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San Antonio residents reel from latest smuggling tragedy
Tony Bokanian got a call last Monday from a neighbour who told him police were massed near his used auto parts business on the south-western edge of San Antonio in southern Texas.
Ruthless innocence
A heart-rending tragedy set in a dysfunctional rural commune captures the pure sugar-rush of the last days of childhood
Feminism is not over, the work goes on everywhere every day
As it happened, I was in Edinburgh the day Roe v Wade was overturned, and the next day I caught a train back to London and did what I usually do when I get anywhere near King's Cross station.
If it cared, TikTok could inform not inflame Kenya's political debate Odanga Madung
Over the past year, I have submerged myself in propaganda, trying to study the information nerve-endings of Kenyan politics.
A Muppet makeover
The stage version of My Neighbour Totoro has smashed box office records. We meet the Jim Henson puppeteers bringing Studio Ghibli's beloved film to life
MUSIC - Billie Eilish
Eilish seems to be enjoying herself. Bathed in red light, she unselfconsciously throws herself into unfettered, unchoreographed dancing during You Should See Me In a Crown and All the Good Girls Go to Hell.
Bibi, or not Bibi? Netanyahu plots his comeback
Bethan McKernan and Quique Kierszenbaum
Paula Rego
'She is dancing among the greats' Jonathan Jones celebrates an artist and bold storyteller of freakish imagination
What are the best Italian cookbooks to serve up a taste of la dolce vita?
As will Cucina Salentina, by Lucia Lazari, adds Theo Randall, chef-patron of Theo Randall at the InterContinental.
Shot in the arm
Arron Banks's libel loss is a timely boost for journalism
Ships in the night
How supply bottlenecks are transforming the global economy
Hear them roar - A war cry for rebellious women told by the granddaughter of a wise, bawdy and irrepressibly defiant survivor
Her novels are heart-wrenching and raw; all, in some way, about the drudging ordinariness of female pain, indignities from which she extracts tearful belly laughs.
Forget politics, sport is leading the way in tackling racism - Mihir Bose
Against that backdrop, the idea that sport could play a leading role in dragging a reluctant world into a non-racial future may seem a ridiculous fantasy.
Empty class Students left in limbo as strike rolls on
Before February, Khalil Rahman Abdullah would start his day with morning prayers before racing off to classes at the University of Ilorin, where he is a final-year medical student.
'What a ball-buster!'
Juno Temple, the comic spark in Ted Lasso, relishes her new role as the no-nonsense assistant who got The Godfather made...by confronting mob bosses
'A global catastrophe' Women will suffer if court upends Roe
Activists warn that anti-choice groups will thrive if 1973 ruling is overturned especially in developing world
'A struggle to survive': why tourists' return is essential
Every day, for the past 20 years, Joyce Naserian has laid out her handmade curios near an entrance to the Maasai Mara park to sell to passing tourists. Her earnings have helped the 46-yearold feed and educate her four children.
Any ceasefire deal ceding territory is ruled out
Ukraine has said it will not agree to any ceasefire deal that would involve handing over territory to Russia, as Moscow intensified its attack in the eastern Donbas region last weekend.
How a green corridor could save a deer in peril
Only 1,500 huemul remain, but rewilding swathes of land may help the animal that appears on Chile's coat of arms
Curious orange
Curcumin, a chemical extracted from the spice turmeric, could be a natural treatment for illnesses ranging from osteoporosis to cancer. What's puzzling scientists is how to get it into the bloodstream in sufficiently high volumes
Land parcels Amazon HQ plans divide Indigenous groups
Smoke curls into the air, a drum beats, the dance begins, a chant is raised. Ten metres away, cars howl past on a busy road, drivers unaware of the sacred ritual taking place in the centre of a bustling South African city.
Maduro glimpses a lifeline as US eases sanctions
It was little more than a year ago that US officials were publicly rubbishing the prospect of engagement with Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, who they described as a “dictator”.
New PM VOWS change but flags 'difficult' China ties
It's a government that represents change, but also has respect for democracy'
Recycling plan aims to stub out cigarette littering
In a move that could provide some income for homeless people and clean up the streets, the Catalan government is looking at paying €4 ($4.25) to anyone who hands in a pack's-worth of cigarette ends at a recycling point.
Who owns Einstein's face?
Thanks to a savvy California lawyer, Albert Einstein has earned far more posthumously than he ever did in his lifetime. But is that what the great scientist would have wanted?
#MeToo is over if we don't listen to victims like Amber Heard
The backlash to the #MeToo movement was always coming. We know this because a backlash has followed every single step forward feminists have ever made. This backlash was always going to be big, too.
Anarchy on the TV
How do you make a drama about the godfathers of punk when their lead singer is taking you to court and your cast has barely heard of them? Director Danny Boyle reveals all
Life after death
Lou Sedaris was a difficult man who had always baffled his children. So when he died at 98, where would they begin with his funeral?
The banks collapsed in 2008 - our food trade could go the same way
For the past few years, scientists have been frantically sounding an alarm that governments refuse to hear: the global food system is beginning to look like the global financial system in the run-up to 2008.
A Marcos back in power is a warning to the whole world
Earlier this month, Adarna House - a children's book publisher in the Philippines - publicized a special offer on social media: 20% off a #NeverAgain book bundle.