Kiran Moodley is a Correspondent at Channel 4 News. He was previously a multimedia producer and worked in Washington for the first year of the Trump administration.
Before Channel 4, he worked at PBS NewsHour, GQ, CNBC and The Independent.
He is a West Ham season ticket holder.
A £15 million funding pot has been launched, to help open up to 300 nurseries in primary schools in England.
The best building of the year will be crowned tonight – when the winner of British architecture’s top award, the Stirling Prize – is announced in London.
‘The Apprentice’ charts the rise of Donald Trump in New York in the 1970s and ‘80s, and had already sparked controversy for the scene where Trump’s character sexually assaults his first wife Ivana.
Members of the train drivers union Aslef have voted to accept a government pay offer, bringing to an end more than two years of strike action in England, Scotland and Wales.
‘Will and Harper’ follows him and his friend Harper Steele on a road trip they decide to take after she revealed she was a trans woman.
An indication of just how bad our health problems are can be seen in figures given exclusively to this programme by the International Longevity Centre.
The Princess of Wales has appeared in a deeply personal video confirming she has finished chemotherapy and will return to public duties soon.
For the 92 hereditary peers in the House of Lords, their time in Parliament is set to come to an end. The Labour government promised in its manifesto to finish what it started in 1999: abolishing the hereditaries.
At least 12 people have died after their boat ripped apart as they were trying to cross the English channel.
The German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has urged mainstream parties not to side with the far-right Alternative for Germany ‘AfD’ party.
Last month India’s PM drew condemnation for hugging Vladimir Putin on the day Russia bombed a children’s hospital in Kyiv.
The father of a trainee doctor whose rape and murder at a state-run hospital has rocked India, says he is determined to get justice for his only child.
Russia continues to advance on the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk – where President Zelenskyy is describing the situation as “difficult”.
Back then, there were divisions within the party, anti-war protests on the streets, and a Republican rival talking all about law and order. Sound familiar?
Volodymyr Zelenskyy says the embattled frontline city of Pokrovsk remains his “top priority”.