CATEGORIES

Seeking justice for Del Monte farm deaths
The Guardian Weekly

Seeking justice for Del Monte farm deaths

As families of the dead men question the company's version of events, friends say the food firm bribed them

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Company distances itself from farm violence
The Guardian Weekly

Company distances itself from farm violence

Fresh Del Monte has claimed it should not be held liable for a civil lawsuit alleging killing, rape and violence by security guards at its Kenyan pineapple farm because it is domiciled in the Cayman Islands.

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2 mins  |
February 16, 2024
A hostile state How military tried to stifle Imran Khan's PTI party
The Guardian Weekly

A hostile state How military tried to stifle Imran Khan's PTI party

For months, police blocked Arsalan Hafeez from entering the Pakistani constituency where he stood for election last week. Since he put himself forward as the candidate for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), the political party led by Pakistan's now incarcerated former prime minister Imran Khan, Hafeez alleges that the state's machinery did everything to prevent him from contesting his district of Narowal in the state of Punjab.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Turmoil as voters deliver a rebuke to the generals
The Guardian Weekly

Turmoil as voters deliver a rebuke to the generals

Police fired teargas to disperse supporters of Imran Khan last weekend as protests broke out across Pakistan amid allegations of widespread vote-rigging targeting the former prime minister's political party and other nationalist groups in the general election.

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4 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Fragile front Israel's assault is rocking the foundations of liberal politics
The Guardian Weekly

Fragile front Israel's assault is rocking the foundations of liberal politics

Something odd is happening. A sort of glitch or malfunction. Liberal politicians who refuse to call for a ceasefire in Gaza or halt support for Israel's assault are no longer making sense, and increasingly seem as though they are going through a crisis.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Rafah release Netanyahu uses hostage rescue to justify strikes as support dwindles
The Guardian Weekly

Rafah release Netanyahu uses hostage rescue to justify strikes as support dwindles

Israel's prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, was early this week deploying the successful rescue of two Israeli hostages to justify continued military pressure on Rafah, even as Israel came under intense international pressure not to launch a ground offensive against the southern Gaza city.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Rafah on the edge
The Guardian Weekly

Rafah on the edge

As Israel threatened a ground operation in Gaza's southernmost city, panic and despair set in among a population with nowhere to left to turn

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Smoke Screens Mental Health Apps Under Scrutiny
The Guardian Weekly

Smoke Screens Mental Health Apps Under Scrutiny

As experts worry over privacy issues, effectiveness and even harm, the UK is looking at how to regulate the plethora of smartphone-based mental health tools

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5 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Russia Looms Large Over Nato's Borders - But US Help Is Not Assured
The Guardian Weekly

Russia Looms Large Over Nato's Borders - But US Help Is Not Assured

In 1905, in the Finnish city of Tampere, Vladimir Lenin met Joseph Stalin for the first time. They and two dozen or so revolutionaries began to map out plans to overthrow the tsar and bring down the Russian empire.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Keep Calm And Carry On? Health Fears Could Reshape The King's Role
The Guardian Weekly

Keep Calm And Carry On? Health Fears Could Reshape The King's Role

Last Monday, King Charles emerged from a private clinic alongside Queen Camilla to wave to a small crowd. The message that Buckingham Palace wished to convey was obvious: the monarch is strong and will carry out his duties despite the health setback.

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2 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Can Anything Stop The Deepfakes?
The Guardian Weekly

Can Anything Stop The Deepfakes?

With Taylor Swift the latest victim of Al-generated porn, pressure is growing on social media companies to start taking it seriously.

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10 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Amazon, Joyce and the circus
The Guardian Weekly

Amazon, Joyce and the circus

As part of the centenary of Ulysses, German circus company Rimini Protokoll provocatively enacts the hyper-consumerism and physical exertion that drive the online retail giant

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Pop star or 'election psyop'? US conspiracists tout Swift as Pentagon asset
The Guardian Weekly

Pop star or 'election psyop'? US conspiracists tout Swift as Pentagon asset

Taylor Swift is a \"Pentagon asset\", an \"election interference psyop\" who, with unnamed left-leaning forces, has conspired to \"rig\" the Super Bowl and endorse Joe Biden in the presidential election.

