VIDEO: Brains may be ‘wired’ for addiction

Abnormalities in the brain may make some people more likely to become drug addicts, according to scientists at the University of

Euro MPs reject new food labels

Euro MPs block changes to food labels that would have allowed claims such as “now contains 15% less

Record ‘legal highs detected’

A record number of potentially dangerous new legal highs were found in Europe last year, say

Legionella Britons die in Spain

Three British men die and three more people remain in hospital after contracting Legionnaires’ disease while on holiday in Spain, a tour company

1.1 million face £100 tax fines

Just over one million taxpayers face a penalty of £100 for failing to submit their self-assessment tax returns on time, HM Revenue and Customs

How to build an empire out of a bikini

Jacqueline De Biase, 49, describes how an idea to start making her own bikinis at home 30 years ago blossomed into one of Brazil’s leading bikini

Financial risks: Danger or opportunity?

During a financial crisis the instinctive reaction is to take cover but, according to some people, that is the perfect time to take

What drives US entrepreneurship?

What is the secret behind the high number of successful business start-ups in the US? We talk to three American business

India’s richest shrine goes green

India’s Tirupati Temple has adopted a range of green technologies – and the shrine is now trading carbon

Olympics ‘boosting’ Scots tourism

Tourist bookings for visits to Scotland around the time of the London Olympics are rising, it is

Redknapp lies ‘extremely telling’

Harry Redknapp’s admission of lying to a News of the World reporter is “extremely telling”, a court is

Score draw in TV football case

The Premier League and the importers of foreign satellite TV decoder boxes and cards are both claiming victory after their latest court

Air India asked to pay fuel bill

Air India assures it will pay its dues for jet fuel to three state-owned oil firms by Friday after its fuel supplies are

China miner gets gold price boost

Chinse mining group Zijin says it expects a 20% jump in profits for 2011 boosted by higher gold prices during the

Cold front ad for Mini backfires

An advertising agency for BMW pays to name Europe’s cold weather “Cooper” in Germany, after the firm’s Mini Cooper car, but the stunt

Pilkington to close one UK line

Japanese glass manufacturer Nippon Sheet Glass says it will close one of its three UK production lines as it cuts

UK recession looms, says report

The UK will enter recession in the first half of the year as households continue to cut back, says the National Institute of Economic and Social

Hutchison to buy Orange Austria

Hong Kong’s Hutchison 3G agrees to buy Orange Austria in a bid to expand it presence and boost market share in the

BT cuts costs to increase profits

Telecoms group BT reports a sharp rise in profits, thanks largely to a jump in the number of broadband

Interest rate ‘collusion’ probe

Swiss authorities investigate 12 US, European and Japanese banks over claims they have been fixing their interbank lending

Uganda signs oil production deal

Oil production is set to start in Uganda after a deal is signed between the government and London-based Tullow oil, which also draws in Chinese and French

Service sector sees strong growth

The UK’s service sector grew at its fastest rate since March 2011 in January, according to a closely watched

Panasonic predicts a record loss

Japanese electronics giant Panasonic forecasts a record net annual loss of $10bn for the year to

Eurozone service sector growing

The eurozone’s service sector grows for the first time in four months, although Spain and Italy continue to

Many die at S Sudan peace meeting

At least 37 people have been killed in South Sudan following a shoot-out at a peace meeting aimed at ending recent violence, officials

Cairo clashes over football anger

At least two people are killed in clashes between Egyptian protesters and police in the capital Cairo, amid ongoing anger over deaths after a football

Tactical nukes ‘an anachronism’

Images of tactical nuclear sites still operating in

Funds U-turn for US women’s group

A major US breast cancer charity reverses a decision to cut funding to women’s group Planned Parenthood, after a furious

Labour: Banks must serve society

Ed Miliband calls for a culture of “one nation banking” in which financial institutions are not “isolated” from the rest of the economy and

VIDEO: Cardboard Ayatollah lampooned

A cardboard cut-out version of the founder of Iran’s Islamic revolution is mocked online after touring