On Sunday, Zambia asked Cuba to recall Nelson Pages Vilas, its ambassador, over his open support for the new opposition Socialist Party.
China's Xinhua news agency reported on Sunday that the country's major policy bank CDB is planning to lend $63.77B for poverty relief projects in 2018.
Macau gambling revenue saw a 22% gain over the course of March thanks to the decent demand for gambling in China's only legal casino centre.
The Chinese state news agency Xinhua said on Sunday that the country's NEV start-up Singulato is planning to invest around $2.39B in Suzhou.
In an interview broadcast on Sunday, the Turkish Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekci said that the country's exports hit a record $15.1B over the course of March.
On Sunday, a German newspaper revealed that one of Volkswagen's prominent shareholders urged his colleagues to vote against Wolfgang Porsche's re-election to the board.
According to the state media, Syrian rebels started to leave the last bastion in Ghouta on Sunday, raising hopes that a conflict in the enclave might be finally ended.
The German Minister of Foreign Affairs Heiko Maas said on Sunday he wanted to rebuild trust with Russia and gradually improve ties.
Somali officials reported that Al Shabaab militants had attacked the African Union troops outside their base in Bulomarer, Somalia.
On Sunday, Afghanistan's election authorities revealed that they had confirmed 20 October as the date of the parliamentary and district council election.
The Governor of the Russian Kemerovo region, Aman Tuleyev, resigned on Sunday in the wake of the deadly shopping centre fire.
Japan's banking industry lobby stated that Japanese banks must continue with consolidation efforts to try to bolster profitability.
Saudi Arabia's GDP shrank 1.18% on an annual basis in the Q4 of 2017, following the prior quarter's decline of 0.43% and marking the fourth straight quarterly contraction.
Office sources reported that Gilberto Occhi, the CEO of Brazil's state-owned bank Caixa Economica Federal, would become the country's next Minister of Health.
On Sunday, the United States and South Korea resumed their joint military exercises after they were postponed because of the Winter Olympics.
Saudi Arabia has signed a non-binding agreement with Boeing to provide training and support to the country's fleet.
Flash figures released on Sunday showed that South Korean crude oil imports fell 16.9% year-over-year in March to 79.7M barrels.
The Namibian President Hage Geingob stated on Saturday that China was not colonising Africa and that improving cooperation between countries was benefiting both of them.
Japan's banks must proceed with consolidation, using everything from informal tie-ups to mergers, to tackle falling profitability, the new chief of the industry's lobby group stated.
China is expected to complete by mid-April the formation of government departments as a component of a restructuring plan, which was ratified by parliament, state media reported citing Vice Premier's comments.
The Supreme Court battle between the US government and Microsoft on whether tech firms could be forced to provide data stored overseas is likely to end.
South Korea's exports climbed less than anticipated in March, adding to uncertainties surrounding the future of global demand due to rising fears of the US-China trade war.
A Russian court has detained Tanzilia Komkova, the Head of State Construction Supervision for the Kemerovo region, in relation to last week's deadly fire at the Zimnyaya Vishnya shopping mall.
Alibaba, a Chinese e-commerce conglomerate, and Ford, an American multinational automaker, opened a car vending machine in China.