Why Fifa’s credibility problem is all about transparency
Fifa President Sepp Blatter is under pressure in Brazil and at home in Switzerland to prove that his organisation is fit for purpose.
138 items found
Musicians, statesmen, the Vatican and fellow space travellers pay their respects to the original Starman.
A man carrying a knife has been shot dead by officers in Paris after trying to get into a police station on the first anniversary of the Charlie Hebdo attacks.
Three Labour leadership candidates and Nicola Sturgeon say they would allow Syrian refugees to live in their home, after the Finnish PM said on Saturday he would open up his country house.
The findings of a Commission say the Church has an “unrepeatable chance to make things better” and calls for support for survivors of abuse to be an “absolute priority.”
Just seven countries in the world – including the Vatican – outlaw abortion without exception. Latin America correspondent Guillermo Galdos has been meeting those affected in Chile.
In the name of art a former Italian church that has been converted into Venice city centre’s first mosque plans to open its doors on Saturday – despite security concerns.
Pope Francis and TV star Kim Kardashian have weighed into a debate, causing outrage in Turkey. But what is the reason behind it?
Meriam Ibrahi, who was sentenced to death in Sudan for renouncing Islam, has met Pope Francis at the Vatican. Meriam’s conviction was quashed after Sudan came under intense international pressure.
Fifa President Sepp Blatter is under pressure in Brazil and at home in Switzerland to prove that his organisation is fit for purpose.
Channel 4 News has exclusive video of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe arriving at a private hospital in Singapore. Mr Mugabe’s wife Grace and his bodyguard attempt to stop the cameraman filming.
As Catholics around the world celebrate the canonisation of Popes John Paul II and John XXIII, Channel 4 News asks two British Catholics if saints still have a role to play in today’s society.
Paul Mason meets a Spanish generation who thought they’d fought and won the basic battles for women’s rights.
Do criticisms of the government’s welfare reforms by Archbishop Vincent Nichols, the country’s highest-ranking Catholic, represent a shift in the church’s position?
Pope Francis has created his first batch of cardinals, naming 19 men from around the world who will lead the Roman Catholic church.
If the Vatican under Pope Francis can recommit itself to helping the poor, while becoming more forgiving, then the Catholic church will have been rescued by a revolutionary with a message of simplicity and inclusivity.