Vatican Pope John Paul II received the last rites after suffering a heart attack, Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls said. UN The UN Security Council voted to approve war crimes trials over Sudan's Darfur region at the International Criminal Court, ending weeks of deadlock over US opposition to the tribunal. Zimbabwe Zimbabwe's opposition made a strong showing in early results from elections that President Robert Mugabe said his ruling ZANU-PF party would win by a landslide following a day of voting that was free of the bloodshed from past polls. NKorea Hopes for a speedy resumption of six-party talks aimed at ending North Korea's nuclear weapons drive faded after Pyongyang declared itself a nuclear power on a par with Washington and said its new goal was regional disarmament. Asia A United Nations official said the latest estimates from a massive earthquake which struck northwestern Indonesia earlier this week put the death toll as high as 1,300. Iraq Car bombs killed at least 11 Iraqis near Shiite shrines as the community marked a major religious festival, while Sunni leaders feuded over a role in the political process they largely boycotted. Mideast Israeli rabbis and right-wing groups urged soldiers to desert in a fresh attempt to thwart the planned withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and closing of all Jewish settlements in the territory. WorldBank The World Bank named Paul Wolfowitz its next president despite misgivings about the deputy US defence secretary's "neoconservative" ideology and enthusiastic promotion of the war in Iraq. Iraq US intelligence agencies were "dead wrong" in their pre-war assessments of Iraq's weapons programs and still know dangerously little about current nuclear and biological threats, a US presidential commission said. US The life of brain-damaged woman Terri Schiavo has ended but the battle over her fate is still raging in the United States, with a leading lawmaker vowing to take action against an "arrogant, out-of-control" judiciary. Warcrimes The Bosnian Serb government has forwarded to the country's prosecution authorities the names of 892 people believed to be involved in the massacre of some 8,000 Muslims in Srebrenica and who are still holding official positions, a spokeswoman said. WorldBank The World Bank decided to support and guarantee a 1.2 billion dollar hydroelectric project in Laos after 10 years of deliberations on the controversial venture, officials said.