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Lula vows to protect the Amazon after era of destruction
The politician tipped to become Brazil's new environment minister has paid tribute to the murdered British journalist Dom Phillips and said Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's incoming government will battle to honour the memory of the rainforest martyrs killed trying to safeguard the Amazon.
Short change? Activists are divided over the value of direct action
Disruptive tactics have gained huge global coverage but are they alienating the people that they most need to reach?
What is loss and damage?
After a catastrophic climate year, expect to hear lots about loss and damage at Cop27, but what does it mean and why is it so contentious?
Too hot to handle?
The effects of global heating could soon reach a tipping point, but there are fears the summit in Egypt will get bogged down in recriminations as the damage accelerates
Nouveau Rishi
The former chancellor looked finished when he lost to Liz Truss, but now Rishi Sunak is Britain's third prime minister in two months. Can a man twice as rich as the king lead the country through a cost of living crisis?
Diversity Multicultural Milestone As UK Has Its First PM Of Colour
Sunak also becomes the first Hindu to lead the countryina symbolic moment for ethnic minority representation
Putin's Hidden Hybrid War Is Designed To Break Europe's Heart
Nato planners have always worried about the Storskog border crossing in Finnmark, where Arctic Norway comes face to face with Russia. In Soviet times, the 195-km frontier was a potential flashpoint. The Red Banner Northern Fleet's nuclear-armed submarines are still based at nearby Murmansk, on the freezing Barents Sea.
Ring Of Power Ruthless Xi Settles In For Another Five Years
Xi Jinping named acolytes in key political positions last Sunday as he was confirmed as China's leader for a precedent-breaking third term after a weeklong political meeting that eliminated rivals and strengthened his power.
'Social Media Firms Are Undermining Democracy'
YouTube and Facebook are allowing disinformation to be spread about Brazil's election campaign in an already polarised and violent election, according to a report by human rights organisation Global Witness.
Open House? Republicans plan to sink key Biden legislation
A standoff over the debt ceiling. Aid to Ukraine on the chopping block. And impeachment proceedings against homeland security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas - or perhaps even president Joe Biden himself.
Despite turmoil, star ballerina strikes note of optimism
Cuba's favourite ballerina, Viengsay Valdés, will run on to the stage of the island's National Theatre on 2 November, fairly certain that it won't collapse beneath her.
Terrified villagers flee as the battle for Kherson rages on
As she was driven by her son out of Dudchany, a small village in the north-east of the Kherson region a few days ago, Rosaliya Kovalchuk, 72, glimpsed something that will haunt her forever.
Foreign intervention has hollowed out the state and led to disaster
What comes first in Haiti: disaster or foreign intervention? The conventional, eg first world, wisdom has it that disaster comes first.
Can period tracking help athletes win?
For many sportswomen, fluctuating hormones can be the difference between winning a medal and going home empty-handed, but researchers and companies hope to turn monthly woes into record-breaking heights
Relief and unease as two years of isolation finally end
After more than two years of near-total isolation, Japan has reopened its borders to overseas visitors - but the road back to the pre-Covid tourism boom could be long and bumpy.
Xi's vision of greater isolation will make his country poorer
In August, there was an unexpected stir in China about a scholarly article. The piece, published in a respected but specialist journal, argued that during the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) and Qing dynasty (1644-1911), China had been a country relatively closed off to the outside world. Most recent I scholarship has assumed that this was a bad thing and that greater openness in the modern era had led to China's rise in global standing and growth. But the article took a contrarian position, suggesting that there were economic and social advantages to the doors being closed in large part. The argument was then sent out on the social media feed of a thinktank closely linked to the Chinese Communist party. There was plenty of social media comment, mostly wondering whether the CCP was hinting that today, too, China should think about whether openness was quite such a good idea.
Confessions of a rock star
Bono on the birth of U2, that iTunes album, and the Live Aid show: 'There's only one thing I can see when I watch it: the mullet'
'I struggle with the so-called free world compared with life in prison’
When Chelsea Manning leaked hundreds of thousands of classified documents, everyone thought they knew why. They were wrong
The truth behind the Cop27 masquerade
Sisi's Egypt is making a big show ahead of the summit. Meanwhile it is torturing activists and banning research. The global community should not play along
A busted flush Truss discredited high-octane, freemarket economics, perhaps for ever
Boris Johnson's tenure had been short, but it had been consequential. At first glance, a similar verdict on Liz Truss's 50 days in office seems improbable.
As Trump goes front and centre, Biden takes a back seat
Raucous music was played, bellicose speeches were given and big lies were told. Donald Trump held his 20th and 21st campaign rallies of the year in Nevada and Arizona last weekend, urging voters to support Republican candidates in the midterm elections.
Beam me down
Space solar power is a potentially limitless energy source for Earth, but was deemed too expensive to set up. Is that about to change?
Cuts and strikes No respite for Truss as a perfect storm of crises builds
Liz Truss is hoping her conference speech on growth, growth, growth” last week will have set a new agenda for her party, drawing a line under the disastrous week of her U-turn over the 45p tax rate and 10 days of market turmoil after the mini-budget. However, there are multiple potential crises on the horizon. Here are some of the most difficult and intractable problems.
‘Climate justice’ PM demands rich nations pay up
Shehbaz Sharif, the prime minister, has said Pakistan should not be forced to go out with a begging bowl” to rich polluting nations after the floods that have devastated the country and said he would be seeking climate justice” from the international community.
Putin’s revenge Missile strikes give temporary cheer to Russia hardliners
The victims were ordinary Ukrainians: those who died at the busy intersection of Volodymyrska and Shevchenko streets in Kyiv, at a downtown playground, or the hundreds of thousands now in homes without light, water and heat in cities across the country due to a barrage of Russian cruise missiles.
Defiance as Russian strikes bring war back to the capital
Shevchenko Parkin central Kyiv is a tranquil public garden, where the trees are turning golden against the city’s blue, autumnal skies. Presiding over the park is a statue of Taras Shevchenko, Ukraine’s national poet, persecuted by the Russians in the 19th century for writing in Ukrainian.
‘Get lost' Schoolgirls vow to take their country back from the mullahs
Last Monday night, 16-year-old Elnaz sat at home in the Iranian city of Karaj and wept with shock and rage as she scrolled through social media posts about the death of NikaShakarami.
'Women, life and freedom'
The scale of the uprising over the death of Mahsa Amini is unprecedented, but will it lead to the end of the Iranian regime?
PAYBACK TIME
Ransomware hackers are on the rise, encrypting our computer data and demanding huge sums for its release. But a network of self-taught tech geniuses is leading the digital resistance.
We are waking up to the truth: Brexit left us poorer and adrift
Last week, having whiled away two joyous days at the Tories' conference in Birmingham, I spent a long afternoon an hour's drive away, in the cathedral city of Worcester.