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A master's profound coda
A virtual concert by Ryuichi Sakamoto has captivated audiences. Its creator, Todd Eckert, talks about working with the Japanese composer, who died in March
Is it right or wrong to post about conflict on social media? Hannah Jane Parkinson
The welcome irony is that Martin Niemöller's words about not speaking out are everywhere. If you were not already familiar with First They Came, his urging of resistance in the face of tyranny and persecution, from history class or Holocaust documentaries, you may have seen it on Instagram during the past weeks.
Germany's admirable bond with Israel is becoming a straitjacket
With Gaza bombarded, with thousands dead and its infrastructure largely in ruins, is it ever acceptable for a German to criticise Israel? Almost the entire German political establishment and most of those in public life apparently think not.
The sparring game
Louis Theroux's charm and cheek made him one of the best interviewers in the business. Will he take it on the chin when Zoe Williams turns the tables?
Magnificent megastructures
Utilitarian as they may be, some civic projects are so monumental they approach the sublime. And one of the most elegant is a power station hidden away inside a mountain in the glorious landscape of north Wales
Indigenous ancestry row tarnishes singer's legacy
Allegations in a documentary that the popular American folk singer Buffy Sainte-Marie misrepresented her Indigenous roots have rattled First Nations communities in Canada, where she claims to have been born, highlighting the complex legacy of an artist whose decades-long career is defi ned by advocating for Indigenous rights.
One year out, most US voters don't want Trump or Biden
Americans are one year away from a presidential election that's shaping up to be a historically unpopular rematch between the oldest ever sitting president, Joe Biden, a Democrat, and his Republican predecessor, the twice-impeached, serially indicted Donald Trump.
Ground dispute How a rusting wreck became a geopolitical flashpoint
For more than two decades, a second world war-era ship, BRP Sierra Madre, has stood deliberately grounded in the remote, shallow waters of the fiercely contested South China Sea, carrying the Philippine flag and guarding against Chinese expansion.
Border zone reimagined as a path towards peace
A new tourist trail offers hikers a radical view across the 38th parallel, 75 years after war cut Korea in two
The hope and perils of an AI revolution
Africa lags behind as a global Al power, but is beginning to realise the technology's potential-good and bad
'All we can do now is run away' Is time up for the sinking islands of San Bernardo?
Islanders on this archipelago live only a few metres above sea level, while authorities fail to take action as climate change brings oblivion closer each year
Summit highs Existential threats and a new forum for diplomacy
Rishi Sunak hailed last week's artificial intelligence summit at Bletchley Park, the UK base for second world war codebreakers, as a diplomatic win after it produced an international declaration to address risks with the technology. Here are five things that we have learned from the summit.
Chaos theory Johnson will struggle to reverse account of his Covid reign
Inquiry evidence stacks up against former PM, in repeated references to him being out of control and indecisive
Mone admits involvement with 'VIP lane' PPE firm
The Conservative peer Michelle Mone has acknowledged for the first time that she was involved with a company that was awarded government PPE contracts worth £200m ($250m) during the Covid pandemic.
Kyiv rebukes general over claim war is at a stalemate
Volodymyr Zelenskiy has denied a suggestion from the Ukrainian military's commander-in-chief that the war with Russia has reached a stalemate, and a senior spokesperson for his administration has rebuked the general in question and accused him of making \"the aggressor's job easier\".
Freedom, but no peace Life on the Kherson frontline
On the Saturday, the Russians hit a school and a grain store. On the Sunday, the ceaseless bombardment of Kherson from across the river struck a medical facility. An artillery round landed near a middle-aged man. The doctors did their best but the shrapnel had pierced his brain.
'Get them out' Hostages' families call for concessions to secure release
Relatives of Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza have called on Benjamin Netanyahu to make significant concessions to secure the freedom of their loved ones.
The last hope
A long-mooted two-state solution between Israel and Palestine could offer a path to peace after the bloodiest fighting in decades. But how might it look – and would the will still exist to achieve it?
Nature's way - A gripping, semi-historical imagining of the memories and experiences of a French botanist in colonial Africa
Readers of David Diop's previous novel, which won the International Booker prize, probably won't have forgotten the experience. At Night All Blood Is Black is narrated by a young Senegalese soldier recruited to fight for France in the first world war and brutalised in the trenches.
Breezy does it
From Barcelona to Bohemia, artists are using arange of innovative techniques to capture and harness the power of mighty winds
Even the French are giving up on arthouse
Independent cinema risks being sacrificed on the altar ofmarket forces. From Jules et Jim to Blue Is the Warmest Colour, that would be aterrible loss
This malaria vaccine will transform our battle with the mosquito
Want to guess the most dangerous animal in the world? When my team asked children in Edinburgh during a public outreach event with schools, they said sharks, alligators, spiders and lions.
A poverty so vicious that only a grim new vocabulary describes it
It starts slowly. A food bank crops up inside your local mosque. You notice more sleeping bags on the walk to work. Over time, the signs seem to grow.
Fast and furious
Caster Semenya is the Olympic gold-winner whose elevated testosterone levels led people to question her right to compete. With a few choice words for World Athletics, the middle-distance runner talks about labels, leaked medical records and how lowering her hormones affected her body
Root and branch - The battle to save a city's trees
What started outasasmall protest escalatedintoa decade-long battle between Sheffield counciland hundreds of ordinary people, who decided totake radical action to save their neighbourhood trees
'Stick with the fight,' urge young gun control activists
Following 2023's deadliest mass shooting in the US that occurred in Lewiston, Maine, last week, young gun control activists are once again speaking up against the failures of lawmakers amid an all too familiar tragedy.
The small town that's teaching Japan about immigration
An unassuming industrial town in Japan, far from the busy tourist hubs of Tokyo and Kyoto, is in the middle of an unprecedented social transformation. Õizumi, rather than the country's capital, is at the forefront of Japan's foreigner-friendly future.
Newcomers threaten Patagonia's paradise
Anational park has drawn hundreds of people tosettlein the remote area, witha potential threat to wildlife and a way of life
How Jokowi's son could go from food seller to vice-president
Indonesia's next vice-president could be a familiar face. Gibran Rakabuming Raka, 36, is the son of the current president Joko Widodo and his swift rise to the top of the country's political echelons is proving controversial, raising questions about dynasty-building and the strength of the country's democracy.
Las Vegas is model for gambling sector purge
Ukrainian officials seeking to oust Russian actors from the country's gambling industry are going to emulate the methods of the US authorities in the 1980s when they rooted out the Italian mob from the casinos of Las Vegas.