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Zeroing In Could Covid Burst The Olympic Bubble?
Like many middle class Chinese, the 26-year-old banker from Beijing spent the first two weeks of January celebrating the new year.
Up, up and away
When inventor David Mayman took to the skies with a jetpack, it seemed he had fulfilled an age-old longing for flight. Yet no one batted an eyelid
Word of Honor
After her acclaimed debut in The Souvenir, the actor returns in its sequel, starring alongside her mother, Tilda, and playing a version of her godmother. All good material for her psychology degree, she says
‘I thought I was going to be a millionaire'
Fears rise that the wild promotion of unregulated crypto assets is creating a new generation of addicts
The shape of things to come
Senegal cast-off western influences after gaining independence in 1960, but though its new African style is neglected, Dakar’s buildings still dazzle
THE KILLING OF A GOD
The naval explorer Captain James Cook was worshipped as a deity in the 18th century. Now his statues are being defaced in the lands he visited as his myth is re-examined.
Opinion
Science has defanged Covid – so let’s learn to get on with our lives | Where are the inspiring female leaders? Not where you might think | The social media mob and cowardice have done away with nuance
Fish pills: the hidden catch
The market in this prized commodity is worth billions – but are the supposed health benefits worth the cost to global ecosystems?
‘We're just country bumpkins!'
Wet Leg’s feelgood anthems have beguiled their fans. But, after playing for fun and turning down record labels, do they finally feel they are a ‘real band’?
‘We will fight' Actors and lawyers get ready to take up arms
The mood last week in Ukraine was eerily calm, despite talk of war.
Rock bottom Villagers fear losing land to Chinese mine owners
A convoy of trucks laden with huge black granite rocks trundles along the dusty pathway as a group of villagers look on grimly.
NOWHERE TO HIDE
How insects are losing the race against climate change
No go, Joe? A year on, Biden's big promises hit reality
Enemies within, a radicalised opposition and messaging failure have hamstrung the president’s first 12 months
Is this the end?
Boris Johnson’s lame ‘partygate’ excuses have been mocked by quiz show hosts and sports pundits. But while the UK prime minister is accustomed to ridicule , the deep anger of families who suff ered in the pandemic while obeying the rules will not go away. It’s now just a question of how long he survives …
In the Djokovic circus, it was the players who hit all the winners
Stefanos Tsitsipas learned to listen to Covid science the hard way. Not the really hard way, of course.
I remember 20 May 2020. It was the day I buried my sister
I remember well what I was doing on the evening of 20 May 2020, when more than 100 people were invited to a BYOB party in the prime minister’s garden, “to make the most of the lovely weather”.
Fallen idol? Speculation over silence of the nation's founding father
The question was being asked with increasing urgency last week: where is Nursultan Nazarbayev ?
Ukraine talks Can history help find a path to rapprochement with Putin?
So high have the stakes been set by Russia over the future security architecture of Europe, so imminent is the threat of war in Ukraine, that the three meetings due between Russia and the west this week have drawn comparison with great west-Russia exchanges of the past : Yalta in 1945, Paris in 1960 – over Berlin – and Reykjavík in 1986.
The Trump menace is darker than ever – and snapping at Biden's heels
The problem with coverage of this month’s anniversary of the events of 6 January 2021 is that too much of it was written in the past tense. True, the attempted insurrection when a violent mob stormed Capitol Hill to try to overturn a democratic election was a year ago, but the danger it poses is clear and present – and looms over the future. For the grim truth is that, while Donald Trump is the last US president, he may also be the next. What’s more, the menace of Trumpism is darker than ever.
‘An affront to justice ' The festering legacy of Guantánamo Bay
‘A huge political albatross’ About 30% of former Guantánamo detainees who were resettled in third countries have not been granted legal status . Of the hundreds released , about 150 were sent to third countries in bilateral agreements brokered by the US, because their home countries were considered dangerous to return to. Many remain in legal limbo and analysis indicates that about 45 men have not been given residency documents upon resettlement. Noa Yachot
The mystery of Austria's silence over dual citizens held in Iran
Six years ago on New Year’s Day, an Iranian-Austrian IT businessman said goodbye to his wife and three children and boarded a flight from Vienna to Tehran via Istanbul. Kamran Ghaderi had been due to return five or six days later, but he was arrested and has spent six years in Evin prison in Tehran.
Macron – and the west – are now prey to France's toxic populism
France is both beautiful and brutally bleak. It is a country studded with towns and rural vistas that take your breath away, but pockmarked with districts of soulless, desolate concrete, especially in the suburbs of its cities, the banlieues. It’s as though French planners and architects, in their embrace of modernity, lost touch with what it means to be human. It has been an important trigger for a toxic brew of Islamophobia and wider cultural despair.
Living with Covid: Planning beyond virus does not mean dropping all precaution
Reports in the UK last Sunday that free lateral flow tests could be axed within weeks under a strategy of living with Covid were met with a swift backlash. The British government promptly denied the suggestion that people would soon have to pay for the tests.
Inequality is driving protests against an authoritarian system
Almaty, the commercial capital of Kazakhstan , is the kind of mirage that oil-rich nations so often produce. It has all the trappings of comfort and consumer excess: swanky shopping malls, luxury car dealerships, high-end hotels. This is the image of prosperity that the country’s rulers enjoy projecting. For decades, Kazakhs have been encouraged to take out expensive loans to buy flats, cars and even holidays they can barely afford.
Djokovic furore hides trail of unanswered questions
The tennis star was released from detention, having gained a new fanbase of anti-vaxxers and far-right figures
America divided: BEHIND THE LINES
With the perception of reality between Democrats and Republicans so distorted, could civil war really happen? Some experts doubt an armed conflict could arise – but others foresee a Northern Ireland-style insurgency …
A natural film star who quietly pioneered a revolution Sidney Poitier
For postwar America, Sidney Poitier became something like the Black Cary Grant: a strikingly handsome and well-spoken Bahamian-American actor. He was a natural film star who projected passion, yet tempered by a kind of refinement and restraint that white moviegoers found reassuring.
UK and the EU likely to remain best of enemies
When Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission president, gave her lengthy “state of the union” speech in September, there were mentions aplenty of the EU’s vital relationships with Turkey, the western Balkans and Africa.
A rise in political pressures over the protocol
Brexit has forced Northern Irish businesses to deal with new barriers, while the delicate political balances have been strained.
The moon is once again within touching distance
Elon Musk claims his Starship rocket will carry passengers to Mars within five years