The country was divided before, unsure about its approach to Hezbollah, but now people are thinking as one The smell of burnt rubber hung heavy over the rescue workers as they dug, painstakingly removing rubble, their shadows long and movements harsh under the burning floodlights. Onlookers watc...
Read Also
- Kenya's president visits Haiti as it grapples with future of international efforts to fight gangs
- Blaine Higgs asked to apologize for ‘joke’ about dead N.B. Liberal supporter
- US national security adviser Jake Sullivan expresses worry over escalating tension in Middle East
- Kenya Haiti peacekeeping
- Hungarian intel agency interviews CEO with pager link
- Weaponising ordinary devices violates international law: UNHR chief
- ‘You may trust your husband but I don’t’: Gisele Pelicot case shows why medical staff should test for STDs
- Trump says too late for another debate as Harris pushes for second clash
- Honeymoon over: Keir Starmer now less popular than Rishi Sunak
- Takeaways from AP's report on warning signs about suspect in apparent Trump assassination attempt
Latest The Guardian
- Honeymoon over: Keir Starmer now less popular than Rishi Sunak
- Elon Musk backs down in his fight with Brazilian judges to restore X
- Worker who mistakenly sent abuse to customer wins unfair dismissal claim
- Keir Starmer vows to protect public services from fresh austerity
- Sicily: fear of foreign actors prompts security request for wreck of luxury yacht
- Warboys lawyer joins team working for alleged Fayed victims
- Starmer eyes ex-Tory minister David Gauke for sentencing review role
- Fulham fans on Mohamed Al Fayed: ‘I was shocked, but I wasn’t surprised’
- ‘We’re not safe any more’: Lebanon reels from week of attacks that have intensified war with Israel
- Family of banker murdered 20 years ago rebuke ‘incompetent’ Police Scotland