The Revolutionists by Jason Burke review – from hijackings to holy war
A colourful study of the evolution of extremism in the tumultuous 1970s No one knew what to call them. For some they were “skyjackers”, for others “air bandits”. Neither name stuck, but by 1970, these figures were fixtures of the western political landscape. It helped that hijacking planes was (…)
Site référencé:
The Guardian (Asia Pacific)
2671.jpg?width=140&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=44da4366504bddee0b5d1beab1222f3e, 2671.jpg?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=1a2dd1958d1efabbc3b4f9e1ca0df21e, 2671.jpg?width=700&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=dca01512fdbc01e66d16ed794ac5e2e8
The Guardian (Asia Pacific)
Rayner’s return gives a lift to Labour’s gloomy backbenchers
22/10/2025
London woman’s £150 fine for pouring coffee down street drain revoked
22/10/2025
The Guardian view on campus discontent : listen to those on the frontline | Editorial
22/10/2025
The Guardian view on the cloud crash : an outage that showed who really runs the internet | Editorial
22/10/2025
MPs ‘pushing hard’ to launch inquiry into Prince Andrew’s Royal Lodge residence
22/10/2025
Sheku Bayoh’s family accuses Scottish police of ‘sabotage’ after inquiry chair resigns
22/10/2025