Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump confronted doubts on Monday about the depth of his knowledge of world affairs, delivering a sober speech to a pro-Israel crowd and outlining for the first time his team of foreign policy advisers.
Yolanda Mauri's ancestors almost certainly came to Cuba in chains, laboring as slaves on an island of French coffee plantations and fields of Spanish sugarcane.
At least 23 people including two women died in a southern Pakistani town after drinking tainted liquor with dozens more sickened, police said on Tuesday. The incident is the latest to highlight the proliferation of low-grade liquor in the country.
Brazil's struggling government found itself fighting on two fronts on Monday, with impeachment proceedings threatening President Dilma Rousseff while legal battles harry her predecessor, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
The top suspect in last year's Paris attacks told investigators after he was captured that he was planning new operations from Brussels and possibly had access to several weapons, Belgium's foreign minister said on Sunday.
Aviation experts on Sunday began examining the black boxes from the FlyDubai flight that crashed at an airport, killing all 62 aboard.
World media organizations have pledged to enhance cooperation in an era when traditional media organizations are facing great challenges.
A total of 1,662 migrants have landed on Greek islands near Turkey since a landmark EU-Turkish deal on curbing the influx took effect on Sunday, a Greek coordination panel said Monday.
Brushing past profound differences, US President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro were scheduled to sit down on Monday at Havana's Palace of the Revolution for a historic meeting, offering critical clues about whether Obama's sharp U-turn in policy will be fully reciprocated.
Some of Yemen's last remaining Jews have arrived in Israel after a clandestine operation retrieved them from the war-torn country, an Israeli nonprofit group said on Monday.
For the last decade, Somali refugees have flocked to this conservative farm town on Colorado's eastern plains. They've started a small halal mini-market and a restaurant, sent their children to the schools and worked at a meat processing plant.
Drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is getting some self-help advice and gaining a bit of weight in prison under his new, tighter-security regime, but Mexico's formerly most wanted man is apparently not doing so well in the love department.
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