WN Network Sweden Globe
Sweden Globe
Search the World News Network
Advanced Search


Breaking News Fri, 03 Dec 2010
A police officer watches as Roma line up for their flight, before being expelled from France at Roissy airport, north of Paris, Thursday Aug. 26 2010.
Arrest   London   Photos   US   Wikipedia: United States diplomatic cables leak
 Denver Post 
WikiLeaks founder still fugitive as more cables released
Fri 3 Dec 2010
LONDON — The law is closing in on Julian Assange. Swedish authorities won a court ruling Thursday in their bid to arrest the... (photo: AP / Jacques Brinon)
From left, U.S. President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso pose for a G8, G5 and Egypt family photo, at the G8 summit in L'Aquila, Italy, Thursday, July 9, 2009
Diplomatic   Photos   Whistleblower   Wikileaks   Wikipedia: United States diplomatic cables leak
 The Daily Telegraph Australia 
WikiLeaks offline after domain 'killed'
Fri 3 Dec 2010
WIKILEAKS has been taken offline after its domain host EveryDNS.net terminated the whistleblower website's account. "WikiLeaks.org domain killed by US everydns.net after claimed mass... (photo: AP / Eric Feferberg)
Iraqi children wave at US Marine Corps (USMC) troops with Echo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines, 1st Marine Division, as they patrol near Fallujah, Iraq, in support of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM. 		 		%lt;table  Zeenews  Fri 3 Dec 2010
WikiLeaks 'tweets' Kennedy speech on secrecy
Washington: WikiLeaks, defending its decision to publish thousands of classified US diplomatic cables, sent out a link on Twitter to excerpts of a speech by John F Kennedy in which the former US... (photo: US DoD)
Diplomatic   Photos   Washington   Wikileaks   Wikipedia: United States diplomatic cables leak
Snow-covered cars for sale on display at an Auto Store in Litchfield, Illinois, USA as seen on this February 11, 2010 file photo.  Herald Tribune  Thu 2 Dec 2010
12 dead as heavy snow, flooding slams Europe
BERLIN - Freezing temperatures and often blinding snowfall killed 12 more people and caused travel chaos across northern Europe on Thursday, while some of the worst floods in a century devastated... (photo: WN / Janice Sabnal)
Berlin   Europe   Photos   Weather   Wikipedia: Winter of 2010–2011 in Europe
Top Stories more Headlines
A car drives in the snowy countryside near Chasne sur Illet, western France, Thursday Dec.2, 2010. Nine regions in northwest and southeast France were put on a weather alert, warning of snow and ice until Thursday morning. SNCF, France's national railway, said traffic on the main southeast routes had been affected by heavy snow, but 80 percent of its high-speed trains were still running. The Jordan Times Thu 2 Dec 2010
12 dead as heavy snow, flooding slam Europe
Tweet - Freezing temperatures and often blinding snowfall killed 12 more people and caused travel chaos across northern Europe on Thursday, while some of the worst floods... (photo: AP / David Vincent)
Emergency   Europe   Photos   Weather   Wikipedia: Winter storm
A member of staff clears snow on the runways to reopen the airport as a British Airways plane is seen in the background at the London City Airport in London, Thursday, Dec. 2, 2010. More heavy snow caused havoc across Britain on Thursday disrupting plane and rail services and leaving travellers stranded. Commuters struggled to get to work as Britain's worst early winter weather in almost two decades showed no sign of easing its icy grip. Inquirer Thu 2 Dec 2010
Snow batters Europe; Britain grinds to a halt
LONDON—Fresh snowfalls swept northern Europe Thursday, causing misery for travellers as airports remain closed, roads were blocked and Eurostar international rail... (photo: AP / Akira Suemori)
Emergency   Europe   Photos   Weather   Wikipedia: Winter storm
A man points towards the Wikileaks memos shown on a TV screen at an electronic shop in Karachi, Pakistan on Thursday, Dec. 2, 2010. Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari sought a pledge from the United Arab Emirates to allow his family long-term refuge, as they did for his late wife, if he died or was killed, according to a secret diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks. Gulf News Thu 2 Dec 2010
WikiLeaks founder Assange fears assassination
Stockholm/London: Swedish police said yesterday that technical problems hindering the arrest of Julian Assange, the founder of whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, had been... (photo: AP / Fareed Khan)
Internet   Photos   Sweden   US   Wikipedia: Julian Assange
Interpol's Secretary General Ronald Noble gestures during a press conference after the meeting with Pakistan's Interior Ministry Chief Rehman Malik in Islamabad, Pakistan on Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2008. Noble said Pakistan has agreed to work with his organization to help India investigate last month's deadly terrorist attacks in Mumbai. Denver Post Thu 2 Dec 2010
Rape charges land Assange on Interpol list
PARIS—Interpol has placed the Australian-born founder of WikiLeaks on its most-wanted list after Sweden issued an arrest... (photo: AP / Anjum Naveed)
Interpol   Paris   Photos   Sweden
secretary general of interpol ronal noble- Wall Street Journal Thu 2 Dec 2010
Interpol Issues Alert For WikLeaks' Assange
By JEANNE WHALEN Interpol Wednesday said it is making public an international "wanted" alert it began circulating for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on November 20. In... (photo: Press Information Dept. of Pakistan)
Interpol   Issues   Photos   WikiLeaks   Wikipedia: Interpol
An excerpt from the Wikileaks embassy cables, printed in the Wednesday Dec. 1, 2010 edition of The New York Times, is shown in this photograph, in New York, Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2010. The U.S. stands little chance of convincing Pakistan to sever links with militants fighting in Afghanistan using its current strategy, Washington's envoy in Islamabad warned last fall in one of dozens of memos leaked Wednesday that expose America's troubled alliance with the nuclear-armed state. The diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks also reveal U.S. concern that Islamist militants might get access to Pakistan's nuclear material and doubts over the ability of the country's weak government. Al Jazeera Thu 2 Dec 2010
Amazon pulls plug on WikiLeaks
Amazon, the US internet company, has stopped allowing WikiLeaks to use its servers, forcing the whistle-blowing website to shift its services to Europe.... (photo: AP / Richard Drew)
Internet   Photos   Security   US   Wikipedia: WikiLeaks


Baltic Today
Business Stockholm
Europe Business Daily
Europe Daily
Gothenburg News
North Europe News
Scandinavia Biz
Scandinavia FM
Scandinavia Media
Scandinavia Media
Scandinavia Post
Scandinavia Sport
Stockholm Daily
Stockholm Post
Sveriges Media
Sweden Maritime
TV Scandinavia