ATHENS, GREECE - The Greek island of Crete was rattled by a 5.9-magnitude earthquake Friday that was felt as far away as Israel, Egypt and Turkey, officials said.
ISRAEL - Social-networking sites, specifically Facebook, are being used to promote a campaign that appears to target the very existence of Israel, with hundreds of thousands worldwide seeking to join in a plan to "return" to and take over the original homes of their families in "Palestine" on May 15.
THAILAND - Thailand's navy has used helicopters and an aircraft carrier to rescue more than 800 tourists stranded by heavy rain on the country's southern islands. Nearly a week of torrential rain has caused flooding and landslides in southern Thailand, killing at least 17 people and tourists trapped on islands in the Andaman Sea and Gulf of Thailand.
UK - The number of homeowners who are struggling to pay their mortgage has jumped and will keep on rising, the Bank of England warned yesterday. Between January and March, lenders said there had been a surge in homeowners failing to find the money to make their loan repayments. They told the Bank's researchers that they expect the problem to get even worse in the coming months.
UK - David Livermore is in a race against evolution. In his north London lab, he holds up an evil-smelling culture plate smeared with bacteria. This creamy-yellow growth is the enemy: a new strain of germs resistant to the most powerful antibiotics yet devised by humankind.
IRELAND/EU - Ireland put a 70-billion-euro price on protecting its banks from future shocks on Thursday and promised a radical overhaul of the sector, trying to persuade investors it has the nation's financial crisis under control. The European Central Bank (ECB) offered a compromise funding solution for Irish lenders but its proposal fell short of a formal medium-term funding facility that would have gold-plated Dublin's big bang announcement.
USA - Congressional lawmakers, after watching from afar as the Obama administration sent US forces into Libya, have started to weigh in with legislation aimed at exercising some control over the direction - or at least the funding - of the mission. After returning from recess, lawmakers are looking at drafting a proposal that would put Congress on record for or against US military involvement.
USA/JAPAN - The world's largest concrete pump, deployed at the construction site of the US government's $4.86 billion mixed oxide fuel plant at Savannah River Site, is being moved to Japan in a series of emergency measures to help stabilize the Fukushima reactors.
INDIA - India's population has grown by 181 million people over the past decade to 1.21 billion, according to the 2011 census. More people now live in India than in the United States, Indonesia, Brazil, Pakistan and Bangladesh combined. India is on course to overtake China as the world's most populous nation by 2030, but its growth rate is falling, figures show. China has 1.3 billion people.
AFRICA - Scientists can't predict when it will erupt as it's in the middle of a war zone. Mount Nyiragongo is one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world - and scientists say it is only a matter of time before it makes the city below a modern day Pompeii. But they don't know when since, located as it is in the war-torn eastern edge of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the two mile high cauldron of lava is also one of the least well understood.
PORTUGAL - Portugal insisted it could cope with looming debt repayments, after analysts warned it does not have enough money to meet its obligations. The debt-laden nation faces around 9 billion euros (7.9 billion pounds) in bond redemptions by June, but currently has no more than 5 billion euros in cash, analysts at Barclays Capital estimated.
USA - US consumers face "serious" inflation in the months ahead for clothing, food and other products, the head of Wal-Mart's US operations warned Wednesday.
AFRICA/MIDDLE EAST - Anwar al-Awlaki, al-Qaeda's most influential English-language preacher, said revolts sweeping the Arab world would help rather than harm its cause by giving Islamists freed from tyranny greater scope to speak out. Western and Arab officials say the example set by young Arabs seeking peaceful political change is a counterweight to al-Qaeda's push for violent militancy and weakens its argument that democracy and Islam are incompatible.
LIBYA - Libyan Foreign Minister Moussa Koussa is in Britain and "no longer willing" to work for Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's regime, the UK Foreign Office says. He flew in from Tunisia on a non-commercial flight and was questioned for several hours by British officials. "He travelled here under his own free will. He has told us he is resigning," said a Foreign Office spokesman.
IVORY COAST - Forces loyal to one of Ivory Coast's rival presidents, Alassane Ouattara, have captured the administrative capital Yamoussoukro, residents say. Fighting erupted when they later entered the key port of San Pedro on their advance from the north against incumbent leader Laurent Gbagbo. Mr Gbagbo continues to cling to power in the main city Abidjan.
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