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Guardian weekly thrasher
Guardian weekly
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The victims of Africa’s forgotten war. Plus: After the Moscow attack, a cynical blame game begins
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Subscribe to a clearer, global perspective on the issues shaping our world
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Subscribe to The Guardian Weekly and enjoy seven days of international news in one magazine with worldwide delivery.
Guardian Weekly at 100
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Our seven-day print edition was first published on this day in 1919
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Our weekly print magazine is celebrating a century of news. Here’s how it covered the Apollo 11 landings; Northern Ireland’s Bloody Sunday; Hillsborough; the fall of the Berlin Wall and Rwanda’s genocide
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Our weekly print news magazine is celebrating its centenary. Here’s how it covered big events of the past two decades including 9/11, the Arab Spring and Trump’s victory
Readers around the world
History of Guardian weekly
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The Guardian Weekly editor Will Dean on the transformation of our century-old international weekly newspaper into a weekly news magazine
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For almost a century, the Guardian Weekly has carried the Guardian’s liberal news voice to a global readership. Taken from the GNM archives, these pictures chart the paper’s life and times from 1919 to the present day
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Since the end of the first world war, the Weekly has delivered the liberal Guardian perspective to a global readership
In pictures
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Those celebrating rejoice by throwing coloured powders at one another. The festival marks the start of spring and is marked in India, Nepal and around the world
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Emergency crews responded to an attack at a venue near Moscow, where the roof collapsed amid a raging fire
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Polyfest, held this week in Auckland, New Zealand, saw thousands of high school students gather to compete in music, dance and speech performances
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AFP photographer Pedro Pardo gained access to a remote stretch of frontier in China’s north-east Jilin province. Between rusting factories and peeling housing blocks were glimpses of daily life in North Korea
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Las Fallas is a festival that lasts for weeks in which installations of parodic papier-mache, cardboard and wooden sculptures are burnt every year on the last day, in the ‘cremà’ to end the festivities
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Lofoten Seaweed in Norway creates products for everyone from home cooks to professional chefs. These include nori, grass kelp, knotted wrack, truffle seaweed, among many other local species
Regulars
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This reader found the Weekly to be an ideal travelling companion
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Dominic Cummings: maverick or mishmash; Irish election fallout
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The west London hotspot is famed for its bohemian, Afro-Caribbean character but, having lived through many changes already, locals are worried about plans for Portobello market
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Exclusive: Satellite analysis revealed to the Guardian shows farms devastated and nearly half of the territory’s trees razed. Alongside mounting air and water pollution, experts says Israel’s onslaught on Gaza’s ecosystems has made the area unlivable
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Poor harvests in extreme weather conditions have led to a tripling of cocoa prices – but farmers have seen no benefit
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Long reads
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Datacentres are part of Ireland’s vision of itself as a tech hub. There are now more than 80, using vast amounts of electricity. Have we entrusted our memories to a system that might destroy them? By Jessica Traynor
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The long read: Despite promises of reform, exploitation remains endemic in India’s sandstone industry, with children doing dangerous work for low pay – often to decorate driveways and gardens thousands of miles away
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From 2020:Jake Haendel spent months trapped in his body, silent and unmoving but fully conscious. Most people never emerge from ‘locked-in syndrome’, but as a doctor told him, everything about his case is bizarre
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Guardian Weekly's global community
Guardian Weekly's global community