Greece's government may call early elections if the country's international lenders do not soften their terms for a cash-for-reforms deal, Deputy Social Security Minister Dimitris Stratoulis said on Friday.
The number of people killed in a devastating gasoline station fire and heavy flooding in Ghana's capital, Accra, has exceeded 150, the country's Red Cross disaster management coordinator, Francis Oben, said on Friday.
South Korean authorities squabbled on Friday over their handling of an outbreak of Middle East respiratory syndrome, as a fourth person died and five new cases were reported.
Alan Bond, the high-flying Australian businessman, America's Cup hero and convicted fraudster, died on Friday at age 77 following complications from open heart surgery.
Under the glittering dome of the Invalides military hospital in Paris, where Napoleon lies buried, France's great general continues to divide opinion, 200 years after his historic defeat at Waterloo.
A young girl in a bright pink dress tiptoes around the edge of a cage containing a white Bengal tiger, as young couples walk by with strollers.
Hundreds more schools closed on Thursday in South Korea as officials struggled to ease growing panic over an outbreak of the MERS virus that has infected 35 people, killed two and caused thousands to cancel travel plans.
The Republic of Korea said on Thursday it had agreed to a request from the Democratic People's Republic of Korea to install thermal-imaging cameras at their Kaesong joint industrial zone to prevent the spread of the MERS virus into the DPRK.
Eight days after returning from a business trip to the Middle East, a 68-year-old man in South Korea developed a cough and fever.
One of Australia's most prominent, colorful and controversial public figures continued to fight for his life in a Perth hospital on Thursday.
For Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, failure in the legislative elections on Sunday is simply not an option.
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