Live from the newsroom, Elena Casas Montanez provides an overview of the world's newspaper headlines, from Monday to Friday at 9.10 am (and at 6.20 am and 7.10 am for France's newspapers).
International papers, Thursday, 18.11.2010: This morning we look at Sarah Palin's ambitions for the US Presidency, ongoing coverage in the British press of upcoming royal nuptials, coverage of the France-England friendly match and finally Haiti's cholera epidemic.
Violence against African migrants this week in Tel Aviv has sparked angry debate in Israel. Haaretz is accusing members of Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party of "incitement". That - and the latest on the Facebook IPO fiasco - is the focus for this look at the world's papers this Friday 25th May, 2012.
The French press looks at the latest bad news for the economy. Air France is restructuring and layoffs are certain. Libération asks: what can the new left-wing government do? This as Le Parisien-Aujourd'hui-en-France reports on union anger that a former Air France CEO could, despite the economic crisis, get a "jackpot" bonus. That's the focus for this Friday, 25th May 2012.
Today we focus on the Egyptian elections - will the military be the real winners? We're also looking at Quebec's student protests, and the race to save this year's Parmesan.
Has Obama's policy in Afghanistan been a disaster, why is Syria's conflict tipping over into Lebanon, and who's going to win the Egyptian election? It's all in the international press review.