The Wall Street Journal

Global mining’s new reality: guns, hostages, arrests

Global mining’s new reality: guns, hostages, arrests
Soldiers escort miners from a site in Ethiopia. (Image: Abyssinian Group)
The Wall Street Journal
By Julie Steinberg in London and Rhiannon Hoyle in AdelaideNeil Warburton was finishing up his breakfast of porridge and local honey when the armed soldiers converged. The Australian veteran mining executive had flown to southern Ethiopia in 2023 to check on progress at his lithium mine. One of the largest undeveloped lithium projects in the world, it was supposed to start production in late 2024, selling spodumene concentrate that would end up in batteries for electric vehicles and other products.That plan has gone seriously – and p...

More World

Another attempt at peace in Ukraine
World

Another attempt at peace in Ukraine

Despite Trump’s plan, the West lacks the unity of purpose to put pressure on Putin.

Why democracy needs digital borders
Technology Opinion

Why democracy needs digital borders

Simply put, borders are a key bulwark against chaos.

US consumer confidence slumps to lowest in seven months
World

US consumer confidence slumps to lowest in seven months

Consumers were "less sanguine" about their current situations. 

AFP 26 Nov 2025
Cow cuddling gives farms boost amid dropping dairy prices
Primary Sector

Cow cuddling gives farms boost amid dropping dairy prices

Cow cuddling isn’t new: It grew popular during covid.