John Pilger has watched Julian Assange’s extradition trial from the public gallery at London’s Old Bailey. He spoke with Timothy Erik Ström about the trial.
Britain
Having reported on the long, epic ordeal of Julian Assange, John Pilger gave this address outside the Central Criminal Court in London on September 7 as the WikiLeaks editor’s extradition hearing entered its final stage.
Birmingham, Plymouth, and Newcastle trades and labour councils have recently voted overwhelmingly to join the campaign to halt the extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the United States, writes Kerry Smith.
The looming economic crisis is serving to exacerbate tensions and competition between different nation states and blocs, writes Lindsey German.
To understand why Britain has fared so badly in the COVID-19 pandemic, it is essential to appreciate the neoliberal reforms which have steadily mutated its National Health Service over decades, write Bob Gill and Sarah Gangoli.Ìý
The latest Stockholm International Peace Research InstituteÌýfigures reveal a world in which arms spending is rising across most, if not all regions, writes Chris Nineham.
Death is touching everyone in Britain with fatalities from COVID-19 running at nearly a thousand a day, writes Derek Wall. So why is Prime Minister Boris Johnson still popular?
Ìý
World-renowned journalist and filmmaker John Pilger speaks to authorÌýTJ Coles about the coronavirus crisis in the context of propaganda, imperialism, and human rights.
Major threats to public health, living standards and political freedoms underpin Prime Minister Boris Johnson'sÌýresponse to COVID-19, write Neil Faulkner and Phil Hearse.
Environmental campaigners are calling for urgent action to cut pollution in the Arctic from the global shipping industry, writes Kerry Smith.
The truth is that Australia could have rescued Julian Assange and can still rescue him, writes John Pilger.
When conversing with commoners, members of the British Royal Family are instructed to always ask the question "And what do you do?"ÌýFor, after all, this gives the working class something to talk about – their job.
But Phil Shannon says it is high time the question was returned in kind by asking of the royals: "And what do you do?"
- Previous page
- Page 7
- Next page