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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

12 killed in Cambodian traffic accident: police

PHNOM PENH  ( 2008-04-02 10:39:56 ) : 

Twelve people have been killed and 11 others seriously injured in one of Cambodia's worst-ever traffic accidents, police said on Wednesday.
The crash occurred Tuesday when a mini-van packed full of travellers collided with a truck as it tried to turn across a highway in eastern Cambodia, district police chief Heng Vuthy said.
"It is a tragedy caused by driver negligence," he told AFP.
Traffic accident fatalities have more than doubled in the past five years, becoming Cambodia's second biggest killer behind HIV/AIDS and resulting in mounting costs for the government.
Better roads and more vehicles are contributing heavily to this bloody toll, but bad driving is the main cause behind most accidents, police say.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

China warns Japan, Europe not to support Dalai Lama

BEIJING  ( 2008-04-01 20:37:00 ) : 

China said on Tuesday it opposed foreign nations providing support to what it said was the Dalai Lama's attempts to split Tibet from China, reacting to reports that he may go to Japan and Europe.
"We oppose his split’s activities. We oppose any officials of foreign countries providing support for the split’s activities by the Dalai Lama," foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters.
Jiang made the remark when asked to comment on plans by the Dalai Lama to make a stopover in Japan next week on his way to the United States.
The Dalai Lama is a frequent visitor to Japan, where he enjoys a wide public following. But unlike many of their Western counterparts, Japanese leaders have almost always refused to meet the Nobel peace laureate.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner also said on Tuesday the European Union's 27 foreign ministers would invite the Dalai Lama for talks in Brussels.
"As the Dalai Lama does not ask for a boycott (of the Olympic Games in Beijing) nor Tibet's independence it is time to go back (to dialogue)," Kouchner said.
When asked to comment on this, Jiang referred to her previous statement.
The Dalai Lama has repeatedly denied he wants independence for Tibet, or is trying to orchestrate independence. He has said he wants greater autonomy for Tibet under Chinese rule, but also an end to repression there.