Ukraine
The Donbass in 2014: Ultra-right threats, working-class revolt, and Russian policy responses
Ukraine war, imperialism and the left: An interview with British socialist Phil Hearse
Ukraine: Unions strive to keep Ukraine’s mines running, protect civilians and appeal for solidarity
Eastern Europe’s tragedy: How the spheres of influence policy amplifies reaction
To undermine NATO retrenchment, the left must fight to win the peace
New reality? Europe and the war in Ukraine
Swedish left’s perspectives on the war in Ukraine
(Video) Ukraine: Revolutionaries at war
The war on Ukraine: An interview with a Ukrainian socialist
Before the 2014 war, Pavel Lisyansky, founder of the Eastern Human Rights Group, was a miner and trade union activist in the Donbas. If it were not for Russia’s aggression, he would still be working in the mines, he says. “This is my life,” is how he signed the photo from his personal archive accompanying this interview. Today, Pavel Lisyansky and his colleagues from the Eastern Human Rights Group (EHRG) founded in July 2014 in Debaltseve actively document and report on human rights violations in the Russian-occupied territories and help local residents facing lawlessness.