International News



 

North Korea says Kim Jong Il has died


North Korean leader Kim Jong-il died Saturday on a train trip, a tearful state television announcer has reported.

Russia seizes Iran-bound radioactive material


Russia said Friday it had seized radioactive materials from the luggage of a passenger planning to fly from Moscow to Tehran.

In Cuba, old clunkers and Soviet cars now for sale


Want to buy a blue 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air for $11,000 or a Soviet-made Lada 1600 for $15,000?

New U.N. climate deal struck, critics say gains modest


Countries from around the globe agreed on Sunday to forge a new deal for the first time to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

As U.S. leaves, Iraqi forces still under construction


Iraq's rebuilt military is a long way from matching up with regional powers like Saudi Arabia, Iran and Israel.

Hospital fire kills at least 73 in eastern India


A fire ripped through a hospital in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata on Friday, killing at least 73 people.

Egypt's Islamists claim most seats in run-off vote


The Muslim Brotherhood said on Wednesday it had won most seats in an opening round of run-offs in Egypt's staggered parliamentary vote.

Blasts across Afghanistan target Shi'ites, 59 dead


A suicide attack killed dozens of Shi'ite Muslims at a crowded Kabul shrine on Tuesday.

Afghanistan's allies pledge to stay for long-haul


The West used an Afghanistan meeting on Monday to signal enduring support for Kabul as allied troops go home.

Biden prods Turkey on new Iran sanctions


Vice President Biden has urged Turkey to pass new sanctions against Iran.

Britain pulls embassy staff out of Iran


Britain has evacuated all its diplomatic staff from Iran a day after protesters stormed and ransacked its embassy.

Pakistan warns NATO attack threatens Afghanistan peace bid


Pakistan ratcheted up pressure on NATO on Monday over a cross-border attack that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers at the weekend, threatening to drastically reduce cooperation on peace efforts in Afghanistan.

Egypt protesters battle on to end army rule


Street clashes flared in Cairo again Wednesday as protesters derided an agreement forged by Egypt's ruling generals and mostly Islamist parties for a swifter transfer to civilian rule.

The EU and the clatter of high ideals


Failed by squabbling politicians, wracked by faithless financial markets, the EU may flinch these days in the glare of world scrutiny.

Egyptian police battle protesters, 33 dead


Cairo police fought protesters demanding an end to army rule for a third day on Monday and the death toll rose to 33.

Greece's Samaras rules out post-election cooperation


The leader of Greece's conservatives signaled his main focus was on winning an election and reversing policies.

Did troops bring democracy? Iraqis have doubts


Sitting in a barber shop in Baghdad's Shi'ite Sadr City slum, three friends agreed after a long and hard argument.

Sixty-nine killed in Syria on Monday: activists


At least 69 people were killed in southern Syria on Monday.

Norway mass killer Breivik admits July massacre


The anti-Muslim militant who killed 77 people in attacks in Norway on July 22 acknowledged carrying out the massacre.

Israel rushes airliner defenses as Libya leaks SAMs


Israel has accelerated the installation of anti-missile defenses on its airliners, a security official said on Friday.