BBC News with Marion Marshall
The Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani says his country doesn't trust the United States and the feeling is mutual. Mr Gillani told the BBC it could be weeks before Pakistan lifts its blockade of Nato convoys carrying supplies to Afghanistan. Relations between the US and Pakistan have been in crisis since 24 Pakistani soldiers were killed in a Nato air strike on two border posts last month. Mr Gillani said relations with the US must be improved.
"Yes, there is a credibility gap. We are working together, and still we don't trust each other. I think we have to improve our relationship so that for the better results we should have more confidence in each other."
The Russian President Dmitry Medvedev says he's ordered an investigation into all allegations of fraud in last weekend's parliamentary election. Mr Medvedev made his statement on the social network Facebook, and 4,000 people used the president's page to respond with what in a random sample were mostly hostile comments. On Saturday, Russia saw its biggest protests yet against the governing party of Vladimir Putin. Our Moscow correspondent Daniel Sandford reports.
In the topsy-turvy world, that is, Russian politics, President Dmitry Medvedev's announcement was made on his Facebook page rather than through any formal Kremlin statement. He said that he'd given instructions for checks to be made on whether polling stations had complied with election laws. But there was nothing specific about who would conduct the limited investigation, and he gave no ground on the protesters' main demand that Sunday's elections to the Duma should be held again. Neither President Medvedev nor the more powerful Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has appeared at a public event for three weeks since Mr Putin was booed at a martial arts fight. The response to President Medvedev's Facebook announcement was thousands of angry comments from people saying they didn't believe him.