Mariam Yahya Ibrahim was detained at Khartoum airport Tuesday, a day after an appeals court overturned a death sentence imposed on her.
Two bombs were detonated at the exchange on Cairo's outskirts Saturday, killing two women.
Congressional Republicans appear divided by the debate over the Export-Import Bank of the U.S.
The Iraqi military forces were aided by Shiite volunteers and local Sunni tribal militias.
The Clintons managed to wipe out millions of dollars in debt within four years of their leaving the White House.
Wojciech Janowski was fired as Poland's honorary consul to Monaco after being charged with the murder of his mother-in-law.
Ahmed Abu Khattala made his first appearance in a U.S. courtroom in Washington.
Poroshenko signs a EU trade deal, and Ukrainians hold their breath through a weekend cease-fire extension.
The northern Iraqi city has been seized by Sunni militants during a cross-country offensive.
German Chancellor Merkel calls for review of EC president selection process.
Government officials try to stem the tide of growing ISIS support.
A U.N. panel has concluded a shipment of weapons seized by Israel came from Iran and represents a violation of the arms embargo on Iran.
The decision by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals followed a request by Indiana's attorney general for an emergency order to place the ruling on hold until the Chicago-based appeals court can hear the case.
Officials are trying to handle an influx of new arrivals, many of them unaccompanied minors from Central America, that has crowded facilities in Texas and led to efforts to move some to other states.
John Boehner wants to sue President Obama for bypassing the House with executive orders, but Obama has his own criticisms for the Republican-controlled body.
The findings emerged after President Barack Obama met with acting Veterans Secretary Sloan Gibson and the White House official assigned to investigate the agency, Rob Nabors.
The White House says the U.S. could soon join the biggest anti-landmine treaty currently in effect.
The Turkish government sent legislation to parliament that could signal its support for an independent Kurdistan.
The OPEC nation has suffered an increasing incidence of power outages in recent years, which critics have attributed to low electricity tariffs and limited state investment following the 2007 nationalization of the power sector
Nigeria is one of the world's highest rates of kidnapping, an enterprise that funnels hundreds of millions of dollars to the sophisticated criminal gangs that carry it out.
Some U.S. fans couldn't resist the world war rematch idea.
Chinese workers -- and oil investment -- are in jeopardy in Iraq after ISIS attack.
U.S. government sources say private security firms in Iraq have not had immunity from prosecution since 2008.
"Calamity Will Befall US," warns the hashtag.
A Chinese philanthropist says that China's poor would use cash handouts to buy food, not drugs. He's right -- but not in the way he thinks.
The EPA's assessment of trichloroethylene is the first of its kind since 1986.
As sales of her memoir dropped, Clinton's criticism of the Chinese government seems to be shutting her out of a huge market.
New York prosecutors have argued that Facebook has no right to inform its users that their information has been turned over to investigators.
Mayfield was one of the three men charged with attempting to take photos of U.S. Sen Thad Cochran’s wife in a nursing home.
One supporter of the gunman whose shot 100 years ago started World War I says the shooter "began the liberation from serfdom and slavery."