IMF and UN officials killed in Kabul restaurant attack
1 hour ago
A
senior IMF official and four UN employees were among 15 people killed
in a suicide bomb and gun attack on a restaurant in Kabul, officials
say.Wabel Abdallah, the head of the IMF's Afghanistan office, and the UN civilian staff died in the capital's popular Taverna du Liban, in what UN chief Ban Ki-moon said was a "horrific attack".
Philip Palmer reports.
SAN
FRANCISCO: US chip giant Intel has said it will trim its workforce by
five per cent this year as it shifts from personal computers to powering
mobile gadgets.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
SAN
FRANCISCO: US chip giant Intel has said it will trim its workforce by
five per cent this year as it shifts from personal computers to powering
mobile gadgets.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
SAN
FRANCISCO: US chip giant Intel has said it will trim its workforce by
five per cent this year as it shifts from personal computers to powering
mobile gadgets.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
SAN
FRANCISCO: US chip giant Intel has said it will trim its workforce by
five per cent this year as it shifts from personal computers to powering
mobile gadgets.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
Word of the job cuts came a day after Intel reported that its net profit last year sank 13 per cent but that the troubled personal computer market appeared to be stabilising.
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