if spoke on thursday telling people to rise up and attack. the nation s capital has been moved from tripoli to gadhafi s place. the challenges that lie ahead. over 70 countries recognize them as libya s interim leaders. japan s new prime minister is said to hold his first news conference in just a few minutes. he previously served as finance minister. par lament elected him on tuesday, making him the country s sixth new leader in five years. in istanbol, some of the worst protest violence in turkey in years. scores of young kurdish threw stones ant petro bombs at security forces as they fired tear gas to try to break up the grounds. they organized it to mark world peace day and it did start out peacefully, but some kurds are bitter over the turkish/kurdish rebels on the diopside of the border. those are the world news headlines. i m max foster. world business today starts right now. good morning. from cnn london, i m nina dos santos. and a very good afternoon from c
dark studio. but we re going to improve, i promise. the big stories are the u.s. markets. the markets tanked again yesterday. the dow, the nasdaq and s&p were down 4% but good news for stocks futures. premarket trading is all up across the board this morning but remember, futures doesn t mean much until 6:00 a.m. eastern time. let s see how the world s money is doing this morning. andrew stevens is joining us live from hong kong, so tell us something good. i with us going to tell you something good yesterday butcy think i failed you yesterday, carol. there is something good at the moment because wall street may have tanked but europe particularly is up and up pretty healthily at this your hour, between 2% and 3% between europe, germany, and france. that s prosecutor surprising after what we ve seen. as you pointed out, u.s. futures are higher so we do seem to be taking a lead on what the u.s. investors in the market are doing. here the markets finished between flat and 1% d
take a look at tahrir square 6:00 p.m. egyptian time. traffic is moving again as the military tries to restore hour. welcome to a brand new hour of america s news headquarters. good sunday morning to you. i m jamie colby. the stream of cars in cairo mixed in with holdout protesters and cleanup crews. they are there trying to get things back to normal. scene that may represent the challenge ahead for egypt. greg burke is joining us live. what is the latest from the streets of egypt and the response where you are? hi, jamie. there are those pockets of protesters in the square still but there is also a return to normalcy. the biggest way you see that is the number of cars going through the square. also the very important announcement that par lament has been dissolved and also that elections will be held in
the fallout happened when elections failed to give any party a ruling majority. the high court ordered the par lament back to court declaring the impass as unconstitutional. wiki leaks dropped another bomb and another may be on the way. the founder of the controversial website released another 400,000 classified u.s. military documents this week outlining torture claims and a growing number of civilian deaths in iraq. how dangerous is this document? joining us to weigh in is fox news analyst major general bob scales. great to see you, general. good to see you. what is going on? 400,000 new documents. one of the key sticking points that supporters of wiked i leaks say it is important to get the information out there because they are covering torture and abuse claims. is that a valid point in any way? it is not. the u.s. command is worried about this for several reasons. sure, sources and methods are