Beijing had introduced regulations in March imposing strict curbs on online publishing, particularly for foreign firms.
The oil company revised the death toll from Wednesday's explosion, likely caused by a leak, to 24, and said the number was expected to rise further.
Saturday's massive 7.8-magnitude earthquake killed 587 people.
Christoph Mueller, a German national, tried to turn around the state-owned carrier as it dealt with the loss of two jets in less than a year.
Terrorism, migration and economic problems can be addressed more successfully with Britain as part of the European Union, the U.S. president wrote.
The African nation’s army tried to cover up the slaughter of hundreds of Shiite men, women and children, an Amnesty International report says.
Sales of the Minnesota-born artist's recordings skyrocketed Thursday after news of his death spread worldwide.
The group that acquired the Panama Papers, which it says detail examples of tax avoidance, has declined to cooperate with U.S. authorities.
Friday’s ceremony in New York City, coinciding with Earth Day, arrives amid troubling reports about the impact of global warming.
A proposed drug policy overhaul in Mexico would increase the amount that weed users can legally carry from 5 to 28 grams.
The exiled former National Security Agency contractor hopes to accept a free-speech award there, but fears extradition to the U.S.
Five people were said to be missing after a portion of the elevated structure, built for the Summer Olympics, fell into the ocean.
"Otzi," as he has been nicknamed, was discovered in 1991 by hikers in the Alps.
There’s more to understand about the new face of the $20 bill than her work as an abolitionist. These six facts will surprise you.
Russian government officials have admitted they expect no economic growth in 2016.
The forces of President Bashar Assad dropped warning leaflets in Homs, urging rebels to give up before a fierce new offensive begins.
The Chinese government has issued warnings on espionage amid a new push to combat foreign threats.
The president said the Gulf nations also agreed to help Iraq, a request he had been planning to make during this trip.
Thought to bring wealth and good luck, albino body parts have become a hot commodity on the black market in Malawi and southern Africa.
The former University of Birmingham student wrote a 2011 blog post where she criticized Zionist politics.
The founders of the restaurant previously started a successful pop-up bar out of an RV based on the TV show "Breaking Bad."
The children would be resettled in the country over the next four years, the British immigration ministry announced Thursday.
A government official in Ethiopia’s western Gambella region told local media the children would soon be rescued from South Sudan and reunited with their families.
Loose cash laws in Germany have long attracted illegal dealings, and the problem is worsening.
The ECB president brushed off German criticism of his ultra-loose monetary policy Thursday and vowed to use all the tools at his disposal to boost growth.
Devices worth “hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars” were sold to various countries, a Chinese official told a state-run news outlet.
Ahead of the opening of its first theme park in mainland China in June, Disney says its Shanghai menu will “respect Chinese diet.”
NATO has been patrolling the Aegean Sea since February to curb human trafficking, which has reportedly helped slow the influx of refugees making the dangerous crossing.
India’s hottest months are May and June, but some states have already registered temperatures in excess of 104 degrees Fahrenheit.
As the South American country struggles to get back on its feet, a series of new short-term financial measures were announced to boost reconstruction efforts.