Foreign Affairs Correspondent Jonathan Miller is based in Bangkok, Thailand. Before moving to Asia in 2015, he spent 12 years reporting out of London on news across the Middle East, Africa and the Americas. Jonathan has won four Royal Television Society awards and four Amnesty International TV News awards for Channel 4 News. He is the author of Duterte Harry: Fire and Fury in the Philippines, a biography of the Philippine President, Rodrigo Duterte, whose bloody rule he has documented for this programme.
Police in Hong Kong have fired tear gas to disperse crowds of protesters.
A huge protest has been going on all day at Hong Kong’s airport as the city gears up for another weekend of potential violence, with a major rally planned tomorrow in defiance of a police ban.
Police in Hong Kong have been accused of standing by while a gang of masked attackers stormed a metro station, attacking dozens of people.
Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets over the bill, which would have allowed people to be sent to mainland China for trial.
General Ntaganda fought for various rebel groups that terrorised Ituri and North Kivu provinces over a period of nearly 20 years.
We were offered a rare glimpse of life in the secretive state, but seeing is not always believing.
Four men have been charged with murder over the shooting down of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 in 2014, which killed 298 people.
It’s been almost three years since Rodrigo Duterte took power in the Philippines and his notorious war against drugs has been raging ever since.
New Zealand’s Prime Minister says she remains “resolute and focused” on confronting racism in her own country following the terrorist attacks at two mosques in the city of Christchurch.
Among the dead in Christchurch was Haji Daud Nabi, a grandfather who fled the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 before eventually settling in New Zealand.
Her cabinet has backed a ban on semi-automatic weapons, and the Prime Minister has urged owners to hand such guns in to the police.
The bodies of some of the 50 Christchurch victims are due to be released to their families soon.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said, however, that nothing in the message could have helped stop the killings.
Evidence from witnesses and previously unpublished documents raise the question of whether Banks was trying to bribe the police chief in a bid to discredit Chris Kimber.
President Trump was widely expected to announce some sort of agreement with Kim Jong-un, so the abrupt nature of his departure came as a shock.