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- 104 - How death and despair haunt Pakistan’s Christian minoritySun, 09 Apr 2023
- 103 - ‘Stand-up’ for Ukraine: Coping through comedy in the face of warSun, 02 Apr 2023
- 102 - 'Dance like there is no tomorrow': Ukraine's wartime music sceneSun, 26 Mar 2023
- 101 - How Ukrainian-Russian couples are faring after a year of warSun, 19 Mar 2023
- 100 - 'People want to buy local': The rise of Ukraine's wartime winesSun, 12 Mar 2023
- 99 - 'Can't go back': How an Afghan girls' school principal fled the TalibanSun, 05 Mar 2023
- 98 - ‘Books they love’: A Kabul graveyard library for two schoolgirlsSun, 26 Feb 2023
- 97 - How US abortion organisers are learning from Honduran activistsSun, 19 Feb 2023
- 96 - A long and lethal legacy: In the shadow of asbestos in the UK
Widely used in construction for decades, the aftermath of asbestos exposure has been a death sentence for many in the United Kingdom.
Written by Katharine Quarmby.Read by Richard Martin.
This article is part of a wider cross-border investigation,Asbestos: The Lethal Legacy, led by Investigative Reporting Denmark, edited by Katharine Quarmby, and made in collaboration with journalists from Knack in Belgium, Tygodnik Powszechny and Reporters’ Foundation in Poland, Ostro in Croatia and Slovenia, Investigative Reporting Project Italy, De Groene Amsterdammer in The Netherlands, Grupo Merca2 in Spain, Al Jazeera in the UK and TV2 Nord in Denmark. The investigation is supported byJournalismfund.eu.
Sun, 12 Feb 2023 - 95 - Cost of living: An Indian waste-picking couple struggle with debtSun, 05 Feb 2023
- 94 - Back from extinction: How to resurrect a Tasmanian tigerSun, 29 Jan 2023
- 93 - The Ukrainians using embroidery to stand up to RussiaThu, 19 Jan 2023
- 92 - 'We have no one': The women and girls sold as brides in Kashmir
Indian women and girls are being sold by traffickers and forced into marriages against their will for as little as $35. AJ Longreads highlights how under-reported these cases are and how the victims are left feeling abandoned.
Names of the women and children have been changed to protect their identities.
Written by Rifat Fareed.
Read by Mohita Namjoshi.
Sun, 15 Jan 2023 - 91 - The deq tattooist: Preserving the ink of a disappearing cultureSun, 08 Jan 2023
- 90 - Revisit: The woman protecting South Sudan's parks from war and poachingSun, 01 Jan 2023
- 89 - Revisit: The Sri Lankan taxi driver reuniting adoptees with their families.
This week we return to the story of Andrew Silva from Sri Lanka. His day job is taxing people around, but what he does in his spare time is truly life changing. With a car full of DNA tests and a natural detective's instinct, he's helping to reunite adopted children with their birth mothers.
Written by Bhavya Dore.
Read by Loveday Smith.
Sun, 25 Dec 2022 - 88 - 'Republic of fear': A return to Yemen after 11 yearsSun, 18 Dec 2022
- 87 - The Indian soldier who vanished on a glacier 38 years ago
As the climate crisis causes water levels to plummet, riverbeds to dry and glaciers to melt, artefacts like old warships, an ancient city, a mosque, 'hunger stones' and human remains have emerged. The body of an Indian soldier was found on Siachen Glacier. His widow always hoped he would ‘come home someday’.
This story is part of “Climate artefacts”, a mini-series telling the stories behind the people, places and objects that have been discovered due to drought and warming temperatures.
Written by Rifat Fareed.
Read by Mohita Namjoshi.
Sun, 11 Dec 2022 - 86 - ‘Justice delayed’ in Texas city where police killed a Black womanSun, 04 Dec 2022
- 85 - ‘I was desperate’: Young job seekers scammed, abused in Nigeria
Predators and fraudsters are exploiting vulnerable unemployed Nigerians, and the costs are sometimes deadly. AJ Longreads explores how social media is being used to lure victims.
A warning - this story contains details of sexual assault. Names have been changed to protect the privacy of the victims.
Written by Damilola Banjo.
Read by Laura Lockwood.
