CATEGORIES

The oil catastrophe averted by crowdfunding
The Guardian Weekly

The oil catastrophe averted by crowdfunding

When civil war broke out in 2014, a leaky tanker in the Red Sea became a crisis point-prompting a remarkable UN-led international public rescue effort

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5 mins  |
September 08, 2023
Sunak under pressure over failing concrete in schools
The Guardian Weekly

Sunak under pressure over failing concrete in schools

A school buildings crisis was threatening to engulf Downing Street this week, with Rishi Sunak accused of slashing the budget for repairs while his education secretary was caught claiming colleagues had done nothing to stop it

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4 mins  |
September 08, 2023
Group therapy Modi's G20 call to arms can't halt retreat of globalisation
The Guardian Weekly

Group therapy Modi's G20 call to arms can't halt retreat of globalisation

India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, will have the unenviable task of forging agreement between the world’s biggest developed and developing countries when G20 leaders gather in Delhi for their annual summit on  9 September

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2 mins  |
September 08, 2023
How Russia cherishes its propaganda friends in Italian media
The Guardian Weekly

How Russia cherishes its propaganda friends in Italian media

Whenever Nello Scavo returns from Ukraine, he is overcome with frustration

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3 mins  |
September 08, 2023
War gains Military breaches Russian line of defence
The Guardian Weekly

War gains Military breaches Russian line of defence

Ukrainian forces have decisively breached Russia’s first defensive line near Zaporizhzhia after weeks of pain staking mine clearance, and expect faster gains as they press the weaker second line, the general leading the southern counteroff ensive has said

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3 mins  |
September 08, 2023
The evacuees who can't take Russian shelling any more
The Guardian Weekly

The evacuees who can't take Russian shelling any more

Antonina Sanina's last two nights in Kupiansk were spent hiding in the base. ment of her apartment block. She survived six and a half months of Russian occupation last year, but the renewed shelling of the Ukrainian town finally prompted her to abandon home. \"I couldn't take it any more,\" she explained simply after volunteers drove her to safety

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3 mins  |
September 08, 2023
For the ages The question everyone is avoiding: how old is too old for power?
The Guardian Weekly

For the ages The question everyone is avoiding: how old is too old for power?

THE QUESTION WAS SIMPLE: what are your thoughts about running for re-election in 2026? \"Oh,\" said Mitch McConnell with a half chuckle, a mumble and then: silence

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3 mins  |
September 08, 2023
In 2018, Alexandria OcasioCortez became America's youngest-ever congresswoman and part of the celebrated 'Squad' of House progressives.Now an established Democratic force, she talks about the climate crisis, Trump and misogyny in the US
The Guardian Weekly

In 2018, Alexandria OcasioCortez became America's youngest-ever congresswoman and part of the celebrated 'Squad' of House progressives.Now an established Democratic force, she talks about the climate crisis, Trump and misogyny in the US

'We are in a moment of generational change'

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8 mins  |
September 08, 2023
Bloomsbury threads
The Guardian Weekly

Bloomsbury threads

A new book about London's most famous literary set explores its lesser-known role in sparking a sartorial revolution

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6 mins  |
September 01, 2023
With five PMs in seven years, the Tories are all at sea with no ideas
The Guardian Weekly

With five PMs in seven years, the Tories are all at sea with no ideas

Late one night in 1867, Benjamin Disraeli, chancellor of the exchequer in Lord Derby's Tory government, cunningly thwarted a Liberal wrecking amendment in the Commons to his second reform bill. Having written to Queen Victoria at 2am, he went to the Carlton Club in London, where he was cheered and toasted as \"the man who rode the race, who took the time, who kept the time, and who did the trick\". The following year, he became prime minister.

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
'I get in trouble when I talk about the state of the nation'
The Guardian Weekly

'I get in trouble when I talk about the state of the nation'

After 17 years abroad, Zadie Smith has returned to her literary stomping ground of north London. She talks about fame, therapy and finding inspiration for her latest novel on her doorstep

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10+ mins  |
September 01, 2023
Don't mention the war
The Guardian Weekly

Don't mention the war

On the International Space Station, astronauts from Russia and the west share a craft the size of a large family home. So what happened when Moscow started a conflict 400km below on Earth?

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10+ mins  |
September 01, 2023
Far-right populist who is a 'shoo-in' for president aims at pope
The Guardian Weekly

Far-right populist who is a 'shoo-in' for president aims at pope

In one corner of the ring stands Javier Milei, 52, self-described former tantric sex coach, outsider anarcho-capitalist and frontrunner in Argentina's upcoming presidential elections; in the other, his compatriot Pope Francis, 86, champion of the poor, repeatedly derided by Argentina's likely next president as \"a fucking communist\" and \"the representative of the evil one on Earth\" for promoting the doctrine of \"social justice\" to aid the underprivileged.

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Not'appy The problem with digital societies
The Guardian Weekly

Not'appy The problem with digital societies

Increasingly, the world seems to run on smartphones-often to the exclusion of those who struggle with tech. What can be done?

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4 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Son of Soros under fire as foundations retreat from Europe
The Guardian Weekly

Son of Soros under fire as foundations retreat from Europe

He survived the Nazis, made a fortune on Wall Street and became one of the most steadfast backers of democracy and human rights in the eastern bloc. But there are now fears about the commitment of the billionaire philanthropist George Soros, 93, to his homelands, as his donor network announced it will curb its activities across the EU from 2024.

