three people were killed and at least 1,000 injured Wednesday after a soccer pitch invasion in the Egyptian city of Port Said, a Health Ministry official said, in an incident that one player described as “a war, not football”.
“This is unfortunate (...)
two nations and territories will be competing in the 2010 Delhi Games, including the NZ territory of Tokelua, which will make its Commonwealth Games debut. Rwanda is the most recent addition to the Commonwealth, having been admitted this year. (...)
illiteracy-program contractual teachers who were sacked by the Ministry of Education recently have lodged a complaint with the National Society for Human Rights (NSHR).
Dr. Ahmad Al-Bahkali, the NSHR branch's director here, said the society's legal (...)
Veneration of the Qur'an is done by learning and teaching it, memorizing and respecting its laws and provisions, knowing thereby what is permissible and what is forbidden, also by honouring those who understand and have memorized it, and by making (...)
four years after the death of the Indian-born British author and poet Rudyard Kipling, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1907, his reputation is still hotly debated. This is partly because of his support for British imperialism, and (...)
one Indian detainees were released from Shumaisy Deportation Center in one single day Friday, considered to be a record number of any nationality sent back home.
Muhammad Ashraf, an inmate awaiting deportation who spoke from his cell, described the (...)
four paintings by promising young female artists are on show at the Sahwat Ebda'a Exhibition in Madinah which began on Saturday. The exhibition, which was opened by Mansour Nuzhah, Director of Taibah University, has been organized by the (...)
nine percent of the participants had been referred to medical oncologists, somewhat lower than the 88 percent seen among younger patients in other research, the investigators report. Sicker patients were roughly half as likely to be referred as (...)