One Federal Reserve official said this week he did not "expect that it would be appropriate" to raise interest rates in 2015. He's got company.
Four members of the Zone 9 blog were acquitted of terrorism charges Friday morning after spending 18 months in prison.
Ahmed Mohamed, the American Muslim teen briefly arrested after his homemade clock was mistaken for a bomb, met with Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir, who has ruled for almost 26 years.
The new law could add as many as a million voters to the rolls by 2018.
Russian air power his backing up Syrian President Bashar Assad's forces as they look to reclaim the city of Aleppo.
New lawsuits and documents reveal water dousing may have been used alongside waterboarding to interrogate CIA detainees.
Syrians will not be granted asylum status if they've spent time in Russia, which Norway considers a "safe" country.
Russia has denied owning a drone that was shot down near to the Turkish border with Syria. Moscow claims all its drones are accounted for.
If the proposed ballot measure were to pass, it would require ammunition dealers to be licensed like gun dealers.
New tools on the Healthcare.gov website aim to address the key thing that stops people from buying insurance: lack of understanding about how it works.
The Philippines and Vietnam remain vulnerable to Chinese cyberattacks, as the smaller nations challenge China's claims in the South China Sea.
Deutsche Bank announced in September that it will close its investment banking operations in Russia, to “reduce complexity, costs, risks and capital consumption.”
Senior police officials said that a leak in the cylinder could have led to the explosion at a hotel in the western city of Mumbai.
As of mid-August, China has 596 billionaires — up 242 on 2014 — and above the U.S. figure of 537, according to the annual China Rich List.
A U.S. official said Washington believes the unidentified drone shot down by Turkish warplanes near the Syrian border is of Russian origin.
The deadly disease killed over 11,000 people across West Africa last year.
According to Saudi Arabia and Turkey, Moscow has made a “big mistake” by launching its operation in Syria.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has said he plans to travel to the Middle East soon to try to calm the violence.
The men were charged with producing and distributing guns, most of which were without serial numbers and illegally equipped with silencers.
U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter has denied South Korea’s request for transfer of key American technologies for its project to develop KF-X indigenous fighter jet.
As many as 270 people died after Pan Am Flight 103 was blown up over Lockerbie, Scotland, while on its way from London to New York on Dec. 21, 1988.
The National Judicial Appointment Commission act, introduced by the Narendra Modi-led government last year, sought to replace a two-decade old system for the appointment of judges to higher courts.
"The [California coastal] commission has overstepped both federal and California law," Joel Manby, CEO of SeaWorld, said in a statement Thursday.
While witnesses said they counted at least 42 dead, police officials put the casualty estimates at 14.
According to some reports, the EU is ready to offer Turkey, whose porous border serves as a gateway to Europe, up to $3.4 billion in aid to stem the flow of refugees.
Kosovo national Ardit Feriz allegedly hacked into U.S. security data and provided information about military and federal employees to the Islamic State group in Syria.
Mexico and the U.S. said they will open two jointly staffed border stations on Mexican soil in a bid to streamline trade and improve communication at the frontier.
"All options are on the table," a diplomat said.
Gavin Newsom, a former San Francisco mayor, said elements of the measure would be strongly supported by California voters.
Clinton and the other Democrats in the November 2016 race for the White House have pushed hard for support among Hispanics, a critical voting bloc.