With the impending return of Donald Trump to the White House, our correspondents assessed how key nations are preparing. Shaun Walker reported on the complex picture in Ukraine, where, despite a notable lack of public support for Kyiv from Team Trump, there is increased acceptance for a push for a peace deal. Andrew Roth examined the quandary for Washington in pursuing an isolationist policy towards Syria. The Ukrainian city of Bakhmut has been destroyed by Russia, but Emma Graham-Harrison and Artem Mazhulin reported on the inspiring Svitlana Ovcharenko, editor of the town’s newspaper. She is trying to keep the idea of Bakhmut alive by continuing to publish, despite all of its surviving residents fleeing. Paris correspondent Angelique Chrisafis has been covering the horrors of the trial of Dominique Pelicot since it began in September. As we approach its conclusion, Angelique looked back in depth at the case of one of the worst sexual predators in history, as France – and the world – reflected on how his depravity was allowed to happen. If you only read one piece on the case, this should be it. Following Monday’s arrest of a suspect in the New York killing of the health insurance executive Brian Thompson, police found a 3D-printed “ghost gun” among his possessions. That revelation came two days after we published this grimly fascinating feature by Samira Shackle about the growing threat of these homemade weapons, from their use by far-right cells to jihadists. Meanwhile, the intense focus on the US healthcare insurance industry after the Thompson shooting continues. In this expert analysis, Jessica Glenza assessed a landscape marked by policy gridlock, special interests and record profits, creating a level of dissatisfaction and grievance that spilled over into political violence. Simon Goodley revealed that a group of Vodafone franchise operators in the UK were launching a £120m legal claim against the phone company after accusing it of “unjustly enriching” itself at their expense (a claim Vodafone “strongly refutes”). Some of the operators spoke to Simon about the deep financial and emotional strain that they say was caused by moves including slashed commission fees and fines for seemingly minor administrative errors. Our in-depth Courts in crisis series examined the unprecedented backlogs and chaos in the legal system in England and Wales, with dire consequences for all and even justice itself. Over the past eight months, the Observer’s Shanti Das has been investigating the rising number of rape cases in England and Wales that have collapsed after the defendant has claimed to be suffering from “sexsomnia”, a rare medical condition that can cause sufferers to engage in sexual activity while in non-REM sleep. After the Observer’s previous investigations, the Crown Prosecution Service promised to improve its handling of sexsomnia claims. But last weekend, Shanti discovered it has failed to keep any data on sexsomnia cases and does not know how often it is used as a defence. Henry Belot covered the rise in antisemitism in Australia and the fear and anger among the Jewish community after the firebombing last week of a Melbourne synagogue. The 2034 men’s Fifa World Cup was awarded to Saudi Arabia by a process that left it as the sole bidder. Barney Ronay was damning about this vote without a vote: “Football has now committed an extraordinary act of violence. Not to mention a show of total disdain for governance, democracy, care, love, hope and good sense.” You might have heard of 15-minute cities: walkable neighbourhoods with nearby conveniences (and the baffling conspiracies attached to them). Denmark has gone 10 minutes better with a “five-minute city” in a revolutionary neighbourhood in Copenhagen. Steve Rose took a (short) stroll around Nordhavn. One more thing … I love Marina Abramović and I love the BBC Radio 4 series This Cultural Life, so the Serbian conceptual artist’s appearance on the show was a treat. “I am hilarious,” she deadpanned, in one of several laugh out loud moments. |