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Even the French are giving up on arthouse
Independent cinema risks being sacrificed on the altar ofmarket forces. From Jules et Jim to Blue Is the Warmest Colour, that would be aterrible loss
This malaria vaccine will transform our battle with the mosquito
Want to guess the most dangerous animal in the world? When my team asked children in Edinburgh during a public outreach event with schools, they said sharks, alligators, spiders and lions.
A poverty so vicious that only a grim new vocabulary describes it
It starts slowly. A food bank crops up inside your local mosque. You notice more sleeping bags on the walk to work. Over time, the signs seem to grow.
Fast and furious
Caster Semenya is the Olympic gold-winner whose elevated testosterone levels led people to question her right to compete. With a few choice words for World Athletics, the middle-distance runner talks about labels, leaked medical records and how lowering her hormones affected her body
Root and branch - The battle to save a city's trees
What started outasasmall protest escalatedintoa decade-long battle between Sheffield counciland hundreds of ordinary people, who decided totake radical action to save their neighbourhood trees
'Stick with the fight,' urge young gun control activists
Following 2023's deadliest mass shooting in the US that occurred in Lewiston, Maine, last week, young gun control activists are once again speaking up against the failures of lawmakers amid an all too familiar tragedy.
The small town that's teaching Japan about immigration
An unassuming industrial town in Japan, far from the busy tourist hubs of Tokyo and Kyoto, is in the middle of an unprecedented social transformation. Õizumi, rather than the country's capital, is at the forefront of Japan's foreigner-friendly future.
Newcomers threaten Patagonia's paradise
Anational park has drawn hundreds of people tosettlein the remote area, witha potential threat to wildlife and a way of life
How Jokowi's son could go from food seller to vice-president
Indonesia's next vice-president could be a familiar face. Gibran Rakabuming Raka, 36, is the son of the current president Joko Widodo and his swift rise to the top of the country's political echelons is proving controversial, raising questions about dynasty-building and the strength of the country's democracy.
Las Vegas is model for gambling sector purge
Ukrainian officials seeking to oust Russian actors from the country's gambling industry are going to emulate the methods of the US authorities in the 1980s when they rooted out the Italian mob from the casinos of Las Vegas.
'I feel guilt' Deserters urge Russian soldiers to join them
Men tell of escape to Armenia and feelings ofremorse as growing numbers of troops flee criminal war’ in Ukraine
Party protest Labour faces Muslim backlash at Gaza stance
'I was a Labour party member for 31 years. The Palestine crisis was the end of the tether for me. I cannot tolerate Keir's policies any more,\" said Waheed Akbar, the former mayor of Luton.
Human shields How has Hamas been accused of using them?
In audio released by the Israel Defence Forces, a member of the Military Intelligence Directorate can be heard calling a Palestinian man in Gaza urging him and his family to evacuate south. But the man says it is hard to comply because Hamas is blocking roads, and \"sending people back home\". He adds that Hamas is shooting at Palestinians trying to leave the area.
A matter of time Israeli troops are now on the ground in Gaza - but for how long?
The heavy fog that cloaked Gaza's agony on the morning after Israeli troops arrived was burned away by the sun - only to be replaced by the smoke of hundreds of bombs, and between the blasts, there was a new sound: machine gun fire. The taking of Gaza territory had begun.
Ghosts of Gaza Phones flooded with news of dead
Last Sunday morning, phones belonging to the 2.3 million people trapped in the besieged Gaza Strip slowly came to life again, inundated with updates, messages and missed calls after the lifting of a 36-hour neartotal communications blackout imposed by Israel.
Rewards v risks It's not luddism to rein in Al's undreamed-of power and potential
Will it destroy us, or will it save us? An age-old debate between tech optimists and tech pessimists that has played out over centuries as the steady march of human progress delivers new technologies, from the wheel to the printing press to the smartphone. Today it is a conversation being conducted with increasing urgency about artificial intelligence.
Bots and robbers What is AI, and will it make us all redundant?
What is artificial intelligence?
Hope or horror?
The great AI debate dividing its pioneers
Stories from the edge
Film-maker Gessica Généus kept her cameras rolling through Haiti's deadly upheavals of 2019 and is working on her next film as the violence continues
Secrets of a YouTube chess king
Levy Rozman has racked up more than a billion views on his Gotham Chess channel, introducing the game he loves to new audiences
'They call me Lucky Jim'
Photographer James Barnor documented Ghana's move to independence, but was only recognised in his 80s. Now 94, he has been reflecting on a body of work spanning eight decades
Inside the Taliban's luxury hotel
Once the site of legendary parties, Intercontinental the in Kabul is still a potent symbol of who rules Afghanistan - and what its future might hold
Machado, the outsider hoping for an electoral tilt at Maduro
The last time Venezuelans went to the polls, in 2018, the political opposition to Nicolás Maduro, the president, deemed the election so farcical it walked away from the contest. Since then, a fractured opposition has largely resigned itself to watching helplessly as Hugo Chávez's successor tightened his grip on power and the country fell ever deeper into chaos.
Bleak House - Deadlock lays bare Republican dysfunction
Death threats. Screaming matches behind closed doors. A futile cycle of votes that put internecine warfare on full public display. The Republican party last week sank into new depths of disarray and dysfunction - with no remedy in sight.
Youngest MP looks to ancestors to build new future
On her first day in New Zealand's parliament, Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke, the country's youngest politician, made a beeline to a wall of photographs to seek an image of her ancestor - the first Māori minister to the crown.
Super-rich seek an exit plan as Xi cracks down on elites
Billionaires are notoriously hard to track. It's no surprise - the easier they and their assets are to find, the easier they are to tax. But by all accounts, the number of uber-wealthy people in China is in decline. Of the world's estimated 2,640 billionaires, at least 562 are thought to be in China, according to Forbes, down from 607 last year.
'There is no hope here' - Young Africans explain why they would risk death to leave home
Five African reporters talk to people from their home countries about why they are willing to chance everything to start a new life abroad
Can market gardens help rewilding take root?
I find rewilding an inspiring idea. But, alongside its critics, I'm also troubled by some implications - particularly the idea that farmland will have to be cultivated even more intensively to produce food because other fields are turned over to nature. Is it realistic?
Sir Bobby Charlton 1937-2023
Prolific midfielder and part of English football folklore with Manchester United and the 1966 World Cup-winning team
Double despair - Byelection routs portend calamity for Sunak's Tories
Brutal as they were, last week's twin UK byelection losses in Tamworth and Mid Bedfordshire did not necessarily change the plight faced by the Conservatives. But they shone so bright a beam on the situation that even the most self-deluding Tory MP can no longer pretend.