The Democratic People's Republic of Korea will send Olympic gold medalists and world champions to the 17th Asian Games to be held in Incheon, Republic of Korea, from Friday to Oct 4.
The United States announced on Tuesday that it would send 3,000 troops to help tackle the Ebola outbreak as part of a ramped-up response, including a major deployment in Liberia, the country where the epidemic is most rapidly spiraling out of control.
The Ukrainian Parliament approved on Tuesday two bills offering major concessions to independence-seeking insurgents and more autonomy to eastern regions, where unrest has been raging since mid-April.
Syria's government is pushing compulsory education in the midst of an escalating civil war, promoting education as an alternative to violence, while using strict measures to compel displaced parents to send their children to school.
At a recent political rally in Wellington, indicted Internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom jokingly asked members of New Zealand's spy agency to raise their hands.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott shifted his office to a tent in an isolated Aboriginal community on Monday, keeping a promise made when he came to power despite having just committed troops to the fight against Islamic State.
Typhoon Kalmaegi swept out of the Philippines on Monday after causing chest-deep floods in some rural areas but leaving the storm-prone country largely unscathed, authorities said.
British Prime Minister David Cameron was to plead with Scots on Monday to vote against independence as Scotland enters the most decisive week in its modern history.
The German government has no knowledge of any country delivering weapons to the Ukraine government, Berlin said on Monday.
As many as 500 migrants are feared to have drowned after traffickers rammed and sank their boat in what the International Organization for Migration described on Monday as "the worst ship-wreck in years".
Sweden's Social Democrat-led bloc officially began the struggle to form a government on Monday, a day after it ousted the center-right ruling coalition in parliamentary elections but fell short of a majority.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|