News

The Chinese government claimed in 2021 that more than 80% of cotton harvesting was done by machine. But people are still ...
A traditional song in the Uyghur language plays over the video of a man feeding bits of car chassis into a machine. “Who is going to the city to be a stranger? Who can no longer stand it?” a nasal ...
The Trust for the Bureau of Investigative Journalism is an independent charity (1179275) established in 2018. It exists to support charitable elements of the Bureau’s work and mission to keep ...
The biases of a court expert whose advice has been pivotal in the removal of at least a dozen children from their mothers’ care have been exposed by an undercover investigation by the Bureau of ...
TBIJ co-publishes its stories with major media outlets around the world so they reach as many people as possible. Heated tobacco is touted as a better alternative to cigarettes for smokers, yet new ...
When it comes to explaining the impact of America’s second biggest private company on your life, no one puts it better than the company itself. “We are the flour in your bread,” says one of Cargill’s ...
At least 16 hospitals in Italy have been treating cancer patients with a poor-quality imported drug that is not approved for use in the EU, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ) and POLITICO ...
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 ...
Content warning: This story contains references to violence, suicide, child abuse and self-harm. A suicide attempt, depression, substance abuse, insomnia, surveillance, threats. These are just some of ...
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 ...
Last year the Spanish boyband Dvicio were riding high after their latest album topped the charts. The “boys” – by now all in their late 20s or early 30s – were the summer’s cover stars for Like!, a ...