As Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would seize territory in Gaza and finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said the population would “leave in great numbers”, Bethan McKernan and Malak A Tantesh spoke to Palestinians suffering under the renewed military assault and a nine-week blockade on food and medical supplies. Jason Burke and Malak also reported on the wave of looting in Gaza as Palestinians become more desperate. Writing from Washington DC, Andrew Roth explored how Trump’s walk-away diplomacy has enabled Israel’s worst impulses. On Today in Focus, Bethan drew on four years of reporting from Israel and the Palestinian territories to give her assessment of the worsening conditions in Gaza and the diminishing prospects for peace. Aya Al-Hattab, a writer in Gaza, provided a terrifying first-hand account of conditions there. When India launched its reprisal for the Kashmir terrorist attack with missile strikes in Pakistan-administered Kashmir and the Pakistani province of Punjab, Aakash Hassan in Kashmir and Shah Meer Baloch in Islamabad gathered first-hand accounts of panic and fear. South Asia correspondent Hannah Ellis-Petersen asked who will talk the two sides down now that the US seems unwilling to get involved. In an exclusive interview, Shah spoke to Pakistan’s deputy prime minister, Ishaq Dar, who told him the country would go to “any extent” to defend its dignity, while defence and security editor Dan Sabbagh explained how India’s strikes show warfare has been normalised again. Reporters Angela Giuffrida and Harriet Sherwood were waiting for white smoke at the Vatican as Robert Francis Prevost became Pope Leo XIV. Sam Jones profiled a moderate, good-humoured first American pope, while Catherine Pepinster made the case that Prevost’s choice of name is indicative of a progressive reformer. Two investigations from Shaun Walker and Pjotr Sauer revealed how Russia is using online recruits for its sabotage campaign in Europe, and previously unreported details of the plot to bring down DHL cargo planes with exploding parcels. And in an exclusive reported from the Chornobyl exclusion zone in Ukraine, Dan Sabbagh looked at the likely tens of millions of pounds worth of damage caused by a Russian drone attack to the containment structure over the site of the world’s worst nuclear disaster. Julia Kochetova’s photographs are haunting. There was, wrote economics editor Heather Stewart, relief for Keir Starmer as the UK signed a trade deal with the United States on Thursday, but warned of a limited wider impact on the UK economy. Annie Kelly broke down what the deal means for our First Edition newsletter. It was, argued Gaby Hinsliff, less a trade deal than as the end of a hostage negotiation. Donald Trump confirmed the deal via his social media platform Truth Social, something he increasingly does for most White House announcements and policy updates. Adam Gabbatt profiled Trump’s output on the platform and what it tells us about his mentality. Elsewhere, for the Guardian US’s featured essay series, Derek Beres asked if Maga politicians’ “only the strong survive” approach to illness, public healthcare and education is heralding an era of “soft eugenics” in the United States. After last week’s local elections in England, former Conservative minister Justine Greening wrote that heavy losses by the Tories in last week’s local elections are proof that out-Reforming Reform does not work. Polly Toynbee agreed and called for Labour to recognise that what really matters are local issues and to see the threat from progressives in the form of the Liberal Democrats and the Green party. John Harris spent time in Lincolnshire, where Reform achieved great success, and drew a sobering picture of a country whose citizens have lost the ability to talk to each other. An inquest in Sydney heard evidence from police and mental health workers who had contact with Joel Cauchi and his concerned parents before he went on to stab six people to death and injure others at Bondi Junction shopping centre in April 2024. Security guard Joseph Gaerlan also gave vivid evidence about the chaos and terror of the rapid attack on shoppers by a man who was finally shot dead by a lone police officer. In this fascinating visual investigation, Ana Lucía Gonazález Paz, Rajeev Syal, Garry Blight, Harvey Symons, Lucy Swan and Paul Scruton revealed the extent to which the UK’s prison system is hampered by its historical infrastructure and the outdated philosophy behind it. The piece made a big impact. We had some enjoyable reads in our lifestyle section: Chloë Hamilton, 34, took a long, hard look at millennials like herself and asked: “Are we really as uncool as gen Z say?” Sarah Miller posed another important question: why do some people not ask questions in conversation? Alyx Gorman investigated a curious row between two cooks in Australia, and asked on the Full Story podcast: does anyone really own a recipe? Jess Cartner-Morley wrote that glamour had trumped politics at the Met Gala, despite the tumultuous US national mood, and also not to be missed are Amelia Gentleman’s deep reporting on the first English city to try to ban smartphones for under-14s, and Rob Davies’s investigation into the scourge of 24-hour high street slot machine shops in the UK. Our culture section was full of great reads this week: Donna Lu looked at how, after years of jarring Cockney-Kiwi accents, Hollywood has finally cracked Australian dialects; Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova proved a thrilling, if somewhat disillusioned and dejected interviewee for Philip Oltermann as she looked back at her last decade; Emma John went behind the scenes of Here We Are, the late Stephen Sondheim’s final musical, which has been completed, to the outrage of some fans. We had Jonathan Jones’s five-star review of the National Gallery rehang in London. Andrew Lawrence wrote in praise of Ryan Coogler’s ambitious vampire film Sinners, a Great Migration period piece that smartly captures the highs and lows of the Black experience, and Lucy Mangan was bemused at the first show to emerge from Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s $100m Amazon deal: a two-part documentary about the octopus … And finally, do take a look at this beautiful project by our Saturday magazine and environment teams who asked 99 people – from Barack Obama and Billie Eilish to his cameraman and neighbours – for a message to send to David Attenborough on the occasion of the legendary natural history broadcaster’s 99th birthday. |