World

Find all of the PBS NewsHour’s international reporting and analysis.

Correspondent Fred de Sam Lazaro of Twin Cities Public Television reports on continuing efforts by the International Commission on Missing Persons to identify bodies found in mass graves in Srebrenica on the 10th anniversary of the Bosnian massacre.

The Group of Eight summit concluded Friday with an agreement to increase aid to Africa, but no movement on reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Following a background report, two foreign policy experts debate the results of the G-8 meeting and…

A group calling itself the al-Qaida Organization in Europe claimed responsibility for the deadly train and bus attacks in London. A discussion with security experts about who might be behind the bombings and why it's important to know who orchestrated…

Al-Qaida in Iraq said Thursday on a Web site that it had killed Ihab al-Sherif, the top Egyptian diplomat in Iraq, who had been abducted days earlier. Two experts talk about the ambassador's murder and its impact.

Four nearly simultaneous explosions rocked London's subway system and a double-decker bus during the morning rush hour Thursday. James Mates of Independent Television News reports from London.

Time magazine reporter Vivienne Walt, who was on London's subway system when four bombs went off Thursday morning, talks about the latest developments in the recovery effort and investigation into the bombings.

After the London train and bus attacks, the Bush administration raised the terror alert to "orange," or high risk, for all U.S. mass transit systems, which now face major tests to protect their riders. Transportation experts assess the current mass…

Jul 05

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President Bush left Washington, D.C. Tuesday for Europe, where he will meet this week with the leaders of the world's top industrial nations for a three-day summit on international economic issues.