BBC News with Fiona MacDonald.
One of the opposition presidential candidates in Iran, Mehdi Karroubi, has alleged that some of the people detained after the disputed election last month have been tortured to death in prison. Andrew Bolton has more
The claim by Mehdi Karroubi, one of the defeated presidential candidates, comes after he said that a number of prisoners both male and female had been raped. He’s called for the formation of an independent committee to review evidence in a calm atmosphere. The Iranian authorities have denied the rape allegations but have admitted that abuses have taken place. One detention center was ordered to close. Analysts say the Iranian opposition is using the issue to continue attacking the government without directly questioning the election victory of President Mohammed Amadinajad.
A long-running battle between two famous German carmakers has ended with the largest Volkswagen agreeing to buy a 42% stake in the sports car unit of Porsche. The two companies will complete a complex merger by 2011. With the details, here is our
business reporter Theo Leggett.
The merger plan is complex but allows Porsche to retain its independence within an integrated group. The Porsche and Piech families which currently control Porsche will together remain Volkswagen’s biggest shareholder. But it’s not yet clear whether they will hold a majority stake. The German state of Lower Saxony is expected to retain a significant holding and will continue to hold a veto over key decisions taken by the board, while new investment to reinforce the group’s
Finances is expected to come from the Middle Eastern Emerald of Kasa.
The finance ministers of Germany and France have hailed figures which show the two countries have unexpectedly returned to growth after a year of recession. The German and French economies each grew by 0.3% in the 2nd quarter of this year, confounding forecast that they’d continue to shrink. The French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde told the BBC why she thought that France had fared better than expected.
Our banking system has been slightly more stable and more solid than in other places. Number two, we certainly launched a policy of NO.1 reforms NO.2 re-launch growth as much as we could and we started quite early on, particularly in respect to the automotive sector. And I think that that particular part was extremely helpful.
The United Nations Security Council has expressed serious concern at the imposition of a further period of house arrest on the Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi. The council’s statement which called for the release of all political prisoners in Burma came after two days of debate. Earlier, the European Union extended its sanctions on Burma. The EU said that the judges involved in Ms. Suu Kyi’s sentencing will be subjected to asset freezes and bans on travel to EU countries.
World News from the BBC
Gunmen in the southern Russian region of Dagestan have shot and killed four police officers and seven civilians. The attackers opened fire on a police checkpoint, a nearby sauna. Islamist rebels have been blamed for an upsurge in violence in Dagestan and the neighboring regions of Ingushetia and Chechnya.
The executive board of the International Olympic Committee has recommended that golf and rugby sevens will be the new sports in the 2016 summer games. The decision was made at a meeting of the IOC board in Berlin. Rugby sevens is a faster seven-a-
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