No port of call: coronavirus may sink the cruise industry

No port of call: coronavirus may sink the cruise industry

Cruise ships had been enjoying a golden era—until covid-19 came along. The pandemic has been a catastrophe for the industry. Stranded passengers have taken ill and even died, ships have been banned from ports, and revenue has collapsed. But lawmakers are unlikely to bail it out. In Sweden, daily life has been pretty normal, despite the coronavirus, but can that continue? And we report on Dutch disease—the language’s unusual affinity for poxy swear words.

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Episoder(1933)

On the Horn’s dilemma: meeting Somalia’s president

On the Horn’s dilemma: meeting Somalia’s president

The Horn of Africa’s resurgent jihadists of al-Shabab pose the biggest problem to Hassan Sheikh Mohamud. He tells us his plans—political, economic and principally ideological—to calm tensions. Western...

30 Nov 202228min

The French connection: Macron’s state visit to America

The French connection: Macron’s state visit to America

Behind the pageantry, Presidents Joe Biden and Emmanuel Macron will have much to chew over, from a unified response in Ukraine to tricky trade negotiations. Our modelling suggests that Russia’s weapon...

29 Nov 202223min

Patience zero: China’s remarkable unrest

Patience zero: China’s remarkable unrest

Protests have become as bold as they are widespread—mostly against the country’s unsustainable zero-covid policies, but increasingly against the ruling regime itself. California’s wildfires have been ...

28 Nov 202225min

Forgoing a song: protest inside and beyond Iran

Forgoing a song: protest inside and beyond Iran

Players’ refusal to sing their national anthem at the World Cup has brought their country’s protests onto the global stage. We ask whether the discontent back home threatens the regime. A sober look a...

25 Nov 202228min

Scar from the madding crowd: Korea probes a tragedy

Scar from the madding crowd: Korea probes a tragedy

Grief about the deaths of more than 150 people in a crush has turned to anger, and the investigation into what actions were taken—or not taken—has turned political. Our correspondent looks into the va...

24 Nov 202226min

A whole other kettle of fission: Ukraine’s imperilled nuclear plant

A whole other kettle of fission: Ukraine’s imperilled nuclear plant

The power station in Zaporizhia has served as an impromptu military base for Russian forces—but danger is mounting and there are signs that troops may soon give it up. The sportswear-industry boom tha...

23 Nov 202223min

Ploy story: a defenestration at Disney

Ploy story: a defenestration at Disney

Executives have squeezed out Bob Chapek and re-anointed Bob Iger as boss. But the firm’s woes are less about leadership and more about the new economics of Hollywood. We ask why Zimbabwe’s teen mother...

22 Nov 202222min

Damage collateral: a tide turns at COP27

Damage collateral: a tide turns at COP27

An issue ignored for three decades came to dominate the summit’s agenda: reparations to poor countries for climate-driven “loss and damage”. Alas, halting those coming losses did not feature much. Our...

21 Nov 202228min

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