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Like the US, Australia's politicians cheer on genocide. But Palestinians and First Nations peoples remain firm in their struggle, writes Randa Abdel-Fattah.
Comment: The French republic has become obsessed with excluding Muslim women from the public sphere, writes Malia Bouattia.
Comment: For 30 years I had only heard the Quran recited by men, but hearing a woman's voice was a revelation, writes Aniqah Choudhri.
The West vocally defended Iranian women’s right to choose following protests that saw them unveil in opposition to oppressive state laws, yet now that the French government is restricting Muslim girls' rights, all is silent, writes Nadeine Asbali.
The election of a second-generation Pakistani Muslim as First Minister of Scotland is an antidote to the anti-immigrant sentiment across Britain and Europe, writes Sam Hamad, who reflects on his own upbringing as a Scot of a similar background.
Nadeine Asbali asks: Why aren't feminists who preach sexual freedom up in arms about Israeli soldiers violating the most intimate parts of Palestinian life?
Afroze F Zaidi argues that tributes made by UK Muslim organisations to the Queen following her death, show complicity in the whitewashing of her colonial legacy, and are reflective of the policing of Muslims through the Prevent strategy.
Despite strides in women's rights, guardianship laws that give male relatives control over the women in their lives remain the most significant impediment to gender equality. But Islamic law is not the true culprit, writes Yousra Samir Imran.
Amid Israel's war on Gaza, explicit anti-Muslim sentiment has crept back into the mainstream. The goal is the same: to dehumanise us, writes Nadeine Asbali.
The racist accusation of misogyny by Julia Hartley-Brewer against Mustafa Barghouti embodies the refusal to see Palestinian men as victims, writes Hebh Jamal.