Judging by the balance of play, the margin should have been bigger in favor of the home side, but given the conditions in the city leading up to the game, Bengaluru would take the win secured by CK Vineeth’s 7th minute goal with both hands.
Former president of Taiwan Ma Ying-Jeou, who wanted to forge closer ties with China, refused entry to the spiritual leader on numerous occasions, after his last to the nation in 2009, Reuters reported.
Dozens were killed in a spate of attacks across Iraq on Monday when militants of the so-called “Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant” (ISIL) terrorist group attacked a security headquarters in al-Rutba in western Iraq on the first day of Eid al-Adha, police sources...
German 10-year bond yields – the bloc’s benchmark – rose 2 basis points to 0.05 percent on Wednesday, having climbed as high as 0.09 percent in early trades. This reduced total gains this year to 8.5 percent. Losers outnumbered gainers, 110 to 67, while 50...
Former executives from Rupert Murdoch’s media company News UK have been censured by Parliament for their conduct in the aftermath of the phone hacking scandal.
Jane Kinninmont, deputy head of the Middle East and North Africa programme at the Chatham House think tank in London, said the world needed to pay more attention to the “cold conflict” between Iran and Saudi Arabia. “The hesitation and failure to rescue the...
The death toll due to dengue in the national capital mounted to 14 as AIIMS today confirmed the five cases of fatalities due to the vector-borne disease which has also affected over 1,150 people this season.
The huge blast early Saturday at the Tampaco Foils Ltd. factory outside the capital, Dhaka, triggered a massive blaze that spread quickly at the plant, where flammable chemicals were stored.
A war of words over Donald Trump’s “deplorables” is intensifying as Republicans and Democrats fight for political points over Hillary Clinton’s claim that numerous NY billionaire’s supporters are racist, sexist and homophobic.
EU law expert Camino Mortera-Martinez, from the Centre for European Reform, told the Guardian: “In theory United Kingdom citizens, as third-country nationals, would certainly be subject to the obligations [of such a scheme]”.