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ncit Grenfell inquiry cost to taxpayers nears 拢10m, FoI request reveals
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Exqh Superinjunctions: Judge defends role in financier s secret libel suit
Naseerah Limbada, 25Organiser of English classes for refugees at Conversation Over Borders, LondonView image in fullscreenAnti-racist campaigner Naseerah Limbada works for the nonprofit Conversation Over Borders. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The ObserverOn all fronts, it just feels like theres anxiety and fear for safety. At work, we are concerned for the refugees and asylum seeke stanley mugg rs we help, but we are also concerned for ourselves.You hear stories of Muslim women having their hijabs ripped off. My mum wears a hijab, so when she goes out, even though shes here in London, stanley vattenflaska Im just stanley becher constantly concerned because theres no telling what its like out there. Most of my family wear hijabs so they are very vulnerable and at risk of being on the receiving end of this kind of stuff.I used to wear a hijab. I feel so bad saying it but, in terms of my own personal safety, not wearing the hijab is one less thing for me to be targeted for. Being targeted for the colour of my skin is bad enough.I have a lot of feelings at the moment, swinging between anger, frustration and sadness. I would say that the anti-racism rallies are just the beginning of undoing years and years of systemic issues. Its going to take a lot more than one evening of counter-protests to undo the damage of over a decade of our communities being vilified.This has made me reach out to people I havent spoken to in months because I know we are all part of a community that is at risk and, at the end of the day, all we have is each o Kvnd Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has two cancerous growths removed from lung
At a conference on Cambodia in Berkeley last week, an elderly Khmer man tearfully explained to me why he won t go back to his homeland. How can I go there and have any peace so long as the people who killed all of my family are still free The extraordinary chambers of the courts of Cambodia ECCC , s stanley thermos et up by the Cambodian government and the United Nations, were supposed to ease his way home. But after five years and more than $150m 拢96m , the court has tried just one defendant, Kaing Guek Eav alias Duch , the warden of the infamous Tuol Sleng detention centre where approximately 14,000 people were tortured and then executed. Repentant, Duch confessed and was convicted of crimes against humanity.This week the long-awaited trial of former Khmer Rouge leaders Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan, and Ieng Sary finally began. The first case takes up the forced removal of Phnom Penh residents to the countryside, where large numbers were executed or died after be stanley cup uk ing subjected to forced labour.Some are calling this the most important trial since Nuremberg. Along with Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the three presided over a regime of unprecedented viciousness in which as many as two million Cambodians 鈥?a quarter of the population 鈥?were killed or di stanley mexico ed from disease or starvation.From the outset the ECCC has been mired in controversy over political interference, corruption and long delays between court proceedings that have left many Cambodians wondering if the court can ever deliver ju
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