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  Monday, May 19, 2008, Jamadi-ul-Awwal 12, 1429    

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 World

Ex-Israeli defence officials for indirect talks with Hamas

Jerusalem—A number of former Israeli army and security officials have told the government they support indirect talks with Hamas and are opposed to any large-scale military assault on the Gaza Strip, the Haaretz newspaper reported on Sunday. The officials sent a letter to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and other top ministers urging indirect negotiations to reach a long-term ceasefire with Hamas, the Islamist movement which seized control of Gaza almost a year ago.

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Dublin conference targets cluster bomb ban

London—Envoys from around 100 countries are to gather in Dublin on Monday for a 12-day conference aimed at clinching an international treaty banning cluster munitions. The negotiations should hammer out a wide-ranging pact that would completely wipe out the use, production and stockpiling of cluster bombs by its signatories. But notable absentees from the Dublin Diplomatic Conference on Cluster Munitions, which concludes on May 30, include China, India, Israel, Russia and the United States: all major producers and stockpilers.

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Researchers despondent as AIDS vaccine still out of reach

Washington—A quarter of a century since the virus that causes AIDS was identified, a vaccine against the deadly disease remains frustratingly out of reach despite a well-funded global effort to find a cure. “Nearly a billion dollars is spent globally on HIV/AIDS research annually, and yet the sobering reality is that at present there are no promising candidates for an HIV vaccine,” Bruce Walker of Harvard Medical School wrote in the May 9 edition of the journal Science.

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Tropical storm Halong lashes northern Philippines

Manila—Tropical storm Halong battered the northern Philippines with 95 kilometre (59-miles) per hour winds on Sunday, triggering floods and landslides and displacing about 6,000 people, relief officials said. There were no immediate reports of casualties but the civil defence office in Manila said huge waves known as storm surges destroyed 10 houses and displaced 780 people in and around the coastal town of Botolan, about 145 kilometres (90 miles) northwest of the capital.

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US elections: Hope is the colour of the future

Comment
Maryam Ismai

ON MY bookshelf, I have a curious book that I bought at the height of the Afro-centric 1990’s; it’s called Your History: From the Beginning of Time to the Present. Written by James Augustus Rodgers in 1940, this hand-penciled comic book is an attempt to instill pride and fill in the gaps of so much of world history that excluded many persons of African descent. Curious descriptions such as the man of Danish and African heritage, pure African blood, run-away slave, attempts to tell the hidden truth of not just American history, but world history. Most of this book is pretty funny, if you don’t understand the complexity of race and especially race in America.

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