War on Want
Poverty is political. War on Want campaigns against the root causes of global poverty.

🔴It's time for football to show genocide and apartheid the red card.
NEW research reveals injustice at the heart of football: nine English @premierleague football clubs are sponsored by 15 corporations that are involved in Israel’s apartheid and genocide of the Palestinian people.
This is sportswashing: from sponsor branding on shirts to advertising across stadiums, football clubs are promoting these corporations to millions of fans.
⚽Read the research in full – link in our bio.

🔴It's time for football to show genocide and apartheid the red card.
NEW research reveals injustice at the heart of football: nine English @premierleague football clubs are sponsored by 15 corporations that are involved in Israel’s apartheid and genocide of the Palestinian people.
This is sportswashing: from sponsor branding on shirts to advertising across stadiums, football clubs are promoting these corporations to millions of fans.
⚽Read the research in full – link in our bio.

🔴It's time for football to show genocide and apartheid the red card.
NEW research reveals injustice at the heart of football: nine English @premierleague football clubs are sponsored by 15 corporations that are involved in Israel’s apartheid and genocide of the Palestinian people.
This is sportswashing: from sponsor branding on shirts to advertising across stadiums, football clubs are promoting these corporations to millions of fans.
⚽Read the research in full – link in our bio.

🔴It's time for football to show genocide and apartheid the red card.
NEW research reveals injustice at the heart of football: nine English @premierleague football clubs are sponsored by 15 corporations that are involved in Israel’s apartheid and genocide of the Palestinian people.
This is sportswashing: from sponsor branding on shirts to advertising across stadiums, football clubs are promoting these corporations to millions of fans.
⚽Read the research in full – link in our bio.

🔴It's time for football to show genocide and apartheid the red card.
NEW research reveals injustice at the heart of football: nine English @premierleague football clubs are sponsored by 15 corporations that are involved in Israel’s apartheid and genocide of the Palestinian people.
This is sportswashing: from sponsor branding on shirts to advertising across stadiums, football clubs are promoting these corporations to millions of fans.
⚽Read the research in full – link in our bio.

Israel is committing a genocide of the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip.
UK Foreign Secretary @DavidLammy said that calling Israel’s actions genocide "undermines the seriousness of that term".
His statement is misleading and wrong – find out more and tell him that this is genocide via the link in our bio.
BREAKING 📣: We're outside the Foreign Office in Westminster to demand the UK Government reject Rosebank.
Approving this enormous oil field would be morally indefensible, and could violate the UK’s legal obligations under international law.
If approved, Rosebank could send £200 million to Israeli energy giant Delek Group, known to operate in illegal settlements in the West Bank and supply fuel to the Israeli military via subsidiary Delek Israel.
This flow of money is thanks to Rosebank co-owner, Ithaca Energy, who are majority-owned by Delek Group. Through this connection, Delek has already make over ONE $BILLION from North Sea oil and gas exploitation.
Sign the petition against oil profits for occupation and genocide - link in @stopcambo bio

💥 Breaking: on the anniversary of NEXT's union busting factory closure in Sri Lanka, we were there at stores across the UK to let them know we demand justice for workers. Exactly one year ago, NEXT closed its Katunayake factory in Sri Lanka, claiming it was not profitable enough.
🫵 Tag @nextofficial and tell them why they should reopen the factory, bring back union jobs and treat their workers fairly!
💬 1,416 workers lost their jobs overnight after being informed via WhatsApp — some after more than 30 years of service
📢 This was the only NEXT factory in Sri Lanka where workers had a recognised union and a collective bargaining agreement, winning modest wage increases of around £10 extra per month compared to NEXT’s other factories in the country.
🚫 NEXT responded by shutting the factory without consultation and destroying that agreement.
💸 In the year since, NEXT has reported record profits of £1.15 billion and rewarded CEO Lord Simon Wolfson with a 50% pay rise, bringing his pay package to £7.4 million, alongside a £3.56 million bonus.
Meanwhile, workers who lost their jobs have faced unemployment, financial hardship and a lengthy legal struggle for compensation.
🗣️ As one worker from the factory said:
“We have all lost our jobs and the factory has been shut down — not because we did anything wrong, but because we stood together as a trade union to fight for workers’ rights and speak out against injustice.”
Workers in Sri Lanka and workers in the UK deserve better pay, better protections and the right to organise without fear.
#NextCanAffordIt

