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http://forum.putclub.com/viewthread.php?tid=157772&extra=page%3D1 939]8BERt BBC News with Jonathan Izzard.
o4U]lK$ ~&vA_/M Votes are being counted in Israel's general election, a poll which could have a crucial effect on the Middle East peace process. Exit polls suggest that the 'centralist' Kadima party led by Tzipi Livni is narrowly ahead of the centre-right Likud party led by the former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. From Kadima headquarters, Tim Franks.
s n=zh1 A QGu7D #%| At Kadima party headquarters, a gust of delight and shock greeted the release of the exit polls. Those polls suggested that having been consistently behind in the surveys for months, Tzipi Livni had managed to garner the support of enough people who didn't want her right-wing rival Benjamin Netanyahu to be prime minister. Despite the smiles here at Kadima headquarters, these are very early moments. The numbers could still change. And even if Tzipi Livni's Kadima party were to remain the largest, there is no guarantee that the Israeli president would call on her to try to form the next government if he believes she won't succeed. This does appear to be a remarkable combat. That appearance may not last.
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q {EZFx,@t The Secretary General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon has announced an inquiry into damage to UN property in Gaza during Israel's recent offensive. From UN headquarters in New York, Laura Trevelyan.
Q;d+]xj vEX|Q\b6' During the three-week long Israeli offensive in Gaza, more than 40 people were killed by Israeli fire outside a UN school and a warehouse in the main UN compound was destroyed by Israeli shells. There were ten incidents in which UN property was damaged. Now Ban Ki-moon has announced an inquiry into what happened to be headed by Ian Martin, formerly the UN envoy to Nepal. Israel and the United Nations have a fraught relationship in Gaza. The world body's relief and work agency distributes aid to Palestinians, which leads / Israeli officials to see the agency as biased in favor of the Palestinians.
*tIdp`xT/T JsHxQ0Tw The US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has unveiled a new government plan costing up to 1.5 trillion dollars aimed at reviving the country's stricken financial sector. Under the plan, an investment fund of public and private money will be set up to buy toxic assets from ailing financial institutions. The US Federal Reserve will also provide more help for homeowners:) facing foreclosure. But Mr. Geithner warned that the plan was not an easy solution.
_m)gO/02A 9;r48)5 I wanna be candid. This strategy will cost money. It will involve risk and it will take time. But as costly as this effort may be, we know that the cost of a complete collapse of our financial system would be incalculable for families and for businesses and for our nation. "
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u-]vK At the end of the day's trading on New York Stock Exchange, the Dow Jones share index fell, ending the session more than 4.5% lower.
$4#=#aKW. j=!(F`/ The largest American carmaker General Motors says it's cutting 10,000 jobs or roughly one in seven of its workforce. GM, the world's largest carmaker until it was overtaken by Toyota last year, says it will also cut pay by 10% for most of its remaining office workers in the US.
}L{_xyi># jb#1&L14 World News from the BBC.
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go8 ~5XL@j I^ Red Cross officials in Sri Lanka say at least 16 patients being treated in a makeshift hospital in the war-torn north of the country have been killed by heavy shelling as government forces continue their offensive against Tamil Tiger rebels. The patients at the facility near the coastal village of Putumattalan were among hundreds who had fled the last functioning hospital in the war zone after it came under repeated artillery fire.
z&6]vN' Q>06dO~z8 Interpol has issued its biggest ever alert for terror suspects, the request of Saudi Arabia. The International Police Agency issued a worldwide appeal for help to find 85 people suspected of plotting attacks against Saudi targets. The list includes 83 Saudis and two Yemenis. It was released by Saudi officials last week.
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