Wrongfully jailed men call for change to England and Wales compensation law
Justin Plummer, Oliver Campbell and Peter Sullivan tell parliamentary inquiry they do not yet qualify for compensation despite being exonerated
Family of worker killed on Saudi World Cup site still waiting for compensation a year on
Lengthy delays in compensation are ‘emblematic’ of what many relatives of migrant workers go through in the Gulf kingdom, say rights groups
Saunas, safaris and silence in Norfolk: a winter weekend on a rewilded retreat
A transformative conservation project encompassing East Anglia’s large but secluded Fritton Lake has high-end hospitality and nature-rich experiences at its heart
Dear Liar review – George Bernard Shaw spars with the original Eliza in Pygmalion
Jerome Kilty’s fusty two-hander charts the cantankerous and flirtatious relationship between the playwright and actor Mrs Patrick Campbell
The President’s Cake review – sweet portrait of life in wartime Iraq builds to an explosive climax
Nine-year-old Lamia is obliged by her school to bake a birthday cake for Saddam Hussein, and meets a series of vivid characters as she shops for sanctioned ingredients
Mia Amor Mottley on course for third term, as Barbados heads to the polls
PM and global climate action advocate looks set to secure another victory despite voter concerns over cost of living and crime
Stay Alive: Berlin 1939-45 by Ian Buruma – how Berliners defied their Nazi masters
An immersive account of how the inhabitants of a liberal city – including the author’s father – survived fascism
UK car breakdown cover: seven top tips to drive the best deal
Whether you want the basic safety net or complete rescue package, the bill depends as much on what’s needed as what is included
Britain’s building standards are now so bad, even the super-rich are facing housing misery
Residents of the UK’s most expensive flats have won a court case over defective pipework. If their homes are shoddily built, what hope do the rest of us have, asks writer and curator Phineas Harper
Wednesday briefing: Why the debate over working from home says more about inequality than productivity
In today’s newsletter: Hybrid working has quietly settled into Britain’s post-pandemic landscape but the real story lies in who gets flexibility and who never did
Canada shooting: 10 dead including suspect in attack on Tumbler Ridge high school, police say
More than 25 people are injured, including two with life-threatening injuries, after shooting at secondary school and local residence
Broken ribs, ruptured bowels: ebike injuries double at major Sydney hospital in one year
More than half of the cases presenting to the St Vincent’s emergency department in Sydney had self-reported speeds of more than 25km/h
‘Women’s freedoms are at stake’: concern at rise of Islamist party before Bangladesh election
Jamaat e-Islami, oppressed under Sheikh Hasina’s rule, could take unprecedented share of the vote on Thursday
TV tonight: a journalist’s deep dive into the mind of a serial killer
Sky Crime’s documentary looks back at a shocking 1970s crime spree. Plus: Dawn French and Mark Heap wrap up their secretive sitcom. Here’s what to watch tonight
Tumbler Ridge shooting: what we know so far
Nine people killed by shooter who was later found dead at Tumbler Ridge secondary school in British Columbia, Canada, with more than 25 people injured