Sudan's news agency SUNA reported on Sunday that the Sudanese government would extend a ceasefire with rebels until the end of this year.
The Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser reported on Sunday that the company was in talks with several Indian companies to create a joint venture partnership by 2018.
On Sunday, the Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro thanked the US President Donald Trump for a flood of criticism that made him famous worldwide.
Lebanon's Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah noted on Sunday that the US was aiding Islamic State by restricting attempts of the Syrian army to retake its territories.
The Governor of Tokyo Yuriko Koide noted on Sunday that her newly-established Party of Hope would offer centric policies to voters, thus challenging right- and left-wing parties.
Russia might limit US media from operating in the country in response to unwarranted pressure on its RT channel, a Foreign Ministry representative said on Sunday.
The business-oriented coalition of Argentina's President Mauricio Macri is likely to win a valuable seat in the Senate in two weeks, the latest Management&Fit poll showed on Sunday.
French public workers are set to strike on Tuesday, thus protesting plans to reduce 120 000 jobs and cut sick leave compensation.
The Secretary General of OPEC Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo explained on Sunday that the organisation might take ‘extraordinary measures' to balance the oil market in 2018.
Suhail bin Mohammed al-Mazrui, the Energy Minister of the United Arab Emirates, expressed hopes that oil producers will reach an agreement on expanding oil output cuts next month.
China's crude steel production marked a modest increase of 5.6% in the first eight months of 2017, compared with 0.1% drop in the same period in the previous year.
Iran warned the US against designating Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist group and stated that US regional military bases could be at risk, when further sanctions were implemented.
Survey showed that nearly a quarter of voters in Austria still be undecided before the election on October 15, though another poll suggested that People's Party keeps a lead.
According to a Sunday newspaper, Theresa May signalled that she could fire the UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson in an attempt to restore authority after a number of political failures.
On Sunday, the German Chancellor Angela Merkel met with leaders of the CDU's Bavarian sister party to discuss policy differences and formation of a new government.
Six people were reported to be dead and 35 more wounded amid a blast at natural gas depositary in the city of Accra, fire service reported on Sunday.
On Sunday, the British Conservatives decided to suspend Julie Girling and Richard Ashworth from the party for support of European resolution that complicated further Brexit talks.
According to the Sunday Times newspaper, HSBC decided to choose John Flint, as a new chief executive, and asked the Bank of England to approve his candidacy.
On Sunday, a field commander for the Syrian Democratic Forces notified that a last assault on the Islamic State's positions in Raqqa should begin this night.
According to sources close to the matter, a number of vehicles carrying Turkish troops entered Idlib near the Athman village on Sunday.
According to North Korean media, Kim Jong Un said that nuclear weapons is a powerful instrument which guarantees state's sovereignty and maintains a peace in the Korean peninsula.
New Zealand's nationalist party that keeps the balance in power after the election conducted talks with the Prime Minister, and with the opposition leader in order to form a coalition government.
China's anti-corruption watchdog reported on Sunday that about 1.34M officials had been punished starting from the year of 2013 under the President Xi Jinping's anti-graft drive.
The Syrian military have reported on Sunday that its army had encircled the Islamic State in eastern Syria, in al-Mayadin city.