Kalmykia’s Long Goodbye
The mass deportation of the Siberian Kalmyk people by Stalin still reverberates.
The mass deportation of the Siberian Kalmyk people by Stalin still reverberates.
Badma Biurchiev Open Democracy Dec 2016 15min Permalink
One story of coming to America from the Soviet Union.
Julia Ioffe The Atlantic Jan 2017 Permalink
One refugee’s escape from Syria.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Oct 2015 25min Permalink
How populism took a continent.
Sasha Polakow-Suransky The Guardian Nov 2016 30min Permalink
"Some in Nice knew the man as one of the many playboy predators the city seems to beget—black hair slicked back off a shining brow, dress shoes tapering to varnished points, a dark shirt unbuttoned low to reveal the pectorals into which he had obsessively, unblushingly, invested himself. He was 31 but preferred older women, both for their erotic openness and, it seems clear, for their money. Those who knew him best knew him to be a cold and brutal man, detached, amused by little save rough sex and gore."
Scott Sayare GQ Jan 2017 20min Permalink
A dispatch from the Philippine capital, where “no one will be safe until many, many more have died.”
James Fenton New York Review of Books Jan 2017 15min Permalink
The president of the Philippines’ kill list is reputed to have over million names of supposed drug pushers and addicts, including many mayors and politicians. There is no reliable way to get off the list other than dying in a hail of bullets from assassins on motorbikes.
Patrick Symmes New York Times Magazine Jan 2017 15min Permalink
Tokyo’s reverent “black music” fandom.
Amanda Petrusich Oxford American Jan 2017 25min Permalink
A trip to Râmnicu Vâlcea, a town of 120,000 where the primary (and lucrative) industry is Internet scams.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee Wired Feb 2011 10min Permalink
How a poet and an architect rescued a nation’s riches.
Tony Perrottet Smithsonian Jan 2017 25min Permalink
A 48-hour reconstruction of the Breitscheidplatz Attack and the political response.
Der Spiegel Dec 2016 25min Permalink
The Mosul Dam is failing. A breach would cause a masssive wave that could kill as many as a million and a half people.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Dec 2016 25min Permalink
A ragtag band of pirate-Jihadists grab Americans from a diving resort in the Phillipines and lead them on an odyssey through the jungles of an archipelago with the competing interests of the Phillipines’ Navy and Army, the U.S. Military, and the C.I.A. thwarting their rescue.
Mark Bowden The Atlantic Mar 2007 45min Permalink
How the refugee crisis has made a lot of people very, very rich.
Malia Politzer, Emily Kassie Huffington Post Dec 2016 Permalink
How the 1983 assassination of his father, the president of American University of Beirut, shaped the Golden State Warriors basketball coach.
John Branch New York Times Dec 2016 Permalink
When his father was murdered, Wasil Ahmad vowed revenge. He was 8 years old.
Joshua Hammer GQ Dec 2016 20min Permalink
John Georgelas was a military brat and drug enthusiast from Texas. Now he’s a prominent figure within the Islamic State.
Graeme Wood The Atlantic Dec 2016 40min Permalink
As business declines amidst an opioid epidemic in America, Purdue Pharma’s owners the Sackler family are pursuing a new strategy: putting OxyContin in medicine cabinets around the world.
Harriet Ryan, Lisa Girion, Scott Glover LA Times Dec 2016 15min Permalink
In the beginning, they were known as die Dönermorde – the kebab murders. The victims had little in common, apart from immigrant backgrounds and the modest businesses they ran.
Thomas Meaney The Guardian Dec 2016 25min Permalink
An investigation into how “Mr. Putin, a student of martial arts, had turned two institutions at the core of American democracy — political campaigns and independent media — to his own ends.”
Eric Lipton, David E. Sanger, Scott Shane New York Times Dec 2016 Permalink
'He collapsed on Granville Road, within 100 meters of the house he was renting for $20,000 a month. Police and medics were called to the scene, but within 30 minutes, Perepilichny was pronounced dead. Police told the press the death was “unexplained.” A 44-year-old man of average build and above-average wealth had simply fallen down and died in the leafy suburb he’d recently begun calling home.'
Jeffrey E. Stern The Atlantic Dec 2016 30min Permalink
A Czech Libertarian planted a flag on an unclaimed island in the Danube and gave it a name. Now, the Liberland government is struggling to build its a country without taxes, political correctness, or much in the way of women.
Morgan Childs GQ Dec 2016 15min Permalink
What it takes to defect from the military state of one of the world’s youngest countries.
Alexis Okeowo New Yorker Dec 2016 35min Permalink
A young Brazilian couple from “an impoverished northeastern city that’s been described as ground zero of the Zika epidemic” struggle to care for their daughter.
Alex Ronan New York Dec 2016 10min Permalink
Mary Kuanen escaped the violence of Sudan only to live through her husband’s murder in suburban Denver. This is her life today.
Robert Sanchez 5280 Dec 2016 Permalink