
Tue 2, Dec 2008
- Entertainment News: Brian thrown out of the jungle in I'm A Celeb eviction
- Weird News: Baby bats are bottle fed by wildlife carers after storms caused grey-headed flying foxes to abandon their litters along Australia's Gold Coast
- Weird News: Covent Garden gears up for the 28th annual Great Christmas Pudding Race
- Weird News: Six-years-old and 6'3! The Field Marshall is set to take over from the Colonel as Britain's biggest bull
- London News: London braces itself for another Arctic blast as snow sweeps the country
- London News: Two men to appear in court in Uxbridge after death of Brentford man after Sunday league football match
- London News: Video featuring Homer Simpson, Garfield and Titanic wins Turner Prize at Tate Britain
- Weird News: Former Playboy Playmate Vanessa Carbone in naked protest against Japanese whaling
- London News: Osama Bin Laden's right hand man, Abu Qatada, from west London, returned to jail for breaching bail terms
- National News: Over 160 competitors in a mountain biking race fell ill due to sheep faeces in the mud, report shows
- London News: Switzerland's second-largest bank, Credit Suisse, to cut 650 UK jobs, with possible cuts at London office
- International News: Venice flooded by highest water levels in more than 20 years
- I'm A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here: Nicola McLean gets dirty with David Van Day
- Pet of the Year: Could this little hamster become our Pet of the Year
- London News: Sharon Shoesmith, suspended head of Haringey Council children's services, is offered police protection after threats to kill her daughters over Baby P scandal
- London News: Pakistani refugees used homes in Ealing and Wembley as base to plot homeland terrorist attacks, court hears
- Desperate British tourists tell of Thai airport chaos
- Weird News: Scary Spice Mel B's snake-hips - is this the worst airbrushing ever?
- Weird News: Saxophone-playing walrus shows The Beatles how it’s really done
- I'm A Celebrity...Get Me Out Of Here!: Nicola McLean gets down and dirty with pop star David Van Day in a ploy to fake a jungle romance - but it all gets too much for jungle babe Nic!
- London News: A woman from Pinner, north west London, who subjected her neighbours to a campaign of misery by throwing water, rubbish and sanitary towels into their garden has been given a five year Asbo
- London News: The jury in the Jean Charles de Menezes inquest are told the limitations of their verdict after a coroner declares a verdict of 'unlawful killing' could not be justified
- News: Convicted sex killer Peter Tobin is found guilty of murdering schoolgirl Vicky Hamilton 17 years ago when he abducted the teenager before burying her body in his garden
- London News: Time not called on happy hour as pubs escape ban in Government U-turn
- London Football: Burnley make the semi-finals of the Coca-Cola Championship after showing a young Arsenal side how to finish
Mon 1, Dec 2008
- Steve's betting tips for London
- Paddy Power's daily bet for thelondonpaper readers
- Weird News: What crunch? Yachts, diamond-encrusted phones and private islands sold at Millionaire Fair
- London News: New Met chief Sir Paul Stephenson takes the reins of London's police force
- London News: A damning report into failings exposed by the Baby P tragedy led to three senior figures from Haringey Council losing their jobs
- Mumbai terror: Elite commando tells of hotel siege terror at Taj Mahal Hotel
- London News: Barnet man scoops £1 million top prize on the Premium Bonds
- London News: London could be next on the list for Underground phone service as Glaswegians prepare to make their first Tube calls
- London News: VAT reduction comes into force today
- International News: Lucky few fly home but thousands still stranded at Thai airports
- London News: London footballer dies after being attacked on the pitch at the end of a match
- Christmas markets feature: Our pick of the best Xmas markets in London
- London News: An investment banker from Camden who was mugged outside her home went into labour and gave birth just hours later
- Sports columnist: No drama if Gallas goes
- London News: Boy, 11, ‘killed by two cars’ in hit-and-run outside Ikea in north London
- London News: Police have released e-fits of two women wanted in connection with a violent attack in Westminster that left a teen blind in one eye
- Entertainment News: Actor John Barrowman apologised today for exposing himself on a live radio show
- London News: A campaigner who intended to stab himself to death changed his mind at the last minute after hearing a Kylie song, a court has heard
- London News: Boy George admitted to police that he had handcuffed a male escort to his bed and threatened him, but "certainly wasn't going to kill him", a court heard today
- London Football: West Ham claimed their first point at Anfield for nine years as Liverpool took over at the top of the Barclays Premier League
Sun 30, Nov 2008
Sat 29, Nov 2008
Fri 28, Nov 2008
Thu 27, Nov 2008
Wed 26, Nov 2008
As stock markets around the world continued to plummet, Mr Darling told the Commons it was essential EU governments acted in a co-ordinated fashion if they were to avoid simply passing on problems to other member states.
