How will France respond to the Paris attack?
Jonathan Rugman, who also covered the Charlie Hebdo shootings in January, analyses last night’s shocking attacks and what they mean for France.
President François Hollande has marked the first anniversary of the terror attacks of 2015 by unveiling plaques commemorating the 130 victims. And the state of emergency imposed since then looks likely to be extended.
At least 84 people, including children, are killed after a man drives a lorry through crowds celebrating Bastille Day in Nice, in what the French authorities are calling a terror attack.
A man who stabbed a passenger to death at a German train station and injured three others appeared to have mental health problems, according to the authorities.
Channel 4 News wins the Bafta 2016 News Coverage Award for our reporting of the Paris terror attacks on 14 November 2015. You can watch that programme in full here.
Downing Street says it is “concerned” about missing Briton David Dixon following the Brussels terror attacks.
A Belgian national said to be linked to the terrorists who killed 130 people in Paris is arrested in Morocco.
The attacks in France dominated the headlines, while the media were accused of ignoring other victims of the so-called Islamic State’s global campaign of terror.
The so-called Islamic State has shown itself capable of striking civilian targets in western Europe. But is the terror group on the back foot in its heartlands of Iraq and Syria?
French police are holding two relatives of one of the men behind the Paris attacks which killed 129 people. Belgian police have also arrested seven people in connection with the attack.
The family of Nick Alexander, the first British victim of the Paris attacks to be named, pay tribute to him. He was one of at least 89 people killed in the massacre at the Bataclan concert venue.
Jonathan Rugman, who also covered the Charlie Hebdo shootings in January, analyses last night’s shocking attacks and what they mean for France.
2015 is turning out to be a grim and possibly defining year for France, and for Europe.
French President Francois Hollande calls the Paris attacks “an act of war” organised from abroad by the so-called Islamic State – with help from inside France.
Shocking video shows people fleeing from the emergency exit and climbing out of windows at the Bataclan theatre, during the Paris attacks on Friday night.
A man’s mobile phone saved his life when it stopped flying shrapnel from hitting his head. He was walking past the Stade de France when a bomb exploded.