Massachusetts Child Rape Suspect Arrested In New York After Crime Spree Spanning Several States
Gregory Lewis, who is a suspect in crimes in North Carolina, Colorado and Oregon, had also been spotted in Idaho, Utah and Ohio.
Landslide In Sri Lanka Kills At Least 10 While Nearly 300 More Are Reported Missing
State-run network Rupavahini showed muddy water flowing in from the hilltops, hinting at the possibility of more landslides.
Fire Inside London's Olympic Stadium Extinguished By Firefighters, No Injuries Reported
The $807 million stadium, which is being restructured to be used as home field for the West Ham football club, is also getting a new roof.
Zambia's President Michael Sata Dies In London From An Undisclosed Illness
Michael Sata had traveled to London for treatment at the King Edward VII hospital on Oct. 19 with his wife and family members.
Australia's Ebola Travel Ban Criticized By UN, Liberia, Sierra Leone
The Ebola virus has so far killed nearly 5,000 people and has infected more than 10,000 people, mostly in West Africa.
Kim Jong Un Had A Cyst Removed From His Ankle During His Absence, Says South Korean Spy Agency
Kim was last seen in public on Sept. 3 and reappeared with a cane only on Oct. 14, triggering rumors about the North's future.
Coalition Of Private Technology Companies Tracks Hacking To Chinese Intelligence
The coalition includes Microsoft, Symantec and Cisco, and suggests private firms can be nimbler than federal agencies in preventing future hacks.
California Man Found Guilty In 2012 Shooting Deaths Of Two Chinese Students At USC
Javier Bolden, 22, was convicted of fatally shooting two Chinese graduate students while trying to rob them in April 2012.
US States, Army Stand Firm On Ebola Quarantine Despite CDC's New Guidelines
The U.S. CDC has provided guidelines aimed at building a national standard on the way to handle the Ebola virus.
Suicide Bombing Near Baghdad Kills 27 Shiite Militiamen, ISIS Role Suspected
The attack occurred in the town of Jurf al-Sakhar, which was taken back by government forces from ISIS over the weekend.
New York, New Jersey Stick To Home Quarantines For Ebola While Nurse Kaci Hickox Plans Lawsuit
New York, New Jersey and Illinois implemented a mandatory 21-day quarantine aimed at people returning from Ebola-hit countries.
Toyota Sells 7.61M Vehicles Until September To Maintain Global Lead Over Volkswagen And GM In 2014
Toyota’s deliveries in the U.S. increased 5.7 percent until September, led by a 26 percent rise in the sales of its RAV4 SUV.
Chinese Lawmakers Consider Repealing Death Penalty For 9 Crimes
China executed 2,400 people in 2013, about three times more than the combined count in all countries with the death penalty.
Two Killed, 23 Injured As Lebanese Army Attacks Islamist Gunmen In Tripoli
Islamist gunmen accuse the Lebanese military of supporting the Shiite militant group Hezbollah.
World Health Organization Says 4,922 Killed And More Than 10,000 Infected By Ebola
The U.S. National Institutes of Health declared the recovery of Nina Pham, a nurse who contracted Ebola while treating Thomas Eric Duncan.
Hong Kong Leader Compares City Police Favorably With US Counterparts
The Hong Kong police has tried clearing out the area several times and even used tear gas and pepper spray in the process.
Ebola Mali: WHO Says 'Emergency' In Country After Many People Exposed To Possibly Contagious Girl
A 2-year-old who died from Ebola virus disease traveled on a bus while she was symptomatic and likely infectious.
World Health Organization Monitoring 43 People For Ebola, Sends Experts To Mali After First Case
Mali became the sixth African country to have witnessed a case of Ebola, after a 2-year-old girl tested positive for the disease.
Letter Warning Of Impending Suicide Bombings On Indian Flights Deemed Fake By Authorities: Report
In September, al Qaeda announced the formation of a South Asia wing to “raise the flag of jihad” on the subcontinent.
North Korea Says The South's Leaflet Campaign Against Pyongyang Is A 'Declaration Of War'
Earlier this month, both countries exchanged gunfire at the border after the North shot down balloons carrying anti-Pyongyang propaganda leaflets.
Lufthansa Prepares To Outsource IT Business To IBM
The German airline’s plan to outsource its IT business is expected to save the company nearly 70 million euros each year.
India Gears Up To Prevent Ebola, Follows Cues From Nigeria, WHO And CDC
India has been on high alert since the World Health Organization declared Ebola an international health emergency in August.
Ashoka Mukpo Declared Ebola-Free; 2 Passengers To Chicago From Liberia Hospitalized
Ashoka Mukpo is the second person, after Rick Sacra, to be treated for the Ebola virus at the Nebraska Medical Center.
Samsung Galaxy Range Devices Receive NSA Approval For US Government Use
In June, some Samsung phones and tablets were approved by the U.S. Department of Defense to hold sensitive but unclassified information.
Pakistani Court Pulls Anti-Government Network, ARY News, Off Air For 15 Days, Fines It $97,000
ARY News' viewership had climbed to its highest ever after it aired narratives against Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's government.
Australia To Help China Bring Back Corrupt Economic Fugitives
At least seven high-level officials have reportedly fled to Australia with $1 billion stolen from public funds.
Enterovirus D68 Affects Young Girl In Yonkers, New York, Elementary School Cleaned Up
Seven people who tested positive for Enterovirus D-68 have died so far in the U.S. The CDC is investigating links between the virus and paralysis.
At Least 20 People Killed In Bangladesh In Passenger Bus Collision
Over 10,000 people are killed in road accidents in Bangladesh every year due to bad roads, reckless driving and poor condition of vehicles.
Saudi Arabia's Largest Bank, National Commercial Bank, To Convert To Fully Islamic Bank
The Sharia board has said that 78 percent of NCB's finance deals, 92 percent of liabilities and 73 percent of income, are Sharia-compliant.
New Ebola Guidelines In US To Require Nurses Treating Affected Patients To Cover Their Bodies Fully
The latest move by the CDC comes after two health care workers in Dallas contracted the virus while treating an infected patient.