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(1940)

Repetitive strains: SARS-CoV-2 variants

Repetitive strains: SARS-CoV-2 variants

The coronavirus’s Delta variant accounts for ever more infections; we ask about mutational surprises yet to emerge, and what can be done about them. The ousting of Ethiopia’s army from the Tigray regi...

2 Jul 202123min

Party piece: China’s Communists at 100

Party piece: China’s Communists at 100

Pomp and rhetoric marked the centenary of what are arguably the world’s most successful authoritarians. We sit in on the celebrations, tinged with paranoia; we look back to 1921 and how the party came...

1 Jul 202122min

No day in court: Jacob Zuma’s jail sentence

No day in court: Jacob Zuma’s jail sentence

South Africa’s embattled former leader will be imprisoned for failing to show up to trial—a sign that, for all the rot in South Africa, its Constitutional Court still has teeth. Our environment editor...

30 Jun 202120min

Bear necessities: learning to handle Russia

Bear necessities: learning to handle Russia

As both summitry and military near-misses proliferate, some want measured dialogue while others want markedly tougher talk. Our defence and Russia editors discuss world leaders’ diverging views on han...

29 Jun 202121min

Third time’s the harm: Africa’s crippling covid-19 wave

Third time’s the harm: Africa’s crippling covid-19 wave

Hopes that the continent had escaped the worst of the pandemic have proved too hasty; our correspondent describes a slow-rolling tragedy with little hope of respite. Reading scores in America are shoc...

28 Jun 202120min

Iraq to its foundations: a chance to remake the state

Iraq to its foundations: a chance to remake the state

With elections looming, there is an opportunity to remake a state ravaged by war and riven by power struggles. We ask how to take Iraq out of a hard place. Fires are raging again in the American West;...

25 Jun 202121min

Bench marks: weighing recent SCOTUS rulings

Bench marks: weighing recent SCOTUS rulings

The court’s term is not quite over, with contentious rulings still pending. We examine the latest decisions to gauge how its new conservative justices have affected its ideological bent. As a former M...

24 Jun 202122min

Hunger strikes: North Korea’s food shortages

Hunger strikes: North Korea’s food shortages

An admission that the country’s food situation is “tense” is a rare glimpse into the compounding effects of pandemic policies and crop failures. Adherents of wild conspiracy theories in America tend t...

23 Jun 202119min

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