The 7,000-person demonstration coincides with the second anniversary of the president's inauguration.
The agreement with one of the rebel factions follows a conflict that has so far claimed the lives of about 4,300 people in eastern Ukraine.
The U.N.'s World Food Program said it needs an additional $64 million in December alone to support 1.8 million Syrian refugees.
"I kind of know how a Republican can win," the former Florida governor said.
North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un says smoking foreign cigarettes is unpatriotic.
President Obama listed multiple ways that could help neighborhoods put trust in police after Ferguson.
A Texas group planned to target the two Chicago landmarks with C-4 and chemical explosives, a report said.
Even though the AIDS death toll has fallen by 30 percent globally since 2005, it has increased by 50 percent among adolescents.
A top British official expressed concern regarding Russia's "extremely aggressive probing" of air defenses.
Amid the public turmoil, some are calling Mexico a "failed state." Peña Nieto's approval rating has plummeted in recent months, a survey notes.
North Korean involvement in leaking Sony movies to the Pirate Bay would greatly damage the company's brand, experts say.
The strike comes a day after clashes left 17 police wounded and 40 protesters arrested. Hong Kong's leadership vowed "resolute action."
A civil lawsuit would face some of the same obstacles that convinced a grand jury not to indict the Ferguson police officer.
Warnings over further economic turmoil in Venezuela are becoming louder after OPEC declined to cut oil production last week.
The White House has earmarked about $75 million to equip more police officers with body cameras.
A study of five cities across the world found impoverished youths face myriad challenges that limited their ability to live healthy.
There is serious money at stake: Up to 400,000 barrels of Iraqi oil remains off the market until the issue is solved.
Protesters across the U.S. organized walkouts from school and work in support of the "Hands Up Walk Out," organized via #handsupwalkout.
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The spotlight now shifts from the jungles of Colombia to a well-guarded meeting hall in Cuba.
The victory marks an important milestone for the devoutly Roman Catholic country.
Congress has 14 days to take care of a lot of business, from renewing authorization to strike ISIS to preventing a government shutdown.
This year's theme carries over from the past three years: Getting to Zero.
The U.S. Supreme Court could soon set a precedent on whether people can be prosecuted for what they say on the Internet.
Apache said in a statement Monday that the "tragic carjacking incident this past August involving our colleague Bill Henderson is still under investigation by the U.S. government."
It's one thing for the GOP to be angry at the president; it's quite another for them to come up with a viable alternative.
Two years into Peña Nieto's term, the president's reform drive has morphed into disillusionment and protests. Investors are watching warily.
Dr. Myles Bradbury's abuse was "such a grotesque breach and betrayal," said the judge who sentenced him.
A search operation for those missing is underway, but authorities said bad weather and rough seas were hindering the effort.
The pipeline can currently supply 142.5 billion cubic meters of gas to Europe every year.