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Robert Parry. "But Bush's challenge now is to implement a measured - and effective - response to the Sept. 11 attacks. To do that, Bush must recognize the shades of gray that have marked the path behind and surely will mark the struggle ahead." USA.
Looks at Wall Street closing, global markets swinging wildly, and surges in oil prices.
Financial experts believe the terrorist strikes in the US are the single most expensive man-made disaster in history.
Bewildered insurers start to count the cost of the US attacks, and seem to be facing the most expensive man-made disaster in history.
As stock markets prepare to restart trading, the rapid recovery of the financial system is largely thanks to minute contingency planning.
A list of helpline numbers provided by companies that were based in the World Trade Centre.
Practical advice, contact numbers, and details of new security arrangements following the attacks on America.
The European Central Bank and the US Fed cut interest rates by 0.5%, as central banks around the world moved to prevent financial panic.
The Bush administration comes to the aid of America's stricken airlines, as carriers around the world make swinging cutbacks, reports the BBC.
Pakistan's stock markets, closed amid fears of the implications of US reprisals for terrorist attacks, are to re-open on Monday.
Around the world, airlines are cutting jobs, mothballing planes and issue profit warnings, so can BA escape the storm, asks the BBC.
EU finance ministers will consider relaxing tough rules on state aid to airlines, as the industry suffers following the attacks on the US.
Ryanair and Easyjet say price-cuts, not state subsidy, are the answer to the crisis facing the air travel industry.
The FTSE 100 index manages to claw its way back from five-year lows seen earlier as a deal to save the airlines looks close to fruition.
Chancellor Gordon Brown says the deal reached on insurance for UK airlines is not a precursor to wide-ranging state aid.
Consumer tastes are set to change as a result of the attacks on the World Trade Center and general feelings of insecurity.
Parents and teachers must allow children to talk through the horrific events in the United States, psychologists say.
A TV event to raise money in the wake of the US attacks, featuring some of the biggest names in showbiz, is screened around the world.
The rush of casualties expected by New York hospitals failed to arrive as expected on the day after the tragedy.
Laws designed to catch computer criminals could result in a huge increase in the amount of covert surveillance carried out on British citizens.
The hijack attacks on the World Trade Center, and the towers' subsequent collapse, were detected by earthquake monitoring stations.
How real is the threat of biological agents being unleashed on the UK population, asks the BBC.
Thousands of people are feared dead after terror attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington. Send us your reactions to these unprecedented acts.
Reports how Britain's most senior police officer is to liaise with US law agencies to help with intelligence operations in the wake of the terror attacks.
Details of flights in and out of the UK's airports following the terrorist attacks on the US.
Thousands of Americans shed tears as they attended an emotional and unprecedented tribute to the victims of the terrorist attacks at Buckingham Palace.
A businessman from London recounts his frantic escape from the World Trade Center after two airliners slammed into the New York landmark.
British families mourning relatives killed in the US terrorist attacks began the pilgrimage to the scene of devastation in New York.
The BBC's Legal Affairs Correspondent, Jon Silverman, looks at the "life-support" system behind Osama Bin Laden's alleged network of terror.
Police in the UK are given more time to question three people arrested in connection with the terrorist attacks in the US.
A photograph is released showing a British-born employee evacuating the World Trade Center moments before its collapse.
The sister of Osama Bin Laden is living in the UK, Whitehall sources confirm.
Downing Street warns "difficult decisions" lie ahead as European Union leaders announce plans for an emergency summit on Friday.
BBC Political Editor Andrew Marr says Tony Blair's world role really has made the UK prime minister a bridge between America and Europe.
Tony Blair gives the Taleban regime in Afghanistan a clear warning to hand over terrorist suspect Osama Bin Laden, or face the consequences.
Home Office Minister John Denham promises that the government will act to cut out the "cancer of Islamophobia" in British society.
Thoughts on the bomb attacks, from Africans around the world.
The President of Senegal, Abdoulaye Wade, calls for Africa to ensure that African countries are not used as bases for terrorist networks.
Somalia's government says it will not offer sanctuary to Osama Bin Laden after suggestions that he may flee there.
The BBC's Jane Black speaks to New Yorkers left stunned by the devastation of their city in the aftermath of the attacks.
Reports on how information about the safety of Asian nationals working in New York's destroyed World Trade Center could take days to emerge.
First hand accounts from BBC News Online users.
BBC News Online rounds up the main stories from around the world on the reverberations from the catastrophic terrorist attacks in the US.
The US named 19 people suspected of being the hijackers, as police around the world worked to find the organisers of the attacks.
Religious leaders condemned the attacks against the USA during Friday prayers, although some say America and Israel may be partly to blame.
Full copy of the speech in which American President Bush speaks of a "kinship of grief" and a "unity against terror" at a memorial service in Washington DC.
The US not only wants to find those responsible for Tuesday's attacks, but is also planning a campaign against terrorism worldwide.
In New York's financial district, workers picked their way back to the office for the first time since the attacks.
US President George Bush wants Osama Bin Laden "dead or alive" as the worldwide investigation into the US attacks widens.
The US steps up security following a warning from senior officials that associates of the hijackers could still be at large.