The trial has begun in France of a fundamentalist Catholic priest accused of causing the deaths of five people at a scouting summer camp.
The man, Father Jean-Yves Cottard, was in charge of the camp in July 1998 when four inexperienced teenagers and a rescuer drowned after their boat capsized.
Father Cottard, who belongs to a strict order linked to the far right National Front, is alleged to have run the camp along paramilitary lines. The BBC Paris correspondent says the incident has shed light on the secretive world of the order following the reaction of the bereaved parents -- who said that the arrest of Father Cottard was a greater loss than being deprived of their children.
From the newsroom of the BBC World Service
Violence greets Clinton visit
Russian forces pound Grozny
EU fraud: a billion dollar bill
Next steps for peace
Cardinal may face loan-shark charges
Vodafone takeover battle heats up
(From Business)
Trans-Turkish pipeline deal signed
French party seeks new leader
Jube tube debut
Athens riots for Clinton visit
UN envoy discusses Chechnya in Moscow
Solana new Western European Union chief
Moldova's PM-designate withdraws
Chechen government welcomes summit
In pictures: Clinton's violent welcome
Georgia protests over Russian 'attack'
UN chief: No Chechen 'catastrophe'
New arms control treaty for Europe
Mannesmann fights back
(From Business)
EU fraud -- a billion-dollar bill
New moves in Spain's terror scandal
EU allows labelling of British beef
UN seeks more security in Chechnya
Athens riots for Clinton visit
Russia's media war over Chechnya
Homeless suffer as quake toll rises
Analysis: East-West relations must shift