EUROPE - French President Nicolas Sarkozy called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a "liar" in remarks to US President Barack Obama overheard by journalists. "I can't stand him any more, he's a liar," Mr Sarkozy said in French. "You may be sick of him, but me, I have to deal with him every day," Mr Obama replied.
RUSSIA - Military action against Iran would be a "very serious mistake fraught with unpredictable consequences", Russia's foreign minister has warned. Sergei Lavrov said diplomacy, not missile strikes, was the only way to solve the Iranian nuclear problem.
UK - Wallace and Gromit maker Aardman's head of TV has said the company may have to halt UK production of its famed stop-frame animations because it has become too expensive. Miles Bullough told Radio 4's World This Weekend there was a "crisis" in the UK's TV animation industry and that homegrown shows were being lost to cheaper foreign competitors.
UK - Barclays chief executive Bob Diamond has warned of "social unrest" unless the UK generates more growth and jobs. From riots in Greece to protests at St Paul's Cathedral, anger was rising, especially among the young, he said. Banks can play a key role to help, he said, but must also apologise for mistakes and show they can contribute to society.
GREECE - Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou sealed a deal with the opposition on a crisis coalition to approve an international bailout, but details remain thin despite an EU ultimatum for Athens to get serious about tackling its huge problems.
EUROPE - The six weeks allotted to save monetary union have expired. The G20 has come and gone, yet no workable firewall is in place as the drama engulfs Italy and threatens to light the fuse on the world's third largest edifice of debt.
UK - Control of its borders is the way in which a nation defends its security and identity. Yet to judge from some recent developments, Britain's security and identity - with parts of its civil service - have descended into a near-farcical shambles.
SAUDI ARABIA - Three million Muslim pilgrims today symbolically stoned Satan in a valley near the Saudi Arabian holy city of Mina - part of the last, and most dangerous, rite of the annual hajj. In previous years the sheer number of people swirling around the pillars has led to stampedes - with 244 people killed in 2004 and 360 fatally injured the following year.
UK - David Cameron will today hold crisis talks with Cabinet eurosceptics as it emerged that Britain's exposure to the International Monetary Fund could rise to 40 billion pounds. Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith and Northern Ireland Secretary Owen Paterson will tell the Prime Minister he needs to toughen his stance on Europe, setting out a clear timetable for clawing back powers handed to Brussels.
CANARY ISLANDS - Homes and roads evacuated on Spanish Canary Island after 10,000 underwater volcanic tremors in three months.
- Ships ordered away from port and planes banned from flying over El Hierro
- Eyewitnesses report material being spewed 20m into the air from water
EUROPE - If a week is a long time in politics, we now know how much longer it can feel when the politics involve not one, but several nations with conflicting agendas. When Europe awoke this morning, Greece still had a prime minister and the eurozone was still just about intact.
WASHINGTON, USA - The jobs crisis has left so many people out of work for so long that most of America's unemployed are no longer receiving unemployment benefits. Early last year, 75 percent were receiving checks. The figure is now 48 percent - a shift that points to a growing crisis of long-term unemployment. Nearly one-third of America's 14 million unemployed have had no job for a year or more.
USA - It will be the latest sobering economic milestone that few were hoping to see: The US national debt - any day now - will soar above the $15 trillion mark.
OKLAHOMA, USA - The US state of Oklahoma has been shaken by a 5.6 magnitude earthquake, thought to be the strongest in its history. Some buildings cracked and a highway buckled, but there were no immediate reports of serious injury or damage.
FRANCE - Snarling French president dismisses the English saying 'you don't understand Europe'. French president Nicolas Sarkozy launched an astonishing attack on Britain's attitude to Europe last night. The furious French leader was branded the 'new de Gaulle' after claiming the British can't comprehend Europe because we are 'an island'.