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BBCNewsAll:

  • 'Many failures' caused BP spill

  • BP's internal investigation into the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico finds that "a series of failures" was to blame.
  • Cameron flies to see ill father

  • David Cameron misses prime minister's questions, flying to be with his father in France after he suffered a stroke while on holiday.
  • Murder charge changes supported

  • Calls for different degrees of murder charges have received the backing of the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, the BBC learns.
  • Church defiant over Koran burning

  • A small US church says it will defy international condemnation and go ahead with plans to burn copies of the Koran on the 9/11 anniversary.
  • Concern for missing girl and baby

  • Police are concerned about a 14-year-old girl from Bristol who has been missing with her 11-month-old daughter since Friday.
  • UN 'failed' DR Congo rape victims

  • A senior UN official says its peacekeepers failed the victims of mass rape in DR Congo, with the numbers affected double the previous estimate.
  • SNP outlining government vision

  • Scottish ministers are setting out their final programme for government before next May's Holyrood election.
  • Blair cancels second book event

  • Tony Blair pulls out of a second event related to his memoirs amid threats of disruption by an anti-Iraq war protest.
  • Legionnaires' outbreak in S Wales probed

  • Health officials are trying to find the source of a Legionnaires' disease outbreak which has been linked to the death of a 64-year-old woman.
  • House giant faces administration

  • Property giant Connaught is expected to formally enter administration later, putting thousands of jobs at risk.
  • Kampusch releases book on ordeal

  • Natascha Kampusch, who was kidnapped and held in a cellar for more than eight years as a child, launches her autobiography in Vienna.
  • Strictly Come Dancing line-up is revealed

  • Rugby player Gavin Henson, magician Paul Daniels and former Destiny's Child star Michelle Williams are among the line-up for this year's Strictly Come Dancing.
  • The secrets of good dancing and 'dad dancing'

  • Scientists carry out the first rigorous analysis of dance moves that make men attractive to women.
  • Capello praises display by Rooney

  • England boss Fabio Capello hails Wayne Rooney, who is the subject of newspaper allegations about his private life, for his performance in the win over Switzerland.
  • McManus praises Scots' character

  • Stephen McManus insists Scotland's last-gasp victory over Liechtenstein was down to character rather than luck.
  • Nadal powers into quarter-finals

  • Rafael Nadal beats Feliciano Lopez in straight sets to reach the US Open quarter-finals.
  • Live - County Championship

  • Yorkshire aim to press home their advantage against leaders Nottinghamshire after blowing the County Championship title race wide open, while Sussex close in on promotion.
  • England cruise to T20 series win

  • England record their seventh successive victory in Twenty20 internationals and a 2-0 series win over Pakistan with an emphatic six-wicket victory in Cardiff.
  • Sir Ranulph fined over car crash

  • Sir Ranulph Fiennes is fined £1,000 after a court is told he fell asleep at the wheel of his car and crashed into another vehicle.
  • Girl, 14, raped during park walk

  • Police appeal for information in a bid to trace a man who raped a 14-year-old girl in a Bedford park.
  • Homecoming impact 'overestimated'

  • The economic impact of Scotland's year-long Homecoming celebrations was "substantially" overestimated, a report claims.
  • Man injured in Glasgow shooting

  • A 41-year-old man is treated in hospital following a shooting in the Bridgeton area of Glasgow.
  • MP met Claudy bomb suspect priest

  • The priest suspected of being involved in the 1972 Claudy bombing met Martin McGuinness shortly before he died, the deputy first minister confirms.
  • Cuts 'must be resisted' says SF

  • Sinn Fein says cuts "proposed or imposed by the British goverment must be challenged and resisted", following Peter Robinson's call for savings.
  • Rape convictions reach new high

  • The number of rape convictions in Wales has risen to a four-year high, according to figures revealed to BBC Wales.
  • Fire at Swansea car parts plant

  • Fire crews scale down their operation at the Linamar car parts factory in Swansea after a large blaze overnight.
  • Mozambique bread price climbdown

  • Mozambique says it will reverse the increase in the price of bread that sparked deadly riots last week.
  • Arrests over Swaziland protests

  • Police in Swaziland arrest about 50 people ahead of protests against sub-Saharan Africa's last absolute monarchy, activists say.
  • Clan 'behind Philippine massacre'

  • The first witness in the trial of a powerful clan accused of the Philippines' worst political massacre says the family plotted the killings over dinner.
  • Powerful tremor rattles NZ city

  • A powerful aftershock near the New Zealand city of Christchurch causes further damage and sends residents running into the streets, reports say.
  • EU agrees new financial framework

  • European finance ministers agree a new framework for financial supervision, designed to help prevent future financial crises.
  • Euro MPs urge EU action on Roma

  • Euro MPs accuse the European Commission of failing to protect Roma (Gypsies) deported from France.
  • Gunmen hit Honduras shoe factory

  • Men armed with automatic weapons burst into a shoe factory in northern Honduras, killing 18 people in suspected gang attack.
  • Thousands caught in Mexico floods

  • Hundreds of thousands of people in eastern and southern Mexico see floodwaters inundate their homes.
  • Castro criticises Iranian leader

  • Cuba's Fidel Castro criticises Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for what he called his anti-Semitic attitudes.
  • Iran stands firm on stoning case

  • Foreign powers should stop interfering in the case of an Iranian woman who was sentenced to death by stoning, Iran's foreign ministry says.
  • Autocracy fear as Sri Lanka votes

  • Sri Lankan MPs are to vote on proposals to let President Mahinda Rajapaksa seek a third term, in a move critics warn marks a slide to dictatorship.
  • Six die in Pakistan drone strike

