A continent best known for its symptoms of morbid decline is doing remarkably well by measure of economic growth and good governance
The "Nation's Actress" is found dead in her apartment after being attacked by aggressive online rumors
Supporters of the popular president do well in local elections, but not as well as expected
For all the rhetoric about a common front, Germany leads a new run of unilateral action to save institutions and reassure depositors
A storied location will be abandoned for a new, more secure building in humbler surroundings
While the world speculates on Kim Jong Il's health and whether Washington can get nuclear talks back on track, millions of North Koreans are running out of food
France is a key U.S. ally in confronting Iran's nuclear program. But many in Paris, and Washington, believe that solving the problem requires direct U.S.-Iranian talks
A black mayor tries to ban a street dress code, but runs afoul of the courts. Could class politics be at work?
An angry exchange of public denunciations between top leaders of the ANC suggests that some Mbeki loyalists may be planning to quit the party
It may have looked like just another sluggish freighter, but the Faina's cargo of tanks put the buccaneers in the eye of an international storm
A dictionary's cull of archaic terms has brought language mavens onto the ramparts
A new X-band radar in the Negev desert may provide early warning of any Iranian attack, but some say it's there to serve U.S. objectives rather than Israeli ones
At the prodding of Iran, whose support is critical to the survival of the Assad regime, Damascus can be expected to beef up Hizballah
With security heightened after the Sept. 20 bombing, the city resembles the Iraqi capital of 2003
There's been no lights, camera or action in Bollywood with up to 150,000 workers going on strike in India's most glamorous industry
Over three years in the making, the U.S. Senate passes a deal with India that opens up the nuclear power for business
Fakhruddin Ahmed explains why he's willing to risk turmoil to hold a new election
Viewpoint: Washington's orthodoxies have prevailed since the end of the Cold War, but the credit crisis is accelerating their demise
The annual conference of Britain's hopeful opposition party is overshadowed and unsettled by Congress
Was it due to U.S prodding or a way for Kayani to prove that his office remains the most powerful in the troubled country?
Old warriors are up in arms again over a scene in Lee's new film about the Buffalo Soldiers who helped liberate Italy
As Israel's embattled prime minister prepares to leave office, he issues a series of stunning departure statements
Moves to hand control of the anti-Qaeda Sons of Iraq to a Shi'ite government they mistrust are fueling growing anger
France's conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy finds himself echoing long-standing positions of his Socialist opposition
Caught in between four countries and 60 years of conflict, the disputed plateau could soon change hands again - peacefully
Why many Britons see the giant Cerne Abbas, a.k.a. the 'Rude Man,' as a pillar of national pride
Ineffective mainstream parties and worries over immigration push protest parties on right to their best cumulative result since WWII
Caught between the West and nuclear upstarts like Iran and North Korea, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency has one of the toughest jobs in diplomacy
Flirtatious remarks by President Zardari unleash a firestorm of criticism in Pakistan
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