On Friday, Vatican recalled a Washington diplomat after the US State Department stated that the priest might have violated federal laws of child pornography.
The UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres condemned the North Korean ballistic missile launched over Japan, saying he would negotiate the situation at the UN General Assembly's meeting next week.
Lufthansa together with other companies bid for parts of the insolvent airline Air Berlin by Friday deadline as the struggling company's administrators sought for new investors.
On Friday, Eurostat reported that the Euro zone's trade surplus fell to €18.6B in July, compared to the prior month's downwardly revised €21.7B reading and missing analysts' expectations for an increase to €20.1B.
The Hurricane Irma's death toll was at 82 on Friday as 1.5M businesses and homes remained without power during sweltering heat in Florida, five days after the storm hit the US southeast.
Polls showed on Friday that support for the Conservative Party of the German Chancellor Angela Merkel dropped to 36%, while more than a third of German citizens doubt their final vote decision.
The UK police declared London's underground train incident as terrorist attack, reporting that 18 people were injured; however, no death has been confirmed yet.
Iceland is more likely to face another snap election after one of its three coalition parties decided to quit the newly formed government over a "breach of trust".
The President of the Eurogroup Jeroen Dijsselbloem explained on Friday that a clear strategy for the Euro zone was needed prior to discussing changes in its institutions.
Daniele Nouy and Sabine Lautenschlaeger warned that in the absence of ECB regulation at 'European level', banks might try to exploit differences in national laws to avoid its rules.
German union criticised the administrators of Air Berlin for postponing a decision on the struggling airline's sale as thousands of workers were left into critical situation.
The British police are investigating reports of the explosion at a London underground train that took place at the Parsons Green station on Friday.
On Friday, French armed forces arrested a man in Paris after he had attacked an anti-terrorism soldier who patrolled one of the sensitive places of the city due to the increased number of terrorist attacks.
The Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson stated that Britain would stand together with the international community against North Korea after the provocative country launched another illegal missile on Friday.
China's cryptocurrency trading platform ViABTC announced it would close asset deposits, registration and trading pairs on September 25 and shut down its website on September 30, following Beijing's crackdown on the sector.
The US companies hit by hurricanes Irma and Harvey faced a tough fight over their attempts to recoup lost income as insurers reject entrepreneurs' applications whose business was not damaged physically.
Australia will move about 200 people, who got their refugee applications denied, to a new Papua New Guinea facility centre within weeks.
Late on Thursday, fresh criminal charges were filed against the Brazilian President Michel Temer, a statement published on the website of the state's prosecutor general's office revealed.
The Stuttgart-based automotive company Daimler announced that UPS would become the first US customer for the firm's brand-new eCanter trucks.
A district court in Taiwan sentenced a mainland Chinese student Zhou Hongxu to 14 months in jail on charges of infringing national security laws.
On Friday, Kyodo News revealed that the Japanese automaker Mazda was planning to launch electric-based vehicles by the early 2030s.
Rex Tillerson, the US Secretary of State, urged Russia and China to take direct actions against North Korea after its missile launch on Friday.
Macy's is set to increase by 20% the number of workers the company's hires during the shopping season on holidays, albeit total hiring for holiday will be fewer than last year.
Wolfgang Schauble, the German Finance Minister, said that the ECB must be very cautions when changing its monetary policy to avoid nervous reaction from FX markets.