The Associated Press (AP) is a nonprofit independent global news organization with bureaus in over 100 countries. Founded in 1846, the wire service licenses its factual reporting to media outlets worldwide.
Human Rights Watch says administration ‘tramples on the rights of its people’
Almost 9,000 homes have been fully destroyed or partially damaged
Non-Muslims not permitted in sacred site
Attack killed 9 Iraqi tourists and wounded 20
State-run TV says group planned sabotage, ‘unprecedented terrorist operations’
Pope Francis' trip to Canada to apologize for the horrors of church-run Indigenous residential schools marks a radical rethink of the Catholic Church's missionary legacy in the Americas
Thousands of people were ordered to evacuate a fast-moving wildfire near Yosemite National Park that exploded in size into one of California's largest wildfires of the year
Food prices in emerging markets have risen by nearly 14% this year
At least 6 more still missing
One is a toddler; the other is an infant
Officials aim to speed up projects to clear underbrush, eliminating some wildfire fuel
Pope Francis is set to deliver historic apology for abuses at Catholic-run residential schools.
Some say testing and vaccines can still stop the outbreak from taking root
1948 Genocide Convention at the heart of case brought by Gambia
Some people oppose the use of tax money, while others say Japan's ruling party is attempting to glorify Abe and please ultraconservatives like him
More than a dozen migrants interviewed by the Associated Press told of how they were brutalized by the SSA while being held in its detention facility in the town of Maya on Tripoli's western outskirts
68-year-old Bannon faces up to two years in federal prison when he's sentenced
Officials point out that vaccinations, boosters helped keep virus in check for president
In the two months since the Azovstal's fighters surrendered, ending their dogged defense of the sprawling plant, few families and friends of those killed or captured have been able to find closure
Divided along the world's most heavily fortified border since 1948, the two Koreas prohibit their citizens from visiting each other's territory and exchanging phone calls, emails and letters, and they block access to each other's websites and TV stations
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