Officials said they had recovered more suspected wreckage Tuesday on the northern coast of French island of La Reunion.
A United Nations official has confirmed the authenticity of a list circulating among ISIS fighters that presents the prices of women and child slaves. Young girls sell for less than $200.
As the war in Afghanistan enters its fourteenth year, thousands of Afghan civilians — especially women and children — are being killed or wounded.
The nine migrants, mostly from Pakistan and Afghanistan, were trying to reach the northern French city of Calais that connects France to the U.K. through a concrete tunnel under the English Channel.
The Nigerian army cleared the bombs planted along a road in Borno state which led out from the northeastern town of Gwoza, Boko Haram's former headquarters.
Russia's Investigative Committee has launched a probe into the accident for possible traffic violations.
The country's leaders have struggled to contain a revolt against austerity measures from within the governing party.
Mullah Omar's death has exposed fissures in the militant group's leadership base and cast doubts over the future of peace talks with the Afghan government.
A Border Security Force convoy was attacked by two militants Wednesday in Udhampur district in the northern Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.
Six Birmingham firefighters, who came in contact with the man, and two family members of the person, have been quarantined.
Richard Burdon, a New Zealand gamekeeper, said he was looking forward to hosting Sabrina Corgatelli.
A federal audit found that a lack of communication between states was to blame for Medicaid providers flouting bans.
Russia says that its claim for over 463,000 square miles of Arctic territory is backed by "ample scientific data."
The trial of the two journalists triggered widespread criticism as state officials had stressed in recent days that they were committed to protecting freedom of the press.
Military courts were empowered to try suspected militants after Taliban gunmen massacred 134 children at an army-run school in December.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi discussed ongoing tensions in the South China Sea on Wednesday, with Kerry urging China to pull back its sweeping territorial claims.
FBI has so far contacted a technology firm that helped manage the private server and Clinton’s lawyer David Kendall, the Washington Post reported.
Lake Victoria is Africa’s largest lake and its waters spread across Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya.
Chinese officials say the East Turkestan Islamic Movement recruits Uighurs from Xinjiang, and trains them with extremists in Syria and Iraq.
Drug dealers are coming up with creative ways to sneak drugs into prisons these days.
The rails were damaged during heavy rains, causing both trains to come off the rails at the same spot, in the state of Madhya Pradesh in central India.
The Los Angeles City Council is debating an airport permit process that would enable ride companies such as Uber legally to pick up riders at the airport.
As Congress considers the nuclear deal, Israel's prime minister tried to convince American Jews to oppose it.
Israel jailed a suspected Jewish militant without trial on Tuesday, the first application of the controversial measure against a citizen in a government-ordered crackdown following the lethal torching of a Palestinian home.
Infighting in the Taliban could threaten tentative peace talks with the Kabul government to end 13 years of war.
In the wake of high profile killings of unarmed black men by police, Americans feel blacks are treated less fairly today than they were in 2007, according to survey results released on Tuesday.
Three family members found dead Friday were murdered with a claw hammer and had their throats slit.
Kasich and Christie grabbed the last two spots for the GOP debate Thursday, and will be onstage with Trump, Bush, Walker, Huckabee, Rubio, Paul, Carson and Cruz.
Tauric Chersonesos, a former Greek colony and nature preserve, will be run by a Russian Orthodox priest who does not specialize in the field.
A 115-year-old U.S. law aimed at preventing unlawful animal trafficking may be difficult to enforce in the case of an American hunter who killed a celebrated Zimbabwean lion.