CATEGORIES

THE EMPTY PLINTH
The Guardian Weekly

THE EMPTY PLINTH

In 1760, a pivotal slave revolt began in Jamaica - and now many want its leader made a national hero. But what if this story is bigger than that?

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10+ mins  |
April 05, 2024
No end to agony as gangs shift focus to elite 'safe' areas
The Guardian Weekly

No end to agony as gangs shift focus to elite 'safe' areas

As gang fighters and police battled outside his home near Haiti's beleaguered capital late last month, Nielsen Daily Fierrier hurled himself to the ground.

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3 mins  |
April 05, 2024
'Feeble, tired and unfit' Biden plays hardball with Trump
The Guardian Weekly

'Feeble, tired and unfit' Biden plays hardball with Trump

With November set to be one of the most consequential elections in US history, it would be understandable if Donald Trump and Joe Biden reached for lofty rhetoric: if they attempted to match the highminded ideals of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and the rest of the nation's founding fathers.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Eyes in the sky How drones are helping animal rights campaigners
The Guardian Weekly

Eyes in the sky How drones are helping animal rights campaigners

Inexpensive and easy to use, they are proving invaluable for activists monitoring illegal fishing, hunting and deforestation - as well as keeping tabs on zoos and aquariums

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4 mins  |
April 05, 2024
'We are finally free' Hopes high after poll landslide
The Guardian Weekly

'We are finally free' Hopes high after poll landslide

Just 10 days before being elected president of Senegal, Bassirou Diomaye Faye was in prison. Years of political turmoil have left the west African state's democracy on the brink of collapse, with deadly uprisings and the jailing of opposition figures commonplace.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
How a civil servant won the battle with big tobacco
The Guardian Weekly

How a civil servant won the battle with big tobacco

It was 20 years ago that an Irish civil servant named Tom Power won a remarkable battle against the tobacco industry when Ireland enacted the world's first ban on smoking in bars, restaurants and workplaces.

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3 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Danish denial as minister is urged to get ona plane’
The Guardian Weekly

Danish denial as minister is urged to get ona plane’

The Danish health minister should \"get on a plane and visit\" some of the thousands of women thought to be living with the consequences of being forcibly fitted with the contraceptive coil as children, Greenland's gender equality minister has said.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Coil scandal The women who were forcibly fitted with IUDs
The Guardian Weekly

Coil scandal The women who were forcibly fitted with IUDs

Victims left traumatised and infertile after birth control devices were inserted without consent by Danish doctors

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4 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Lost habitats True cost of a city built from scratch
The Guardian Weekly

Lost habitats True cost of a city built from scratch

Nusantara is billed as a state-of-the-art capital city that will coexist with nature but not all residents of Borneo's Balikpapan Bay are happy

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4 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Funding lesson Universities fear consequences of clampdown on student visas
The Guardian Weekly

Funding lesson Universities fear consequences of clampdown on student visas

Rishi Sunak may not go down in history as \"the man who destroyed UK higher education\", as one former university leader put it, but the prime minister's willingness to clamp down on international student numbers could end up doing just that, coinciding with what one expert called a funding crisis for universities.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
What now for Thames Water as investors turn off the taps?
The Guardian Weekly

What now for Thames Water as investors turn off the taps?

Thirty-five years ago, investors flocked to buy into the water industry, an essential public utility and a monopoly, in a sell-off by Margaret Thatcher that was deeply unpopular with the public, but saw shareholders gain 40%, on average, on the first day of trading.

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3 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Bridge clear up crucial to national economy
The Guardian Weekly

Bridge clear up crucial to national economy

Crews of engineers have begun the dangerous and intricate job of removing the mangled wreckage of the Francis Scott Key Bridge from the Patapsco River outside Baltimore, as top federal government and Maryland state officials stressed that the health of the US national economy depended on it.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Gulag survivors given voice at Venice Biennale
The Guardian Weekly

Gulag survivors given voice at Venice Biennale

When Petko Ogoyski was released from communist Bulgaria's gulag in 1953, he built a sixstorey memorial tower in his home village of Chepintsi.

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3 mins  |
April 05, 2024
'New future' Opposition sweeps to victory in local polls
The Guardian Weekly

'New future' Opposition sweeps to victory in local polls

Turkey's main opposition party dealt an unexpected blow to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's rule last Sunday with a sweeping victory in local elections, maintaining control of major cities including the capital, Ankara, and Istanbul, where Ekrem İmamoğlu secured a second term as mayor.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Games threat Paris on alert for Olympics attacks
The Guardian Weekly

Games threat Paris on alert for Olympics attacks

The French interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, met intelligence services to assess the terrorist threat to the country, after the Moscow concert hall attack claimed by Islamic State (IS) raised fresh security fears over the Paris Olympics.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
IS affiliates could launch new wave of terror on the west
The Guardian Weekly

IS affiliates could launch new wave of terror on the west

Islamic State (IS) remains defeated in its core strongholds of the Middle East but has made significant progress in Africa and parts of south Asia, winning territory and resources that could serve as a launchpad for a new campaign of extremist violence, analysts and officials believe.

