The Guardian
Sex, drugs and homeless tours in Prague
- Title
- Sex, drugs and homeless tours in Prague
- Date posted
- 14 hours ago
- Description
- Title
- Can journalism survive the Taliban?
- Date posted
- 2 days ago
- Description
- The Etilaat Roz was once the most widely circulated newspaper in Kabul, but everything changed in August 2021 when the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan.
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With journalists tortured in the street for their reporting, many of the paper's staff were forced to flee. Two years on, editor-in-chief Zaki Daryabi continues to fight for the Etilaat Roz's future and coordinates his team across the US, Europe and Afghanistan. In this unique video diary, journalist Abbas Rezaie follows the tenacious correspondents as they continue to report the news. We witness a turning point in Afghanistan’s history, and reflect on what it is to be a displaced journalist.
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- Title
- ‘The Greens are our enemy’: What is fuelling the far right in Germany?
- Date posted
- 3 days ago
- Description
- The far right are on the march in Germany and the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) has become the most popular party in several states.
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Immigration and a sense of being economically left behind have been driving factors in the rise in popularity but the Green party and the federal government’s climate policies have also borne the brunt of public anger. The Guardian travelled to Görlitz, on the German border with Poland, to find out to what extent Germany’s green policies are fuelling the far right
Chapters:
00:00 – Intro
00:44 – Görlitz and Saxony are a far right stronghold
01:25 – What do people in Görlitz think of the Green party and climate change?
02:32 – A far right rally in Görlitz - The Free Saxons and the AfD
05:11 – Attacks on the Green party, Robert Habeck and Ricarda Lang
05:34 – 'We've had death threats' ...
- Title
- How horses are healing childhood trauma | Pressure and Release
- Date posted
- 9 days ago
- Description
- The Kimberley region of Western Australia is a beautiful place. But it is home to communities in crisis – devastated by a pattern of suicides among young Aboriginal people. A glimmer of hope emerges in the form of Prof Juli Coffin, a Nyangumarta woman and mental-health professional who enlists her herd of horses to create deeply felt connections between animal and human. Prof Coffin's programme uses a culturally appropriate setting to support long-term healing for some of Australia's most vulnerable young people.
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- Title
- Why Prague's homeless are resorting to poverty tourism
- Date posted
- 15 days ago
- Description
- Homelessness is on the rise globally, and the Czech Republic has the highest rate in central and eastern Europe. The Guardian visited Prague, for a long time a popular destination for tourists, to see how even this sector caters for the city’s visitors - and to meet the range of people aiming to tackle the causes of homelessness in all its forms.
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Chapters:
00:00 – A homeless tour of Prague
01:52 – Is homeless tourism unethical?
03:20 – Nadjêje's homeless shelters: a social housing crisis in the Czech Republic
05:25 – Street homeless outreach team: 'the entire eastern bloc is relocating here'
06:40 – 'Homeless women face a whole host of problems': Jako doma's day centre
08:35 – A bistro run by homeless ...
- Title
- How coral sounds can heal dying reefs
- Date posted
- 15 days ago
- Description
- This is the sound a coral reef makes. Scientists believe playing sounds of a healthy coral reef to a dying one could save damaged corals
The world has lost half its coral reefs since the 1950s due to global heating, overfishing and pollution and 14% of the Earth’s coral was lost in less than a decade between 2009 and 2018. Using underwater speakers, scientists have broadcasted the sounds of a thriving reef to degraded coral in the Caribbean.
Coral reefs are formed when coral produces and releases sperm and eggs into the sea.These then join to form coral larvae, which swims through the ocean, looking for hard, rock-like structures on which to settle and form coral colonies. The larvae were up to seven times more likely to settle at a struggling reef where they played soundscapes of a healthy ecosystem.
While the results are promising, the scientists say there is more work needed to understand whether all coral species respond to reef sounds in t...
- Title
- The sorry state of asylum seeker housing
- Date posted
- 16 days ago
- Description
- The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale and Oldham who wanted to highlight the realities for women in the asylum system across Greater Manchester.
