Hague: GCHQ modified my phone to stop bugging
William Hague has revealed that GCHQ, the British intelligence gathering operation in Cheltenham, has modified his telephone to stop people bugging it – the Chinese especially.
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William Hague has revealed that GCHQ, the British intelligence gathering operation in Cheltenham, has modified his telephone to stop people bugging it – the Chinese especially.
As foreign ministers meet in London to discuss Syria, William Hague says they want the moderate opposition to the Assad regime to know that “we are behind them”.
The Defence Secretary says critics who claim he is making “overzealous” spending cuts have no idea how the Ministry of Defence budget works.
The UK’s largest and newest privately run jail, described by the justice secretary as a model for prisons, is condemned as unsafe, violent, with very poor offender management and health service.
A new book by a top military advisor claims modern day warfare is no longer nation states fighting on a foreign battlefield, but small groups of insurgents fighting in the centre of our cities.
North Swindon Tory MP, Justin Tomlinson, tells Channel 4 News that “we have doubled the small business rate relief.” However businessman Leslie Hatcher argues that “business rates are too high.”
David Peace, author of a new book about football manager Bill Shankly, and critic Natalie Haynes, a Man Booker prize judge, ask if modern fiction is seeking inspiration from the recent past.
Traumatised and exploited, most of the Syrian children in the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan are not at school. But as Lindsey Hilsum reports, there are no better options available.
Dog abductions, new planets and aliens living in your home – the latest and final release of the Ministry of Defence’s “UFO files” documents public claims of encounters “of the third kind”.
The families of British soldiers killed in Iraq win a landmark legal victory to pursue damages from the government for failing to protect the human rights of their loved ones.
The political sabre-rattling, rarely subdued, has been particularly shrill of late. Andy Davies introduces our series on how Britain is responding to the challenge of immigration.
In the week of the bicentenary of explorer David Livingstone’s birth, Channel 4 News asks three modern day adventurers why others should follow in their footsteps, and what they might find.
Planning minister Nick Boles has spoken out about his feelings over Lynton Crosby being give a free run on the Eastleigh campaign by-election.
Efforts to tackle the “shocking underworld” of modern slavery and sexual exploitation that exists in the UK, are failing, an independent think tank claims.
The MoD budget is not guaranteed protection in the 2015-16 spending round after all – the perils of letting the prime minister conduct his own briefings perhaps?