UK - Great Britain and other parts of the world are experiencing unrest at a time of global economic uncertainty and stock market volatility. Here's a look at what's happening around the world and how economic downturns are bringing protestors into the streets.
USA - Hurricanes announce themselves on forecasters' radar screens, before slamming into an unlucky coast - all on live television. Tornadoes strike with little warning, but no one can doubt what's going on the moment a black funnel cloud touches down. If we're lucky, a tsunami offers a brief tip-off - the unnatural sight of the ocean retreating from the beach - before it cuts a swathe of destruction and death. But a drought is different.
UK - Fresh violence is flaring around the UK tonight as parts of the West Midlands and Manchester come under siege from a series of copy-cat riots. It comes as 16,000 police officers have been deployed on London's streets tonight in a bid to contain a fourth night of violence which spiraled out of control across dozens of London suburbs yesterday.
USA - If the economy falls back into recession, as many economists are now warning, the bloodletting could be a lot more painful than the last time around.
SYRIA - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad pressed on with a tank onslaught against a city Monday, but was plunged deeper into international isolation by Arab neighbors who denounced his violent crackdown and recalled their envoys from Damascus.
PHILADELPHIA, USA - Mayor Michael Nutter today announced a tighter weekend curfew in the Center City and University City regions of the city, as he continues grappling with the threat of "flash mobs" in Philadelphia. Nutter today described those engaging in flash mob rampages as "a tiny minority of ignorant, reckless fools."
USA - The excessive heat has taken a toll on water lines in the City of Kemp. In order to make repairs and refill two water towers there the water has been cut off. "With the drought being so bad, it's causing so much problems within our water facilities... the ground moving, the ground shifting, has caused numerous, numerous of water line breaks for us," explained Kemp Mayor Donald Kile.
UK - Left-wing politicians have cynically sought to make political capital out of the riots, blaming government cuts for the orgy of violence. Labour MPs and activists lined up to make excuses for the thugs, spouting claims that disadvantaged youth had no option but to smash up high streets.
LONDON, UK - The London stock market suffered a plunge of more than 100 points for an unprecedented fourth successive day yesterday. The value of Britain's leading companies has now fallen by 210 billion pounds in little over a week, a slump of nearly 14 per cent, following yesterday's 46 billion pounds sell-off.
UK - The BBC was criticised for its political correctness last night after continually referring to the yobs rioting across London as "protesters". Two days after a peaceful protest over the death of suspected gangster Mark Duggan in Tottenham ended, the corporation was still using the term to describe violent looters.
LONDON, UK - The police have become so sensitive to the issue of race that it is impairing their ability to do the job. What caused these riots and why did the police lose control? Some commentators think the disorder was understandable and justified; some say the police "had it coming"; others that the violence was only to be expected given the unemployment and poverty in the area.
GERMANY - Europe and the US are hopelessly over-indebted. The crisis that started in the US real estate sector in 2007 has devastated state finances on both sides of the Atlantic and is threatening to wreck the euro and trigger a second global downturn. The world lacks the political leadership needed to end the turmoil.
UK - Violence has broken out for a third consecutive day in London, with riot police deployed and firefighters tackling blazes across the capital. Shops were looted and buildings, among them a furniture store in Croydon, set alight as police clashed with youths.
USA - Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan on Sunday ruled out the chance of a US default following S&P's decision to downgrade America's credit rating. "The United States can pay any debt it has because we can always print money to do that. So there is zero probability of default" said Greenspan on NBC's Meet the Press
UK - The Great Reprieve is exhausted. The world has used up the three years' grace gained by extreme stimulus after the debt bubble burst in 2008. This time we face the risk of double-dip recession without shock absorbers. Interest rates are already at or near zero in much of the OECD club. Fiscal deficits are stretched to the limits of safety.