India has conducted a second test firing of a nuclear-capable missile with a range of 5,000 kilometers. New Delhi is struggling to challenge Beijing in the race for missile dominance in Asia.
Russia's president this week reached out directly to the American people, with his anti-war message, via an open letter published in the New York Times. Vladimir Putin made his case against an intervention in Syria, saying all the evidence points to the rebels, not Assad, as the culprits of last month's chemical attack. Now, however, one of Putin's most out-spoken critics in the US - Republican senator John McCain, is planning a response.
'US could live with Saddam & without war', but can it live with Assad?
In one corner of Berlin, Christmas has been cancelled, with centuries of public celebrations put aside for a more neutral "winter festival". But it's not only Christmas though - local Muslims have lost the right to publicly mark Ramadan, instead getting a summer festival.
This week Katie Pilbeam explores the Lehman's legacy half a decade after the US investment bank collapsed -- the biggest bankruptcy in history - questioning whether or not the risks of an overinflated debt and property balloon have been learned. Plus -- the virtual currency Bitcoin will soon be available at a ATM near you - Katie speaks to the brains behind the machines and also catches up with the CEO of Citroën at the Frankfurt Motor Show to discuss the rocky road ahead for the struggling European car market, as well as this week's most exciting corporate news.
Some academic institutions in UK have come under fire for spying on their students' private data - a move that they say was designed to improve education standards.
Εγγραφή σε:
Σχόλια ανάρτησης
(
Atom
)
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια :
Δημοσίευση σχολίου