A violent storm ravaged the Russian capital, Moscow, killing at least 11 people and wounding dozens of others.
French President Emmanuel Macron accused Russian state news outlets of spreading "fake news" and "propaganda" against him during May's presidential election, after holding talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Versailles Palace outside Paris.
More than 100,000 Afghans have been forced to leave their homes because of war in 2017, the United Nations reported on May 29.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is a "deeply convinced transatlanticist" who believes it is right to point to differences in her country's ties with the United States in order to maintain healthy relations, her spokesman said on May 29.
Muslims in the U.S. city of Portland, Oregon, said they were raising money for the families of two men who were killed when they came to the defense of two young women who were targeted by an anti-Muslim rant.
New French President Emmanuel Macron says he will be “demanding” when he hosts Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Versailles palace outside Paris on May 29.
North Korea has once again ratcheted up tensions on the Korean Peninsula, test launching what is believed to be a short-range ballistic missile.
Russia surprised the aviation world on May 28 with the maiden flight of its new MS-21 medium-range passenger plane, creating a rival for its Western competitors with its first post-Soviet mainstream commercial airliner.
British police investigating the deadly terror attack in Manchester say they have made another arrest as they continue their efforts to capture the suspected network of which they believe suicide bomber Salman Abedi had been a part.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on May 28 that Europe can no longer "completely depend" on the United States and the United Kingdom after the election of President Donald Trump and the Brexit vote.
U.S.-backed Iraqi forces launched a broad attack on the final districts held by the Islamic State (IS) militant group in west Mosul, military officials say.
Members of the network used by Manchester bomber Salman Abedi may still be at large, Britain’s interior minister said, as the terrorism threat level in the country was lowered due to significant progress in the investigation.
Load more