Kim's Sister Denies N. Korea Exporting Weapons To Russia
South Korea and the United States have repeatedly accused North Korea of supplying weapons to Moscow, despite a raft of UN sanctions on both countries that would ban any such arms transfers.
Reddit Gives OpenAI Access To Its Wealth Of Posts
Reddit, which debuted on the New York Stock Exchange earlier this year, has been seeking to capitalize on the value of exchanges in its varied discussion groups as it seeks to improve revenues.
Israel Says S.Africa 'Genocide' Case At UN Court 'Totally Divorced' From Facts
A top lawyer for Israel painted the South Africa case as a "mockery" of the UN Genocide Convention it is accused of breaching.
China Offers To Buy Up Commercial Housing To Boost Property Market
Property and construction accounts for more than a quarter of gross domestic product, but the sector has been under unprecedented strain since 2020, when authorities tightened developers' access to credit in a bid to reduce mounting debt.
Crisis-ridden Boeing Prepares For Turbulence At Annual Meeting
The company, under heavy regulatory scrutiny following recent safety and quality control problems, has defeated shareholder proposals at past annual meetings that usually have lasted an hour or less.
US Military Says First Aid Delivered To Gaza Via Temporary Pier
The pier was successfully anchored on Thursday, with around 500 tons of aid expected to enter the Palestinian territory in the coming days.
Brazil To Host 2027 Women's World Cup As Gaza Overshadows FIFA Meeting
After the success of Australia and New Zealand last year, FIFA members picked Brazil over a European bid in a push to expand women's football to new continents.
Musk Confirms Twitter Has Become X.com
The billionaire head of Tesla, SpaceX and other companies bought Twitter for $44 billion in late 2022 and announced the rebrand to X last July.
Gaza Fighting Rages After Israel Vows To Intensify Rafah Offensive
With Gazans facing hunger, the US military said "trucks carrying humanitarian assistance began moving ashore via a temporary pier" it set up to aid Palestinians in the besieged territory.
Taiwan President Takes Office Under Close Scrutiny
China, which claims Taiwan as part of its territory, has branded Lai a "dangerous separatist" who will bring "war and decline" to the self-ruled island.
Despite Western Pressure, China In No Hurry To Reduce Russia Support
While China does not want to upend its ties with the West, and insists it is not sending lethal weapons to Moscow, Washington has stressed that Russia would struggle to sustain its assault on Ukraine without Beijing.
Rapidus 'Last Opportunity' To Put Japan Back On Global Chip Map
Tokyo has promised up to four trillion yen ($25.7 billion) in subsidies to help triple sales of domestically produced chips to more than 15 trillion yen by 2030.
US Military Says Aid Pier Anchored To Gaza Beach
The US-built pier, announced in March by President Joe Biden and constructed at a cost of at least $320 million, is part of international efforts to circumvent restrictions on overland access into the Gaza Strip imposed by Israel, Washington's close ally.
Ukraine Says Halted Russian 'Advance' In Some Kharkiv Zones
As Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv was sending yet more reinforcements to the area, the Ukrainian army said it had managed to partially halt Russia's advance.
China's Baidu Posts Weakest Quarterly Revenue Growth In Over A Year
Baidu is a key player in China's tech industry, which once charted years of ballooning growth until Beijing imposed a regulatory crackdown on the sector starting in 2020.
EU Probes Facebook, Instagram Over Child Protection
The probe is under a mammoth law known as the Digital Services Act (DSA) that forces the world's largest tech firms to do more to protect European users online and clamp down on illegal content.
Siemens To Sell Electrical Motors Business To KPS
Innomotics, a subsidiary whose motors and other systems are used in a variety of industries including chemicals, oil, utilities and automotive, employs around 15,000 people.
Dutch Parties Reach Deal To Form Government
It was not immediately clear who would be prime minister to lead the right-wing coalition government and replace Mark Rutte, who is almost certain to be tapped as the new NATO secretary general.
Xi, Putin Hail Ties As 'Stabilising' Force In Chaotic World
It is Putin's first trip abroad since his March re-election and the second in just over six months to China, an economic lifeline for Russia after the West hit it with unprecedented sanctions over its military offensive in Ukraine.
Google's AI Search Revamp Puts Publishers In A Quandary
The internet titan announced Tuesday it is introducing AI-generated answers to online queries in the United States, in one of the biggest changes to its world-leading search engine in 25 years.
IMF Approves Use Of Reserve Assets For 'Hybrid' Financial Instruments
The IMF said Wednesday that its board had voted to allow member states' IMF-issued international reserve assets to be used by multilateral development banks (MDBs) to acquire financial instruments that would stretch their balance sheets further.
Brazil Announces Aid To Families As Lula Visits Flooded South
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva visited the stricken Rio Grande do Sul region for a third time since the flooding began almost two weeks ago, killing 149 people and displacing more than half-a-million.
Japan Economy Suffers Worse-than-expected Contraction Of 0.5%
Gross domestic product in the world's number four economy shrank by 0.5 percent against market expectations of a drop of only 0.3 percent.
Mission Impossible? Next Boeing CEO Faces Pile Of Problems
In the ensuing weeks, Boeing has endured troubling congressional hearings with whistleblowers and safety experts, repeat delays to a space launch, and a steep decline in commercial plane deliveries that has deepened financial losses.
What Will Be The Repercussions Of Biden's New China Tariffs?
US President Joe Biden unveiled steep tariff hikes on Chinese green tech this week, hitting imports like electric vehicles, chips and solar cells -- and adding stress to US-China ties.
Top UN Court Hears S. Africa Calls To Stop Israel Rafah Offensive
Top lawyers for Pretoria will kick off two days of hearings at the Peace Palace, home of the International Court of Justice, imploring judges to order a ceasefire throughout Gaza.
Arab Leaders Head To Bahrain For Gaza-focused Summit
Heads of state and government began touching down on Wednesday in Manama, capital of the Gulf nation, where the flags of the Arab League's 22 members were flying.
Coppola's Epic 'Megalopolis' Finally Arrives At Cannes
Will history repeat itself as Coppola, 85, returns to the French Cote d'Azur to premiere "Megalopolis", a $120-million project he self-funded by selling part of his California wine estate and which has been gestating for some 40 years?
Consumer Groups Accuse Temu Of Manipulating Online Shoppers
One of the fastest-growing apps, Temu only entered the EU market in April 2023 and says it has on average around 75 million monthly active users in the 27-country bloc.
Monet Painting Fetches $35 Million At New York Auction
Both Sotheby's and rival auction house Christie's launched their spring season Monday. Though the global art market softened last year, strong sales in London and Paris have sparked optimism for 2024.