John Pilger recalls the "electric" opposition of writers and journalists to the coming war in the 1930s and investigates why there is "a silence filled by a consensus of propaganda" today as the two greatest powers draw closer to conflict.
Africa
Episode 7: 麻豆传媒 journalists Ben Radford and Isaac Nellist take you through the latest news from Australia and around the world.
At least 427 people have been killed, as clashes between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces听enter听their ninth consecutive day.听Peoples Dispatch听reports.
Richard Gott's 2011 book focuses on the revolutionaries and rebels who stood up to the British Empire. Alex Salmon reviews.
The left in Sudan warns that the conflict between the Sudanese Army and the Rapid Support Forces could be used as another excuse to prevent the hand over of power to civilian forces, reports Pavan Kulkarni.
The eight year long Saudi war on Yemen looks, at long last, within reach of a resolution, reports Rupen Savoulian.
Colonial-era laws are still used to oppress LGBTQ+ Africans, writes Efemia Chela, but the struggle to organise grassroots mutual aid and for legal rights continues.
Communist Party of Swaziland activist Mvuselelo Mkhabela听escaped from a hospital after being shot and tortured by the police, reports Peoples Dispatch.
The latest migrant drownings off the Tunisian coast have led to further scrutiny of Tunisia鈥檚 treatment of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, reports Peoples听Dispatch.
Hoyam Abbas, from the United Sudanese Revolutionary Forces Abroad, talks about the current stage of Sudan's democratic revolution against military rule.
Don't Gas Africa believes 鈥淎frica has a monumental opportunity to pursue sustainable socioeconomic development without relying on fossil fuels鈥, reports Jessica Corbett.
Burkina Faso鈥檚 government decided on January 18 to ask French military forces to leave the country within a month, reports Vijay Prashad.
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