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Statues memorialising individuals that brutally colonised and subjugated India stand tall in Britain even as India celebrates 74 years since it became a Republic.
A spectacle of the subaltern, Tasweer Photo Festival Qatar is giving face and space to the world's forgotten. With exhibits spanning across Africa and Asia, the festival is helping give a new lease of life to post-oil Qatar's creative industries.
Since being awarded the 2022 FIFA World Cup, Qatar's suitability as a host country has been scrutinised despite the measures it has taken to address concerns. Emad Moussa explores the double standards and racism behind the human rights rhetoric.
Several countries in the Middle East including Lebanon, Syria and Yemen are facing unprecedented outbreaks of cholera. Sasha Fahme explains how this is directly linked to conflict and climate change, and why a global response is urgently needed.
Despite continued crimes by the military junta against Muslims and other minorities in Myanmar, Sam Hamad argues that the world seems to care very little, and may be turning a blind eye because the state justifies its actions using the war on terror.
As part of the Sheikh Hamad Award for Translation and International Understanding, a conference was held highlighting the research of Urdu-Arabic translators and researchers who are passionate about reviving a rich shared heritage.
With this years Jameel Prize adjudicated on making a political statement or commemorating a loved one through Islamic traditions, °®Âþµº speaks with the finalists about their creative vision and what poetry to politics means to them.
Comment: The Shamima Begum ruling suggests that for Britain's ethnic minorities, our citizenship is not as 'valid' as ethnically white Britons, writes Aniqah Choudhri.
The Citizenship Amendment Bill restricts Muslim immigrants from becoming naturalised citizens. Yet the narrative informing the bill is clear: India's Muslims are not welcome in their homeland, writes Khaled Beydoun.
Comment: The abject failure of European counter-terror policies is clear for all to see. Doubling down on them will only worsen the problem, writes Malia Bouattia.