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The silver sovereign
Charles III is the oldest British monarch ever to be crowned. But his reign begins in a kingdom under a cloud
Beacon of free media moves to Costa Rica in survival bid
El Faro has survived many pressures in its 25 years of reporting on El Salvador's bloody drug wars, crime and institutional corruption
Dig down Stalin-era bunkers dusted off
Although a missile attack deep into Russia is unlikely, historic bomb shelters are being made ready for use
War has forced people living on the border to choose their identity
Where do you call home? I've travelled and lived in so many places, the question sometimes confused me
Sudan's outsider general
How the leader of a powerful militia fell out with the Sudanese army and plunged the country into civil war
Indigenous peoples fear toxic leaks from oil industry
Alice Rigney was born on the northern shores of the Athabasca River, a mighty body of water that flows from Canada's western ice fields to the far reaches of Alberta province
Governors act to halt 'turning back clock' on abortion
Despite receiving a reprieve from the supreme court that halted an abortion pill ban, Democratic states are stockpiling the drug as the legal fight for access continues
Whodunnit? Brexit kills London leg of the Orient Express
When the Orient Express began operating in the 19th century, passports were optional - the only paperwork required by British travellers was a copy of the Thomas Cook Continental Timetable
The shunned communist heroine who sailed the world solo
For a short while in the late 1970s, Krystyna ChojnowskaLiskiewicz was probably the most famous woman in communist Poland
Raab's furious exit offers little respite to mandarins
Bullying report forced the deputy prime minister's hand, but tensions between the government and civil servants are high
All the people India's rise is accompanied by China's contraction
India has overtaken China as the most populous country, the most significant shift in global demographics since records began more than 70 years ago
The (not so) open and shut case of the EU's nuclear split
When Europe's first new nuclear reactor in 16 years came online in Finland, it was hailed by its operator for playing an \"important role in the green transition\"
Ukraine war triggers new high in global arms budgets
Defence spending in western and central Europe has surpassed that of the last year of the cold war, an annual report has found, as military expenditure across the world hit an all-time high of $2.24tn last year
Carlson exit Host's bile and bigotry became too much for Fox
Tucker Carlson, the far-right TV host whose embrace of racist conspiracy theories came to signify a shift further right at Fox News, leaves a legacy of bringing extremism to the mainstream and speculation is turning to any next step in an incendiary career
Khalifa Haftar Libyan warlord who could fuel a drawn-out proxy war
The Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar helped to prepare the Rapid Support Forces RSF), a militia fighting for control of Sudan, for battle in the months before the devastating violence that broke out on 15 April, according to former officials, militia commanders and sources in Sudan and the UK
'Nobody is left'
As brutal fighting lays waste to wealthy central Khartoum, the capital city's most sought-after addresses are now so dangerous that residents are doing what they can to flee
Carlson exit Host's bile and bigotry became too much for Fox
Tucker Carlson, the far-right TV host whose embrace of racist conspiracy theories came to signify a shift further right at Fox News, leaves a legacy of bringing extremism to the mainstream and speculation is turning to any next step in an incendiary career
Dominion case Fox and the $787m cost of avoiding public humiliation
The staggering $787.5m settlement between Fox and voting equipment company Dominion marked the end of one of the most aggressive efforts to hold someone accountable for misinformation after the 2020 US election
Khalifa Haftar Libyan warlord who could fuel a drawn-out proxy war
The Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar helped to prepare the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a militia fighting for control of Sudan, for battle in the months before the devastating violence that broke out on 15 April, according to former officials, militia commanders and sources in Sudan and the UK
'Nobody is left'
As brutal fighting lays waste to wealthy central Khartoum, the capital city's most sought-after addresses are now so dangerous that residents are doing what they can to flee
Clean age kicks Feargal Sharkey's unlikely second act as an activist
The former Undertones frontman was only looking for a retirement hobby. How did he become the face of the fi ght for Britain’s rivers?
Revealed Value of jewellery in the king's collection
Charles has inherited gems estimated to be worth at least £533m from the late queen
When hope fails
A remarkable meditation on friendship, success, madness and violence that refuses to oversimplify
Different for girls
Judy Blume‘s chronicles of female adolescence in the 1970s still resonate today – and her best-loved character, Margaret, is about to hit cinemas
A 'cathartic' vision of a school shooting
Sung in nine languages, with music by one of the world’s best composers, Innocence is already being hailed as a defining work of our time
Sun king? DeSantis's plan to turn all the states into Florida
The title of Governor Ron DeSantis’s book, which he is zealously promoting across the nation, is less important than the subtitle
I'm home' Biden delivers an Irish ode to the American dream
John F Kennedy set the template for US presidential forays to Ireland with a rapturous visit in 1963 that he called the best four days of his life
Nubians fight to save an ancient language and identity
Jehad Ashraf is the first member of her family to grow up not understanding her mother tongue
In Santiago's backstreets, an outdated cafe culture clings to life
At kerbside tables, down shadowy alleys and in underground arcades, coffee in Chile’s capital is still served con piernas – with legs
Chez Serge The method and mess of Maison Gainsbourg
Since his death in 1991, fans of the singer-songwriter and French cultural icon Serge Gainsbourg have turned his home in a quiet street in the chic 7th arrondissement of Paris into a shrine