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Scientists have revealed how to solve the climate crisis, but will we listen?
Amid the triple crisis of the war in Ukraine, the still-raging pandemic and escalating inflation, climate scientists have just pulled off a truly impressive achievement. They have stood firm and persuaded the world's governments to agree to a common guide to solving the climate emergency. Despite the despair of mounting global problems, the release of the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change shows some grounds for hope.
Patel sorry as just 12,000 arrive in UK
Priti Patel, Britain's home secretary, has apologised for the time it has taken for Ukrainian refugees to arrive in the UK under two visa schemes, after new figures showed 12,000 have so far reached Britain.
A RECESSION WORSE THAN ANY OTHER THE PAINFUL PROSPECT OF CHANGING TO LIFE WITHOUT RUSSIAN GAS
BERLIN n Germany, they call it “Day X”. Businesses up and down the land are making contingency plans for what is seen as a growing likelihood that Russian gas will stop flowing into Europe's biggest economy.
KHARKIV UNDER FIRE ‘WE HAVEN'T HAD A DAY OFF IN A MONTH'
The rubbish collectors in Kharkiv wear flak jackets. Several of their trucks are peppered with shrapnel holes from shells that landed during their rounds. The bins they empty are packed with the shattered, twisted remains of homes destroyed by explosions.
In the bad books
From Art Spiegelman to Margaret Atwood, books are disappearing from American schools’ shelves. What’s behind the rise in censorship?
Slowly but surely, the sun is setting on the Commonwealth
Just how long has the British monarchy been in crisis? This time – after “Megxit”, after Prince Andrew – it was the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s disastrous trip to the Caribbean.
Putin casts a shadow over Orbán in high-stakes election
Until the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Hungary’s general election campaign was dominated by such ruling party preoccupations as “traditional values” and protecting children from “ LGBT propaganda ”.
Omicron makes tracks into virus-free outposts
Covid outbreaks in Samoa and Vanuatu have further whittled down the number of Pacific island nations that have escaped the pandemic, as cases surge after the first instances of community transmission in both countries.
The Putin perplexity Biden's blunder may at least force the west to focus on an endgame
At the end of what had been a largely flawless visit to Europe, during which he focused on the misery Vladimir Putin was imposing on Russia, Joe Biden closed his 27 -minute speech last Saturday evening in Warsaw by conjuring up the image of a less popular US president – George W Bush – when he said: “For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power.”
Welcome to Britain. Now what?
As war in Ukraine creates millions of new refugees, many people evacuated from Kabul last summer are still living in limbo. For six months, we followed three families as they adjust to life in their new home
What happens next? Moscow may have scaled back its military ambitions, but the war is far from over
One month after Vladimir Putin asserted that Ukraine should be liberated from the historical mistake of its independence, the Russian defence ministry announced that Russia’s war aims were limited to the Donbas region, and nearing completion.
Vote loser? Pécresse's regress leaves Républicains facing oblivion
The rightwing presidential candidate Valérie Pécresse has promised to rewrite the French constitution in order to fight crime and illegal immigration, as she tried to boost a flagging campaign that risks her party imploding if she fails to reach the final round this month.
‘GOD HAS LEFT MARIUPOL'
An unfolding story of heartache, destruction and death has been documented by residents
How should the world respond to the next pandemic?
Having raised the alert about the highly infectious Omicron variant of the S ars-CoV-2 virus last November, Tulio de Oliveira watched as South Africa was hit with travel bans. Already smarting at what he saw as wealthier nations’ hoarding of vaccines, anti viral drugs and test reagents, his frustration spilled over.
EDGE OF REALITY
A battle in the Russia-Ukraine conflict is being waged across social media. But who is winning the infowars?
EBV The enemy that lives inside our bodies
Epstein-Barr virus is a decisive factor in multiple sclerosis and linked to cancer. Can the lessons of Covid help to eradicate this common infection?
Anyone got a plan?
The west needs to agree on a long-term strategy to outflank Putin
Green futures Could Putin's gamble help the west kick its hydrocarbon habit?
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will have a profound impact on the world’s race to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions, climate experts have warned – but it may not all be negative.
THE WAR THAT NOBODY WANTED TO SEE COMING
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine wasn’t inevitable, but we have been moving toward it since the collapse of the Soviet Union
West slaps sanctions on Putin's fake news factories
Twelve key disinformation outlets used to bolster Vladimir Putin have been hit with sanctions in an online crackdown on “false and misleading” reports claimed to be orchestrated by Russian intelligence.
‘WE WILL FIGHT THE RUSSIANS BACK'
While hundreds of thousands of people fl eeing the destruction in the east have arrived in search of sanctuary, the citizens of Lviv have been preparing for the inevitable onslaught by Putin’s forces
‘It's ecocide' Activists rise against laws that favour industry
Thousands of demonstrators gathered in Bra sília after one of the Brazil’s leading musician , Caetano Veloso , called a protest to denounce what environmentalists are calling a historic assault on the environment under President Jair Bolsonaro.
‘A new chapter'
Progressives hope Boric can leave behind a dark past
Russia's claims
Is there any justification for Putin’s war?
Keyboard warriors
How a booming tech sector has switched to war footing in the face of Russian invasion
Illicit craft brewers risk arrest under restrictive alcohol laws
Naamcial’s craft beers often have distinctly Thai flavours, as he experiments with native produce, boiling the pulp of jackfruit and mango to mix into different concoctions. Yet his homemade products are forbidden.
Concern as ‘antifeminist' is elected president
The election of an avowed “anti-feminist” as the next president of South Korea has been greeted with dismay amid accusations Yoon Suk-yeol fuelled the gender divide to garner support from young male voters.
Border line Yavoriv strike is unnerving – but Russia unlikely to attack Poland
Russia’s deadly multiple missile strike last Sunday on Ukraine’s military base in Yavoriv, less than 25km from the Polish border, was clearly designed to send a message.
Avengers assemble
The foreign fighters coming to Kyiv’s aid
A subtle pact Beijing is still refusing to condemn Russia, but for how long?
Three weeks into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, China is still turning diplomatic cartwheels to prevent the war from damaging its global standing, while preserving its strategic partnership with Moscow.