Morning re-cap of main news, May 8

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* Serbian President Boris Tadic said election a hardline nationalist as parliament speaker is detrimental to the country's interests

* In Ukraine:

- Ukraine's political crisis acquired a new twist as the president, premier and opposition failed to attend a scheduled parliamentary session convened to discuss legal arrangements for snap elections

- President Viktor Yushchenko said that the transportation minister should resign after a train derailed in the east of the country and a gas pipeline going to Europe was damaged by a blast

- Ukraine's top prosecutor, Svyatoslav Piskun, said a blast that damaged a Russian gas pipeline bound for Europe Monday was caused by negligence rather than terrorism

* Russian Railways railroad monopoly said it cancelled the St. Petersburg-Tallinn train service as of May 26 for being unprofitable

* No nation has the right to tell Poland how to name streets or what monuments to unveil in Polish cities, the country's Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski said

* Nicolas Sarkozy left France for a short break Monday after his victory in last weekend's polls, but violent protests against the hardline president-elect show no signs of abating

* Russia has called on the Palestinian government to take effective action to stop missile attacks on Israel and prevent reprisals, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said

* The foreign ministries of Russia and China denied a report by a human rights group that they supplied arms in breach of a UN embargo to the government-backed militia in Darfur in west Sudan

* A group of military observers and OSCE Mission officials came under attack in the Georgian-Ossetian conflict area, a spokesman for the joint peacekeeping forces said

* Russia and Bulgaria signed a number of intergovernmental agreements on cooperation as prime ministers of the two former Communist countries met Tuesday in Moscow

* Russia intends to ratify in the near future an agreement on the construction of the one billion-euro Burgas-Alexandroupolis oil pipeline, Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov said

* The World Bank approved a $2.96 mln grant for Uzbekistan to help the Central Asian republic with bird flu prevention measures, the WB office in the Uzbek capital said

* The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is prepared to increase its financial assistance to Moldova by $33 million, the head of the IMF mission in the impoverished ex-Soviet republic said

* Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus could establish a customs union as soon as Russia and Kazakhstan join the WTO, Russia's deputy economics minister said

* It will take Gulf nations 12-15 years to start developing civilian nuclear energy, the foreign minister of Kuwait, Sheikh Mohammad Al-Sabah, said

* An expert at Belarus' top security service spoke out against paying a ransom to militants who kidnapped a Belarusian woman in Nigeria, or her brother getting involved in the negotiations

* A team of Israeli archeologists found what they believe is the tomb of King Herod, who ruled the Roman province of Judea in the 1st century BC, Hebrew University said

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