South Georgia following on from last year's record will once again experience an increase in the number of cruise ship visits to the Island.
BRITISH Type 23 frigate, HMS Iron Duke, who was recently involved in anti – drug smuggling work in the Caribbean, has officially taken over the South Atlantic Patrol Task
British-Hungarian financier and philanthropist George Soros warned in an interview with Budapest's Nepszabadsag newspaper that it is too early to say if markets will stabilize after last week's panic and described the current situation as the crisis of a lifetime.
Uruguay's president Tabare Vazquez announced that a Portuguese pulp and paper company will spend over 4 billion US dollars to build a cellulose plant and port in Uruguay.
Colombia's Alvaro Uribe, Brazil's Lula da Silva and Uruguay's Tabare Vazquez figure as the leaders with the best performance record according to the 2008 edition of the Ibero-American Governance Barometer 2008.
The US government announced a 250 billion US dollars plan to purchase stakes in a wide variety of banks in an effort to restore confidence in the sector. President George W Bush said the move would help to return stability to the US banking sector and ultimately help preserve free markets.
Up to £50bn of taxpayers' cash is to be injected into four of Britain's biggest banks through the government's rescue package, the BBC has learned. Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), HBOS, Lloyds TSB and Barclays is to sell off shares, the majority of which the government is expected to buy.
Asian markets have reacted positively to efforts by world leaders to end the recent financial turmoil. Sydney's benchmark index leapt 5.5%, as markets in South Korea and Singapore opened up around 3%. Tokyo's market was closed for a public holiday.
EU leaders earlier said no big bank would be allowed to fail, as they agreed a plan to tackle the crisis.
Argentina's Soy King, Gustavo Grobocopatel warned that if export taxes remain averaging 35%, and commodities don't recover prices of early 2008, next year many people will be going bankrupt because with current costs oilseeds production is not viable.
United States economist Paul Krugman, a well-known critic of the President George Bush administration for policies that he argues led to the current financial crisis, won the 2008 Nobel Prize for economics on Monday.