Hillary Clinton enters the final full week of the presidential race on defense once again over her use of a private email system. Meanwhile, a newly emboldened Donald Trump is seizing on the discovery of a trove of new emails that may be pertinent to the FBI's investigation and trying to open new paths to victory by campaigning in traditionally Democratic states.
Nepal has successfully drained part of a giant glacial lake near Qomolangma, also known as Mount Everest in the West, averting risk of a disastrous flood that could have threatened thousands of lives, officials said on Monday.
As evening approaches in Iraq's northern city of Irbil, TV presenter Bakr Mahmoud Mahdi prepares to go live with a show called Freedom Studio.
Mourners in Morocco on Sunday attended the funeral of a fishmonger whose death in a rubbish truck crusher has caused outrage across the North African country, with authorities vowing to punish those responsible.
Thousands strut through the streets in event inspired by Hollywood hit movie 'Spectre'
A teenager dressed as Batman danced through the door as music thumped inside for a Halloween party in the ground-floor apartment of a Soviet-era housing project in Cuba's capital. On a side table, candles flickered inside squashes carved into jack-o'-lanterns.
The first female-only fitness club has opened in Kabul, with the objective of promoting health and sport among women in Afghanistan's traditionally patriarchal society.
"I want to go back to Syria. There is war in my country, but we've been living for seven months in Greece like prisoners."
Goa has long attracted Western holidaymakers for its relaxed vibe, but rapid construction, swelling crowds and fears over safety are threatening the Indian state's global reputation as a tranquil haven.
Hillary Clinton has lashed out at the FBI's handling of a new email review, leading a chorus of Democratic leaders who declared the bureau's actions just days before the election "unprecedented" and "deeply troubling".
The woman at the center of a deepening political crisis around South Korean President Park Geun-hye will cooperate with prosecutors investigating allegations that she had improper control over state affairs, her lawyer said on Sunday.
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