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Last week, Russia's lower house of parliament passed a resolution insisting that Josef Stalin's man–made 1932–33 famine – called the Holodomor in Ukrainian – wasn't genocide.

Not even the Russians dispute that the Soviet government deliberately starved millions. But the Russian resolution indignantly states: "There is no historical proof that the famine was organized along ethnic lines." It notes that victims included "different peoples and nationalities living largely in agricultural areas of the country."
Related Articles Last 30 Days
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) ––Pirates have hijacked a tanker and its 41 crew members off Yemen's coast in the Gulf of Aden, the owner said Saturday.
BANGKOK, THAILAND (AP) – Thai police used tear gas to disperse a crowd of several thousand anti–government protesters who were besieging city police headquarters. The prime minister said he might declare a state of emergency if the rioting worsens.
HANOI, VIETNAM (AP) – Vietnamese authorities denied Friday that they had used force or stun guns to break up a demonstration by Catholics who are demanding the return of land the Communist government took more than four decades ago.
TUZI, Montenegro – Two U.S. citizens convicted in Montenegro of plotting an ethnic Albanian rebellion in the country said in an interview Friday that they are innocent, and they accused authorities of torture.
TORONTO (AP) – Police have identified the man who witnesses say stabbed and beheaded a passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in Canada.
WARSAW, Poland (AP) ––Testifying at the trial of Poland's last Communist leader, Former Polish President Lech Walesa suggested Wednesday that the Soviet system was responsible for the killing of protesting shipyard workers in 1970, rather than individuals.
YAOUNDE, CAMEROON (AP) – Ten insurgents and two Cameroonian soldiers were killed in a rebel attack in the oil–rich Bakassi peninsula, Cameroon's Defense Minister said on state–run TV on Friday.
OSLO, NORWAY (AP) – A group of men armed with bats and iron bars attacked a center for political asylum–seekers in southern Norway, leaving more than 20 people injured, the facility's director said Friday.
BEIJING | China and Russia signed an agreement Monday to end a long–running dispute over the demarcation of their eastern border, the scene of military clashes between the once–bitter Communist rivals.
ANKARA, TURKEY (AP) – Three Germans seized by Kurdish rebels during a climbing expedition on Mount Ararat more than a week ago have been released in good condition, authorities said Sunday.
KHARTOUM, SUDAN (AP) – Sudanese police say a stampede among crowds of people attending a military graduation ceremony killed 17 people and injured three dozen others.
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA (AP) – North Korea said South Korea was to blame for the shooting death of a South Korean tourist in the communist nation, demanding an apology Saturday and saying it would ban visits to a mountain resort where Seoul has already suspended tours since the killing.
ULAN BATOR, Mongolia (AP) ––Rifle–toting soldiers patrolled the streets and armored vehicles guarded intersections in Mongolia's capital Wednesday, the start of a four–day state of emergency triggered by riots over alleged election fraud in which at least five people died.
State radio in Cameroon says prison guards have killed 16 inmates trying to escape from a jail in the country's commercial capital.
Formal charges were filed Wednesday against four men accused in connection with the 2006 killing of journalist Anna Politkovskaya, Russian investigators said.
The plight of tens of thousands of abused Pakistani women doesn't garner the headlines of Darfur's genocide in Sudan, the sympathy afforded Burma's forgotten victims or the outrage unleashed in New Orleans after Katrina. These battered women also don't attract the outpouring of financial support that so many other recent global tragedies have drawn.
MOSCOW, Russia (AP) ––Three years after gunning down unarmed protesters in the city of Andijan, Uzbek authorities are still persecuting people they believe are linked to the unrest, an international rights group says in a report released Monday.
MADRID, Spain (AP) ––Pirates have hijacked a Spanish fishing boat with a crew of 26 off the coast of Somalia, Spain's Foreign Ministry said Monday.
Here are some news items from just this past week:

In Tibet, according to an Associated Press report, "police opened fire on hundreds of Buddhist monks and lay people who had marched on local government offices to demand the release of two monks detained for possessing photographs of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled Buddhist leader." At least eight died.
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