Gove tries to take control of the upper ground.
EPA/Andy Rain
Bogeymen abound for the justice secretary – not least within the Conservative Party.
Syria torn?
Shutterstock/Volodymyr Borodin
A Syrian town of Muslims and Christians stands united amid the country’s chaos.
Food parcel handouts have topped 1m in the UK.
www.shutterstock.com/Jordi C
Food banks feed more than just society’s vulnerable members.
The Iraqi army is in increasing need of the US’s help.
EPA/Nawras Aamer
The Obama administration likes to say it won’t put “boots on the ground” in Iraq – but that’s increasingly at odds with reality.
Pressing the flesh.
Jane Barlow/PA
Spoiler alert: we already know the winner.
A matter of time?
EPA/Sebastiao Moreira
Brazilians are disgusted with all their politicians. Can anyone take control?
Countess Markiewicz.
Brian Lawless/PA Wire
About 250 women appear to have taken part in 1916’s Easter Rising.
Home safe?
Owen Humphreys/PA Wire/Press Association Images
Here’s why you shouldn’t blame local authorities for the failure of government contractors.
Did the campaign literature change people’s minds?
PA/PA Archive
Wilson’s government sent out a pamphlet ahead of the referendum with many similar messages, but was it worth it?
Hidden abuse.
Shutterstock
Women over 60 are being killed in their own homes - but little more is known about these crimes.
Alice Bartlett
The big vote is not just for Brits – which might be a surprise to some people.
Filip Singer/EPA
It might face an uphill battle for the world to adopt the proposed name change.
EPA/Justin Lane
The Republican insurgent’s latest foray into geopolitics was even more dangerous than it sounded.
A helping hand.
Africa Studio/Shutterstock
Some of the most vulnerable people in society are being kept alive by food banks.
Landing on every door mat.
Gemma Ware
Two academics assess the main arguments made in the government’s EU referendum leaflet.
Ian Nicholson / PA Archive/Press Association Images
Celebrities should not be able to get the British legal system to do their dirty work for them.
Corbyn enters the fray for stay.
Chris Radburn/PA Wire
The Labour leader is no Europhile, but this scepticism is a real strength for the remain camp.
Yemenis have lived under the shadow of drones for years.
EPA/Yahya Arhab
The US has been mounting semi-secret drone strikes in Yemen for years – and it seems the UK has been deeply involved.
Let the campaigns begin.
Andrew Milligan/PA Wire
The choice of the ‘establishment’ campaign has irked others in the Eurosceptic camp.
Flowers for Ukraine’s new prime minister, Volodymyr Groysman as President Poroshenko congratules him.
Roman Pilipey/EPA
Election of Volodymyr Groysman as prime minister marks the first political realignment since Euromaidan.
Marking the fifth anniversary of the overthrow of Colonel Gadddafi.
STRINGER/EPA
Since 2011, Libya has been trying to fashion itself into a functioning democratic state – but instead, it’s still mired in violent chaos.
Two worlds? Minaret in Brick Lane, East London.
Andy Sedg/Flickr
An ‘us and them’ narrative pervades reporting about British Muslim attitudes, but there remains lack of understanding about what the separation of the church and state really means.
This story is not about John Whittingdale’s private life.
PA / PA Archive/Press Association Images
The uneasy relationship between political power and the influence of the news media.
EPA/Sebastian Kahnert
Chancellor Angela Merkel wouldn’t like to see Britain leave the EU, but a remain vote is not necessarily an easy option either.
Charles I attempts to arrest five members of Parliament in 1642.
Charles West Cope/Wikimedia Commons
The idea that only Parliament should set British laws emerged to protect the people from the King.