Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was to install a powerful new assembly of his allies on Friday, dismissing an international outcry and opposition protests saying he is burying democracy in his country.
Standard Life has reportedly sold its entire 5.8% stake in the discount sports retailer and Aviva has reportedly also reduced its holding.
The Republicans will need to convince 60 members of the Senate for the bill to become law
Here's what you need to know.
"If the UK financial system thrives in a post-Brexit world, which is the plan, it will not be 10 times GDP, it will be 15 to 20 times GDP," Carney said.
More than 200,000 cases are being recalled.
These tiny tweaks can make all the difference.
This circuit uses lighter weights, putting joint safety above all.
Chest day, leg day—it doesn't matter.
Efforts by state officials to retrieve the money have not been successful as Mr Woyome insists the law has not been fair to him
The ultimate motivator turned out to be infidelity.
?Burn calories and improve your overall health while you sit.
Social media networks like Facebook and WhatsApp have become a key conduit for false news
Google wanted to buy Snap for $30 billion, Twitter is betting its future on video, and Faraday Future has shaken up its executive board.
Meet the Jiftip, a bizarre invention that glues your penis shut, claiming real sex without the side effects.
Officials in Canada scrambled Thursday to find enough cots and empty beds to accommodate hundreds of mostly Haitian asylum seekers from the United States, even putting Montreal's famed Olympic stadium to use as a makeshift dormitory and welcome center.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres will pay his first visit since taking the UN helm to Israel and to the Palestinian territories, including the Gaza Strip, at the end of the month, diplomats said Thursday.
Kosovo faces potential political crisis after its new parliament failed to elect a speaker on Thursday, casting doubt on whether the coalition that won June's snap polls can muster a majority.
US officials destroyed nearly two tons of carved illegal ivory worth $8-10 million in New York's Central Park on Thursday to denounce poaching that kills nearly 100 elephants a day in Africa.
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