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‘Crucial’ medical documents have not been disclosed, according to a complaint signed by former players.
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A Guinean court on July 31 convicted Guinea’s former president Moussa Dadis Camara and seven others in a landmark trial for rapes and killings of protesters in 2009. This is the first time crimes against humanity have been prosecuted in Guinea.
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Meta has agreed to a $1.4 billion settlement with Texas in a privacy lawsuit over allegations that the tech giant used biometric data of users without their permission, officials said Tuesday. Texas Attorney General Ken...
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Marked and unmarked graves were found at 65 of the more than 400 U.S. boarding schools that were established to forcibly assimilate Native American children into white society.
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When Putin invaded, a historian in Kyiv saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was in danger. So he set out to save as much of it as he could.
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Sri Lankan authorities are conducting a campaign to deny Hindus and other religious minorities access to places of worship and other property and redesignate locations as Buddhist sites.
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Amnesty International urges the Government of Bangladesh and its agencies to respect the right to protest and end this violent crackdown.
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Since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014, its forces have detained and tortured thousands of fighters and civilians. Here, the photojournalist Zoya Shu recounts five years of documenting their stories
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Since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014, its forces have detained and tortured thousands of fighters and civilians. Here, the photojournalist Zoya Shu recounts five years of documenting their stories
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In response to an order by the State Information Commission (SIC) directing the Public Service Commission (PSC) to disclose information on a competitive examination, the PSC revealed that it had destroyed the document in question. The Kerala High Court observed that the destruction of the document was improper.
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Sri Lanka’s government formally apologised to the island’s Muslim minority for forcing cremations on Covid victims, disregarding World Health Organization assurances that burials in line with Islamic rites were safe. Sri Lanka’s entire Muslim community – around 10 per cent of the 22 million population – was still traumatised, representatives said.
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Some 200,000 children, young people and vulnerable adults suffered abuse while in state and faith-based care in New Zealand over the last 70 years, a landmark investigation has found. It means almost one in three children in care from 1950 to 2019 suffered some form of abuse, including being subject to rape, electric shocks and forced labour, according to the Abuse in Care Royal Commission of Inquiry. The publication of the commission's final report follows a six-year investigation into the experiences of nearly 3,000 people.
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Statistics raise concerns that rise in demand for data processing driven by AI could derail climate targets.
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Israeli forces have been publishing degrading photographs and videos of detained Palestinians, including children, a form of inhumane treatment and an outrage on their personal dignity that amount to war crimes.
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National Archives files show officials were troubled by idea of institution enriching widow of Cambridge Five agent
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A new law extends the state’s sexual assault evidence protections to cover DNA samples. But getting justice in hundreds of cold cases will require more than just testing, survivors say.
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Amid calls to return antiquities, historian finds documents that reveal many were not result of imperial plunder.
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Amid calls to return antiquities, historian finds documents that reveal many were not result of imperial plunder.
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Sandra Hemme was 20 years old when she was found guilty of stabbing to death library worker Patricia Jeschke from St Joseph, Missouri, in November 1980. She was given a life sentence. There was no evidence that linked her to the crime other than a confession she gave under heavy sedation in a psychiatric hospital, a review into her case found. Now 64, she is believed to have served the longest known wrongful conviction of a woman in US history according to her representatives.
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On the heels of this year’s Nelson Mandela International Day, marked annually on 18 July, we are taking you back in time to an epic moment at the United Nations in the 1990s when the anti-apartheid hero and icon made a historic debut in the UN General Assembly Hall as the first democratically elected President of South Africa. |
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