Britain Britain was to fall silent for two minutes to remember the victims of the London suicide bombings a week ago, as police stepped up their hunt for the planners of the deadly attack. Britain British police have identified the man thought to be the mastermind behind last week's bombings in London in which at least 52 people died, a report said. Iraq Two suicide bombers blew themselves up outside Baghdad's fortified government compound, killing one civilian and wounding six people, the day after 32 Iraqi children were killed by a blast while accepting chocolates from American soldiers. Mideast Hundreds of Jewish settlers, enraged by Israel's closure of the Gaza settlements ahead of next month's pullout, were forcibly removed from the main Kissufim crossing after clashing with police and soldiers. France Under extra security, President Jacques Chirac -- struggling to rebound from a series of bruising setbacks -- reviewed France's annual Bastille Day celebrations on the famed Champs-Elysees. Pakistan Relatives desperately sought news of their loved ones as medical workers struggled to identify mangled corpses a day after nearly 150 people were killed in Pakistan's deadliest train crash for one and a half decades. NKorea Top nuclear negotiators from South Korea, the United States and Japan opened discussions here to lay the groundwork for the resumption talks next month with North Korea over its nuclear weapons programs. WTO Unless the World Trade Organisation moves into overdrive, the Hong Kong round of trade liberalisation talks in December will go nowhere, dealing a blow to global commerce, ministers warned. Japan Japan gave a company permission to test-drill a potentially lucrative gas field in the East China Sea contested with Beijing, after talks on the dispute broke down amid deteriorating ties. Philippines Opponents of President Gloria Arroyo admitted that street protests are unlikely to topple the Philippine leader but said they believe they can win enough support to impeach her in Congress over a political scandal. US NASA called off Discovery liftoff after detecting a fuel sensor problem, saying Saturday would be the earliest date for a launch of the first space shuttle since the 2003 Columbia disaster.