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"We should pay attention to this in our policy discussions," a former U.S. Central Command chief told Newsweek.
These reforms only benefited a small group of Indians: By 1935, only 12 percent of citizens could vote. Then, the United Kingdom entered the Second World War—and took India with it.
Johannesburg’s central library recently reopened after a five-year closure, a signal of the city’s revival after years of ...
Pakistan marked a historic milestone on Thursday with the official launch of its national engagement with the Global Development Initiative (GDI), becoming the first country to anchor the initiative ...
Commercial ships are sailing close to Oman and are being advised by maritime agencies to avoid Iran's waters around the ...
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi disputed President Donald Trump’s claims that trade deals were used to clinch a recent ceasefire with Pakistan, the latest sign of possible strain in the ...
As another punishing summer edges into Karachi, a Stanford researcher and a former climate minister confront the same ...
Federal Minister for Planning, Ahsan Iqbal, has said that as India has weaponized water and on the face New Delhi's bad intentions, the government of Pakistan has decided to complete Di-amer-Bhasha ...
Google Maps rarely physically verifies if a place is permanently closed and sometimes trusts local guides and third party partners to apply changes to the place's availability.
High in the Himalayas, where winds slice through conflict-hit Kashmir at 160 mph and temperatures swing from -20°F to 113°F, India has unveiled the world's highest rail bridge, remaking the ...
Why Pakistan still shows Junagadh, Gujarat on its map despite a 1948 referendum confirming its accession to India. On February 20, 1948, a referendum was held in Junagadh. Of 201,457 voters, 190,870 ...