Blog
Britain calls it safety. It is censorship
The Online Safety Act, sold as child protection, now hides Gaza’s pain, silences dissent and spreads censorship.
Afghanistan’s opium crop falls 20 percent as synthetic drugs surge
UN says the area devoted to opium poppies has dropped to a fraction of that cultivated before Taliban’s narcotics ban.
Tigray fighters enter Ethiopia’s Afar region, stoking fears of new conflict
Tigray was the centre of a devastating two-year war that pitted the TPLF against Ethiopia’s federal army.
Sudanese prime minister calls for RSF to be labelled ‘terrorist’ group
Kamil Idris tells Al Jazeera violence could spill beyond Sudan's borders if international community fails to step in.
How a star-studded Kashmir cricket league bombed as organisers fled
Billed as Kashmir's biggest ever cricket show, the collapsed event has left a trail of questions, sense of betrayal.
Russia infiltrates Pokrovsk with new tactics that test Ukraine’s drones
Russia threatens to encircle Pokrovsk, seeing it as a gateway to the remaining free areas of Donetsk.
Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum presses charges after groping attack
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum has filed a complaint after she was groped by a man on the street.
Where are tens of thousands of people in Sudan fleeing to?
At least 80,000 people displaced as Sudan’s humanitarian crisis deepens following the RSF’s capture of el-Fasher.
Gaza’s fragile freedom
Al Jazeera’s Ibrahim al-Khalili reflects on his brother’s release and the deep scars left on freed Palestinian prisoners
Could soaring global debt trigger the next financial crisis?
The IMF says global public debt could exceed 100% of GDP by the end of the decade.