💥 Breaking: on the anniversary of NEXT's union busting factory closure in Sri Lanka, we were there at stores across the UK to let them know we demand justice for workers. Exactly one year ago, NEXT closed its Katunayake factory in Sri Lanka, claiming it was not profitable enough.
🫵 Tag @nextofficial and tell them why they should reopen the factory, bring back union jobs and treat their workers fairly!
💬 1,416 workers lost their jobs overnight after being informed via WhatsApp — some after more than 30 years of service
📢 This was the only NEXT factory in Sri Lanka where workers had a recognised union and a collective bargaining agreement, winning modest wage increases of around £10 extra per month compared to NEXT’s other factories in the country.
🚫 NEXT responded by shutting the factory without consultation and destroying that agreement.
💸 In the year since, NEXT has reported record profits of £1.15 billion and rewarded CEO Lord Simon Wolfson with a 50% pay rise, bringing his pay package to £7.4 million, alongside a £3.56 million bonus.
Meanwhile, workers who lost their jobs have faced unemployment, financial hardship and a lengthy legal struggle for compensation.
🗣️ As one worker from the factory said:
“We have all lost our jobs and the factory has been shut down — not because we did anything wrong, but because we stood together as a trade union to fight for workers’ rights and speak out against injustice.”
Workers in Sri Lanka and workers in the UK deserve better pay, better protections and the right to organise without fear.
#NextCanAffordIt

💥 Breaking: on the anniversary of NEXT's union busting factory closure in Sri Lanka, we were there at stores across the UK to let them know we demand justice for workers. Exactly one year ago, NEXT closed its Katunayake factory in Sri Lanka, claiming it was not profitable enough.
🫵 Tag @nextofficial and tell them why they should reopen the factory, bring back union jobs and treat their workers fairly!
💬 1,416 workers lost their jobs overnight after being informed via WhatsApp — some after more than 30 years of service
📢 This was the only NEXT factory in Sri Lanka where workers had a recognised union and a collective bargaining agreement, winning modest wage increases of around £10 extra per month compared to NEXT’s other factories in the country.
🚫 NEXT responded by shutting the factory without consultation and destroying that agreement.
💸 In the year since, NEXT has reported record profits of £1.15 billion and rewarded CEO Lord Simon Wolfson with a 50% pay rise, bringing his pay package to £7.4 million, alongside a £3.56 million bonus.
Meanwhile, workers who lost their jobs have faced unemployment, financial hardship and a lengthy legal struggle for compensation.
🗣️ As one worker from the factory said:
“We have all lost our jobs and the factory has been shut down — not because we did anything wrong, but because we stood together as a trade union to fight for workers’ rights and speak out against injustice.”
Workers in Sri Lanka and workers in the UK deserve better pay, better protections and the right to organise without fear.
#NextCanAffordIt

💥 Breaking: on the anniversary of NEXT's union busting factory closure in Sri Lanka, we were there at stores across the UK to let them know we demand justice for workers. Exactly one year ago, NEXT closed its Katunayake factory in Sri Lanka, claiming it was not profitable enough.
🫵 Tag @nextofficial and tell them why they should reopen the factory, bring back union jobs and treat their workers fairly!
💬 1,416 workers lost their jobs overnight after being informed via WhatsApp — some after more than 30 years of service
📢 This was the only NEXT factory in Sri Lanka where workers had a recognised union and a collective bargaining agreement, winning modest wage increases of around £10 extra per month compared to NEXT’s other factories in the country.
🚫 NEXT responded by shutting the factory without consultation and destroying that agreement.
💸 In the year since, NEXT has reported record profits of £1.15 billion and rewarded CEO Lord Simon Wolfson with a 50% pay rise, bringing his pay package to £7.4 million, alongside a £3.56 million bonus.
Meanwhile, workers who lost their jobs have faced unemployment, financial hardship and a lengthy legal struggle for compensation.
🗣️ As one worker from the factory said:
“We have all lost our jobs and the factory has been shut down — not because we did anything wrong, but because we stood together as a trade union to fight for workers’ rights and speak out against injustice.”
Workers in Sri Lanka and workers in the UK deserve better pay, better protections and the right to organise without fear.
#NextCanAffordIt

💥 Breaking: on the anniversary of NEXT's union busting factory closure in Sri Lanka, we were there at stores across the UK to let them know we demand justice for workers. Exactly one year ago, NEXT closed its Katunayake factory in Sri Lanka, claiming it was not profitable enough.
🫵 Tag @nextofficial and tell them why they should reopen the factory, bring back union jobs and treat their workers fairly!
💬 1,416 workers lost their jobs overnight after being informed via WhatsApp — some after more than 30 years of service
📢 This was the only NEXT factory in Sri Lanka where workers had a recognised union and a collective bargaining agreement, winning modest wage increases of around £10 extra per month compared to NEXT’s other factories in the country.
🚫 NEXT responded by shutting the factory without consultation and destroying that agreement.
💸 In the year since, NEXT has reported record profits of £1.15 billion and rewarded CEO Lord Simon Wolfson with a 50% pay rise, bringing his pay package to £7.4 million, alongside a £3.56 million bonus.
Meanwhile, workers who lost their jobs have faced unemployment, financial hardship and a lengthy legal struggle for compensation.
🗣️ As one worker from the factory said:
“We have all lost our jobs and the factory has been shut down — not because we did anything wrong, but because we stood together as a trade union to fight for workers’ rights and speak out against injustice.”
Workers in Sri Lanka and workers in the UK deserve better pay, better protections and the right to organise without fear.
#NextCanAffordIt

