Fatima Manji is a Special Correspondent and Presenter. She regularly reports on a range of national and international stories.
Her broadcasting has included telling the story of the migration crisis from the borders of Europe, interviewing victims of ISIS atrocities in Iraq and challenging politicians here in the UK during the referendum campaign. She also occasionally presents the programme from the studio. Fatima has won a number of awards for her journalism and in 2015 she was a finalist for the Royal Television Society's Young Journalist of the Year.
During the last General Election she presented Britain's first ever Alternative Election Debate featuring young party leaders facing a live audience on Channel 4. Fatima joined Channel 4 News in 2012 and previously worked as a reporter and video journalist at the BBC.
The chief executive of ExxonMobil has been testifying at a Congressional hearing into allegations that the company deliberately hid evidence about the dangers of climate change. He denies that his firm spread disinformation.
A woman who made a complaint of a sexual assault against a high profile figure to the Metropolitan police has told Channel 4 News that she felt pressured to drop the charges.
The business secretary is said to have put in a formal request to the Treasury, asking for help for the industries worst affected by the surging energy prices.
With me now is Katherine O’Brien who is a spokesperson for the British Pregnancy Advisory Service. And we’re also joined by Professor Geeta Nargund who is the founder of CREATE Fertility, which runs fertility clinics.
Students at an all female Cambridge college will be given lessons on fertility – after the college’s new president said she wanted to stop young women “forgetting to have a baby” until it was too late.
Craig Bennett is chief executive of The Wildlife Trusts, made up of 46 independent conservation charities.
Britain is one of the most nature depleted countries on the planet.
Rates of depression and anxiety have soared around the world during the pandemic, according to a global review.
The conservationist and broadcaster Chris Packham has led a children’s march to Buckingham Palace, with a petition signed by more than 100,000 people urging the Queen to introduce rewilding on royal estates before the COP26 summit begins at the end of the month.
The Metropolitan Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick says she will launch an independent review of the force after the murder of Sarah Everard
Boris Johnson has said that young climate change activists “have every right to be angry”. The Prime Minister was speaking virtually at the final day of the youth climate change conference in Milan. His Italian counterpart’s speech was met by protests. So with just a month to go until COP26, has this given us a…
We speak to Archie Young, the UK’s lead climate negotiator at the Cabinet Office, who’s in charge of the team who will actually sit at the table in Glasgow, and Ella Simons, from Australia, who’s just turned 15 and is the youngest delegate here in Milan.
We sat down with a group of young activists from India, Pakistan, Argentina, Sudan and Moldova, and started by asking them how climate change is already affecting their own countries.
The teenage Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg had three words for world leaders – blah, blah, blah – in a blistering takedown of their response to the climate crisis at the Youth4Climate summit in Milan.
We were joined by Professor Peter Slee, the vice chancellor of Leeds Beckett University, and by Stephanie Macaulay, a third year student in the business school at Leeds Beckett.