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  • Israel’s parliament has passed a law imposing the death penalty on Palestinians convicted of fatal attacks – a measure sharply criticised as discriminatory by European countries and human rights groups. Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s deputy head of international news, Devika Bhat, for Today in Focus: The Latest - our evening podcast bringing you up to speed on the story of the day in 10 minutes.

    Israel passes law to give death penalty to Palestinians - The Latest

    Video10:25
  • Israeli warplanes struck a building in a southern suburb of Beirut after sending an evacuation notice

    Israeli strike destroys building in southern suburb of Beirut – video

    Video0:33
  • Witness video released on 31 March and verified by Reuters shows a large explosion and plumes of smoke rising in Isfahan

    Large explosion seen in Isfahan in Iran – video

    Video0:35
  • Singer says she is 'feeling good' in video confirming she will perform again in Paris in September

    Céline Dion announces return to performing in birthday message – video

    Video1:49
  • It has been 10 years since the migrant crisis began - when thousands of people fleeing war, persecution and poverty sought refuge in Europe. A decade later, migration remains one of the continent’s most divisive and politicised issues

    How Europe’s immigration crackdown is fuelling smuggling gangs – video

    Video14:07
  • Hannah Ellis-Petersen visits communities living in the shadow of Bhalswa’s overfilled landfill heaps to see how they have become reliant on the landfill that is poisoning them

    Life and death on India’s toxic trash mountains – video

    Video13:28
  • Child poverty in the UK is now at record levels, with 4.5 million kids living in poverty. One of the biggest drivers of this is the controversial two-child limit, which caps universal credit and tax credits to a family’s first two children​. With the Labour government’s Child Poverty Strategy due ​imminently, many charities and campaigners have called for this brutal policy to be scrapped, but what’s life actually like for mums under the limit and will the government listen to growing calls to abolish the austerity-era policy? Journalist and poverty campaigner Terri White speaks to women in her area of greater Manchester to find out.

    Raising kids in poverty: The UK’s ‘inhumane’ two-child limit

    Video15:04
  • Reporter Matthew Cassel speaks to Israelis in Tel Aviv, to see what they think of the war, famine and genocide happening next door, and the growing international condemnation against it

    'Our Genocide': How do Israelis feel about the war in Gaza? – video

    Video15:34
  • Meet Mazyouna, a 13-year-old girl from Gaza who lost the right side of her jaw in an Israeli attack on her home in Gaza. She lost two of her siblings in the attack and was denied access by Israel to life-altering surgery abroad for more than six months

    From Gaza to Texas: the race to save Mazyouna’s face - video

    Video8:53
  • Each spring since 2003, Jon Aars, senior scientist at the Norwegian Polar Institute, and his team have conducted an annual polar bear monitoring program on Svalbard - collaring, capturing and taking samples from as many bears as they can across several weeks.By studying polar bears they get a better understanding of what is happening in this part of the Arctic environment. The bears roam over large distances and, being apex predators, provide lots of information about what is happening lower in the food chain and across different Arctic species.The Guardian accompanied Aars on an expedition to the southern end of Spitsbergen island, the largest in the Svalbard archipelago.

    How scientists capture a polar bear – video

    Video8:40
  • Milford Towers is a social housing estate in Lewisham, south London, slated for demolition and described by its residents as 'hell'. The residents accuse the council of ignoring them and deliberately running it into the ground. There are frequent leaks, mould infestations, fires, stabbings and violence – and perpetually broken lifts.

    The London ‘hell’ estate fighting back: murders, fires and broken lifts

    Video7:33
  • Samah Khalid Naji is 18, and along with six other members of her family, is living in the bombed-out remains of their house in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza. It was destroyed in October by an Israeli missile strike. The Guardian spent two days with Samah and her family in December to see the remains of their house and how they are surviving the war. She told the film-maker Majdi Fathi about why they decided this was the safest place for them to be

    Why I stay: Living inside the ruins of my Gaza home – video

    Video6:35

Documentaries

Watch our series of in-depth films exploring in rich detail the stories behind the headlines
  • In a time of escalating ICE raids and the ache of uncertainty, 38-year-old Abel has made a radical decision: he's leaving the United States. Not because he has to, but to escape his perpetual limbo and see the world

    Abel leaves LA: self-deportation from Trump's America - documentary

    Video13:57
  • Amateur conservationist and social media influencer Theerasak 'Pop' Saksritawee has a rare bond with Thailand’s critically endangered dugongs. Pop raises an urgent alarm — before Thailand’s dugongs vanish forever

    The influencer racing to save Thailand’s most endangered sea mammal

    Video15:04
  • Dying is a process and in a person’s final hours and days, Nickie and her Threshold Choir are there to accompany people on their way and bring comfort. Through specially composed songs, akin to lullabies, the choir cultivates an environment of love and safety around those on their deathbed.

