As the country's army loses ground to the Taliban in the north, Afghanistan is forming local militias and asking warlords to fight the group, the New York Times reports.
A mob of Muslim religious leaders in Lahore, Pakistan, demanded that the suspect be burned alive.
The Baloch Liberation Army said it was responsible for the attack.
However, the Islamic State group conceded the scenario is "far-fetched" in the latest issue of its propaganda magazine Dabiq.
Opinions are divided on whether the people killed in the attack are militants or civilians.
Emails exchanged by Hillary Clinton and Sidney Blumenthal show that the latter had obtained information about unrest in Libya through “sensitive sources."
Journalist Greg Palast -- whose book was among those seized from the al Qaeda leader's hideout -- says terrorism wasn't necessary.
The al Qaeda chief was into video production well before ISIS was -- and also passionate about the French economy.
Saudi Prince Turki Faisal also called on U.S. President Barack Obama to "find the way to make our area free of weapons of mass destruction."
The hundreds of declassified documents include a letter the al Qaeda leader wrote to one of his wives who was traveling from Iran to rejoin him in Pakistan.
Although details of the accord have not been revealed yet, many in Afghanistan have termed it a “shameful” deal.
Saudi officials claim the increased beheadings show the kingdom's commitment to "maintaining security and realising justice." In 2014, Saudi Arabian beheadings ranked third in the world, after China and Iran, according to Amnesty International.
Using the classic “lever test,” researchers found that rats were all too eager to self-administer the drug.
More than 168,000 Chinese nationals visited India in 2012, compared with more than 610,000 Indians who traveled to China.
The tribal region of North Waziristan is believed to be one of the last strongholds of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and its allies.
The accords are the latest sign of what officials in both countries have sought to portray as a new era in their bilateral relations.
Veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh claimed Pakistan had kept Osama bin Laden in captivity for five years.
The violence is the first of its kind directed at the community amid escalating threats against Pakistan's religious minorities.
The militants left leaflets on the bus that used a derogatory Arabic word for Shi'ites, blaming them for "barbaric atrocities ... in the Levant, Iraq and Yemen."
At least six gunmen opened fire on a bus carrying members of the minority Shiite Ismaili community in Karachi, Pakistan.
NBC News reported, citing sources, that Pakistan knew Osama bin Laden’s location before the raid, corroborating journalist Seymour Hersh's report.
"There are too many inaccuracies and baseless assertions in this piece to fact check each one."