This is a city full of young people who have been cooped up for two years, first because of Covid and then the war with Russia. They yearn for contact
Russia's state-owned gas monopoly said Monday that it would slash gas deliveries to Germany, as Russian President Vladimir Putin once again showed his unpredictability and his power to inflict pain on the bloc for backing Ukraine
While Alibaba has a secondary listing in Hong Kong, that does not allow it to join a popular Stock Connect programme that links to bourses in Shanghai and Shenzhen
An unprecedented economic crisis has dealt a body blow to a free and universal healthcare system that just months earlier was the envy of the country's South Asian neighbours
Emboldened by their deep pockets and eager to boost viewership of their streaming-subscription services, Apple and Amazon have thrust themselves into negotiations for media rights held by the NFL, MLB, and Formula One racing
Three days after striking a deal with Russia to liberate the grain, Ukrainian laborers are laying the groundwork for shipments at the port of Odesa and others to markets overseas. And an attack by Russia on a military target at the Odesa port does not appear to have slowed the efforts
In a seven-year deal reportedly worth hundreds of millions of dollars, will cover broadcast rights for men's and women's international matches played in Australia as well as the Big Bash League and Women's Big Bash League
Trade unions called Monday for the European Commission to impose maximum temperature limits for outdoor workers, after three people died while on shift in Madrid during last week's withering heatwave
The hard-soled rubber sandals made from recycled military truck or aircraft tyres— evocative of the communist state's resourcefulness under fire — are available at markets and small stores alike
Many industries have been upended by Google, Facebook and Amazon. But there is also a very different software story, according to James Bessen, executive director of the Technology & Policy Research Initiative at the Boston University School of Law, and in a new book, he challenges what he terms the "disruption myth"
The logging industry in Congo uproots precious old-growth trees for use in furniture and home construction, then, entire swaths of forest are burned to make way for farming. But the raiding of the forest by regular people in search of cooking materials is surprisingly destructive as well