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20 years after Uday Hussein's reign of terror over Iraq's national team, the squad has risen from the ashes of dictatorship and invasion to achieve international success once again. They are a symbol of the country's resilience, writes Saoud Khalaf.
Despite official military withdrawals, American influence in the region has not dwindled, it has simply transformed. But if needed, Washington will revert back to its old techniques of power, writes Burak Elmali.
The different treatment of Kurdish and Palestinian women in Western media reveals imperial interests in deciding whose worth of solidarity, writes Sara Al Saeed
Attempts to silence Palestinian voices at Adelaide Writers Week reveal the selectivity of free speech and how it can be used to censor those that speak out against state-sanctioned violence, writes Amal Naser.
Shivan Fazil warns that Iraq’s new government should not attempt to ‘reinvent the wheel,’ rather it must focus on continuing with strategies developed by previous governments, and prioritise addressing high unemployment as well as corruption.
Young people are at the forefront of the protests in Iran, and they show no signs of stopping despite the regime’s remorseless killing of young people, writes Katy Shahandeh.
After the failure of the Arab Spring, the region has been suffocating under new authoritarian regimes. A desperate nostalgia for how things were reflects deep dissatisfaction, but the possibility of revolution isn't dead, writes Tareq Alnaimat.
Simón RodrÃguez Porras reflects on the history of Lula’s rule, parts of which he says raise serious questions about the future, including his militarisation of slums in Brazil, complicity in the occupation of Haiti, and trade agreement with Israel.
In July President Tebboune called for the teaching of English to become part of the primary program. The rapidity of this reform involves many ulterior motives regarding France and the colonial language, but also the failure to arabise schooling.
The case of political prisoner Alaa Abdel Fattah reminds us of the burden that Muslim and Arab men face within Western media, as well as the incredible efforts their loved ones make to humanise them in their time of need, writes Hannah al-Khafaji.