Supported by the Elephants Trail, the group met women stuck in the asylum backlog, women traumatised by detention and women struggling to find housing. They were all volunteering in their communities, while reckoning with a hostile climate towards refugees and asylum seekers. This film is part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain.
#Asylum #Refugees #Rochdale #ElephantsTrail
- Title
- How leasehold properties keep people poor
- Date posted
- 23 days ago
- Description
- Because of laws brought in by William the Conqueror nearly a thousand years ago,
a fifth of properties in England and Wales can be bought but you can never actually own them.
The system is called “Leaseholding” and it’s a reality for 4.98 million properties in the UK. Leaseholding means you own your property but not the ground it sits on. It’s a system that dates back to when William the Conqueror invaded Britain, claimed all of the land for the crown and leased it to his lords, who in turn leased it to peasants in order to maximise profits while keeping ownership.
The system remains relatively unchanged. “These days you “lease”, the ground from the owner of the land for a certain period, and are still legally called a tenant. Once that period expires, you will need to pay to extend that lease. If you don’t, all legal rights to the property you own revert to the land owner. It’s a system that affects the least well-off the most as leas...
- Title
- The young Americans fighting to ban abortion
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- Since the US supreme court's overturning of Roe v Wade, 16 states have enacted stringent bans on nearly all abortions. But that is not enough for a new generation of organised and passionate activists intent on pushing even stricter laws across the country. Carter Sherman spends time with students and organisers at the annual March for Life in Washington DC and meets the influential woman spearheading the national movement
- Title
- Encountering a 200-year-old hair braid from a formerly enslaved African
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- The remote island of St Helena, a British overseas territory, is best known for Napoleon's tomb – the island's biggest tourist attraction. While overseeing the construction of a long-awaited airport on the island, Annina van Neel learns that the remains of thousands of formerly enslaved Africans have been uncovered, unearthing one of the most significant traces of the transatlantic slave trade in the world. Annina decides to advocate for this legacy, initiating a debate among the islanders – many of whom have shared ancestry with the enslaved – about how to create an appropriate memorial. Along the way, she enlists the help of African American preservationist and veteran activist Peggy King Jorde, who makes important connections in their shared history.
- Title
- The asylum system is failing but these women are no longer staying silent
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale and Oldham who wanted to highlight the realities for women in the asylum system across Greater Manchester.
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Supported by the Elephants Trail the group met women stuck in the asylum backlog, women traumatised by detention and women struggling to find housing. They were all volunteering in their communities, while reckoning with a hostile climate towards refugees and asylum seekers. This film is part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain.
00:00 Intro
01:21 Our stories
03:05 Detention legacy (or detention centre)
05:07 In limbo
06:28 Housing issues
08:15 Our community
09:51 The Rwanda policy
10:35 A decision
The Guardian publishes independent journalism, made possible by supporters. Contribute to The Guardian today ► https://bit.ly/3biV...
- Title
- Buried: how we choose to remember the transatlantic slave trade
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- The remote island of St Helena, a British overseas territory, is best known for Napoleon's tomb – the island's biggest tourist attraction. While overseeing the construction of a long-awaited airport on the island, Annina van Neel learns that the remains of thousands of formerly enslaved Africans have been uncovered, unearthing one of the most significant traces of the transatlantic slave trade in the world. Annina decides to advocate for this legacy, initiating a debate among the islanders – many of whom have shared ancestry with the enslaved – about how to create an appropriate memorial. Along the way, she enlists the help of African American preservationist and veteran activist Peggy King Jorde, who makes important connections in their shared history.
Buried is available with Swahili and isiZulu translated subtitles which can be applied in video settings. The synopsis is available in both languages below.
Buried: jinsi tunavyoamua kukumbuka biashara y...
- Title
- Could Biden’s handling of Gaza split the Democrats?
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- In the vital swing state of Michigan, growing fractures among the Democratic base could spell trouble for Joe Biden in the November election. As party loyalists canvas in the run up to a primary vote, a protest movement against the president’s support for the war in Gaza gains momentum. Oliver Laughland and Tom Silverstone visit the state.
