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The ruling to allow Julian Assange's extradition to the United States is based on fraudulent 鈥渁ssurances鈥 scrabbled together by the Biden administration when it looked in January like justice might prevail, writes John Pilger.

Kamala Emanuel: Punish war criminals not journalists

The British聽decision to extradite Julian Assange is an attack on us all, argues聽Socialist Alliance Senate candidate聽Kamala Emanuel.

Taliban beating woman in public in 2001 cr RAWA

November 16 marked exactly three months of Taliban occupation of Kabul, reports Yasmeen Afghan. The world cannot turn its back.

A global digital campaign will be launched聽to end the unfair and unjust ban on the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), reports Peter Boyle.

The US Department of Commerce revealed on November 3 that it would be adding Israeli-based spyware developers NSO Group and Candiru to its blacklist, reports Binoy Kampmark.

Binoy Kampmark sums up the second day of the extradition appeal by the United States against Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

Binoy Kampmar sums up Day 1 of the appeal hearing against Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

Prominent figures in Aotearoa (New Zealand) are calling on Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to offer Wikileaks founder Julian Assange asylum, reports Matt Robson.

As the world awaits the outcome of the United States' appeal to extradite Julian Assange from Britain, the WikiLeaks founder's courage is beyond doubt, writes John Pilger.

The United States prosecution of Julian Assange is about to enter the next phase in what can only be described as torture via procedure, reports Binoy Kampmark.

Hotel Intercontinental Kabul cr Wikimedia Commons

In an Orwellian twist, Kabul鈥檚 famous Intercontinental Hotel was the venue for an awards ceremony on October 18 for the families of suicide bombers who managed to successfully explode their vests, reports Yasmeen Afghan.

News Corps' calculated change of heart on climate change聽in the lead-up to COP26聽has not fooled too many, argues聽Binoy Kampmark.