impunity
. But so far, only pro-Gbagbo supporters have been arrested, despite the findings of a UN Human Rights Council report earlier this month that both sides had committed atrocities.
World News from the BBC
A court in Zimbabwe has freed a government minister, Jameson Timba, who was arrested on Friday on suspicion of undermining the authority of President Robert Mugabe. A judge ruled that the police had no
justification
for arresting Mr Timba, who was accused of calling Mr Mugabe a liar. Mr Timba is a member of the Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC party, which is part of Zimbabwe's power-sharing government.
Israel has warned journalists to travel with a flotilla of boats trying to break Israel's blockade of Gaza that they could be banned from working in Israel for 10 years. Foreign journalists in Israel said the warning raised serious questions about press freedom. The flotilla, which will carry pro-Palestinian activists from more than a dozen countries, is planning to set sail this week.
A group of computer hackers, known as Lulz Security, say they are
disband
ing after targeting official American websites, such as the CIA and the US Senate. Tom Burridge sent this report from Washington.
Through a statement posted online, the group, which claims to have six members, said after 50 days its mission of cyber exposure and disruption was over. In a parting shot, the group released documents [that] they said included confidential material taken from Arizona's police department and the US telecoms giant AT&T. Little is known about LulzSec. In the murky world of hacking, their motives for disbanding are unclear. But after rival hackers claimed to have released information to help track them down and police in Britain arrested a 19-year-old man in connection with LulzSec's hacking, this small publicity-seeking group might have started to fear that their game was up.