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Guardian world networks

All of the Guardian's world network coverage in one place
  • Nyumanzi resettlement camp in northern Uganda.

    Is Uganda the world's best place for refugees?

    Once refugees themselves, Ugandans look to ‘return the good’ to people fleeing war in South Sudan by offering land and help
  • Man's hand typing on a laptop

    'It's easier to hack an election than eBay': confessions of a Belarusian hacker

    Sergei Pavlovich, known as Policedog, sheds light on the community accused of aggressive activity on behalf of the Kremlin
  • A man carries flags of Crimean Tatars and Ukraine while celebrating the Day of Crimean Tatars National Flag in Simferopol, in 2014

    Russian authorities 'imprisoning Crimean Tatars in psychiatric hospitals'

    Since annexation many ethnic Tatar activists have been detained in outdated mental institutions, rights activists say
  • Turks protest outside the Dutch consulate in Istanbul

    How to survive tyranny: 10 pieces of advice from Turkey

    Spread facts, be careful, and don’t assume democracy is safe, say people who know what life is like under a strongman leader
  • Can Dündar

    Turkey is heading for dictatorship, but voters can still turn the tide

    Can Dündar
    A referendum on vast new powers for the president hangs in the balance despite his comprehensive crackdown on dissent
  • Ahmet Altan and his brother Mehmet Altan

    Revealed: the terror and torment of Turkey's jailed journalists

    Prisoners tell of solitary confinement and maltreatment after being caught up in the Kafkaesque media purge
  • turkey-top-image-edit

    'Sometimes I laugh at this farce': six writers on life behind bars in Turkey

    Six persecuted writers describe the mental and physical toll of living in the country that jails more journalists than any other
  • Sergei Kechimov

    The reindeer herder struggling to take on oil excavators in Siberia

  • People protest in Minsk against a tax on those who work fewer than six months a year.

    'We are not slaves': Europe's most repressive state is re​awakening

    Andrei Sannikov
  • An activist holds a sign reading ‘We are the majority’ outside the Kremlin on International Women’s Day.

    ​Festival tries to reclaim Russian feminism – but is it radical enough?

    More than 1,000 attend Fem Fest in Moscow to talk about domestic violence, rape and low pay in male-dominated society
  • Astana Ice Fishermen photo story

    Cold catch: the ice fishermen of Astana – in pictures

    Outside the Kazakh capital, Astana, the river snowscape is populated by strange figures. Detroit-based photographer Aleksey Kondratyev investigated and discovered they were ice fishermen, who brave -40C temperatures waiting patiently for their catch
  • John Githongo, former Kenyan investigative journalist

    Rebels with a cause: Africa's whistleblowers need urgent protection

    Baltasar Garzón and William Bourdon
    A group of activists, lawyers and artists have launched a platform to help citizen watchdogs in often dangerous situations
  • Eastleigh, Nairobi’s predominantly Somali neighbourhood.

    'You were supposed to die tonight': US anti-terror strategy linked to torture in Africa

    Security forces funded by US are accused of human rights abuses including summary executions and disappearances
  • Demonstrators march last year in Bujumbura during a protest in front of the building of Radio Publique Africaine burnt in May 2015 during the failed coup.

    'Fake news' fuelled civil war in Burundi. Now it's being used again

    Exiled journalists tell of how decades of balanced post-conflict reporting is being dismantled by President Nkurunziza
  • A poster of Donald Trump in North Mitrovica.

    Rumbling Balkans threaten foreign policy headache for Trump

    In Kosovo, Serbia, Bosnia and Macedonia, signs of ethnic tension are on the rise again
  • Russian soldiers salute in front of the Alexandrov Ensemble’s home in Moscow

    The 'unpatriotic' post on Facebook that meant I finally had to flee Russia

    Arkady Babchenko
    I was already used to abuse, but after I wrote about a Russian military plane crash, a frightening campaign against me began
  • Mauritanian anti-slavery activist Biram Dah Abeid.

    In an age of autocracy, meet the dissidents speaking truth to power

    Strongmen are back in vogue, but these six people are determined to defy the despots
  • Racks of bottles at Artwinery

    Brut force: the winery in the middle of a war zone

    The chaos of eastern Ukraine has taken a heavy toll on this Soviet-era winery, which once supplied more than half the country
  • Turkey president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

    Erdoğan v free speech: how does it feel to live in Turkey right now?

    From imprisoned journalists to the forthcoming referendum, tell us how the current climate is affecting you
  • Striking Kenyan medics demonstrate over low pay at Uhuru Park in central Nairobi, on Monday.

    Kenya's health system on the verge of collapse as doctors' strike grinds on

    Mass walkout over reneged 2013 deal on boosting pay and staffing has left patients untreated and medical union leaders in jail
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