Immersive and current news, informed by frontline reporting and real-life accounts.
Monica Piccinini speaks to those on the ground in the Brazilian state where health workers are battling against a horrendous surge in Coronavirus cases
As the Scottish Government announces an extra £250 million to tackle the ‘national disgrace’ of drug-related deaths, Lindsey Kennedy and Nathan Paul Southern report on Westminster’s failing drugs policy and how it is stopping Scotland from fighting addiction
Harriet Williamson speaks to teachers about feeling like an ‘afterthought’ as those still working in schools with vulnerable pupils and the children of key workers are not deemed to be a priority for vaccination
Steve Shaw reports on the British politicians who condemn state violence at the hands of authoritarian regimes while allowing UK police and military to train the very forces responsible
Steve Shaw reports on the House of Commons vote which allows the British Government to sign off on trade deals even if they are with countries guilty of mass killings
Nafeez Ahmed investigates the opaque USForThem group lobbying against Coronavirus restrictions, and its Conservative Party, Brexit and Pro-Trump connections
Grant Stern, the journalist who exposed the scandal behind the non-profit organisation involved in building Trump’s wall, explains the background and why Bannon isn’t off-the-hook
Andrew Neil’s Union-Jack-branded platform is backed by a range of foreign and right-wing interests, reports Sam Bright
Post-Brexit Britain is free from EU rules and oversight in theory but not in practice, says Mike Buckley
John Sweeney reflects on the bravery of the Russian opposition leader, poisoned by Putin, who has returned to face his tormentors
The incoming US President Joe Biden is today providing a space of collective mourning for the American nation, reports Stefan Simanowitz
CJ Werleman explores the scale of challenges facing the incoming US President – from the immediacy of the Coronavirus crisis to the structural evils of American life
Monica Piccinini looks at how the Brazilian electorate has been let down by their populist authoritarian leader
David Hencke and Philip Whiteley report on the dismissal of an employee of a nuclear processing plant after she spoke out against alleged systemic bullying, racism and sexism
Hannan, Rees-Mogg, Gove, Johnson, Farage, Fabricant, Banks, Morgan, Grimes and the Spectator – Donald Trump’s British cheerleaders cannot whitewash their history
Vulnerable wildlife is collateral damage in the Prime Minister’s economic vision for Britain, writes Stuart Spray
Now isolated from the Continent and determined to ‘rule the waves’ once more, Britain looks to countries with questionable regimes to strike up business deals
Right-wing extremism is a significantly greater terror threat than violent jihadism, reports CJ Werleman – yet gets mainstream media and political support
Sian Norris digs deeper into the private companies providing free school meals to the UK’s most vulnerable children
Nafeez Ahmed reports on startling testimony that appears to contradict previous denials of following the discredited COVID-19 policy and promises to vaccinate the whole country
Improving ventilation and upgrading PPE to protect healthcare workers from aerosol transmission will help drive out the Coronavirus sooner, says Dr Nishant Joshi
Nafeez Ahmed reports on the background of the controversial broadcaster whose think tank has been funded by Pro-Donald Trump donors
Susan Nathan explores the experiences of parents and teachers struggling to cope with a lack of tech for online learning, with additional reporting by Sian Norris
In an exclusive interview with Byline Times, Twitter’s Roadside Mum explains how she was expected to feed her children for 10 days on the meagre free schools meal pack provided by a food service firm
David Hencke reports on how only 9,000 out of nine million airline passengers were checked for quarantine over a five-month period last year
Brexit is stoking an international trade crisis while exports are being pummelled by the pandemic, reports Sam Bright
As women in Argentina celebrate the right to safe, legal abortion, Sian Norris looks at the network of opposition against progressive change for women and girls in the region
Sam Bright and Steve Shaw report on the Government’s decision not to purchase doses of Russia’s vaccine despite the possibility it could be combined with the vaccine from Oxford University
Jonathan Fenton-Harvey explains how Joe Biden’s election victory has already provided an impetus for peace among Gulf states
Steve Shaw looks at Donald Trump’s decision to grant freedom to close allies, and the two people the President should consider pardoning instead
CJ Werleman explores how the US President’s extraordinary assault on American democracy should ring alarm bells for the UK and Australia
Sian Norris and the Byline Times Team talk to parents on the front line of COVID-19 transmission in Britain’s education system
Despite evidence showing the risk of teachers catching the Coronavirus in schools and then passing it on to others in the community, the Government has ignored the issue at every turn, says Adam Hamdy
Steve Shaw reports on Germany’s arms exports to the countries creating the world’s worst humanitarian crisis
A lack of online access exacerbates an existing equality gap between children in disadvantaged communities and their wealthier counterparts, reports Sian Norris
Stephen Delahunty and David Hencke report on the changed rules stifling UK imports and exports in red tape
CJ Werleman reports on an Australian defamation case that strikes a blow against online intimidation