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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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Eleven found guilty of crimes against humanity after trial that heard testimony on torture, rape and forced disappearances
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Report claims posts on abortion and contraception have been deleted while misinformation on the feeds of social media users in Africa, Latin America and Asia has not been tackled
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Long reads
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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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The long read: As the author of a book about a pivotal uprising in 18th-century Jamaica, Vincent Brown was enlisted in a campaign to make its leader a national hero. But when he arrived in Jamaica, he started to wonder what he had got himself into
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Guardian Weekly's global community
Guardian Weekly's global community