AP - Reaching out to evangelical voters, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is announcing plans that would expand President Bush's program steering federal social service dollars to religious groups and in a move sure to cause controversy support their ability to hire and fire based on faith.
AP - The Pentagon said Monday it is charging a Saudi Arabian with "organizing and directing" the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole and will seek the death penalty.
AP - Democrat Barack Obama rejected a retired general's suggestion that Republican John McCain's military experience didn't necessarily qualify him to be president, as GOP surrogates lined up to label the remarks indecent and disrespectful.
AP - Helicopters and a bomber attacked insurgents massing in eastern Afghanistan under cover of darkness, killing an estimated 33 people, the U.S.-led coalition said Tuesday.
AFP - French diplomat Alain Le Roy was named Monday to succeed Jean-Marie Guehenno as head of the UN department of peacekeeping operations (DPKO), spokeswoman Michele Montas said.
AFP - African Union observers condemned Zimbabwe's one-man election as undemocratic on Monday, intensifying pressure on Robert Mugabe as he faced his peers after a vote much of the world has dismissed as a farce.
Reuters - Anwar Ibrahim, leader of
Malaysia's revitalized opposition, left the Turkish embassy on
Monday where he had taken refuge following sodomy accusations,
the latest thunderbolt in Malaysia's political tempest.
Reuters - A Canadian who accused U.S.
authorities of violating his rights and illegally deporting him
to Syria where he was tortured lost an appeal on Monday.
Reuters - The United States will spend an
additional $1.25 billion on international food aid donations
this year and next as donor countries seek to blunt the effects
of soaring food prices on the world's poor.
Reuters - Four Iraqi men are suing U.S. military
contractors who they say tortured them while they were detained
in Abu Ghraib prison, according to lawsuits being filed at U.S.
federal courts on Monday. -- read full article
Mon, 30 Jun 2008 18:49:39 GMT - Yahoo! News: Top Stories
Reuters - Iraq opened its giant oilfields to
foreign firms on Monday, putting British and U.S. companies in
pole position five years after U.S.-led troops invaded the
country to oust Saddam Hussein.
Reuters - Flooding on the Mississippi River has
closed the St. Louis harbor to barge traffic, halting
commercial traffic at an important junction of several major
waterways, said the U.S. Coast Guard.
Reuters - Democratic presidential
hopeful Barack Obama on Monday rejected questions about his
patriotism even as he drew fire for a supporter's attack on
Republican rival John McCain's military record.
Reuters - African leaders on
Monday pushed President Robert Mugabe to open talks with the
opposition after he was re-elected unopposed in an election
condemned as violent and unfair by the continent's own
monitors.
AP - Second-seeded Jelena Jankovic and No. 4 Svetlana Kuznetsova were ousted in the fourth round Monday, leaving Wimbledon without any of the top four women in the quarterfinals for the first time.