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Nobel peace prize recipient, Aung San suu Kyi, sentenced to three more years in Myanmar

The Nobel peace prize award holder turned tyrant Aung San suu Kyi is sentenced to another three years after the former leader of Myanmar was found guilty of breaching the country’s official secrets act by a secretive military court, the latest in a thread of convictions brought by the generals who removed her from office in a coup last year.

A Critique on Hoda Katebi and the Rise of Secular Liberal Activism within the Muslim Community

The tragic death of Mahsa Amini and the media frenzy that followed is significant in also analyzing the ideologies that activists within the Western Muslim community abide by and what true activism under Islamic values is defined as. One such activist who rose to the occasion was Hoda Katebi.

Deadly Blast Targets Shia Minority in Kabul, Killing 19 and Injuring 27

At least 19 people were killed when a suicide bomber exploded himself at an educational institute in the capital city of Afghanistan, Kabul. Over 27 were also wounded when the blast rocked the city in the the Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourhood of western Kabul, a largely Shia Muslim area and home to the minority Hazara community.

What Media Won’t Tell You About Iran and Mahsa Amini | Setareh Sadeqi

In a LIVE TMJ News segment, Zainabrights interviews Setareh Sadeqi who is a political analyst living in Iran about the dominant Western media narrative on Mahsa Amini, Iran protests, current events, the morality police, regime change, censorship, color revolutions, foreign disruptions and the bigger picture. This is what you won't see or hear from mainstream media.

Karbala And The Choice Of Human Morality | Tarek Bazzi

Karbala is often looked at as a historical tragedy in Islam's history, but the bigger picture is missed. With the first episode of TMJ's new show 'For God and Country' with journalist Zainabrights and guest Tarek Bazzi, the subject of Karbala is broached, the choice of human morality examined and connections made in the global landscape today.

I Am a Woman Living in Iran and the Protests are Ruining our Lives

 It has been a few days since the unrest in Iran began following the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody. The mainstream media is flooded with claims that Mahsa was beaten to death by the police and as a result, the Iranian women are protesting against the dress code law of the country and burning their headscarves. 

Mandating Social Hijab in a Willed Islamic Country is Not the Same Thing as the Banning of Hijab in a Secular One

The death of Mahsa Amini and the ensuing media attention on Iran has brought to light the question of whether it is a double standard, on the one hand, to support the mandatory headcovering and modest clothing policy in the Islamic Republic, whilst on the other hand opposing headcovering bans in secular states such as France. The argument boils down to "individual autonomy" and the lack of state's ability to interfere with a woman's dress code.

15 Year Old Girl Killed by US Military Forces in Fallujah, Iraq

A 15-year-old Iraqi girl was killed on Tuesday 20th September, identified as Zainab Essam Majed al-Khazali. She died when a stray bullet hit her head in the Albu Alwan area on the outskirts of Al-Fallujah, Iraq on Tuesday as the US military conducted drills in the Victoria base close to Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison.

Mahsa Amini’s Death Feeds the Western Media Propaganda Machine

Without awaiting any investigation presenting evidence for the cause of her death, which took place shortly after she was arrested by the authorities for not complying with the state’s defined dress code, Western media outlets were quick to blow the trumpet of hysteria. These included claims that, “women are waving their headscarves in the air and lighting them on fire as crowds chanted “women, life, freedom,” “death to the dictator,” and “Iran’s demonstrations quickly began to call for regime change”.
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