Colombians will go to the polls on Sunday in a tight presidential race that many didn’t expect would be so close just a few months ago.
Several hundred people have died in heavy rains and flooding in Brazil, civil defense officials said Thursday.
About 5,000 Mexican motorists along the border near San Diego, California, protested the death of an illegal immigrant last week while in the custody of U.S. border agents, the Notimex news agency reported.
The United Kingdom has “no doubt” about its sovereignty of the Falkland Islands, a British government minister said Tuesday.
On his knees in the soggy soil, 9-year-old Alexis Ocampo digs deep into the earth, his small gardening rake separating dirt from rocks. “Look, I found a worm!” he shrieks.
Gunmen opened fire at two different bars in northern Mexico, killing nine people and injuring 12, Mexico’s state news agency reported Sunday, citing the attorney general’s office.
At a shelter near Mexico City, Belkis Nunez is recovering.
The laptop belonging to Joran Van der Sloot was turned off the night he is suspected of having killed a young Peruvian woman in Lima, suggesting he lied to investigators when he said he attacked her after she read an e-mail on his computer connecting him to missing American teenager, Natalee Holloway, a source said Friday.
In August, icon is all about music. Presenter Monita Rajpal travels to the Swiss resort of Montreaux which has, for more than four decades, been home to the annual jazz festival.
A journalists’ organization has called on the Mexican government to rescue four journalists believed held hostage by a drug cartel.
Commuter battle lines in one of Brazil’s biggest cities are drawn on the ground, underground and also, in the air.
It was the soccer foul seen round the world — a knee to an opponent’s groin. It didn’t earn a red card and a sending off for Bolivian President Evo Morales, but it was caught on video and — and this viral world of Youtube — got him a lot of unwanted attention.
At least 24 people have died as heavy rains continue to batter parts of the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo, authorities said.
At least one organization attempting to deliver aid to Haiti continued to be plagued Sunday by delays and logistical problems, but aid was getting to those who need it most, officials said.
Sitting in the shade away from the heat, Jean Frank is making a fishing net that he hopes will help him return to his life as a fisherman.
A Venezuelan farmer who went on a hunger strike over the occupation of his land by neighboring farmers with the support of the government died Monday night, the government and his family said Tuesday.
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