BBC News with Nick Kelly
Nato has acknowledged that one of its weapons in the Libyan capital Tripoli may not have hit the intended target and would have caused a number of civilian casualties. Libyan officials said seven people including two babies were killed in the attack on a building in the Souk al-Juma district on Saturday night. Earlier, a Nato spokesman said they had targeted a surface-to-air missile site.
Thousands of protesters have again gathered outside the Greek parliament in Athens to oppose any further budget cuts. Waving banners and Greek flags, they shouted "Thieves" and "Traitors". The protests came as the Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou
appealed to
parliament to push through painful economic reforms. Eurozone finance ministers are expected to release funds to
avert
a default by Greece. Gavin Hewitt reports from Athens.
Crowds have once again been gathering outside the Greek parliament, voicing their opposition to any further budget cuts
in exchange for
new funding from the IMF and the EU. Inside the chamber, MPs were beginning a three-day debate before a crucial confidence vote in the government. New short-term funding is dependent on the government winning that vote. The Prime Minister George Papandreou, facing a violent unrest, told MPs that cash reserves would soon be
exhaust
ed. He urged politicians to unite because the country finds itself at a crucial point.