About 232 people have been confirmed dead and many others are still missing after the explosion and fire in Soma, Turkey.
Ukraine is set to host roundtable talks with Moscow on Wednesday set to resolve the ongoing crisis in eastern parts of the country.
A minority party in the Turkish Parliament called for an investigation, but the plan was rejected by the ruling party.
Russia says U.S. participation is not necessary for the continued operation of the space station.
At least 15 factories were reportedly set on fire, while more than hundred were looted in southern Vietnam.
The three drones found earlier were single-engine propeller planes carrying Japan-made cameras and were set to fly over military facilities.
It is the biggest corruption scandal to hit a foreign company in China since the Rio Tinto affair in 2009.
Baraka replaces Cory Booker, now a U.S. senator.
The Chinese are shipping soil to the reef to enlarge it for an airstrip, Philippine and U.S. sources say.
Despite his lead in the race and his opponent's death, the final votes must still be certified by the North Carolina Board of Elections.
President Obama met with the leader of Syria's opposition, while Human Rights Watch probes new chemical attacks.
In an interview with Barbara Walters, Shelley Sterling speculated that "early onset dementia" may explain her husband's racist comments.
Hunter Biden, son of Vice President Joe Biden, will join the top private gas producer in Ukraine.
China's investment in a Kenyan railroad shows a superpower eager to capture African hearts and minds, but not quite succeeding yet.
Hopes of finding survivors "are diminishing" according to Taner Yildiz, Turkey's energy and natural resources minister.
The children were about 15 feet in the air when they fell from the bouncy castle. Two boys were seriously injured and a girl had minor scrapes and bruises.
Hunter Biden's business partner Devon Archer, who has ties to John Kerry, has reportedly been appointed to the company's board.
Ladkhar Brahimi resigns from his post as U.N. envoy to Syria after spearheading two rounds of negotiations in Geneva.
"This is really the make or break moment.”
In his new book, the former U.S. treasury secretary fires back at his critics and many others who crossed him during his tenure.
In the two months since Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 was lost, the FAA has considered a wide range of technological advances.
The Stuxnet attack was the impetus for Iranian hackers to attack foreign targets, security experts say.
The children were reported missing Monday after their mother didn't return them to their biological father.
Demonstrations were held around the world demanding the release of 276 female students kidnapped from a Nigerian secondary school.
A team of about 30 U.S. experts comprised of FBI, defense and state department officials, and a British team, are joining the search.
At least 11 people were killed in the attacks in northwestern Syria, according to Human Rights Watch.
Abubakar Shekau, the leader of Boko Haram, has demanded the release of militant prisoners in return for the abducted Nigerian girls.
U.S. manufacturers have repeatedly complained that China holds down the yuan's value, giving an unfair advantage to Chinese exporters.
“The cancer must be uprooted,” Judge David Rozen of Tel Aviv District Court said referring to political corruption.
Egyptian security forces haven't actually detained most of the 1,200 people recently sentenced to death.