Al Shabaab militants killed at least 36 non-Muslim workers at a quarry in northeastern Kenya on Tuesday, beheading at least two of them in revenge for Kenyan military action against the group in neighboring Somalia.
Two months ago, the World Health Organization launched an ambitious plan to stop the deadly Ebola outbreak in West Africa, aiming to isolate 70 percent of the sick and safely bury 70 percent of the victims in the three hardest-hit countries - Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone - by Monday.
Black Friday fatigue is setting in.
It's a robot unlike any other, inspired by the world's fastest land animal and controlled by video game technology.
Six months ago, Marjina stepped off a train in New Delhi with her two children, hoping to find a better life after her husband abandoned them without so much as a goodbye.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani plans to fire senior civilian and military leaders in the country's most volatile provinces to reinvigorate the battle against the Taliban insurgency, officials said.
When Islamic State fighters swept into northern Iraq's second city of Mosul in a lightning June offensive, their propaganda trumpeted a better life for the people under jihadist rule.
A charming, yet revolutionary, television commercial has been garnering a great deal of attention on and off the airwaves and changing the way people in Bangladesh think about education, particularly in poorer, more rural areas. It shows students being taught by teachers hundreds of miles away in Dhaka, the capital, via the Internet.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Monday opened the door to the use of nuclear energy as Australia faces growing pressure to bring down its greenhouse gas emissions.
Negotiators from more than 190 countries gathered in Lima on Monday for the last main stop of the UN climate negotiations on the road to a planned global warming deal in Paris next year.
The sprawling power station that hums and coughs along this coast in Indonesia is labeled as a Japanese contribution to the global fight against climate change.
Darren Wilson, a white police officer who shot a black teenager dead in Ferguson, Missouri, has resigned, but his resignation has not halted the unrest that followed a grand jury decision to not indict him.
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