Pope Francis was the second world leader Putin kept waiting for an hour on Wednesday.
Russians and citizens of other former Soviet nations are flocking to ISIS, says a top Syrian Muslim leader.
At a Clinton Foundation event in Colorado, the agriculture secretary and former president shared a laugh about weed's value as a cash crop.
Online drug sales with bitcoins are thriving on the dark Web, according to a survey of people by the Global Drug Survey.
The rise in fighting and deaths has convinced Congress, long inclined to supply weapons to Ukraine, that the country still needs more assistance.
Twitter's promoted content isn't always paid for by organizations. The microblogging site also has a little-known emergency notification system.
The street-level data gathered from the vans will be used to improve Apple Maps in future updates, but what about our privacy?
Reports had previously claimed that Kylie Jenner showing off her body on social media may have to do with her feud with Blac Chyna.
For the first time ever, scientists have recorded and measured voluntary -- and habitual -- alcohol consumption in any wild ape.
The Russian military planes had approached the Baltic airspace without sharing a flight plan.
Amnesty International has called for an overhaul of Ireland's "draconian" law, which criminalizes abortion in all but the most extreme circumstances.
Standard & Poor's downgraded several U.K. and German banks, saying it considers government support for these banks to be uncertain.
After an investigation by IBTimes U.K., authorities are looking into the connection between Eritrea's 'diaspora tax' and the terrorist group.
U.K. authorities have played cat and mouse with the Pirate Bay for nearly a decade with little success.
Wipes used to clean hospital surfaces are actually spreading germs instead, researchers found.
Candidates before him, like Chris Christie and Mitt Romney, have found foreign trips dangerous territory — full of mishaps and political blunders.
The Chinese Football Association has described Hong Kong's team as being made up of people “with black skin, yellow skin and white skin.”
The move will reduce staff strength at Europe's biggest bank by at least 22,000, and is part of a broader cost-cutting process.
CEO Stuart Gulliver is due to outline on Tuesday his second major strategic plan since taking over at the start of 2011.
Authorities have announced plans to open 150 treatment centers, a remarkable acknowledgment of the scale of alcoholism in the Islamic republic.
Buckingham Palace said Monday that Queen Elizabeth will visit Bergen-Belsen during her state visit to Germany in late June.
"We think this offers the best mobile reading experience ever," says Apple marketing VP Susan Prescott.