05/17/2005
Paid access archivePress Review
A brief look at the stories making headlines in the Russian-language press
Newsweek 'Regrets' Report on Quran Insult
But the major U.S. weekly magazine is not retracting its story about guards at Guantanamo desecrating the Muslim holy book.
Malaysian Police Condemned
Malaysian police have been abusing powers of preventive detention and should no longer be permitted to use internal security laws to sidestep courts and lock up suspects, an official inquiry found on Monday.
Koreas Resume Two-Party Talks
The reconciliation talks between North and South are seen as ""vital"" to renewing six-party talks on the North's nuclear plans.
Rice Sneaks to Iraq For a Surprise Visit
Secrecy for U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's visit to Iraq on Sunday was so tight that even her pilot did not know his passenger's name until she got on board.
Iran Approves Bill Requiring Nuclear Fuel Development
Parliament voted Sunday to require the government to develop its nuclear fuel cycle, as the government shifted pressure onto Europe by saying it was giving it a ""last chance"" in nuclear talks as an international showdown over Iran's atomic intentions is brewing.
Turks Combating 'Honor Killings'
In a remote part of Istanbul, a young woman sat in front of a television on a recent day watching a chilling scene unfold. Panning across the dank walls of a cave, the camera stopped on a primitive drawing of a female form, then dissolved into a modern crime scene showing the chalk outline of a woman's body on a road.
Directory Publisher Sold to Macquarie
Macquarie Bank's newest investment fund will buy European directory publisher YBR Group for 1.8 billion euros ($2.3 billion), expanding an asset management business that is delivering record profit.
Paper: Airbus May Fund Airline Merger
America West Airlines and US Airways are talking with Airbus, hedge fund Par Capital Management and Air Canada's parent about funding a merger of the two U.S. carriers, people familiar with the talks said.
Bookmaker Buys Rival for $1Bln
William Hill has agreed to buy Stanley Leisure's betting shops for 504 million pounds ($935 million) to become Britain's biggest bookmaker, the two companies said on Monday.
- AIG Executive Strikes Deal With Prosecutor
- New Nike Campaign Targets Women
- World Trade Center Set to Expand
- $50M Complex to Bring Elite Housing to Center
- Nicholson Puts Down $5M for Marlon Brando's House
- Hotel Tries for Record Sandwich
- Cypriot Holiday Homes at Risk
- Oil Oligarch Roulette Puts New Spin on Trial
- A Victory for State Paranoia
- Let Communism Rest in Peace
- Courage in the Face of Corruption
- Business in Brief
- President Resurrects GDP Goal
- Vyugin Pushes Firms to List at Home First
- Report: Siemens Revises Power Bid
- Arctic Plan May Tap Norwegian Expertise
- Tymoshenko Vows to End Fuel Crisis
- Zhirinovsky Claims Pure Motives in Iraqi Business
- Alfa Telecom Says Svyaz Sale Is Premature
- Lack of Iron Forces MMK Slowdown
- News in Brief
- Critical Journalist Jailed for 2 Years
- Council of Europe Frets About Belarus
- Parties May Get Say in Who Is Governor
- Deaths Said to Top 700 as Uzbek Unrest Spreads
- Uzbek Refugees Are Denied Passage
- Press Group Urges Karimov to Let Reporters Work
- So Far, Verdict Appears to Be Guilty
- Stuck Between Karimov and Radical Islam
- Banking Lessons for Future Oligarchs
- 28 Detained After Rowdy Courthouse Rally
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