#News #US #Gaza #JoeBiden #Biden #Democrats
- Title
- Is Joe Biden's bid for re-election in trouble? | Anywhere but Washington
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- In the vital swing state of Michigan, growing fractures among the Democratic base could spell trouble for Joe Biden in the November election. As party loyalists canvas in the run up to a primary vote, a protest movement against the president’s support for the war in Gaza gains momentum. Oliver Laughland and Tom Silverstone visit the state.
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- Title
- Traumatised by the welfare system
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale in greater Manchester, who turned the lens on a benefits system that they have seen unfairly penalising vulnerable people in their town.
The group of reporters from the Elephants Trail met friends, family and others in the community trying to navigate the system, and consider how they can use those stories to advocate for change across the country. This film is part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain.
#MadeInBritain #UK #Benefits #Welfare #Politics #News
- Title
- Britain's broken welfare system is leaving our community on the brink
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale who turned the lens on a broken benefits system which they had seen first hand unfairly penalising vulnerable people in their community. The team of reporters met friends, family and others in the community trying to navigate the system while also trying to advocate for change in greater Manchester and across the country. This film was made as part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain.
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Ins...
- Title
- Digital Divide: excluded by a lack of internet access
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Doctors' appointments, job applications, personal banking, key services and more are today mostly managed online. While the UK government details its plans for a digital future to transform public services, one in seven Britons are forced to live without the internet. This film is voiced by three individuals experiencing digital exclusion, revealing how varied and complex the repercussions can be.
Through enacted scenes from their lives, it makes visible the expanding digital divide – an issue too often unseen or ignored by policy makers, businesses and society at large.
#DigitalDivide #DigitalExclusion #Technology #Internet #documentary
- Title
- The Digital Divide: could you live without the internet?
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Could you live without the internet? Doctors' appointments, travel directions, job applications, benefits forms, school scheduling and key services are today managed online.
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While the UK government details its plans for a digital future to transform public services, one in seven Britons are forced to live without the internet. This film is voiced by three individuals experiencing digital exclusion, revealing how varied and complex the repercussions can be. Through enacted scenes from their lives, it makes visible the expanding digital divide – an issue too often unseen or ignored.
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Website ► https://www.theguardian.com<...
- Title
- Cruise ship vs plane: which pollutes more?
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Cruising is booming – 2023 ticket sales have surpassed historic levels and 2024 has seen the launch of the largest cruise ship ever built. But as cruise tourism's popularity has increased, so have the pollution problems it brings.
Sources:
"4 times worse than flying" - The International Council on Clean Transportation
"1 Million cars per day" - Transport & Environment study
"25% of all marine waste comes from cruise ships" -
Ocean & Coastal Management journal
"24% lower emissions if speed reduced" - Seas at Risk report
#CruiseShip #Cruise #Travel #Climate #Pollution #news
- Title
- How cruise ships became a catastrophe for the planet | It's Complicated
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Cruising is booming – 2023 ticket sales have surpassed historic levels and 2024 has seen the launch of the largest cruise ship ever built.
But as cruise tourism's popularity has increased, so have the pollution problems it brings. To customers, it may not be evident that any problems exist, since some cruise line companies claim to be becoming more climate-friendly.
The truth can be quite different. Josh Toussaint-Strauss interrogates what impact the world's biggest ships are having on the planet.
From the Guardian:
‘Biggest, baddest’ – but is it the cleanest? World’s largest cruise ship sets sail
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/jan/26/icon-of-the-seas-largest-cruise-ship-human-lasagne-climate-fuel-lng-greenwashing
‘A good cruise is one that doesn’t come’: Europe’s ports bear brunt of ship pollution
https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2023/oct/19/europe-ports-bear-brunt-of-cruise...
- Title
- Human or AI? The future of beauty standards
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Images created by AI are getting exponentially better, to the point where many people are unable to separate them from the real thing. As this technology continues to develop, challenges to our perception of what is real are immense, and our trust in what we are seeing is eroded. These fake people are already changing industries such as modelling and marketing, but can they offer a more diverse reflection of humanity than has historically been available - or are they destined to reflect the narrow standards of beauty these industries have long been drawn to?
