President Pranab Mukherjee receiving Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi at the Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi yesterday.
Alison ‘The Mammoth’ Cerutti and Bruno Schmidt sparked wild scenes at a rain-soaked Copacabana stadium as they powered to men’s beach volleyball gold at the Rio Olympics yesterday.
With no more tears left to shed, a distraught Dipa Karmakar now wants to get back into training so she can start working towards leaving a lasting legacy in gymnastics.
He is used to playing in front of packed crowds in sporting stadiums — now Australian cricketing great Brett Lee is hoping to win new fans as his debut movie hits cinemas in India.
Lenovo Group expects its loss-making smartphone business to turn a corner next fiscal year as it shifts towards higher-end devices and ramps up marketing in the US and China.
Scotland Yard’s ability to respond to a terror attack is being threatened by sky-high property prices forcing thousands of officers to become “commuter cops” living outside London, a new report warned yesterday.
Deutsche Bank’s supervisory board should discuss scrapping bonuses for top executives for a second year after Germany’s largest bank put dividend payments on hold, consumer banking chief Christian Sewing said.
Sharjeel Khan’s blistering 152 laid the platform for Pakistan’s 255-run thrashing of Ireland in the first one-day international at Malahide yesterday.
In the ongoing war for our attention, books are losing. Badly. That’s not new. It’s well-known that most people prefer TV shows to tomes.
German running twins Anna and Lisa Hahner crossed the Rio women’s marathon finish line hand-in-hand but their spontaneous move has not been universally seen as a celebration of the Olympic ideal.
State Bank of India approved a merger plan that will combine the country’s largest lender with three of its units and Bharatiya Mahila Bank Ltd amid a government push to strengthen the nation’s fragmented banking industry.
The market for liquefied natural gas is about to attract more players and more trading as new supply from the US and Australia strengthens buyers’ bargaining power.