CAR: religious violence makes housemates of the archbishop and the imam
Heard the one about the Catholic archbishop and the imam who decided to move in together? It’s not a joke in the war-torn Central African Republic.
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Syrian President Bashar al-Assad says he has no intention of giving up power and the issue is not up for discussion, accordng to reports.
Syria’s government and some rebels could let humanitarian aid flow and enforce local ceasefires in the country’s civil war, US Secretary of State John Kerry announces.
Heard the one about the Catholic archbishop and the imam who decided to move in together? It’s not a joke in the war-torn Central African Republic.
Former Formula One world champion Michael Schumacher suffers a head injury in a fall while skiing off-piste in the French Alps resort of Meribel.
Malta may soon offer rich foreign investors the chance to buy a life in the European Union. But the Mediterranean island nation is not alone in selling citizenship for cash.
England face a tough group D in the 2014 football World Cup in Brazil after they were drawn to play Italy, Uruguay and Costa Rica. England, Italy and Uruguay have all won the tournament before.
The devil is always in the detail but FactCheck is on hand to run the slide rule over the chancellor’s latest update on the health of the economy.
Britain’s education system appears to be stuck in a rut while our Asian competitors surge ahead. FactCheck investigates.
The foreign secretary and the US secretary of state head to Geneva amid growing optimism that a deal on Iran’s nuclear programme is close to being struck.
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was poisoned with radioactive polonium, his widow says after receiving the results of Swiss forensic tests on her husband’s corpse.
As the owners of the Grangemouth petro-chemical plant near Falkirk announce that it will close, the UK and Scottish governments say they hope a way can be found to keep it open.
As Britain and other countries try to persuade Syria’s fractured opposition to attend peace talks in Geneva, the main western-backed group signals that it may not be going.
It is not religion but dolphinariums and ski resorts that are the opium of Kim Jong-un’s people. In Channel 4 News’s search for “the real” North Korea, we first have to navigate through the country’s facade of “luxury socialism”.
In Austria and some other European countries, testing services tell clubbers whether their drugs are cut with other substances. But are such checks any more than quality control for the drugs market?
In London about one third of property buyers are now from overseas. With demand for houses rising all the time, this is having a knock-on effect on prices across the UK, say campaigners.