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Montevideo, May 5th 2024 - 10:43 UTC

Stories for August 11th 2006

  • Friday, August 11th 2006 - 21:00 UTC

    Penguin News Update

    Headlines: Rewarding a year's hard work;
    Travel security increased on south-bound flights only; Governor leaves;
    Advice for Camp patients; Man injured in incident;
    Coastal contract: clock ticking to end of Island Shipping service.

  • Friday, August 11th 2006 - 21:00 UTC

    Brazil: 12% of Congress faces expulsion for taking bribes

    A Brazilian congressional panel has recommended that 72 Deputies and Senators be expelled for taking bribes. The panel investigated during 52 days a huge corruption ring accused of profiting from inflated contracts to supply ambulances and sanitary equipment to local authorities.

  • Friday, August 11th 2006 - 21:00 UTC

    Argentina/Chile milk war beginning to boil

    Argentina warned Thursday that if Chile imposes safeguards on Argentine imports of dairy produce to Chile it will take the case to the consideration of the World Trade Organization as contemplated in current commerce legislation.

  • Friday, August 11th 2006 - 21:00 UTC

    Mexican vote recount showing “errors”

    The first of five days of partial vote recount in Mexico's contested presidential election has shown the existence of errors but representatives from the ruling coalition said Conservative candidate Felipe Calderon retains the tight advantage.

  • Friday, August 11th 2006 - 21:00 UTC

    Pulp mills conflict: ruling expected in September

    Hearings before a Mercosur trade block arbitration court in Montevideo in connection with a presentation filed by Uruguay against Argentina concluded Thursday behind closed doors.

  • Friday, August 11th 2006 - 21:00 UTC

    UK foils aircraft bomb plot

    Plotters allegedly planned to blow up 10 US-bound airliners over the Atlantic. Twenty-four UK-citizens arrested, but ringleader said to be still at large.

  • Friday, August 11th 2006 - 21:00 UTC

    Coping with new air travel restrictions

    Four-hour lines. No water bottles. Screaming children. Missed flights. US experts offer strategies for coping with the effects of the latest airline terror plot.