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Female genital mutilation is an all too common practice across MENA, where a lack of legal protections and publicly available data means that survivors have no access to support or justice, writes Paleki Ayang.
As Labour leader Keir Starmer continues to abandon policies associated with Corbyn, even with the risk of losing the next general election, the base of activists and election of socialist candidates locally cannot be ignored, writes Mike Phipps.
UK government hypocrisy is all too visible in its concern for Ukrainians, compared with its continued complicity in Yemen’s humanitarian crisis. It seems one set of war victims is more of a priority than another, writes Nabila Ramdani.
The international community's failure to address the climate crisis is epitomised in Somalia, where the worst drought in decades has left 20 million people facing starvation. If this is an omen, it is a grim one, writes Tiara Sahar Ataii.
Shireen Abu Akleh's murder by Israeli forces once again laid bare the double standards, hypocrisy, and silencing that characterise journalistic portrayals of Palestine. Canadian media is no exception, writes Dalya Al Masri.
Like ISIS, insurgency groups in gas-rich Cabo Delgado, Mozambique are a growing network of organised crime. As they capitalise on poverty and mounting discontent of locals to recruit, military airstrikes are not the answer, writes Audrey Simango.
There is a striking parallel between Vladimir Putin's behaviour in Ukraine and Saddam Hussein's behaviour in the past. The two men resorted to force, accompanied by remarkably similar claims, to achieve expansionist ambitions, writes Gilbert Achcar.
President Sisi repeatedly blames the January 25th Revolution - which toppled dictator Hosni Mubarak -Â for a host of Egypt's problems today, reflecting the regime's deep-seated fear that such events could reoccur, writes Taqadum al-Khatib.
Washington sends arms to Europe to fight for democracy, while American weapons to Arab autocrats help defeat the struggle for freedom, writes Emile Nakhleh.
The realities and attitudes to faith and community of Arab Christians are starkly different from their Western counterparts, because they are immersed and shaped by the manifold struggles surrounding them, writes Harry Hagopian.