The Guardian Weekly magazine is a round-up of the world news, opinion and long reads that have shaped the week. Inside, the past seven days' most memorable stories are reframed with striking photography and insightful companion pieces, all handpicked from The Guardian and The Observer.
Editor’s notes
Global report • Headlines from the last seven days
United Kingdom
Reader’s eyewitness
SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT
How a tragedy was twisted into a far-right rallying cry • The student Henry Nowak’s harrowing death revealed the ease with which such events can be appropriated for political ends, both in the UK and beyond
Vance, Musk and the UK • The US has linked this tragedy to ‘civilisational decline’. Why?
Stand firm, fight back • Murder should not be exploited to spread lies about race and privilege
Power and glory World Cup 2026, the greatest show on earth, has kicked off and is set for a six-week sprint through Trump’s America • This is the end, of our elaborate plans, the end. Of everything that stands, the end. It seems fitting that football’s latest stopping point on its voyage upriver into the blank parts of the map, a mission so choice that when it’s over you may never want another one, should be a World Cup overseen by a haunted-looking man with a messiah complex, out there operating beyond the pale of acceptable sporting governance, the warrior-poet Swiss lawyer football never knew it needed.
Populist but pro-western Pashinyan gets to heart of the matter
In limbo Middle East pays the price for impasse of leaders’ making • The complex relationship between Trump and Netanyahu continues to undermine a ceasefire
Did one man plan attacks on Jewish communities? • Legal documents, expert investigations and social media posts show how a 32-year-old Iraqi appeared to run ‘proxy’ campaigns
Sew fine
Happy talk Does utopian plan of fer a realistic route to a fairer world? • Some will question its credibility – but alternative future to the one imagined in report is far bleaker
Wee-working startup turns urine into fertiliser
Brutal and emboldened How bandit crisis spun out of control • Conflicts over resources and land have grown due to the climate crisis, deforestation and population growth
Families tied after deputy role raises dynasty fears
‘Bring your own plastic’ call as Iran conflict hits supplies
Heart works The labour of digitising 60,000 love letters
Moral mission • Can autonomous killer drones powered by AI take morality onboard? While the technology is set to play a growing role in modern warfare, there remains an unresolved ethical challenge
Endless blackouts breed fear of coming US showdown
Status symbols Should Trump raise statues without public consultation?
‘I had an epiphany: my birth mother didn’t want the adult me. She wanted the baby she’d been forced to give up’ • Thirty years after my parents were pressured into placing me with an adoption agency, I finally reconnected with them. But it was nothing like the neat stories you see on TV
Hello, goodbye • By the mid-1960s, the Beatles were ready to quit touring for good. A new collection of pictures by rock photographer Jim Marshall captures their last gigs
Simon Tisdall • The failure to bring peace lies at the door of Trump’s meddling
Nadia Khomami • Hey! You in the stalls! Put that phone away and surrender to the art
Jonathan Freedland • Britain is now a swamp of lies – and we got here on the Brexit bus
The Guardian View • Hopes for cancer treatment come in small victories that extend life, not in giant leaps
Opinion Letters
‘Brash, pushy, lethal’ • That’s how actor Rupert Everett describes his younger self....