On Friday, the country reported a new case of Ebola, only a few days short of being declared Ebola-free.
All 150 aboard the flight are presumed dead.
Museum officials said that there have been no threats made against the museum but "we should be vigilant."
Divisions in Yemen are tribal, not religious, but external powers are exploiting them.
Religious rights leaders claim that the country's administration is worried about the growing influence of Christianity.
Dnipropetrovsk Governor Igor Kolomoisky had earlier been a major stakeholder and effective manager of UkrNafta.
The three men who were executed were sentenced to death in September after being convicted of homicide and leading a terrorist organization.
Unbowed by the Umbrella Movement protests, C.Y. Leung says he does not "rule out" standing for re-election in 2017.
The Minuteman III missiles are the only land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles in service in the U.S.
Previously leaked documents have shown that Canada's intelligence service is monitoring millions of domestic emails every year.
Police officials are trying to locate the suspect or suspects while the university issued a statement asking students to take precautions.
Several people who posted comments on social media against politicians and the government had been arrested under the law.
The British government has expressed concerns over the expansion of Israeli settlements under the pretext of "protection of Jewish history."
Petro Poroshenko has presided over a protracted conflict with separatists, and an ailing economy.
Israel has criticized the Obama administration's push for an agreement over Iran's nuclear program as a "bad, insufficient deal."
The talks are aimed at fixing a dispute over the border that divides Asia's largest nations.
Christopher Manney, who was sacked after he fatally shot Dontre Hamilton last April, will not get his job back, a review panel ruled late Monday.
The move would make Canada the second NATO country to launch strikes against ISIS in Syria.
The new government also announced that it would not grant asylum to any more Syrian refugees.
The freshman forward plays for Princeton and was not warned of the threat before the game.
The House has approved a resolution that asks President Obama to provide military support to Ukraine in its fight against pro-Russian separatists.
Islamic State militants have reportedly siphoned off millions from Iraqi government employees.
Supporters of Martese Johnson, the black UVA honors student whose head was bloodied during his arrest last week, started a crowdfunding campaign.
Utah Gov. Gary Herbert signed legislation Monday allowing firing squads to execute death row inmates if lethal injection drugs are unavailable.
The U.S. assured Afghanistan's leaders it would keep funding Afghan security forces at a targeted peak level of 352,000 personnel at least into 2017 to provide stability as foreign troops withdraw.
Cops in the City of Brotherly Love are not well-versed in their department’s policies on deadly force, a report from the U.S. Justice Department finds.
The Pentagon said on Monday it was notifying 100 U.S. troops that a group claiming ties to ISIS had posted their names, addresses and photos on the Internet and was calling for American sympathizers to kill them.
The poll also showed that Rousseff's personal approval rating had dropped to 18.9 percent from 55.6 percent in September.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie petitioned an auto dealership to loan a Corvette to the host who interviews him on a radio show.
Four years after NATO warplanes helped dislodge dictator Muammar Gaddafi, Libya has descended into chaos, with two rival governments fighting for control.