With two months of a gripping Premier League season left Leicester City are closing on the title and it is not fanciful to suggest that Tottenham Hotspur, West Ham United and Southampton could complete the top four.
The US is still fundamentally hostile to Iran and its policies have undermined the benefits of sanctions relief, the Islamic Republic’s hardline leader said yesterday, warning Iranians not to trust their old enemy.
Britain’s Bradley Smith will join the factory KTM effort in the MotoGP World Championship for the 2017 and 2018 seasons.
Qatar Stock Exchange witnessed corrections, especially in the insurance, real estate and telecom sectors, and its key index settled a marginal 11 points lower.
Russia has begun to withdraw military equipment from Syria, the defence ministry said Tuesday, after Moscow announced it will pull the bulk of its forces from the war-torn country.
Myanmar’s powerful military questioned Aung San Suu Kyi’s picks for president and vice president yesterday as tension simmered between the two sides a day before parliament votes on who should get the top job.
The Qatar Tourism Authority (QTA) will participate in the Qatar University Career Forum to give students and graduates an opportunity to explore the tourism industry.
Gunmen attacked a care home run by missionaries in Yemen’s southern city of Aden yesterday, killing 16 workers including four Indian nuns, officials said.
A large number of distinguished artists from around the world will take part in the second New York Times “Art for Tomorrow” conference to be held from March 12 –15 in Doha.
The Doha Film Institute (DFI) has been continuously supporting the participation of Qatari filmmakers in various international film events, workshops and festivals, CEO Fatma al-Remaihi said.
In addition to sagging oil prices and political risk, investors in Saudi Arabia now have a new source of uncertainty: widely different views of the kingdom from the world’s three major credit rating agencies.
Wireless carrier Vodafone Group and cable giant Liberty Global agreed to combine their Dutch businesses, creating a provider of Internet, TV and mobile services and accelerating deal-making in Europe’s phone industry.