    Threshold: the choir who sing to the dying - documentary

    Video21:46
  • Alan has promised his wife, Sylvia, that they will be cryogenically preserved upon death, and reunited in the future. However, when Sylvia dies all too soon, Alan, now 87, falls in love with another woman and is forced to reconsider his future plans.

    Love Immortal: man freezes late wife but finds new partner

    Video11:51
  • Josh Toussaint-Strauss investigates disappearing restaurants on Google Maps with Lauren Leek, a social data scientist, who grew so frustrated with this problem that she decided to build her own.

    How Google Maps is shaping where we eat – video

    Video6:37
  • More than eight years after the Grenfell Tower fire killed 72 people, the companies, materials and rules that made it possible are still shaping how homes are built, in the UK and around the world

    How the failures that caused Grenfell still exist today

    Video8:12
  • Josh Toussaint-Strauss investigates how illegal HMOs contribute to a crisis of poor housing and how local grassroots organisations are trying to help

    How illegal HMO properties are risking lives (and how Guardian readers can help) – video

    Video4:11
  • Josh Toussaint-Strauss digs into the long history behind the practice of skin lightening, and how the beauty industry has used messaging rooted in classism and colonialism to sell its products, as well as investigating what unregulated products are doing to the skin

    How the beauty industry still profits from colonialism – video

    Video6:52

Explainers

  • Has the US and Israel's war on Iran made regime change a viable possibility, or has it only pushed reform further out of the Iranian people's reach?

    Is regime change in Iran a possibility? – video

    Video7:39
  • Donald Trump has promised to ‘fix’ Venezuela’s ‘broken’ oil industry – but with analysts estimating that could take up to 14 years and billions of dollars, what is in it for the US president?

    Dense, sticky and heavy: why Venezuela’s oil is valuable to Trump – video explainer

    Video3:35
  • Whether you’re a parent of a child, or a child watching this on a VPN, Guardian Australia’s Matilda Boseley is here to clear up what the social media ban means

    Are Australian kids breaking the law if they sneak on to social media? – video

    Video3:15
  • Kyiv is battling to minimise Putin's maximalist demands, including the cessation of territories in the east

    Ukraine: are we closer to a peace deal? – video explainer

    Video2:07
  • As a fierce contest takes shape between Labour, Reform UK and the Greens, John Harris and John Domokos take the temperature in an area of Manchester that feels like a microcosm of Britain - and find voters split between two completely different views of their lives, and the future

    Why this Manchester byelection is a lesson in 21st century politics – video

    Video13:48
  • In last week's byelection in the Welsh constituency of Caerphilly, Reform UK were the hot favourites, and the focus of huge attention. But as John Harris and John Domokos saw close-up, a Reform win failed to happen thanks to a story most of the media didn't see: how online fear and loathing were beaten back by community spirit, facts trumping fury, and everyday empathy 

    The Welsh town that saw off Nigel Farage – video

    Video15:51
  • After a long summer defined by flags, protests and tensions over asylum, John Harris and John Domokos go back to Liverpool to explore the lives of people dealing with a huge housing crisis, while trying to stop the issue exploding into hate and division

    The city that reveals Britain's biggest problem: there's nowhere to live – video

    Video15:25
  • As Nigel Farage's party sweeps to victory in Lincolnshire, John Harris and John Domokos take a road trip through anger, sadness and fear – and, despite Reform's triumph, discover people working on a new politics of hope and common humanity

    From absurdity and anger to hope in Reform UK's new heartland – video

    Video16:33
  • Following the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good by ICE agents in Minneapolis, the Guardian’s Oliver Laughland and Tom Silverstone travel to the heart of affected neighbourhoods  to speak with residents who are fighting to defend their community from violence and intimidation

