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Sunday, June 7, 2026
Botswana: Diamond mining continues to cause suffering for Bushmen

Despite ever increasing profits from multinational diamond mining operations in the country, Botswana’s Bushman communities continue to suffer. Last week the second-largest diamond in history was discovered close to the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, the recognized ancestral homeland of the Bushma

Feeding ‘Godzilla’: as Indonesia burns, its government moves to increase forest destruction

Bill Laurance|James Cook University In the midst of its worst fire crisis in living memory, the Indonesian government is taking a leap backward on forest protection. The recently signed Council of Palm Oil Producing Nations between Indonesia and Malaysia, signed at the weekend in Kuala Lumpur, will

18 Village Councils in India demand Coca Cola stop using groundwater

Eighteen village councils (panchayats) in the immediate vicinity of the Coca-Cola bottling plant in Mehdiganj in Varanasi district in India have come together to demand that the groundwater used by Coca-Cola be stopped immediately due to the growing water crisis in the area. Panchayats, or village c

The Story of a Solar Fridge: Film

Vincent Urban DR Congo is often a forgotten crisis. It doesn’t show up much in the news, but millions of people continue to be forced from their homes cut off from health care and other essentials because of ongoing waves of violence. In October 2015, I accompanied the humanitarian organisati

London Police acknowledge violating women’s human rights

London police officers had infiltrated social and environmental justice campaigns and developed intimate relations with women activists. Eight women who were abused undertook a joint battle for justice.   The follwing is a press release by the eight women whose human rights were violated by Metropo

What’s common between bureaucrats salaries, business persons tea and farmer suicides in India?

In the early 1990s, when the new economic policy of reforms was introduced in India, the trickle down theory was more aggressively propagated. Who have actually gained riches and who have been marginalized? This morning I woke up to few very interesting news. News 1: Seventh Pay Commission for 23.5

Indigenous activist’s life in danger after opposing destruction of Peruvian Amazon

Washington Bolivar, an indigenous activist in Peru has been receiving death threats as he challenges the destruction of Amazon rainforest for timber extraction and conversion to oil palm. According to a press release by Forest Peoples Programme, in the course of the last month, human rights defen

New Groundwater Regulations in India to impact existing Coca-Cola, Pepsi plants

The latest guidelines could put an end to the excessive and destructive groundwater usage by industries that were “grandfathered in” under the last guidelines. The new guidelines, brought by the Central Ground Water Authority (CGWA) – the national groundwater regulatory agency – become effec

Sustainable Development Goals, an opportunity for transnational solidarity

Civil society activists share their ideas and strategies on SDG implementation-the need to think without a box and talking eye to eye A two day conference (6-7 November 2015) on SDGs and transnational activism in Berlin got together an exciting mix of open culture initiatives where activists a

How the environmental justice movement is gathering momentum in South Africa

  Jacklyn Cock, University of the Witwatersrand Environmental justice is a travelling discourse which has taken on distinctive meanings in different parts of the world. South Africa is no exception. As a mobilising force the concept emerged from the US where it was developed 50 years ago in opp

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