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.
Eyewitness El Salvador
Global report • Headlines from the last seven days
United Kingdom
Reader’s eyewitness
SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT
Fears grow over far right’s rise • Ahead of a snap parliamentary vote, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally is polling high across much of the country. Can the party actually win power – and what would it try to do if so?
‘Russian roulette’ • Macron’s ballot box gamble is the stuff of centrist nightmares
Identity crisis • Beware rebranded far right’s creep into the mainstream
Spotlight • Renewed Russian strikes take heavy toll on Kharkiv
Key powers fail to sign peace summit communique
No end in sight • Israel’s conflict with Hamas and Hezbollah grinds on
US warns of the most catastrophic famine for four decades
Eyewitness United States
The Brexit omertà Why both main parties are scared to mention the B word • It was once the defining issue in British politics – but this time around no one, it seems, is in any way keen to discuss the UK’s place in the EU
Cornish language enjoys a renaissance
Snow patrol Inside the fight to save arctic foxes • Captive breeding has helped reduce threat from predators and the climate crisis – but can the species survive long-term?
‘It’s tragic’ Teen Afghan girls on life without school • Barred from education for more than 1,000 days, girls face forced marriage, violence and isolation with no end in sight
The women whose words are tackling Wikipedia’s male bias
Cats in flats • Delight as covert pets finally given legal status
Life support Why looking after No 1 isn’t always best • Research has confirmed the health benefits of supporting others. And the deeper the engagement, the better it gets
Will supreme court ethics prove to be a key election issue?
Russian warships bring cold war frisson to Havana
‘We’re in 1938 now’ Putin’s war in Ukraine and lessons from history • Some analysts believe Kyiv is buying the west time on the precipice of a world war. Does the experience of previous conflicts suggest this time is being used wisely?
The vinyl frontier • As album sales boom in the UK, so has the illegal trade in poor-quality fakes. But dogged record detectives are fighting back against the bootleggers
Opinion Simon Tisdall • Rising violence against politicians is an attack on democracy itself
Anya Ryan • I’ve swiped away my dating apps – and life feels all the better for it
Jonathan Freedland • If Starmer is a ‘political robot’, he’s one that has been hardwired to win
The GuardianView • Heatwaves are on the rise and without urgent action, the death tolls will grow
Opinion Letters
Culture All the rage • The designer and activist has been making waves for decades. Now she’s back with an urgent political message
Alive and Kicken The gallery that’s pivotal to how we see photography • Co-founded before the medium was taken seriously as art, this Berlin venue is turning 50 by celebrating its collection – and photography itself
Culture Reviews
A wild ride • Tragedy and farce collide in the Irish author’s beautiful, lovable and fun tale of lovers on the run in 19th-century Montana
A disaster foretold • The story behind 1986’s Challenger space shuttle explosion is a gripping catalogue of underfunding and stifling bureaucracy
Burning bright •...