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The political conversation is becoming ever more focused on migration, with Reform UK leader Nigel Farage determined to make small boat crossings and asylum seekers the central domestic policy topic while parliament is in recess. The summer has witnessed a clear rise in nationalistic rhetoric with anti-migrant rallies outside hotels alongside a campaign to raise the flags of St George and the union jack. For our cover story, Esther Addley examines the increasingly febrile climate across the country and hears why observers are concerned at the lack of government pushback against far-right orchestrated protests.We return to Gaza for the big story based on a joint investigation by the Guardian, the Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and the Hebrew-language outlet Local Call using information from an IDF database. Emma Graham-Harrison and Yuval Abraham reveal what figures collected by the Israeli military suggest about the conduct of their Gaza campaign.Last week, the high court found in favour of the Guardian after the British actor and film-maker Noel Clarke sued for libel over allegations of sexual misconduct. As the Guardian’s editor-in-chief Katharine Viner writes in Opinion, the verdict was a victory for the brave women who told us their stories – and for journalism. Your subscription allows the Guardian to do such vital investigations. Thank you for your continued support of our work.Get the Guardian Weekly delivered to your home addressFive essential reads in this week’s editionNadiya and Serhii were evacuated from Dnipropetrovsk oblast to Pavlohrad. Photograph: Julia Kochetova/The GuardianSpotlight | No negotiation After Donald Trump mooted Ukrainian-Russian land swaps to achieve peace in Ukraine, Dan Sabbagh hears from residents of Donetsk about what they think of giving up their homelandEnvironment | An unlikely paradiseKorea’s demilitarised zone has become a haven for some of Asia’s rarest species, finds Raphael Rashid on a trip to the edge of the uninhabited stripFeature | Silicon Valley highs and lowsFormer Facebook executive and one-time UK deputy prime minister Nick Clegg tells Gaby Hinsliff what it was really like working with the tech bros and billionairesOpinion | Disillusionment leads to electoral disappointment It’s clear that millions of loyal voters are disappointed with the Democrats (and Labour too). If they fail to adapt to the collapse of centrist politics, says Nesrine Malik, then defeat beckonsCulture | Fighting talk Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch rehearse a playful marital tiff for their new film The Roses in the presence of Catherine ShoardWhat else we’ve been readingOver the course of almost 70 years, the British photographer Martin Parr has documented the mundane and turned it into an art form. This collection of his life in pictures spans most of those years and in doing so reveals much about how Britain has changed during that time. Graham Snowdon, editorDining across the divide is one of my favourite features from the Guardian, and I think it plays a crucial role in countering the narrative that the UK is irreversibly divided and a middle ground cannot be found. We all need to have more conversations with “the other side” as a collective – maybe we wouldn’t have as many problems as we do today. Craig Law, product marketing managerOther highlights from the Guardian websiteFestivalgoers battled winds of 70km/h in Black Rock City, Nevada, as a ‘wall of blowing dust’ swept through the Burning Man festival site. Photograph: Simba Khela/itsjeka Video | Powerful dust storm sweeps through Burning Man campsite Audio | Can science crack the mystery of ME? Gallery | Psychedelic rock! Formations that mess with your mindGet in touchWe’d love to hear your thoughts on the magazine: for submissions to our letters page, please email weekly.letters@theguardian.com. For anything else, it’s editorial.feedback@theguardian.comFollow us Facebook InstagramGet the Guardian Weekly magazine delivered to your home address
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