Outside the Keleti railway station in Budapest, Hungary.
Reuters/Leonhard Foeger
It’s not just calling refugees “migrants” that dehumanises them – it’s talking about them as if they’re numbers.
Don’t even think about reporting this: police in Turkey.
Murad Sezer
By arresting foreign reporters in its turbulent south-east, Turkey sent yet another signal that inconvenient journalists are not welcome.
Saying it at last.
Reuters/Leonhard Foeger
In just a few weeks, the people of Europe have been galvanised into supporting the refugees dying to reach their shores.
Newspapers report the death of Aylan Kurdi.
EPA/Andy Rain
A devastating picture of a drowned boy has touched viewers and political leaders alike – and could be a turning point in Europe’s spiralling refugee crisis.
Under a pall.
Reuters/Luke MacGregor
Ever since the Jimmy Savile affair, the police have been investigating historical child abuse on an unprecedented scale.
Is that clear?
Scott Ableman
The new question risks leading voters down an uncertain path.
The scene at Keleti train station in Budapest, Hungary.
Reuters/Leonard Foeger
Budapest’s main train station has been reopened to refugees – but Hungary’s hateful politics of fear are only getting harsher.
Tempers fray in Beirut.
Reuters/Aziz Taher
Lebanon’s garbage protests are spiralling out of control. Where will it end?
We thought the phone hacking scandal would chasten News Corp. We were wrong.
Palmyra’s Temple of Bel, pre-Islamic State.
Reuters/Gustau Nacarino
The robust international laws meant to protect cultural heritage are worth little without real international action.
Migrants from the Middle East wait outside a train station in Budapest on their way across Europe.
Laszlo Balogh/Reuters
A green card lottery would give so-called economic migrants a legal route to Europe.
Burial in Madagascar, 2013.
Dennis van de Water
One of the biggest problems in international development is that health statistics are badly kept in many of the countries with the most to gain. Finally something is being done about it.
Pick me! I’ve got an idea!
PA/Stefan Rousseau
A run down of what each has to say on the top issue of the summer.
Who benefits from benefits?
Shutterstock
The government faces pressure to means test benefits to stop richer elderly people claiming at the expense of their poorer peers.
Left out.
Reuters/Murad Sezer
Europe always prefers to overlook its colonial past – but now it’s becoming unavoidable.
Women in Tokyo can go it alone.
Thomas Peter
Don’t dismiss the idea of women-only carriages. It might help.
Straight down the line: one of the BBC’s values.
Reuters/David Nicholls
The BBC has called for a national debate on what it is for. The public needs to speak and the politicians need to listen.
Reuters Photographer
If the commercial media has its way the BBC will end up cash-strapped and shackled by regulation.
The ancient city of Palmyra.
Ulrich Waack/Wikipedia
Khaled al-Asaad was a world renowned scholar before his death at the hands of Islamic State.
Reuters/Henry Romero
The awful combination of impunity, corruption and violence in which a group of Mexican students were abducted persists to this day.
The washed-up belongings of people who drowned off the coast of Libya.
Reuters/Hani Amara
Immigration is a lightning rod in British politics, but we have to be brave and look beyond the numbers.
The first minister of Scotland addressing the Edinburgh TV festival .
Danny Lawson/PA
The Scottish first minister’s speech may have been strong on vision, but there were no signs of innovative thinking on how new Scottish services would be funded at a time of BBC cutbacks.
That sinking feeling: Sir John Chilcot.
Reuters/Matt Dunham
Whatever position you take on the Iraq Inquiry – whether you see it as an establishment stitch-up, or whether you think it might actually tell the truth about Britain’s decision to go to war in Iraq in…
Level playing field?
From www.shutterstock.com
The current anti-doping regulation clearly isn’t working. Perhaps it is time to change our approach.
The funeral of General Adolphe Nshimirimana, assassinated in August 2015.
Reuters
Some of Burundi’s highest-ranking officials have been assassinated – but ordinary Burundians are still being terrorised too.