An adult and a child have been killed in a collision between a train and a car near the Dutch town of Harlingen.
US-backed forces in Syria paused military operations near a major dam held by IS group in order to allow engineers to fix any problems after conflicting reports about its stability.
NATO plans to spend 3B euros to upgrade its satellite and computer technology over the next three years as the Western military alliance adapts to new threats.
Turkish voters living in Europe are heading to polling stations to cast their ballots in a referendum calling for expanded powers for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The chief of the ECB's supervisory Daniele Nouy said that the Central bank's authorities would soon decide on a rescue plan for Italy's Monte dei Paschi di Siena.
The Supreme Court of the United States said it would not hear a bid to revive record labels' claims over Vimeo's copyright violation.
The RBS said the FCA and other regulators had asked the lender to provide information about the bank's possible involvement in a 2011-2014 money laundering scandal.
The world's largest meatpacking firm JBS said it would weigh the possibility of suspending the $1B US initial public offering following a corruption scandal.
Around 40 countries including the US, France and Britain will skip the nuclear arms ban negotiations that kick off at the UN today.
Facebook announced that the optional live location-sharing feature would be available on the company's Messenger application starting from Monday.
The Italian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs said that the country would call for greater US participation in building international help for Libya.
The Supreme Court of the United States said it would not hear a bid to revive the $7.25B credit card antitrust settlement retailers reached with Visa and MasterCard.
Mohammed al-Jadaan, the Saudi Finance Minister, said on Monday that a reduction in the tax that Aramco pays to the government would not harm state finances.
On Monday, Israel issued an advisory for its citizens who are currently on vacation in Egypt's Sinai to leave the peninsula, highlighting the threat of an attack by the ISIS.
A Vietnamese citizen held in a confinement cell at a Japanese immigration centre committed suicide, causing renewed worries over conditions in Japan's custody facilities.
Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader, has been charged with $352.20 fine over involvement in anti-government demonstrations in Moscow on Sunday.
Data released by the Munich-based Institute for Economic Research on Monday showed that the German business confidence soared to the highest level in almost six years.
On Monday, Russia's officials refused to satisfy US and EU's calls to free opposition protesters arrested in anti-government demonstrations on Sunday.
The Qatar Sovereign Wealth Fund CEO Sheikh Abdullah announced on Monday about the new office opening in San Francisco's Silicon Valley amid the fund's US portfolio expansion.
On Thursday, the South Korea's court is eager to hold a hearing to pass a verdict over the ousted President Park Geun-hye arrest and decide whether to hold her for 20 days in a cell during the investigation.
The UK Interior Minister Amber Rudd stated that messaging services such as Whatsapp should refuse messages encryption as it gives a free rein to terrorists to secretly communicate and plan attacks.
On Sunday, Uber Technologies announced it had to suspend its new self-driving car programme after an automated vehicle crashed on a roadway of Arizona.
The world's largest factory of its kind began recycling the rubbish into a Refused Derived Fuel in Tel Aviv, processing about 1.5K tonnes of rubbish every day amid the Israeli attempt to improve the environment.
The Spanish Minister of Budget Cristobal Montoro asserted that he was sure that the centre-right minority government would win support from the opposition parties to confirm the 2017 budget plans.