Randeep Ramesh
Randeep Ramesh is social affairs editor for the Guardian. He was the paper's south Asia correspondent for six years and a leader writer for the paper, specialising in globalisation. He was a City news editor and worked on the home news desk. He has won Scoop of the Year and What the Papers Say Investigation of the Year for work on parliamentary lobbying scandals
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Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani claimed diplomatic immunity from case brought by Fawaz al-Attiya
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Campaign group says manuals and videos for public sector workers on spotting signs of radicalisation are ‘naive and dangerous’
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UK has given more than £2m to fund judicial reforms but there are concerns over alleged abuse of Mohammed Ramadan
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Neil Goulden has stepped down from his role at the Responsible Gambling Trust
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Former prime minister of Qatar at centre of court case brought by UK-born ex-colleague who alleges he was falsely imprisoned for 15 months
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Select committee chairman Keith Vaz says campaign group was ‘deeply misguided’ to have missed chance to put things right
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The six-year journey that transformed a north London schoolboy into the world’s most wanted man
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Project Falcon included tactics such as involving Tony Blair as a lobbyist for the United Arab Emirates in 2013
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Exclusive: Files reveal plans for crown prince to demand David Cameron act against Islamist group in return for BAE Systems and BP deals
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Charity Commission had acted to choke off funding after US intelligence claimed group was ‘jihadist front’ but reverses position as judicial review is withdrawn
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Qatari agents acting on behalf of Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani alleged to have falsely imprisoned British national Fawaz al-Attiya in Doha
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Former attorney general calls on Conservatives to stop fraud in communities with ‘a tradition of electoral corruption in their home countries’
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Jesse Norman expects decision from communications watchdog in January as discussions continue about future of Openreach fibre broadband network
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Group representing poorer constituencies say leader is ‘not speaking to the country’ and is turning away from unions
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The UN should be the solution in Libya, but it’s the problem