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Left in limbo Rohingya live in fear, stripped of their rights
In the 31 years since Anuara Begum’s family moved into their bamboo shelter in the Nayapara refugee camp, the only improvement they have been able to make was replacing its tarpaulin roof with tin sheeting – less flimsy but hammer loud when the rains come.
Detente with Syria leaves refugees in fear of forced returns
Syrians across the opposition and in the Kurdish north of the country have reacted with alarm to Turkish moves to normalise relations with Damascus amid claims the overtures will lead to mass demographic swaps and the forced return of millions of refugees.
What scandal? Marin photos spark debate about who a leader can be
Sanna Marin has been the focus of unusual by Finnish standards - international attention ever since she became the world's youngest prime minister at the age of 34 in December 2019.
‘Dead animals are floating in the water. People are ill’
In the midst of swamps of flood water, hundreds of people who fled one of the worst-hit districts of Pakistan pitched tents on the only high ground they could find – on the banks of the Saifullah Magsi canal.
History lessons Europe needs to look back in order to rescue consumers
Every energy shock has its winners and losers. Countries that export more oil and gas than they import do well while those that import more than they export suffer.
‘A bright spot’ Power goes on at North Sea windfarm
Steve Wilson is a little wind-swept after stepping off a rock-ing boat in choppy North Sea waters. Wilson is programme director of Seagreen, Scotland’s largest offshore wind farm, which last week began producing power.
Reality bites After all the talk of tax cuts , a cold truth awaits Liz Truss
For months, everyone in government had known that last Friday was energy cap day, and at 7am the bad news duly dropped.
'I can't sleep' Owners face closure as bills soar
Weeping Cross fish bar, Stafford "I just don't know how I can stay in business," said John Evans of the Weeping Cross fish bar in Stafford
Energy bills are rising by 80% for millions of British homes and businesses, and even worse is predicted for next year. With the government in inertia, is the country facing a social and economic catastrophe? - The cold front
I'm scared when anyone says winter' For many, the energy bill rise is just one in a stack of growing problems
To the moon and back
Nasa's original photos of the Apollo missions, kept locked in a freezer in Houston, are some of Now, they have been restored the most vital artefacts of human endeavour. and remastered for a new century. Astronaut Tim Peake looks on in wonder at a space odyssey
'They help us imagine making the incredible journey ourselves'
THE ORIGINAL NASA PHOTOGRAPHIC FILM from the Apollo missions is some of the most important in existence.
Free speech reminds us the world is not a stage
Jerry Sadowitz has long pushed the boundaries of comedy. The cancellation of his Edinburgh fringe show reflects the difficulty of determining those edges
Don't forget us, Petro's rural base tells new president
The wooden bars of the marimba bounce under the heads of enthusiastic mallets. Guasás - bamboo cylinders filled with seeds - shake in unison. Dressed in a white cotton dress and straw sombrero, Otoniel Orobio sings.
Cheney pain Where do anti-Trump Republicans go now?
She knew the price of defying Donald Trump but did it anyway. Liz Cheney, crushed in a primary election in Wyoming, was anointed by supporters and commentators as leader of the Republican resistance to the former US president.
'Like a jewel' Good karma comes to Hare Krishna Island at last
But Hare Krishna Island, as it came to be known, struggled. It was isolated, costly to maintain and froze in winter.
Plan to save giant kauri has roots in Māori wisdom
Look out at the forest of Waita kere and you will see the skeleton of Aunt Agatha above the treeline.
The road to rouille
Krishna Léger’s restaurant is headed for Michelin stardom - not surprising for a graduate of Paris’s most prestigious cookery school, until you learn that he commuted to class from his prison cell
A world in motion
Climate breakdown will drive people from their homes in unprecedented numbers. But migration can be a solution
Forest fight Pereira's legacy kept alive in the Amazon
Rainforest defenders defy threats to fulfil the murdered activist's planned mission of Indigenous exchange
Floundering economy presents a big problem for Beijing
In his tour of the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen last week, Li Keqiang, the premier, tried to send some positive energy at a time when many citizens have been complaining of hardship.
Trussed up? Door to No 10 opens wide as Sunak hopes for a miracle
Rishi Sunak’s supporters are understandably glum, but one thing alone means they have not totally given up hope of defeating Liz Truss in the race to replace Boris Johnson as Conservative party leader and prime minister.
Calm for now in eurozone’s inflation hotspot
Part of the explanation for the lack of a political backlash may be that Estonian salaries have been on a sharp upward trajectory for several years and the economy recovered quickly from the pandemic.
Red lights Is recession about to sweep the continent?
Six months after Vladimir Putin ordered Russian troops into Ukraine, the extent of the damage to the European economy is becoming clear.
Russia's endgame After all this blood and terror, just what does Putin want from Ukraine?
There is still widespread disagreement in the west on Vladimir Putin’s motives, six months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Dugina murder FSB's blaming of Ukraine raises more questions than answers
The speed of the FSB's work on this case was as suspicious as its lack of progress elsewhere
SIX MONTHS OF HELL
After half a year of fighting, thousands are dead and millions displaced. Peace talks have stalled. Where do we go from here?
Serena’s achievements and attitude are a beacon to all Black girls Etan Thomas
Serena Williams announced her impending retirement from professional tennis in Vogue magazine last week.
‘Change is coming’ Preparing for climate apocalypse
At his remote woodland home in Saxony, an Englishman is trying to stay positive about a collapse of the food supply
Beware the invisible blob in this grotesque Dickensian reality show Marina Hyde
Nothing could possibly be longer than this Conservative leadership race – not even the final minute of your washing machine cycle.
Voyages out
Travel can narrow, as well as broaden, the mind, shown in the fates of two chroniclers of Portugal’s age of discovery