South Africans are voting in what are expected to be the most competitive elections since the end of apartheid, which could result in the ruling
Author: Sarah Mitchell
Boulter and Evans exits leave no British players standing at Roland Garros
A miserable tournament for Great Britain’s singles players at the French Open came to an end on Tuesday night as difficult defeats for Katie Boulter
Djokovic overcomes form struggles and crowd in first round win at French Open
Novak Djokovic arrived in Paris for his French Open title defence with ample reasons to doubt himself. He is struggling badly for form, there has
Alex de Minaur banishes Australian woes with easy French Open win
Alex de Minaur knows better than anyone that he has underachieved at Roland Garros, having yet to pass the second round in seven previous visits.
Kenya begins public hearings into alleged abuses by UK troops
Kenya has launched public hearings into allegations of human rights violations and abuses of power by British troops based in the former colony. The British
Argentinian president to meet Silicon Valley CEOs in bid to court tech titans
Javier Milei, Argentina’s president, is set to meet with the leaders of some of the world’s largest tech companies in Silicon Valley this week. The
In historic first, Canada lawmaker addresses legislature in Indigenous language
A First Nations lawmaker in Ontario has addressed the province’s legislature in Anishininiimowin, in a “historic” milestone that repudiates a centuries-long colonial “war” on Indigenous
French Open 2024: Sabalenka, Kasatkina, Mertens and Ruud through – as it happened
Otherwise, thanks all for your company and see you tomorrow at 10am BST. That, then, is us for the day, so before we depart, a
Rwanda’s top UK diplomat oversaw use of Interpol to target regime opponents
Rwanda’s top diplomat in the UK oversaw the use of the international justice system to target opponents of the country’s rulers around the world, the
This Time Next Year review – satisfyingly slick by-the-numbers romcom
Based on Sophie Cousens’ novel of the same name, and adapted for the screen by the author, this opens with a twinkly tourism-office-style visit-London-for-the-festive-season montage