Agence France-Presse (AFP) is the world's oldest news agency, founded in 1835 as Agence Havas. Headquartered in Paris, it provides coverage in six languages across 151 countries.
Francis is expected to personally apologize to Indigenous survivors of abuse committed over a span of decades at residential schools run by the Catholic Church
The move took six weeks and required extraordinary planning, including the help of animal friends who accompanied the orphans
Several hundred anti-government demonstrators gathered
Series has smashed sales records since the first instalment appeared in 1997
Situation has added to the bad blood between London and Paris
Negotiations between Iran and world powers have stalled since March
Somali's state communication bureau in a statement said an armed Al-Shabab group that crossed into the southeastern region on Tuesday 'was surrounded in a sub-locality called Hulhul and completely destroyed'
Law will let people seek $10,000 from any person or company that manufactures, sells or transports firearms that are banned in the state
Journalists will continue publishing the digital version of the paper from exile
The plan has already been adopted by the government and endorsed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
President welcomes lifting of most roadblocks across nation, appeals to protesters remove rest, allow economic activity to resume
Viral video of woman pleading for her daughter to be released draws wrath of newspapers
On May 23, 2021, a Ryanair flight from Greece to Lithuania was forced to land in Minsk, with Belarusian authorities arresting dissident journalist, Roman Protasevich, and his partner, Sofia Sapega, who were on board
COVID-19 disrupted access to care, exacerbated health inequities
Land was recaptured from Armenian separatists following a 2020 war over disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
Last month, a 35-year-old trader issued 'defamatory threats, inciting violence against the person of Mr. Newton Ahmed Barry,' the country's cybercrime police said
Stavros Nicolas Niarchos, who writes for US magazines The Nation and The New Yorker, reportedly had made contact with armed groups
Marina Ovsyannikova shot to prominence in March for interrupting a live TV broadcast to denounce Russia's military action in Ukraine
Thousands called for greater civil freedoms
Raging in parts of southwest Europe showed no sign of abating.
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