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Europe is heading for dark waters, and its leaders are dozing at the tiller
Democrats fear Joe Biden is sleepwalking to disaster in a November rematch with Donald Trump. Tories level similar criticism at dozy Rishi Sunak as Labour dreams of an autumn landslide. But for a truly world-beating slumber party, EU leaders take the bedtime biscuit.
The choice over Ukraine
Two years into the full-scale war, Olesya Khromeychuk sees the world's support for Ukraine waning. But, she warns, it's not just her country's future at stake
WHO'S AFRAID OF THE BIG BAD WOLF?
After being hunted to near extinction, wolves have returned to Europe. But when one killed the family pony of EU president Ursula von der Leyen, it ignited a high-stakes battle. Are the animals' days numbered?
Gen Z falls for the quiet charms of the public library
Henry Earls dresses up to go to the library. He picks out cosy knitted sweaters and accessories with well-worn copies of classic books. Earls looks like an adjunct English professor - or an extra in the movie Saltburn.
Kidnappings surge as guerrilla insurgency advances
The gunmen came for Alemetu when she was sleeping. They marched her out of her home in Ethiopia's Oromia region and took her to a disused school in the countryside, where she was held hostage for four weeks.
Rebel army fighters use drones to take on ruling junta
As the drones flew over western Myanmar's Chin hills, the junta did not know what was about to hit them. Their operators were hidden a few hundred metres away in the dense forest. As the images on their screens indicated the drones were hovering above the target - a military base in the town of Lailenpi-they hit the button on their controllers and bombs began to fall.
The heiress creating her own wealth tax
Marlene Engelhorn hopes giving away €25m will shake up democracy in a country that has no inheritance tax
After riots, grievances simmer at a Muslim-run soup kitchen
When Dublin erupted in a riot last November, masked youths looted shops, set fires and shouted slogans against immigrants and refugees. \"Ireland is full,\" said one banner. \"Ireland for the Irish,\" said another.
Kashmir's slopes are free of snow - and tourists
As evening draws near, Bashir Ahmad Bhat is still waiting for his first customer of the day. Seven years ago, Bhat, 34, gave up his job as a driver to work in Gulmarg's tourism sector. January is peak season at India's premier ski resort, attracting amateur and professional skiers from around the world.
Biggest, but also baddest Can ocean liners ever be green?
The world's largest cruise ship may run on LNG, but campaigners dispute its environmental credentials
Fighting talk Is Europe right to be ready for a wider war?
A wave of anxiety has gripped European defence ministers and armed A forces as politicians and military leaders believe Nato-sceptic Donald Trump could be elected as the next president of the US and that Russia may not be forced out or defeated in Ukraine. This febrile mood has prompted growing warnings that Europe could find itself involved in a war in Russia, even though at present Russia is embroiled in Ukraine.
Drone raids help Kyiv carry the fight deep into Russia
Last week, a motorist driving in Russia's Leningrad region came across something unusual. Men had blocked off the road. In front, a large olive-green military vehicle with cigar-shaped missiles on the back was reversing and then parked up on a snowy verge. \"Fuck! It's an S-300,\" the driver exclaimed, before adding: \"So guys, let's prepare for the worst.\"
UN urges donors to rethink Gaza funding halt
The United Nations secretary general, António Guterres, has appealed to the 10 donor countries that have withdrawn funding from the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) to reconsider.
ICJ order UN court's Gaza decision puts the west to the test
In seeking a provisional order from the international court of justice restraining Israel from committing potentially genocidal acts in Gaza, South Africa put not just Israel's treatment of Palestinians in the dock but also the whole post-second world war rules-based order, including the authority of the ICJ itself. Never has there been such a high-profile case brought in the middle of such a bloody conflict.
Not so fast...Trump seems unstoppable-but here's why he's vulnerable
You'd think a week spent in the snow and ice of New Hampshire, watching Donald Trump stroll to a double-digit victory over his last remaining Republican rival, would have left me filled with angst about the presidential election in November.
Veep power In the hunt for Trump's running mate, only devotees need apply
The last Republican who occupied the job of US vice-president ended up the target of a violent mob calling for him to be hanged. Even so, as Donald Trump closes in on the Republican nomination for 2024, there is no shortage of contenders eager to be his deputy.
Trump's dark side
The former president looks almost certain to win the Republican nomination. But his lashing out at a rival exposed a weakness that could yet be pivotal in the election
Use your noodle: DIY ramen is a no-brainer if you've got the time
Can you make good ramen at home, and is it worth the effort?
Nature trail A physicist turns his hand to life science, to explore how commonly held models of why we're here are wildly oversimplified
You might think, with the completion of the Human Genome Project more than 20 years ago, and the discovery of the double helix enjoying its 70th birthday last year, that we actually know how life works. In physics, the quest for a so-called Grand Unifying Theory has preoccupied the most ambitious minds for generations, alas to no avail. But in the life sciences, we managed to find four grand unifying theories in the space of 100 years or so.
Why China and India are tapping into Top Gun
The new superpowers have fallen for the action-packed world of blockbuster air force films, but can their efforts be anything more than military propaganda?
Outside in
The Chinese American screen director Lulu Wangon The Expats, her complex new TV series set in 2014 Hong Kong
Abuse of unaccountable power is at wicked heart of Post Office scandal
To the widely voiced reasons to admire Alan Bates, the heroically dogged leader of the campaign to achieve justice for the victims of the Post Office scandal, let me add another.
The pastoral Carer
not just about the future of their businesses, but about family, identity and even mortality.
Boeing's problems are bigger than just nuts and bolts
Aviation is an abundant source of metaphors, but not always as self-generating as the terrifying Alaska Airlines incident that has once again brought Boeing low: a hole blown in the side of an ascending plane, a gap that was not properly plugged, passengers staring into the void.
'He wins big' Trump storms the Republican caucuses in Iowa
For some Americans it's a nightmare from which they cannot wake, but for others it's a new chapter in the Maga saga
Word perfect Activist poet embracing essence of being African
After giving birth, Vanessa Chisakula started writing poetry as a way of processing the changes and struggles she was experiencing as a new mother.
Happy haus How Vienna became the world's most livable city
The Austrian capital's radical social housing tradition bucks the trend for soaring rents elsewhere. What is its secret?
Crown duel Republicans stir as king takes throne
When the Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, appeared on the balcony of Christiansborg Palace in Copenhagen last Sunday to announce the new monarch, she was met by a sea of cheering faces.
No end in sight as Israel marks 100 days of war
Israelis last weekend marked 100 days of war with a 100-minute pause in the working day and rallies to call for the return of hostages held in Gaza, but little relief from the anxiety that has gripped the country since Hamas launched its 7 October attacks.
Arc of crisis
How Houthi anger with Israel is reshaping the Middle East conflict