FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “linguistic ingenuity”

Showing 1 - 6 of 6

OPINION

Sudan's war and the Africa we don't see

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/04/2025

» Last Tuesday, British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said: "Many have given up on Sudan, but that is wrong. It's morally wrong when we see so many civilians beheaded, infants as young as one subjected to sexual violence, more people facing famine than anywhere else in the world.... We simply cannot look away."

OPINION

Exploding pagers: What was the point?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 20/09/2024

» The exploding pagers that killed at least 12 people and injured 2,800 others in Lebanon and some adjacent places on Tuesday were mostly just a new wrinkle on the exploding cellphones that Israel has used to assassinate its opponents in the past, but there was one major innovation.

OPINION

World oblivious to risk of all-out war in Africa

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 02/05/2024

» 'We could see an all-out war between all the tribes and that is really the doomsday scenario. At this point, it's not unrealistic," the head of an international non-government organisation that is working in Sudan told the Al Jazeera news agency last week. (She asked them to withhold her name to protect her in-country team in North Darfur.)

OPINION

War sounds death knell for The Last Empire

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 06/09/2022

» This is not another pipe-sucking reassessment of Mikhail Gorbachev's failed attempt to democratise the Soviet Union thirty years ago. He wasn't actually trying to do that anyway; he was attempting to save the Soviet Union and Communism by civilising and softening the harsh Bolshevik dictatorship that had prevailed since 1917.

OPINION

Cameroon's war on anglophones is self-defeating

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 06/11/2019

» Sometimes Donald Trump gets it right. In February he cut off US military aid to the central African country of Cameroon because of its appalling human rights record (and didn't even offer to restore it if the Cameroon government dug up dirt on his political opponents at home). Last Friday he acted again, dropping Cameroon from a pact that promotes trade between sub-Saharan African countries and the US.

OPINION

Peeving Putin: Making Latvian society less Russian

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 07/04/2018

» Lots of countries have two or more official languages: Canada (two), Belgium (three), Switzerland (four), South Africa (11), India (23) and so on. They all have trouble balancing the competing demands of the various language groups. But Latvia has only one official language, and it has a bigger problem than any of them.