(Lin Shaowen)
First up, in Asia,
Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak has replaced his deputy amid a continuing financial scandal.
In Myanmar, police have seized methamphetamine tablets with an estimated value of more than 100 million dollars in an abandoned truck.
(TY)
Turning to Oceania,
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop is in New York to push for an international criminal tribunal into the MH17 crash.
Staying in the country, The New South Wales government will audit public school prayer groups because of concerns that students are being exposed to violent ideologies.
(ZJN)
Moving on to Africa,
In Libya, a court has sentenced former leader Muammar Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi to death over war crimes linked to the 2011 revolution.
Cameroon will send an additional 2,000 soldiers to its northern border with Nigeria to fight militant Islamist group Boko Haram.
(Lin Shaowen)
And in the Middle East,
In Egypt, at least 25 people have died in a fire at a furniture factory north of the capital Cairo.
Iran's foreign minister said "high-level" talks will soon be launched with the EU, after meeting with EU foreign policy Chief Federica Mogherini in Tehran.
(ZJN)
Looking to Latin America,
The Peruvian army says it has rescued 39 people from a farm where the Shining Path rebel group kept them as slaves.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has met with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to ask for support in finding a solution to a territorial dispute with neighboring Guyana.
(Lin Shaowen)
And in Europe,
Some 2,000 migrants have tried to enter the Channel Tunnel terminal in Calais in an attempt to reach the UK.
In France, farmers have used tractors to block the border with Germany and chucked foreign vegetables off trucks in protest of cheap imports.
(TY)
And finally in North America,
An American jailed for 30 years for spying for Israel is to be freed in November after the US granted his parole.
Twitter's revenue and earnings for the second quarter have beaten expectations, but co-founder Jack Dorsey has said he is "not satisfied" with its user growth.
(Lin Shaowen) That's the global headlines survey.