News

Senegal, one of West Africa’s largest economies, has torn up its tax treaty with Mauritius as debate rages over the island tax haven’s impact on developing economies. Senegal unilaterally ended its ...
In a year marked by rising authoritarianism, financial secrecy and threats to press freedom, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists exposed corruption at the highest levels, ...
Radio Free Asia journalist Shohret Hoshur, who reports on news in China’s Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, attending a 2015 hearing of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China in Washington, ...
What makes ICIJ's secure open-source software different from other tools? We answer some of the common questions about Datashare.
Working with ICIJ's award-winning Datashare team, the new Neo4j fellow will explore ways to present data and find efficient ways to connect the dots.
A survivor who testified in the case slammed the sentence — a choice between prison or paying a fine — which Nigeria’s anti-trafficking agency intends to appeal.
Interviews with former workers by ICIJ partner The Gecko Project reveal new links between First Resources, the billionaire family that owns it, and a trio of companies that have reportedly cleared ...
A new book by Russian ICIJ member center Proekt goes where none has gone before: Putin’s personal life and his inner circle.
Mauritius Leaks is a cross-border investigation that reveals how one law firm on a small island off Africa’s east coast helped companies leach tax revenue from poor African, Arab and Asian nations.
Intellexa founder Tal Dilian poses for a picture at his house in Limassol, Cyprus, in April 2020. The United States has sanctioned notorious spyware consortium Intellexa, as well as its two key ...
Two years after the Panama Papers rocked the offshore financial system, a fresh document leak from the law firm Mossack Fonseca reveals new offshore details about an array of global elites, including ...
An ICIJ reporter tried to capture the "opulence and neglect" inside a tiny African state that had squandered its oil riches — and experienced the dangers of reporting in a country with no free press.