BBC News with Michael Polls The cases of four (parliamentarians) in Britain have been referred to prosecutors in connection with the (scandal) over (excessive expenses) claim by politicians. The four are not being named, but the police said they include members both House of Commons and House of Laws. Rob Wobson reports. The expenses scandal has now taken another turn. Police they'd delivered files of evidence on four parliamentarians to prosecutors. It would now be for the prosecution service to decide whether they would press charges. But the very fact, the profiles had been handed over suggests the police feel potential at least there's a case to answer. So the (prospect) of a MP or member of the House of Laws having to appear in court is now a step closer. (Anti-fraud) police in Nigeria has set a two-week deadline to some of the country's wealthiest to repay money they borrowed from banks. The police said they are acting because many debtors failed to keep their earlier promises to pay back the money. Caroline Duffield reports from Lagos. This new (deadline) is the latest attempt by Nigeria's anti-fraud police to (claw back) billions of dollars owned to banks here. This summer, Nigeria’s central bank performed an emergency rescue of nine financial institutes that were close to (collapse). It had (nothing to do with) the global financial crisis and (everything to do with) corruption in Nigeria. One reason for the bank's cash crisis was the wealthy customers who had taken out huge loans were failing to pay them back. Microsoft has reportedly offered to pay one of the world's biggest news empires for (exclusive) internet access to its news content. It’s a move that could signal the end of free news on the internet. The reports indicate the Rupert Murdoch's news cooperation would be paid to remove its material from the Google search engine. And put it instead on Microsoft's own news service Binging reports. One of the great freedoms afford by the internet is free news. However, many news organization and papers like news cooperation’s Wall-street Journal make their money from selling news. These (publishers) have been struggling to find ways to sell out or put online. News papers everywhere are suffering from falling sales. And search engine like Google are often (criticized) for putting these publishers material online where they can be read for free. Proposal by Microsoft to pay news providers to leave Google would be welcomed by publishers especially this start of trend among other (search engines). Scientist at the CERN, a nuclear search center in European said they produced the first particle (collisions) just three days after the large hadrom collider was restarted after year long repairs. Cheers broke out at the control room when beams of sub-atomic particles going the opposition direction collided. The Scientist hopes to recreate the conditions that existed ever start the universe. BBC News There's been (uproar in the Indian parliament over the leaking of report which (implicates) senior figures of the Hindu nationalist party, the BJP, in the (demolition) of a (mosque) in Ayodhya 17 years ago. The incident triggered riots between Hindus and Muslims across India, and led more than 2,000 deaths. An official report on the Ayodhya destruction was given to the government in June. According to leagues in the Indian media, the report named the BJP's leader LK Advani and the former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee. The family of an (innocent) Brazilian man, Jean Charles de Menezes, was (shot dead) by police in London two weeks after suicide attacks in 2005, have reached a deal on compensation with the Metropolitan Police. The sum of money involved has not been disclosed. Here's N. The armed police unit shot Jean Charles de Menezes in a south London station, having mistakenly identified him as Hussain Osman. He had fled after attempting to (blow up) a similar train the day before. The picture of the police operation that's emerged in the court cases in inquiry scenes is one of the police force scrambling to cope with the new and unforeseen development: what to do about a failed suicide bomber on the run. There were questions about the (surveillance) operation than they were communication failures all commentating in the killing of an innocent unarmed man. A Belgian man, who was wrongly thought to be in a (coma) for 23 years, has described his joy after doctors realized he was in fact conscious. Medical staff have believed Rom Houben was in (vegetative) state after a car crash, but he was simply (paralyzed) and unable to communicate. His true condition was finally discovered by (neurologists) using new brain scanning equipment. Communicating through a specially adapted computer Mr Houben said it felt like a second birth. The neurologists believe he may be one of the many wrongly diagnosed coma cases around the world.