UK - Teenagers could buy the emergency contraceptive from the Boots website without seeing a doctor or pharmacist. It is feared this will fuel promiscuity among young girls, who unknown to their parents will be able to keep a supply in their bedroom.
USA - President Barack Obama has come out in favour of allowing a mosque to be built near the site of the former World Trade Centre, destroyed nine years ago by Islamic extremists in hijacked airliners. The site is near where almost 3,000 people died on September 11, 2001, after Muslim hijackers flew two hijacked airliners into the center's twin towers, which crumbled as New Yorkers fled in terror.
USA - More horrifying than the plague of Black Death across Europe. More costly in lives than World War II. Financially it could make the Katrina repairs look like a pocketful of change. And it's not a matter of if, but when. That's the alarming warning being issued by John G Kappenman, owner of Storm Analysis Consultants and an expert of the dangers of electromagnetic pulse damage to modern society, with a list of qualifications after his name as long as a phone book.
PAKISTAN - Besides sharing the wrenching loss of loved ones, homes, possessions, farms, livestock, livelihoods, and businesses, many of Pakistan's millions of flood victims also seem to have another loss in common: their faith in government and its ability to help them.
EUROPE - The new European Union ambassador to Washington has suggested that he will speak for Britain on foreign and security policy in America. Joao Vale de Almeida was this week formally installed as the EU's ambassador to the US, and suggested that American officials should regard him as their first point of contact for transatlantic discussions.
RUSSIA - With fires continuing to blaze across Russia, many are concerned that radioactivity left over from the Chernobyl disaster could be released into the air. The Kremlin, however, has played down the risk. Russia may finally be getting its wildfires under control.
SLOVAKIA - Slovakia's decision to drop out of an aid package for Greece undermines euro zone unity but it will not affect the bailout for Athens, and Bratislava may well have calculated that the repercussions will be slight.
USA - A Florida pastor is speaking out in defense of his congregation's controversial plan to burn copies of Koran on the ninth anniversary of the September 11 terror attacks, MyFoxOrlando.com reported. "Things like 9-11, Fort Hood, and the honor killings... these are possibly not isolated incidents," Dove World Outreach Center pastor Terry Jones said. "These are things that, if we don't stand up now, they can increase."
GERMANY - The German economy grew by 2.2% in the three months to the end of June, its fastest quarterly growth in more than 20 years, official figures show. "Such quarter-on-quarter growth has never been recorded before in reunified Germany," the national statistics office, Destatis, said.
MIDDLE EAST - To meet increasingly defiant Iranian threats to US regional military forces, Washington has detached the USS Truman Carrier Group from support duty for Afghanistan in the Arabian Sea and reassigned it to Dubai opposite the Gulf of Oman and the Straits of Hormuz with thousands of marines aboard.
UK - A massive heatwave in Russia and the current devastating floods in Pakistan could be linked by the unusual behaviour of the jetstream, scientists believe. The jetstream is the high-altitude wind that circles the globe from west to east and normally pushes a series of wet but mild Atlantic lows across Britain.
PAKISTAN - Stricken communities caught in Pakistan's devastating floods are growing increasingly desperate, local officials say. Floodwater triggered by heavy monsoon rains is surging south along the Indus River, forcing people from their homes.
EUROPE - AFP reports that French Europe Minister Pierre Lellouche has described as "perfectly ill-timed" the proposals from Budget Commissioner Janusz Lewandowski for the introduction of direct taxes to finance the EU budget.
LONDON, UK - Rising grain prices from Russia's drought and fires will pressure populations already hit by the financial crisis and could stoke unrest - particularly in the Middle East, North Africa and parts of Europe. Wheat prices have risen by nearly 70 percent since June after Russia suffered its worst drought in 130 years and are at their highest since 2008, when the last major food price rally sparked protests and riots in a string of emerging nations.
USA - America is a "Mickey Mouse economy" that is technically bankrupt, according to Jochen Wermuth, the Chief Investment Officer (CIO) and managing partner at Wermuth Asset Management. "America today looks like Russia in 1998. Consumers, companies and the government are all highly indebted. America as a result is a bankrupt Mickey Mouse economy," Wermuth told CNBC.