The new technology demonstrates how China is rapidly catching up in an area of defense that the U.S. has traditionally dominated.
OPEC Secretary-General Abdalla El Badri said the expectation "is that the market will return to more balance in 2016,” Bloomberg reported.
When adjusted for inflation, tuition and fees today were 40 percent higher than 10 years ago.
The scandal-plagued German automaker plans to offer impunity as an incentive to encourage employees to come forward with potentially incriminating information.
The U.S. is one of the only countries doing worse than it was 25 years ago, with maternal mortality rates rising to 14 deaths per 100,000 live births from 12, the United Nations said.
The GOP White House hopeful has previously accused the movement of calling for the murder of police.
Following the countries' mutual banning of flights, the move to suspend electricity imports is Ukraine's latest front in its struggle to untangle its economy from Russia's.
Donald Trump supports a mass deportation as was done when President Eisenhower sent undocumented immigrants to remote areas of Mexico, where many died.
Here is the full list of Nigeria's newly appointed ministers and their portfolios, as well as the text of Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari's speech.
The proposed ban is aimed at reducing the harm of secondhand smoke and the costs stemming from fires.
A court in Moscow found a former policeman guilty of selling Russian state secrets to the CIA.
She previously has said that the color is fake, but the hair is real.
Anastasia Lin, the China-born Canadian entry, says after speaking out on human rights abuses in China, she never received an invitation letter to the contest final.
The U.S. has proposed $880 million in arms sales to Europe, whose nations have increased military budgets and called for greater NATO support since Russia’s annexation of Crimea.
Several writers, including Salman Rushdie, know all too well the consequences of controversial prose, for which three authors have been killed in the past two years alone.
The State Department is seeking information on the whereabouts of six key leaders of a Somalia-based terrorist organization that has killed thousands of people in the Horn of Africa.
A South Korean government spokesperson said the omission of a top official's name from a funeral list was unprecedented.
The accusation comes after widespread suspicion over a canceled presentation at the 2014 Black Hat conference.
The Iranian president said in an interview that to restore bilateral ties, the U.S. should change its policies and correct mistakes it made in the past 37 years.
The Free Palestine Movement activist Paul Larudee has said Israel, to a large extent, controls the election process in the United States.
According to a report by Amnesty International, Chinese police are still using coercive measures -- including torture -- to extract forced "confessions" from detainees and, in many cases, their lawyers.
Sweden places border controls to deal with a massive influx as it expects to see about 190,000 asylum-seekers arriving into the country this year.
According to a Palestinian team probing into Arafat’s death, the leader was killed by Israel.
"We are fulfilling and will continue to fulfill the mandate of a sovereign parliament," Neus Munte, vice president of the Catalan government, said Wednesday.
Two state-controlled Russian channels leaked the designs that are supposed to create “zones of extensive radioactive contamination.”
According to a new report, the U.S. is spending over $20 billion a year on subsidizing fossil fuels -- a 35 percent increase since President Obama took office in 2009.
China has ruled Tibet with an iron fist since it was "peacefully liberated" by People's Liberation Army troops in 1950, and trips by Western reporters and political figures are vanishingly rare.
The plane, operated by Florida-based ExecuFlight, was about to land at Akron Fulton Airport when it crashed into an apartment building, killing nine.
The news could tarnish President Nicolas Maduro's image as he heads toward legislative elections in December that are expected to be difficult for the Socialist Party.
The U.S. president asked his South African counterpart "to continue to work with other regional actors to call for calm," the White House said in a statement.