*With thanks to the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
*Great British Brands is published by Country & Town House magazine
- Title
- Human or AI? The future of beauty standards
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Images created by AI are getting exponentially better, to the point where many people are unable to separate them from the real thing.
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As this technology continues to develop, challenges to our perception of what is real are immense, and our trust in what we are seeing is eroded. These fake people are already changing industries such as modelling and marketing, but can they offer a more diverse reflection of humanity than has historically been available - or are they destined to reflect the narrow standards of beauty these industries have long been drawn to?
*With thanks to the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
*Great British Brands is published by Country & Town House magazine
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Sign up to the Guardian's free ne...
- Title
- Ukrainian Factory | Guardian Documentaries
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Ukrainian Factory offers a poignant glimpse into the life of Vitalii Velychurov, a key worker in the main bread factory of Mykolaiv, once a frontline city.
Russian troops destroyed Mykolaiv's major infrastructure and most of the city's residents have left – including Vitalii's wife and children – but the factory has delivered bread to the besieged population every day since the full scale invasion broke out.
Lost in memories of the past and an uncertain future, Vitalii finds solace in the continued rhythm of the factory.
#news #documentary #ukraine #russia #war #film
- Title
- Living with a disability on the 7th floor of a condemned estate
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Milford Towers is a social housing estate in Lewisham, south London, slated for demolition and described by its residents as 'hell'. The residents accuse the council of ignoring them and deliberately running it into the ground. There are frequent leaks, mould infestations, fires, stabbings and violence – and perpetually broken lifts.
#UK #London #News #Housing #Welfare
- Title
- Ukrainian Factory: two years of war for a Mykolaiv key worker
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- The film offers a poignant glimpse into the life of Vitalii Velychurov, a key worker in the main bread factory of Mykolaiv, once a frontline city. Russian troops destroyed Mykolaiv's major infrastructure and most of the city's residents have left – including Vitalii's wife and children – but the factory has delivered bread to the besieged population every day since the full scale invasion broke out. Lost in memories of the past and an uncertain future, Vitalii finds solace in the continued rhythm of the factory.
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- Title
- The London ‘hell’ estate fighting back: murders, fires and broken lifts
- Date posted
- 2 months ago
- Description
- Milford Towers is a social housing estate in Lewisham, London, that is described by its residents as "hell". Slated for demolition, the residents accuse the council of ignoring them and deliberately running it into the ground. There are frequent leaks, mould infestations, break ins, fires, people being stabbed, and perpetually broken lifts. The Guardian's Adam Sich and Christopher Cherry spent a few days there as residents announced enough is enough, and united to challenge the council to finally start treating them as people.
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Tw...
- Title
- The young Americans fighting to ban abortion
- Date posted
- 3 months ago
- Description
- Since the US supreme court's overturning of Roe v Wade, 16 states have enacted stringent bans on nearly all abortions. But that is not enough for a new generation of organised and passionate activists intent on pushing even stricter laws across the country. Carter Sherman spends time with students and organisers at the annual March for Life in Washington DC and meets the influential woman spearheading the national movement
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The...
- Title
- "Love and respect": working together as farmer and flock
- Date posted
- 3 months ago
- Description
- When Rakel took over the last farm in her Norwegian village, she was not only taking responsibility for a flock of accident-prone woolly animals, but also a way of life at a crossroads.
This was a chance to follow in the footsteps of her much-loved father, and live the way she had always dreamed, alongside her wife. A flock of sheep comes with a flock of problems, so the saying goes. With the help of community and family, can Rakel succeed?
#RowdyFlock #Woolly #SheepFarm #Norway
- Title
- Rowdy Flock: a daughter, her dreams, and a sheep farm in Norway
- Date posted
- 3 months ago
- Description
- When Rakel took over the last farm in her Norwegian village, she was not only taking responsibility for a flock of accident-prone woolly animals, but also a way of life at a crossroads.
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This was a chance to follow in the footsteps of her much-loved father, and live the way she had always wanted alongside her wife. A flock of sheep comes with a flock of problems, so the saying goes. With the help of community and family, can Rakel succeed?
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- Title
- Reunited with my cat in the rubble of Gaza
- Date posted
- 3 months ago
- Description
- This is how 13-year-old Yousef Khalid Saeed Naji describes feeling as he is reunited with his cat in the ruins of his Gaza home.
