| July 2007 |
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The foreign ministers of 27 European Union member states approved Monday sending EU peacekeepers to Chad and the Central African Republic in October to protect refugees from the Sudanese violence-torn province of Darfur. 
Iraq's environment minister blamed Monday the use of depleted uranium weapons by U.S. forces during the 2003 Operation Shock and Awe for the current surge in cancer cases across the country. 
The Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty could still be "reanimated" if NATO countries agree to ratify its adopted version before the December 2007 deadline, a Russian parliament member said Monday. 
The leader of the radical Lebanon-based Shiite movement Hezbollah has said it can strike anywhere in Israel at any time. 
Russian prosecutors proposed Monday that the U.K. request Russia launch criminal proceedings against businessman Andrei Lugovoi, the key suspect in the murder of former Russian security service officer Alexander Litvinenko. 
Two crew members of the International Space Station have begun a spacewalk that includes the removal of an outdated ammonia reservoir, a NASA Houston mission control spokesperson said Monday. 
Iran's ambassador to Iraq confirmed that talks between his country and the United States on security issues in Iraq would begin Tuesday in Baghdad. 
Estimated economic losses caused by last week's powerful earthquake in northwestern Japan could total $12.5 billion, local authorities said Monday. 
Russian prosecutors proposed Monday that the U.K. request Russia launch criminal proceedings against businessman Andrei Lugovoi, the key suspect in the murder of former Russian security service officer Alexander Litvinenko. 
The board of directors of Russia's flagship airline Aeroflot [RTS: AFLT] approved Monday the purchase of two new long-range Airbus 350XWB passenger planes and 22 long-distance Boeing 787 Dreamliner jets. 
Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez has said he will soon submit to parliament a bill allowing the president to be re-elected an unlimited number of times. 
A total of 23 Russian tourists were injured when a bus en route to the south of France crashed in Poznan, west-central Poland, the Russian consul said. 



