Opinion

How war changes feminist movement

Ukrainian feminists look back at the challenging year that has reinvigorated their activism and shaped their values, writes Kateryna Semchuk LIKE everyone else in Ukraine, feminist activists had to adapt quickly

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New dawn for Turkish-Greek relations?

Greece is responding to the catastrophic earthquake in Turkey with great sympathy. Could it lead to an easing of tensions between the traditionally hostile neighbours? Ronald Meinardus writes A SENSE of profound

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Can Guterres become Solon?

by Evaggelos Vallianatos: ANTONIO Guterres is the secretary general of the United Nations. Solon was an Athenian statesman, constitutional reformer, and poet of the late seventh and sixth century BCE,

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From language to liberty

Dr. Rashid Askari: This Irish proverb — Tirgan teanga, tirgan anam — means a country without a language is a country without a soul. So does the Indonesian — Bahasa

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Physicists together to rein in nuclear threat

Carol Polsgrove: AS THE Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ Doomsday Clock has ticked closer to midnight, a new organisation has taken shape to sound the alarm: the Physicists Coalition for

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Spin, lies fuel a bloody war of attrition

Medea Benjamin and Nicolas JS Davies: In a recent column, military analyst William Astore wrote, ‘[Congressman] George Santos is a symptom of a much larger disease: a lack of honour,

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No permanent allies, only permanent power

Chris Hedges: IF WE do not build left-right coalitions on issues such as militarism, health care, a living wage and union organising, we will be impotent in the face of

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Sheikh Hasina surprises the nation once again

Syed Borhan Kabir: The ending point of other politicians is the beginning of Sheikh Hasina. Many politicians are bogged down with the issues of today but she plans about tomorrow.

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