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2 mins  |
February 09, 2024
PRECIPICE OF FEAR
The Guardian Weekly

PRECIPICE OF FEAR

Jérémie Heitz has pushed freeriding to breathtaking, beautiful new extremes. But as the risks get bigger, the questions do, too

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10+ mins  |
February 09, 2024
Joe's burden Primary win reveals more about the changing face of America
The Guardian Weekly

Joe's burden Primary win reveals more about the changing face of America

Surprise! Joe Biden won the Democratic presidential primary in South Carolina with a high-90s percentage that would make even Vladimir Putin or Kim Jong-un blush.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
'A mistake' Russian sect finally gets apology after 70 years
The Guardian Weekly

'A mistake' Russian sect finally gets apology after 70 years

Betty Kabatoff was eight years old when she was rushed from her home and taken into the mountains to hide from Canadian police. She and some other children slept under a shelter made from tree branches, but within days, a helicopter appeared overhead and they were forced to move on.

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2 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Gallery fills creative void for artists amid island's struggles
The Guardian Weekly

Gallery fills creative void for artists amid island's struggles

In a country ravaged by food and health emergencies, art is vital, said Hobisoa Raininoro.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
After the coup Three years on, the junta is struggling to assert control
The Guardian Weekly

After the coup Three years on, the junta is struggling to assert control

Three years after seizing power, Myanmar's junta is struggling to assert control, with humiliating losses in recent months and growing criticism of its leader, Min Aung Hlaing, by pro-military figures.

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2 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Mill boon A co-living community designed for long life
The Guardian Weekly

Mill boon A co-living community designed for long life

It took 13 years to turn a historic building into eco-friendly co-housing, planned to see its members into older age

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6 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Nottingham's taxes soar, but local services are in disarray
The Guardian Weekly

Nottingham's taxes soar, but local services are in disarray

In Nottingham's Old Market Square, the fountains that once flowed in front of the Council House are bone dry, and under proposed cost-cutting measures they may never be switched on again.

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2 mins  |
February 09, 2024
In Antakya, poor fear worst as towers rise from rubble
The Guardian Weekly

In Antakya, poor fear worst as towers rise from rubble

A huge rebuild is under way in the earthquake-damaged city -but many feel they will have no place in the new homes

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5 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Growing pain Why farmers are so angryand what the EU is trying to do about it
The Guardian Weekly

Growing pain Why farmers are so angryand what the EU is trying to do about it

Farmers' protests have been sweeping Europe in countries such as Greece, Germany, Portugal, Poland and France, where the government was taken by surprise late last month by a motorway blockade of Paris.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Furious farmers demand EU reforms
The Guardian Weekly

Furious farmers demand EU reforms

Europe's farming sector is facing a big crisis and must \"profoundly\" change its rules, Emmanuel Macron said after a European Union leaders' summit in Brussels was overshadowed by protesting farmers hurling eggs, dumping manure and lighting fires.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Jarring silence Are we ignoring Gaza's women because they are 'not like us'?
The Guardian Weekly

Jarring silence Are we ignoring Gaza's women because they are 'not like us'?

Sometimes a disaster is so large that it obscures its own details. Behind the number of dead and displaced in Gaza, for women and girls the conflict has been disproportionately grinding. In a \"cruel inversion\" of the history of this conflict, the head of UN Women told the Associated Press, women and children have borne the brunt of the war.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Grand designs The audacious reimagining of the Middle East
The Guardian Weekly

Grand designs The audacious reimagining of the Middle East

In a US election year, Joe Biden is offering diplomatic incentives to rival states in the region-including the recognition of Palestine

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7 mins  |
February 09, 2024
'Opera is to touch the soul of another'
The Guardian Weekly

'Opera is to touch the soul of another'

Romanian diva Angela Gheorghiu is back to reprise the La Bohème role she has sung hundreds of times yet, she believes, changes with every performance

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3 mins  |
February 02, 2024
A concrete maze
The Guardian Weekly

A concrete maze

Hong Kong's M+ wants to be a global titan of art, to rival the likes of Tate Modern. But did its architects, Herzog & de Meuron, overdo the cement?

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6 mins  |
February 02, 2024
England may have given cricket to the world, but it's India's game now
The Guardian Weekly

England may have given cricket to the world, but it's India's game now

Whatever the on-field result of the current Test cricket series between India and England, which began last week, off the field India will still be the winner. Indian money now rules the game. India generates more than 80% of cricket's international income. And in international cricket, what India says always goes.

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3 mins  |
February 02, 2024
Europe is heading for dark waters, and its leaders are dozing at the tiller
The Guardian Weekly

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.

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3 mins  |
February 02, 2024
The choice over Ukraine
The Guardian Weekly

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

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10+ mins  |
February 02, 2024