World Politics
Give money to hungry not banks, says UN food chief
The director of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation has questioned how world powers could put so much money into fighting the financial crisis and not feed the one billion hungry.
Inside World Politics
Obama bends knee to Chinese might
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
On a carefully orchestrated tour, his hosts' economic power has limited US options, reports Clifford Coonan in Beijing
Britain 'ready' to send more troops
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Allied troops must stay in Afghanistan to prevent the Taliban filling any "vacuum", the Foreign Secretary said today.
Greens urge tuna ban
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Environmentalists called for a global ban on the trade in Atlantic bluefin tuna, after the body responsible for managing stocks cut quotas but did not suspend fishing of the threatened species.
The 40 million children who just didn't exist
Sunday, 15 November 2009
One charity's campaign to register the births of all children in the developing world is transforming millions of young lives.
America's 'first Pacific president' woos China, North Korea, and Burma
Sunday, 15 November 2009
US President Barack Obama pledged yesterday, in the first major speech of his extensive Asia tour, to deepen dialogue with China rather than seek to contain the rising power.
IoS graphic: UN child report
Sunday, 15 November 2009
IoS graphic: Where to find the world's missing people
Sunday, 15 November 2009
Suicide attack piles pressure on Obama and Brown
Saturday, 14 November 2009
Prime Minister says Nato will send another 5,000 troops to Afghanistan
Karzai told to talk with the Taliban
Saturday, 14 November 2009
The British Government has suggested that the government of Hamid Karzai should talk to the Taliban leadership, the so-called "Quetta Shura", in an attempt to bring insurgents into the political process.
US indecision annoys British Government
Friday, 13 November 2009
British ministers and military chiefs fear that wrangling in the US over the deployment of extra troops risks undermining support for the war in Britain. They are irritated and angry over the delay in obtaining a decision amid signs that President Obama's administration is deeply split over the issue.
EDITOR'S CHOICE
Most popular in World News
Read
1 Feed the world? Band Aid 25 years on
2 Italian stallions: The sex lives of Mussolini and Berlusconi
3 Does this picture show British soldiers broke Geneva Conventions?
4 The terrifying voyage of Burma's boat people
5 Exclusive: The unseen photographs that throw new light on the First World War
6 Guilty: China's verdict on the man who helped quake victims
7 US builds up its bases in oil-rich South America
8 Sex and cheese as Sarkozys meet Simpsons
Emailed
1 Italian stallions: The sex lives of Mussolini and Berlusconi
2 The terrifying voyage of Burma's boat people
3 Faith leaders call for calm as murdered priest is buried
4 Gulf: A choice between liberalisation or recovery?
5 As deaths in Afghanistan rise, so does the growth of opium
6 The end of Communism? Cuba sweeps away egalitarian wages
7 Iran defiant over nuclear 'rights'
8 Spirit of the past inspires Congo campaign
Commented
1Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Why is my gender suddenly in retreat?
2University accused of £36m student scam
3Brown: Britain must be at heart of Europe
4Marine marvels found in the darkness of the deep
5Countdown to Copenhagen: A change in the political climate on emissions
6British press split in two by Wapping?s great gamble
7Clegg reveals Lib Dems are prepared to back Cameron
8Bruce Anderson: Iraq is inseparable from the personality of Tony Blair
Columnist Comments
• Dominic Lawson: Why the British will never love Europe
'The Continent' we called it, knowing we were not of it
• Mary Dejevsky: Incentives that work the wrong way
London Metropolitan University is a very far cry indeed from Oxbridge
• Tom Sutcliffe: Should we pay double to save the bookshop?
A civilized city without bookshops struck me as a contradiction in terms

