US Congressman-elect George Santos admits he lied on his bio
A Republican, who is due to take his US House of Representatives seat in January, has admitted that he lied about his job experience and college education.
A Republican, who is due to take his US House of Representatives seat in January, has admitted that he lied about his job experience and college education.
Residents in the worst-affected areas have been urged to evacuate amid a deluge that has blocked motorways, forced the closure of the city’s airport and caused a huge disruption to flights
London's most expensive postcodes have been revealed, see if yours makes the list.
Memphis police officers appear to laugh and one can be seen smoking a cigarette in body cam footage released after the death of Tyre Nichols. Mr Nichols was beaten by police following a traffic stop and died three days later in hospital.
Fire engines are in Worcester city centre after reports of smoke coming from the roof of a building.
More than two decades since their last World Cup triumph and without a local consensus pick, Brazil are considering breaking an unwritten taboo: hiring a foreign coach.- Local candidates - Brazil did once have foreign coaches, although their reigns were fleeting.
These pictures of fan-favourite wrestler Big Daddy were taken less than a week after tragedy struck in the ring.
In November, the former ‘Tonight Show’ host underwent surgery to treat serious second and third degree burns
Angoulême is once again the centre of the world for graphic novelists, as the French city hosts the 50th edition of its international comics festival. Our reporters have been speaking to best-selling author Riad Sattouf, who received the festival's Grand Prix this year. Meanwhile, cartoonist Tom Gauld joins us in the studio, as his latest collection "Revenge of the Librarians" features in the official selection at the festival. He tells us about lockdown boredom, book snobs and the enduring appeal of paper and ink in a world of screens.Read more on FRANCE 24 EnglishRead also:From Arsène Lupin to Tintin: Paris's cultural winter warmersMeet Reno Lemaire, a manga artist with a French accentUS cartoonist Chris Ware on drawing inspiration from everyday acts of humanity
Egyptian archaeologists have uncovered a Pharaonic tomb near the capital Cairo containing a gold leaf-covered mummy that had remained closed for 4,300 years. It's believed to be one of the oldest and most complete mummies ever discovered in Egypt. The remains were discovered at the bottom of a 15-metre shaft in a recently uncovered group of tombs at the Saqqara necropolis, south of Cairo."This mummy may be the oldest and most complete mummy found in Egypt to date," Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s former an
The Africa Centre originally opened its doors in 1964 to champion the cause of Africa and its people worldwide.
Wood fires produce more particle pollution than traffic exhausts in UK, and controls remain ineffective
Campbell, 19, of Hounslow, west London, was sentenced to 14 months in jail after pleading guilty to carrying a firearm in a public place
Mr Bridgen lost the Conservative whip earlier this month for tweeting an article questioning the safety of the Covid vaccines.
Russian social media channels and media are sharing a doctored video that alleges Poland will form army units of "non-traditional orientation". We disprove these claims in this edition of Truth or Fake. Read more on FRANCE 24 English
YORK snooker star Ashley Hugill is into the second round of the 2023 Betfred Snooker Shootout following a 40-20 victory over Andrew Pagett at the Morningside Arena in Leicester.
In this edition on Holocaust Memorial Day, we discover a little-known chapter of French history. In 1943, the Germans had occupied the southern French port city of Marseille. With its working class, immigrant and Jewish neighbourhoods around the Old Port, the city had come to represent everything that Hitler and the Nazis hated. The Germans, who saw the Old Port neighbourhoods as a hotbed of the French Resistance, decided to make an example of Marseille. They rounded up thousands of people, including hundreds of Jews who were later sent to a concentration camp, and destroyed an entire district.Between January 22 and 24, 1943, some 6,000 Marseille residents were arrested. More than 1,500 were later deported, including almost 800 Jews who were sent to the Sobibor extermination camp in Nazi-occupied Poland. From February 1, 1943, a whole neighbourhood near the Old Port was razed to the ground. Hundreds of homes were destroyed and 50 streets wiped from the map.FRANCE 24's Florence Gaillard and Georges Yazbek met with survivors and descendants of victims of the Marseille roundup, who shared their harrowing accounts. Among them is Pascal Luongo, a lawyer who filed a criminal complaint in 2019 for crimes against humanity.English translation: Monte Francis Read more on FRANCE 24 EnglishRead also:Police resistance during WWII: How French officers saved hundreds of Jews in NancyPikovsky family behind Holocaust documentary honoured at French ceremonyVichy France’s ‘biggest stain’? The August 1942 roundup, 80 years on
A primary school near Glasgow has been praised after positive inspection results.
A researcher on Mustang Island, Texas, showed off a huge American eel he found washed ashore in video from Tuesday, January 17.Jace Tunnell, a reserve director at the University of Texas Marine Science Institute, shared a video on YouTube of him enthusiastically presenting a female American eel, which he said was around four foot long.“This is basically as big as they get,” Tunnell said. “This is likely a female, they’re larger than the males.”Tunnell added that large females can have up to four million eggs.The American eel is listed as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species.Tunnell explained that this was in part due to the negative impact of dam building on the eel’s life cycle over the past century. “Whenever all the dams and stuff started coming in, the life cycle of these fish, of going up the rivers, coming down the rivers, and going way out in to the ocean to be able to have their eggs […] with those dams on the rivers, really, they weren’t able to do the things they would normally do.”The Mission-Aransas National Estuarine Research Reserve, which Tunnell manages, conducts research and education into preserving healthy Texas coastlines. Credit: Jace Tunnell, Reserve Director at the University of Texas Marine Science Institute via Storyful
Holocaust Memorial Day (January 27) is a day for everyone to remember the millions of people murdered in the Holocaust, under Nazi Persecution, and in the genocides which followed in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, and Darfur.
Last night Helena Bonham Carter made a plea to put more old women on TV. “For f***’s sake, you have all these people in telly who are men”, the actor said at the British Film Institute. The show, written by Russell T Davies, follows the life of Noele Gordon, a Seventies soap star who was unexpectedly sacked from the soap opera Crossroads at the age of 61.