People searching the internet for information about suicide methods are more likely to find sites encouraging suicide than those offering help or support, according to a study released on Friday. The same set of search terms were fed into Google, Yahoo!, MSN and Ask.
Tourism and commerce are conspiring to turn what for centuries has been a thriving Jewish district -- a slice of downtown Tel Aviv in modern Paris -- into just another identikit shopping strip, locals say. The "To rent" sign hanging over a celebrated kosher restaurant is a symbol of the rapid decline of the Rue des Rosiers area.
The world's most expensive champagne, popping the records at €4 166 (about R53 500) for a personalised bottle of bubbly, goes on sale on Thursday targeting a "super-rich" global elite. The limited-edition, 12-bottle box sets of Perrier-Jouet champagne will be priced at €50 000.
French regulator AMF said on Tuesday it had found evidence of insider trading at Airbus parent EADS surrounding delays to its A380 superjumbo and that it would inform Paris prosecutors. It also alleged the company had misled financial markets by failing to meet standards on the publication of information.
Back in the wild Sixties and Seventies, a Formula One hotshot would arrive bleary-eyed at his hotel, check out the nearest club and order a large drink or three. In 2008, his corporate-conscious counterpart is more likely to check into the gym and order an early call. "I have busy testing days, busy marketing days and I have training days," said Lewis Hamilton.
France extended their perfect record against Italy with a 25-13 win on Sunday that kept alive their slim chances of retaining the Six Nations title. France, who bounced back from a defeat by England on the same Stade de France pitch two weeks ago, will now try to ruin Wales's Grand Slam hopes next Saturday in Cardiff.
England manager Fabio Capello has brought David Beckham back into his team and it's nothing to do with the star reaching 100 appearances. He believes that the Los Angeles Galaxy midfielder might well be wearing the same white shirt at the 2010 World Cup.
Calls to end forced marriage, domestic abuse and job discrimination marked International Women's Day on Saturday as demonstrators took to the streets worldwide. The issues highlighted crossed a wide spectrum, including abortion rights in Italy, violence against women in Iraq and women hostages in Colombia.
French MPs on Tuesday approved a groundbreaking law against the promotion of anorexia, making it illegal to publicly incite excessive thinness. The Bill would bar any form of media, including websites, magazines and advertisers, from promoting extreme thinness, encouraging severe weight-loss or methods for self-starvation.
Staff at Le Monde, France's newspaper of record, went on strike on Monday to protest plans to axe a quarter of its journalists and sell off several magazines. It is only the second time that journalists at the loss-making newspaper, founded in 1944, have walked off the job.
Rembrandt and Rubens may be turning in their graves. The latest show at the venerable Louvre sees blood, bones and beetles cohabiting with the grand masters of the Dutch, Flemish and German schools. France's biggest museum has invited a contemporary artist to show works "in counterpoint" with those of the old masters.
France's interior minister faulted the Chinese organisers of the Olympic torch relay for its chaotic run through Paris, saying in an interview on Wednesday that French police merely provided technical support. "The Olympic rule is that the organising country is always responsible for preserving the flame," Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie said.
The Paris leg of the Beijing Olympic flame relay was cut short on Monday after citywide protests against China's crackdown in Tibet forced the torchbearers to take refuge on a bus. The torch's journey by foot ended outside the French Parliament, where protesting deputies hung a Tibetan flag on a railing.
France will not support bids by the former Soviet republics of Georgia and Ukraine to become members of Nato, putting it at odds with the United States, French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said on Tuesday. "France will not give its green light to the entry of Ukraine and Georgia," Fillon told France Inter radio.
Comorian rebel leader Mohamed Bacar was put in military custody on the French island of Reunion on Saturday pending a decision on whether to deport him after charges against him were dropped, authorities said. Bacar fled the Indian Ocean island of Anjouan this week when Comorian and African Union troops toppled his renegade government.
France's last surviving veteran of World War I, an Italian immigrant who fought in the trenches with the Foreign Legion, has died at the age of 110, the president's office said on Wednesday. Lazare Ponticelli, who joined his adopted country's army at the outbreak of the war with Germany in 1914, had attended a memorial ceremony as recently as November 2007.
Pirates off the coast of Somalia released 30 hostages seized aboard a French yacht a week ago following negotiations that ended the stand-off peacefully, French officials said. The hostages, including 22 French crew aboard Le Ponant, were freed "without incident", President Nicolas Sarkozy said in a statement, without providing details.
French authorities were working on Saturday to free a luxury cruise yacht and its 30-member crew taken hostage by pirates off the coast of Somalia. "The defence and foreign affairs ministries are working to act as quickly as possible. I hope ... to try to obtain the release of the hostages," French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said.