The decade assuming Human Rights Concerns begin to impact foreign policy. In 1979, citing the i mean in uganda, the Washington Post differentiated between rogue regimes and near dictatorships. How does the International Community deal with rogue regimes, those that under the color of National Sovereignty commit unspeakable crimes against their own citizens, it asks. Among diplomats, terrorism became an increasing concern. In 1979, forced by congress, the state department began identifying and labeling state sponsors of terrorism. The Islamic Revolution in iran underscored the notion that in the middle east at least, all bets were off. The next years were rocky. President reagan, for example, called libyan leader moammar get off the the madman of the middle east and described him as part of a new International Version of murder incorporated. And years before george w. Bush would describe an axis of evil a confederation of terrorist states becaus but it was the cln administration that ma
Julie Lucas
Crime-writer Rachel Lynch
- Credit: Millie Lucas
One cold morning, the butchered remains of a woman are discovered. DI Kelly Porter knows this is the work of someone who has killed before – and will kill again.
Before you think there is a serial killer on the loose in Hertfordshire, rest assured, it’s an extract from Baldock crime author Rachel Lynch’s new novel. Her eighth in the detective inspector Kelly Porter series, the 48-year-old’s gripping stories have sold almost half a million copies.
As a child Rachel ‘always had something to say’, writing stories and poetry and losing herself in books. She continued her love of literature while studying history at the University of Lancaster. But it is the wild, rugged scenery of the Lake District that inspires her atmospheric crime novels.