Around a million spectators watched the royal procession on the streets of London on 29 April.
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Around a million spectators watched the royal procession on the streets of London on 29 April.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
By Jonathan Amos
Endeavour’s crew head back to their quarters in the Astrovan after the postponement The final mission of Nasa’s Endeavour shuttle has been delayed by at least 72 hours because of technical problems.
The orbiter is being held on the ground while engineers investigate a hitch in a unit that powers the vehicle’s hydraulics.
The youngest of America’s reusable spaceplanes is set to deliver a $2bn (£1.2bn) particle physics experiment to the International Space Station (ISS).
US President Barack Obama was due to attend the lift-off in Florida.
Also present at the Kennedy Space Center is Endeavour commander Mark Kelly’s wife, Gabrielle Giffords, the Arizona politician shot in the head by a gunman in January.
The lift-off had been targeted for 1547 local time (1947 GMT; 2047 BST), but was postponed just after midday.
Kelly and his crew had already suited up and were making their way to the shuttle. By tradition, their “Astrovan” would normally stop briefly outside Kennedy’s launch control centre before moving on down to the pad, but on this occasion the vehicle pulled in front of the building and parked.
The “scrub” was called moments later.
Managers and engineers are now discussing how long a turn-around they need to deal with what appears to be an electrical problem associated with one of the three auxiliary power units in Endeavour.
A heater that prevents freezing in a fuel line leading to the unit stopped working. Another heater was also displaying unusual behaviour.
Nasa managers suspect a short in an electrical switchbox may lie at the heart of the failure but they will not know for sure until engineers can get inside the shuttle to inspect the unit.
“As we say in this business, ‘we will not fly before we are ready’,” said shuttle launch director Mike Leinbach.
Local police were expecting up to 750,000 people to gather near the Kennedy spaceport to watch the launch. The impeding retirement of the shuttle programme has drawn huge interest in the final flights of the orbiters.
The Discovery ship was the first to bow out with a mission in February. It is now being dismantled and made safe for museum display.
Endeavour is next. After its 14-day trip to the space station, it will be prepared for exhibition at a science centre in California.
The Atlantis orbiter will end the shuttle programme with a mission in June or July.
Nasa hopes by the middle of the decade to be buying crew transportation services from a range of commercial providers.
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Anti-government protests in Syria have grown over the past six weeks Syrian activists are calling for further popular protests in the face of a security crackdown that they say has left hundreds dead.
Among those reported to be joining the appeal to stage a “day of rage” were the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood.
Demonstrations expected after Friday prayers would express solidarity with the city of Deraa, a focus of unrest.
There has been growing international criticism of the Syrian regime’s response to protests.
EU officials are due to meet in Brussels on Friday to discuss sanctions against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, while the UN Human Rights Council is expected to hold an urgent meeting in Geneva on Syria.
Human rights activists in Syria say at least 500 people have died in six weeks of protests against the government of President Assad’s regime.
The situation in Deraa is clearly becoming increasingly desperate. Around 120,000 people are trapped there.
Since Monday, they’ve been isolated by thousands of government troops and dozens of tanks. Water, electricity and phones have been cut off all that time. There are no medicines, and no access to medical facilities.
Demonstrations and shootings are reported from other parts of the country, with some Syrians even fleeing into Lebanon on foot to get away.
The ruthless crackdown has led more than 200 members of the ruling Baath Party to resign, most of them from the Deraa area. They said the security forces had destroyed all the values they had been brought up with. These are not national figures, but the public resignation and ringing denunciation was a rare sign of dissent from within the system.
A notice on the Facebook page Syrian Revolution 2011 called for a “Friday of Anger”.
“To the youths of the revolution, tomorrow we will be in all the places, in all the streets,” it said.
“We will gather at the besieged towns, including with our brothers in Deraa.”
The Muslim Brotherhood also called on people to take to the streets, in a statement sent to Reuters news agency.
