Forgotten Millions: Where your money has gone
The generosity of Kiwis has helped that the plight of millions of refugees.
The generosity of Kiwis has helped that the plight of millions of refugees.
Rachel Smalley is drawn into the nightmare of two brothers who are separated en route to Germany.
Rachel Smalley comes face to face with the grim reality of life as a refugee in Turkey as she witnesses how families try to rebuild their lives.
Hundreds of thousands of Syrians are dead, millions are displaced or living as refugees, and 13.5 million people are relying on aid just to sustain their lives.
Rachel Smalley meets a couple of children affected differently by the ordeal but with equally unclear futures.
Every parent does it. I know I do. We have great hopes for our children.
Josh Emett dines out in Dubai and discovers the best creme brulee he has tasted.
Hazara family tell Rachel Smalley they are in Serbia to escape the resurgent Taliban in their home country.
My role, as a journalist, should be to act as a witness; to report on the situation as a bystander and then leave it as I found it, but an incident in 2013 changed my perspective, writes Rachel Smalley.
Immigration Minister confirms New Zealand will take a total of 750 Syrian refugees - 600 in an emergency intake over and above the usual annual quota of 750.
Church communities around New Zealand can host and settle an extra 1200 Syrian refugees, the Anglican and Catholic Church says.
The one-off intake will go "over and above" New Zealand's annual refugee quota, but will not number into the thousands, Prime Minister says.
Today the Herald restarts its campaign The Forgotten Millions to help refugees from the Syrian crisis.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has told fellow leaders that Europe has a duty to shelter refugees, rebuffing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
Rachel Smalley is set to return to the Middle East this year as she continues to spread awareness and raise money for the growing refugee crisis.
The three US airlines say competition from rapidly-expanding Persian Gulf carriers has cut their passenger load to the Middle East and Asia by more than 20%.
Celebrated New Zealand author Charlotte Grimshaw follows Ramadan, starting in Dubai and ending on the West Bank.
Foreign Minister Murray McCully is quite blunt about the Security Council and the Middle East peace process.
Once upon a time Patricia Greig had the good fortune of a luxury stopover in Dubai.
In several of Oman's tiny villages, some clinging to the sides of cliffs, Jim Eagles finds plenty of hospitality from friendly locals.
Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulchre is visited by Christians from everywhere, writes Kate Shuttleworth.
Eye-witnesses say streets of Palmyra are strewn with hundreds of bodies – the latest victims of terrorists's savagery.
Mass graves containing the bodies of 1700 Iraqi military cadets killed by Isis are being opened - TV clips showing skeletal remains still wearing combat boots.
Abducted, locked away, all but starved, raped... then, a dramatic escape. How one Yazidi girl escaped the clutches of her Isis captors.
World Vision chief executive Chris Clarke travelled with broadcaster Rachel Smalley to the Middle East to meet some of the millions affected by the Syrian conflict, and was struck by the number of fathers having to make impossible choices for their families.
Atriumphant Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to be on a new collision course with Barack Obama after the US President bluntly restated his belief in a Palestinian state and criticised the Israeli leader's election campaign tactics.
The Syrian conflict is one of several emergencies World Vision is responding to.