Sun, 27 Nov 2022 - 84 - Mohammed Salim: The 'bare-footed Indian' who wowed Celtic
India's first footballer to play for a European club made history without ever wearing a pair of football boots. As Qatar makes history for being the first country in the Middle East to stage a World Cup, AJ Long reads reflects on how any nation and anyone can make it against the odds.
Written by James Welsh.
Read by Richard Martin.
Sun, 20 Nov 2022 - 83 - As climate clock ticks, war in Ukraine upends Arctic researchSun, 13 Nov 2022
- 82 - Reckoning with genocide in NamibiaSun, 06 Nov 2022
- 81 - How Holocaust historians are unearthing Ukraine’s presentSun, 30 Oct 2022
- 80 - The battle over space emissions in CornwallSun, 23 Oct 2022
- 79 - Cost of living: A couple's move from tent to apartment
As rents and homelessness rise in New Orleans in the US, we meet Jessica and Terry who have finally been able to find a home. However, they now face new living challenges.
A warning - this story contains references to suicide. If you or a loved one is experiencing suicidal thoughts, help is available. Visit www.befrienders.org for more information.
Written by Delaney Nolan.
Read by Pete Ferrand.
Sun, 16 Oct 2022 - 78 - Women in war: A psychologist helps Ukrainian soldiers' familiesSun, 09 Oct 2022
- 77 - What the war means for Ukrainians with disabilitiesSun, 02 Oct 2022
- 76 - Love, determination and risking all to cross the MediterraneanSun, 25 Sep 2022
- 75 - The teeth makers of KandaharSun, 18 Sep 2022
- 74 - The tiny murder scenes of forensic scientist Frances Glessner LeeSun, 11 Sep 2022
- 73 - Treating wounded and sick civilians in western UkraineSun, 04 Sep 2022
- 72 - When 'Z' meant joy, freedom and humour to Russians and UkrainiansSun, 28 Aug 2022
- 71 - The deadly virus Nigerians fear more than COVID-19: Lassa feverSun, 21 Aug 2022
- 70 - 'I'll be sacrificed': The lost and sold daughters of AfghanistanSun, 14 Aug 2022
- 69 - Murdered women: Sabina Nessa, ‘a kind and generous soul’
As part of Al Jazeera's series on murdered women, we explore the life and death of Sabina Nessa. Her family say she was ‘a kind and generous soul’. But they question why there was not wider media attention about her death and why some lives get more coverage than others.
Written by Julie Bindel.
Read by Laura Lockwood.
Sun, 07 Aug 2022 - 68 - 'Ready for rescue': Saving refugee lives in the Mediterranean Sea
Journalist Lexie Harrison-Cripps recently boarded a Doctors Without Borders search and rescue ship along one of the world’s deadliest migration routes.
The remote location makes it virtually impossible to report on without an invitation from an NGO. As a result, every year thousands of people live - and die - in horrific conditions while governments go unchecked.
Written and read by Lexie Harrison-Cripps.
Sun, 31 Jul 2022 - 67 - The Kyiv museum staff who stayed to protect cherished artefactsSun, 24 Jul 2022
- 66 - 'You’ll get it in your veins': Australia's black-opal minersSun, 17 Jul 2022
- 65 - Psychotherapists help Yazidis heal layers of trauma in IraqSun, 10 Jul 2022
- 64 - The Georgian village facing Russian ‘creeping occupation'Sun, 03 Jul 2022
- 63 - The refugees cast adrift in the MediterraneanSun, 26 Jun 2022
- 62 - The mystifying rise of suicide in Pakistan’s Thar DesertSun, 19 Jun 2022
- 61 - 'A healing journey': Residential school survivors and the Church
Pope Francis has apologised for the Roman Catholic Church's involvement in Indigenous residential schools in Canada. For more than 160 years children were abused in
Canada’s residential school system. More than 60 percent of them were run by the Catholic Church.But following the pope's apology, can survivors forgive?
Written by Brandi Morin.
Read by Laura Lockwood.
