Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

How tariff wars are reshaping migration and raising the risk of human rights abuses in supply chains

How tariff wars are reshaping migration and raising the risk of human rights abuses in supply chains

THE tariff wars between the US and its trade partners have rarely been out of the news since the US president, Donald Trump, revealed his plans for sweeping “liberation day” levies back in April. The uncertainty that followed for businesses worldwide has now morphed into a battle over global supply chains, as the US and China seek dominance over resources and manufacturing. At the same time, the subject of migration has been high on many countries’ news agendas. In the US especially, there has been growing anger over federal immigration raids and controversial deportations to “third countries”. Yet it appears…
Read More
Netflix’s ‘Mo’ delivers humour, heartache as it explores Israel-Gaza war and Palestinian and Mexican migrant life in the U.S.

Netflix’s ‘Mo’ delivers humour, heartache as it explores Israel-Gaza war and Palestinian and Mexican migrant life in the U.S.

I recently watched both seasons of the Netflix drama-comedy Mo (2022-25), expecting a good laugh, since the show is headlined and written by funny and smart comedian Mohammed Amer. Mo does provoke a lot of laughter, but it also stirs deep emotions, including despair, loneliness and helplessness, as the episodes explore life in America for people on the margins. Mo is a semi-autobiographical depiction of Amer’s life. He’s a Palestinian who grew up in Houston, Texas, immigrating to that city when he was nine years old by way of Kuwait. In the series, Amer plays Mo Najjar as he navigates…
Read More
Forcing Zelensky to hand Putin Ukraine’s ‘fortress belt’ in Donetsk will lose it the war

Forcing Zelensky to hand Putin Ukraine’s ‘fortress belt’ in Donetsk will lose it the war

IN the recent summit talks in Alaska designed to halt the Russia-Ukraine war, Vladimir Putin demanded that Kyiv cede control of the entirety of its Donetsk oblast (region) to Russia. But this would effectively be tantamount to an acceptance of overall defeat for Ukraine. In giving up this region, Kyiv would also be giving up its principal defensive barrier against further Russian encroachment into the whole of Ukraine – that is, it will lose its “fortress belt”. This is the name given (by the Russians themselves) to a series of fortified Ukrainian-held cities, towns and settlements in the west of…
Read More
Israel’s ‘double-tap’ hospital strike probably breached rules of war

Israel’s ‘double-tap’ hospital strike probably breached rules of war

A video broadcast earlier this week captured the horrifying moment rescuers and journalists were killed in a “double-tap” strike on the Nasser hospital in southern Gaza. They had rushed to the scene of an initial Israeli attack, only for the same location to be bombed minutes later. Five journalists and several medical staff were killed by the second strike. The attack prompted a wave of international condemnation. UK foreign secretary David Lammy wrote on social media: “Horrified by Israel’s attack on Nasser hospital. Civilians, healthcare workers and journalists must be protected. We need an immediate ceasefire”. Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin…
Read More
Why Donald Trump’s plans to prosecute flag burning divides his supporters

Why Donald Trump’s plans to prosecute flag burning divides his supporters

“IF you burn a flag, you get one year in jail. No early exits. No, nothing.” This is what US President Donald Trump announced in the Oval Office in the last week in August. Ever the master media manipulator, America’s communicator-in-chief issued this as an executive order. An executive order is issued by the president and doesn’t need to be passed by Congress. They are, however, expected to relate to existing law. Trump so far has signed 196. His latest directive, which aims to restore “respect, pride and sanctity” to the US flag, instructs the Department of Justice to investigate…
Read More
“I lost all hope for my life”: Arakan Army accused of detaining Rohingya in forced labour camps

“I lost all hope for my life”: Arakan Army accused of detaining Rohingya in forced labour camps

AFTER nearly three months in what he described as a prison labour camp, *Sharif said he and dozens of other Rohingya received an ultimatum in mid-July from the Arakan Army (AA): remain in captivity in their native Myanmar or be expelled to overcrowded and increasingly unsafe refugee camps in Bangladesh, where rations are dwindling. This story was originally published by The New Humanitarian.By Ali M. Latifi and Anonymous Rohingya researcher The 29-year-old told The New Humanitarian these unthinkable options were presented to 78 people – including 20 women and 33 children – while they were being detained in a prison…
Read More
Was the ‘double tap’ attack on Gaza’s Nasser hospital a war crime? Here’s what the laws of war say

Was the ‘double tap’ attack on Gaza’s Nasser hospital a war crime? Here’s what the laws of war say

THERE has been widespread international outrage at Israel’s attack on Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, northern Gaza, on August 25. The attack took the form of a “double tap” strike. The first attack killed at least one person, then – as medics, journalists and other responders rushed to the scene – a second attack on the same location killed another 20 people. This included five journalists and several medical staff treating people injured in the first attack. Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has called the incident a “tragic mishap”. But whether or not the attacks on the hospital were intentionally…
Read More
How Israel’s new NGO registration rules seek to divide the international aid response

How Israel’s new NGO registration rules seek to divide the international aid response

NEW guidelines for international aid groups threaten to further bend the humanitarian system in Palestine to serve Israeli political and military goals by muzzling advocacy and dividing NGOs between those willing to play by Israeli rules and those who refuse, aid workers in Gaza and the West Bank say. This story was originally published by The New Humanitarian.By Riley Sparks Those who refuse to play by Israel’s rules are increasingly being frozen out, several international aid workers told The New Humanitarian. Most spoke on condition of anonymity because of concerns that Israeli authorities will retaliate against organisations that speak up.…
Read More
Who is Lisa Cook, Federal Reserve governor targeted by Trump?

Who is Lisa Cook, Federal Reserve governor targeted by Trump?

BEFORE she was targeted by President Donald Trump, Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook published research centring on race and inequality and advocated for other Black women in economics.  Trump on Monday said he intended to fire Cook, who in 2022 was confirmed as the first Black woman to serve on the independent Federal Reserve Board, which sets U.S. monetary policy and regulates financial markets. Over 100 people have served as governors on the seven-member Federal Reserve Board since it was founded in 1913. This story was originally reported by Grace Panetta of The 19th. Meet Grace and read more…
Read More
‘There’s no such thing as someone else’s children’ – Omar El Akkad bears witness to the destruction of Gaza and the West’s quiet assent

‘There’s no such thing as someone else’s children’ – Omar El Akkad bears witness to the destruction of Gaza and the West’s quiet assent

OMAR El Akkad does not want you to look away. An award-winning journalist and novelist, El Akkad was born in Egypt, lived as a teenager in Qatar and Canada, and migrated as an adult to the US, where he now lives with his family in the Pacific Northwest. His essay collection, One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This, draws on his life, from childhood to new fatherhood. He combines these reflections with a sharp grasp of modern history to examine responses in the West to “the world’s first livestreamed genocide” in Gaza. Finding that response wanting, he urges…
Read More