Crime | Man accused of sexual coercion caught after five years

THE Judiciary Police (PJ) has caught a man from mainland China who was wanted in a case that occurred five years ago. The suspect is accused of

Canidrome | Gov’t accused of falling short on placement of greyhounds

The government is expected to find the greyhounds of the Canidrome a place to live, the head of the Macau Yat Yuen Canidrome Company, Angela

Briefs | Carlos Álvares appointed new BNU chief

Liaison Office has new deputy director The State Council of China has appointed Zhang Rongshun as new deputy director of the Liaison Office in

Gambling is back at 2 once-shuttered Atlantic City casinos

People are winning and losing money again for the first time in years at two Atlantic City casinos that had been shut down. Monday marked

UK Heathrow’s third runway wins backing of parliament

London Heathrow airport’s 16 billion- pound (USD21 billion) expansion plan may have cleared its last major political hurdle, but the project has yet to convince

Cape Verde’s economy grew 3.9 percent last year

Cape Verde’s economy in 2017 added to the economic dynamism already evident in 2016, by posting growth of 3.9 percent, one-tenth of a percentage point higher

Angola has a new head of IMF mission

A mission of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) begins a visit to Angola on July 2 with one of the aims being to present the new head of

US airlines could lose passengers over Taiwan defiance

With a month to go before the world’s major airlines must comply with Beijing’s order to recognize Taiwan as part of China, U.S. carriers risk flying fewer

US aircraft carrier patrols disputed sea amid China buildup

The U.S. military has deployed the third aircraft carrier this year to patrol the disputed South China Sea, where Washington has criticized China’s military buildup on new

Large army veteran protests pose challenge for Xi Jinping

On Chinese state television broadcasts, President Xi Jinping is often shown clad in battle fatigues inspecting troops, praising their service, and hailing the People’s Liberation Army

Hong Kong | Four elderly siblings shot in rare instance of gun violence

Four elderly siblings were shot yesterday, one fatally, by a relative in a rare instance of gun violence in Hong Kong that was apparently sparked by a

Thailand | Top official says flooding complicates cave rescue

Intensive efforts to rescue 12 boys and their football coach who have been trapped inside a flooded cave in northern Thailand for three days hinge on pumping

Analysis | Solving the plastic crisis starts with Asia

Since Jan. 1, when China stopped accepting the rich world’s recyclable plastic waste, it’s gotten a ton of criticism for worsening the already deep crisis

Australia to ban covert foreign interference in politics

Australia’s House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved national security legislation yesterday that would ban covert foreign interference in domestic politics and make industrial espionage for a foreign power

US Authorities abandon ‘zero-tolerance’ for immigrant families

The Trump administration has scaled back a key element of its zero-tolerance immigration policy amid a global uproar over the separation of more than 2,300 migrant families,

Education | Do you really know what your kid’s doing on that smartphone?

Ayrial Miller is clearly annoyed. Her mother is sitting with her on the couch in their Chicago apartment, scrolling through the teen’s contacts on social media.

President says Iran in ‘economic fight’ with US

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said yesterday his country is in a “fight” with the U.S., a day after protesters angered by Iran’s tanking economy confronted police

Offbeat | Kangaroo stops play during Australian women’s soccer match

The Australian soccer team competing at the World Cup is called the Socceroos. But a different kind of soccer-roo has dominated a pitch for half an hour

This Day in Hstory | 1991 – Yugoslav troops move against Slovenia

Yugoslav tanks, troops and aircraft have swept into the small republic of Slovenia, 48 hours after it declared independence. Federal forces moved to seize control of

Analysis | World Cup 2018 Video refereeing a boon and a bust

As must have been the case with the first glimmers of electric lights in the 19th century, video assistant referees benefited from an initial “Wow! The

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