Category: Feature
John McCain’s warmongering and ‘hegemonic world view’ live on as liberals support fuelling Ukraine war
7 August 2022|The Interregnum|Mohamed Emaazi
US senator John McCain died on 25 August 2018. Understanding his world view offers an insight into the world view of much of the US political class, including its support for fuelling the war in Ukraine.
Exclusive: Whistleblower Craig Murray On His Experience In A Scottish Prison
6 December 2021|The Dissenter|Mohamed Elmaazi
In an exclusive interview one day after his release from prison, Craig Murray describes surviving a COVID outbreak and why he is not done challenging his conviction for blog posts.
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British father pled “not guilty” to terrorism charges for supporting his son, an anti-Daesh YPG volunteer
14 February 2020|The Interregnum|Mohamed Elmaazi
The British state is now wielding terrorism charges against family members of YPG volunteers even though it is not a banned organisation. Activists say this reflects a wider policy of “use and abuse” of terrorism legislation designed to clamp down on social activism and solidarity work which would otherwise be perfectly legal.
Judge’s acceptance of ‘complexity’ of Assange’s case “is an important win”, says historian John Rees
20 December 2019|The Interregnum|Mohamed Elmaazi
In a surprise development District Judge Venessa Baraitser seems to have accepted that Julian Assange’s main extradition hearing will take weeks rather than days, though she still refuses to assist with his prison conditions.
UK Mainstream Media Ignore History of ‘Brutal Removal’ of Islanders From Chagos Islands
23 November 2019|Sputnik International|MohamedElmaazi
When discussing the ongoing saga of the UK and the Chagos Islands, mainstream media often miss the history of how the UK government ruthlessly expelled the inhabitants of the Indian Ocean islands in the 1960s and 1970s. A story which award winning investigative Journalist John Pilger told in his 2004 documentary “Stealing A Naton”.
Powerful images of the ongoing mass protests in Chile
19 November 2019|The Canary|Antonio Kadima
Chilean photographer Antonio Kadima illustrates state repression and civil uprising in neoliberal Chile.
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Labour pledges to abolish immigration detention centres in historic conference vote
25 September 2019|The Canary|Mohamed Elmaazi
On the last day of the Labour Party conference in Brighton delegates from around the country, representing both unions and Constituency Labour Party’s (CLPs), voted unanimously to support the most radical break in immigration policy in the Labour movement’s history.
The disturbing reality behind why the US really nuked Japan 74 years ago – twice
7 August 2019|The INTERREGNUM/THE CANARY|Mohamed Elmaazi
It is still believed, by some, that the US nuked Japan to avoid the mass casualties that would otherwise have resulted in their attempt to forcibly take over the island. Part of this mythos is that the Japanese refused to surrender until the second atomic bomb was dropped. But the truth, which has long been known by historians, is far more dark and tragic.
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CrowdStrikeOut: Mueller’s Own Report Undercuts Its Core Russia-Meddling Claims
5 July 2019|Real Clear Investigations|Aaron Maté
Award winning journalist Aaron Mate separates fact from fiction, from unknown, in this in depth analysis and breakdown of Russiagate and the report of US Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
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