News

Anti-gay violence mars Hungarian parade

Hungarian riot police used water cannon and tear gas on Saturday to stop far-right extremists from throwing petrol bombs and breaking up the annual gay parade in the capital Budapest.

G8 gathers for diplomacy amid result doubts

Leaders of the Group of Eight rich nations meet this week in northern Japan to grapple with a raft of problems from soaring food and fuel prices to African poverty and global warming amid doubts about how much the annual diplomatic pageant can achieve.

Pensioners bear brunt of inflation

Pensioners have seen the average cost of living soar by more than a third during the past 10 years, research showed on Saturday.

Child trust fund rates drop despite savings war

Rates on cash child trust fund (CTF) accounts have fallen, despite the credit crunch stoking a war in the cash savings market.

Lebanese leaders close to government deal

Lebanese leaders are finalising a deal on the formation of a national unity government as stipulated in an agreement that ended the country's political crisis, political sources said on Saturday.

Iran vows to pursue nuclear work despite incentives

Iran vowed on Saturday to pursue its uranium enrichment programme, a day after delivering its response to an incentives package by world powers trying to curb its nuclear ambitions.

McGuinness urges Iraq to learn from N.Ireland peace

Northern Ireland's Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness, a former top IRA guerrilla, urged Iraqis on Saturday to learn from the experience of his homeland, which suffered decades of sectarian conflict then found peace.

Detective missing after U-turn on Malaysian leader

A Malaysian detective has gone missing after retracting allegations he made linking Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak to the brutal murder of a Mongolian woman, police said on Saturday.

Sentamu calls for church to reach out on knife crime

Dr John Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, has today urged the Church of England to reach out to young people involved in knife crime.

Archbishop ignites homosexuality debate

The Primate of All Ireland, Archbishop Alan Harper, has called on Anglicans to revise their approach to the debate on homosexuality according to traditional Anglican methods.

Dr Who downloads to reach unchurched

Christian radio outreach ministry Whistling Frog Productions has released its latest batch of free audio downloads for churches, schools and radio stations on the theme of Dr Who.

ACET leaders turn light on 'forgotten' Aids pandemic outside Africa

Leaders of ACET programmes in India and Eastern Europe are using a UK visit to highlight the growing HIV problem in their regions.

China Aid wants business sector to speak out on persecution

China Aid Association this week launched a new campaign to raise awareness within China's business sector of religious persecution against Christians.

Hillsong gears up for annual conference

One week before World Youth Day, tens of thousands of Christians from across generations, denominations and cultures will gather at Sydney's Acer Arena for the annual Hillsong Conference which runs from 7 - 11 July.

'Bleeding' picture of Jesus draws crowds at Mumbai

Thousands of devotees thronged St Michael's church in Mahim, Mumbai, following reports of a dark patch resembling blood appearing on a portion of a painting of Jesus Christ.

New study finds fewer evangelical universalists than Pew report

The re-wording of a question about religious beliefs coupled with a more precise definition of a Christian group led to a new survey finding far fewer evangelical universalists than in last week's Pew Forum report.