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'My hero' Worldwide solidarity for Pelicot's courage
She has been hailed as a feminist hero across France, commended for her courage at rallies across the country and applauded by supporters each time she has entered or left the courtroom in the southern city of Avignon.
Revealed The international 'race science' network funded by US tech boss
Group promoting 'dangerous' scientific racism ideology teamed up with German rightwing extremist, secret recordings show
Residents count cost of a climate risk hotspot
Damage to northern region ignites debate in acountry where just 6% are insured against natural disaster
A new England The next coach is German and it really, really doesn't matter
While objectivity has never had much place in English football, Thomas Tuchel's appointment as the new national team coach represents a significant departure in two obvious ways.
Are Earth's carbon sinks collapsing?
Scientists fear that as it heats up, the planet is losing its natural ability to absorb CO2 through oceans, forests and soil
UK is waging proxy war, says Russian ambassador
Moscow's ambassador to London has said the UK is waging a proxy war against Russia while predicting the \"end of Ukraine\".
Small and lethal Adapted drones carrying explosives 'hunt' civilians
Sasha Ustenko has survived three attacks by the Russian drones that stalk the streets of Kherson carrying fragmentation grenades to drop on anything that moves.
Surreality bites at Musk's $1m election giveaway
Standing before a large US flag, which spanned the breadth of a vast stage, the world's richest man told an assembled crowd S that he loved them.
Storm of no protest I visited a struggling climate-ravaged town. Why is Trump sure to win here?
A few hundred metres from the shoreline - where the Gulf of Mexico meets the small town of Cameron in south-west Louisiana - my feet crunch over four-year-old detritus.
Last stand Why Sinwar's 'warrior death' will gain him martyr status
A discrepancy in the official Israeli account of Yahya Sinwar's final moments has emerged that appears likely to add fuel to the martyr's cult fast developing around the Hamas leader.
Detainees describe IDF using them as 'human shields'
After they burned down his family home in northern Gaza, Israeli troops separated Ramez al-Skafi from his family and detained him.
All-time low Has India joined the countries that assassinate on foreign soil?
A gruelling week for Indian diplomacy began with an explosive press conference last Monday in which Canadian police officials accused Indian diplomats of being involved in \"criminal\" activities on Canadian soil, ranging from homicide and assassinations to extortion, intimidation and coercion against members of Canada's Sikh community.
Murder, arson and drive-by shootings
Compelling evidence suggests that the Hindu nationalist government of Narendra Modiworking in league with gang leaders is targeting enemies far beyond India’s borders
After the fall
He was known for taboobusting, transgressive stories about identity, sexuality and belonging. Then Hanif Kureishi broke his neck. Despite a lifechanging injury, he's still every bit as provocative
Province's blueprint for sharing land with First Nations
An experiment is under way in British Columbia, Canada's westernmost province: the government is rewriting its laws to share power with Indigenous nations over a land base bigger than France and Germany combined.
True superstar Nadal calling time on career brings an end to golden era
There are some moments in sport that stand above all others. For Rafael Nadal, that moment came in the early evening at Wimbledon in 2008.
Play chess against Mo Salah? I would love that
The football-mad world No 1 on the players he'd like to face, why he feels he has never played the perfect gameand his retirement plans
Addis adagio Pianist plays a key role in musical adventure
Girma Yifrashewa will never forget the exhilaration of getting his own piano - a surprise gift.
'Coolest job on earth': new team for penguin post office
As a \"tent master\", whose work involves building big tops at music festivals, George Clarke has never run a post office- and certainly never counted penguins for a living.
A children's hospital with its own healing properties
From patient 'cottages' to walls designed for scribbling on, the Kinderspital in Zurich is a child-friendly miracle
Road to recovery Reeling Florida counts the cost of double hurricane strike
More than just clouds were swirling when a tropical disturbance that would become Hurricane Milton formed in the south-western Gulf of Mexico, beginning its inexorable advance towards a strike on Florida's west coast.
Forecasters targeted as conspiracy theories swirl
Meteorologists tracking the advance of Hurricane Milton were targeted by a deluge of conspiracy theories that they were controlling the weather, abuse and even death threats, amid what they say is an unprecedented surge in misinformation as two major hurricanes hit the US.
Tributes paid to ex-Scottish first minister Alex Salmond
Scotland's first minister John Swinney paid tribute to Alex Salmond's \"colossal contribution\" to Scottish and UK politics, as allies mourned his sudden death last Saturday, at the age of 69.
Labour pledges have left chancellor boxed in for budget
Frustration grows among ministers forced to delay plans until after Rachel Reeves speech
Ballot boxing Stage set for a battle of the political dynasties
Former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte, 79, returned to politics last week when he registered to run as mayor in his family's stronghold, Davao city.
How the Kremlin is trying to hijack an EU referendum
Last spring, customs officers in the tiny nation of Moldova struck gold.
Fear of being forgotten Despair in Gaza as focus shifts away
As Israeli bombs began to fall across Lebanon, the scenes of bloodshed and chaos were grimly familiar to the people of Gaza. Mai al-Afifa, 24, was teaching a workshop about how to identify unexploded ordnance in a school turned shelter in the central Gaza town of Deir al-Balah last Thursday when an Israeli missile hit the next building in the compound.
"They take care of us' Shias put their faith in Hezbollah
When the Sabra family fled bombardments in Israeli the southern Lebanese town of Marjayoun for Beirut's southern suburbs in October last year, a monthly stipend in dollars from Hezbollah meant they did not fear going hungry.
You gotta let people know who you are' On the campaign trail with Kamala Harris
With election day closing in, the Democratic nominee launched an intense drive to tell her story in her quest for the presidency. David Smith joined her on Air Force Two
The erosion of Britain's history has nothing to do with statues
The People's Story Museum in Edinburgh is a part of the city's cultural fabric whose name says it all: a museum and archive, opened in 1989 and located in the 16th-century Canongate Tolbooth, that takes in just about every aspect of working-class life in the Scottish capital from the 18th century to the late 20th century. Its exhibits include recreations of a bookbinder's workshop, a wartime kitchen and a jail cell; the artefacts it looks after span work, leisure, politics, protest and more.