US Navy sailors signal all go for launch to a Super Hornet fighter jet off the USS Harry S Truman aircraft carrier, operating in the Red Sea, on 13 March 2025.Photo: MC2 Logan Mcguire/US Navy Photo/Alamy Stock Photo

Britain’s undeclared war on Yemen

Ruth Rohde and Jack Cinamon explain how the US and Britain went from selling bombs for use against Yemen to dropping them themselves.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
A young man walks through fire and smoke near the city of Jenin’s main hospital during clashes with the Israeli military in July 2023.Photo: Víctor Cabo

Under the eye of occupation

The Jenin refugee camp has long been branded a ‘capital of resistance’ for Palestinians in the West Bank, but it has paid a price. Kasturi Chakraborty reports on the impacts of Israel’s latest siege and life under surveillance.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
Marking the National Day of Remembrance for Truth and Justice on Avenida de Mayo, Buenos Aires on 24 March 2018.Photo: Nicholas Tinelli/Alamy Live News

A past denied

To confront the atrocities of its military dictatorship, Argentina introduced a range of lauded ‘memory and justice’ policies. Now the Javier Milei government is stoking denial of the past and undermining families’ fights for justice. Ali Qassim reports.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
After failing to use the tools at its disposal to prevent the Ukraine war, the UN has receded further from view as the fighting continues. Here Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky inspects a building damaged by a Russian missile attack in Vyshgorod, 25 November 2022.Photo: American Photo Archive/Alamy

Trading rhetoric

The war in Ukraine has thrown the UN’s weaknesses and contradictions into sharp relief, argues Lily Lynch.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
Photo: PA Images/Alamy Stock Photo

‘The smears make me stronger’

Francesca Albanese has stepped out of the United Nations’ structures to speak directly to the world’s people about the ongoing genocide in Palestine. Bethany Rielly meets her.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
Palestinians inspect the rubble of the Yassin Mosque at Shati refugee camp in Gaza City. It was hit by  hit by an Israeli airstrike on 9 October 2023.Photo: Adel Hana/Associated Press/Alamy

Fiddling while Gaza burns

Having facilitated Israel’s settler-colonial project, the UN is now helpless to pick up the pieces. By Hamza Yusuf.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
The US tests an atomic bomb in the Nevada desert, 1953.Photo: Horizon/Alamy

Fork in the road

In March, a UN conference sought to make progress towards outlawing nuclear weapons for good. But how can it make a difference while the world’s nuclear powers ignore it? Xander Elliards reports from New York.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
United Nations - The Facts

United Nations - The Facts

Components, budget, and the peacekeepers of the United Nations.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
Action & Info

Action & Info

Action, and further reading on the United Nations.

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets Secretary-General Antonio Guterres at UN headquarters. While the UN General Assembly has consistently condemned Israel, the all-powerful Security Council has blocked international action.Photo: Sopa/Alamy

Global leadership vetoed

The modern failures of the United Nations are not an aberration – but a product of its imperial roots, argues Conrad Landin. So how can we create a functioning system for global co-operation?

Buy this magazine

NI 556 - United Nations at 80 - July, 2025
A ‘torture room’ where scores of suspected KLFA members were interrogated, on the grounds of the Mweru High School.Photo: Jaclynn Ashly

Memories in the walls

Jaclynn Ashly explores how the haunting legacy of Britain’s internment camps has shaped Kenya, and why it’s important to keep the fading memories alive.

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Women take to the streets of São Paulo in protest against Brazil’s abortion bill on 15 June 2024.Photo: Brazil Photo Press/Alamy Stock Photo

A case of conscience

A growing movement of Christian feminists are making their voice heard as they oppose threats to tighten the country’s abortion laws. Alice McCool reports from inside their fight.

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Police detain a man on the outskirts of Kano, Nigeria on 23 April 2007 amidst protests over election results.Photo: Radu Sigheti/Reuters

Above the law

Successive governments have failed to tackle police brutality, corruption and unlawful detention in Nigeria. Promise Eze hears from those who’ve experienced the sharp end of the country’s legal system.

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Action & Info

Action & Info

Action, and further reading on critical minerals.

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
The metals pie

The metals pie

Ramped-up demand for critical raw materials will cost the earth rather than save the world, concludes Vanessa Baird. And how much do we really need?

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Illustration: Andy Carter

Smarter moves

There are better ways than digging ourselves deeper into a mining hole.

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Mining galore: southern Congo already produces 70 per cent of the world’s cobalt. Production is predicted to double between 2021 and 2028.Photo: Pascal Maitre/Panos

Congo’s cobalt curse

Corruption, pollution and child labour have long blighted the DRC’s cobalt industry. But is there any way of turning the country’s critical mineral wealth into a blessing rather than a burden? Cat Rainsford investigates.

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Atacama's famous flamingos have been hit by declining water and shrimp levels, affecting their numbers and colour.Photo: Vanessa Baird

White flamingos and lithium frenzy

Oasis of life – or zone of sacrifice? The fate of Chile’s culturally and environmentally rich salt flats may be decided by a lithium rush to double output. Vanessa Baird reports from the Salar de Atacama.

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Rice-pickers in Cocachacra fear the mine will use and pollute the water needed for agriculture.Photo: Vanessa Baird

Farming yes! Mining no!

The government of Dina Boluarte is determined to inflict a hated copper mining project on the people of the Peru’s Tambo Valley. Why, asks Vanessa Baird?

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025
Critical minerals rush - The Facts

Critical minerals rush - The Facts

Rising demand; Where from?; Big dirty business; Real needs?

Buy this magazine

NI 555 - Critical minerals - May, 2025

Articles in this category displayed as a table:

Article title From magazine Publication date
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
United Nations at 80 July, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Critical minerals May, 2025
Back