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BBCNewsAll: BP's internal investigation into the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico finds that "a series of failures" was to blame. David Cameron misses prime minister's questions, flying to be with his father in France after he suffered a stroke while on holiday. Calls for different degrees of murder charges have received the backing of the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, the BBC learns. 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. Police are concerned about a 14-year-old girl from Bristol who has been missing with her 11-month-old daughter since Friday. A senior UN official says its peacekeepers failed the victims of mass rape in DR Congo, with the numbers affected double the previous estimate. Scottish ministers are setting out their final programme for government before next May's Holyrood election. Tony Blair pulls out of a second event related to his memoirs amid threats of disruption by an anti-Iraq war protest. 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. Property giant Connaught is expected to formally enter administration later, putting thousands of jobs at risk. Natascha Kampusch, who was kidnapped and held in a cellar for more than eight years as a child, launches her autobiography in Vienna. 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. Scientists carry out the first rigorous analysis of dance moves that make men attractive to women. 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. Stephen McManus insists Scotland's last-gasp victory over Liechtenstein was down to character rather than luck. Rafael Nadal beats Feliciano Lopez in straight sets to reach the US Open quarter-finals. 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 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 Fiennes is fined £1,000 after a court is told he fell asleep at the wheel of his car and crashed into another vehicle. Police appeal for information in a bid to trace a man who raped a 14-year-old girl in a Bedford park. The economic impact of Scotland's year-long Homecoming celebrations was "substantially" overestimated, a report claims. A 41-year-old man is treated in hospital following a shooting in the Bridgeton area of Glasgow. The priest suspected of being involved in the 1972 Claudy bombing met Martin McGuinness shortly before he died, the deputy first minister confirms. Sinn Fein says cuts "proposed or imposed by the British goverment must be challenged and resisted", following Peter Robinson's call for savings. The number of rape convictions in Wales has risen to a four-year high, according to figures revealed to BBC Wales. Fire crews scale down their operation at the Linamar car parts factory in Swansea after a large blaze overnight. Mozambique says it will reverse the increase in the price of bread that sparked deadly riots last week. Police in Swaziland arrest about 50 people ahead of protests against sub-Saharan Africa's last absolute monarchy, activists say. 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. A powerful aftershock near the New Zealand city of Christchurch causes further damage and sends residents running into the streets, reports say. European finance ministers agree a new framework for financial supervision, designed to help prevent future financial crises. Euro MPs accuse the European Commission of failing to protect Roma (Gypsies) deported from France. Men armed with automatic weapons burst into a shoe factory in northern Honduras, killing 18 people in suspected gang attack. Hundreds of thousands of people in eastern and southern Mexico see floodwaters inundate their homes. Cuba's Fidel Castro criticises Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for what he called his anti-Semitic attitudes. Foreign powers should stop interfering in the case of an Iranian woman who was sentenced to death by stoning, Iran's foreign ministry says. 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 people have died in a US missile strike targeting militants in Pakistan's tribal district on the Afghan border, security officials say. 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. Mark David Chapman, who killed John Lennon, has been denied parole and will remain imprisoned for at least two more years, officials say. 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. UK house prices have stabilised, according to the latest survey from the Halifax. UK manufacturing output rises 0.3% in July from the month earlier, thanks to increased output in the machinery sector. All the action, reaction and analysis in video and text as Nick Clegg stands in for David Cameron at prime minister's questions. 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". An independent review of the UK's controversial extradition laws will take place and it will consider if the US-UK treaty is "unbalanced". Millions of pounds is lost in England by the failure of the NHS to provide more obesity operations, a study says. Taking statins may reduce the risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis, a study suggests. More needs to be done to establish which are safe and effective ways to relieve morning sickness, experts say. Vice-chancellors warn that the traditional university experience could become the preserve of an elite. Cambridge University has come top of an international university rankings table, knocking Harvard of the top spot for the first time since 2004. Digital technology must be a "national priority" in UK universities, says an industry and university task force. Premises across Europe, including a Swedish university, have been raided by police in a piracy crackdown The UK's Information Commissioner has reprimanded ISP TalkTalk over recent unpublicised trials of its anti-malware system. Sony has released a "minor" update for its PlayStation 3 that closes a loophole that allowed users to run pirated software. Astronomers spot the tell-tale signs of so-called "dwarf galaxies" being digested by much bigger spiral galaxies. Domestic heat pumps need to be subject to tighter regulations in order for them to deliver widespread energy savings, a report suggests. Business Secretary Vince Cable is expected to signal a squeeze on government funding for scientific research, urging universities to do 'more for less'. Horror movie The Last Exorcism debuts at the top of the UK and Ireland box office, taking £1.1m in its opening weekend. Thousands of photographs taken by playwright George Bernard Shaw are to be posted online, the National Trust announces. Sir Paul McCartney is to be presented with a Kennedy Center honour at the White House in Washington in December. Street cocaine has long been diluted, but now the cutting agents themselves have spawned a black market. US drama Mad Men has won praise for its recreation of the 1960s, but it's not a classic depiction of the decade. 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? 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. The miners trapped underground in Chile were able to watch a football match after rescue workers provided a mini TV screen. As preparations are made for the eighth series of Strictly Come Dancing, Radio 1 Newsbeat's Natalie Jamieson has a look behind the scenes. 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 have won this year's Mercury Music Prize for their debut album xx. Rescue workers from seven countries gather for a two-day disaster exercise in Portsmouth to test how they would react to an earthquake. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin says he has not ruled out standing for president again at the 2012 elections. 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 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. Why people who say 'I don't know' are smarter than we think Did the Blitz really make British people tougher? The UK visits of Benedict XVI and John Paul II compared The experimental class where hands-up are banned The xx express surprise at debut album's success How John le Carre's old foe is back on British soil Uncovering the exploitation of young boys made to dance for money |