
Walking through the crowded streets of the Pakadjuma neighbourhood in Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, I am struck by the vibrant atmosphere around me. Children play happily in puddles, surrounded by...

Donald Trump is firing out presidential pardons and warnings of retribution. What happens next?
Donald Trump has now pardoned or commuted the sentences of around 1,500 January 6 protesters, including those who were convicted of crimes against police officers relating to the riot at the US Capitol. But use of the...

Netflix’s La Palma’s ‘megatsunami’ has been debunked
In the Netflix series La Palma, a Norwegian family goes on holiday to the Canary Islands when a young researcher discovers alarming signs of an imminent volcanic eruption. Cumbre Vieja is an active volcano on La Palma,...

Why meteorologists are comparing Storm Éowyn to a bomb
Storm Éowyn is today unleashing strong and damaging winds over the British Isles, and particularly over Ireland and Scotland. Air pressure at the centre of the storm plummeted 50 millibars in the 24 hours leading up...

The pope’s memoir, Oscar nominees and a mafia exhibition – what to read, see and do this week
I finally got round to watching Conclave last week. Two hours of Ralph Fiennes and Isabella Rossellini in Oscar-nominated performances alongside Lucian Msamati and a stray papal turtle. The scandals. The tension. The...

The Holocaust poets who can help us to understand genocides past and present
On Holocaust Memorial Day we remember the victims of the Nazi Holocaust in 1940s Europe and all those affected by later genocides. I believe that reading poetry is an important way to commemorate these victims because it...

Sexism linked to social ills for men and women, finds largest cross-cultural study of its kind
Feminism is facing a backlash, with womens rights being rolled back in many countries and a significant number of people saying feminism has gone far enough or even too far. Yet women still face basic obstacles to...