Almost 2,000 unauthorised slums in the Indian capital city of Delhi are set to be legalised under a new law, giving more than 4 million ownership rights.
The bill passed by the Indian cabinet this week will give residents the right to own homes at "minimal rates", thus enabling them to build and sell properties and take loans.
"It will transform the lives of more than 40 lakh (4 million) residents who came to Delhi in search of a better life and livelihood but were forced to live in squalor," said Housing Minister Hardeep Singh Puri.
"Besides providing a legitimate claim to the property, the decision will encourage property holders to invest in safe structures, thereby improving living conditions in these colonies substantially."
Most inhabitants are migrant workers from other parts of India who cannot afford regular housing.
Under the proposed law, which will be presented during the next session of parliament, authorities will map the boundaries of the slum areas, and prepare a plan.
Residents will have to provide basic documentation and pay a nominal charge to register their property and receive the title, Puri said.
The death toll from Afghanistan's worst earthquake in years jumped to over 1,400 on Tuesday with thousands more injured, authorities said, as difficult terrain hindered rescue efforts in isolated villages of the country's mountainous eastern region.
Belgium will recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly, Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot said on Tuesday, adding to international pressure on Israel after similar moves by Australia, Britain, Canada and France.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un crossed the border into China on his special train early on Tuesday to attend China's celebration of the formal surrender of Japan in World War II, North Korean state media said on Tuesday.
At least 1,000 people were killed in a landslide that destroyed a village in the mountainous Jebel Marra area in the Darfur region of Sudan, leaving only one survivor, the armed group that controls the area said early on Tuesday.
Vietnam celebrated the 80th anniversary of its declaration of independence from colonial rule on Tuesday, with its largest military parade in decades, unprecedented cash handouts and the release of nearly 14,000 prisoners.