Syria, Europe and Uganda via the Metropolitan line
A short trip on the London Underground to a suburban girls’ school makes for an uplifting visit.
With 41 of the Commonwealth’s 53 member states criminalising homosexuality, will David Cameron speak out for the LGBT community at the Sri Lanka summit?
After seeing the difference aid makes to the lives of disabled people in Uganda, Channel 4’s Ade Adepitan is lobbying for disability rights to be included in the UN’s millennium development goals.
The warnings over immigration shares many of the themes previously aired in the 1970s. Channel 4 News’s Darshna Soni describes one city’s experience of a previous wave of immigrants.
In 1972, Idi Amin expelled Uganda’s Asians, many of whom were British citizens and settled in the UK. At the time, ITN visited Leicester to find out how immigrants were coping.
A year ago a film about a Ugandan warlord, Kony 2012, went viral. Its director Jason Russell succeeded in making Joseph Kony famous, but subsequently struggled with his own new-found fame.
A British theatre producer who spent five nights in a Ugandan police cell before being deported tells Channel 4 News his treatment was a throwback to the days of dictator Idi Amin.
A short trip on the London Underground to a suburban girls’ school makes for an uplifting visit.
A court in Kampala dismisses the case against British theatre producer David Cecil, who faced two years in a Uganda jail for putting on a play about homosexuality.
Channel 4 News maps the new frontiers of the terror network al-Qaeda and its affiliates across Europe, Africa and the Middle East.
Exclusive: David Cecil, who faces two years in a Ugandan prison for producing a play about homosexuality, tells Channel 4 News sending him to jail would be “quite crazy”.
One day after a Channel 4 News report on Congo’s “Terminator”, a sequel to the record-breaking Kony 2012 video is expected to premiere online.
As debate rages over the Kony video, one social media expert tells Channel 4 News that despite its flaws, the film “sets new standards” for media campaigns and “highlights the power of celebrity”.
Jon Snow on the latest film to sweep the internet calling for the capture of the militia leader Joseph Kony who once terrorised northern Uganda.
Inaccurate and misguided or a masterclass in disseminating a benevolent message. Kony 2012 continues to divide opinion, writes Lindsey Hilsum.
An internet video campaign calling for the arrest of Lords Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony has been viewed 30 million times. Critics have branded the campaign misguided and potentially damaging.