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King Charles III's admiration for Islam has excited the UK's Muslim community. With the ascension of a Muslim-friendly king, Yahya Birt asks us to consider the monarchy's violent history of empire and current soft power.
Comment: Will the 71-year-old be given a first-class tour of the wonders of the Israeli occupation? It's unlikely, writes Chris Doyle.
Comment: As alarm over Saudi human rights abuses grows, so does criticism of the Westminster-Riyadh friendship. The relationship of convenience is under threat like never before, writes Tom Charles.
Comment: At parliament, Grenfell community members described the local council's 'managed decline' of the area. These people deserve dignity and respect, now, writes Tom Charles.
As protests are met with excessive police violence, a true reckoning with France's colonial past requires taking steps towards abolition, writes Noura Salem.
Drawing on Irish revolutionary, James Connolly’s writings, Pat Stack explains that the Queen’s death is a reminder that the monarchy is a continued symbol of one class’s right to rule, only by birth, over another.
Watching familiar faces like John Cleese reveal their Islamophobia and join GB News may shake our sense of belonging as British Muslims, but despite the initial despair, can actually provide clarity and liberation, writes Mariya bint Rehan.
Whilst some may be celebrating Rishi Sunak as the first person of colour to become Prime Minister, Kushie Amin explains that his privilege and politics have so far proven that he is of no benefit to South Asians in the UK who face poverty and racism.
Opinion: Three towering figures of the Arab left have died since 2020: Tunisian Gilbert Naccache, Syrian Michel Kilo, and Moroccan Abdellah Zaazaa. Khadija Mohsen-Finan revisits their trajectories over 50 years of activism and social upheaval.
Comment: They were the trailblazers and the indigenous; now they are the scapegoats and the demonised, writes Otman Aitlkaboud.