News

Jesuits to launch online journal

The state of ecumenism today, what scientists think about faith, and the European Treaty are among the topics that will be addressed as the British Province of the Jesuits launches new online journal.

Two prominent Chinese house church leaders detained

Two prominent leaders of one of China's largest house church networks detained by local police in China's Gansu Province since 20 December 2007.

Christian Ecology Link meets Brown over opposition to nuclear power plants

Christian Ecology Link representatives meet the Prime Minister to express opposition to a new generation of nuclear power plants.

Church to be consulted on blasphemy laws repeal

Downing Street has announced plans to consult the Church of England over plans to scrap blasphemy laws.

MercyMe celebrates record-breaking radio and sales In 2007

The multi platinum, Dove Award-winning and Grammy-nominated band MercyMe is kicking off 2008 as the headline act for the US Winter Jam.

Italy's Catholic head backs abortion moratorium

The head of the Catholic Church in Italy said he would support a moratorium on abortion, giving an extra boost to the proposal that has gained much support in recent days.

Ecumenical body praises churches in Kenya

The head of the World Council of Churches has welcomed signs of hope in Kenya and praised churches for their role in peacemaking.

Bush in Mideast peace push

U.S. President George W. Bush faces a balancing act in West Bank talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday, the second day of a Middle East peace mission laden with scepticism.

White House race enters new phase

The unpredictable fight for the White House went national on Wednesday as candidates fanned out across the United States and Democrat Barack Obama bounced back from a surprise loss to Hillary Clinton to grab a coveted union endorsement.

Police say two more churches bombed in Iraq

Two car bombs exploded outside two churches in the volatile northern city of Kirkuk on Wednesday, police said, the latest in a wave of attacks on Christian targets in Iraq this week.

151,000 Iraqis killed since U.S.-led invasion: WHO

About 151,000 Iraqi civilians were killed in the three years following the U.S.-led invasion of their country, according to World Health Organisation (WHO) research published on Wednesday.

U.S. to consider 3,000 more troops for Afghanistan

U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates will consider a proposal to send some 3,000 additional U.S. troops to Afghanistan to thwart any spring offensive by Taliban militants, the Pentagon said on Wednesday.

African Union head meets Kenya's feuding parties

African Union chief John Kufuor shuttled between Kenya's president and opposition leader on Wednesday to try to break a political impasse behind post-election turmoil that has killed 500 people.

Floods displace more than 30,000 in east Sri Lanka

Monsoon flooding has forced more than 30,000 people in eastern Sri Lanka from their homes, with many taking refuge in temporary shelters like huts, schools and mosques, officials said on Thursday.

UK to end years of wavering over nuclear power

The governemt is expected to give the go-ahead to a new generation of nuclear power stations on Thursday, ending years of uncertainty over its energy plans.

English and Maths poor in one fifth of schools

One in five schools in England fails to give pupils a decent education in maths and English, although the trend is improving, exam league tables showed on Thursday.