Featured

Jordan government guarantees all bank deposits

Jordan government guarantees all bank deposits Amman - Jordanian Prime Minister Nader Dahabi announced Thursday that the government would guarantee all bank deposits in the country until the end of 2009.

"All bank deposits, without any ceiling, will be guaranteed by the government until the end of 2009," Dahabi told board chairmen and general managers of local commercial banks whom he met at the Central Bank of Jordan (CBJ).

Dahabi and CBJ governor Umayyah Touqan assured the bank executives that the country's banking system was not experiencing any liquidity shortage or any credit crisis.

Poll shows majority California voters oppose gay marriage ban

Voting in NYC council for change in term-limits law

Pudgy pets worry British veterinarians

Pudgy pets worry British veterinariansLondon - About half the dogs and a third of all cats in Britain are too fat, a veterinary charity warned Thursday.

Worse: most pet owners don't notice that their four-legged friends are packing too many pounds.

According to the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals, only a fifth of cat owners are aware that their pet has a weight problem. That applied to only a third of dog owners.

Since so many dogs and cats are overweight, pet owners have unrealistic perceptions of the ideal weight and shape for their pet, said veterinarian Sean Wensley.

Greek government spokesman resigns over real-estate scandal

Greek government spokesman resigns over real-estate scandal Athens - Greek government spokesman Theodoros Rousopoulos resigned on Thursday over a real-estate scandal that has linked the conservative government with a monastery in northern Greece.

Rousopoulos reportedly handed in his resignation to Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis and the prime minister accepted it, thanking him for his support to the party over the past eight years.

German minister rejects Swiss protest over tax issue

OECD LogoStuttgart - German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck rejected Thursday a protest from Switzerland, two days after he said in Paris that the Alpine republic was not doing enough to stop tax evaders.

Speaking in Stuttgart, Steinbrueck, who oversaw Germany's rescue package last week for ailing banks, said, "I'll keep naming names." He said he would continue to be outspoken whenever "Germans are invited to evade taxes."

He criticized Berne for summoning the German ambassador to hear a protest over his Tuesday remarks.

Pages