From President Trump to Erdogan: Theresa May’s tour
Mrs May is building up an interesting travel history that begins to paint a picture.
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Mrs May is building up an interesting travel history that begins to paint a picture.
America’s new president made a lot of promises on the campaign trail about what he would do on his very first day in office.
It didn’t take long after last night’s attack for the backlash to begin: a clamour of protests about Angela Merkel’s open-door policy towards migrants and refugees.This has, after all, been a year when the fear of terror attacks has haunted Europe, a year which has also seen the rise of the populist right.
Should we test the teeth of asylum seekers who claim to be children? How many “child” refugees are lying about their age?
This is the story of Aleppo – told with the help of one incredible filmmaker in the city who reveals the humanity of many of those trapped inside one of the world’s most dangerous places.
On Theresa May’s flight to New York one official on her team joked he’d issued instructions that Boris Johnson was to be “rugby tackled” if he looked like he was leaving their section of the plane to mingle with the media.
Welcome to Aleppo, Syria. The relentless bombardment. The curse of barrel bombs. The growing list of casualties. Behind every statistic, there is almost unimaginable human suffering.
A Syrian denied asylum in Germany kills himself and injures 12 others in a suicide bombing – the fourth violent attack in the country in less than a week.
Hate crime across the UK had gone up 46% in the two weeks either side of the Brexit vote, compared to the same period last year.
Greek riot police are evacuating thousands of migrants from a camp on the Macedonia border where they have been stranded for months.
The government says families will lose out to the tune of £4,300 if they vote to leave the EU. Is it true?
The Great Mosque of Brussels is said to remain a centre of Saudi-funded Wahhabi preaching and Salafism.
Russian forces begin pulling out of Syria after a six-month military campaign supporting President Bashar al-Assad’s government.
Now at night, in hopelessly overloaded craft, they are pointed at destiny or death in the pitch-black moonless nights and heavy cloud of this week.
Migrants and refugees who were stranded at a camp on the Greek border cross a river near the frontier, with hundreds making it through a fence to Macedonia.