Britain's three rival groups on Saturday clashed over immigration in southeast England's port town Folkestone, exposing divided public sentiments towards the ongoing Calais migrant crisis.
Three Spanish journalists are missing, who were feared to have been kidnapped, in or around the Syrian City of Aleppo, according to reports in the Spanish press.
U.S. Department of Defense on Tuesday said that Muhsin al-Fadhli, a longtime al-Qaida operative and the leader of the Khorasan Group, was killed in U.S. airstrike in northern Syria on July 8.
Greece's cabinet reshuffle aimed at finalizing in coming weeks the debt deal on a third bailout with international creditors received mixed reactions in Athens on Saturday.
Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) on Monday confirmed the death of 44 persons following a twin blast that rocked the central north city of Jos on Sunday night.
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's approval rating has sunk to 9 percent, the lowest since she took office in 2011, according to a poll released Wednesday.
Chile's Copa America 2015 is set to be a magical showcase of the best talent in the world of football but the bets are on for who will be the tournament's best player.
Police in the east U.S. coastal city of Boston are searching for a third man in conjunction with a terror case, after police had shot and killed the first suspect Usaama Rahim on Tuesday, U.S. media reported on Thursday.
Hussein Dandashi, a nine-year old Syrian refugee, was waiting outside a school in a poor district in Lebanon's northern port city of Tripoli for pupils to finish their school day to play soccer with them.
Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza speaks to state radio on Thursday, commending security and defense fores who did not join coup plotters, and urged solders who are still behind the coup to "surrender."
Former South Korean Prime Minister Lee Wan-koo was summoned by the prosecution Thursday for questioning on suspicions that he was involved in a bribery scandal two years ago.
Kenyan police confirmed on Monday a major manhunt for the pursuit of more than 300 Al-Shabaab returnees who sneaked into the country from Somalia.
A giant study of Australians exercising habits has determined people need to be vigorous enough when doing so to work up a sweat to reap the benefits.
Chinese officials who meddle in judicial cases could now find their names in a newly created blacklist by the central authorities.
Regular use of aspirin or other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) can reduce most people's colorectal cancer risk but a few individuals with rare genetic variants do not share this benefit, a study suggested Tuesday.
"A person was jumping in and out of traffic," the dispatcher radioed. The description came in: black male, tan jacket and jeans.