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Guardian weekly thrasher
Guardian weekly
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What data reveals about the global pandemic. Plus: South Africa’s strife
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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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Fuel price rises have triggered protests in Almaty, the country’s commercial capital and largest city, and other cities
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Until 1984, the prison on the island of Gorgona off Colombia’s Pacific coast was a place where political prisoners and dangerous criminals served their sentences. Now it is a national natural park of coral reefs, dense jungle and exuberant fauna
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From the US to Ukraine, Canada to Kashmir, winter has tightened its icy grip on the northern hemisphere
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During the annual Els Enfarinats battle in the south-eastern Spanish town of Ibi participants dress in military clothes and stage a mock coup d’etat as they battle using flour, eggs and firecrackers outside the town hall. The 200-year-old tradition is part of the Day of the Holy Innocents celebrations, a time in Spain for pulling pranks
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Described as the country’s moral compass, Desmond Tutu has died aged 90
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The Guardian’s picture editors select photo highlights from around the world
Regulars
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This reader found the Weekly to be an ideal travelling companion
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The long-running series in which readers answer other readers’ questions on subjects ranging from trivial flights of fancy to profound scientific and philosophical concepts
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Dominic Cummings: maverick or mishmash; Irish election fallout
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I turned to documentary film-making to stay sane when Austin was ravaged by skyrocketing rents and breakneck change
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Move to appoint Justice Ayesha Malik, who banned virginity tests for rape survivors, described as ‘defining moment’ for the country
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Decision to close public hammams – most people’s only chance for a warm wash – sparks anger in light of country’s mounting crises
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Culture
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For the late-blooming, quietly bestselling author, inhabiting her characters is crucial. And so in her new novel, Free Love, she becomes a middle-aged woman in 1960s London who abandons her family for a much younger man
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Long reads
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From ultra-processed junk to failing supply chains and rocketing food poverty, there are serious problems with the way the UK eats. Will the government ever act?
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The long read: When the drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico exploded in 2010, Stephen Stone escaped with his life. But in the years that followed, he came to feel deeply betrayed by the industry he had once trusted
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This week, from 2016: When Ada Colau was elected mayor of Barcelona, she became a figurehead of the new leftwing politics sweeping Spain. The question she now faces is a vital one for the left across Europe – can she really put her ideas into practice?
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Guardian Weekly's global community
Guardian Weekly's global community