However grim and difficult life these days is, I’d still prefer to be sitting on dry land in lockdown than trying to do a three-point turn on the Suez canal with a 400-metre cargo ship under my control. Wouldn’t you? The grounding of the Ever Given container vessel in the Suez canal has provoked both hilarity and genuine concern.
Read More | Lire La SuiteView on urban insecurity: build a feminist city
The way our cities and towns look and work reflects political priorities. In mid-19th century Paris, when Baron Haussmann was seeking public money for building his boulevards, he told the government that wide, open avenues would make it harder to riot and build barricades. In an age of urban insurrections at the heart of the French capital, that quickly opened up the public purse.
Read More | Lire La SuiteThe banality of the British monarchy
If Harry and Meghan can leave ‘The Firm’ and build a new and ‘authentic’ life as adults, why can’t I and millions of other Canadians do the same?
Read More | Lire La SuiteThe climate crisis can’t be solved by carbon accounting tricks
An astonishing global shift is under way: 127 countries have now stated that by mid-century their overall emissions of carbon dioxide will be zero. That includes the EU, US, and UK by 2050 – and China by 2060. Companies are enthusiastically signing up to similar “net zero” goals.
Read More | Lire La SuiteView on the crimes of Assad’s regime: slow, uncertain justice
The conviction of an intelligence official in Germany marks the end of impunity – but will more senior figures be held accountable?
Read More | Lire La SuiteThe path to peace in Israel-Palestine is through decolonisation
Only the formation of a single decolonised state encompassing the entire territory of historical Palestine can put an end to Israel’s colonial ambitions.
Read More | Lire La SuiteTen years on from the Arab spring, Sisi has made life in Egypt hellish
In 2011, I, like most Egyptians at the time, had little hope that Hosni Mubarak’s regime would ever end. His 30 years in power had been set apart by systematic human rights violations. His pathological concern with his own security had given rise to a vast autocratic and bureaucratic state, with little civil or political freedom.
Read More | Lire La SuiteBeyond the Beirut explosion: The many dangers of ammonium nitrate
On August 4, 2020, nearly 2,750 tonnes of improperly stored ammonium nitrate exploded in the seaport in Beirut, killing more than 200 people, injuring more than 6,000, and displacing thousands from their homes.
Read More | Lire La SuiteView on Russia’s protests: Navalny isn’t Putin’s only problem
Politicians know that they have a problem when they have to deny it. On Monday, Vladimir Putin insisted that an extravagant palace on the Black Sea coast did not belong to him, following a video exposé released by the opposition leader, Alexei Navalny, and so far watched by around 90 million people. Footage of him swimming in a giant pool was fake.
Read More | Lire La SuiteThere is no ‘return to normalcy’
Joe Biden’s presidential bid has often invited comparisons to President Warren G Harding, whose 1920 campaign slogan promised a “return to normalcy” after a chaotic preceding decade.
Read More | Lire La Suite



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