| | | Daily Bulletin | 02.11.2011 | 19:30 UTC | | | Cannes - the posh Mediterranean playpen of the European elite - is in the media spotlight again; but this time it's for a three-day G20 summit focused on sorting out the financial fate of Greece.  | | |  | WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange could be extradited from Britain to Sweden within two weeks to face allegations of sex crimes, after a British court rejected his appeal.  | | | | |  | As Libyans begin to enjoy their new-found freedom, the country faces a myriad of problems in the months ahead. A former exiled Libyan tells Deutsche Welle about the dangers of Libya turning into the next Afghanistan.  | | | | |  | Chinese artist Ai Weiwei has been handed a multi-million euro bill for backtaxes and fines, not long after his release from prison. He told Deutsche Welle that he thinks the charges are designed simply to silence him.  | | | | |  | The German second division soccer club Dynamo Dresden faces a ban from next season's German Cup inter-league play after its fans rioted during a loss to first division Dortmund last week.  | | | | |  | In many parts of the world, bribery is just a part of doing business. A new study by Transparency International shows Russian and Chinese companies pay kickbacks regularly, while German firms are cleaning up their acts.  | | | | |  | As the British foreign ministry concludes its London Conference on Cyberspace, activists say the UK's domestic cyber policy is behind the times. Web freedom activist Peter Bradwell tells DW why.  | | | | ... someone starves to death. DW-WORLD.DE takes a deeper look at the politics, the economy and the science of hunger. Each Monday anew. The causes and the answers.  | | |  | | © 2011  | | | | | |
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