There is a corner… mourn but don’t militarise terror deaths
I found myself thinking about Rupert Brooke’s soldier this morning as we mark the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Britain and think about British tourists who were murdered in Tunisia.
Paraic O’Brien speaks about his time in Tunisia on the frontline of this crisis.
Tunisia is at the forefront of the migrant crisis with unprecedented numbers of people from Africa and the Middle East travelling through the country in the hope of reaching Europe.
Tunisia’s decade-old democracy is facing its biggest crisis yet, after the president ousted the government and suspended parliament last night amid fierce protests.
England will be playing their first match on Monday against Tunisia. The two teams met exactly 20 years ago, in a game overshadowed by rioting England fans. But today, it’s the Tunisians who have a problem with fan violence. The authorities are struggling to deal with clashes at stadiums, sparked by a young population frustrated…
The inquest into the Britons who caught up in the massacre in Tunisia in 2015 has heard from a mother who lost her father, her brother and one of her two sons.
It was the deadliest terror attack on Britons since the London bombings of 7/7.
The manhunt for a 24-year-old Tunisian man continues all over Germany as fingerprints on the lorry used in the attack confirm his identity and Chancellor Merkel defends German security services amid accusations of deadly blunders.
I found myself thinking about Rupert Brooke’s soldier this morning as we mark the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Britain and think about British tourists who were murdered in Tunisia.
Footage of the gunman who killed 38 people in a terrorist attack in Tunisia has been posted online. It comes after the FCO advised all Britons in the country to return home.
Warning that a “further terrorist attack is highly likely”, the Foreign Office advises that tour operators will be laying on extra flights to bring tourists home.
A minute’s silence is held in the UK in memory of the 38 victims of last week’s beach massacre in Tunisia.
The bodies of eight Britons who were killed by a gunman in Tunisia last week have returned to the UK.
The number of identified Britons killed in the Tunisia terror attack has risen from 18 to 22. The bodies of those who died are to be flown back to the UK tomorrow.
A video showing the chaotic scenes inside the grounds of the hotel in Tunisia as a jihadi gunman attacks from the beach is released. The footage shows staff reacting to the attack.
The British death toll in the Tunisian beach massacre is expected to double to at least 30, sources say, as David Cameron pledges a “full spectrum” response to terrorism.