Wednesday, 30 September, 2009, 8:00 GMT 13:00 +05:00:Asia/Karachi | |
TOP STORIES | |
Brown loses Sun newspaper backing Gordon Brown insists "it's people who decide elections, not newspapers" after the Sun declares for the Conservatives. | |
Deadly tsunamis strike in Pacific Tsunamis caused by a powerful earthquake in the Pacific kill more than 90 people in Samoa, American Samoa and Tonga. | |
Cancer jab 'unlikely' death cause A girl who died shortly after being given a cervical cancer vaccine had a "serious underlying medical condition", an NHS Trust says. | |
UN 'to remove Afghanistan envoy' The BBC learns that UN official Peter Galbraith is to be removed from his post in Afghanistan, but the envoy denies this. | |
Online advertising 'overtakes TV' Online advertising spending in the UK has overtaken television expenditure for the first time, a report says. |
WORLD | |
Deadly tsunamis strike in Pacific Tsunamis caused by a powerful earthquake in the Pacific kill more than 90 people in Samoa, American Samoa and Tonga. | |
IMF cuts crisis losses prediction The International Monetary Fund cuts its prediction for write-downs from the financial crisis to $3.4tn (£2.1tn) from $4tn. | |
UN 'to remove Afghanistan envoy' The BBC learns that UN official Peter Galbraith is to be removed from his post in Afghanistan, but the envoy denies this. |
EUROPE | |
Russia-Georgia war EU report due An independent report into who started last year's Russia Georgia conflict is set to be published by the European Union. | |
New Czech move to block EU treaty Czech senators opposed to the EU's Lisbon Treaty file a new legal complaint that could delay its adoption for months. | |
Brown loses Sun newspaper backing Gordon Brown insists "it's people who decide elections, not newspapers" after the Sun declares for the Conservatives. |
MIDDLE EAST | |
UN scrutinises Gaza 'war crimes' UN's human rights representatives gather in Geneva for a sensitive debate on a report into Israel's military operation in Gaza. | |
Iran insists on 'nuclear rights' Iran says it will not negotiate away its rights to nuclear enrichment at an upcoming meeting with world powers. | |
Iran allows visit to US detainees Swiss diplomats have visited three US hikers detained in Iran after straying across the border from Iraq, officials say. |
SOUTH ASIA | |
UN 'to remove Afghanistan envoy' The BBC learns that UN official Peter Galbraith is to be removed from his post in Afghanistan, but the envoy denies this. | |
Nepal church collapse kills many At least 23 people are killed at a Christian conference when a makeshift church building collapses in eastern Nepal. | |
Air India pilots call off protest Senior pilots of India's national carrier, Air India, call off their four-day-old protest after a government assurance to look into their demands. |
UK | |
Brown loses Sun newspaper backing Gordon Brown insists "it's people who decide elections, not newspapers" after the Sun declares for the Conservatives. | |
RAF leaflet box kills Afghan girl An investigation begins into the death of an Afghan girl who died when a box of leaflets dropped by an RAF aircraft landed on her. | |
Cancer jab 'unlikely' death cause A girl who died shortly after being given a cervical cancer vaccine had a "serious underlying medical condition", an NHS Trust says. |
ENTERTAINMENT | |
Polanski capture 'always planned' US prosecutors dispute claims Roman Polanski's arrest came out of the blue, saying he had been on a "wanted list" for years. | |
Call halts Craig and Jackman play Actors Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman halt a performance of their Broadway play over an audience member's ringing mobile phone. | |
Glasgow not 'too white' for Mobos The founder of the Music of Black Origin Awards rejects comments that Glasgow is a "very white" city to host the event. |
SCIENCE/NATURE | |
'Clown' tourist blasts into space Circus entrepreneur Guy Laliberte is to become the "first clown in space" as he lifts off in a Soyuz rocket from Kazakhstan. | |
Deadly tsunamis strike in Pacific Tsunamis caused by a powerful earthquake in the Pacific kill more than 90 people in Samoa, American Samoa and Tonga. | |
Mummy autopsy result 'was wrong' The first scientific autopsy on an ancient Egyptian mummy probably got the cause of death wrong, research suggests. |
TECHNOLOGY | |
Online thieves step up bank raids Cyber-criminals are increasingly avoiding bank anti-fraud software and recruiting money mules to avoid being caught. | |
18m Freeview homes in TV retune More than 18 million households with Freeview will need to retune their set-top boxes and TVs later as the service is upgraded. | |
Online advertising 'overtakes TV' Online advertising spending in the UK has overtaken television expenditure for the first time, a report says. |
HEALTH | |
Cancer jab 'unlikely' death cause A girl who died shortly after being given a cervical cancer vaccine had a "serious underlying medical condition", an NHS Trust says. | |
Social isolation 'worsens cancer' Social isolation may trigger biological changes that make cancer more deadly, US research on mice suggests. | |
IVF clinics' success rates online IVF success rates are now almost indistinguishable among clinics so patients need to consider other factors, says regulator. |
EDUCATION | |
Parents to get discipline warning Plans to improve pupil behaviour, including leaflets reminding parents of their responsibilities, will be unveiled by Ed Balls. | |
Brown's pledge on school funding Prime Minister Gordon Brown pledges not to cut public spending on schools in England. | |
Watchdog fears over poor students The man who champions the lot of poorer students has said he is "extremely concerned" about the delays to grant and loan payments. |
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1955: James Dean killed in car smash Hollywood actor James Dean is killed when his sports car is involved in a head-on collision with another vehicle. | |||
2000: Shocking images of boy shot in Gaza There is a shocked and angry reaction to images of the death of a 12-year-old Palestinian boy caught in Israeli-Palestinian crossfire. | |||
1971: Foreign Office names Soviet superspy The British Government names Oleg Lyalin as the Soviet defector who last week exposed dozens of Russians alleged to be spying in the UK. | |||
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