“Do not let the regime besiege your compatriots,” said the statement, said to be the first direct appeal by the group. “Chant with one voice for freedom and dignity. Do not allow the tyrant to enslave you.”
There are reports that the government is also ordering state employees and party members to come out of the mosques and demonstrate in favour of President Assad.
The BBC’s Jim Muir, in neighbouring Lebanon, says one way or another, it will be a trial of strength, with the protesters saying that at this stage there can be no turning back.
In Deraa, at least 50 people are reported to have been shot dead, with some bodies still lying in the streets as it is seen as too dangerous to retrieve them.
Unverifiable video footage posted on the internet showed security forces clubbing a dead body in the street before dragging it away.
Witnesses said water, communications and power had been cut off.
Deraa is the southern city in which political protests began in Syria six weeks ago. A military crackdown was launched there on Monday, with security forces backed by tanks forcing their way into the centre of the city.
Syrian authorities say they are acting to restore security.
Foreign journalists have been banned from Syria and reports from inside the country are difficult to verify.
There are unconfirmed reports of divisions within the security forces and of soldiers refusing orders to fire on protesters.
On Wednesday, 200 members of Syria’s ruling Baath party resigned after issuing an angry public statement denouncing the repression.
The resignations – mostly from around Deraa – follow those of 30 Baath officials from the coastal city of Baniyas, north-west of Damascus.
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Judd Trump and Ding Junhui are level at 12-12 going into Saturday afternoon’s final session in their World Championship semi-final.
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With second-placed Chelsea hosting Tottenham and his side facing Arsenal over a busy weekend, Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson says the Premier League title race is not over despite United enjoying a six-point advantage with four games left.
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Forensic teams have been scouring the scene for clues The bomb that killed 15 people in a cafe in Marrakesh was set off by a remote-controlled device, Morroco’s interior minister has said.
Taieb Cherkaoui’s comments came as he briefed lawmakers on Thursday’s blast at the Argana cafe that also wounded more than 20 people.
The French interior minister says at least six of the dead were French.
Reports say two Canadians, a Briton, an Israeli, one Dutch national and two Moroccans were also killed.
The British man was named later by local officials as Peter Moss, from south-east England. His family has been informed of his death.
Two Marrakesh residents – who were near the cafe in the Djemaa el-Fna square – earlier told Reuters the blast was carried out by a suicide bomber.
No group has so far said it carried out the attack in the major tourist spot.
However, a video attributed to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (Aqim), seen posted on the internet on Friday, included a threat to Morocco three days before the Marrakesh blast, according to the AFP news agency.
The last serious attack in Morocco was in Casablanca in 2003, when 45 people – including suicide bombers – were killed.
On Friday, Mr Cherkaoui told deputies in Rabat that the bomb was set off “from a distance”, AFP reports.
He added: “Initial inquiries have shown that an explosive product made up of nitrate and ammonium and two TATP (triacetone triperoxyde) explosives, and also with nails.”
As investigations continued on Friday, details of the nationalities of those killed began to emerge.
The Moroccan interior ministry also issued a statement saying seven of the 15 dead had so far been identified.
In Israel, reports said an Israeli woman and her husband, thought to be Moroccan, had been killed in the blast.
The couple, who lived in Shanghai, China, were said to be visiting her father for the Jewish festival of Passover.
One Dutch national was also reported to have died and two others were seriously injured, the Netherlands foreign ministry said. They were part of a Dutch tour group.
French officials added that seven French nationals were injured in the blast.
President Nicolas Sarkozy branded the attack “heinous, cruel and cowardly”, his office said.
Mr Sarkozy spoke by telephone to King Mohammed VI, who ordered a “speedy and transparent inquiry” when he chaired a council of ministers at the royal palace in Fez.
Paris has dispatched forensic investigators and anti-terrorist officers to help the Moroccan enquiry, AFP says.
Moroccan Communications Minister Khalid Naciri told the AFP that “this was a terrorist act” and that the country would react “with diligence”.