    The occupation of Minneapolis: how residents are resisting Trump’s ICE 'invasion' – video

    Video13:09
  • In the aftermath of the Charlie Kirk killing, the Guardian's Oliver Laughland and Tom Silverstone head to Chicago, where Donald Trump's Ice deployment, codename 'Operation Midway Blitz', has been met by a defiant wave of sustained protests

    How Chicago is resisting Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown - video

    Video13:21
  • Donald Trump's second presidency has led to allegations of pervasive self-dealing. From the acceptance of a luxury jet from the state of Qatar, to the creation of a Trump cryptocurrency, the president has been accused of monetizing the White House while enacting a swath of extreme policy. Oliver Laughland and Tom Silverstone travel across south Florida, visiting Turning Point's student action summit, meeting the Republican strategist Steve Bannon, and witnessing events at the harsh new detention centre "Alligator Alcatraz".

    Trump’s new gilded age: fearmongering, mass deportations and self-enrichment – video

    Video13:47
  • The world’s richest person has placed his mission to Mars in a low-income county near the US-Mexico border. As a small cluster of voters connected to SpaceX decide to incorporate their own ‘Starbase city', Oliver Laughland and Tom Silverstone meet environmental opponents, space enthusiasts and residents who decry the gentrification Musk's expansion has brought

    How Elon Musk ‘colonised’ a corner of Texas to build his own space city - video

    Video12:48

Sport

  • Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Paul Watson and Jacob Steinberg after a disappointing England performance against Uruguay and Igor Tudor leaving Spurs.

    England disappoint and the Tudor era is over at Spurs | Football Weekly

    Video55:46
  • Jannik Sinner beat Czech 21st seed Jiri Lehecka 6-4 6-4  in a rain-interrupted Miami final to become the first man since Roger Federer in to complete the Sunshine Double.

    Sinner sees off Lehecka to complete Sunshine Double: Miami Open final highlights – video

    Video2:43
  • Max Rushden is joined by Jonathan Wilson, Nedum Onuoha and Will Unwin, featuring very sad voice notes from Barry Glendenning and Elis James, looking back on disappointments for the Republic of Ireland, Wales and Northern Ireland

    World Cup playoff drama and Salah’s legacy at Liverpool | Football Weekly Extra – video

    Video1:00:23
  • The Iran men’s national football team wore black armbands and held school bags as their anthem played before a match in Turkey on Friday, in what a team official said was a protest over the killing of schoolgirls on the first day of the war

    Iran football players hold school bags in tribute to girls killed in bombing – video

    Video0:41
  • The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale and Oldham who wanted to highlight the realities for women in the asylum system across Greater Manchester. Supported by the Elephants Trail, the group met women stuck in the asylum backlog, women traumatised by detention and women struggling to find housing. They were all volunteering in their communities, while reckoning with a hostile climate towards refugees and asylum seekers. This film is part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain

    Our lives in the UK asylum system: 'the power of fear' – video

    Video11:58
  • The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale in greater Manchester, who turned the lens on a benefits system that they have seen unfairly penalising vulnerable people in their town. The group of reporters from the Elephants Trail met friends, family and others in the community trying to navigate the system, and consider how they can use those stories to advocate for change across the country. This film is part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain.

    Britain's broken welfare system is leaving our community on the brink – video

    Video13:37
  • The Guardian was working with a community reporting team called the Elephant’s Trail in Rochdale on a series about their town when a byelection was called.  The contest quickly plunged into chaos after the Labour party and the Green party withdrew support for their candidates and the canvassing was dominated by smaller parties. But how did this affect the voters? The team hit the streets and found evidence of apathy, concerns about homelessness and a desire for politicians who are committed to changing their community for the better 

    A view from Rochdale: ‘Democracy has gone out of the window’ – video

    Video4:09
  • Homegrown was a grass roots community group that stood in the middle of a new housing development in rapidly gentrifying Tottenham in north London. The group was led by Rose and Emma whose message to the young people they helped was to be their best, and never give up. So when they were told they had to leave, there was only one thing to do: occupy.

    Occupy Tottenham: a community defends its home - video

    Video21:41

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