On Saturday, many human rights groups and organizations criticized decision to appoint the President of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe, as a goodwill ambassador of the World Health Organization (WHO).
On Saturday, the chairman of the State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission Xiao Yaqing highlighted that state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and their private investors will benefit from the Communist Party of China (CPC) stronger governance.
He Lifeng, the chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said that China's economy is on the way to hit 2017 growth target of 6.5%.
According to security forces, Iraqi military have finally taken control of the district of Altun Kupri in Kirkuk that was previously held by Kurdish Peshmerga soldiers.
Iraq was forced to increase oil exports from southern provinces by 200K barrels per day to compensate shortage of supplies from Kirkuk oil fields, the Iraqi Oil Minister Jabar al-Luaibi said on Saturday.
On Saturday, a senior official assured that the Communist Party of China (CPC) continues to maintain contacts and communicate with its North Korean colleagues, as it is essential for regional stability.
Not less than 72 people died after suicide bombers attacked two mosques in Kabul's western Dasht-e-Barchi district and central Ghor province, officials reported on Saturday.
The Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said he saw a possibility of repeated elections in the five country's states where the opposition won a majority of votes.
The Nikkei reported on Saturday that Mitsubishi is planning to collaborate with Digital Realty Trust to build about 10 data centres across Japan by 2022.
The US FAA has filed an offer to stop allowing US travellers to carry their laptops in checked bags, as tests showed the lithium-ion laptop battery can overheat and explode near an aerosol spray can.
The US-based pharmaceutical firm Merck announced its plans to lay off around 1.8K sales representatives in the country as a part of a major company shake-up.
Tesla announced that it has raised creditworthiness for the company's car lease program to $1.1B from $600M, just after the necessity to spend heavily on new Model 3 fixing.
A California judge tossed a $417M verdict in a lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson, where a woman claimed that she developed cancer after using the company's products.
The US Treasury Department said that the country's budget deficit widened to 3.5% of GDP or $666B, for the fiscal year 2017, as the record amount of spending offset record receipts.
Social media firm Snap announced that it laid off 18 employees in the company's recruiting division, making a reflection of hard competition from Facebook.
Theresa May, the British Prime Minister, won a reprieve in stalled Brexit negotiations, while the EU leaders showed willingness to move the talks forward in the forthcoming moths.
The government of Spain ensured opposition support to dissolve Catalonia's parliament and hold new elections in January in a bid to defuse regional government pushing for independence.
The New York Fed lowered its forecasts for the US economic growth for the Q3 and the Q4, as Hurricanes Irma and Harvey hurt industrial output and home construction in September.
US home resales rebounded 0.9% to a seasonally adjusted yearly rate of 5.39M units in September, despite expectations for a 1.0% decline in the reported period.
Paris announced plans to prevent Asian bike-share operators bursting into the town the way Uber and Airbnb did by introducing new rules.
German car manufacturer BMW confirmed that the EU antitrust officials were in the company's offices in Munich to make its inspection due to alleged violation of antitrust regulations.
Rex Tillerson, the US Secretary of State, said that the US is unlikely to impede the EU business transactions and trade with Iran despite Donald Trump's decision to decertify the 2015 nuclear deal.
General Electric's stock fell nearly 6%, as the company announced that its Q3 profit missed projections, while CEO slashed earnings estimates due to lower power operations' volume.
The French Foreign and Finance Ministry's officials and French businesses decided to meet to discuss the consequences of the US President decision to refuse the certification of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.