Searching for the truth about MH17
The nuttiest conspiracy theory I’ve seen so far has it that flight MH17 was full of the bodies of those who died on flight MH370, the aircraft that disappeared over the Indian Ocean back in March.
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Air Algerie flight 5017 crashes on its way from Burkina Faso to Algiers, with 116 people on board including 51 French nationals.
The general secretary of British Airline Pilots Association (Balpa) tells Channel 4 News the world has changed after the MH17 crash, and pilots need more guidance about where is safe to fly.
The nuttiest conspiracy theory I’ve seen so far has it that flight MH17 was full of the bodies of those who died on flight MH370, the aircraft that disappeared over the Indian Ocean back in March.
For the first time in a major Arab-Israeli conflict, the world has access to non-traditional sources of reality such as Twitter – and it means Israel is losing the battle for hearts and minds.
What Palestinians in Gaza can’t work out is why the outside world seems deaf to their cries for intervention to stop this relentless bombing.
It was certainly clear when I met former Malaysia Airlines executive Abudul Aziz that he loves the company – it was equally clear that he is worried about it after the downing of flight MH17, the company’s second tragic loss in a matter of months.
Aviation lawyer James Healy-Pratt, representing some of the MH370 victims’ families, asks whether Malaysia Airlines should have been in Ukraine airspace after the crash of flight MH17 on Thursday.
A Malaysian Airlines plane has been reportedly shot down over Ukraine, killing hundreds. Aviation authorities have warned against flying over the area in the past – but the guidance is not mandatory.
Six Britons are among 300 feared dead after a Malaysian passenger plane crashes in Ukraine near the Russian border – with officials claiming it was shot down by a ground-to-air missile.
Owen Paterson, the outgoing environment secretary, was loathed by environmentalists and animal lovers. By contrast former science minister David Willetts was the darling of academics.
Now that the football is over, what to do with the millions of German flags, wing mirror decorations, rattles, bottle warmer or coolers?
They’re not sacked but merely told: “There’s no work next week.” How a new play shows people struggling with the life of zero-hours contracts.
From home-made, short-range rockets to weapons that can threaten the populations of Israel’s major cities, Hamas arms are increasing in sophistication – and in destructive capability.
A bakery that refused to bake a cake featuring the slogan “support gay marriage”, alongside Sesame Street’s most sexually ambiguous couple, is facing court if it refuses to get baking.
Ibrahim Hassan Al-Asiri can lay claim to being the most world’s most dangerous man. And he has been linked to bomb fears which have seen the US step up airport security.