Iraq Iraq's new constitution looked set for adoption following an historic referendum, but election officials said two Sunni Arab provinces had rejected it and stressed that final results were not yet in. Greece Greece's agriculture ministry confirmed the country's first positive test for avian flu virus, following tests on the island of Chios which detected the presence of the H5 strain in a local turkey. Mideast Israel decided to suspend all contacts with the Palestinian Authority and impose a series of restrictions on civilians in the West Bank following a shooting attack which killed three Jewish settlers. Pakistan Aid finally started reaching some of Pakistan's thousands of cold and hungry earthquake survivors as helicopters, trucks and donkeys raced to reach Himalayan villages cut off for nine days. Japan Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi made another controversial visit to a Tokyo war shrine, infuriating Asian neighbors which see it as a symbol of Japan's past military aggression. Germany Germany's incoming chancellor Angela Merkel named the conservative ministers in her cabinet, completing the line-up of a power-sharing government tasked with injecting life into an ailing economy. China China's second manned space flight ended successfully as the Shenzhou VI craft returned to Earth, prompting patriotic celebrations and plans for an ambitious new mission in 2007. UN President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe denounced US President George Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair as "the two unholy men of our millennium" in a speech to the UN Food Agency. Libya US President George W. Bush demanded that Libya spare the lives of five Bulgarian nurses facing a firing squad and release them from prison. Russia Veteran Chechen guerrilla leader Shamil Basayev claimed responsibility for a mass raid by Islamic militants in southern Russia last week, while a top official said the authorities were partly to blame for a radicalisation of Muslim youth in the region.