Dutch Minister may remove telephone-tapped’s right to know

Justice minister Ernst Hirsch Ballin has told MPs he is considering scrapping the rule which says the security service has to inform people their telephones have been tapped after the tap has been removed. In practise, those whose phones have been tapped are often hard to track down and there are enough other opportunities open to people to find out if their phone conversations have been listened into, the minister said. Nor is there any... [more]

EU ‘allows doctor language tests’

EU rules do not stop national authorities carrying out language tests on foreign doctors working in the UK, the European Commission said. A spokesman was responding to a House of Commons report calling for tighter vetting of foreign doctors and urging ministers to press for EU rule changes to allow checks by the General Medical Council. The report followed fears about the risk of patients being treated by doctors lacking the right qualifications... [more]

France Spy agency probed Sarkozy marriage rumours

France’s spy agency, the DCRI, has confirmed it was tasked with identifying the source of rumours – since denied – about the stability of French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s marriage with singer Carla Bruni. French spies tried to track down the source of rumours about the stability of President Nicolas Sarkozy’s marriage, the head of the domestic intelligence agency said Wednesday. Asked about the rumours —... [more]

Discovery unloads supplies for space station

The Discovery crew began to deliver supplies to the International Space Station on Thursday and prepared for the mission’s first spacewalk a day after the US space shuttle docked with the orbiting station. Discovery astronauts opened the hatch to unload the Italian-made Leonardo Multi Purpose Logistics Module to start the transfer some eight tonnes of science racks and other supplies into the space station, a job that will take several... [more]

Dutch Rail plans to increase activity abroad

State-owned railway company NS is planning to increase its activities abroad considerably by moving into Scandinavia and southern Europe, the Volkskrant reports on Thursday. The company already runs rail services in England, Germany and the Czech Republic. NS’s foreign investments are largely paid for by cash earned in the Netherlands, the paper says. NS claims profits earned abroad are also used to finance foreign activities but... [more]

Camilla suffers broken leg on Scotland walk

Prince Charles’ wife, Camilla, plans to keep up all her scheduled engagements despite breaking a leg while hillwalking in Scotland, a royal spokeswoman said Thursday. “While hillwalking in slippery conditions in Scotland, the Duchess of Cornwall took a tumble and hurt her leg,” a spokeswoman for Clarence House said, noting that the mishap occurred on Wednesday. Following doctor’s advice on Thursday, Camilla —... [more]

Greece plunges deeper into crisis

Markets pounded Greek bonds and banking stocks on Thursday, driving the debt-stricken euro zone member’s borrowing costs to new highs and pushing it closer to tapping a last resort EU/IMF safety net. The government struggled to reassure markets it can stay solvent after the premium investors demand to buy Greek rather than the benchmark German government debt surged for the third day in a row to a record high since Greece joined the... [more]

BA, Iberia finally seal merger deal

British Airways and Spanish carrier Iberia signed a merger agreement on Thursday, sealing a long-awaited deal to create Europe’s second largest airline by passenger kilometres. The deal, which creates a group with a combined market value of around $7.8 billion (5 billion pounds), ends the flag carrier’s long pursuit of Iberia, and will allow it to emulate rivals Lufthansa and Air France who have successfully acquired smaller... [more]

Consumer group Germany urges users to ditch Facebook

Anti-Facebook feelings in Germany grew Wednesday as a major consumer group urged people to abandon the social networking website unless it scraps planned changes to its privacy policy. “If protection of your personal data is important to you, we can only advise users to oppose the planned changes, and together with their friends to choose another provider,” said the Federation of German Consumer Organisations (VZBZ), an... [more]

French first lady dismisses rumors of infidelity

Carla Bruni-Sarkozy has dismissed rumors of infidelity by her or her husband, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, as “insignificant” and brushed off theories that lies were planted in a plot to bring down the glamorous couple. She says that she and Sarkozy “have turned the page” and suggested the media to do the same. A close Sarkozy aide and the president’s lawyer have both held out the possibility the rumors... [more]

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