USA - The Obama Administration should remove Hamas from the terrorist list, former President Jimmy Carter told media following his visit to Gaza today. He said he plans on pushing for the change when he meets with US officials on Thursday to discuss his latest trip to the Middle East.
UK - In a debate on European Affairs in the House of Commons yesterday, Shadow Foreign Secretary William Hague said that as a consequence of poor election results, the Government would have little influence when it came to discussing Europe's institutional future.
UK - Customers of RBS, which is now more than 70 per cent owned by the government, will enjoy fine dining and champagne courtesy of the bank as they watch the tennis championships at the All England Club, which start on Monday.
WASHINGTON - The new strain of H1N1 flu is causing "something different" to happen in the United States this year - perhaps an extended year-round flu season that disproportionately hits young people, health officials said on Thursday.
TALBOZANG, AFGHANISTAN - Fifty-year-old Abdul Wadud walked for two hours across Afghanistan's remote northern mountains to hear a police commander give yet more promises of aid for those who turn their backs on growing opium. Wadud does not grow drugs. But if no money comes soon, he will.
USA - As a senator, Barack Obama denounced the Bush administration for holding "secret energy meetings" with oil executives at the White House. But critics say the president has left a huge loophole for himself on the issue of transparency.
UK - A record crowd of about 36,500 revellers has welcomed the dawn of the Summer Solstice at Stonehenge. The number of people attending the event caused roads in the area to become gridlocked in the hours leading up to sunrise at 0458 BST.
UK - Concerns over the appointment of Aaqil Ahmed, who was poached by the corporation from Channel 4 last month, will be raised in a Church document to be published tomorrow. It calls his move to the BBC a "worrying" development and accuses the corporation of treating religion like "a freak show".
UK - Paramedics are being offered £40 overtime each to take part in a gay pride march, even if they are not homosexual, according to reports.
FRANCE - Helicopters are being deployed to spray poison in the skies above northern France to wipe out swarms of mosquitoes that are threatening to cross the Channel into Britain.
BRUSSELS - Friday's deal in Brussels paving the way forward for a second referendum on the Lisbon Treaty in Ireland is the most important decision taken in Europe this year. The treaty, which will bring widespread reforms to the European Union and give its institutions greater power, could go into effect before the end of the year.
WASHINGTON - The US is moving ground-to-air missile defenses to Hawaii as tensions escalate between Washington and Pyongyang over North Korea's recent moves to restart its nuclear-weapon program and resume test-firing long-range missiles.
ROME - One billion people throughout the world suffer from hunger, a figure which has increased by 100 million BECAUSE OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS, says the UN. The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said the figure was a record high.
UK - Power station workers could walk out AND THREATEN ELECTRICITY SUPPLIES in support of the 900 oil refinery staff sacked over unofficial industrial action. French giant Total wrote to 900 workers at its Lindsey refinery in Lincolnshire, telling them they had until Monday to reapply for their jobs.
UK - Teachers are being handed five-page guides warning of the dangers of Pritt Stick, fuelling claims health and safety rules are ruining education. Staff told how they had been subjected to a series of increasingly bizarre guidelines to stop schools being sued in the event of an accident.