New Internationalist

VIETNAM

On a November evening last year in Hanoi’s upscale Tay Ho district, the pop star turned dissident Mai Khoi was huddled in her modest apartment with her husband. No-one dared to go outside as plainclothes government agents had already tried to forcibly kick the couple out, hitting a visiting filmmaker in the process and breaking his microphone. They

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Internationalist

New Internationalist7 min read
Where Did The Land Go?
Every time Mike Maruvire looks out across the vast tracts of unutilized farmland along Zimbabwe’s highways, his heart sinks. For the past two years, the 29-year-old has been desperately seeking a piece of land to farm. ‘I could do with just three hec
New Internationalist1 min read
Northern Ireland More Trouble
In West Belfast, the gates of the ‘peace wall’ dividing the Protestant and Catholic neighbourhoods remain shuttered from dusk until dawn. ‘We now have terrorists in government,’ says a unionist resident, referring to the recently elected Sinn Fein Fi
New Internationalist9 min readInternational Relations
Global Ambitions EU Style
In mid-March the first relief ship docked in Gaza, carrying food for a besieged people. The vessel was the Open Arms. It usually rescues people in distress in the central Mediterranean – the world’s deadliest migration route, where volunteer ships ha

Related Books & Audiobooks