The Australian police officers rescued a young British woman who was raped several times and held in the outback of the Northern Australia for two months; the police also detained her abuser who had already faced the court on Monday.
Britain has to think over to keep the tariff-free trade after leaving the EU as its privation will cause job losses at the Ford sites in the UK.
On Tuesday, the military spokesman reported that the Iraqi security forces gained control over the main government complex and the museum in Mosul casting out the Islamic State militants.
Facebook had to suspend its location-sharing tool as the Italian Business Competence company filed a lawsuit against the leading application for violating copyright laws and stealing the ideas and secrets of its Faround app.
The Volkswagen CEO Matthias Mueller stated that the acquisition between Peugeot and Opel would not cause any trouble for VW, despite the buying deal would create PSA a new auto giant, making it a major VW competitor at the market.
On Tuesday, North Korea issued a temporary ban on Malaysian citizens from leaving the country in order to ensure the safety of North Korean diplomats in Malaysia, which Malaysia suspects in the murder of North leaders's half brother.
On Monday, the US President Donald Trump signed a new travel ban order, which takes effect on March 16 and prevents citizens from six majorly-Muslim countries, with exception of Iraq, from travelling to the US for 90 days.
On Tuesday, oil was the only commodity to avoid significant losses and traded flat for the third consecutive day, as investors' uncertainty kept rising amid US oil output counteracting with OPEC's production cuts.
Early on Tuesday, the US Dollar remained relatively unchanged, as all eyes were set on the possible Fed rate hike next week, as well as the upcoming employment data this Friday.
A group of major institutional investors tried to bar companies of MSCI Inc and S&P Dow Jones Indices, such as Snap Inc that sell non voting shares from the stock benchmark.
Shares of numerous IT services companies fell on Monday amid the Trump administration's notice that H-1B visa applications, used by foreign IT workers, will be temporarily suspended.
Maersk and IBM stated that companies were cooperating to digitise, monitor and manage shipping transactions under worldwide popular block chain technology.
On Monday, the Pentagon stated that last week's strike in Yemen, the Arabian Peninsula, killed the US detention center's former Guantanamo Bay prisoner.
According to Turkish PM Yildirim, the country will permit Syria's air force pilot's family to visit airman at the local hospital after the plane crashed on Turkey's territory.
At Geneva's auto show, Volkswagen will present a self-driving car to comply with the growing demand for eco-friendly cars and to fight the diesel emissions scandal.
In Nepal's southern plains, local police killed three ethnic Madhesis as they attempted to ruin the opposition meeting, the most fatal incidents since September 2015.
The former France's President Sarkozy's allies requested beleaguered candidate Fillon to replace himself in the Presidential Elections due to a financial scandal.
The former French Prime Minister Juppe stated that he decided to avoid the Presidential Elections amid scandal-hit candidate Fillon.
According to German Finance Minister, the country's economy will benefit from Deutsche Bank's €8B cash call that will strengthen the bank's capital base.
On Monday, Deutsche Bank's request for €8B check that should be signed by the shareholders to back the new strategy was accepted by the interested investors.
The US-backed Syrian force blocked the main road of Raqqa, the Islamic State-held city, tearing the major highway between fortress of Deir al-Zor region and the capital.
On Monday, prices for oil made a U-turn, eventually inching higher, as the Oil Minister of Iraq stated that OPEC would require to cut production output even further - up into the second half of 2017.
General Motors stated that the company is planning to dismiss approximately 1,100 employees in May in Michigan as the production will be shifted to Tennessee.
On Monday, the Zimbabwe government agreed to pay additional benefits for the previous year to the public sector workers after they had raised a sit-in protest.