Long Reads

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Long Reads - Total results - 675
Kashmir's healthcare workers go the extra mile to vaccinate shepherd populace against COVID-19
long-reads

Kashmir's healthcare workers go the extra mile to vaccinate shepherd populace against COVID-19

Carrying vaccine doses and medical equipment including oxygen cylinders, healthcare workers trekked through the mountains on foot or with the help of horses or porters for six hours to reach their destination in Lidderwat, 20 km from Pahalgam.

Queer Eye's Bobby Berk on the Netflix show's impact, road to Fab 5 stardom, and his design philosophy
long-reads

Queer Eye's Bobby Berk on the Netflix show's impact, road to Fab 5 stardom, and his design philosophy

In an exclusive interview with Firstpost over Zoom, Bobby Berk, the design expert on the Emmy Award-winning show, spoke with us about Queer Eye's brand of magic.

Two men, one ambulance, and their battle against Delhi's devastating second COVID-19 wave
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Two men, one ambulance, and their battle against Delhi's devastating second COVID-19 wave

Aadil and Azeem started free ambulance services in Delhi during the last week of April 2021. Their services are primarily targeted at patients from underprivileged backgrounds.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, deaths among Black Americans soar due to opioid addiction crisis
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Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, deaths among Black Americans soar due to opioid addiction crisis

The portrait of the opioid epidemic has long been painted as a rural white affliction, but the demographics have been shifting for years as deaths surged among Black Americans. The pandemic hastened the trend by further flooding the streets with fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid, in communities with scant resources to deal with addiction.

Empathy engines, the paranormal and living vicariously | Inside Life is Strange: True Colors
long-reads

Empathy engines, the paranormal and living vicariously | Inside Life is Strange: True Colors

Life is Strange: True Colors is 'a game about the power of empathy and the protagonist's critical journey of self-discovery'

How a Bolivian indigenous community is struggling to survive the loss of the country's second largest lake
long-reads

How a Bolivian indigenous community is struggling to survive the loss of the country's second largest lake

The lake dried up about five years ago, victim of shrinking glaciers, water diversions for farming and contamination. Ponds reappear in places during the rainy season.

US documents hold answers to the mystery of former Japanese PM and wartime criminal Hideki Tojo's remains
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US documents hold answers to the mystery of former Japanese PM and wartime criminal Hideki Tojo's remains

The documents show the cremated ashes of Tojo, one of the masterminds of the Pearl Harbour attack, were scattered from a US Army aircraft over the Pacific Ocean about 30 miles (50 kilometres) east of Yokohama, Japan’s second-largest city, south of Tokyo.

In Israel's mixed Jewish-Arab cities, communities find themselves on edge after war, violence
long-reads

In Israel's mixed Jewish-Arab cities, communities find themselves on edge after war, violence

Like Jews and Arabs across the country, communities in Lod are on edge as the future of peaceful coexistence in mixed cities remains in question.

In Syrian camp, children left with no school, no play as only education coming their way is IS propaganda
long-reads

In Syrian camp, children left with no school, no play as only education coming their way is IS propaganda

It has been more than two years that some 27,000 children have been left to languish in al-Hol camp. Most of them not yet teenagers, they are spending their childhood in a limbo of miserable conditions with no schools, no place to play or develop and seemingly no international interest in resolving their situation.

After mainland China, Communist Party's focus now shifts to quashing Tiananmen Square tributes in Hong Kong
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After mainland China, Communist Party's focus now shifts to quashing Tiananmen Square tributes in Hong Kong

In Hong Kong, the recent arrests and convictions of prominent activists have had a chilling effect on those who participated in the vigil in the past.

In photos: How Guatemalan lives are being upturned by failed immigration bids
long-reads

In photos: How Guatemalan lives are being upturned by failed immigration bids

The COVID-19 pandemic initially blunted migration to the U.S. last year, but numbers were soon on the rise again.

Amid COVID-19 pandemic, restorers in Florence's Medici Chapel unleash grime-eating bacteria to clean Michelangelo's sculptures
long-reads

Amid COVID-19 pandemic, restorers in Florence's Medici Chapel unleash grime-eating bacteria to clean Michelangelo's sculptures

Last fall, with the chapel operating on reduced hours because of COVID-19, scientists and restorers completed a secret experiment: They unleashed grime-eating bacteria on the artist’s masterpiece marbles.

On the India-Bhutan border, an indigenous group faces extinction due to mining pollution
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On the India-Bhutan border, an indigenous group faces extinction due to mining pollution

The entire population of one of the world’s smallest indigenous groups, the Toto, live in a village on the India-Bhutan border. They are threatened by mining, water scarcity and a blood disorder.

World Press Photo 2021 contest winners include Mads Nissen's First Embrace, Antonio Faccilongo's Habibi
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World Press Photo 2021 contest winners include Mads Nissen's First Embrace, Antonio Faccilongo's Habibi

This year, the competition received 74,470 entries from 4315 photographers across the globe. The winners' list comprises 45 photographers from 28 countries, of which 35 are first-time winners.

Amid ceasefire after 11-day war, displaced in Gaza face familiar plight
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Amid ceasefire after 11-day war, displaced in Gaza face familiar plight

The United Nations estimates that about 1,000 homes were destroyed in the 11-day war that ended last Friday. Lynn Hastings, the UN humanitarian coordinator for the region, said hundreds of additional housing units were damaged so badly they are likely uninhabitable.

An AD-mi-RAY-ble vision: Revisiting Satyajit Ray's foray into the advertising industry
long-reads

An AD-mi-RAY-ble vision: Revisiting Satyajit Ray's foray into the advertising industry

Charting the growth of Satyajit Ray, the ad-man, Pinaki De selects five advertisements created by the filmmaking genius and analyses how Ray balanced commercial demands with his fine aesthetic sensibilities.

Mexico City marks 500 years of  Spanish siege of Tenochtitlán, the capital of Aztec Empire
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Mexico City marks 500 years of Spanish siege of Tenochtitlán, the capital of Aztec Empire

It was one of the few times an organised Indigenous army under local command fought European colonisers to a standstill for months, and the final defeat helped set the template for much of the conquest and colonisation that came afterward.

After being hit by COVID-19 crisis, fishing season offers hope to Senegal's women
long-reads

After being hit by COVID-19 crisis, fishing season offers hope to Senegal's women

In the small community of Bargny, women support their families by drying, smoking, salting and fermenting the catch brought home by male villagers.

Livelihoods of Worli's Koli community, impacted by coastal infra projects, further battered by COVID-19 crisis
long-reads

Livelihoods of Worli's Koli community, impacted by coastal infra projects, further battered by COVID-19 crisis

For years, artisanal Kolis at Worli have been coping with environmental and community endangerment from coastal development projects. The COVID-19 lockdown has added to the woes of the fishing community.