Release of nuclear-contaminated water is a threat to us all

Wesley Seale|Published

Already two years ago, in April 2021, UN human rights experts deplored Japan’s decision to release the contaminated water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear plant ...

It is evident that G7 summit hasn’t changed with the times

Wesley Seale|Published

If the G7 foreign ministers’ meeting is anything to go by, South Africa will not be missing much.

Energy crisis: SA must be wary of the US, West

Wesley Seale|Published

Yet, since the outbreak of the conflict in Ukraine, reports suggest that there has been an uptick in the production of coal in the US.

UCT crisis is 190 years in the making

Wesley Seale|Published

Only the residents of Cape Town who have been living under a rock will deny that the current crisis at UCT speaks to the very nature of the university and that it ...

Xinjiang critics must visit, make their own assessment

Wesley Seale|Published

Not many people realise just how diverse China really is.

US hopeless at domestic and foreign policy

Wesley Seale|Published

Johnson leaves after the catastrophic Brexit referendum, under David Cameron, and the term of the lame-duck prime minister, Theresa May

Initiative will give life to words of Madiba that freedom is ultimately about the welfare of the other

Wesley Seale|Published

On Freedom Day a group of people gathered in the Ahlulbait (as) Mosque Complex to deepen inter-religious dialogue and ensure that faith communities too contribute ...

Denialism is not China’s policy either

Wesley Seale|Published

While racism, or even for that matter denialism, has never been official Chinese policy, the tone-deaf responses and even defences that we have seen coming, especially ...

What South African and Chinese citizens have in common

Wesley Seale|Published

Friendship and learning to know each other will teach us how diverse we all are but more importantly also just how much more we have in common.

Accomplices to financial murder

Wesley Seale|Published

In the 2015/16 financial year nearly R60 billion left South Africa and the country’s regulatory arms have no strategy to stop the problem.