“Morocco is confronted by the same threats as in May 2003,” he said.
Police said checkpoints had been set up at the entrances to Morocco’s main cities. French intelligence and counter-terrorism experts are to travel to the former French colony on Friday, officials in Paris said.
Morocco has remained relatively peaceful amid recent unrest in north Africa and the Arab world, but the king has pledged constitutional reforms following several largely peaceful protests over the past two months.
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Thousands of people were in the park by mid afternoon on Friday Thousands of people – mostly in their teens and 20s – have gathered in Glasgow’s Kelvingrove Park for an unofficial royal wedding party.
The event was organised on social networking sites, where 12,000 people had indicated their intention to go.
Glasgow City Council had warned people not to attend what it described as an “unsafe and unofficial” party.
A council spokesperson said: “We strongly urge people to find a safer alternative way of celebrating.”
The council requires that anyone wishing to organise an official event in the park must prove they can provide first aiders, public toilets, stewards and public liability insurance.
A council spokesperson said: “This event was organised without involvement or consent form the council and we have genuine safety concerns for anyone attending.”
BBC reporter Hannah Livingston said there were thousands of people in the park and a sound system had been put in place.
“I think everyone is in good spirits. Its the same kind of vibe as the west end festival”
Harry Olorunda Student
There were, she said, very few toilet facilities for the size of crowd and some people seemed unsure about the purpose of the event.
A friend of the organisers, student Harry Olorunda, said everyone had been taken aback by the number of people who had converged on Kelvingrove Park.
“More than we expected turned up,” he said.
“In terms of safety, we are a bit worried, but that’s what the police are here for.
“I think everyone is in good spirits. It’s the same kind of vibe as the West End Festival.”
Strathclyde Police confirmed that officers had been deployed to the park. The force helicopter was also seen circling overhead.
A spokeswoman said there was no hint of trouble by mid afternoon and the event was “being policed accordingly”.
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Benjamin Arellano will face trial in the United States Prosecutors in Mexico have extradited the alleged leader of the Tijuana drug cartel, Benjamin Arellano Felix, to the United States.
The cartel, now weakened, once controlled much of the flow of drugs from the northern Mexican state of Tijuana to the US.
Prosecutors say Mr Arellano Felix, 59, led the cartel’s criminal and financial operations.
He will face trial in a federal court in San Diego, in California.
Family business
Mexican authorities handed Mr Arellano Felix over to US federal agents on Friday.
At its height, the Tijuana cartel, also known as the Arellano Felix Organisation after the family running it, is thought to have been the main supplier of cocaine and marijuana to the US.
Benjamin Arellano Felix is accused of leading the cartel from 1989 until his arrest in 2002, overseeing its drug trafficking operations and the kidnapping and murder of rival traffickers, informants and members of the security forces.
The Arellano Felix brothers were among the most wanted drug dealers in the 1990s He is also facing charges of money laundering.
After Benjamin Arellano Felix’s arrest in Mexico in 2002, his younger brother Francisco is believed to have taken over the leadership of the cartel until his own arrest in 2006.
Another brother, Eduardo, is thought to have taken over the reins for the following two years until his capture in 2008.
Mexican officials believe the cartel is now run by a sister, Enedina Arellano Felix, and her son, Luis Fernando Sanchez Arellano.
Ramon Arellano Felix, considered the most violent of the brothers, was killed in a shoot-out with police in 2002.
Mexican security forces say the cartel is severely weakened, and that much of its turf has been taken over by rival gangs.
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Clarence House has released footage of the Duchess of Cambridge wearing her second Sarah Burton dress, for the evening celebrations in Buckingham Palace.
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Razia Iqbal reports on the street parties held across the UK in honour of Prince William and Kate Middleton’s marriage.
