• chevron_right

      Men believed to be missing surfers died from gunshots, Mexican officials say

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 20:35

    Families of men presumed to be two Australian and American who went missing in Baja California arrive in Tijuana to identify bodies

    The bodies believed to be those of the two Australians and an American who went missing in the Pacific coast state of Baja California showed the three men were killed with gunshots to the head, Mexican authorities said on Sunday.

    María Elena Andrade Ramírez, the state’s attorney general, said the families of the missing men had arrived in Tijuana to verbally identify the bodies. Authorities expect to have official confirmation shortly.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Horror and fury in Australia as epidemic of violence against women sweeps across the country

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 06:22

    Anger and grief have erupted, with women demanding action from the government on what has become a national emergency

    It was the death of Samantha Murphy that prompted a sense that something in Australia was very wrong.

    The 51-year-old mother of three left her home in Ballarat in regional Victoria to go for a jog at around 7am on a Sunday morning in early February and did not return.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      ‘A complete 180’: how a trial treatment in Sydney for heroin addiction is changing lives

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 00:00

    Exclusive: Robbie Mason wanted to give up but just didn’t know how. Then he and his partner joined Australia’s first hydromorphone trial

    Robbie Mason started using heroin when he was a child.

    His hands are dotted with pinprick scars. He used for so long he stopped being able to inject into the veins in his arms, so he turned to his fingers.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      ‘Exceptional’: rare book of illustrations from Darwin’s ‘bird man’ on sale for £2m

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 2 days ago - 10:00

    The full set of folios published by John Gould will be presented at Firsts book fair in London in mid-May

    John Gould was one of the most sought-after taxidermists in 19th-century London, commissioned by King George IV to stuff the first giraffe to arrive in England.

    But Gould’s lasting legacy is birds. He travelled the world documenting and cataloguing as many avian species as he could find, many of them never seen before, earning him the nickname the Bird Man and the appointment as official “bird stuffer” to the Zoological Society.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Three bodies reportedly found in northern Mexico where Perth brothers went missing

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 22:01

    Siblings Callum and Jake Robinson and US citizen Carter Rhoad were travelling on a surfing holiday when they were reported missing

    Three bodies have reportedly been found in an area of northern Mexico where two Australian brothers and an American friend are missing.

    Reuters cited two sources with knowledge of the investigation as saying Mexican authorities had found three bodies in Baja Peninsula. The bodies were reportedly found near a cliff, but have not yet been formally identified.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      The not-so-secret cost of being superhuman: elite sport’s problem with disordered eating

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 15:00

    Athletes are breaking their silence about their experience of eating disorders and disordered eating. Why is this happening in an arena celebrated as the epitome of health?

    Elite sport has long been consumed with the idea of the superhuman. Pushing the capabilities of the human body to its extremes in the hopes of uncovering the blueprint to engineer bodies that can jump higher, run faster and endure longer. And, as professionalism has increased, so too has the optimisation of athletes’ bodies in the quest for peak human condition.

    But recent revelations that former Australian women’s cricket captain Meg Lanning cut her international career short due to struggles with disordered eating have exposed some of the cracks that have long been forming in the elite sport system.

    Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Glencore may trigger bidding war for mining rival Anglo American

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 11:43


    Swiss company considers making takeover offer, while BHP could move again after initial rejection

    The mining company Glencore is considering making a takeover offer for Anglo American that could trigger a multibillion-pound bidding war for the company, according to reports.

    It prompted a 3% jump in Anglo American’s share price on Friday, making it the top riser on the FTSE 100 and helping to drive the index to an all-time high of 8,215 points.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      We know there are many benefits to writing by hand – in a digital world we risk losing them | Nova Weetman

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 4 days ago - 15:00 · 1 minute

    Handwriting makes us better writers, free of the suggestions of spelling and grammar apps, and it represents something of our personalities

    Recently, I found a letter my mum had written me years ago when she was on holidays in Vietnam. The paper is thin and ratty on the edges, but the handwriting and the turn of phrase is unforgettably hers. In looping, cursive black ink, she has described pages and pages of wondrous observations about her travels, immediately transporting me to another place and another time. If this had been sent as an email, it might have been lost in the endless updating of laptops and operating systems. But because it was a letter, I added it to a box in the cupboard some years ago, knowing I would want to read it again and again and again.

    Letters like these become even more valuable after someone dies, when you go hunting for a record of their voice. And knowing that the person held a pen to write the words elevates the correspondence far beyond something sent via phone or computer. But it is not just the words they write or the expressions they use; it is also the very particular form their lettering takes. I can recognise the bulbous, slightly rounded N that my mum always used, remembering all those times I tried to forge her signature and failed dismally. Her handwriting, like that of my dad’s and of my grandparents, was distinctive, as much their signature as their name.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Great Barrier Reef’s worst bleaching leaves giant coral graveyard: ‘It looks as if it has been carpet bombed’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 6 days ago - 15:00

    Scientists stunned by scale of destruction after summer of storm surges, cyclones and floods

    Beneath the turquoise waters off Heron Island lies a huge, brain-shaped Porites coral that, in health, would be a rude shade of purplish-brown. Today that coral outcrop, or bommie, shines snow white.

    Prof Terry Hughes, a coral bleaching expert at James Cook University, estimates this living boulder is at least 300 years old.

    Continue reading...