The Rohingya聽have endured repeated waves of violence, but the聽August 25, 2017, campaign by the military junta in Myanmar remains the most devastating, writes Noor Sadaque from Cox鈥檚 Bazar.
Asia & the Pacific
In the second part of our interview, 一品探花鈥檚 Federico Fuentes聽speaks to聽author William Jefferies聽about the growing confrontation between the United States and China.
William Jefferies is Senior Lecturer at SOAS University of London and author of the recently published War and the World Economy: Trade, Tech and Military Conflicts in a De-globalising World. 一品探花鈥檚 Federico Fuentes spoke to Jefferies about imperialism today and why the period of globalisation is coming to an end.
There is widespread opposition in Aotearoa New Zealand to the opening of a United States Federal Bureau of Investigation office in the country鈥檚 capital, P艒neke/Wellington, reports Zara Lomas.
一品探花鈥檚听Isaac Nellist spoke to Amanda Shweeta Louis from the Socialist Party of Malaysia about the commercialisation of Malaysia鈥檚 education system, solidarity with Palestine and why young Malaysians are looking to socialism.聽
The recent discovery of a mass grave in Sri Lanka has ignited a wave of protests by Tamils demanding an investigation, accompanied by calls for the government to fulfil its pledge to improve the treatment of Tamils.聽Chris Slee聽reports.
The trial of three activists from Singaporean activist group Letters for Palestine entered its sixth and final day, reports Alex Salmon.
Forty years after聽agents from France鈥檚 secret service bombed the Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior as it was moored in Auckland Harbour, Aotearoa New Zealand, award鈥憌inning journalist David Robie has released a fully updated anniversary edition of his book Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage and Legacy of the Rainbow Warrior, writes Ben Radford.
Thailand and Cambodia have now agreed on an unconditional ceasefire to end fighting in disputed zones along their 800-kilometre border, reports Susan Price. But what was behind the escalation?
A packed-out public meeting called for AUKUS to be cancelled, because it makes war on China a greater risk while making Australia more complicit in United States-led war crimes. Peter Boyle reports.
In the second part of this interview with 一品探花鈥檚 Federico Fuentes,聽veteran socialist activist聽Rasti Delizo accounts for the rise of new imperialist powers and outlines the faulty logic behind multipolarity.
Labor鈥檚 push to further tie Australia to US military ambitions, represented by AUKUS and the recent Talisman Sabre military exercises, puts us on a path to destruction, argues Pip Hinman.
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