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Les archives d’une association missionnaire à Rome conservent des lettres de catholiques du Québec datant des 19e et 20e siècles. Ces fidèles offraient un don pour « acheter un petit Chinois », croyant contribuer ainsi à sauver l’’âme d’enfants en besoin de rédemption. Ces histoires intimes révèlent les rapports à la religion, à la colonisation, à soi, à l’autre ? De lettre en lettre, Marie-Louise et les petits Chinois d’Afrique met en lumière un pan de l’histoire du Québec qui s’interprète...
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Syphilis is continuing to spread in remote Indigenous communities across Australia. The sexually transmitted disease was almost eradicated, until an outbreak began in 2011.
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From the late 19th to mid-20th century, the Amazon rainforest faced intensive rubber exploitation, dubbed “rubber fever,” that caused immense suffering and death.
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To combat disinformation, Brazil gave one judge broad power to police the internet. Now, after he blocked X, some are wondering whether that was a good idea.
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Women searching for their missing relatives in Mexico and Colombia unite their struggles in the face of the indifference and abandonment of their countries in the framework of the International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances.
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Azerbaijani authorities have arrested a researcher and political analyst, Bahruz Samadov, on spurious treason charges, in the government’s escalating crackdown against its critics.
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A group of Indigenous women are hoping to stop the bulldozers at a former Montreal hospital which they believe could hold the truth about children still missing from a grisly half-century-old CIA experiment.
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The sales of intelligence agency data raised awkward questions as the nation is expanding military information sharing with the United States.
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The sales of intelligence agency data raised awkward questions as the nation is expanding military information sharing with the United States.
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The sales of intelligence agency data raised awkward questions as the nation is expanding military information sharing with the United States.
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Though so-called bawdy house riots were common in seventeenth-century London, the disorder of 1668 revealed the city’s deep political and religious resentments.
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The Sri Lankan government continues to persecute the families of victims of enforced disappearance who seek to enforce their rights.
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The Whigs started holding political conventions in the 1830s − and historians from the Smithsonian who visited the GOP and Democratic conventions this year found the tradition is still very vibrant.
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UN Secretary-General António Guterres received a warm welcome in the capital of Timor-Leste on Wednesday where he hailed the 25th anniversary of its vote for independence, praising the national unity of the past, and pledging the UN’s unwavering support in the future. |
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A new morality law enacted by the Taliban in Afghanistan, cements policies that “completely erase” women’s presence in public, the UN human rights office, OHCHR, said on Tuesday, calling for it to be immediately revoked. |
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UN Secretary-General António Guterres has strongly condemned the killing of around 200 people in the Burkinabe town of Barsalogho at the weekend, which left a further 140 injured. |
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Le Bureau des droits de l’homme de l’ONU a demandé, mardi, « l’abrogation immédiate » d’une nouvelle loi sur « la morale » qui durcit davantage les restrictions imposées aux femmes en Afghanistan, relevant que celle-ci pourrait « rendre invisible et sans voix la moitié de la population afghane ». |
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“People don’t just sit and wait for aid, but when there’s no condition to survive, they don’t have another choice” explains documentary photographer Liba Taylor, famous for documenting human resilience to adversity.
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“People don’t just sit and wait for aid, but when there’s no condition to survive, they don’t have another choice” explains documentary photographer Liba Taylor, famous for documenting human resilience to adversity.
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The Sri Lankan government has been trying to persuade international partners of its achievements in reforming the economy and protecting human rights. However, a new report by the United Nations high commissioner for human rights warns that Sri Lanka is facing renewed threats to fundamental freedoms.
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