Israeli savagery and disdain for international law display the depths of inhumanity. When challenged to show courage by supporting life for Palestinians, Labor remains silent.听Stuart Rees 补苍诲听Shamikh Badra argue that it must recognise Palestine.
Stuart Rees
Morality and justice are not determined by body counts but a fraction of history shows Israel as a militarised, apartheid state which cultivates violent racism towards another people, argues Stuart Rees.
The Australia Palestine Advocacy Network is urging Labor to support South Africa鈥檚 suit against Israel for聽genocide in Gaza in the International Court of Justice in The Hague. Stuart Rees reports.
Millions are asking why 75 years of Palestinian dispossession and experience of racist-fuelled violence has been allowed to climax in these mass murders in Gaza?聽Something can be done, argues Stuart Rees.
The Anthony Albanese government looks likely to prevent delegates voting on the merits of the AUKUS alliance and to recognise Palestine as a state. Why is it so scared of dissent, asks Stuart Rees.
The terrible earthquake disaster in Turkey and Syria should make us聽ponder聽the meaning of community and nation as well as security and sovereignty, writes Stuart Rees.听
An indifferent Australian government has looked on as聽legal due process for Julian Assange聽has been trashed. Stuart Rees reports on聽Nils Melzer's new book聽The Trial of Julian Assange.
Beware powerful people who claim that democratic governments聽in the United States, Britain 补苍诲听Australia聽administer justice always according to some time-honoured principle about rules of law, argues Stuart Rees.
Among protesters the meaning of the panacea slogan 鈥渇reedom鈥澛爄s diverse. Stuart Rees argues that聽reasoning 补苍诲听persuasion聽are needed to combat the pandemic of intolerant dogma.
Armed with inclusive views of humanity, 鈥渢he Arch鈥 crossed borders, challenged nationalism and advocated justice, not least for the Palestinians, writes Stuart Rees.
Cruelty has caught fire in Australian politics; cowardice has become the currency affecting exchange with Washington and London, argues聽Stuart Rees.
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