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Corruption agency hopes portal will ‘make it difficult for Russian oligarchs to sell such assets’
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Updates on the latest additions to the Secret Canada database, plus a behind-the-scenes look at the process of filing 400 FOI requests
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Norway's data protection agency said on Tuesday (8 August) it would start fining Facebook and Instagram owner Meta nearly $100,000 per day for defying a ban on using users' personal information to target ads.
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The tropical forests of the Congo Basin are home to nearly 1 million indigenous people. After thousands of years of survival, deforestation is perhaps their biggest challenge yet.
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The bodies of eight Kalina people from French Guiana who died in 1892 are held in national collections. Their remains could be returned to their homeland, as the French government has pledged to facilitate restitutions to overseas territories.
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Medical exploitation is an often overlooked part of Black history and partly explains the mistrust that members of the Black community have for the medical industry.
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Since 2020, human rights defenders have been one of the most actively persecuted social groups in Belarus. This massive crackdown has made it impossible for activists to engage in human rights work without risking their dignity, freedom and even their lives. All human rights organisations, independent media and trade unions have been closed down, and their activities were deemed extremist and constituting criminal offences.
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Textbook apparently written in just five months is part of Kremlin’s tightening of control over historical narrative in schools
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The Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM) on Tuesday revealed compelling evidence of the country’s military and affiliate militias engaging in more frequent and audacious war crimes and crimes against humanity.
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Un mécanisme d’enquête de l’ONU a annoncé mardi disposer de solides preuves d’une « hausse spectaculaire » des crimes de guerre et contre l’humanité au Myanmar.
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Les corps de huit Kaliña morts en 1892 et conservés dans les collections nationales pourraient être rendus à leur terre d’origine, alors que le gouvernement s’est engagé à faciliter les restitutions pour les outre-mer.
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“Imprisoned workers were essential to creating the basic infrastructure of New Zealand’s Pacific empire. Government agents needed government buildings, so offenders who couldn’t (or wouldn’t) pay their fines built residencies, courthouses and other imperial premises.” — Jared Davidson.
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A report by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission may be an opportunity to repair the relations with the Indigenous peoples.
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In the late 1930s, as the Nazis stepped up their persecution of German and Austrian Jews, many countries in the West severely limited the number of visas they granted to refugees. But there was one place refugees could go without even obtaining a visa: Shanghai. An exhibit in New York explores a little-known chapter of World War II.
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Deben investigarse las denuncias de que migrantes y solicitantes de asilo, incluidos niños y niñas, han sido objeto de empujones por parte de funcionarios de Texas, quedando varados bajo un calor sofocante, muchos con lesiones en la piel por el alambre de púas instalado como parte de las estrategias de la Operación Lone Star. La totalidad del financiamiento federal a la operación debe cesar.
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An Arabic magazine banned by Jordan for poking fun at a royal wedding hits back with ridicule.
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The National Institute of Indigenous Peoples faces a monumental challenge: preserving over a century of documentation before it deteriorates.
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“Aboriginal people, if they appear at all in the landscape, are presented as ornamental figures, framing devices, exotic touches. Only rarely is their humanity expressed . . . Mostly they are simply absent.” — Kennedy Warne on the erasure of Aboriginal people in colonial art.
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Canada's national archives is working to identify, digitize and transfer six million pages of federal Indian day school records to the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR), the department head says.
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American Ancestors and Collaborators Announce the Launch of "10 Million Names," a Project to Honor the Family Histories of African Americans Whose Ancestors Lived Under Slavery, with a Permanent, Free, Publicly Accessible Database at 10MillionNames.org
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