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
The Russian minister who became a US truck driver
The Guardian Weekly

The Russian minister who became a US truck driver

The former minister drove his big white truck north until he reached Michigan. The Great Lakes provided a welcome relief from the scorching Texas heat.

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2 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Fukushima fish traders fear effects of water release
The Guardian Weekly

Fukushima fish traders fear effects of water release

Awa-jinja is a place of pilgrimage for the more superstitious fishing crews of Shinchi-machi, a coastal town in Fukushima, who come here to lower their heads and ask the Shinto gods to look kindly on them as they prepare to steer their boats into the Pacific Ocean.

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2 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Bombed out The island idyll where atomic tests reverberate
The Guardian Weekly

Bombed out The island idyll where atomic tests reverberate

Oppenheimer has reminded the world of the impact of nuclear weapons testing. One Pacific archipelago never forgot

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Monster, Inc Loch Ness's most famous local keeps head down
The Guardian Weekly

Monster, Inc Loch Ness's most famous local keeps head down

Around Loch Ness last Saturday, the hope was for sunshine. Would-be champions prepared for the Glenurquhart Highland Games, dedicated runners warmed up for the Loch Ness 24 endurance race - and volunteers readied their binoculars and notepads for the biggest search for the Loch Ness monster in 50 years.

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
How football president's kiss led to a #MeToo moment
The Guardian Weekly

How football president's kiss led to a #MeToo moment

When Jenni Hermoso arrived in the stands, the standing ovation was thundering. On the field below, Atlético de Madrid and AC Milan were battling it out for the Women's Cup, but the message - scrawled on posters, temporary tattoos and a metres-long banner unfurled by the players - was unanimous at the stadium in Madrid last Saturday night: \"We're with you, Jenni Hermoso.\"

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2 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Female suicides on rise under Taliban regime
The Guardian Weekly

Female suicides on rise under Taliban regime

First, her dreams of becoming a doctor were dashed by the Taliban's ban on women's education. Then her family set up a forced marriage to her cousin, a heroin addict. Latifa* felt her future had been snatched away.

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Touch down Moon landing is another leap in the global space race
The Guardian Weekly

Touch down Moon landing is another leap in the global space race

For all the risks, for all that was riding on a successful landing, the descent to the moon's surface was remarkably uneventful, if not exactly stress-free. The Vikram lander, part of India's Chandrayaan-3 mission, dropped steadily on its thrusters to the rock below, slowed to a hover as it approached the ground, and finally came to a rest on the dusty terrain.

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2 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Labrador dawn A future where culture meets conservation
The Guardian Weekly

Labrador dawn A future where culture meets conservation

A plume of red erupts in the grey-blue waters and Martin Shiwak accelerates his boat to grab the seal he has shot before it sinks out of sight. Shiwak has hunted for years in the waters of Lake Melville, close to the Inuit community of Rigolet in Nunatsiavut.

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5 mins  |
September 01, 2023
The next movement Prigozhin is gone, but the Sahel will not be free of Wagner soon
The Guardian Weekly

The next movement Prigozhin is gone, but the Sahel will not be free of Wagner soon

Last week, before Yevgeny Prigozhin died in a plane crash, the founder of the Russian mercenary group Wagner appeared bullish in a publicity video, holding a rifle and dressed in desert camouflage.

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
The cost of speaking out The not so mysterious deaths of Putin's opponents
The Guardian Weekly

The cost of speaking out The not so mysterious deaths of Putin's opponents

The attacks have varied, from underwear tainted with the nerve agent Novichok or polonium-laced tea to the more straightforward assassinations by a bullet but, throughout Vladimir Putin's 23-year rule, Kremlin critics, journalists and defected spies have been killed and targeted for opposing him.

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3 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Patriot, traitor, martyr ...
The Guardian Weekly

Patriot, traitor, martyr ...

After his apparent assassination, Yevgeny Prigozhin's legacy is still to be determined. The Wagner chief's reputation will be dictated by two linked factors-Putin and the result of the war

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4 mins  |
September 01, 2023
Village people - A celebrated court case links Victorian England with slavery in Jamaica in Zadie Smith's gripping historical novel
The Guardian Weekly

Village people - A celebrated court case links Victorian England with slavery in Jamaica in Zadie Smith's gripping historical novel

Zadie Smith has spent a long time concertedly not writing historical fiction.

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3 mins  |
August 25, 2023
Carry on screaming Film studio is back from the dead
The Guardian Weekly

Carry on screaming Film studio is back from the dead

Amicus, which mastered the art of the gleefully ghoulish cinematic short-story collection in the 60s and 70s, is set to make a glorious return

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3 mins  |
August 25, 2023
For 25 years, my weekly game has been about so much more than sport
The Guardian Weekly

For 25 years, my weekly game has been about so much more than sport

It’s the middle of summer, which means a new football season. The glory game hardly sleeps these days: the Women’s World Cup has only just concluded and there is the constant spectre of the Saudi power grab on men’s elite football.

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3 mins  |
August 25, 2023
Biden's Middle East policy aims seem delusional and out of time
The Guardian Weekly

Biden's Middle East policy aims seem delusional and out of time

It’s uncanny, the way America’s declining influence across the Middle East seems to be tracking the previous, humbling retreat of the British empire from the same area.

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3 mins  |
August 25, 2023