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Article written by Peter Hunt Diplomatic and royal correspondentMore from Peter Follow Peter on Twitter
Kate Middleton, now the Duchess of Cambridge, is the newest member of an ancient institution As she walked up the red carpeted long aisle, to the strains of a coronation anthem, in a church where one day she is due to be crowned Queen, the bride knew her life was being transformed.
She was marrying; acquiring not just one, but three titles; and she was being propelled into the heart of Prince William’s long-surviving family.
The dress will be endlessly debated and discussed in the coming days, maybe even the coming years.
Other aspects of the occasion will also linger in the mind.
When Prince William struggled to place the ring on his wife’s finger it was a scene which has been played out in so many other churches and venues, so many other times.
And their short journey from Buckingham Palace to Clarence House in an Aston Martin with balloons, an L Plate and a number plate which read “JU5T WED” is something others have done – though not necessarily in such a classy car.
When the Queen returned from the wedding service and remarked to someone, “that was amazing”, it was a reminder that at the heart of this day has been a very human moment featuring two people pledging their lives to each other.
The canapes have been consumed at the afternoon reception, the crowds are beginning to diminish, and we are left with a fresh royal recruit – Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cambridge.
It’s a title which doesn’t yet trip off the tongue. It soon will.
The wealthy middle-class 29-year-old from Berkshire is poised to inject youth, glamour and beauty into an ancient institution with pensioners at its helm. They won’t object – as long as they’re not too upstaged.
The House of Windsor, its power stripped away over the centuries, now survives on being noticed. It withers, if ignored.
So this moment is much more than just the personal celebration of a commitment of a duke to his duchess – important as that is, given the recent, painful history of royal marriages.
These occasions also help to reinvigorate the monarchy; they generate fresh, worldwide interest in its activities; and they offer the promise of another generation to come to sustain it.
Despite remarkable changes in attitudes since the Queen was crowned, opinion polls show a majority of the population still favour keeping things the way they are.
Of course, the support isn’t unanimous. Republicans, who favour an elected head of state, argue the months of build-up to this day have forced people to think critically about the family the newest entrant has just married into.
The dominant feature though, today, has been the presence, in significant numbers in the country’s capital of the couple’s supporters, not their critics.
Together, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are embarking on married life. Together they hope to start a family.
Together they will forge the future direction of the British monarchy.
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The EU probes involve 16 global banking giants as well as other linked institutions The EU’s competition authorities are investigating the activities of nine of the world’s biggest banks over the market for credit default swaps (CDS).
CDS’s are a form of insurance policy taken out on financial instruments, such as bonds, in case they lose value.
The banks include Barclays, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Citigroup.
The probe centres on whether preferential treatment – including special low fees – was given by a clearing house to drum up business.
The other five banks involved are Bank of America, Credit Suisse, JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and UBS.
The EU’s anti-trust commissioner, Joaquin Almunia, said in a statement: “CDS’s play a useful role for financial markets and for the economy.
“Recent developments have shown, however, that the trading of this asset class suffers a number of inefficiencies that cannot be solved through regulation alone.”
The value of CDS – said to be in the region of $28 trillion (£17tn) dwarfs the worth of the instruments they are based on.
As well as providing insurance against a bond going bad, CDS are also used for speculation, with banks and hedge funds trading in CDS to make money without actually owning the underlying bonds.
During the height of the financial crisis there were concerns that speculation in CDS for bonds was driving down prices and fuelling market panic.
The European Commission said it is investigating whether the nine big investment banks received special treatment from the clearing house ICE Clear Europe, and were therefore only giving their business to ICE.
The Commission said: “The effects of these agreements could be that other clearing houses have difficulties successfully entering the market and that other CDS players have no real choice where to clear their transactions.”
The nine banks are shareholders in ICE’s US clearing arm.
In a separate case, the Commission said it was investigating whether those nine banks – and the seven others that act as dealers in the CDS market – give essential information on pricing and other daily activities only to Markit Group Ltd, which is the leading financial data provider for that market.
