Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Ukraine: what happens next in a world without framework?
The question is no longer what Tony Blair did, or what President Obama should do, but what are we all going to do?
899 items found
David Cameron says “detailed plans are now being put in place” for an international mission to Iraq but will they be enough to help the thousands of Yazidi refugees still stranded on Mount Sinar?
The killing of 817 demonstrators last year was systematic, planned and ordered by officials, says Human Rights Watch, which wants the UN to investigate what are “probably” crimes against humanity.
Rural crime is rising, with tractor thefts linked to export gangs, but it is the organised gangs rustling sheep that really concerns farmers.
The fire that destroyed part of Eastbourne pier is being treated as suspicious, according to police.
More than a million public sector workers strike – but last time, in 2011, the action was more a war of words over the turn-out than one of attrition. It wasn’t like that back in the day…
The question is no longer what Tony Blair did, or what President Obama should do, but what are we all going to do?
More than 50 million people were forced to leave their homes last year due to war or persecution, the highest number since the second world war, says the UN refugee agency.
In east London a small group of religious hardliners is intent on dividing society and creating conflict. We look inside the Britain First patrols that are directly provoking the Muslim community.
Iranian-American writer Azadeh Moaveni, a former US director of Defense at the National Security Council Kori Schake, and former Defence Minister Dr Liam Fox debate in the Channel 4 News studio.
US President Barack Obama say he is “not ruling anything out” to help Iraq deal with the insurgent threat after days of violence as militants take over a swathe of the country.
Fears that Islamist extremists were attempting to infiltrate schools in Birmingham date back as far as 2010, but have only just hit crisis point. Channel 4 News looks back at who said what.
A suicide bomber kills 18 people and wounds around 60 more in Iraq in the latest of a string of blasts that leave nearly 70 dead. A member of the defence committee says security will only get worse.
Labour’s Yvette Cooper calls on the home secretary to explain why she released a letter criticising Michael Gove, which resulted in the resignation of one of her advisers.
Two Sussex county cricket players are charged by the English and Wales Cricket Board under its anti-corruption code.
In February, Channel 4 News reported from Ayebridges Avenue, near Staines, as residents reeled under the devastation of flooding. Three months on, many of them have still not returned.