Justice. Kennedy, a key swing vote on the court, announced on Wednesday that he would retire this summer. Justice Kennedy’s news that he’ll leave the court next month immediately activated a network of White House aides, congressional allies and outside advocates, all set for their second Supreme Court confirmation fight in two years.
Asked if the U.S. might recognize Crimea to be part of Russia, he said, “We’re to have to see” and then said the situation was handled “unfortunately” by his predecessor, President Barack Obama.
The accident took place on Friday evening in Hunan province south of the capital Beijing. Footage from the scene showed both heavily damaged vehicles along the rain-slicked highway.
ditorials in Pakistani newspapers blame Pakistan and Pakistan alone for being demoted to the 'grey list' by Paris-based global terrorist watchdog Financial Action Task Force. They said the Wednesday greylisting was a "self-inflicted" act and that's what's to be expected when terrorists roam freely.
Deadly conflict is raging in central Nigeria as more than 200 people were reportedly killed in a series of recent clashes between Muslim herders and Christian farmers.
Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte has formed a three-man committee to open up a dialogue with the Catholic church and other religious organizations following his controversial criticism of the Christian faith.
This is World Refugee Week, a time when people around the world are encouraged to remember the plight of the world's 25.4 million refugees. This year, The United Nations Secretary General has drawn special attention to the plight of suffering Christians and Yazidis from Iraq and Syria.
The Hong Kong Christian Council, a Protestant ecumenical organization has released a report exposing a growing sexual harassment and abuse problem in local churches, according to The South China Morning Post.
Roughly 3,500 Swedes have had microchips inserted into their bodies, essentially turning their hands into contact-less credit cards, key cards and even rail cards.
As thousands of Iranians take part in a second day of protests against the Islamic regime, government officials sought to accuse the United States instead of Iran's economic woes.
At least seven people have died in a fresh wave of violence in Nicaragua, and after more than two months, there are few signs the unrest is subsiding.The unrest comes as no surprise to the stepdaughter of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega. Zoilamerica Ortega Murillo now lives in Costa Rica, and she told CBN News in an exclusive interview that the world is finally seeing Ortega's true nature.
The Presbyterian Church USA passed several resolutions critical of Israel on Friday during the denomination's 223rd General Assembly held in St. Louis, Mo.
The United States Senate recently passed overwhelmingly the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act which bans the Department of Defense from selling F-35 fighter jets to Turkey as long as the NATO ally holds American Pastor Andrew Brunson in prison.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is in hot water after calling the God of the Bible "stupid" for allowing Adam and Eve to sin in the Garden of Eden.
Protesters angered by Iran's cratering economy confronted police officers in front of parliament on Monday, with security forces firing tear gas at them, according to online videos, the first such confrontation after similar demonstrations rocked the country at the start of the year.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan won Turkey’s landmark election Sunday, the country’s electoral commission said, ushering in a new system granting the president sweeping new powers which critics say will cement what they call a one-man rule.
Saudi women steered their way through busy city streets on Sunday, driving to work, running errands and relishing a new era in which they are allowed to drive and no longer need to rely on men to move around.
China, Turkey and North Korea are just a few of the countries where Christian missionaries, and really, believers in general face persecution and even death.
Jesse Bless, an attorney for Ms. Souza and her son who stood with them at their news conference, described the ruling by U.S. District Judge Manish Shah as unique, adding he hoped it would “open the door” for others to do the same and help hasten a resolution to the crisis.
Ms. Jayapal, the only Indian-American woman so far elected to House of Representatives, is seeking a re-election in the mid-term elections later this year.
The command’s move to an expanded facility at Camp Humphreys, about 70 km south of Seoul, comes amid a fledgling detente on the Korean Peninsula, but the relocation was not linked to that.
For several years now, EU nations have been trying to stem the flow of those making the perilous journey to the continent by sea, part of a desperate attempt to shore up EU unity on an issue that has helped fuel a political crisis in several member nations.
Mr. Mattis said that even as the U.S. is in “unprecedented negotiations with North Korea, ... the longstanding alliance between Japan and the United States stands firm.”