CATEGORIES
Kategorien
Opening a window on a new golden age for Naples
The man whose home is adorned with a mural of Diego Maradona says Napoli's Serie A title triumph symbolises the city's resurgence
Smoke signal
Amsterdam's red light area bans cannabis
Deadly toll Civilians pay price of fighting
Research by doctors' group and relatives' accounts shed light on suffering and casualties over several weeks of conflict
The children 'adopted' by Russians for financial gain
The stories told to Svitlana Popova's 15-year-old daughter, Alina, while she lived under Russian occupation in Ukraine's southern Kherson province, were designed to terrify her
Staying on
West caught between worry and hope after Erdoğan win
Lira plunges as Erdoğan takes win as mandate for divisive rule
The Turkish lira hit a new low on Monday after the election win of the president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in a renewed sign of the economic troubles his country is expected to face in the third decade of his rule
A terrible human cost
One EU policy Britain is happy to emulate: forcing back refugees
'It felt like my way out'
Why Indian students head to UK universities
The numbers game
Net migration to Britain hit a record high in 2022, despite years of failed Tory pledges to reduce it. What exactly is driving the increase - and why do successive governments persist with simplistic and misleading ideas that migration can be purged from an interconnected world?
'Wising Up' Brexit Blame Game Comes Back To Bite The Tories
Carmakers’ criticisms and migration figures add to pressure on Rishi Sunak, who is not trusted by leavers
A Sign Of Failure The Kremlin Is Putting Up Stiffer Economic Resistance Than The G7 Anticipated
THE TIGHTENING OF SANCTIONS AGAINST RUSSIA announced by the G7 summit in Hiroshima is evidence that the west remains solidly behind Ukraine in its battle against aggression. It is also a sign of failure
E-Cigarettes - Smoke Alarm
The rise of disposable e-cigarettes has focused regulators worldwide on what they fear isan explosion of vaping among young people
How Xi's Crackdown On Business Has Maoist Roots
To many western investors, China under president Xi Jinping is a tough nut to crack
Intensive Farming 'Is Main Cause Of Bird Decline'
The use of pesticides and fertilisers in intensive agriculture is the biggest cause of the dwindling number of birds in Europe, according to scientists
On Tap How Israel Uses Water To Control West Bank
In occupied villages, farms owned by Israelis are flourishing, while Palestinians often do not have enough water to drink
OUT OF SIGHT
The deep oceans store huge amounts of energy, but they are not bottomless
THE GLOBAL WARNING
As seas around New Zealand heat at an unparalleled rate, scientists are starting to understand what it might mean for marine ecosystems around the world
What my privileged start in life taught me about the British class system
It wasn't just luck that propelled the Guardian columnist into a media career. She reflects on the subtle workings of class (and a meeting with a naked future PM)
Back to life The Toronto river that's roaring again after 50 years
After decades of illness, includinga cholera scare and bouts of malaria, Toronto's Don River succumbed to mounting neglect and was pronounced dead in 1969
The battle to expand 'broken' supreme court
Wearing dark suit and sunglasses, Brian Fallon pointed at the gleaming US Capitol building to his left, then to the marble edifice of the supreme court to his right
Call to bring guardianship laws into 21st century
The day before Aly Hegazy graduated from high school in June 2020, his father died from cancer after a long illness. The grief of losing him was compounded by the realisation that, without his father's signature,Hegazy would be unable to go to university
Kashmir's cricket bat industry facing final innings
For more than 100 years they have been making cricket bats from Kashmir's willow trees
Pedal power Giant-killing MP gears up to capitalise on poll win
At the small Bangkok shophouse that Rukchanok Srinork uses as an office, the A floor is cluttered with stacks of campaign signs and leaflets. There are bottles of Fanta and fruit donated by her supporters (orange is her party's colour). And, by the entrance stand her team's well-known bicycles
After Noah The London zoo team on a mission to save species
The hatching of a Socorro dove-extinct in the wild-is part of a campaign to restore captive animal populations
Shipments of arms double - telling only part of story
British arms exports doubled during 2022 to a record £8.5bn ($10.6bn), according to the only publicly available official figures, reflecting escalating geopolitical uncertainties and fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine
Mud, sweat and tears - The deluge, round two
Less than a month after EmiliaRomagna was struck by deadly storms, the rains returned and claimed more lives
Thousands flee homes after flooding devastation
Jamal Ali Abdi has seen flooding in Beledweyne before but never on the scale witnessed this month when the Shabelle River burst its banks, causing devastation to the central Somali town and displacing almost the entire population
Taiwan fears fuelling US efforts to stifle chip industry
Signs of the burgeoning conflict between the US and China can be spotted in many different places, from balloons in the sky to videos on TikTok
The impasse between the west and the rest
In Hiroshima, two issues dominated the minds of western leaders: how to end the war in Ukraine and impose peace on Russia; and how to convince the global south that a subsequent new world order can be shaped in their interests
Eurovision is a political battlefield, with neon
Volodymyr Zelenskiy wasn't allowed to address the crowd in Liverpool, but the contest was still a four-hour anti-war protest