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We uncovered the full extent of this network in our latest investigation, which was part of the Dirty Payments project, led ...
Cargill: the company feeding the world by helping destroy the planet It's a controversial corporate giant that transformed how we eat and has the global food industry in its grip. So why haven't we ...
China’s economy runs on Uyghur forced labour More than 100 global brands are linked to a scheme that ships Xinjiang ethnic minorities to work in factories thousands of miles away ...
Psychologist’s ‘alarming’ views on domestic abuse throw spotlight on family court experts Undercover recording reveals Melanie Gill berating ‘completely biased’ judges who have bought into ‘radical ...
Ulf Erlandsson, chief executive of the Anthropocene Fixed Income Institute, a research body, said sustainable finance is used like a “papal indulgence you buy for your sins”. He added: “You might ...
Revealed: global crime network behind QR code car-park scam A sprawling fraud operation, a Dubai-based millionaire – and a £4bn company looking the other way ...
The Bureau has found British American Tobacco has attracted a new generation of non-smokers to addictive tobacco and nicotine products marketed as trendy… ...
Philip Morris International, the world’s biggest multinational tobacco company, is drastically misleading consumers about the amount of nicotine in its range of Iqos heated tobacco products, developed ...
UK rivers near livestock farms are awash with superbugs and antibiotic residues, including in the idyllic River Wye, research by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism has found. Testing commissioned ...
The world sanctioned Xinjiang cotton. China turned it into chicken feed Forced labour in Chinese cotton fields can now be linked to the supply chains of KFC and McDonald’s ...
A vast money-laundering ring moved $4.2bn through a network of 60 HSBC accounts in Hong Kong starting only two years after the bank promised to clean up its act, an investigation by the Bureau of ...
HMRC investigations led to prosecutions against just 11 “wealthy” people last year, an investigation by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism and TaxWatch can reveal. Critics say the figure, obtained ...
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