The 50th anniversary of the disastrous upheaval that took at least 1.5 million lives has been buried by state media, putting to one side parallels with the current leader's rule.
The Philippines terror group demanded a ransom of almost $13 million for Canadian and Norwegian hostages.
A two-year hunt for the particles, which many speculate could be what dark matter is made of, has drawn a blank.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has seen waning support following a controversial refugee policy.
Authorities identified about 170 people who were involved in modeling on social media, mainly on the photo-sharing Instagram application.
By 2060, people living in low-lying coastal areas, mainly in the U.S., China and India, could be affected by an “irreversible and unavoidable” sea level rise, a new report warns.
Claver Berinkindi, 61, is a Swedish citizen originally from Rwanda.
Analysts from the bank said that the oil market had likely shifted into deficit in May, as sustained demand and unexpected disruptions in production offset output growth in Iran and Iraq.
Demonstrators are demanding that a transmission line linking Turkmenistan with Kabul pass through two provinces with large Hazara populations.
The bill requires the administration to review whether or not North Korea fits the terror sponsor designation.
The European Commission is set to present its third report Monday on the efforts to deal with the influx of migrants and refugees.
U.S. intelligence officials expressed doubt that unpopular leftist President Nicolas Maduro would allow a recall referendum this year.
Colombia’s defense minister said the drugs, with an estimated value of $240 million, belonged to the Clan Úsuga crime gang.
The country has one of the lowest birth rates in Europe, and it looks to change that by doubling a child benefit offer to families.
Philippines President-Elect Rodrigo Duterte vows that he will bring back capital punishment and give police “shoot-to-kill” orders.
French law requires websites to take down racist, homophobic or anti-Semitic material and tell authorities about it.
A tip-off from a CIA agent directly led to Nelson Mandela's arrest in 1962.
Dissident leaders issued a statement on Sunday accusing Turkish President Tayyip Erdoğan’s AK Party of intervening to try to block the Congress.
The Israeli prime minister told his cabinet that the only way to reach peace with Palestinians was “through direct talks, without preconditions.”
The missile is capable of destroying any incoming hostile ballistic missile, according to local media reports.
The U.S. Secretary of State’s visit comes at a critical time in efforts to secure peace in strife-torn Syria, Libya and Yemen.
Two gay rights campaigners were killed in an apartment in the capital city of Dhaka late last month in an attack claimed by al Qaeda.
The Venezuelan president declared a 60-day state of emergency Friday to fight foreign aggression, which he blamed for the country’s problems.
Boris Johnson, the former London Mayor, said during an interview that the 28-member bloc and Hitler shared the purpose to unify Europe under a “single authority.”
The explosion took place as several recruits were lining up at a military base in the southern city of Mukalla.
Three of the state-run facility’s gas storages were set alight during the attacks that wounded 21 people.
There has been a long-running legal battle between Europe’s central bank and groups within Germany who want to curb the bank’s power.
Elfin, with five people on board, was detained by a North Korean coast guard ship in the Sea of Japan on Friday.
The young men reportedly planned to sail to Indonesia to join jihadi groups in Syria.
The Pentagon said in the report that China is expected to add substantial military infrastructure to artificial islands in the South China Sea in 2016.