Not welcome: inside the 29 August Guardian Weekly
Briefly

Political conversation is increasingly focused on migration, driven by Reform UK leader Nigel Farage's push to make small boat crossings and asylum seekers a central domestic policy topic. The summer has seen a rise in nationalistic rhetoric, anti-migrant rallies outside hotels and campaigns to raise St George and union flags. Observers are concerned by limited government pushback against far-right orchestrated protests. A joint investigation using information from an IDF database presents figures from the Israeli military that illuminate the conduct of the Gaza campaign. The high court ruled in favour of the Guardian in Noel Clarke's libel case, seen as a victory for victims and journalism. Coverage also includes Ukrainian residents' reactions to proposed land swaps and wildlife findings in Korea's demilitarised zone.
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.
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.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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