Yousef and his sister Samah Khalid Naji, 18, have chosen to live there with five other members of their family after it was destroyed by an Israeli airstrike in October.
"All we wish for is to return to our previous life that we complained about, but we can't,” said Samah, who was a university student for a few weeks before Israel’s assault on Gaza began.
The Guardian spent two days with Yousef, Samah and their family in December to see the remains of their house in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza.
#news #gaza #israel #palestine #cat #animals
- Title
- How Russia is taking control of the Arctic | It's Complicated
- Date posted
- 3 months ago
- Description
- Controlling the Arctic has long been an ambition of Soviet and Russian leaders.
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And it's not hard to see why: the Arctic contains vast deposits of untapped fossil fuels, it is of huge strategic importance militarily and represents an emerging trade route between Asia and the west to rival the Suez canal. But Russia is not the only country with designs on the Arctic. Canada and Denmark have also staked a claim and, in military terms, Nato is bearing down on all sides. Yet Vladimir Putin is closer than any of his predecessors to gaining control of the polar region. Josh Toussaint-Strauss explores how Russia is trying to entrench its claim to the Arctic.
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- Title
- Why I stay: Living inside the ruins of my Gaza home
- Date posted
- 3 months ago
- Description
- Samah Khalid Naji is 18, and along with six other members of her family, is living in the bombed-out remains of their house in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza. It was destroyed in October by an Israeli missile strike.
The destruction of more than a third of Gaza’s homes as Israel bombards the territory in pursuit of Hamas is leading international legal experts to raise the concept of 'domicide': the mass destruction of dwellings to make the territory uninhabitable. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/dec/07/widespread-destruction-in-gaza-puts-concept-of-domicide-in-focus
The Guardian spent two days with Samah and her family in December to see the remains of their house and how they are surviving the war. She told the film-maker Majdi Fathi about why they decided this was the safest place for them to be.
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- Title
- Is it wrong to eat venison?
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- The UK's deer population is at its highest level for 1,000 years, and is growing exponentially. Now at roughly 2 million animals, the UK’s deer stalkers need to cull at least 750,000 animals a year just for the population to stand still. There are also more food banks in the UK than ever. As the need for food grows, donations, especially those containing protein, become harder to find.
To combat these two problems, the Country Food Trust has created a supply chain from deer stalkers all over the country to food banks that need protein-rich donations. The Guardian environment correspondent Damien Gayle follows the process from forest to food bank, to see if venison could provide an answer to Britain’s food shortage.
#Deer #Hunting #FoodBanks #CostOfLiving #UK #News #venison
- Title
- Why I hunt deer: the surprising truth
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- The Country Food Trust has created a supply chain from deer stalkers all over the country to food banks that need protein-rich donations. As the Guardian environment correspondent Damien Gayle discovered, the truth of what makes a good deer hunter is rather unexpected.
Ian Harvey, Forestry Manager for the West of England, said: "It's an odd thing, and people don't really understand this, that to do this job you've actually got to love wildlife and deer."
"If you haven't got that that drive to be absolutely fascinated by their movement, their biology and their behaviour, the motivation... is not going to be there."
"You've really got to love the job and part of that is a real passion for for deer."
#news #deer #deerhunting #hunting #venison #animals
- Title
- Could deer hunters ease the UK's hunger crisis?
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- The UK's deer population is at its highest level for 1,000 years, and is growing exponentially. Now at roughly 2 million animals, the UK’s deer stalkers need to cull at least 750,000 animals a year just for the population to stand still. There are also more food banks in the UK than ever. As the need for food grows, donations, especially those containing protein, become harder to find.
To combat these two problems, the Country Food Trust has created a supply chain from deer stalkers all over the country to food banks that need protein-rich donations. The Guardian environment correspondent Damien Gayle follows the process from forest to foodbank, to see if venison could provide an answer to Britain’s food shortage.
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- Title
- Ulez dinosaur blocks mobile camera van
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Self-styled ‘bladerunners’ are waging a campaign to cut down Ulez cameras, activists wearing inflatable dinosaur outfits track and block mobile camera vans and protesters regularly turn out to drive anger against the mayor and expansion of the scheme.
