Cameron, Europe and the T word
Might Messrs Osborne and Cameron be wise to avoid getting hung up on the T word as far as Europe is concerned?
1,697 items found
War crimes prosecutors say President Assad could face charges after photos from a military photographer appear to show evidence of the systematic killing of 11,000 detainees.
Two men from Birmingham are charged under the Terrorism Act over alleged travel to Syria, appearing before Westminster magistrates court on Saturday.
Might Messrs Osborne and Cameron be wise to avoid getting hung up on the T word as far as Europe is concerned?
The Conservative party’s problems over EU policy are not confined to the backbenches – it has lots of work to do to persuade other EU nations of the need for a new treaty.
Britain will donate another £100m in humanitarian aid to Syria, Justine Greening says, but on the ground intense fighting is preventing aid from reaching the sick and starving.
Syria’s government and some rebels could let humanitarian aid flow and enforce local ceasefires in the country’s civil war, US Secretary of State John Kerry announces.
The president and prime minister of the Central African Republic resign after failing to stop sectarian violence in the troubled country.
UN soldiers are thought to have inadvertently started a cholera epidemic in the poverty-stricken island. Channel 4 News reports from the beleaguered country – four years after the earthquake.
It is the worst refugee crisis since WWII – yet Britain has refused to join most other EU countries in being part of a UN resettlement programme for Syria’s 2.5 million displaced people.
At least five people die after a suspected car bomb exploded in a southern suburb of the Lebanese capital Beirut.
The condition of the former Formula One champion Michael Schumacher has improved slightly after an operation to relieve pressure on his brain. Reports he was going at speed have been denied.
Attackers fired upon the German embassy in Athens in the early hours of this morning in an apparent attempt to sour relations between Greece and its biggest bail-out creditor.
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.
After August’s chemical attack on the Damascus suburb of Ghouta, prospects for peace in Syria looked remote. But then Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his US counterpart, John Kerry, managed to pull the world back from the brink.
From the ‘fiscal cliff’ from which America never fell, to an Iraq inquiry that is still to report back. Here are seven things that were expected to happen in 2013 – but did not.