Rangers – an apology
A facet of the long-running Rangers story has been the creative use of the internet and IT to comment on the saga from all sides, from all kinds of fans, writes Alex Thomson.
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A facet of the long-running Rangers story has been the creative use of the internet and IT to comment on the saga from all sides, from all kinds of fans, writes Alex Thomson.
Alex Thomson asks Rangers fans what they want to see from the Newco.
Channel 4 News chief correspondent Alex Thomson gives his view from Istanbul on the latest flare up between Turkey and Syria
So – 4 July. US Independence Day. Ten in the morning. Hampden Park. The Scottish Premier League gathers for easily the most momentous decision in that league’s brief history, writes Alex Thomson.
From teenage graffiti to shell fragments kept as mementos, Channel 4 News Chief Correspondent Alex Thomson talks through some of the most powerful pictures he took during his recent visit to Syria.
It was back in the biting cold of a Kabul January that Guncha Gul and his family first came to the notice of Channel 4 News viewers, writes Alex Thomson.
In a war where they slit the throats of toddlers back to the spine, what’s the big deal in sending a van full of journalists into the killing zone, writes Alex Thomson.
Ahead of his departure from Syria where the battle to oust President Bashar al-Assad rages, Channel 4 News’ chief correspondent Alex Thomson delivers his final dispatch.
At least 80 Syrian soldiers have been killed by rebels over the weekend, according to an activist group. The violence comes as Alex Thomson visits the villages blamed for the Houla massacre.
Alex Thomson blogs on the search for Houla’s killers – and finds something which questions the government’s version of events.
Alex Thomson, chief correspondent at Channel 4 News, reports from Syria where UN monitors are stationed.
Alex Thomson blogs on the aftermath of the Houla massacre, and why the survivors may never get the answers they deserve.
Alex Thomson blogs on the searing grief felt by those left behind after the Houla massacre.
Alex Thomson blogs on the difficulties facing the UN officers attempting to monitor the Syrian “ceasefire”.