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Covid leaves labourers with less money and fewer rights
When Ram Yadav fled India's strict countrywide lockdown imposed in March 2020, he was one of the lucky ones, managing to hitch rides from Delhi on trucks going in the direction of his village near Kanpur, 400km away.
Horse power
The streets echo again to the sound of hooves
Search for evidence of lost Amazon civilisation falls flat
Deforestation backed by government damages the environment and obliterates archaeological remains
Gold diggers
The fight to protect forests from mining
Migration hits record high with jump in student levels
Net migration to the UK has reached a record level of 504,000 after the arrival of Ukrainians and Hongkongers under government schemes and a jump in the number of international students.
'My heart is already dead' Hope meets despair in Calais camps
A year after 27 people died trying to cross the Channel, people are still drawn by the dream of a better life in Britain
Khamenei's niece calls on nations to shun regime
A niece of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has called on foreign governments to cut all links with Tehran's \"murderous and child-killing\" regime in a video posted online two days after she was arrested.
On manoeuvres Wounded Khan takes on the army
The highly popular former prime minister says the military was behind an attempt on his life but could he still make a pact with the generals?
Power shift Yerevan snub shows Putin losing grip on regional allies
Armenia has asked the French president, Emmanuel Macron, to chair peace talks with Azerbaijan in a fresh challenge to Vladimir Putin's increasingly loose grip on Russia's regional allies in the wake of the war in Ukraine.
'We can get through it'
Kyiv citizens brace for a harsh winter
A dangerous moment
Dissent is a blow to Xi's global prestige which he is unlikely to tolerate for long
Locked and loaded
Rare protests have highlighted intense public frustration over Beijing's zero-Covid policy, with blank pieces of white paper becoming symbols of dissent. But wherever it leads, few envisage a serious challenge to Xi Jinping's authority.
Is petrol on a Picasso next? Threatening art won't fix climate crisis
Another day, another gallery: the attacks on art in the name of climate action have become a headline-hogging obsession with a hideous escalating logic.
I hate the idea of this World Cup in Qatar-but I'm still watching
I must have been 10 when I went to a football match with my parents and realised that the game resonated far beyond the field of play.
Out! And so am I, by £40,000
The UK gambling industry is worth billions. But just 5% of customers are responsible for 70% of that revenue. Those are people like Hannah Jane Parkinson, desperate and deluded, watching their lives fallapart. Here she tells how she lost tens of thousands to date) and investigates an industry beset by corruption and organised crime
THE LAST MESSAGE FROM SNAKE ISLAND
When Putin's forces approached Sea outpost, demanding its Ukrainian defenders surrender or die, their expletive-laden response became a symbol of resistance. How did the men on the island live to tell the tale?
Will Trump evade justice thanks to his 2024 White House run?
The law is clear. The politics less so. If Donald Trump's third run for the White House is propelled by large doses of narcissism and revenge, the former US president must also be hoping that a high-profile political campaign may help keep his myriad legal problems at bay before they bury him.
O come, all ye frugal Christmas markets scaled back
European Christmas markets and illuminations are scaling back due to the energy crisis and climate breakdown - ditching ice rinks for rollerskating and switching on lights for less time.
Bear dens and ancient trees face onslaught
The future of wildlife in the eastern Carpathians is under threat from the destruction of habitat by rampant logging
Penthouses and loans Inside the black hole of FTX
After the crypto exchange collapsed, the expert who handled the Enron debacle came inand was shocked by what he found
Rescuers race to save lives as hundreds die in quake
Indonesian rescue workers were racing to reach people still trapped in rubble on Tuesday, a day after an earthquake struck the main island of Java, as the death toll rose to 252.
Did Hunt rescue the Tories or is the game up?
The latest chancellor's budget comes in the shadow ofthe Liz Truss debacle, hard times ahead and low party morale
Hong Kong diaspora forges new life and links in Colchester
In a bustling park cafe in Colchester on a sunny November day, a group of chatty women are busy serving up Hong Kong delicacies - milk tea, pineapple buns, noodles - to a steady stream of local customers.
G20 meeting Reunion for Xi and Biden as Russia left out in the cold
The G20 meeting in Bali signalled Xi Jinping's emergence from three years of self-imposed pandemic isolation, with the French president, Emmanuel Macron, and Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, among those keen to secure a chat and photo opportunity with the Chinese leader.
Pressure grows to halt trade in Russian diamonds
Through just 1 sq km in Belgium's second city pass 86% of the world's rough diamonds.
On the brink The 1.5C climate goal died at Cop27, but we can't let hope go the same way
When the history of the climate crisis is written, in whatever world awaits us, Cop27 will be seen as the moment when the dream of keeping global heating below 1.5C died.
Missing the boat?
Aclimate finance deal for developing countries was welcome, but hopes of keeping to the 1.5C global temperature increase now seem remote
Hair we go again
The bands that once ruled rock may be making a return. But is there more to glam than loud riffs, spandex and debauchery?
Covid has left Pyongyang even more scarily isolated than ever
Until January 2020, the joint security U area of the Korean Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) was the one place on the peninsula where forces from North and South Korea stood face to face - a spot where Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump even met and shook hands.
Up in arms The new generation trying to ban the bomb
As nuclear dangers gather momentum three decades after the cold war, a disarmament movement is rising to meet them, with a new generation of activists.