World News from the BBC.
Germany's Consumer Protection Minister Ilse Aigner has warned the social networking site Facebook that it could be breaking data protection laws.
Ms Aigner has told a German magazine she is concerned that Facebook users can upload contacts from their mobile phones, including the private phone numbers of people who have never agreed to join the networking site.
She said the company shouldn't store this data which could be marketed for commercial gain.
The French Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux has told residents of the city of Grenoble that police have restored order after rioting there. Youths went on the rampage after a memorial service for a robbery suspect killed in a shoot-out with police.
Thousands of people have taken part in a European-wide gay rights parade in the Polish capital Warsaw. It's the first time the annual EuroPride march has been held in Central or Eastern Europe. There were several small counter-demonstrations.
Divers have recovered what's believed to be the world's oldest drinkable champagne. About 30 bottles were found in a
shipwreck
in the Baltic Sea. Our reporter Danny Aeberhard has the details.
Diving instructor Christian Ekstrom must be feeling bubbly.
Down in the cold,
murky
depths of the Baltic of the Aland Islands between Finland and Sweden, he and fellow divers
stumbled across
what could be a