Such preferential treatment “could be the consequence of collusion between them or an abuse of a possible collective dominance” and could lock other data providers out of the CDS business, the Commission said.
Seven other firms are targeted in this probe: BNP Paribas, Commerzbank, HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland, Wells Fargo, Credit Agricole and Societe Generale.
All 16 banks, which control around 90% of the market whereby banks deal with each other, are shareholders of Markit.
Markit holds a near monopoly on financial data, which the EU says could leave smaller competitors with worse information on pricing.
Market players, however, insist that there is no conclusive proof of such a link.
Markit said Friday it “does not believe it has engaged in any inappropriate conduct and looks forward to demonstrating that to the Commission”.
A spokeswoman for IntercontinentalExchange said the company would cooperate with the investigation.
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QPR ask the Football Association to investigate a newspaper report suggesting the Championship leaders face a hefty points deduction.
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Fifa president Sepp Blatter pledges wide-ranging reforms if he is re-elected, including changes to how future World Cup hosts are chosen.
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David and Samantha Cameron hosted a wedding party in Downing Street David Cameron has hailed the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton as a “great moment for Britain”.
The prime minister, who hosted a party in Downing Street, said: “There’s no greater country and better place to be than right here, right now.”
He described the wedding, in Westminster Abbey, as “incredibly romantic and moving”.
Labour leader Ed Miliband and Lib Dem leader and deputy PM Nick Clegg also attended the service.
Mr Cameron said his his lasting memory of the day would be seeing William and Catherine make their vows at the altar.
The church service was watched by 1,900 guests – but police estimate a million people lined the procession route from the abbey to Buckingham Palace, where the newlyweds were cheered as they kissed twice on the balcony.
After the service, Mr Cameron hosted a street party outside his Downing Street home, with guests including children from local schools and representatives of Age UK, Contact the Elderly and other charities.
The bunting was out at one of the most famous addresses in the country earlier.
The street party in Downing Street included a giant TV screen, brass band, ice cream stand and even bride and groom garden gnomes on the grass outside No 10.
David Cameron, still in his morning suit, arrived straight from the canape reception at Buckingham Palace and mingled with guests who’d been invited through the charities Age UK, Contact the Elderly and Save the Children.
He refused to be drawn on whether the palace or his own staff had provided the best food.
Downing Street workers, and the prime minister’s wife Samantha, had been busy making egg sandwiches, jelly and cup cakes for the occasion.
For most of the older guests the highlight of the day seemed to be a surprise visit from the queen – that’s the queen of soap opera Barbara Windsor.
Conservative Party chair Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, wearing a union jack-patterned shawl, mingled with guests, including four youngsters who raised money for Save the Children’s emergency appeal following the Japanese earthquake and tsunami.
Guests were entertained by a five-piece band and were able to watch celebrations taking place elsewhere on a big television screen.
Mr Cameron, who in 1981 camped out overnight to see the wedding of William’s mother Diana to Prince Charles, said singing Jerusalem in the abbey with an orchestra made him feel like “the roof was going to lift off”.
He added: “It was beautiful to see two people who really love each other and who are incredibly happy at an amazing ceremony.
“It’s a day when we see ‘the new team’. It was incredibly romantic and moving.”
He added: “Although it was a grand occasion, that was a family wedding moment. It was incredibly intimate and moving.”
Mr Cameron said the day was “not just about the beautiful princess and handsome prince”, but a day when Britain celebrated the monarchy itself.
“It’s a great moment for Britain, a moment when everyone is celebrating and it’s being watched round the world where people will see lots of things they love about Britain,” he said.
“The ceremonial, the pageantry, the Royal Family, the institution – but also this beautiful young couple who love each other very much.”
Quizzed about his wife’s decision not to wear a hat for the service, Mr Cameron, who is hosting a street party in Downing Street, said she was “wearing something in her hair,” but joked: “Don’t test me on that sort of thing”.
He said Samantha “looked amazing as she always does”.
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