AP - India's government faces a too-close-to-call confidence vote Tuesday that could scuttle a landmark nuclear energy accord with the United States and lead to early elections.
AP - The judge in the first American war crimes trial since World War II barred evidence that interrogators obtained from Osama bin Laden's driver, ruling he was subjected to "highly coercive" conditions in Afghanistan.
AP - He was accused of masterminding massacres that the U.N. war crimes tribunal described as "scenes from hell, written on the darkest pages of human history."
AP - A judge finished interrogating former Bosnian Serb President Radovan Karadzic early Tuesday, the first step in a procedure to hand over the accused mastermind of Europe's worst massacre since World War II to a U.N. war crimes tribunal.
AP - Pope Benedict XVI ended his visit to Australia Monday by meeting with victims of sexual abuse inflicted by Roman Catholic clergy an issue that has scandalized the church at a time when the Vatican concedes it is struggling to draw people to its fold.
AFP - The International Cricket Council will decide Thursday whether Pakistan can host the Champions Trophy in September amid security fears in the country.
Reuters - Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe and
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai on Monday signed a deal
laying down the framework for formal talks on forming a power
sharing government to end a deep political crisis.
AFP - The parents of missing British girl Madeleine McCann voiced relief Monday after their status as suspects in her disappearance was lifted, and looked forward to gaining access to Portuguese police files.
AP - India's prime minister has long been regarded as the consummate non-politician, a sober technocrat more comfortable with the arcane details of economic policy than the rough-and-tumble world of Indian politics.
AP - Half of Beijing's drivers left their cars at home Monday and took public transportation instead on the first workday under new restrictions meant to clear this city's notoriously polluted skies before next month's Olympics.
AP - Iraq's security has improved so much, even as U.S. troop levels have dropped, that President Bush seems likely to order thousands more soldiers home by year's end.