  • Six people have died in a US missile strike targeting militants in Pakistan's tribal district on the Afghan border, security officials say.
  • American soldiers killed in Iraq

  • Two US soldiers are killed in northern Iraq, the first US military deaths since Washington last month declared an end to combat operations in Iraq.
  • Lennon killer denied parole again

  • Mark David Chapman, who killed John Lennon, has been denied parole and will remain imprisoned for at least two more years, officials say.
  • Cable worries over 'casino' banks

  • Business Secretary Vince Cable expresses "worry" about the combination of High Street banks with investment banking, after Bob Diamond is named as Barclays' new boss.
  • Halifax says house prices stable

  • UK house prices have stabilised, according to the latest survey from the Halifax.
  • UK factory output rises by 0.3%

  • UK manufacturing output rises 0.3% in July from the month earlier, thanks to increased output in the machinery sector.
  • Live: Prime Minister's questions

  • All the action, reaction and analysis in video and text as Nick Clegg stands in for David Cameron at prime minister's questions.
  • Hannan seeks 'in or out' EU vote

  • Tory MEP Daniel Hannan pushes for a referendum on whether the UK should stay in the European Union, calling it a "matter of major constitutional significance".
  • Extradition laws to be reviewed

  • An independent review of the UK's controversial extradition laws will take place and it will consider if the US-UK treaty is "unbalanced".
  • More obesity ops 'will save cash'

  • Millions of pounds is lost in England by the failure of the NHS to provide more obesity operations, a study says.
  • Statins 'may cut arthritis risk'

  • Taking statins may reduce the risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis, a study suggests.
  • Call for morning sickness action

  • More needs to be done to establish which are safe and effective ways to relieve morning sickness, experts say.
  • Two-tier university warning given

  • Vice-chancellors warn that the traditional university experience could become the preserve of an elite.
  • Cambridge tops university table

  • Cambridge University has come top of an international university rankings table, knocking Harvard of the top spot for the first time since 2004.
  • Digital subjects 'priority' call

  • Digital technology must be a "national priority" in UK universities, says an industry and university task force.
  • European police in pirate raids

  • Premises across Europe, including a Swedish university, have been raided by police in a piracy crackdown
  • TalkTalk rapped for malware trial

  • The UK's Information Commissioner has reprimanded ISP TalkTalk over recent unpublicised trials of its anti-malware system.
  • PS3 update blocks hardware hack

  • Sony has released a "minor" update for its PlayStation 3 that closes a loophole that allowed users to run pirated software.
  • Dwarf galaxies gobbled by giants

  • Astronomers spot the tell-tale signs of so-called "dwarf galaxies" being digested by much bigger spiral galaxies.
  • Heat pumps 'need tighter rules'

  • Domestic heat pumps need to be subject to tighter regulations in order for them to deliver widespread energy savings, a report suggests.
  • Cable to signal 'cuts to science'

  • Business Secretary Vince Cable is expected to signal a squeeze on government funding for scientific research, urging universities to do 'more for less'.
  • UK moviegoers Exorcised by horror

  • Horror movie The Last Exorcism debuts at the top of the UK and Ireland box office, taking £1.1m in its opening weekend.
  • Online archive for Shaw pictures

  • Thousands of photographs taken by playwright George Bernard Shaw are to be posted online, the National Trust announces.
  • Sir Paul to get US culture honour

  • Sir Paul McCartney is to be presented with a Kennedy Center honour at the White House in Washington in December.
  • The blackmarket in cutting agents

  • Street cocaine has long been diluted, but now the cutting agents themselves have spawned a black market.
  • The 60s, but not as we know it

  • US drama Mad Men has won praise for its recreation of the 1960s, but it's not a classic depiction of the decade.
  • Do our memories get better with age?

  • Our ability to recall events seems to sharpen as we get older, says Lisa Jardine, but can it be trusted to paint an accurate picture?
  • Live: Urgent question

  • Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury David Gauke is making a statement on PAYE contributions after it emerged that nearly six million people in the UK have paid the wrong amount of tax.
  • Trapped miners watch football match

  • The miners trapped underground in Chile were able to watch a football match after rescue workers provided a mini TV screen.
  • Behind the scenes of new Strictly

  • As preparations are made for the eighth series of Strictly Come Dancing, Radio 1 Newsbeat's Natalie Jamieson has a look behind the scenes.
  • Pressure mounts against Koran burning

  • A small US church planning to burn copies of the Koran on the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in New York is facing international condemnation.
  • The xx on winning Mercury Prize

  • The xx have won this year's Mercury Music Prize for their debut album xx.
  • Mock earthquake test for rescuers

  • Rescue workers from seven countries gather for a two-day disaster exercise in Portsmouth to test how they would react to an earthquake.
  • On the road with 'action man' Putin

  • Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin says he has not ruled out standing for president again at the 2012 elections.
  • Drilling ban's effect on Louisiana

  • The environmental impact and effect of a drilling moratorium imposed by the Obama administration following the Gulf oil spill is continuing to be felt in towns like Lafayette, Louisiana.
  • Angelina Jolie visits Pakistan

  • Angelina Jolie has visited Nowshera in north-west Pakistan to highlight the plight of more than 20 million people affected by the country's worst ever floods.
  • Clueless?

  • Why people who say 'I don't know' are smarter than we think
  • All for one

  • Did the Blitz really make British people tougher?
  • Papal tours

  • The UK visits of Benedict XVI and John Paul II compared
  • Miss! Pick me

  • The experimental class where hands-up are banned
  • Mercury musicians

  • The xx express surprise at debut album's success
  • 'The Russians are here'

  • How John le Carre's old foe is back on British soil
  • Afghan dancing boys

  • Uncovering the exploitation of young boys made to dance for money