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Published in: Home: OpinionHow many Namibians is too many for Suella? 935
Home secretary claims residents of Dominica, Honduras, Namibia, Timor-Leste and Vanuatu are ‘abusing’ visa-free travel
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Published in: Home: OpinionSunak knows hiking visa fees will devastate migrant families. That’s the aim
The decision to fund public sector pay rises through migrants’ visa and healthcare fees is political and unfair
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Published in: 50.50: InterviewGuatemala election: Candidate’s office raided after vow to curb corruption
Guatemala’s embattled presidential hopeful Bernardo Arévalo tells openDemocracy of plans to crack down on corruption
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Published in: Home: OpinionCould winning an election be the end of Keir Starmer?
Elected as the lesser of two evils, Labour will face crises from the offset. Could its disenchanted left step in?
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Published in: Home: AnalysisWhat Uxbridge does (and doesn’t) tell us about ULEZ and Labour’s strategy
Both Labour and the Tories blame Sadiq Khan’s anti-pollution strategy. But are they right about what voters want?
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Published in: ourEconomy: OpinionUN should be learning from sustainable food producers – not hosting Big Ag
Small-scale farmers and Indigenous groups say they have again been shut out of the UN Food Systems Summit
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Published in: Home: NewsThe Tories’ lesson from Uxbridge: pretend not to be the Tories
The Conservative Party was barely mentioned in election leaflets, while Boris Johnson’s name didn’t come up once
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Published in: oDR: Feature‘I can hear the explosions’: Inside a frontline hospital in Ukraine
In a small town near Russian-held Bakhmut, medics are saving lives against a backdrop of rocket fire
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Published in: 50.50: NewsYoung Arab and Black men jailed and fined in France’s riot trials
Fast-track trials deliver hefty sentences for petty crimes committed during riots sparked by police killing teenager
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Published in: 50.50: OpinionUS liberals and political media need to show urgency on the climate crisis
Despite floods and fires, both left and right in the US act like environmental disaster isn’t happening
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Published in: Home: NewsRevealed: Lobbying chief set to win seat on policy-shaping Labour committee
Director whose lobbying firm represents BlackRock and Police Federation seeks place on party’s conference committee
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Published in: Home: NewsCovid bereaved families slam David Cameron and George Osborne over austerity
Lawyers for the victims' families took aim at those they hold responsible for leaving the UK unprepared for Covid
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Published in: oDR: FeatureTajikistan’s Pamiris: Persecuted, disappeared, and forgotten by the world
Pamiris are increasingly fleeing Tajikistan, fearing for their lives. But they risk being returned by hostile states
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Published in: Home: NewsCovid bereaved say loved ones were treated ‘like toxic waste’ after death
UK was not equipped to deal with Covid deaths, bereaved families tell inquiry as Module 1 concludes
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Published in: Home: NewsBMA chief: UK stockpiled just 3% of daily PPE needed for Covid
Philip Banfield echoes National Audit Office warning about lack of gowns – and criticises standard of NHS-issue masks
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Published in: Home: NewsRevealed: Bank of England staff handed £25m in bonuses
Top bankers have pocketed up to £22,500 on top of their regular salaries, as critics say there is ‘no justification’
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Published in: Dark Money Investigations: NewsOligarch’s ‘UK office’ had bank accounts frozen after openDemocracy revelations
Action came shortly after we revealed ex-Arsenal shareholder Alisher Usmanov could still profit from London firm
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Published in: Home: NewsGove tells Covid inquiry no-deal Brexit planning prepared UK for ‘any’ crisis
The levelling up secretary defended the government's decision to focus on no-deal Brexit over a potential pandemic
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Published in: Home: NewsHospitals had to upgrade ‘inadequate’ oxygen machines at height of pandemic
“Major engineering and structural changes” were made to improve equipment when Covid hit, a health expert has said
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Published in: oDR: FeatureKherson: Life in a flooded city
Despite ruined homes, waist-high floods and food shortages, Kherson’s residents are still finding reasons to smile