Lorenzo Tondo in Jerusalem, Malak A Tantesh in Gaza and Aseel Mousa told the heartbreaking story of Yaqeen Hammad. The 11-year-old was Gaza’s youngest influencer, offering practical survival tips for life under bombardment and, she said, trying to “bring a bit of joy to the other children so that they can forget the war.” She was killed in an Israeli airstrike on her home on 23 May. Malak and Lorenzo also wrote about Dr Alaa al-Najjar, a respected paediatrician and one of Gaza’s dwindling number of medics, who lost nine of her 10 children in an Israeli airstrike on her home in Khan Younis when she was at work, trying to save children. Malak and Jason Burke delved deeper into the hunger and despair in Gaza City and, in the West Bank, Lorenzo, Quique Kierszenbaum and Sufian Taha spoke to witnesses to an attack by violent settlers that left 10 Palestinians in hospital. We published photographs from one of those wounded, an Israeli activist, who retrieved his memory card before his camera was seized and smashed. In Kyiv, Shaun Walker interviewed Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa Dzhemilev, who lives in exile in the Ukrainian capital after Russia seized his homeland. Using very undiplomatic language, he discussed turning down Putin’s money to back the Russians and his views on Donald Trump and his envoy Steve Witkoff: “I’ve seen a lot of stupid diplomats in my life, but one like him, that’s a first.” This week marked five years on since the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis and the subsequent Black Lives Matter protests that rippled around the world. Melissa Hellman visited the still cordoned-off site where Floyd was murdered, where there is a tense debate ongoing over how best to honour his legacy, while Gloria Oladipo spoke to protestors who were shot at by police. In the UK, our Race report project looked at the state of racial equality: an investigation by Chris Osuh, Aamna Mohdin and Raphael Boyd found only a third of the recommendations from UK government-commissioned race reports over the past 40 years have been implemented, while Lanre Bakare spoke to Black British TV makers, who said they were “fighting over scraps” amid a lack of opportunities. Nesrine Malik reflected on how the protests changed the way she thought about racial justice for the the Long Wave newsletter, while Jason Okundaye visited Bristol, where a statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down in 2020. We also heard from writers in Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, Germany and the US on the legacy of the movement in their countries. In UK politics, Pippa Crerar revealed Labour would delay its flagship child poverty strategy until at least the autumn, even though tens of thousands more children will fall into poverty as a result. Ashley Kirk revealed through a striking polling analysis how Keir Starmer’s party has seen the biggest dip in popularity within its first 10 months in power of any newly elected UK government in 40 years. Do these charts show just how worried Labour should be? Jessica Elgot got the scoop on ministers preparing to announce a trade deal with Gulf states, amid criticism from rights groups that it makes no concrete provisions on human rights or modern slavery. Kalyeena Makortoff revealed that 17 years after the taxpayer bailout of Royal Bank of Scotland - now known as NatWest - its disgraced ex-boss, Fred Goodwin, is estimated to be receiving an annual pension worth nearly £600,000. The joy of Liverpool’s Premier League title parade, attended by 500,000 fans was wrecked by a car driving into a crowd, injuring dozens of people. Liverpool football correspondent Andy Hunter spoke to Helen Pidd about how the incident unfolded on Today in Focus and, for the First Edition newsletter, Aamna Mohdin explained how police moved to get ahead of the kind of conspiracy theories that followed last summer’s attack in Southport. There was a shock triumph for Arsenal in the Women’s Champions League final despite starting as underdogs against Barcelona, sparking joyful scenes in Lisbon. “For Arsenal, this changes everything,” wrote Jonathan Liew, and for the defender Leah Williamson it capped quite a journey; the day before the final she talked to Suzanne Wrack about being a 10-year-old mascot on the only previous occasion Arsenal had won the trophy, in 2007. In Australia, the state of New South Wales witnessed a series of devastating floods. Henry Belot spoke to a third-generation dairy farmer on the mid-north coast who was burying his dead stock after devastating floods in the state. Katie McLeod spoke to residents and farmers in the region involved in the cleanup, while Luca Ittimani interviewed a cafe owner in Taree whose cafe was inundated just two years after previous “once-in-50-year” floods. Paula Cocozza told the shocking story of Aimee Walton, whose sister believes she was “groomed” to kill herself on a pro-suicide forum. James Bloodworth told the story of his friend Nick’s descent into the “masculinity salesman” rabbit hole was an important cautionary tale from the manosphere. And on Today in Focus, Nicola Packer described her four-and-a-half-year ordeal through the courts after being prosecuted for, and then found not guilty of, having an illegal abortion. Hannah al-Othman has followed the case from beginning to end. I enjoyed Simon Hattenstone’s interview with Alan Alda to discuss his 60 years of fame; Michael Sun on Lorde’s surprise appearance at a Lorde-themed club night in Sydney; novelist Adam Mars-Jones on the complexities of seeing his “queer biker novel” Box Hill (slowly) make its way to its premiere at Cannes in his diary of his trip to the south of France; these strikingly unguarded portraits of ordinary Soviet citizens at their most relaxed, curated by Mee-Lai Stone; and Zoe Williams on the suggestion millennials are choosing dogs over having children. And I loved the exuberance of Oliver Wainwright’s review of the building and Jonathan Jones’s review of the art at London’s new V&A East Storehouse, an open-access home to a staggering 250,000 artefacts. Oliver dubbed it a “National Museum of Absolutely Everything”. One more thing …Guardian US columnist Moira Donegan has a gripping podcast with academic Adrian Daub called In Bed with the Right, focusing on rightwing ideas about sex, gender and sexuality. It’s fascinating and enraging … I particularly enjoyed the recent episode on Amber Heard, and the ongoing series on what happened in Germany every month in 1933. |