Molly Crabapple – causing mayhem with words and pictures
US artist Molly Crabapple does something rare in journalism – she sees and tells a story in a new way, which is why Paul Mason has nominated her as his person of the year for 2013.
Shaaker is set to take legal action against the British Government after being released from the US prison camp, sources say.
The lawyer for a Guantanamo inmate says fear after the Paris attacks risks giving governments a licence to implement the sort of anti-terror legislation that saw her client wrongly detained.
Investigators deliver a damning indictment of CIA interrogation practices after the 9/11 attacks. Senate intelligence committee chair Dianne Feinstein calls the findings a stain on America’s history.
Briton Moazzam Begg, who stood accused of attending a terrorist training camp in Syria, is due to be released from prison just days before his trial was due to start.
US artist Molly Crabapple does something rare in journalism – she sees and tells a story in a new way, which is why Paul Mason has nominated her as his person of the year for 2013.
More transparency, stricter controls. President Obama promises to be more open about America’s fight against terrorism – in an effort to regain his credibility in an increasingly dangerous world.
With a hunger strike and one hundred inmates refusing food, President Obama renews his intention to shut down the Guantanamo detention centre declaring he does not want people to die.
Former senior members of the US military and political establishment accuse the country’s most senior officials of contributing to the spread of torture.
Violent clashes, hunger strikes and growing calls for its closure – what is happening in Guantanamo Bay, three years after its promised closure?
Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law and spokesman will appear in a New York court later today in a landmark prosecution on US soil.
The last western detainee held at the Guantanamo Bay military base, home to hundreds of suspected terrorists captured by the United States, has been returned to Canada.
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four others who say they planned the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington appear in a military court charged with murdering 2,976 people.
It is rare to see Britain’s intelligence agencies, MI5 and MI6, in open battle with MPs from all parties, including the Deputy Prime Minister.
British spies will discover later whether they will face charges over their alleged complicity in the torture of terror suspects.
Senior UK security officials and ministers could be in the frame as the Metropolitan Police begins a new wider investigation into allegations of rendition in Libya, as Simon Israel reports.