Lohan in court for probation update

Lindsay Lohan is returning to court to give a judge her second update on how she is faring under strict new probation requirements. Today’s hearing in Los Angeles is expected to be much like the actress’s last progress update: short and without surprises. Lohan has been doing clean-up work at the county morgue and attending psychotherapy sessions in an effort to avoid problems with her probation for separate drink-driving and... [more]

Russia to Test if U.S. Radar Downed Phobos Probe

A Russian government commission inquiring into why the Phobos-Grunt Mars probe crashed this week is to test whether it was affected after launch by U.S. radars on its second orbit around the Earth, the commission said on Tuesday. The investigators said that they would stage an experiment where a model Phobos will be subjected to radiation similar to that from U.S. radars. “The results of the experiment will allow us to prove or dismiss... [more]

France facing key bond test after downgrade

France is to issue long-term bonds on Thursday in the first test of its market credibility in the wake of Standard & Poor’s decision to strip the country of its cherished triple-A rating. The sale, an attempt to raise between €7.5 billion and €9.5 billion (between $9.5 billion and $12 billion), will be watched keenly to see whether France will pay higher yields or whether the markets will shrug off the downgrade as they did... [more]

Legend Mats Wilander was hospitalized in Australia

Former world number one Mats Wilander was taken to hospital on the eve of the Australian Open in Melbourne after falling and lacerating a kidney, his company said on Tuesday. In a Facebook posting Wilander on Wheels, which runs tennis clinics, said it wanted to give an update on his condition because of rumours swirling about the Swede, a commentator for Eurosport. “Late on Saturday evening Mats sustained a fall in his apartment... [more]

German airports still stingy with their wireless internet

German airports are slowly offering more free internet access, but progress is slow, with only Cologne Bonn Airport providing unlimited free surfing. That is in stark contrast to much of the rest of the world, including the United States, Austria and Australia where airports sometimes use the free internet access they offer as promotion for their facilities. The Handelsblatt newspaper, which listed a run-down of the situation in Germany... [more]

Kim brother says N.Korea heading for collapse

The eldest brother of North Korea’s new leader says reforms needed to avert the collapse of the country’s economy will lead to the end of its Stalinist regime, according to a book to be published this week. Kim Jong-Nam, the half brother of Kim Jong-Un who took control of the hermit state on the death of their father last month, says the military has become so powerful it will step in and take over. The comments come in a book... [more]

Greeks strike against austerity as EU, IMF visit

Striking Greek workers brought the Athens metro to a standstill on Tuesday and kept ferries docked to protest against austerity as the country’s lenders visited Athens to try to avert a disorderly debt default. EU, IMF and ECB officials start combing through Athens’ books on Tuesday as part of efforts to put together a 130-billion-euro rescue package that Greece needs to stay afloat when a major bond redemption comes due... [more]

Medvedev proposes direct governor elections

Russia’s outgoing President Dmitry Medvedevon Monday proposed a law to restore the direct elections of governors, part of a raft of reforms promised after massive nationwide protests — though the bill still preserves a strongKremlin role in the vote. Medvedev’s powerful predecessor and mentor, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, oversaw a rollback in post-Soviet freedoms during his tenure as president, including scrapping gubernatorial... [more]

Financial transactions tax ‘failed’

As Europe debates whether to apply a tax on financial transactions, a former Swedish finance minister says Sweden’s experience in the 1980s was so negative it repealed the tax as plunging trading volumes led to disappointing tax revenues. “The Swedish experiences were negative, both from the point of view of the state’s finances and from a general socioeconomic perspective,” former finance minister Bo Lundgren, 64,... [more]

Deutsche Börse-NYSE merger heads for rocks

The merger of Deutsche Börse and NYSE Euronext, which would create the world’s largest market operator worth over $17 billion (€14 billion), looks seriously compromised just weeks from an EU competition decision. With European anti-trust services setting conditions deemed unacceptable by executives, there is a growing chance that the tie-up putting the New York Stock Exchange under the same roof as the German market operator will... [more]

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