Iran bans foreign media from anti-British rallies
TEHRAN, IRAN (AP) -- Iran has banned foreign media from covering any rallies in front of British diplomatic missions in the capital
TEHRAN, IRAN (AP) -- Iran has banned foreign media from covering any rallies in front of British diplomatic missions in the capital
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN (AP) -- Afghan President Hamid Karzai is pardoning an Afghan woman serving a 12-year prison sentence for having sex out of wedlock after she was raped by a relative.
One of three American students arrested during protests in Cairo says they were hit and threatened with guns and described that first night in custody as the scariest of his life.
Pakistan accuses NATO of an attack that killed at least 24 soldiers. Pakistan's army said NATO helicopters and fighter aircraft also injured 13 people in what officials are calling an "unprovoked" attack on two border posts near Afghanistan.
BERLIN (AP) -- A German State Governor is asking a tiny town to remove a bell adorned with swastikas and Hermann Goering's name from its Memorial to Germany's War Dead.
JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- Imagine the savannas of South Africa's flagship Kruger Park so choked with brush, viewing what game is left is nearly impossible. The Cape of Good Hope without penguins.The Karoo Desert's seasonal symphony of wildflowers silenced.
Libya's interim leadership announced that Gadhafi was killed Thursday.
A CIA contractor who was once jailed in Pakistan for killing two men in a shootout is due in a Colorado courtroom on charges of fighting over a shopping center parking spot.
A Fort Collins solar energy company is moving some of its workforce to china to improve profits.
A man wanted in the execution-style shooting of two men in Evergreen in 2004 has been captured in El Paso, Texas.
The Defense Department says it has more data on military suicides than ever before, but still not enough to analyze the differences between personnel who take their own lives and those who don't.
The nation's military leaders of tomorrow say they have less preoccupation with the sexual orientation of their colleagues than generations before them.
Encana Corporation said Wednesday that a subsidiary plans to sell part of it's natural gas pipeline business for $590 million.
In UK, worst riots since 1980's continue, police struggle to maintain order.
TRIPOLI, LIBYA (AP) -- A senior Libyan government official has denied rebel reports that Moammar Gadhafi's youngest son was killed in a NATO airstrike on the western town of Zlitan.
A resident of the Syrian city of Hama says gunmen in plainclothes are randomly shooting people in the streets.
An Italian parliamentary commission has approved a draft law that would ban women from wearing veils that cover their faces in public.
A giant clock on a skyscraper in Islam's holiest city Mecca is illuminated at the start of the fasting month of Ramadan.
An Iranian man convicted of disfiguring a woman's face with acid has been spared eye-for-eye punishment.
JAKARTA, INDONESIA (AP) -- Local fishermen say they found the body of an American surfer who went missing last weekend in waters off western Indonesia.
The Italian senate has voted to keep funding for troops in Afghanistan but to reduce its participation in the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Lebanon and in NATO's Libyan operations.
Germany's national disease control center says it is declaring the country's deadly e.coli outbreak over.
NATO says it will continue bombing the Libyan regime's armed forces as long as needed, and the country's leader, Moammar Gadhafi, cannot "wait us out."
GENEVA (AP) -- The U.N.'s top human rights official says the U.S. breached international law when it executed a Mexican citizen.
News International says it is shutting down the News of the World tabloid that is at the center of Britain's phone hacking scandal.