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- Title
- Vandal attacks Ulez camera in broad daylight
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Since London's mayor, Sadiq Khan, extended the capital’s ultra-low emission zone in the pursuit of cleaner air, the backlash has become increasingly ferocious.
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#Ulez #Ulezexpansion #bladerunner #London #UK #Pollution #Climate #news
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- Title
- London’s Ulez battle: blade runners, dinosaurs and conspiracy theories
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- The UK capital's ultra-low emission zone charges the drivers of more polluting road vehicles every time they enter the city. But since the Ulez was extended to the whole of London by the city's mayor, Sadiq Khan, the backlash has become increasingly ferocious.
Self-styled ‘blade runners’ are waging a campaign to cut down Ulez cameras, activists wearing inflatable dinosaur outfits track and block mobile vans and protesters regularly turn out to drive anger against the mayor and expansion of the scheme. While many protesters hold legitimate concerns about the Ulez expansion, the Guardian’s Richard Sprenger discovers that conspiracy theories are never far from the surface.
London Ulez averts more air pollution than that caused by capital’s airports, report shows
The Guardian view on London’s low emission zone: doing the right thing.
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The Guardian pu...
- Title
- Bhutan Mountain Man | Guardian Documentaries
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Phuntsho Tshering is Bhutan’s glaciologist and the only person authorised to climb the country’s sacred Himalayas. While travelling, he records the changing landscape in moving videos for his daughter.
#Bhutan #Glacier #Documentary #Himalayas #Mountains #Science
- Title
- Bhutan Mountain Man: video diaries from a lone glaciologist
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Phuntsho Tshering is Bhutan’s glacier specialist and the only person authorised to climb the Himalayan country’s sacred mountains. He spends months away from home measuring the rapidly melting glaciers, while faithfully recording videos on his phone for his daughter, Yangchen.
Yangchen in turn has an inner dilemma. She prays that her father won’t disturb the Snow Lion, the mythical embodiment of the glacier which the Bhutanese believe could provoke a natural disaster. Meanwhile at school she is taught that the biggest threat to survival of the Snow Lion is not her father, but climate change.
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Website ► http...
- Title
- Taiwan’s volunteer army: the civilians training for Chinese invasion
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Kuo Chiu, known as KC to his friends, teaches urban design at Tunghai University in Taiwan. He’s also one of many of the country's citizens who practises rifle skills in his spare time, in case of a Chinese invasion. The Guardian's video team spent time with KC to see how he is preparing.
#Taiwan #China #Invasion #Military #Asia #News
- Title
- The Taiwanese civilians training for a Chinese invasion
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Kuo Chiu, known as KC to his friends, teaches urban design at Tunghai University in Taiwan. He’s also one of many of the country's citizens who practises rifle skills in his spare time, in case of a Chinese invasion.
The population of Taiwan has long grown familiar with Beijing’s pledge to one day ‘unify’ what it claims is a breakaway province. But recently, there has been a significant increase in aggressive and intimidatory acts.
Taiwan’s 160,000 active military personnel are vastly outnumbered by China’s 2 million-member armed forces, leading many civilians to turn to voluntary medical and combat training to protect themselves.
The Guardian's video team spent time with KC to see how he is preparing.
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- Title
- Gaza: Palestinian doctor refuses to hate despite immense personal tragedy
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Palestinian doctor and five-time Nobel Peace Prize nominee, Izzeldin Abuelaish, has experienced immense personal tragedy. In January 2009, an Israeli tank shell hit his home killing his three daughters and one of his nieces and in October this year, 22 members of his extended family were killed in Jabaliya refugee camp by an Israeli airstrike. Dr Abuelaish speaks to the Guardian about how his personal loss has made him determined to push for peace.
- Title
- How barnacles could help locate the missing Malaysian airlines flight
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Barnacles could help us locate the missing Malaysian Airlines flight 370.
These Barnacles, known as Gooseneck Barnacles, cement themselves to Ocean debris and then use minerals from the sea to build their shells layer by layer. Each layer is made up of slightly different minerals which can tell a story of the temperature and other conditions in the water where it was formed.
