Australia's Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has conducted what is reportedly the world's first political emoji interview, using an angry red face to describe Russia's Vladimir Putin and a running man to depict her boss Tony Abbott.
France and Egypt were poised on Monday to sign a multi-billion-euro deal for the first foreign sale of the Rafale fighter jet despite human rights concerns.
Twelve-year-old Rakib Mia was on his way to scavenge for his family when a gasoline bomb exploded on the floor of his bus in Bangladesh, turning him into a human fireball.
At least 40 suspected Islamic State militants in Libya were killed early on Monday in Egyptian airstrikes in revenge for the killing of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians who had been kidnapped in the Libyan city of Sirte, state-run Nile TV reported.
The European Union has added 19 more individuals, including a Russian deputy defense minister, to its sanctions list for their actions linked to the fighting in eastern Ukraine.
Satellites can help scientists follow parasites and viruses, and in some cases predict months ahead of time an outbreak of dengue fever or malaria, researchers said on Sunday.
Danish police said on Monday that they have arrested two men suspected of helping the gunman who carried out two deadly shooting attacks over the weekend in Copenhagen. The defense attorney for one of the two suspects, Michael Juul Eriksen, said that the two were accused of giving the gunman shelter and getting rid of a weapon.
A cease-fire was declared in eastern Ukraine at one minute after midnight on Sunday, kindling slender hopes of a reprieve from a conflict that has claimed more than 5,300 lives.
Slovakia will host a peace conference on the Ukraine crisis in March, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said on a radio talk show on Saturday.
Resentment has mounted so much in South Korea against what has come to be known as gabjil, highhandedness by the rich and powerful, that parliamentarians are proposing legislation to punish some of the worst abuses.
Dancers on stilts, bare-chested cowboys, Carmelite nuns in miniskirts and plenty of bare flesh flooded Rio's streets on Saturday as revelers cranked up the volume at Brazil's intoxicating Carnival festival.
Malaysia's prime minister is under mounting scrutiny for cracking down on opponents, troubles in a strategic development fund and questions about his family assets - with even ruling-party conservatives questioning his leadership.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|