Stig Östlund

fredag, juni 10, 2011

The Independent

THE INDEPENDENT TODAY

World
Gaddafi regime staked £12bn on secret deal in bid to open peace talks
Kim Sengupta and Solomon Hughes: Memo reveals Tripoli negotiations.
Goldman investigated over £31m Libyan 'bribe'
Spanish police solve case of the bent contortionist
South Korean footballers accused of match fixing
Volcanic ash grounds aircraft across Latin America
Afghanistan: Nine shot dead in wedding attack
Video shows Pakistani army 'killing teenager'
Brazilian court refuses to extradite murderer

UK
Government subsidy cut prompts solar outrage
Sean Farrell: Campaigners said the Government was 'crippling' the solar industry just as other nations were focusing on it.
Follow my lead or Labour is finished, Blair tells Miliband
Cameron leads backlash against Archbishop
CSI, but not as we know it: Will the Forensic Science Service live up to the TV fantasy?
Ageism is justified, says Duke on 90th birthday
Baby P social worker wins damages from The Sun
Foreign cleaners and cooks face crackdown

Sport
PROBIZ Tryline - The Rugby League podcast
The latest edition of The Independent's Rugby League show
Japan's Boss targets Ascot upset
There's a Patten here. Open-water swimming is the 'new marathon'
Manassero makes 'best ever' start in bid to win home Open
Leicester 'thrilled' to sign young trio
Jayasuriya to retire from international game in England
Wakefield look to expand Belle Vue
Cycling: Wiggins holds on to his Dauphiné lead

Opinion
Spare us the fawning over Prince Philip
Johann Hari: When Elizabeth became the Queen, he was forced to quit his job in the Navy, and became depressed.
Leading article: The case for a wider hacking inquiry is now unanswerable
Tom Sutcliffe: On-screen classics with text appeal
Leading article: Realpolitik should not trump justice
Terence Blacker: My charter for a news blackout
Brian Viner: At last - the music we really want to hear
John Walsh: Dad, do you really have to do this to me?
Ian Burrell: How the 'Statesman' got the headlines out of Williams

Business
'Genericide': When brands get too big
What do escalators, asprin and yo-yos have in common? They're all victims of 'genericide'. Rhodri Marsden explores the perils of ubiquity for products – and the complex legal battle it provokes
Government subsidy cut prompts solar outrage
David Prosser: Britain's solar industry feels the cold chill of government rejection
Goldman investigated over £31m Libyan 'bribe'
BMW praises UK staff as it invests £500m in Minis
Marks & Spencer hands bosses £22m pay awards
Bank 'amnesia' threatens reforms, says regulator
The Business On... Jeremy Darroch, chief executive, BSkyB

Environment
Car-hire giants in U-turn over electric fleet
John Lichfield: A pressure group has now accused Paris city hall of organising unfair and publicly subsidised competition.
Government subsidy cut prompts solar outrage
Oil firm wins injunction against Greenpeace

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