A third of the nearly 2,000 sailors from the Charles de Gaulle and escort vessels are confirmed to have COVID-19.
Top Democrat in US Congress labels president's decision to withhold WHO funds 'dangerous and illegal'.
Will this be year zero of a new world or yet another year of us inching towards the edge?
Ankara delays discharge of tens of thousands of soldiers for a month to stave off heavy travelling across country.
Chancellor announces steps in reversing lockdowns amid 'fragile, partial success' but stresses 'extreme caution' needed.
Guatemala's health minister says on one flight, 75 percent of the deportees had tested positive for coronavirus.
Trump halts funds to the WHO, accusing the UN agency of mismanaging the spread of the virus.
Dusk-to-dawn curfew, increased cleanliness and economic measures to mitigate coronavirus crisis.
As the West focuses on its own survival, Africans have the opportunity to complete what their ancestors started.
Health minister says lockdown will be from April 18 to May 9; Supreme Court hears election appeal.
About 100 houses were burned and several people injured during a clash over ownership of a fishing lake.
Wanderson de Oliveira's resignation comes as tensions between President Bolsonaro and the Health Ministry escalate.
South Korea is one of the first major countries to hold a general election during the global pandemic and many see it as a referendum on the government's handling of the crisis.
Four people tell their stories of the COVID-19 outbreak in China.
Investigating the 1988 killing of key Palestinian figure Khalil al-Wazir, or Abu Jihad, by Israeli commandos in Tunisia.
President Trump's decision could mean as much as $720m in health programmes could go unfunded this year and next.
Head of Libya's UN-recognised government accuses renegade commander of exploiting pandemic to launch new offensive.
Source from the Lebanese group says all four passengers in the vehicle survived the attack.
As the pandemic forces doctors to turn to online solutions, many healthcare providers say they now see their advantages.
Amid cautious optimism as COVID-19 deaths slow, experts seek more testing as doctors say pressure on ICU remains high.
Some parents refuse to send their children back to schools and nurseries as coronavirus lockdown measures are eased.
Japan mulls extending cash handout to all households to cushion economic fallout and ministers in New Zealand will take 20 percent pay cut for next six months.
Governments need to start focusing spending on collective survival, not global war.
Abdul Rahim al-Hwaiti was allegedly shot dead after he refused to give up his property for a Red Sea mega-project.
The Philippines attempts to remind Beijing that tackling the pandemic is the first priority amid military activities in disputed areas.