Following a six-month corruption investigation, Ling Jihua has been arrested.
A friend of Chattanooga shooter Mohammod Abdulazeez said he called ISIS a "stupid group" whose actions were "completely against Islam."
The U.S. and Nigerian presidents met at the White House to discuss Boko Haram's growing threat as well as the corruption and public health issues facing Nigeria.
The church tweeted that God had sent the shooter to Chattanooga on Thursday to kill his victims.
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders and his congressional allies are preparing to unveil the most ambitious federal minimum wage hike to date.
Residents of Suruc, Turkey, fear the Islamic State group has a massive, silent hub in their town.
The vague new law will criminalize any act that is deemed to fuel discrimination based on religion, race or ethnicity.
On Monday, after 54 years, the Cuban Embassy in Washington reopened as guests smoked Cuban cigars and exiles protested.
The U.S. Secretary of State will be in attendance when the American flag is raised at the U.S. embassy in Havana, Cuba.
The NSA helped ease cover up U.S. torture at so-called black sites as European governments faced mounting criticism, says WikiLeaks.
Chinese tourists used to be able to get driver's licenses in South Korea in as little as five days.
The controversial elections will likely award a controversial third term to Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza.
An expansive black market for cheese and other imported food products, complete with signals and back room haggling now exists in Russia.
Russia's eastern military district will be equipped with the Iskander ballistic missile system, which can purportedly strike targets 300 miles away.
Backlogs in U.S. asylum offices and immigration courts have hit new heights, leaving people fleeing persecution in limbo for years.
The real estate mogul trailed only Scott Walker in a recent poll of Republican voters in Iowa.
After Donald Trump disparaged Mexican immigrants, Republicans quietly stood by while the fallout ensued. But the McCain comments may be unforgivable.
A family representative told ABC News that Mohammod Youssuf Abdulazeez abused sleeping pills, painkillers, marijuana and alcohol.
In a Tallahassee speech, presidential hopeful Jeb Bush criticized the influence-peddling industry he's relied on for policy advice and campaign cash.
More than half a century of hostility will fade into history Monday as Cuba and the U.S. jointly reopen embassies in Havana and Washington.
A Human Rights Watch investigation found Israeli security forces choked Palestinian children, threw stun grenades and beat them in custody.
The reopening of the banks, which had been shuttered for more than three weeks, is seen by some Greeks as a symbol of normalcy in an uncertain time.
A routine flyover above the disputed South China Sea could have lasting effects on Sino-U.S. relations.
"We are America's Shipyard! United we stand under one flag," the Navy shipyard tweeted.
“Our intention is to try different strategies to process as many people as we can within a reasonable time frame."
China, Russia and 13 other nations will participate in the International Army Games in Russia next month.
The parent company says it is in talks with Acme Markets Inc. to acquire its assets.
Natalia Poklonskaya, the pro-separatist prosecutor general in Crimea, was designated an "action target" by the U.S. in December 2014 for "illegally seizing state power."
The blast in the Turkish town of Suruc may have been linked to the Islamic State group, which controls territory along Turkey's southern border.
Egypt's move to buy the Rafale jets from France is widely seen as an attempt to reduce its dependence on the U.S. for arms purchases.