By ISABEL KERSHNER
The attack came from the rugged desert terrain of the Sinai Peninsula, where Islamic militants have been battling Egyptian forces.
By DAN LEVIN
The musician is hugely popular in China, and Beijing did not appreciate his getting involved in the pro-democracy demonstrations.
By DAVID JOLLY and STANLEY REED
The company is splitting its chief executive and chairman jobs, bringing back a former chief, with a plan for Mr. Pouyanné to lead it into 2016.
By FLOYD WHALEY
Some Philippine senators cited the case in calling for a review of the accord setting the rules under which American military forces visit the country.
By CHOE SANG-HUN
North Korea had threatened to attack the steel structure, which used to be lit around the holiday as part of the nations’ psychological warfare.
By ALAN COWELL and JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
The European Parliament awarded the doctor its highest human rights accolade for a campaign to end the use of mass rape as a weapon of war.
By DAMIEN CAVE
Soldiers said a shootout with gang suspects had led to the deaths in June, but a commission on human rights disputed that account.
Sydney Journal
By JANE PERLEZ
Changes in drinking laws have cleared the way for a gentrification of establishments in a city known for its beer-swilling pubs.
A senior United Nations official said on Tuesday that the Islamic State had threatened to exterminate minority Yazidis in Iraq by killing them if they refused to convert to Islam.
By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN
Several candidates have been assaulted in recent days, highlighting the turmoil surrounding a vote that will complete an overhaul of the government.
By RAPHAEL MINDER
Security agents were left puzzled over how Francisco Nicolás Gómez Iglesias, 20, was able to broker business deals, lunch with politicians, and shake hands with the king.
By RACHEL ABRAMS
Major manufacturers of protective equipment are increasing production as people across the United States brace for new potential cases of the virus.
By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
David Cohen, a Treasury under secretary, discusses the battle to choke off the flow of illicit revenue to the Islamic State.
By DAN BILEFSKY
Sweden launched a search team of 200 personnel aboard ships, helicopters and minesweepers to scour the Baltic Sea in search of an unidentified foreign vessel.
Letter From Europe
By KATRIN BENNHOLD
High-profile revelations of child sexual abuse have shown the risks of ascribing blame according to class or race.
By RAPHAEL MINDER
Four straight tests administered to an auxiliary nurse, María Teresa Romero Ramos, have come back negative for the virus, hospital officials said.
By ELLEN BARRY
The party of Jayalalithaa Jayaram, the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu, says 193 followers have died or committed suicide since she was imprisoned for corruption.
By RICK LYMAN
An exhibition in Warsaw, occupying eight sprawling galleries, traces the history of Jews from their first appearance in Poland in the Middle Ages to the present day.
By PETER BAKER and RICK GLADSTONE
Mr. Fowle was released after nearly six months of captivity, officials said. The United States is working on freeing two others held by North Korea.
By AZAM AHMED
As Mr. Ghani breaks from the courtly style of his predecessor, Hamid Karzai, his desire to move fast may put off others in his government.
By JAMES KANTER
Curbing emissions has long been a popular cause in the European Union. But leaders have to agree on how to generate and distribute energy.
By MICHELLE INNIS
Mr. Whitlam, who introduced free university education and national health care as prime minister in the 1970s, was noted for his early recognition of China’s government.
By MICHAEL FORSYTHE and ALAN WONG
After more than three weeks of protests, the meeting resembled less a negotiating session than a high school debate.
By IAN AUSTEN
A warrant officer was killed and another soldier was injured in a car crash that the police said was the result of a Canadian man’s turn to radical Islam.
By RICK GLADSTONE
Kevin Rudd will lead the Asia Society Policy Institute, a new organization that specializes in Asian issues and policy making.
By ALAN COWELL
The South African track star, who was found guilty of culpable homicide in the killing of his girlfriend, was also given a suspended three-year term on separate firearms charges.
By DOUGLAS MARTIN
Professor Mazrui, who had taught since 1989 at Binghamton University, set off national criticism with his 1986 television documentary, “The Africans: A Triple Heritage.”