Sun, 12 Jun 2022 - 60 - Poland-Belarus border: The people pushed back in a Polish forestSun, 05 Jun 2022
- 59 - LGBTQ Ukrainians and Russians find solidarity in BerlinSun, 29 May 2022
- 58 - Worlds apart: 24 hours with two refugees in PolandSun, 22 May 2022
- 57 - The Hopi farmer championing Indigenous agricultural knowledgeSun, 15 May 2022
- 56 - The Kenyan mothers fighting to end police brutalitySun, 08 May 2022
- 55 - The radio show championing justice for abuse victims in NigeriaSun, 01 May 2022
- 54 - The woman setting the record straight on Native American historySun, 24 Apr 2022
- 53 - Lives derailed: Fleeing Ukraine war destroyed my father’s healthSun, 17 Apr 2022
- 52 - The Sri Lankan taxi driver reuniting adoptees with their families.Sun, 10 Apr 2022
- 51 - 'Not a quitter': The Karachi doctor taking rapists to courtSun, 03 Apr 2022
- 50 - In Berlin, a Russian Jewish restaurant rallies behind UkrainiansSun, 27 Mar 2022
- 49 - The anti-apartheid fighter empowering women in South AfricaSun, 20 Mar 2022
- 48 - The woman protecting South Sudan's parks from war and poachingSun, 13 Mar 2022
- 47 - Murdered women: Adiba Parveen, the quietest girl in the valleySun, 06 Mar 2022
- 46 - Myanmar's 'reluctant' resistance fighterSun, 27 Feb 2022
- 45 - Backyard astronomers: Turning stargazing into space-portraitureSun, 20 Feb 2022
- 44 - A letter to Australia's immigration minister from a refugee
When Novak Djokovic was detained in Melbourne during the Australian Open he was held at the Park Hotel. Someone you probably haven't heard of was also in custody there at the same time. Mehdi Ali, a refugee, has grown up in one of the most notorious immigration detention systems in the world. Here's his open letter to the Minister for Immigration.
Read by Ray Jericho.Sun, 13 Feb 2022 - 43 - Borderlands: fear, uncertainty and life along Ukraine’s frontlineSun, 06 Feb 2022
- 42 - The oysterman, the pirate and Louisiana's disappearing wetlandsSun, 30 Jan 2022
- 41 - In Russia, Indigenous land defenders face intimidation and exileSun, 23 Jan 2022
- 40 - Revisit: Afghan Interpreters betrayed
Hundreds of Afghans risked their lives to assist the US military with interpreting and other services after 9-11. Fearing for their lives, many have been desperate to leave since the Taliban re-took power. But even before August 2021, interpreters found themselves feeling abandoned.
Written by Sayed Jalal Shajjan.Read by me Ben Mitchell.
Sun, 16 Jan 2022 - 39 - ‘The radio station at the heart of an India-GDR friendship’.Sun, 09 Jan 2022
- 38 - Revisiting 'I was born here, I'll be buried here' In Afghanistan to staySat, 01 Jan 2022
- 37 - Revisiting Nigeria’s unregulated human egg industrySun, 26 Dec 2021
- 36 - ‘We do the police’s job’Sun, 19 Dec 2021
- 35 - The Louisiana Indigenous community fighting for hurricane justiceSun, 12 Dec 2021
- 34 - 'Humans are for the grave'Sun, 05 Dec 2021
- 33 - Horrors on the PlateauSat, 27 Nov 2021
- 32 - Canada's 'crying shame': The fields full of children's bonesSun, 21 Nov 2021
- 31 - The last warrior of Africa's ‘Forgotten Army’
At 102 years old, Ebou Janha, is the only surviving veteran of 1 Gambia Regiment – soldiers who helped the British fight against Japanese troops in then-Burma during the Second World War.
On this week’s AJ Longreads… The last warrior of Africa's ‘Forgotten Army’: The Gambia and World War II
Written by Will McBain.
Read by Loveday Smith.
Sun, 14 Nov 2021 - 30 - DR Congo’s gold rush sex tradeSun, 07 Nov 2021
- 29 - 'What we fear as women': Degrees of AbuseSun, 31 Oct 2021
- 28 - ‘Kill them all, don’t spare anyone’Sun, 24 Oct 2021
- 27 - Inside Nigeria’s unregulated human egg industrySun, 17 Oct 2021
- 26 - Ukrainian soldiers bear the invisible scars of warSun, 10 Oct 2021
- 25 - A ‘Jim Crow jury’ prisoner fights for freedomSun, 03 Oct 2021
- 24 - Lebanon: What life is like in a ‘failed state’Sun, 26 Sep 2021
- 23 - Hungry for change: Belgium’s undocumented rally for their rightsSun, 19 Sep 2021
- 22 - ‘Men don’t protect us, they won’t respect us’: Afghan diariesSun, 12 Sep 2021
- 21 - ‘It’s painful to leave home while it’s burning’: Fleeing Kabul
The first commercial flight has taken off from Kabul, Afghanistan. It had been closed since August 30th when the US ended operations to evacuate diplomats, foreigners and Afghans considered at risk from the Taliban.
