The West is making a strategic mistake by focusing only on the Islamic State group, according to a think tank run by Tony Blair Faith Foundation.
British Prime Minister David Cameron is reportedly working to change current laws to give the country’s armed police greater protection against prosecution.
The bus with 25 passengers plunged into a roadside pit in Chian Mai province Sunday.
The detained suspects were purportedly planning to bomb Shiite communities in Java and Sumatra.
The warning came because of a reported threat of a potential militant attack in the major shopping mall in the capital Tunis.
Bomb experts retrieved a suspicious package from Air France's flight AF 463. The airline later labeled the incident a "false alarm."
Germany said that EU states ignoring the quota plan to distribute 160,000 refugees and migrants across the bloc could face legal consequences.
Samir Kantar, a Hezbollah-linked Lebanese militant leader, was killed along with eight others in an airstrike in the Damascus suburb of Jaramana.
The Democratic candidates sparred over gun control and past foreign policy decisions. But there were also moments of accord.
Samir Qantar was allied with Syrian dictator Bashar Assad, but also may have been targeted by Israel for an attack decades ago.
More than 100 people are trapped aboard a passenger vessel, but "the ship has not sunk," a police spokesman said.
The results are provisional but are likely to allow another term for the man who has dominated the country since the 1994 genocide.
Turkey has acknowledged a "miscommunication" with Baghdad over its deployment of troops at the Bashiqa military base in Nineveh province.
Boko Haram pledged allegiance to ISIS in March. The militant group in Nigeria apparently has killed more than 1,000 people in the past two months.
President Mahamadou Issoufou is running for re-election, and opponents are skeptical of the claims of a conspiracy.
Spain's elections Sunday are expected to feature tight races amid surges by two outsider political parties.
The widely anticipated U.S. interest rate hike has spelled good news for currencies in South Africa and Turkey, but others are struggling.
The meeting between Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Khaled Meshaal comes a day after Israel and Turkey say they are close to patching up a five-year-old political rift.
This latest dip comes on the heels of the poor performance by the French president's Socialist party in regional elections last weekend.
A Burundian government representative warns the African Union against sending peacekeeping forces to curb violence without his country's consent.
The Turkish military says the country's warplanes also bombarded Kurdish militant camps in northern Iraq.
About 10 Iraqi troops may have been killed in an airstrike by the American-led coalition because of “a mistake that involved both sides,” U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter says.
The death of Mohammed Badreddin al-Houthi, a key leader in Yemen’s Houthi rebel movement, was reported by local media Saturday.
Police reportedly say the death toll associated with the blast and ensuing gunfire is likely to rise.
China alleges the U.S. engaged in a “serious military provocation” by flying an Air Force B-52 strategic bomber over a Chinese-controlled artificial island.
Nearly half the world's migrants were born in Asia, which has provided the most migrants -- 1.7 million people per year -- over the last 15 years.
Todd Stern saw an opportunity for consensus by aligning the United States with a loose assembly of rich and poor nations.
Iran's decision to step up its coordination with Russia could pave the way for the departure of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
The U.S. and Russia initially had very different views on what should happen in Syria, where Islamic State group militants control considerable territory.
Russia's deployment of the S-400 in Syria is purely for protection, it says, but the move has inadvertently grounded U.S. jets, and Pentagon officials claim Russia was targeting its aircraft.