www.Top100Newspaper.com - TOP 100 NEWSPAPER SITES
TOP 100 NEWSPAPER SITES
 Main  |  Add a Site  |  FREE Content for Your Web-site  |  Bookmark this site  |  Links  |  Webmaster 
Updated Sun, July 27, 2008.
1.www.bizjournals.com3260000
2.www.usatoday.com2550000
3.www.boston.com2370000
4.www.elmundo.es2190000
5.www.libertaddigital.com2050000
6.www.sfgate.com1900000
7.www.stern.de1840000
8.www.canada.com1720000
9.www.zeit.de1610000
10.www.elcomerciodigital.com1560000
11.seattlepi.nwsource.com1430000
12.www.welt.de1330000
13.www.standaard.be1220000
14.www.chicagotribune.com1190000
15.www.al.com971000
16.www.repubblica.it964000
17.www.orlandosentinel.com854000
18.www.journaldunet.com837000
19.www.sueddeutsche.de803000
20.www.latimes.com773000
21.www.nj.com745000
22.www.tribuneindia.com720000
23.www.newsday.com679000
24.www.corriere.it663000
25.www.asharqalawsat.com648000
26.www.zaman.com.tr633000
27.www.signonsandiego.com627000
28.www.sptimes.com587000
29.www.dallasnews.com583000
30.www.examiner.com582000
31.www.denverpost.com570000
32.www.villagevoice.com564000
33.www.baltimoresun.com559000
34.www.csmonitor.com556000
35.www.chron.com540000
36.www.oregonlive.com518000
37.www.telegraphindia.com508000
38.www.nytimes.com506000
39.online.wsj.com505000
40.www.azcentral.com494000
41.www.post-gazette.com491000
42.www.lequipe.fr490000
43.www.aftenposten.no488000
44.www.nypost.com464000
45.www.elconfidencial.com445000
46.deseretnews.com443000
47.www.economist.com440000
48.www.twincities.com437000
49.www.stltoday.com432000
50.www.liberation.fr427000
Pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 


Subscribe to RSS feed Subscribe to Feed Burner feed Add to Del.icio.us Add to Yahoo Add to Google Add to Furl Add to Reddit Add to Blink Add to Meneame Add to Fark Add to Ma.gnolia Add to Newsvine Add to Shadows

24. www.corriere.it

Rating: 663000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.corriere.it' on the other websites

www.corriere.it

Corriere della Sera

Description: Corriere della Sera online, news, approfondimenti, gli articoli del quotidiano e dei supplementi Lavoro, Salute, Economia e Scienze

Most popular searches: Corriere Salute, infotraffic, Montanelli, il corriere dei piccoli, Notizie, www.corrieer.it, wwwcorriere.it, RPQ, Fegiz, Severgnini, news, www.correire.it, wwwc.orriere.it, Corriere della Sera, www.ocrriere.it, approfondimenti, Schelotto, www.corriereit, Economia, ww.corriere.it, Salute, ww.wcorriere.it, quotidiano, www.corriere.ti, Corriere Lavoro, www.corriere.t, www.croriere.it, Solferino, www.orriere.it, wwwcorriere.it, www.corrier.eit, ww.corriere.it, www.corrier.it, www.crriere.it, www.corirere.it, www.corriere.i, www.corriee.it, www.corrierei.t, Lavoro, informazione, giornale, www.corriere.it, www.corriree.it, radio news, www.corrire.it, Corriere Economia, www.coriere.it, Meteo, www.corriere.it, Vivimilano, Aldo Grasso, www.correre.it

