


Why Italy’s next cultural capital looks like a disaster zone
Sixteen years after an earthquake, L’Aquila has yet to shake off the damage
Like most things, the Fontana delle novantanove cannelle, or 99-spout fountain, sounds better in Italian. It is among Italy’s lesser-known and more unusual monuments. The spouts, carved to mimic the faces of men, women and animals, line the walls surrounding a broad square on the outskirts of L’Aquila, a city north-east of Rome. Water gushes into a trough below.
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Ever more Ukrainian women are joining the army
A growing group that is changing society

France’s top general says Russia could attack in five years
Thierry Burkhard, the Forces Armées’ departing chief, says Europe has work to do

The German politicians who want to bar the AfD from government jobs
If the party cannot be banned, perhaps its civil servants can be
Can interceptor drones stop Russia’s terror bombing?
Vast waves of drones are overwhelming Ukraine’s air defences
Pedro Sánchez is fighting for his political life
Shaken by a corruption scandal, Spain’s prime minister is at the mercy of events and of his fickle allies
Why Emmanuel Macron has decided to recognise a Palestinian state
His diplomats hope it will make peace more likely. America and Israel say it emboldens Hamas