A little-known and suppressed British atrocity in a faraway island tells us much about the function of "globalisation", New Statesman, 27 September 1996, p. 34.
Blair's latest morality speech points again to the unmentionable of British politics: that Labour could be more extreme than the Tories, New Statesman, 25 October 1996, p. 17.
They never walk alone; The Liverpool dockers have been on strike for 14 months. Yet the dispute is scarcely reported, is ignored by the politicians and not even officially recognized by the union. 'The bad old days' of casualisation have returned in docks
Gutted!; Thirty years ago, the Daily Mirror was the biggest-selling daily paper in the world. Before television made the running, it was the Mirror that explained events of the day and campaigned on issues that touched millions. Not any more. John Pilger,
A shadow lingering over the killing fields; Pol Pot may be defeated, but Cambodia's nightmare is not over yet, writes John Pilger, The Age, 19 June 1997, p. A17.