rather than
building a reactor.
Chile suffered a devastating earthquake last year, and environmental groups have questioned the decision to invest more in nuclear energy.
The former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide has returned home after seven years in exile in South Africa. Mr Aristide was greeted by cheering supporters as he stepped off a plane in the capital Port-au-Prince. Although he has said he won't re-enter politics, Mr Aristide's return is already causing waves in Haiti, as Andy Gallacher reports.
I'm here outside the home of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the house he hasn't seen for seven years, but tens of thousands of people have followed him here from the airport.
They are, as I'm looking, storming over the walls of the house and over the gate, despite the fact there's razor wire all over the place.
There is a carnival atmosphere here. People are dancing in the streets, wearing his face on their T-shirt[s], waving flags with his face on and saying "Our father has returned home."
The Roman Catholic Church has welcomed a ruling by the European Court of Human Rights that the display of crucifixes in state schools is acceptable. The Vatican described the ruling as "historic", saying the crosses were an expression of the cultural and religious identity of traditionally Christian countries. A woman in Italy had complained that crucifixes at a local school violated secular principles and were discriminatory.