According to an Ethiopian government official, al Shabaab, a Somalian Islamist group, has captured the town of El Bur, Galmudug, after Ethiopia's troops left.
A Kyrgyz-born Russian man has been named as a likely defendant in yesterday's deadly explosion at the Sennaya Ploshchad metro station in Saint Petersburg.
Early on Tuesday, the Reserve Bank of Australia decided to leave its cash rate at the record-low level of 1.50%, keeping a generally neutral bias.
Data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics revealed trade balance in the country widened to A$3.57B in February, being boosted by a steep slide in consumer goods imports.
Vacancies in the US retail mall sector showed 9.9% in the quarter ended March, the same as in the final quarter of 2016, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
An explosion in a Russian metro executed by a suicide bomber with alleged ties to Islamic radicals was fatal for 11 people while 45 others were left injured.
An Organization of American States meeting on Monday resulted in Venezuela's representative storming from the premises after the 34-country block put pressures for Nicolas Maduro to restore democracy in the country.
The South Korean companies Kia Motor and Hyundai Motor have cut back on output in China due to rising competition amongst Chinese producers, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
On Monday, the US appeals court stated that a hearing would be held in May, concerning the matter of a Hawaiian federal judge banning President Trump's revised travel ban order.
According to the Interfax, a Russian news agency, the suicide bomber responsible for the blast in St. Petersburg's metro on Monday was linked to the radical Islamist group.
On Monday, Donald Trump, the President of the United States, said that the explosion in a metro tunnel in St. Petersburg was "absolutely a terrible thing".
On Monday, Turkish authorities have fired 45 more justices and prosecutors as a part of a probe into the last year's attempted coup.
The CEO of Akzo Nobel, a Dutch multinational company, expressed his opposition to the PPG's proposed takeover, saying he does not see any merit in continuing talks with the firm.
On Monday, a German citizen has been sentenced to life in jail over a failed bomb assault on a railroad station back in 2012 and on a number of other charges.
On Monday, the spokesperson of the Organization of American States announced that the meeting to deliberate about the political crisis in Venezuela had been called off.
A blast that hit the Sennaya Ploshchad metro station in Saint Petersburg claimed lives of 10 people, injuring over 20 others.
Daniel Garcia Navarrete, a Spanish matador who was stabbed in the throat and the leg by a bull at Las Ventas bullring in Madrid on Sunday, has undergone surgery.
Francois Fillon, the scandal-hit French presidential candidate, stated that if elected, he would launch a probe into Hollande's supposed intervention in the justice system.
GERB, the largest party in Bulgaria, seeks to form a new government together with three right-wing parties by the end of April.
On Monday, Ferdinand Piech, the former Volkswagen head announced he would sell a great part of stake he holds in Porsche, the company that controls the German automaker.
TCI, a London-based hedge fund, urged Safran, a French systems and equipment supplier for aerospace, to create an independent group to review Zodiac Aerospace valuation.
Data released on Monday showed that the US ISM manufacturing PMI slid to 57.2 points over the course of March, down from 57.7 observed in the preceding month.
The US electronic car giant Tesla bet all the expectations by delivering over 25K vehicles in the first quarter, up 69 percent from a year ago, setting a new record for the electric-car maker.
On Sunday, the EPA Chief Scott Pruitt stated that the Paris climate change pact was a "bad deal" for the United States as the US shared completely different point of view over climate policies than Paris.