Google

© 2005-2008 www.Top100Newspaper.com
Brazil police: Needles in boy reportedly a ritual
BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) -- The stepfather of a 2-year-old boy found with 42 needles in his body has confessed to jabbing them into the toddler as part of a religious ritual, Brazilian police said Thursday....
hosted.ap.org
Pope presses the flesh, visits Rome soup kitchen
VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope Benedict XVI waded into a crowd of well-wishers in Rome on Sunday, just days after he was knocked down by a woman at a Christmas Eve Mass....
hosted.ap.org
Terror is the price of support for despots and dictators | Seumas Milne
Egypt's complicity in the Gaza's siege underlines the role of western support for such regimes in the spread of warIf an 85-year-old Holocaust survivor had gone on hunger strike in support of a besieged people in another part of the world, and hundreds of mostly western protesters had been stoned and beaten by police, you can be sure we'd have heard all about it. But because that is what's been happening in western-backed Egypt, rather than Iran, and the people the protesters are supporting are the Palestinians of Gaza instead of, say, Tibetans, most people in Europe and north America know nothing about it.For the last fortnight, two groups of hundreds of activists have been battling with Egyptian police and officials to cross into the Gaza Strip to show solidarity with the blockaded population on the first anniversary of Israel's devastating onslaught. Last night, George Galloway's Viva Palestina 500-strong convoy of medical aid was finally allowed in, minus 50 of its 200 vehicles, after being repeatedly blocked, diverted and intimidated by Egyptian security – including a violent assault in the Egyptian port of El Arish on Tuesday night which left dozens injured, despite the participation of one British and 10 Turkish MPs.That followed an attempted "Gaza freedom march" by 1,400 protesters from more than 40 countries, only 84 of whom were allowed across the border – which is what led Hedy Epstein, both of whose parents died in Auschwitz, to refuse food in Cairo, as the group's demonstrations were violently broken up and Israel's prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu was feted nearby. Yesterday, demonstrations by Palestinians on the Gazan side of the border against the harassment of the aid convoy led to violent clashes with Egyptian security forces in which an Egyptian soldier was killed and many Palestinians injured.But although the confrontation has been largely ignored in the west, it has been a major media event in the Middle East which has only damaged Egypt. And while the Egyptian government claims it is simply upholding its national sovereignty, the saga has instead starkly exposed its complicity in the US- and European-backed blockade of Gaza and the collective punishment of its one and a half million people.The main protagonist of the siege, Israel, controls only three sides of the Strip. Without Egypt, which polices the fourth, it would be ineffective. But, having tolerated the tunnels that have saved Gazans from utter beggary, the Cairo regime is now building a deep underground steel wall – known as the "wall of shame" to many Egyptians – under close US supervision, to make the blockade complete.That's partly because the ageing Egyptian dictator, Hosni Mubarak, fears cross-border contamination from Gaza's elected Hamas administration, whose ideological allies in the banned Muslim Brotherhood would be likely to win free elections in Egypt.But two other factors seem to have been decisive in convincing Cairo to bend to American and Israeli pressure and close the vice on Gaza's Palestinians, along with those who support them. The first was a US threat to cut hundreds of millions of dollars of aid unless it cracked down on arms and other smuggling. The second is the need for US acquiescence in the widely expected hereditary succession of Mubarak's ex-banker son, Gamal, to the presidency. So, far from protecting its sovereignty, the Egyptian government has sold it for continued foreign subsidy and despotic dynastic rule, sacrificing any pretence to its historic role of Arab leadership in the process.From the wider international perspective, it is precisely this western embrace of repressive and unrepresentative regimes such as Egypt's, along with unwavering backing for Israel's occupation and colonisation of Palestinian land, that is at the heart of the crisis in the Middle East and Muslim world.Decades of oil-hungry backing for despots, from Iran to Oman, Egypt to Saudi Arabia, along with the failure of Arab nationalism to complete the decolonisation of the region, fuelled first the rise of Islamism and then the eruption of al-Qaida-style terror more than a decade ago. But, far from addressing the natural hostility to foreign control of the area and its resources at the centre of the conflict, the disastrous US-led response was to expand the western presence still further, with new and yet more destructive invasions and occupations, in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. And the Bush administration's brief flirtation with democratisation in client states such as Egypt was quickly abandoned once it became clear who was likely to be elected.The poisonous logic of this imperial quagmire is now leading inexorably to the spread of war under Barack Obama. Following the failed bomb attack of a Detroit-bound flight on Christmas Day, the US president this week announced two new fronts in the war on terror, faithfully echoed by Gordon Brown: Yemen, where the would-be bomber was allegedly trained; and Somalia, where al-Qaida has also put down roots in the swamp of chronic civil war and social disintegration.Greater western military intervention in both countries will certainly make the problem worse. In Somalia, it has already done so, after the US-backed Ethiopian invasion of 2006 overthrew the relatively pragmatic Islamic Courts Union and spawned the more extreme, al-Qaida-linked Shabab movement, now in control of large parts of the country. Increased US backing for the unpopular Yemeni government, already facing armed rebellion in the north and the threat of secession from the restive south – which only finally succeeded in forcing out British colonial rule in 1967 – is bound to throw petrol on the flames.The British prime minister tried this week to claim that the growth of al-Qaida in Yemen and Somalia showed western strategy was "working", because the escalation of the war in Afghanistan and Pakistan had forced it to look for sanctuaries elsewhere. In reality, it is a measure of the grotesque failure of the entire war on terror. Since its launch in October 2001, al-Qaida has spread from the mountains of Afghanistan across the region, to Iraq, Pakistan, the horn of Africa, and far beyond.Instead of scaling down the western support for dictatorship and occupation that fuels al-Qaida-style terror, and concentrating resources on police action to counter it, the US and its allies have been drawn inexorably into repeating and extending the monstrosities that sparked it in the first place. It's the recipe for a war on terror without end.Middle EastPalestinian territoriesGazaEgyptGlobal terrorismIsraelSeumas Milneguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
On the Scene: VOA's Brian Wagner Describes Haiti Relief Efforts
With quake aid distribution hampered by blocked roads, limited resources, helicopters are proving to be the best way to reach people
www1.voanews.com
Belgian city apartments collapse
Belgian rescue workers try to save survivors after an apartment building collapsed following a blast in Liege.
news.bbc.co.uk