house, leaving behind notes that indicate he might have been considering suicide, a police source said on Tuesday. The man, named as David Dahan, has not been seen since the weekend, the source said. His car was missing but his cellphone was still at his home.

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/ 15 January 2007

Eurotunnel ‘saved from bankruptcy’

A French court lifted on Monday a threat of bankruptcy over Eurotunnel, which operates the undersea rail tunnel linking France to Britain, but said a rescue plan must be applied within three years. A Paris commercial court approved a financial restructuring package to halve Eurotunnel’s debt mountain, meaning the group will avoid a cash crisis predicted for early this year.

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/ 6 January 2007

Cosmic rays could mean fried chips

In 2003, officials overseeing an election in Schaerbeek, a suburb of Brussels, got a shock. An electronic vote-counting machine declared that 4 096 more people had cast their vote than the ballot slips testified. The machine had been thoroughly tested. So what went wrong? The answer was, literally, a strike from the heavens.

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/ 29 December 2006

Federer targets history

Tennis embraces major changes in 2007 but Roger Federer’s paramount New Year resolution remains the same — to win the French Open. The Swiss superstar racked up another record-smashing year in 2006 with 12 titles, a 92-5 match record in which he won back his Australian Open title and defended his Wimbledon and US Open crowns.

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/ 22 December 2006

French PM questioned in scandal case

French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin said on Friday he had been the victim of ”calumny and lies”, as he emerged from 17 hours of questioning by magistrates over an apparent smear campaign against a political rival. Villepin was heard as a witness, not a suspect, in the so-called Clearstream affair.

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/ 22 December 2006

Fashion rides the wave of French Basque identity

Along a stretch of the Atlantic coastline in France’s Basque country that is a magnet for surfers, the expression of regional identity has become a sartorial matter of choice. With its own language and culture, the Basque country, comprising northern Spain and south-west France, is often associated, especially on the Spanish side, with its struggle for territorial independence.

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/ 21 December 2006

Sushi mania in France overrun by Chinese copies

Raw fish and rice is not exactly the cuisine you would expect to find on every street corner in Paris, but sushi is becoming almost as commonplace in the city as France’s beloved steak and chips. The number of Japanese restaurants in Paris has jumped by about 30% in the last two years as the French turn away from cholesterol-laden fare in favour of healthier food and living.

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/ 21 December 2006

Tribute to ‘father’ of comic-boy hero Tintin

The unmistakable red-and-white checked moon rocket spanning the height of the French capital’s huge Pompidou centre leaves little doubt of the enduring popularity of the intrepid comic boy hero, Tintin. With his ceaseless taste for adventure, often in international hot-spots, the ageless and iconic blond-haired boy reporter was the brainchild and creation of Belgian author Herge in 1929.

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/ 8 December 2006

Barca avoid Champions League scrapheap

Barcelona and AS Roma made their own entries into the history books of the Champions League on Tuesday, although it was the defending champions who penned the most interesting reading. Frank Rijkaard’s Spanish giants calmed the nerves of their anxious fans with a 2-0 victory over Werder Bremen at the Nou Camp which secured entry to the last 16.

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/ 6 December 2006

Paris breaks stereotypes to lure British tourists

A dip in arrivals from Britain, its biggest tourist market, has pushed Paris to re-think the way it packages itself and throw off some of the sniffy stereotypes it has been saddled with. This week, the tourist board for the Paris region launched a new ad campaign aimed at Britons that, far from flaunting its well-known monuments and museums, seeks to portray the French capital as an energetic, youthful and trendy city.

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/ 5 December 2006

US pressures Russia before Iran talks

The United States urged a reluctant Russia and China on Tuesday to agree quickly on a sanctions plan against Tehran and its nuclear programme as officials from six world powers prepared to seek a breakthrough at talks in Paris. US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns said he did not expect a deal in Paris but called on Moscow and Beijing to move faster.

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/ 1 December 2006

Europe’s immigrant women face growing Aids threat

<img src="http://www.mg.co.za/ContentImages/291293/aidsday06.gif" align=left>Immigrant women are becoming some of the main victims of new HIV transmissions in several European countries, especially in France, according to official figures. A third of all new HIV infections detected in France in 2005 affect an immigrant from sub-Saharan Africa.

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/ 28 November 2006

City plans rival to Eiffel tower

It is a city so protective of its romantic skyline that skyscrapers have been banned in the historic centre for more than 30 years. But Paris on Monday unveiled plans for a vast glass-enveloped office block that will become its tallest commercial building and loftiest construction since the Eiffel tower was inaugurated in 1889.

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/ 24 November 2006

Acclaimed French film star Noiret dies

French film star Philippe Noiret, whose trademark hangdog face delighted cinema audiences, has died, French authorities said on Thursday. He was 76. Noiret was one of the most prolific and successful actors of his generation, starring in a string of cinema hits over the past five decades, including the hugely popular 1988 Franco-Italian comedy Cinema Paradiso.

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/ 24 November 2006

Rwanda’s war shifts to the tribunals

An international arrest warrant against nine close aides of Rwanda’s Tutsi President, Paul Kagame, on a charge of participating in the assassination of former Hutu leader Juvenal Habyarimana in April 1994 has led to a new diplomatic war over Rwanda. A French judge this week ordered the arrest of nine high-ranking Rwandan officials.

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/ 23 November 2006

Donors pledge $60m to help African combatants

Donor nations and organisations pledged around -million to an international effort to help former combatants in war-ravaged Central Africa back to civilian life, officials said on Wednesday after an aid meeting in Paris. The figure represents roughly half of the estimated funding still required for a programme totalling about -million, officials said.

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/ 23 November 2006

Electronic jihad’s cyber soldiers

They neither carry weapons nor lay ambushes for soldiers in Iraq or in Afghanistan. But thousands of radical Islamists are waging a different kind of war from behind their computers, called ”electronic jihad”. These radical Islamic sites have sprung up over the past few years, specialising in the organisation and the coordination of concerted cyber-attacks against Israeli, American, Catholic and Danish websites.

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/ 22 November 2006

Nakamura gives Celtic British bragging rights

A terrific free kick by Shunsuke Nakamura gave Celtic an historic place in the Champions League knock-out stages on Tuesday as they edged English giants Manchester United 1-0. After what was dubbed as the ”Battle of Britain”, United’s defeat means the two-time European Cup winners need a point in their final match at home to Benfica to avoid exiting the competition.