One of them was Sharif Safi. The Afghan activist reflects on how he fled to safety, and the hopelessness he feels for his country and its people.
Read by Ben Mitchell.Sun, 05 Sep 2021 - 20 - The land we came from: My people are my homeland
Al Jazeera asks writers to reflect on the environment they grew up in and how it has shaped their lives.
In "The land we came from" series, Terese Marie Mailhot writes about how she hates '"to think the place I played in as a child might someday become unrecognisable, but I still give thanks."
Read by Sheila Sharma.
Sun, 29 Aug 2021 - 19 - 'I was born here, I'll be buried here': In Afghanistan to stayWed, 25 Aug 2021
- 18 - The mental health costs of Poland’s abortion ban
It's been seven months since Poland introduced a near total ban on abortions, including cases where there are severe foetal defects. The procedure is now only allowed in cases of rape, incest or when the pregnancy threatens the mother's life.
Al Jazeera checks in with women whom are struggling with the emotional toll of the ban.Written by Ylenia Gostoli.
Read by Lisa Brandt.
This reporting was supported by the International Women’s Media Foundation’s Howard G Buffett Fund for Women Journalists.
Sun, 22 Aug 2021 - 17 - The Kashmir village that outlawed dowriesSun, 15 Aug 2021
- 16 - Death doulas and end-of-life rights: The debate on assisted dyingSun, 08 Aug 2021
- 15 - Murdered women: A history of ‘honour’ crimesSat, 31 Jul 2021
- 14 - Doomed to stay: The dying villages of Mexico’s Lake CuitzeoThu, 22 Jul 2021
- 13 - Vanished: The Plight of three Ethiopian DomesticWorkers in Lebanon
Meseret started working for a Lebanese family as a domestic worker soon after arriving from Ethiopia in 2011. A little over a year later, she stopped calling her family. Her story of abuse would eventually surface -- along with those from other migrants who'd hoped to seek a better life abroad.
Written by Zecharias Zelalem.
Read by Mapendo Munthali.
Sun, 18 Jul 2021 - 12 - Anwar Ditta: The Mother Who Took on the British Government and Won.Sun, 11 Jul 2021
- 11 - Morna: Cape Verde's Music of Displacement and Return
The longing for home or for those who've left in search of a better life is summed up in one word. Sodade. Cape Verde and its sons and daughters of singers, poets and musicians capture it all in mornas.
AJ Long Reads explores this musical practice as Cape Verdeans observe independence from Portugal on July 5th,Written by-Beatriz Ramalho da Silva.
Read by Jo de Frias.
Sun, 04 Jul 2021 - 10 - Tales from a Crematorium
Cremation on a funeral pyre made from wood has long been part of India's elaborate ritual to honour the dead, but not during the second deadly wave of Covid.
"Funerals have been reduced to just getting rid of the dead body because people are very scared of contracting the virus,”
In Tales from an Indian Crematorium ,we hear about one of the hardest jobs going.
Written by Saurabh Sharma.
Read by me Mohita Namjoshi.
Sun, 27 Jun 2021 - 9 - ‘I have sacrificed a lot’: Growing Up Queer in IndiaSun, 20 Jun 2021
- 8 - 'Betrayed’: The Afghan Interpreters Abandoned by the US
This September will mark 20 years since the start of the US war in Afghanistan. After Al-Qaeda members hijacked four commercial airliners then President George W. Bush vowed to win the war against terrorism. Al Qaeda and Osama Bin Laden in Afghanistan were the targets.
In the years that followed, hundreds of Afghans risked their lives to assist the US military with interpreting and other services. They’ve since found themselves abandoned as the US pulls out of Afghanistan.
Written by Sayed Jalal Shajjan.Read by me Ben Mitchell.
Sun, 13 Jun 2021 - 7 - The Afghan Fathers Braving Beatings to Reach Family in CroatiaSun, 06 Jun 2021
- 6 - ‘I smell it, taste it, feel its heaviness’: Life in Delhi’s DustSun, 30 May 2021
- 5 - Sneakers, California Sun and My Mother’s Other DaughterSun, 23 May 2021
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