Echoes of Bosnia in Syria’s agony
Matt Frei reflects on the lessons of Bosnia as the bloody plight of Syria unfolds
1,852 items found
Am a few days into my Baghdad trip and it has been riveting, frustrating, confounding of my expectations and alarming in almost equal measures.
Matt Frei reflects on the lessons of Bosnia as the bloody plight of Syria unfolds
Over the past few months I’ve been keeping my eye on who might be interested in standing for election as police commissioners. Here are my very latest findings.
Award-winning Sunday Times journalist, Marie Colvin, is killed in the Syrian city of Homs. The paper’s owner Rupert Murdoch calls her “one of the most outstanding correspondents of her generation”.
I don’t know what it was like before, but if this is the new normal in Baghdad it must take some getting used to.
The recently inaugurated Irish President visits London today as part of a three-day tour. But who is the man affectionately known by the Irish public as ‘Michael D’?
Channel 4 News takes a closer look at the hurdles between Israel and an attack on Iran.
A UK/French plan to build the next-generation drone will be announced tomorrow during a summit in Paris, as Britain’s BAE Systems warns of a 14 per cent fall in sales due to defence spending cuts.
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who attempted to blow up a US airliner on Christmas day in 2009 with a device concealed in his underwear, has been given a life sentence.
Jon Snow blogs on the situation in Syria and why it seems to be putting al-Qaeda and the West on the same side.
Al Qaeda urges the Syrian opposition not to rely on the West or the Arab League for help toppling President Bashar al-Assad.
Rupert Murdoch gives his “personal assurance” to staff at The Sun after five arrests at the paper, as MP Tom Watson tells Channel 4 News the media mogul may be called back to the UK to give evidence.
Channel 4 News Correspondent Michael Crick blogs on Simon Weston’s decision to stand for election as a police and crime commissioners (PCCs).
A British idea, developed in the United States, uses computer modelling to predict where crime is going to take place. Now UK police are trialling the method in Manchester and Birmingham.
Defence analyst Anthony Tucker-Jones argues that Russia’s refusal to recognise the inevitable in Syria is condemning the country to an agonising death.