Immersive and current news, informed by frontline reporting and real-life accounts.
The ultimate cost of corruption, incompetence, division and myth is always there, waiting to be brought home – as it has been for too many people in India and around the world during the Coronavirus pandemic, writes Hardeep Matharu
The news that Johnson ‘can’t afford to be Prime Minister’ rings hollow after a decade of austerity-driven child poverty, says Sian Norris
Jonathan Fenton-Harvey reports on an escalating conflict centred on the river Nile
Stephen Delahunty reports on allegations that the Conservative Party is not alone in marginalizing Muslims
The latest appointment to the BBC’s executive team said the Prime Minister has ‘all too often been misunderstood and maligned’ only four months ago, reports Sam Bright
Mike Buckley assesses what impact the resignation of Arlene Foster as Northern Ireland’s First Minister will have on its relationship with the rest of the UK
In an open letter, refugee rights and human rights charities have accused the Home Office consultation on changes to immigration policy as failing to consider the priorities of people seeking asylum
Katie Tarrant reports on recommendations by the higher education regulator on how universities can better deal with abuse allegations
People are wondering why a £3.375m windfall wasn’t enough to keep Nawaz’s think tank going. No one suggests he’s done anything wrong, but Brian Cathcart argues clarity would be welcome
Heidi Siegmund Cuda explains the background to the search warrants executed on Rudy Giuliani
Monica Piccinini reports on the increasing infection and death rates in Brazil from new Coronavirus variants and the lack of Government action
Tom Charlesworth speaks to the COVID-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK group about the Prime Minister’s refusal to meet with it and the National COVID Memorial Wall it has created to honour each victim of the virus
The military coup has unleashed a fresh round of violence in the country that could spiral out of control, says CJ Werleman
The Education Secretary accused Labour of moaning and complaining, as schools express anger about changes to Pupil Premium funding
Nafeez Ahmed reveals the links between an open letter claiming COVID-19 is a mild disease to pandemic disinformation networks and anti-vaccine propaganda
A blog published on the Government’s exams regulator website has been criticised for loading schools with extra work, while betraying a lack of trust in teachers
In the midst of the Coronavirus crisis, a local investment model has taken on added significance, reports Taj Ali
Mike Buckley explores how the Government is taking a big risk in staking Britain’s return to normality almost solely on vaccines
With the spread and impact of the Coronavirus reaching alarming levels in India and Brazil, Kimi Chaddah explores how Narendra Modi, Jair Bolsonaro and Boris Johnson failed their countries but kept their popularity
The latest hearing in the ‘Spy Cops’ inquiry revealed how officers infiltrated the Women’s Movement with a culture of institutionalised sexism that paved the way to sexual abuse, reports Sian Norris
Sam Bright reports on how officials have struck-out crucial information in two uncomfortable cases
Ben Gelblum analyses Israeli views of the occupied territories, with a clear split in opinion over the annexation of the West Bank but also support for an Arab coalition partner in government
James Doleman reports on day two of ‘Tommy Robinson’s’ defamation trial
Adrian Goldberg reports on the intimidation and censorship that is hiding an unfolding crisis for the Tigray population
The EU-Mexico Agreement has thrown a spanner in the works, reports David Hencke
James Doleman reports on defamation proceedings against the founder of the English Defence League
PPE procurement, Test and Trace, Nightingale hospitals, ventilators… Sam Bright rebuts the official rhetoric with some facts
Nafeez Ahmed reports on allegations of cronyism over the funding of a research paper which tries to dismiss evidence that COVID-19 is an airborne infection
Stuart Spray reports on the importance of a High Court judgment on HS2’s actions in an ancient woodland
Wendy Siegelman looks at new evidence about the US polling data handed to Russian agent Konstantin Kilimnik, and the role of the now-defunct election campaign company co-founded by Steve Bannon
As attacks by right-wing tabloids on female academics intensify, Sian Norris explores why they appear to be able to publish such material with impunity
Though Boris Johnson rushed through a discredited report into racial disparities, what happened to the investigation into anti-Muslim bigotry he promised two years ago? Basit Mahmood reports
First-hand testimony from Lebanon’s young healthcare workers reveals the impact of the Coronavirus pandemic on the country
Sian Norris speaks to protestors in Warwick who are demanding that their university takes action on sexual assault – but is the sector as a whole failing to protect women students?
The Government voted against amendments to the Domestic Abuse Bill that would have improved access to justice for migrant women, Sian Norris reports
Exclusive to print for a month, Peter Oborne shares his observations of the political scene, at home and abroad. Here is his March column
Rupert Read and Ian Sinclair dissect the Government’s woeful response to the country’s worst public health crisis in a century