With breathtaking views over Mont Blanc, dozens of high quality restaurants, palaces, sumptuous chalets and luxury boutiques, Courchevel is a right of passage for today’s billionaires and stars.
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300 kilometres from European shores, Libya has become a ticking time bomb ready to implode at any moment. Since the fall of Kadhafi in 2011, the country has been divided between the East and the West, between General Haftar’s new national army and the militia controlling the capital of Tripoli.
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What’s it like to live without running water? In Peru’s sprawling capital, Lima, this is the everyday reality for 1.5 million children and adults, forced to pay up to a week’s salary for just one day’s water.
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Welcome to the exclusive caribbean resort of Saint-Barths - a paradise with a turquoise blue sea, where the temperature never drops below 28º. Since the 50s, sumptuous villas and luxury yachts have made the island a top tourist destination for billionaires and ‘beautiful people’.
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Since announcing his candidacy, Donald Trump is everywhere. To him, it seems that nothing is taboo and no policy too outlandish to embrace. To understand this phenomenon, we followed his campaign across the country for 200 days.
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Can games change the world? Today public spaces and entire cities are being designed, planned and played through the medium of games.
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Walking the red carpets of the Cannes for the first time, Julia Roberts wore an enormously sublime emerald around her neck. This deep green, precious stone immediately captivated the public eye...On a value increase of 7% per year, this jewel exceeds the standards of its other star competitor, the diamond.
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46.7 million Americans live in poverty with around 15% of the US population living below the poverty line. But they aren’t unemployed - most of them have at least two jobs. They’re ‘the working poor’. Meet the people behind America’s economic recovery.
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Just over 100 years ago, nights on Earth were pitch black. But thanks to the triumph of widespread electricity and the light bulb, many regions of the globe are as light as day for almost 24 hours. This illumination of our planet has direct impacts on people, animals and plants.
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