💥 Breaking: on the anniversary of NEXT's union busting factory closure in Sri Lanka, we were there at stores across the UK to let them know we demand justice for workers. Exactly one year ago, NEXT closed its Katunayake factory in Sri Lanka, claiming it was not profitable enough.
🫵 Tag @nextofficial and tell them why they should reopen the factory, bring back union jobs and treat their workers fairly!
💬 1,416 workers lost their jobs overnight after being informed via WhatsApp — some after more than 30 years of service
📢 This was the only NEXT factory in Sri Lanka where workers had a recognised union and a collective bargaining agreement, winning modest wage increases of around £10 extra per month compared to NEXT’s other factories in the country.
🚫 NEXT responded by shutting the factory without consultation and destroying that agreement.
💸 In the year since, NEXT has reported record profits of £1.15 billion and rewarded CEO Lord Simon Wolfson with a 50% pay rise, bringing his pay package to £7.4 million, alongside a £3.56 million bonus.
Meanwhile, workers who lost their jobs have faced unemployment, financial hardship and a lengthy legal struggle for compensation.
🗣️ As one worker from the factory said:
“We have all lost our jobs and the factory has been shut down — not because we did anything wrong, but because we stood together as a trade union to fight for workers’ rights and speak out against injustice.”
Workers in Sri Lanka and workers in the UK deserve better pay, better protections and the right to organise without fear.
#NextCanAffordIt

💥 Breaking: on the anniversary of NEXT's union busting factory closure in Sri Lanka, we were there at stores across the UK to let them know we demand justice for workers. Exactly one year ago, NEXT closed its Katunayake factory in Sri Lanka, claiming it was not profitable enough.
🫵 Tag @nextofficial and tell them why they should reopen the factory, bring back union jobs and treat their workers fairly!
💬 1,416 workers lost their jobs overnight after being informed via WhatsApp — some after more than 30 years of service
📢 This was the only NEXT factory in Sri Lanka where workers had a recognised union and a collective bargaining agreement, winning modest wage increases of around £10 extra per month compared to NEXT’s other factories in the country.
🚫 NEXT responded by shutting the factory without consultation and destroying that agreement.
💸 In the year since, NEXT has reported record profits of £1.15 billion and rewarded CEO Lord Simon Wolfson with a 50% pay rise, bringing his pay package to £7.4 million, alongside a £3.56 million bonus.
Meanwhile, workers who lost their jobs have faced unemployment, financial hardship and a lengthy legal struggle for compensation.
🗣️ As one worker from the factory said:
“We have all lost our jobs and the factory has been shut down — not because we did anything wrong, but because we stood together as a trade union to fight for workers’ rights and speak out against injustice.”
Workers in Sri Lanka and workers in the UK deserve better pay, better protections and the right to organise without fear.
#NextCanAffordIt

On 15 May, we mark the Nakba, Arabic for ‘catastrophe’.
But the Nakba isn't over – Israel is still displacing Palestinians, denying their human rights, and subjecting Palestinians to apartheid.
Find out more and take action now via the link in our bio.
#Nakba78

On 15 May, we mark the Nakba, Arabic for ‘catastrophe’.
But the Nakba isn't over – Israel is still displacing Palestinians, denying their human rights, and subjecting Palestinians to apartheid.
Find out more and take action now via the link in our bio.
#Nakba78

On 15 May, we mark the Nakba, Arabic for ‘catastrophe’.
But the Nakba isn't over – Israel is still displacing Palestinians, denying their human rights, and subjecting Palestinians to apartheid.
Find out more and take action now via the link in our bio.
#Nakba78

On 15 May, we mark the Nakba, Arabic for ‘catastrophe’.
But the Nakba isn't over – Israel is still displacing Palestinians, denying their human rights, and subjecting Palestinians to apartheid.
Find out more and take action now via the link in our bio.
#Nakba78
In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.
In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.

