The Guardian Weekly - June 28, 2024Add to Favorites

The Guardian Weekly - June 28, 2024Add to Favorites

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In this issue

June 28, 2024

Partners in crime

Vladimir Putin's defiant friendship pact with Kim Jong-un and North Korea marks a return to cold war politics - and raises big questions not just for Washington and Seoul, but also for Beijing

Partners in crime

4 mins

Friends Reunited What Can Russia And North Korea Do For Each Other?

China accounts for more than 90% of North Korea's trade and has been its most dependable aid donor and diplomatic ally.

Friends Reunited What Can Russia And North Korea Do For Each Other?

3 mins

Dangerous Alliance Putin And Kim Are The Odd Couple With A Dual Mission

They make an odd couple. One is smiley-faced and chubby. The other is thin-lipped and scowls a lot.

Dangerous Alliance Putin And Kim Are The Odd Couple With A Dual Mission

3 mins

'Enough is enough' In red wall, Tory support is crumbling

It sounds odd to describe a wellto-do village with neat privet hedges, freshly mown lawns and three cars on each driveway as a no-go area. Yet for almost three decades, the pretty parish of Silkstone, on the edge of the Pennines, was unwelcoming territory for Labour folk.

'Enough is enough' In red wall, Tory support is crumbling

4 mins

Poll positions From defeat to total wipeoutthree outcomes facing Tories

Polls that use largescale polling data to extrapolate individual seat tallies, or MRPS-an acronym for multilevel regression and post stratification - have become popular in UK politics.

Poll positions From defeat to total wipeoutthree outcomes facing Tories

2 mins

Can left overcome its bitter rivalries to defy the far right?

The 'New Popular Front' of Socialists, Greens and Communists could be the best hope of keeping out Marine Le Pen's National Rally

Can left overcome its bitter rivalries to defy the far right?

3 mins

Tensions Rise On Border As War Looms

Doctors prepare for casualties, people flee their homes and apprehension hangs in the air as threat grows of conflict with Hezbollah

Tensions Rise On Border As War Looms

4 mins

How Easter Island is swamped by deluge of plastic

Ocean currents are dumping tides of multinational rubbish on to the shores of one of the world's most remote habitats

How Easter Island is swamped by deluge of plastic

5 mins

Fears of skills shortage as departures hit new highs

When New Zealand opened its borders after the pandemic, the departures began immediately.

Fears of skills shortage as departures hit new highs

2 mins

Heads up Road deaths prompt a rethink over bike helmets

When 42-year-old Myrthe Boss gets on her bike to go shopping in the Dutch town of Ede, she pops on a helmet.

Heads up Road deaths prompt a rethink over bike helmets

3 mins

How smooth operators reclaimed 'moonshine' palm spirit

Since the pandemic, Lola Pedro has been spending a lot of time at an eco-tourist hamlet in Badagry town, on the outskirts of Lagos, surrounded by coconut and African apple trees next to chalets with showers open to the sky.

How smooth operators reclaimed 'moonshine' palm spirit

2 mins

Evangelicals On Crusade To Return Trump To Presidency

God's army is on the march. And many of its foot soldiers are wearing Make America Great Again regalia, sensing that their unlikely standard-bearer, former US president Donald Trump, is once again close to the promised land.

Evangelicals On Crusade To Return Trump To Presidency

3 mins

You asked me questions that I've never asked myself. That may seem funny, but part of being Keir is just ploughing on' The man likely to be Britain's next PM

WHAT ABOUT A QUICKFIRE ROUND, Isay to Keir Starmer, who is pushed for time on the campaign trail, a few snapshots to help glimpse the man likely to be PM? Starmer is nodding. He's keen to be helpful, keen to be a sport, although a little unsure of this magazine profile business and the need to talk about feelings. We are in the green room, all mirrors and concrete, backstage at Labour's Scottish launch in Inverclyde, and unless I'm mistaken he still has on a layer of foundation. Ready? He folds his arms across his chest. \"Yes, by all means.\"

You asked me questions that I've never asked myself. That may seem funny, but part of being Keir is just ploughing on' The man likely to be Britain's next PM

10+ mins

Sons of the guns

Can children born into Italy's mafia families be saved from lives of crime? One judge is helping them to establish new lives in a bid to break the cycle

Sons of the guns

10+ mins

The Prosecution Of Roy Is A Stark Warning From Modi To His Critics Salil Tripathi

This month, the highest ranking bureaucrat of the state of Delhi, Vinai Kumar Saxena, permitted the Delhi police to prosecute Arundhati Roy (pictured), and Sheikh Showkat Hussain for remarks they made at a public event 14 years ago.

The Prosecution Of Roy Is A Stark Warning From Modi To His Critics Salil Tripathi

3 mins

Out of the shadows

Anthony McCall made his name with 'light sculptures' that people could enter. But a show in Sweden led to 20 years in the wilderness

Out of the shadows

5 mins

The German theatre that puts climate centre stage

As part of a wider project to reduce its carbon footprint, a Potsdam theatre is reusing props, recycling costumes and doubling up tickets as transport passes

The German theatre that puts climate centre stage

3 mins

Bold ideas for a well-dressed salad - and without the need for oil

It's hard to deny the transformative power of a good salad dressing, but you don't need much oil, if any. Honey, for example, will give \"a natural stickiness that helps adhesion to your salad, while the sweetness balances the acidity of vinegar\", says Tony Rodd, head chef at Pomus in Margate

Bold ideas for a well-dressed salad - and without the need for oil

2 mins

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The Guardian Weekly Newspaper Description:

PublisherGuardian News & Media

CategoryNewspaper

LanguageEnglish

FrequencyWeekly

The Guardian Weekly is an international English-language news magazine based in London, UK. It is one of the world's oldest international news publications and has readers in more than 170 countries.

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