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‘Out on the mountain right now, it is genocide’
From everyone here, tales of how the IS come into your town or village and offer you the chance to convert to Islam, get out of town and your home – or be killed by bullet or beheading.
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South Yorkshire police and crime commissioner Shaun Wright resigns from the Labour Party – but insists he will not leave his post.
Rail passengers will have to pay an extra 3.5 per cent for their season tickets in January on top of the big increases they have seen since the last election.
From everyone here, tales of how the IS come into your town or village and offer you the chance to convert to Islam, get out of town and your home – or be killed by bullet or beheading.
A record of the main developments in Gaza since the crisis escalated at the end of June.
The Monty Python ask the world to sing Always Look on the Bright Side of Life as they say goodbye after nearly 50 years dead parrots, silly walks and spam.
This is precisely the kind of act guaranteed to wipe the gloss of the weekend euphoria as US Secretary of State John Kerry flew in to Kabul to broker a deal between arch-rivals.
From the Titanic to Homeland, fiction has an uncanny habit of predicting reality – and it’s not finished yet.
A tabloid editor rises to the top, in the process laying bare the establishment’s corruption. But Richard Bean’s Great Britain bears no resemblance to any characters, living or dead.
The Libyan human rights activist Salwa Bugaighis has been shot dead by unknown assailants at her home in Benghazi on the day of the country’s general election.
Labour Ed Miliband is focusing on welfare changes to convince voters he’s not weak leader. But he risks antagonising parts of his party in the process.
Following success in the EU elections, Nigel Farage is setting his sights on Westminster – and on next week’s Newark by-election. Are the parties pulling their weight?
A new and rather late recruit to the tide of anti-politics joined the baying mob this morning.
Ukip won hundreds of seats in the local elections, but that may not mean the party will cruise into Westminster in 2015.
One Tory strategist compares Nigel Farage to a “shock jock” radio host whose daily rants won’t measure up to what voters expect of a leader.
With the prospect of success in this week’s European elections, right-wing parties are creating a new, Eurosceptic bloc. Pauline Lockwood looks at the policies behind this new political grouping.