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Diaspora rising: Ethiopian Tigrayan women demonstrate in Trafalgar Square, London, against the escalations in violence in the province of Tigray. Photo: Rod Olukoya/Alamy

No respite

Three years on from the peace deal, the border between the two countries is closed again, despite cordial relations.

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Censored

Censored

Deleting posts and hiding hashtags.

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Homecoming

Homecoming

US First Nations people vs colonial boundaries.

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 Illustration: Emma Peer

Introducing... Samia Suluhu Hassan

Samia Suluhu became the East African country’s first woman president in March 2021.

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Stolen not silent: 66 years after being kidnapped and housed in a church mission, campaigner Rita Wright sits in her home in protest of colonial ‘Australia Day’ celebrations. Photo: Loren Elliott/Reuters

Stolen generations

Report from Australia by Zoe Holman.

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 Illustration: Thewet Nonthachai/Shutterstock

Shadow courts

Juliet Ferguson investigates the Energy Charter Treaty, an international agreement which could be very bad news for energy policy across the Global South.

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Breakfast in Berbera. A young man eats in a tea shop in one of Somaliland’s coastal towns, which is drawing in former pastoralists who are re-training as fishers. Tommy Trenchard/Panos

A taste of hope

With herders under threat from global heating in Somaliland, the government has hatched a plan to move millions to the coast. But can pastoralists adapt to fishing? Alice Rowsome and Yahye Xanas investigate.

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Unbowed: Koza Press editor-in-chief Irina Slavina’s children lead her funeral procession, Nizhny Novgorod, 6 October 2020. Photo: Mikhail Solunin/TASS/Alamy

Not toeing the Kremlin’s line

Despite threats, regional media in Russia is resurgent and inspiring audiences tired of the ‘official version’ broadcast by the nationals. Tina Burrett surveys the changes afoot.

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Action & info

The mounting crisis in Myanmar calls for action on multiple fronts.

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Down with the dictator: photos of the military coup leader general Min Aung Hlaing pasted at the bottom of a flight of stairs in Yangon, for pedestrians to trample on in support of democracy. Photo: Panos Pictures

Fighting the cartel

Myanmar’s generals have amassed billions of dollars through a secretive business empire. Aye Min Thant tracks the growing movements to dismantle it.

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 Illustrations: Raven

‘Life is at a turning point’

Inside the resistance - four people on the frontlines of the anti-coup movement tell Preeti Jha why they are not giving up. Illustrations by Raven.

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Esther Ze Naw and Ei Thinzar Maung lead the first large-scale protests against the coup in Yangon, 6 February 2021. Photo: Myat Thu Kyaw/NUR Photo/Getty

A chance to rebuild?

Thin Lei Win believes the Myanmar military’s reign of terror might be leading a long-divided nation onto a more inclusive path.

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Aung San Suu Kyi on the campaign trail in 2015, standing in front of a poster of her father Aung San, independence hero and founder of Myanmar's armed forces. Photo: Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters

The cost of inaction

Yanghee Lee talks to Preeti Jha about the lessons that should have been learned from that crisis and what practical steps can be taken now.

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The parents of one-year-old Thin Thawdaw Tun carry their injured daughter, who received treatment from volunteer medics. A rubber bullet fired by the security forces hit her in the eye, while she was inside the family home. Photo: Panos Pictures

No place for children

Their slaughter has marked a new era of horror by a junta notorious for its cruelty. Maung Moe reports on three young lives cut short on the deadliest day of violence since the coup.

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Myanmar after the coup - The Facts

Myanmar after the coup - The Facts

The military has unleashed near-daily terror across Myanmar since seizing power in February. Through the figures, we examine the brutality as well as the fightback.

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Search results in a table:

Article title Description Author Published Magazine Link
No respite

Three years on from the peace deal, the border between the two countries is closed again, despite cordial relations.

Alex Jackson July, 2021 532 Read
Censored

Deleting posts and hiding hashtags.

Husna Ara July, 2021 532 Buy
Homecoming

US First Nations people vs colonial boundaries.

Matthew Ponsford July, 2021 532 Buy
Introducing... Samia Suluhu Hassan

Samia Suluhu became the East African country’s first woman president in March 2021.

Richard Swift July, 2021 532 Buy
Stolen generations

Report from Australia by Zoe Holman.

Zoe Holman July, 2021 532 Buy
Shadow courts

Juliet Ferguson investigates the Energy Charter Treaty, an international agreement which could be very bad news for energy policy across the Global South.

Juliet Ferguson July, 2021 532 Buy
A taste of hope

With herders under threat from global heating in Somaliland, the government has hatched a plan to move millions to the coast. But can pastoralists adapt to fishing? Alice Rowsome and Yahye Xanas investigate.

Alice Rowsome and Yahye Xanas July, 2021 532 Buy
Not toeing the Kremlin’s line

Despite threats, regional media in Russia is resurgent and inspiring audiences tired of the ‘official version’ broadcast by the nationals. Tina Burrett surveys the changes afoot.

Tina Burrett July, 2021 532 Buy
Action & info

The mounting crisis in Myanmar calls for action on multiple fronts.

July, 2021 532 Buy
Fighting the cartel

Myanmar’s generals have amassed billions of dollars through a secretive business empire. Aye Min Thant tracks the growing movements to dismantle it.

Aye Min Thant July, 2021 532 Buy
‘Life is at a turning point’

Inside the resistance - four people on the frontlines of the anti-coup movement tell Preeti Jha why they are not giving up. Illustrations by Raven.

Preeti Jha July, 2021 532 Buy
A chance to rebuild?

Thin Lei Win believes the Myanmar military’s reign of terror might be leading a long-divided nation onto a more inclusive path.

Thin Lei Win July, 2021 532 Buy
The cost of inaction

Yanghee Lee talks to Preeti Jha about the lessons that should have been learned from that crisis and what practical steps can be taken now.

Preeti Jha July, 2021 532 Buy
No place for children

Their slaughter has marked a new era of horror by a junta notorious for its cruelty. Maung Moe reports on three young lives cut short on the deadliest day of violence since the coup.

Maung Moe July, 2021 532 Buy
Myanmar after the coup - The Facts

The military has unleashed near-daily terror across Myanmar since seizing power in February. Through the figures, we examine the brutality as well as the fightback.

July, 2021 532 Buy