As the inquiry into the killings of 34 miners in Marikana reaches its final phase, the Bishop of Pretoria says the government is failing to protect people in post-apartheid South Africa.
The Highlands are often thought of as emblematic of Scottish national identity. But will they say yes or no in the referendum? Inigo Gilmore takes the high road from Thurso to Inverness to find out.
Gaza resident Salem Shamaly – “the man in the green shirt” – was killed, apparently by a sniper, during the latest conflict with Israel. His family believes it has a case for a war crime prosecution.
He was shot as he searched for family members in the ruins of their Gaza homes: 23-year-old Salem Shamaly – allegedly killed as he strayed into the path of an Israeli sniper. So what really happened?
Israeli soldiers tell Inigo Gilmore that they believe they will have to return to Gaza because a ‘terrorist’ organisation “such as Hamas” will “grow back”.
Israel will keep fighting Palestinian guerrillas in the Gaza Strip after the army completes its mission of destroying cross-border tunnels, says Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Ayelet Shaked, a far-right Jewish Home party member, tells Channel 4 News she denies calling Palestinian children “little snakes” and apparently endorsing mass deaths on Facebook.
It may be far removed from the fury of Gaza, but even in Jerusalem a clawing sense of foreboding is never far away, writes Inigo Gilmore. And there is one tell-tale sign: the streets are almost empty.
Inigo Gilmore meets US pastor Scott Lively, one of a group of Americans thought to have influenced a new law in Uganda which carries some of the harshest penalties in the world for openly gay people.
Has Washington forgotten what is now the worst humanitarian crisis in modern times? Or has the argument for intervention in Syria simply been lost?
The former US ambassador to the UN John Bolton tells Channel 4 News that sanctions against Russian would be ineffective and calls for the United States and its allies to flex some military muscle.
A booming population of affluent newcomers is pushing long-term residents out of their homes and fuelling talk of class war in San Francisco, the once mellow haven for hippies.
New York’s new mayor Bill de Blasio wants to fight inequality in his new role and his plans include an income tax on wealthy New Yorkers.
Hollywood actors join civil liberties groups in protests against the National Security Agency’s surveillance activities, writes Inigo Gilmore.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie faces more trouble as his opponents weigh in. Last week he had to apologise for an aide causing traffic jams. Now Bruce Springsteen is involved too.