Hague story not about sexuality
The UK is behind the United States in accepting that it does not matter at all if people in public life are gay, writes Jon Snow.
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As Iranian President Ahmadinejad dodges questions about the remaining US hikers held in Tehran, Lindsey Hilsum asks if he can deflect attention from the opposition movement within his own regime?
The Pontiff and his people are worried an “aggressive” secularism is undermining traditional values in British society. But is he right?
Today, President Paul Kagame of Rwanda is in London to deliver the Annual Oppenheimer lecture at the IISS. It’s a sign of international respect for a leader who has spearheaded 15 years of development and economic growth, and is seen by the British and US governments as a model for the rest of Africa. His…
A leaked UN report accuses Rwanda of committing genocide in the Democratic Republic of Congo in the 1990s. Rwandan President Paul Kagame tells Lindsey Hilsum the allegations are “absurd”.
The BBC Trust proposes to freeze the licence fee for two years saying the move is response to the economic climate. Siobhan Kennedy finds the cuts do not match those in the rest of the public sector.
A report published by the Office for National Statistics shows even the number crunchers are at whether there is too much focus on Gross Domestic Product (GDP) figures, writes Neil Macdonald.
65-year-old San Deurinck, a retired shopkeeper, describes to Foreign Affairs Correspondent Jonathan Rugman what he had endured as a child at a Catholic boarding school in the 1950s and 1960s.
Channel 4 News Foreign Affairs Correspondent Jonathan Miller exclusively reveals how David Headley – the American linked to the Mumbai attacks – warned of possible strikes just weeks before.
The UK is behind the United States in accepting that it does not matter at all if people in public life are gay, writes Jon Snow.
‘Clearly regressive’ are two words that will be sending shivers down the spines of the Coalition ministers. For the first time the Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) has completed a comprehensive analysis of who will pay for the Budget measures announced in June, known as a distributional analysis in the jargon.
How does it feel to walk alone towards an unexploded bomb? Channel 4 News is given unique access to one of Britain’s IED units in Afghanistan and reveals a terrifying view of the loneliest job.
He once declared he had no archive, but now the work of the novelist JG Ballard has been donated to the British library in lieu of inheritance tax. Stephanie West reports.
As the government announces a full public inquiry into Stafford hospital, the daughter of someone who died at the hospital tells Channel 4 News she hopes it will “rip apart” NHS secrecy.
David Cameron says we are spending more on debt interest than on schools. FactCheck crunches the numbers.
South Africa star Aaron Mokoena captains his national side and, in his first UK interview, tells Channel 4 News’s Keme Nzerem that the magic of Mandela will see his team through.