Deborah O’Donoghue is a reporter at Travel Tomorrow. This British-Irish writer lived in the UK and France before moving to Belgium. She has travelled all over the world and worked in car body repairs, in the best fish ‘n’ chip shop in Brighton, and been a gopher in a comedy club, as well as a teacher. She’s a past winner of the Commonwealth Broadcasting Association Short Story Prize. Her début novel, Sea of Bones, was published by the UK's Legend Press in 2019 and Droemer Knaur Germany in 2021.
Germany is introducing tougher penalties for airport intrusions in a bid to deter disruptive and costly protests by climate activists. The new legislation, passed by the […]
The Chinese are venturing abroad again in numbers, visa application data and demand for Schengen visas reveal. Visa applications for foreign travel by Chinese citizens have […]
Overtourism is often mentioned in the same breath as housing poverty and soaring inflation, but in proof that the phenomenon affects the affluent too, even residents […]
Overtourism in Santorini may have reached a critical turning point on 23 July, when 11,000 cruise passengers disembarked on the Greek island in just one day. […]
A century-old rock pathway clinging to one of the world’s most picturesque coastlines has re-opened after a 12-year closure for repairs. The 900-metre Via dell’Amore, or “Path of […]
The riskiest cities in the world for visitors in 2024 have been ranked in a new analysis by Forbes Advisor. The study puts Venezuela’s Caracas, Pakistan’s […]
Dubai is set to gain the world’s “greenest” highway, if plans by city development firm URB go ahead. Aiming to turn the existing Sheikh Mohammad Bin […]
Portugal is raising awareness of the months-long drought affecting the country with a campaign that aims to show arrivals at Faro Airport exactly how much water […]
With the Paris Olympics set to start on 26 July 2024, Parisians and other tourists are making their feelings about the international event clear, by staying […]
Flanders has awarded Antwerp Airport a new environmental permit with what Flemish Environment minister, Zuhal Demir has called “strict conditions”. Those caveats include “a ban on […]
Planet Earth has just felt the warmest day in recent history, reaching 17.15ºC on 22 July 2024, according to Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) data. The […]