Asserting that Pakistan was capable of capturing Osama bin Laden, Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf said he would not allow other countries into Pakistani territory to capture the al-Qaeda chief.
The latest poll has shown that Bush's handling of the situation in Iraq has gone up 10 points from November to 46 per cent.
Just when everything seemed picture perfect for brown faces on American television, Showtime reverts to form with its new series Billions. Aseem Chhabra points out how popular media still hasn't gained enough distance from accents and towel-turban fixations.
Australia all-rounder Shane Watson has revealed a controversial new low-carb routine that has helped him lose weight and become less grumpy.
During his career spanning over 30 years, he had interviewed several Indian prime ministers as also world leaders. The Indian community recognised his services by conferring on him several awards.
The US National Science Foundation has funded a programme to make internet chat room surveillance fully automated.
'I always say the root cause is political disputes, poverty and illiteracy,' the Pakistan President tells ABC.
South Korean President's office says Kim promised to close N Korea's nuclear test site next month.
The former US president would undergo quadruple heart bypass surgery in New York's Columbia Presbyterian Hospital.
The $16.5 billion Carmichael coal mine project when completed would be one of the world's largest.
With the acquisition of Hotstar, Disney gets immediate access to the OTT market.
'He is not tired, is not running and is not worried,' Newsweek quoted a Taliban official as saying.
Mosques in two French towns were attacked a day after the firing at French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo that left 12 dead. However, there have been no casualties.
Watching the soccer World Cup might increase your risk of heart attack, a new Swiss study has found.
No let up in crackdown on terror, says Musharraf
From cutting melons on a stomach to gold ice-cream, here's the weirdest, funniest stories from the world around.
The surprise bid, if successful, will create one of the world's biggest media companies, after Time Warner Inc and News Corp.
Ramesh Shrichand Damani says the best way to tackle the market in the near term is to remain invested.
Forty-eight per cent of likely voters questioned in an ABC News-Washington Post survey said they would vote for Bush while 48 per cent opted for Kerry.
He wants a West Asia-style US-sponsored 'roadmap' on Kashmir, but feared India would not allow one.
Opening batsman Cameron Bancroft, the most junior member in the side at 25, was tasked with implementing the plan and was duly caught on camera using the tape.
The poll, conducted by Washington Post-ABC News, suggested that 54 per cent of the voters were unfamiliar with the Massachusetts senator's positions against only 25 per cent who felt the same about Republican President George W Bush.
'He's probably in a hole somewhere hiding from justice,' the US president told ABC television in an interview.
As he prepares for his second term in office, US President George W Bush has said his administration will give top priority to the war on terrorism and the hunt for Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.
Only half the country now approves of the way Bush is managing the US war on terrorism, down 13 points since April, according to the Washington Post-ABC poll.
Indian tennis legend Vijay Amritraj also believes Indian players need to concentrate more on singles.
When asked about countries like Afghanistan, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia figuring in the list, he said, "You're going to see. You're going to see. We're going to have extreme vetting in all cases. And I mean extreme. And we're not letting people in if we think there's even a little chance of some problem."
Heaping scorn at a audio tape purported to be from Al Qaeda's second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri seeking the overthrow of his government, Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf on Friday asserted he would "eliminate" all Al Qaeda terrorists.
Initial polls by leading American televison networks put the democratic contender ahead after the debate.
The 17-page letter reveals that the outfit is facing problems in recruiting Iraqis putting in doubt the administration's claim that Iraq is a recruiting ground for terrorists.