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India's Jet Airways sacks 25 expatriate pilots

Jet Airways New Delhi - Indian domestic airlines Jet airways has terminated the contracts of at least 25 expatriate pilots, news reports said Saturday.

A major hike in aviation fuel earlier this year combined with the impact of high inflation has led to a downturn in India's aviation sector and the sackings are part of an effort to cut costs and streamline operations.

The foreigners among the staff who had been sacked included captains of Boeing 737 aircraft, a Jet Airways spokesperson was quoted as saying by PTI news agency. The airlines had earlier grounded five of these aircraft.

Baghdad blast kills 1, wounds 7; army kills al-Qaeda senior leader

Baghdad, iraqBaghdad  - One person was killed and seven injured on Saturday in a bomb blast in northern Baghdad, police said.

The bomb went off in the al-Qahira neighborhood, damaging nearby shops and vehicles, the Voices of Iraq news agency reported.

Meanwhile, a prominent al-Qaeda-in-Iraq leader was killed in the north of the Iraqi capital during an operation by Iraqi forces, Sahwa fighters and coalition forces, a US army statement said on Saturday.

New Zealand's new prime minister is poor boy made good,

Voting begins in election that could see swing to the right Wellington- New Zealand's new Prime Minister, John Key, 47, who steered his conservative National Party to victory in Saturday's general election, is a classic example of a poor boy made good.

Brought up by his mother in a state house after his alcoholic father died when he was seven, he made a fortune overseas as a foreign currency dealer before returning home to enter parliament a multi-millionaire and its richest member.

"Second best" label uncomfortable for Federer

Shanghai - Proud Roger Federer has pronounced himself massively dissatisfied with his current label of "second best" in tennis after losing the number one ranking last August to Rafael Nadal.

Yemen appeals court reduces jail term for US-wanted al-Qaeda suspect

Federal Bureau for Investigation (FBI)Sana'a, Yeme

Obama won because he had ‘broad-based support of all racial backgrounds’

Holiday mood despite long US election linesWednesday Lahore, Nov 8 : African-American Democrat Barack Obama won the Nov 4 presidential poll because the White votes outnumbered non-White votes and in the end, the scope of Obama’s victory showed that he enjoyed significant, broad-based support from Americans of all racial backgrounds,” the Daily Times quoted an article published on the blog Asian-Nation as saying.

The article further stated that 52 percent of voters earning at least 200,000 dollars per annum voted for Obama as opposed to 46 percent who voted for his rival Republican candidate John McCain.

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