A piece of the missing plane washed up on the French owned Réunion island off the coast of Madagascar in 2015 with gooseneck Barnacles attached. Since then scientists have developed ways of tracking the ocean temperatures he Barnacles had traveled through to then calculate through statistics the drift pathway that could lead back to the crash.
#malaysianairlines #flight370 #barnacles #marinelife #science #news
- Title
- How the world lost forest the size of Switzerland in one year
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- In 2022 the world lost an area of tropical forest the size of Switzerland - more than 4 million hectares. By 2024 a, staggering 16 million hectares will be lost. That's the equivalent of a tropical
forest the size of Tunisia and the rate of deforestation is getting faster.
96% of deforestation happens in the tropics which is especially bad because tropical forests help regulate weather, store vast amounts of carbon and provide homes for the widest variety of wildlife.
#deforestation #climate #climatecrisis #rainforest #trees #news
- Title
- The Ukrainian soldier reunited with his family for Christmas
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 Olena and her son Vova fled to the UK, leaving behind her husband Kostyantin to fight on the frontlines. Olena has built a new life in the UK and now, almost two years later, the family are able to reunite for Christmas.
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- Title
- How refugees fleeing war, genocide and revolution find hope in the UK
- Date posted
- 4 months ago
- Description
- Donate now to help refugees rebuild their lives in safety. All donations go to the Refugee Councils of Britain, Refugees at Home and the No Accommodation Network (Naccom). ► https://guardian.ctdonate.org/
Imagine having to flee for your life and then face unsafe living conditions and towering uncertainties. This is the reality for many seeking refuge in the UK. Join us as we raise funds for charities supporting asylum seekers and refugees by providing practical support, vital accommodation and a safety net against homelessness and destitution.
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Facebook ►https://www....
- Title
- An Israeli airstrike killed 22 of my relatives, but I refuse to hate
- Date posted
- 5 months ago
- Description
- Palestinian doctor and five-time Nobel Peace Prize nominee, Izzeldin Abuelaish, has experienced immense personal tragedy. In January 2009, an Israeli tank shell hit his home killing his three daughters and one of his nieces and in October this year, 22 members of his extended family were killed in Jabaliya refugee camp by an Israeli airstrike. Dr Abuelaish speaks to the Guardian about how his personal loss has made him determined to push for peace.
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The Guardian publishes independent journalism, made possible by supporters. Contribute to The Guardian today ► https://bit.ly/3uhA7zg
Sign up to the Guardian's free new daily newsletter, First Edition ► http://theguardian.com/first-edition
Website ► https://www.theguardian.com
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Twitter ► https://twitter.com/guardian
Instagram ► https://instagram.com...
- Title
- How Israeli settler violence forces Palestinians to flee their homes
- Date posted
- 5 months ago
- Description
- Masafer Yatta, the most rural and desolate area in the West Bank, is home to about 1,000 Palestinians. The community are mostly herders who raise goats and sheep, and have steadfastly refused to leave their homes despite the mounting difficulties posed by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers on the one hand and radical Israeli settlers on the other.
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But after weeks of intense settler violence in the aftermath of the Hamas attack on Israel on 7 October – and despite the decades-long fight to remain in their homes – these communities are now being forced off their land. Some have described it as “a new Nakba.”
The Guardian’s Bethan McKernan travelled to Masafer Yatta and heard from Palestinian families how armed settlers – some in reservist uniforms, others covering their faces – have begun breaking into their homes at night, beating up adults, destroying and stealing ...
- Title
- Making A Mouthful of Petrol | Guardian Documentaries
- Date posted
- 5 months ago
- Description
- Jess Kohl is the director of A Mouthful of Petrol, a coming of age documentary about 12 year old Jai-Dee and his relationship with his dad Wayne Boland, with whom he shares a love of banger racing.
Jess and Wayne discuss their motivation for making the film and how it shines a light on the tender relationship between father and son in an ostensibly hyper-masculine setting.
For Your Consideration
#documentary #bangerracing #racing #motorsport #film #filmmaking