France's government filed a complaint against the e-commerce firm Amazon for abusing the company's dominant position with several suppliers, Le Parsien newspaper reported.
Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov stated that Moscow expected North Korea and the United States to start a dialogue instead of discussing the conditions for such a dialogue.
On Monday, the flight operations at Atlanta's Hartsfield airport were restored, following a daylong power outage that paralysed the travel, as more than 1K flights had been canceled during the last 24 hours.
The Republican US Senator John McCain is likely to miss the expected vote on the tax code overhaul on Tuesday, after he had left Washington for his home in Arizona due to a medical treatment.
China's National Development and Reform Commission has issued fresh guidelines for foreign investment by private firms in an attempt to prevent companies violating policies.
On Monday, Toyota Motor Corp announced its plans to produce over 10 battery EV car models around the world in early 2020s.
According to a poll conducted by Ipsos Peru, a majority of the country's citizens want the acting President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski to step down.
The Honduran conservative President Juan Orlando Hernandez has been officially named as the winner of the presidential election held on 26 November.
China's new home prices increased modestly 5.5% year-over-year in November, shrugging off the range of government measures in the overheated real estate market.
Australian company Aconex stated that it received a $1.19B buyout offer from the US software giant Oracle, setting the target's share price 45% up.
Japanese export growth accelerated gains in November to mark 16.2% of the annual increase for the month, underscoring the solid external demand.
The US data centre firm Equinix announced that it was buying Australia's data centre business Metronode in the all-cash deal worth $791.15M.
On Sunday, Bitcoin, the world's largest cryptocurrency, managed to surpass the $20,000-mark and hit its fresh all-time high of $20,500.
Thousands of people marched in Kiev on Sunday, calling for the release of Mikhail Saakashvili, Ukraine's opposition leader, and the impeachment of the President Petro Poroshenko.
On Sunday, China's electric-car start-up NIO started sales of its first electric vehicle three years after the company's foundation.
John Cornyn, the Senior US Senator from Texas, said that it would be a big mistake for the US President Donald Trump to fire the Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
The death toll in the Pakistani church attack rose to nine people, including two women, while the number of wounded people rose to 56, according to local media.
On Sunday, the British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson called for a liberal Brexit, posing a challenge to the Prime Minister Theresa May's proposed Brexit strategy.
Defence and aerospace group Thales agreed to purchase chipmaker Gemalto for €4.8B, trumping the prior bid by rival French company Atos to take aim at the digital security market.
Top US Republicans anticipated Congress to pass the tax bill overhaul, with the Senate vote on Tuesday and Donald Trump ready to sign the bill by the end of the week.
According to the Interfax news agency, the President of Russia Vladimir Putin had a telephone conversation with Donald Trump on Sunday where he thanked the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) for a lead that helped to stop terrorist attack in St Petersburg.
On Sunday, the African National Congress (ANC) officially nominated former cabinet minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa as the only two candidates to run for the South African presidency of the party.
In a statement published on Sunday, Russian top oil company Rosneft said that it has received licenses from the Venezuelan government to develop two offshore natural gas fields.
On Sunday, the Libyan military leader Khalifa Haftar that controls Eastern part of the country promised to listen to the will of Libyan people. The announcement is viewed as an indicator that he might participate in next year elections.