BBC News
Senior Journalist on the Digital Editing Team at BBC News in London.
Before the BBC I spent six years in Cambodia, covering politics, human rights, migration and the Khmer Rouge tribunal.
You can find me on [email protected]
BBC News
Four men expose the horror and brutality of conditions in the Ukraine war, with two saying they saw soldiers being shot for refusing orders.
Robert Corfield, who admitted abusing a child to the BBC, was a minister in a shadowy church known as The Truth.
Thousands of US adoptees do not have citizenship despite being brought to the country as babies decades ago. Now many fear deportation.
Hundreds of adoptions could have taken place between the 1950s and 1990s, say women who were members of a Christian sect.
In the early 2000s many UK clubs banned Pow! - which critics compared to Sex Pistols' God Save the Queen.
The Christian church, known as The Truth, has been recently rocked by a sexual abuse scandal.
The director of the 2022 Oscar-winning film speaks of his shock at the death of Alexei Navalny.
Alleged victims say predators have gone unpunished for decades in Christian church known as The Truth.
Henry Kissinger died aged 100 this week. His policies caused widespread destruction in Cambodia.
Within hours, his campaign website was selling mugshot-branded mugs, t-shirts and drink coolers.
In 1975, Y Hin Nie fled the Vietnamese army into the jungle. He didn't emerge until 1992.
VOD is the latest in a line of independent media outlets to be stifled in Cambodia.
Ghanaian fishermen have told the BBC of widespread abuse on Chinese fishing vessels.
Activists from the Cambodian environmental group Mother Nature are increasingly being targeted.
There is talk of genocide in Ukraine - but where is the line, and has it been crossed?
He allegedly insulted Cambodia's government, prompting heavily-armed policemen to arrest him.
The spokesman has appeared in public for the first time. But is there more than one Zabihullah Mujahid?
Kem Ley, a Cambodian political commentator, was murdered five years ago, but his legacy lives on.
At least 30 Cambodians died recently in less than a month after drinking toxic home-brewed alcohol.
Pete & Bas, two grandfathers in their 70s, have become two unlikely stars in UK drill.
The Koori Mail, Australia's only fully Indigenous-owned and managed newspaper, is turning 30.
Gemma Robinson died just days before she was due to see her ex-partner in court.
A month ago Han Lay was protesting. Last week she used her pageant speech to criticise the military.
China Mac served 11 years in jail for attempted murder. Now he is leading an anti-racism movement.
Based at Beirut's port, a small cash-strapped rowing team lost everything - apart from their lives.
Has the new national security law pulled the plug on Hong Kong's pro-democracy musicians?
Thai activist Wanchalearm Satsaksit has become the latest exiled government critic to be abducted.
Michael Wray won the first US series of Hell's Kitchen, but then his life took a turn for the worse.
Support meetings for recovering addicts have been cancelled in the lockdown. Here's how one man is coping.
Confusion and anxiety for Italy's residents as restrictions to combat virus spread take effect.
Could Bulgaria's latest football racism scandal change how it deals with the problem?
Doch Chkae began life on a Cambodian rubbish dump, but now play to thousands.
When Daniel Tyler went backpacking, little did he know he'd end up a star in Malaysia.
Nuon Chea, who has died at 93, oversaw some of the worst crimes of the 20th Century.
Nauru's ex-president, a former weightlifter, made a confession on TV weeks before dying on Wednesday.
Four people who were once cult members explain the dangers of life under someone's influence.
Survivors of some of the 20th Century's worst atrocities are ambivalent about a UN-backed tribunal.
Kem Sokha could have led the opposition to victory in Cambodia but a year after his arrest, remains in jail.
BBC Sport
How the traditions of the hunt from hundreds of years before live on in an unusual annual sporting event in Alaska.
Afghanistan's women cricketers have escaped danger, but found only a sporting limbo in exile from their homeland.
Gaelic football has been an unlikely source of joy, adventure and boundary-breaking change for young people in Cambodia.
The Chagos Islands football team are trying to keep the story of their ancestors alive, 6,000 miles from their disputed homeland.
Afghan female volleyball players tell the BBC that one of the squad was killed last month.
Members of Afghanistan's women's cricket team are hiding in Kabul, fearing for their safety following the Taliban's return to power.
At the Atlanta Olympics of 1996, Iraqi weightlifter Raed Ahmed took a huge gamble - inspired by one look from President Clinton.
In June 1993, Shane Warne bowled the 'ball of the century'. Two years before, he was deemed not good enough for Accrington.
Three years ago, 72 people lost their lives in the Grenfell fire. In its wake, a football club was born.
Freelance
Twenty years since collapse of ultra-communist movement, policy hailed by Cambodia PM for ending war back in spotlight.
Increasing Chinese political influence and presence in Cambodia has sparked anti-Chinese sentiment.
The Montagnards have faced decades of persecution for backing America in the Vietnam war and for practising a form of Christianity branded by Hanoi as an 'evil way'. When they escape the country, their future can be just as bleak
PHNOM PENH -- Cambodian authorities are planning to "strictly control" the activities of potential critics of the regime, as Prime Minister Hun Sen ai
Putting out a national newspaper is tough in any corner of the world. But being a newspaperman in one of the world's most isolated nations offers unique challenges. "We've got a 60-year-old [printing] press and, believe me, you can't walk down to the corner hardware store to get a replacement part when you're in the [...]
In his final stronghold, the Khmer Rouge leader is remembered differently.
The Khmer Rouge has long been synonymous with the word genocide. Yet some question whether the regime is, in fact, guilty of 'the crime of all crimes'
The Cambodia Daily