A landmark UN resolution led by Ghana declares the transatlantic slave trade the gravest crime against humanity — but Western opposition and abstentions reveal enduring resistance to historical accountability, write ISAAC SANEY and JAMES COUNTS EARLY
ON March 27, President Donald Trump signed an executive order ending collective bargaining for over one million federal workers, according to the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE). Trump’s executive order cites national security concerns as the reasoning for such a major action.
The White House cites the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (CSRA) as giving the president authority to end collective bargaining at agencies with “national security missions.”
The CSRA has traditionally only applied to agencies such as the CIA, the FBI or the National Security Agency. But Trump’s order ends bargaining for employees at a far larger number of government agencies, including the Department of Defence, Department of Veterans Affairs, the National Science Foundation, the Coast Guard, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of State, the Department of Energy, and many others. Notably, police and firefighters are excluded from this executive order, and may continue to bargain.
The fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a registered nurse and union member, has sparked nationwide protests and renewed calls from National Nurses United to dismantle Ice and related agencies, says MARK GRUENBERG
Nigeria’s presidential spokesman grovels to the West in response to Washington intimidation, writes PAVAN KULKARNI
Organised workers at the notoriously anti-union global giant are scoring victory after victory, and now international bodies are pitching in to finally force this figurehead of corporate capitalism to give in to unionisation, writes EMILIO AVELAR



