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Guardian weekly thrasher
Guardian weekly
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Europe takes charge of its own security. Plus: Reform’s young wing
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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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The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world
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The Russian attack on Ukraine has reached its third anniversary amid intense diplomatic pressure from the US to force an end to the conflict
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M23 rebels have made gains in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, seizing the cities of Goma and Bukavu, stoking fears of a regional conflagration
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In the days after flash floods killed more than 200 people in Valencia last year, volunteers and students sifted through the wreckage for photos belonging to families who had survived the disaster to see what could be saved
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Prince Karim al-Hussaini, the Aga Khan and spiritual leader of the world’s Shia Ismaili Muslim sect, has died
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Uncertainty awaits the crowds of Palestinians who packed the road back home to northern Gaza this week
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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Subsidence affecting many new builds, raising questions about sustainability of skyscrapers in coastal areas
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Moves by US, UK and other donors to cut aid mean ‘high malnutrition rates, starvation and death’, say experts
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Experts say legislation will prevent vulnerable people from accessing justice in latest government-backed crackdown
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Culture
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The 2025 book trade jamboree featured a bonanza of heart-shaped fiction, celebrity memoirs, and some vexed discussion about festival finances and children’s reading
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Editorial: With The Queen’s Gambit, Sally Rooney’s Intermezzo and a new BBC TV show, the game is winning it right now
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5 out of 5 stars.
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2 out of 5 stars.
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Long reads
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When China stopped receiving the world’s waste, Turkey became Europe’s recycling hotspot. The problem is, most plastics can’t be recycled. And what remains are toxic heaps of trash
By Alexander Clapp. Read by Philip Arditti -
At 18, Mustafa was told his only way out of prison was to join the regime forces. After 14 years, his past as one of Assad’s fighters could get him killed
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We are raiding the Guardian Long Read archives to bring you some classic pieces from years past, with new introductions from the authors.This week, from 2018: The foreign policy establishment has been lamenting its death for half a century. But Atlanticism has long been a convenient myth
By Madeleine Schwartz. Read by Kelly Burke
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Guardian Weekly's global community
Guardian Weekly's global community