Unfiltered

I witnessed the Nuseirat massacre but Western media doesn't care
The reframing of the Nuseirat massacre in Gaza as an 'Israeli rescue operation' is proof that Western media doesn't care about Gazans, writes Abubaker Abed.
The uprisings in New Caledonia expose Macron’s colonial contradictions
New Caledonia's experience of French settler colonialism mirrors that of Palestine, making Macron's tyranny all the more hypocritical, writes Sania Mahyou.
The financial destruction of Palestine
As Palestine faces fiscal collapse, Raja Khalidi considers how the international community can aid the Palestinian economy as Israel tries to strangle it.
For Bosnians, concentration camps in Gaza brings back nightmares
Israel's torture camps in Gaza draw another parallel with the Bosnian genocide, writes Nidžara Ahmetašević. And like the Bosnians, justice remains elusive.
Why I called out Suella Braverman's lies on Palestine live on TV
Suella Braverman's attempt to rile up Palestinian supporters has fallen flat, widening the gap between UK leaders and the public on Gaza, writes Fiona Lali.
ICC and Israel war crimes: Were we wrong about Amal Clooney?
Amal Clooney broke her silence on Gaza with the revelation she'd bring Israel to the ICC. So do we owe Amal Clooney an apology, asks Ruqaiya Haris.
Yuval Noah Harari's odyssey into a parallel Zionist universe
Pseudo-intellectual idol to the masses, Yuval Noah Harari's imaginary Zionism is so far-fetched he may as well be living on another planet, writes Yoav Litvin.
The Israeli ground invasion of Rafah will turn southern Gaza into a death zone, writes Amjad Yaghi [photo credit: Lucie Wimetz/TNA/Getty Images]
Gazan journalist Amjad Yaghi's eye-witness account in Rafah describes the horrors of Israel's ground invasion as Gazans desperately try to flee to safety.
In student Intifada, disobeying for Palestine becomes a duty
The rebellious, borderless, and leaderless student movement for Palestine is capable of evolving into a global student intifada, writes Ayça Çubukçu.
Opinion: Egyptian-American activist Aya Hijazi argues that the campus protests for Gaza are an awakening that could shift the West towards justice in Palestine