Steve Rosenberg was watching the "media circus" at Sheremetyevo airport Fugitive US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden has met human rights groups and lawyers at a Moscow airport, in his first appearance in three weeks. He said he sought asylum in Russia as he was unable to travel to Latin America, where he has been offered asylum. Mr Snowden had dropped a previous request after Moscow said he cou
A Japanese pop star has shaved her head and offered a filmed apology after breaking her management firm's rules by spending a night with her boyfriend. A sobbing Minami Minegishi apologised to her fans and said she did not want to leave the band AKB48, in the video seen by millions on YouTube. The production company behind AKB48 said Minegishi, 20, had failed to abide by its cardinal rule - no dat
On Saturday protests are planned across the world against Acta - the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement. The treaty has become the focus of activists associated with the Anonymous hacking network because of concerns that it could undermine internet privacy and aid censorship. First published in 1982, the comic series V for Vendetta charted a masked vigilante's attempt to bring down a fascist Brit
Pte Manning's appearance at the hearing was the first time he had been seen in public since his arrest The US Army analyst suspected of passing classified information to Wikileaks should face a court martial, a military tribunal has recommended. Intelligence analyst Bradley Manning is alleged to have leaked US government cables to the whistle-blowing website. Accused of leaking thousands of docume
Bradley Manning is accused of leaking 720,000 diplomatic and military documents A military officer overseeing the hearing of a US Army analyst accused of leaking government secrets has rejected a request to withdraw from the case. The request was made by a defence lawyer for Private Bradley Manning, 23, as he appeared at a military court. He faces 22 charges of obtaining and distributing governmen
Wikileaks said its releases were being ignored by the world's media An Australian official has described as "incredibly irresponsible" Wikileaks' release of a US cable that appears to name Australian terror suspects. The cable was among more than 130,000 confidential US cables released by the whistle-blowing group, many of which did not remove the names of sources.
Julian Assange told the Guardian that the password for the files was temporary, says the paper A row has broken out between Wikileaks and one of the newspapers it collaborated with to leak US diplomatic cables. The whistle-blowing group said unredacted versions of the 251,000 diplomatic cables had been leaked on the internet.
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