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4 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Legal challenge Scale of suffering will make war crimes claims harder to deny
The Guardian Weekly

Legal challenge Scale of suffering will make war crimes claims harder to deny

Israel has faced questions about whether its war on Hamas inside Gaza broke international law ever since the first few days of the campaign, when it cut off all food, water and fuel shipments to the enclave.

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2 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Excuses have run out' Thousands call for PM's removal
The Guardian Weekly

Excuses have run out' Thousands call for PM's removal

Demonstrators join families of hostages in cities across the country and vow to persist until Netanyahu is ousted

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3 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Has anything changed?
The Guardian Weekly

Has anything changed?

When the US allowed a UN ceasefi re resolution to pass, it marked a shift in Washington’s support for Israel as doubts about the conduct of the war and its legality have grown

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5 mins  |
April 05, 2024
Blind Spot Did Russian Intelligence Neglect The Islamist Threat?
The Guardian Weekly

Blind Spot Did Russian Intelligence Neglect The Islamist Threat?

As Russia observed a day of mourning last Sunday for the victims of the terror attack two days earlier, along with the sorrow came the hard question that follows most similar incidents: how could this have happened?

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2 mins  |
March 29, 2024
After Horror In Moscow, A Cynical Blame Game Takes Shape
The Guardian Weekly

After Horror In Moscow, A Cynical Blame Game Takes Shape

The woman lay in a hospital bed, staring straight toward the ceiling.

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5 mins  |
March 29, 2024
Young people Dwindling prospects may lead to a beaten generation
The Guardian Weekly

Young people Dwindling prospects may lead to a beaten generation

Something is going wrong for young people between the ages of 15 and 24 across Europe, the US and Australia.

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2 mins  |
March 29, 2024
Trump fans the flames for mayhem in test of US democracy
The Guardian Weekly

Trump fans the flames for mayhem in test of US democracy

The end of democracy, riotsin the streets Donald Trump has made such apocalyptic imagery a defining feature of his presidential election campaign, warning that if he does not win and avoid criminal prosecution America will enter its death throes.

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3 mins  |
March 29, 2024
Sunken treasure The battle to raise the San José
The Guardian Weekly

Sunken treasure The battle to raise the San José

A Spanish galleon that was sunk in the 18th century has been at the centre of a dispute over who has rights to the wreck and its estimated $17bn in booty

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4 mins  |
March 29, 2024
Workers deported from Saudi Arabia tell of abuse
The Guardian Weekly

Workers deported from Saudi Arabia tell of abuse

Among the joyful family reunions at the arrivals gate at Dhaka's international air-port, one group of travellers stands out.

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3 mins  |
March 29, 2024
On a bench, in sunshine: how Kate dropped her bombshell
The Guardian Weekly

On a bench, in sunshine: how Kate dropped her bombshell

There was no carpet of roses outside Windsor Castle last Saturday, no bunches of daffodils blocking the entrance to Kensington Palace - just an occasional bouquet.

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3 mins  |
March 29, 2024
'Full gamut' China hacking threat goes beyond raid on voters' data
The Guardian Weekly

'Full gamut' China hacking threat goes beyond raid on voters' data

In March last year an integrated review of the UK's defence and foreign policy said it would protect the country's \"democratic freedoms\" from Chinese state attacks.

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2 mins  |
March 29, 2024
UN ceasefire resolution is a painful moment for Tel Aviv
The Guardian Weekly

UN ceasefire resolution is a painful moment for Tel Aviv

Diplomacy occasionally has the capacity to surprise, and when it does it often portends a deep shift.

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3 mins  |
March 29, 2024
Pocket full of poison An urgent and persuasive warning about the toll of 'phone-based childhoods' that miss out on many enriching activities
The Guardian Weekly

Pocket full of poison An urgent and persuasive warning about the toll of 'phone-based childhoods' that miss out on many enriching activities

At the start of the 2010s, rates of teenage mental illness took a sharp upward turn, and they have been rising ever since.

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3 mins  |
March 29, 2024
Damien Hirst has sawn his electrifying past in half
The Guardian Weekly

Damien Hirst has sawn his electrifying past in half

The pioneering British artist changed my life-but by creating new works and backdating them to his nineties golden era, he has cast doubt on his legacy

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3 mins  |
March 29, 2024