Aircraft debris had been found on the island in South Australia on June 9, and was examined by Australian and Malaysian authorities, along with Boeing.
It was not immediately clear if the second launch, about two hours after the first, was successful, South Korea’s military said.
A video surfaced online that showed eight people, all bank employees, being beaten in front of an audience of over 200 people in northern China.
China’s biggest gaming and social network company will buy most of the Finnish mobile gaming firm for roughly $8.6 billion.
Analysts say the company is rethinking strategy in China amid cutthroat competition in the country’s e-commerce market and challenges for stores.
The People’s Bank of China said it will allow qualified foreign companies to issue shares in stock exchanges on the mainland.
State-owned shipping company COSCO said it also plans to develop other routes in the South China Sea and Taiwan Straits.
The Chinese government is worried that a Brexit would reduce the EU’s ability to act as a counterbalance to the U.S., and hurt China’s investments in the U.K., the country’s leading newspaper suggested.
Security experts say the Chinese seem to be abiding by an agreement to stop supporting the hacking of American trade secrets.
Pixar's “Finding Dory” set a box office record thanks to a lack of any real competition. That wasn't deliberate.
China now has the most and the fastest supercomputers in the world, and it doesn't need chips made by U.S. companies anymore. Intel should be worried.
Hong Kong's Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said his government will write a letter expressing concern over booksellers' case to China's central authorities.
In China, mass flooding has claimed nearly 800 houses and damaged roughly 3,000 buildings as more than a dozen people have been reported missing.
Polls over the weekend showed an increased possibility of Britain remaining in the European Union.
The U.S. State Department warned Americans in May to avoid traveling to North Korea because of the risk of “unduly harsh sentences.”
Starting July 1, the telecast of unapproved TV shows based on foreign formats will be banned in the world’s second-largest economy, according to China’s media regulator.
Ahead of the opening of China’s controversial dog meat festival, shops and restaurants are concealing their trade in the face of growing public protests.
Exports are likely to expand in coming months, but Prime Minister Abe remains under pressure to support growth as further gains in the yen threaten corporate earnings.
Forecaster ZenithOptimedia said it expected companies around the world to spend $99.3 billion on mobile internet advertising next year.
A weaker dollar also helped buy back the commodity after six straight days of declines.
Falling oil prices, rising security threats, lower economic growth in China and higher volatility in exchange rates that have curbed tourism have all put the brakes on spending.
New York could see millions of dollars pour into real estate from foreign sources — no matter how Britons vote on the U.K.’s membership in the European Union.