The Wayback Machine - http://web.archive.org./web/20140105174815/http://wn.com/
Delivers breaking news from all over the world in 50 languages

The Examiner
United States' ongoing attempt to regulate the Internet is becoming more and more of a reality. This could well result in the end of the internet as we know of it today as...
Huffington Post
A bloodbath of civilians, torture and murder of children, willful starvation of millions, forced displacement of a greater population such as the Middle East has never seen, a...
The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) -- It's a new year, so once again it's time to take "Dogs of the Dow" out for a run. This annual Wall Street strategy has investors kick off January by buying the 10...

File - An Iraqi soldier guards a detainee alongside Lance Cpl. Matt R. Walters, an assistant team leader with 3rd Squad, 3rd Platoon, Company C, 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, at the Farwat bakery, Fallujah, Iraq.
FALLUJAH (Iraq): Iraq has lost Fallujah to Al Qaeda-linked fighters, a senior security official said on Saturday, putting militants back in control of the city in Anbar province where American forces repeatedly battled insurgents. But security forces...
photo: USMC / Cpl. Mike Escobar
Mali, Niger evacuate citizens from Central African Republic
Reuters January 4, 2014 - 18:54 By Paul-Marin Ngoupana BANGUI (Reuters) - African countries have started evacuating their citizens from the Central African Republic in recent days amid deteriorating humanitarian conditions and inter-religious...
photo: UN / Tobin Jones
Afghanistan’s Worsening, and Baffling, Hunger Crisis
LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan — In the Bost Hospital here, a teenage mother named Bibi Sherina sits on a bed in the severe acute malnutrition ward with her two children. Ahmed, at just 3 months old, looks bigger than his emaciated brother Mohammad, who is...
photo: US Army / Clay Beyersdorfer
Moncef Marzouki, President of Tunisia, delivers a statement at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France, Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2013. Marzouki, who is from a secular party in the governing coalition, was in Strasbourg addressing the European Parliament and said the assassination was a threat against all of Tunisia. Chokri Belaid, a Tunisian opposition leader critical of the Islamist-led government and violence by radical Muslims was shot to death Wednesday _ the first political assassination in post-revolutionary Tunisia.
TUNIS: Tunisian lawmakers rejected Islam Saturday as the main source of law for the country that spawned the Arab Spring as they voted for a second day on a new constitution. The voting comes amid concerns that a January 14 deadline for the new...
photo: AP / Christian Lutz
U.S. Is Facing Hard Choices in South Sudan
WASHINGTON — South Sudan is in many ways an American creation, carved out of war-torn Sudan in a referendum largely orchestrated by the United States, its fragile institutions nurtured with billions of dollars in American aid. But a murky, vicious...
photo: UN / Hailemichael Gebrekrstos
Philippines in 2014: Emerging Economies with Contentious Leadership
Across a number of emerging markets, the coming year will mark a consequential political transition. This could ultimately prove much more important that the U.S. Federal Reserve's scheduled tapering in early 2014, which is expected to precipitated...
photo: UN / Evan Schneider
From The Ruins Of A Tsunami, A Rebuilt Aceh Rises Anew
As survivors of Haiyan — November's super typhoon in the Philippines — slowly put their lives back together, the rest of Asia has been marking the anniversary of another disaster. Shortly after Christmas nine years ago, a huge tsunami swept across...
photo: UN / Evan Schneider