In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.
In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.
In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.
In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.
In January, wildfires tore across the Andean Patagonia in Argentina, burning thousands of hectares of land and devastating communities, forests and ecosystems.
As the fires spread, parts of the Argentine government and media attempted to blame Mapuche Indigenous communities – claims that judicial investigations later disproved. At the same time, the government had cut firefighting budgets by more than 70% in 2025, pushed to weaken environmental protections, and responded to communities with punishment rather than support.
With limited state intervention, local communities stepped in themselves. Volunteer brigades organised to tackle the fires, coordinate across the region, support evacuations, and run workshops on wildfire prevention, suppression, first aid and rescue work.
These are some of the images from that time – from frontline firefighting efforts to community organising in the aftermath of the fires. We accompanied and supported this process alongside the communities leading it.
The fate of critical ocean currents is in our hands.
Swipe through to understand what’s happening – and why it matters. 🌍
The fate of critical ocean currents is in our hands.
Swipe through to understand what’s happening – and why it matters. 🌍
The fate of critical ocean currents is in our hands.
Swipe through to understand what’s happening – and why it matters. 🌍
The fate of critical ocean currents is in our hands.
Swipe through to understand what’s happening – and why it matters. 🌍
The fate of critical ocean currents is in our hands.
Swipe through to understand what’s happening – and why it matters. 🌍
BP has just announced billions in profits — more than doubling its earnings to around $3.2 billion (£2.4bn) this quarter alone.
While communities around the world face the effects of war and climate breakdown, fossil fuel corporations are cashing in.
The UK government still hasn’t made the choices we need. Instead of leading the transition away from fossil fuels, it continues to keep new oil and gas projects like the Rosebank oil field on the table — locking us into more extraction, more emissions, and more profits for corporations like BP.
In Santa Marta, Colombia, at the First Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels, we’re demanding the UK government backs a truly just transition away from fossil fuels — not more drilling.
#stoprosebank #endfossilfuels
‘Exceptional’ profits for oil giants. Rising bills for everyone else.
We took this message to the beach in Santa Marta and made it into global media.
More super-profits are expected in the coming days. This should be a turning point.
#MakePollutersPay #ClimateJustice #PeopleNotProfit #FossilFuels

13 years ago, over 1,100 garment workers died in the Rana Plaza factory collapse in Bangladesh.
This was no accident: it was the result of negligence by the big fashion brands whose profits are only possible because of garment workers in the Global South.
Garment workers still work in unsafe buildings for low wages – and face repression when their unions call for change.
Today, on International #WorkersMemorialDay we remember those who lost their lives at Rana Plaza – and keep demanding that fashion corporations ensure their workers’ safety.
Photos by Kim Ford.
#IWMD #IWMD26 #RemembertheDead

13 years ago, over 1,100 garment workers died in the Rana Plaza factory collapse in Bangladesh.
This was no accident: it was the result of negligence by the big fashion brands whose profits are only possible because of garment workers in the Global South.
Garment workers still work in unsafe buildings for low wages – and face repression when their unions call for change.
Today, on International #WorkersMemorialDay we remember those who lost their lives at Rana Plaza – and keep demanding that fashion corporations ensure their workers’ safety.
Photos by Kim Ford.
#IWMD #IWMD26 #RemembertheDead

13 years ago, over 1,100 garment workers died in the Rana Plaza factory collapse in Bangladesh.
This was no accident: it was the result of negligence by the big fashion brands whose profits are only possible because of garment workers in the Global South.
Garment workers still work in unsafe buildings for low wages – and face repression when their unions call for change.
Today, on International #WorkersMemorialDay we remember those who lost their lives at Rana Plaza – and keep demanding that fashion corporations ensure their workers’ safety.
Photos by Kim Ford.
#IWMD #IWMD26 #RemembertheDead

13 years ago, over 1,100 garment workers died in the Rana Plaza factory collapse in Bangladesh.
This was no accident: it was the result of negligence by the big fashion brands whose profits are only possible because of garment workers in the Global South.
Garment workers still work in unsafe buildings for low wages – and face repression when their unions call for change.
Today, on International #WorkersMemorialDay we remember those who lost their lives at Rana Plaza – and keep demanding that fashion corporations ensure their workers’ safety.
Photos by Kim Ford.
#IWMD #IWMD26 #RemembertheDead

🆕 40 charities, trade unions and civil society organisations have signed our open letter to Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, @ed_miliband, and UK representatives at the Santa Marta Conference on the Just Transition Away from Fossil Fuels.
We’re calling on the UK government to:
1️⃣ Demonstrate credibility at home by ending new fossil fuel expansion
2️⃣ Support a fair and just global transition
3️⃣ Champion a credible and enabling international framework for transition
This moment demands political courage and consistency. With the High-Level Segment of the talks beginning tomorrow, we urge the UK government to rise to the challenge.

🆕 40 charities, trade unions and civil society organisations have signed our open letter to Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, @ed_miliband, and UK representatives at the Santa Marta Conference on the Just Transition Away from Fossil Fuels.
We’re calling on the UK government to:
1️⃣ Demonstrate credibility at home by ending new fossil fuel expansion
2️⃣ Support a fair and just global transition
3️⃣ Champion a credible and enabling international framework for transition
This moment demands political courage and consistency. With the High-Level Segment of the talks beginning tomorrow, we urge the UK government to rise to the challenge.
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