Oli Mould
This informal settlement is a zone for experimentation: the results are both heartening, and confronting.
Reuters/TT News Agency
Despite its apparently anti-immigration political rhetoric, Denmark remains mainly tolerant of migrants.
A need to report back from the frontline.
Volunteering by Shutterstock
If new anti-lobbying rules for charities aren’t to stifle debate, new ways for community groups to report back from the frontline must be set up.
Laurent Gbagbo at the ICC.
Reuters
How can the International Criminal Court serve justice in a climate of intense rumour and bitter suspicion?
They’re out there somewhere.
Reuters/Yannis Behrakis
NATO has announced a new mission to monitor people-smugglers in the Aegean – but something smells fishy.
Down to eight: the US Supreme Court.
Reuters/Carlos Barria
President Obama’s opponents are saying he should leave the choice of a Supreme Court justice to his successor. But that could leave the nation’s highest court in limbo.
Make America great again, starting with the merch.
Reuters/Rick Wilking
How can three politicians who seem so different appeal to voters for the same reason? The man of the people has long been a powerful prospect.
A tank recaptured from Boko Haram.
Reuters/Akintunde Akinleye
The African terror group has been weakened, but it’s now wreaking a new kind of havoc.
shutterstock.
High rents and benefits restrictions have led to spiralling costs when it comes to housing London’s homeless.
Reuters/Abdalrhman Ismail
The agreement so enthusiastically received by the world is less a leap forward than a cynical act of self-preservation.
Not what keeps Brits awake at night.
Reuters/David W Cerny
Labour’s shadow foreign secretary says leaving the EU would play into Russia’s hands. Ordinary Brits worry more about their jobs.
Another world is possible.
Reuters/Brian Snyder
Left-wing grassroots movements are swelling their ranks and winning elections – but their standard-bearers are same old, same old.
Keeping people safe inside.
Anthony Devlin/PA Wire
In 2015, a person took their life in prison every four days.
Milly Dowler was abducted and killed in 2002.
PA/ Surrey Police
Her case followed certain well known patterns, but the Surrey teenager’s killer was not identified for years after her death.
It’s complicated.
Reuters/RIA Novosti
Russia and Iran have always treated each other well when it suits them, but in hard times, their relationship can get very rocky indeed.
Ed Samuel/shutterstock.com
On welfare reform, it’s a question of listen and learn.
Belen Desmaison
How the borrowed concept of gated communities is dividing rich from poor in the Peruvian capital.
Hope for the future?
Reuters/Pascal Rossignol
Conditions are getting worse at the migrant camps in France, which is leading to protest.
Australian War Memorial
The decision to ‘ban’ relatives of British servicemen to the commemoration of the 1916 Battle of Fromelles is wrongheaded.
Protesters gather outside the recent Anglican church meeting.
Gareth Fuller/PA
The Anglican church has been criticised for standing against gay marriage, but it has taken a positive step on an issue that many activists see as more important.
Can’t touch this.
Reuters/Mike Segar
With the results in, Trump stands proudly on top of what looks like a five-way car crash. What now?
Is this Bernie an eternal flame?
Reuters/Rick Wilking
“Socialist” has been a dirty word in American politics for decades – so why does socialism suddenly seem alive and well?
On yer bike, pal.
Wikimedia
If you want to buy a little piece of Scotland, you can’t actually own it. Thankfully, the rules are different in England and Wales.
Waiting to escape.
Reuters/Osman Orsal
While the world struggles to even get to the negotiating table, the Syrian refugee crisis is still getting worse.
Pegida is striving to project a respectable image.
PA/Hannah McKay
The anti-Islamisation group caused no trouble in Birmingham this weekend – but that’s part of a very deliberate strategy.