Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
>

Ian Birrell

Columnist & Foreign Correspondent

  • Africa
    • General
    • Algeria
    • Congo
    • Egypt
    • Equatorial Guinea
    • Eritrea
    • Ethiopia
    • Gabon
    • Ghana
    • Ivory Coast
    • Kenya
    • Liberia
    • Libya
    • Mali
    • Nigeria
    • Rwanda
    • Somalia
    • Somaliland
    • South Africa
    • South Sudan
    • Sudan
    • Swaziland
    • Tanzania
    • Tunisia
    • Uganda
    • Zambia
    • Zimbabwe
  • Aid
  • Business
    • Economics
    • Technology
  • Covid19
  • Disability
  • Europe
    • European Union
    • Albania
    • Austria
    • Belarus
    • Belgium
    • Bosnia
    • Denmark
    • Estonia
    • Finland
    • France
    • Georgia
    • Germany
    • Greece
    • Greenland
    • Holland
    • Hungary
    • Iceland
    • Ireland
    • Italy
    • Lithuania
    • Moldova
    • Norway
    • Poland
    • Russia
    • Serbia
    • Slovakia
    • Spain
    • Sweden
    • Switzerland
    • Ukraine
  • Health
  • Media
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Film
    • Music
  • Politics
  • Policy
    • Crime
    • Defence
    • Drugs
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Housing
    • Immigration
    • Police
    • Race
    • Social care
    • Sport
    • Transport
    • Welfare
    • Whitehall
  • Travel
  • World
    • Afghanistan
    • Argentina
    • Bahrain
    • Canada
    • China
    • Colombia
    • Cuba
    • Haiti
    • India
    • Iran
    • Iraq
    • Israel, West Bank & Gaza
    • Jordan
    • Kashmir
    • Kazakhstan
    • Lebanon
    • Mexico
    • Montserrat
    • Nepal
    • North Korea
    • Pakistan
    • Philippines
    • Saudi Arabia
    • South Korea
    • Sri Lanka
    • Syria
    • Taiwan
    • Turkey
    • United States
    • Venezuela
Politics

The earthquake that upended British politics

Published by The Wall Street Journal (9th July, 2016) British politics and governance have been shaken during the past few weeks in ways that I have not seen […]

Read More
Europe / European Union / Politics

Boris, Brexit and Cameron’s miscalculation

Published by The Wall Street Journal (3rd March, 2016) As British Prime Minister David Cameron surveys the political landscape, he has much to savor. Last May he confounded critics who […]

Read More
Politics

Britain’s Bernie Sanders may be Labour’s next leader

Published by The Wall Street Journal (5th September, 2015) Thirty years ago I covered politics for a local newspaper in a prosperous patch of north London. Among the […]

Read More
Politics

Triumph, despair and revenge at the British ballot box

Published by The Wall Street Journal (9th May, 2015) On Thursday evening, as the final voters were trudging to polling stations, David Cameron was handed his party’s predictions for the […]

Read More
Defence / Europe / Germany / Politics / Russia

Europe’s defence wanes as the Putin threat grows

Published by The Wall Street Journal (4th March, 2015) The chill of a new Cold War is descending over Europe. In Ukraine, ripped apart by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s […]

Read More
Politics

An earthquake called Ukip hits Britain

Published by The Wall Street Journal (17th October, 2014) It is curious to think that the modest seaside resort of Clacton might end up a landmark in British […]

Read More
Africa / Aid / Kenya

The folly of the 0.7% foreign-aid solution

Published by the Wall Street Journal (10th July, 2014) Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki won global applause when he introduced free primary-school education over a decade ago. Who could […]

Read More
Europe / European Union / Politics / Russia / Ukraine

Ukraine and the shame of Europe

Published by The Wall Street Journal (22nd May, 2014) There are flickers of hope that calm can descend again on Eastern Europe. We are told that those threatening […]

Read More
Europe / European Union / Politics

David Cameron’s right-wing problem

Published by The Wall Street Journal (7th May 2014) Shortly after David Cameron became leader of the Conservatives in Britain, a caller to a radio show asked him about a […]

Read More
Africa / Aid / Economics / Nigeria

Africa is refuting the usual economic pessimism

Published by The Wall Street Journal (16th April, 2014) The terrorist bombing that killed 71 people in Nigeria’s capital Monday morning abruptly turned attention from what had been […]

Read More
Ian Birrell is an award-winning columnist, foreign correspondent, feature writer and investigative journalist. He is contributing editor of The Mail on Sunday, a weekly columnist in The i Paper and writes frequently for other papers and platforms. He is also co-founder with Damon Albarn of Africa Express, the acclaimed collaborative music project. (Pictured: Talking to refugees in Iraq fleeing Islamic State)... Read More.

aid autism Blair Boris Brexit Cameron China coalition Conservatives Corbyn coronavirus crime Daily Mail democracy Dfid Disability drugs EU Farage Guardian immigration Independent ipaper Labour LibDems Libya May Miliband MoS NHS Nigeria Observer Putin Russia social care Syria Times Trump Ukip Ukraine UN UnHerd USA Wuhan Xi Jinping

  • X
  • Bluesky
  • Instagram

Like what you are reading? To start or stop receiving email notifcations for new articles please enter your email address.


 

© Ian Birrell. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy. Website byAbi