In London the FTSE 100 Index slumped almost 8% in its biggest one day points fall ever, while in New York the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell below the 10,000 mark for the first time in four years.
The FTSE 100 also recorded its lowest level for four years and its biggest percentage drop since Black Monday in October 1987.
Mr Darling's intervention came after the German, Danish and Greek governments became the latest countries to guarantee all depositors that their savings would be fully protected in the event of a bank collapse.
Following a similar move last week by the Irish government, it intensified pressure on the authorities in the UK - where deposits of up to £50,000 will be guaranteed from tomorrow - to follow suit.
Mr Darling said yesterday's surprise announcement by the German government had been a "political declaration" of intent rather than a "legally binding" guarantee for depositors.
"It does demonstrate the problems that arise when member states take unilateral action because of course it does have a knock on effect for other member states. It does emphasise the need for us all to work together," Mr Darling told MPs.
"I think that it is very important, otherwise we will end up with a situation that is confused not just to depositors, but to the institutions themselves."
With EU finance ministers due to meet tomorrow in Luxembourg, Mr Darling welcomed a joint statement by European leaders acknowledging the need for "close co-ordination and co-operation" in future interventions.
He again emphasised commitment of the UK authorities to do "whatever is necessary" to maintain stability.
The Bank of England will inject another £40 billion into the markets tomorrow, with such operations set to continue into November, while the Financial Services Authority is consulting on whether further to raise the guarantee for depositors.
With Mr Brown at his side, Mr Darling also confirmed the Government will publish the Banking Bill tomorrow giving the authorities additional powers to intervene in failing banks.
The Chancellor refused to be drawn on calls by the Tories and Liberal Democrats for the Government to take shares in the banks - effectively part-nationalising them - in order to provide them with new capital
He said that the Government would act "quickly and and decisively" when it had proposals to bring forward, warning that speculation - as happened after the initial publication of the US bail-out plan - could cause further instability.
"We have looked at what happened in the United States, nothing is worse than coming forward with a plan that isn't sufficiently developed, where questions cannot be answered," he said.
"That ended up with 1.5 trillion dollars being lost as a result of what was going on in the market over the ten days that followed."
He ruled out, however, a call by Liberal Democrat treasury spokesman Vince Cable to re-write the Bank of England's remit to enable it to slash interest rates in a bid to re-start the economy.
"I don't think that if you establish an independent central bank distant from government, that you should change its terms of reference just because times are difficult."
Earlier, Mr Brown chaired the first meeting of the new twice-weekly National Economic Council (NEC), set up to manage Britain's response to the financial crisis.
In the Commons, both the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats reaffirmed their commitment to work with the Government to get banking reforms on to the statute books.
Shadow chancellor George Osborne said: "If the banking system fails it's not just the banks that go bust: businesses fail, families can't get mortgages, people lose their jobs, not just in the banks but across the wider economy.
Mr Cable however cautioned that the Government may now be forced to go down the road of a blanket guarantee for all depositors.
"In the wake of the apparent German decision to give a complete guarantee of all deposits in the German banking system, it seems to us that the British Government will indeed have no alternative but to give a comparable assurance to people in the British retail high street banks," he said.
