Floods sparked by torrential rains have killed 31 people in Indonesia and more than a dozen are still missing, officials said on Monday, marking the latest calamity for a disaster-prone nation, Xinhua News Agency reported.
A second disaster unfolded on Sunday in northern Mozambique in the wake of Cyclone Kenneth as raging floodwaters killed one person and began to cut off the region's main city from the outside world. Nearly 160,000 people were at risk, with more torrential rain forecast for the days ahead, The Associated Press reported.
KABUL - Any peace agreement with the Afghan Taliban depends on the declaration of a permanent cease-fire and a commitment to end the country's long war, Zalmay Khalilzad the US special envoy for peace in Afghanistan, said on Sunday.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's Socialist Workers' Party won the country's general election on Sunday, but will have to figure out how to form a coalition after it failed to secure enough votes for a majority in the parliament.
Flying terrified Jim Reyer. He conjured images of a flaming crash and a TV reporter on site intoning: "No survivors."
A gunman fired indiscriminately into a crowd that had gathered for Sunday afternoon cookouts along a west Baltimore street, killing a man and wounding seven other people, authorities and reports said, according to The Associated Press.
Police in Scotland are writing to secondary schools to highlight the growing problem of youngsters being targeted as "money mules" by criminals that use children's bank accounts to move money.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday made his first comments on a US court sentencing admitted Russian foreign agent Maria Butina to 18 months in prison, calling her treatment a travesty of justice, Reuters reported.
Thousands of trade unionists and left wing activists joined yellow vest protesters in Paris on Saturday in rejecting French President Emmanuel Macron's proposed tax cuts as too little too late, Agence France-Presse reported.
Japan on Saturday kicked off an unprecedented 10-day holiday, including celebration days for the imperial transition, as airports were packed with a record number of travelers while people queued at teller machines in the cash-dominated nation, Agence France-Presse reported.
KABUL - Thousands of villages and hamlets in Afghanistan have turned into ghost towns, as land mines and explosive devices continue to claim the lives of civilians in one of the world's most heavily mined countries.
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