According to the Turkish broadcast company NTV, six missiles hit Reyhanli, a town on the Syrian Turkish border, resulting in two civilian deaths and sixteen people injured.
Ethnic minorities of Poland expressed concerns due to the resurgence of anti-Semitism, caused by the new bill which would let to imprison individuals for mentioning the "Polish death camp" term.
On Saturday, the deputy leader of Scottish National Party Angus Robertson claimed that he resigns from his position after losing the seat in the UK parliament.
According to the officials, Libyan forces killed three Islamic State fighters near the Dhara oilfield in the southeastern part of the country, controlled by American-Libyan joint venture Waha Oil.
On Saturday, a group of Arab refugees and pro-immigrant Germans marching in Cottbus, Germany, was hit by counter-protests of residents and far-right activists.
Reckitt Benckiser Group and GlaxoSmithKline were the only firms, which submitted non-binding offers for consumer business of Pfizer after rival bidders walked away.
Germany's chipmaker Infineon stated that the company would not need to list or spin off any of the units, when asked about possible ways to raise capital.
Apple stated that a small portion of iPhone 7 might experience a failure of components, which the company would repair at no charge.
Exxon Mobil stated that oil demand would be down 20% by 2040 on the possible result of climate change curbs, though the company's separate report showed the opposite.
Members of Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) and Martin Schulz's Social Democrats (SPD) gathered on Saturday for another round of coalition talks in an attempt to find a compromise on labour rules and healthcare.
In an interview with CNBC Africa the ANC Treasurer-General Paul Mashatile called President Jacob Zuma to leave his post. The statement came a few days before South African leader will meet with six senior members of the country's ruling party.
According to local media, Kenyan police on Saturday arrested another lawmaker who participated in a symbolic "swearing-in" ceremony of opposition leader Raila Odinga.
The Times newspapper reported on Saturday that British government plans to use new powers in order to arrest and seize assets of corrupt politicians, businessmen and foreign criminals.
According to local media, two people got injured after an unknown man started shooting at passers-by from his car in the city of Macerata located in central Italy.
The UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has expressed gratitude to Russia for organisation of Syrian peace summit in Sochi, which gathered all parties to the conflict except for notorious terrorist organisations.
According to local firemen, not less than 30 stores were damaged in a fire that broke out at Meenakshi Amman Temple on Friday. The number of people injured in a fire hasn't been reported yet.
According to the NDTV news agency, MT Marine Express, the tanker carrying $8.1M in gasoline with 22 crew members has disappeared at the Gulf of Guinea for over two days off the coast of Benin.
On Friday, Chevron Corp and Exxon Mobil Corp shares fell to 5% and 6% as both companies failed to report quarterly earnings predicted by Wall Street analysts.
According to the Pentagon document, the US is planning to expand its nuclear arsenal, being concerned about the growing amount of non-strategic nuclear weapons in Russia.
Sprint Corp, the fourth largest wireless carrier in the US, reported in the FCF outlook for 2017 tax year that its quarterly revenue beat experts estimates, which has lead to 3.7% shares rise.
China accused the US of disrespect to Latin America after Rex Tillerson, the US Secretary of State, warned Latin American countries against the reliance on economic partnership with China.
The US Justice Department seeks significant civil penalties from Fiat Chrysler after the US government filed a civil lawsuit, accusing the carmaker of using the software to bypass emission controls.
Dell, the largest private technology company in the world, is considering an initial public offering or a merger with its subsidiary VMware, the publicly traded data centre technology company.
On Friday, Wells Fargo & Co. shares fell 6.1%, because of the new regulatory limitations imposed by The Federal Reserve over compliance issues.