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Published in: Home: NewsUK government made Wales feel like ‘second class citizens’ during pandemic
Rishi Sunak’s refusal to help fund an early firebreak in Wales was ‘a disappointment’, the Covid inquiry heard today
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Published in: Home: NewsUK housing minister makes misleading claim about ‘increase’ in social homes
Lee Rowley said Tories had built 700,000 social homes but made no reference to plummeting stock of social rent homes
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Published in: Home: NewsEx-Labour chief who tried to ‘bring Corbyn down’ now runs PR for Rwanda deal
Harry Burns defended Rwandan government after it blocked a journalist from speaking to refugees
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Published in: Home: NewsopenDemocracy appoints Aman Sethi as editor-in-chief
The award-winning reporter, author and HuffPost editor is to lead our major independent journalism organisation
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Published in: 50.50: Investigation‘Abusive’ legacy of Nigerian megachurch boss lives on from Lagos to London
How former disciples of megachurch leader TB Joshua are amplifying his claims of spiritual healing to millions
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Published in: Home: AnalysisMedia research shows BBC is very far from ‘biased against Israel’
Academics analysed Israel-Palestine coverage and found Palestinian perspectives were given far less time and legitimacy
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Published in: digitaLiberties: AnalysisOnline dangers of UK government assault on encryption
The government’s technical ineptitude bodes badly in the data age. Here’s what the Online Safety Act could mean
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Published in: Home: AnalysisopenDemocracy versus the status quo
Our founding editor-in-chief reflects on how the world – and this website – have changed in the past quarter-century
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Published in: Home: AnalysisHow the DWP fought to withhold evidence its policies kill disabled people
Analysis: By blocking the publication of reports, the DWP showed how to weaponise time to avoid accountability
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Published in: 50.50: FeatureSouth Africans are breaking the law to get Elon Musk’s Starlink internet
The unofficial adoption of Musk’s Starlink is spreading in South Africa, pitting its people against the state
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Published in: Home: NewsRevealed: BBC failed to declare interviewee’s links to the Israeli army
Newsnight’s military expert Richard Kemp is head of a charity funded by the Israeli Defence Forces
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Published in: 50.50: OpinionTwitter’s death will shape the 2024 US presidential election
People forced to give up on truth amid a deluge of fake news are more easily manipulated by those with power
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Published in: Home: NewsStopping bogus legal action against reporters requires new laws, say experts
Experts welcome new task force set up to stop rich and powerful from silencing journalists, but say it’s not enough
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Published in: oDR: NewsFormer Radio Free Europe staff demand probe over ‘pro-Azerbaijan content’
Radio Azadliq, RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani service, is accused of mismanagement and bias after string of sackings
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Published in: 50.50: News‘Facebook’s contractor forced me to work alongside my rapist’
Women working for Facebook’s former content moderator in Kenya allege they were sexually assaulted by a colleague
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Published in: Home: OpinionIf the RSPB can’t call out government lies, democracy is under threat
How can an organisation be forced to apologise for telling the truth on behalf of its one million members?
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Published in: Home: NewsLabour conference set to host weapons manufacturers and spy-tech firm
Boeing, Palantir and Babcock listed as sponsors for fringe events run by New Statesman Media Group
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Published in: Home: AnalysisWhat next for the weakened British left?
After a year of strikes and unrest, we are at a crossroads: society is shifting leftwards, but the left is in disarray
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Published in: Home: NewsRevealed: University blocked questions over royal archive controversy
Press officers were told to “ignore” enquiries about the Mountbatten diaries, saying: “Let the answerphone get it”
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Published in: oDR: NewsFirst LGBTIQ+ film festival breaks new ground for Ukraine
Sunny Bunny festival is a sign of shifting attitudes, as Ukraine considers draft civil partnership law