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Turkey This article is more than 10 months oldTurkish actor wins ECHR case over ‘kiss on the terrace’ videoThis article is more than 10 months oldCourt rules her lawsuit was wrongly thrown out and domestic courts should have shown greater rigour The European Court of Human Rights has condemned Turkey for failing to protect the private life of a prominent Turkish actor who had been secretly filmed kissing another celebrity at her home in footage broadcast on television.
Limp Bizkit This article is more than 8 years oldUkraine to Limp Bizkit's Fred Durst: Keep rollin' on – you're bannedThis article is more than 8 years oldUkrainian security services have reportedly imposed a five-year ban on the nu-metal singer Fred Durst, the singer in the nu-metal band Limp Bizkit, has been banned from entering Ukraine for five years by the country’s security service, according to reports.  The Ukrainian publication Astropof reported that the ban had been imposed in November, “in the interests of guaranteeing the security of our state”, according to Billboard.
GreenpeaceInterview‘A bit of a Swiss army knife’: the leadership duo aiming to help Greenpeace UK cut throughDamien Gayle: Environment correspondentSince taking up their roles in October, Will McCallum and Areeba Hamid have set about transforming the environmental group and expanding its scope to take on new challenges On 24 July 2020, radical climate activists walked up to Greenpeace UK’s elegant 1930s HQ in the heart of Islington and smeared it with pink paint.
In a year in which we questioned our obsession with all things retro, James Blake pulled off the unthinkable, taking dubstep, soul and even barbershop to create a new musical language Published: 6:38 AM ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tbTEoKyaqpSerq96wqikaKWlqLake9KeqaKdo2Sura7Upqpmp5Zif3F9kA%3D%3D
Crime This article is more than 13 years oldBody found near Windsor Great Park identified as missing millionaireThis article is more than 13 years oldHusband charged with murder of Joanna Brown, whose body was discovered in woods on FridayA body found by police near Windsor Great Park has been confirmed as that of missing millionaire Joanna Brown, officers said today . Brown, 46, from Ascot, Berkshire, was reported missing last Monday when a family member raised the alarm, after being unable to contact her.
Higher educationBook explores reason behind the rhymeJack and Jill went up in the hill anxious to lose their virginity, according to a social historian who has published a book documenting the real stories behind the nation's favourite nursery rhymes. Chris Roberts, a librarian at the University of East London, claims the nursery rhymes we all grew up with are full of sex, disease and royal scandal. Jack and Jill was about the loss of virginity, a possible teenage pregnancy and Jack running away the minute he had had his wicked way with Jill.
‘Life can change in a heartbeat’ … Gemma Jones in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. Photograph: Andrew Fox/The GuardianGemma Jones’s dream holiday left her with a crushed pelvis, ribs and collarbone – and changed her life for the better. Twenty years on, she remembers the attack that began with an ominous growl by Elle HuntIt was as Gemma Jones was climbing on to the elephant, over its head and on to its back, that she began to have misgivings.
The ObserverNeil GaimanReviewNeil Gaiman is at his best when he abandons his trademark fantasy for stark realismRead an extract from The Ocean at the End of the Lane This is Gaiman's first adult novel since Anansi Boys in 2005 and his millions of fans will be mad for it. It tells the story of a man who returns to Sussex for a funeral and then finds himself driving "randomly" to the scenes of his childhood.
OpinionIsrael This article is more than 2 months oldThe two-state solution has been a diplomatic failure. It’s also still the best answer we’ve gotThis article is more than 2 months oldChris McGrealThe real obstacle has been Benjamin Netanyahu, who has been in power for nearly half the time since the idea was floated The two-state solution could do with a rebrand. The optimism that greeted the Oslo peace accords between Israel and the Palestinians three decades ago has long since given way to eye rolling and grimaces among politicians and diplomats at any mention of the “peace process”.